First, the federal district courts are not designated by number, they are designated by name (e.g. U.S. District Court for the District of Colorado). Every district court is located in just one state. For appeals purposes, the states are grouped together and covered by a particular Circuit Court of Appeals, most of which are designated by number (the exception being the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit). For example, appeals from federal district courts in Colorado, Utah, Oklahoma, Wyoming, Kansas, and New Mexico go to the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Tenth Circuit.Does a company have to comply with federal subpoena if they are both out of state and out of district? 5th vs 10th federal district for example.
3rd party company has information critical to my case but is out of state.
zenoMorph, you have been told repeatedly to keep all of your related questions to a single thread.Does a company have to comply with federal subpoena if they are both out of state and out of district? 5th vs 10th federal district for example.
3rd party company has information critical to my case but is out of state.
Thanks.
Probably auto correct, yes. Or maybe I had gourd fruit in mind while typing. I've corrected the typo in my reply. Thanks.Taxing Matters: It is "quash" the subpoena, not "squash." Autocorrect, perhaps?
Haha. Hunger could lead to the error. I generally prefer to blame autocorrect, though.Probably auto correct, yes. Or maybe I had gourd fruit in mind while typing. I've corrected the typo in my reply. Thanks.