STATE OF NORTH CAROLINA THE GENERAL COURT OF JUSTICE 20A JUDICIAL DISTRICT COUNTIES OF ANSON, DISTRI 2025

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Appellate Division (Supreme Court the Court of Appeals) Superior Courts. The Superior Courts are the general jurisdiction trial courts for the state. District Courts. The District Courts handle the vast majority of the trial level cases. Administrative Office of the Courts.
The District Courts handle the vast majority of the trial level cases. They have exclusive jurisdiction over civil cases involving less than $10,000, almost all misdemeanors, probable cause hearings in felony cases, juvenile proceedings, mental health hospital commitments, and domestic relations cases.
District courts handle trials within the federal court system both civil and criminal. The districts are the same as those for the U.S. Attorneys, and the U.S. Attorney is the primary prosecutor for the federal government in his or her respective area.
Within limits set by Congress and the Constitution, district courts have jurisdiction to hear nearly all categories of federal civil and criminal cases. Criminal cases involve an allegation by the government that an individual or entity violated the criminal laws of the United States.
Information about criminal cases in the North Carolina court system can be accessed by visiting a public, self-service terminal located at a clerk of courts office in any county. You can use the terminal to search for cases by defendant name, case number, or victim or witness name.
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The North Carolina Court of Appeals is the states only intermediate appellate court. Our judicial system has three levels of courts: Trial courts (District courts and Superior courts), the Court of Appeals, and the Supreme Court of North Carolina.
District courts hear cases involving civil, criminal, juvenile, and magistrate matters. District courts are divided into 41 districts across the state and sit in the county seat of each county.
Whether you are paying monetary obligations previously imposed in a courts judgment or pleading guilty by waiver (as discussed in the previous two questions), your payment options are the same: online, by mail, or in person at the courthouse (or at a magistrates office, for in-person waivers).

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