This project page provides guidance with respect to the notability of judges, courts, and courthouses in the United States.

General Wikipedia notability standards[edit]

Wikipedia:Notability (people)#Politicians and judges states with respect to judges:

The following are presumed to be notable:
  • Politicians and judges who have held international, national or sub-national (statewide/provincewide) office, and members or former members of a national, state or provincial legislature.[1] This also applies to persons who have been elected to such offices but have not yet assumed them.
  • Major local political figures who have received significant press coverage.
Just being an elected local official, or an unelected candidate for political office, does not guarantee notability, although such people can still be notable if they meet the general notability guideline.

Wikipedia:Notability (geographic features)#Buildings and objects states with respect to buildings:


This project page expands on the criteria set forth above specifically with respect to topics within the scope of Wikipedia:WikiProject United States courts and judges.

General definitions[edit]

A court is a body created by law to adjudicate disputes, and given such authority as is needed to carry out this function. A jurisdiction may have several different kinds of courts, with different levels of authority. These courts may operate in a hierarchy, of may be independent of each other. Most courts are trial courts, which hear evidence such as the testimony of witnesses in order to resolve disputes between parties or determine whether an accused person is guilty of a crime. Other courts are appellate courts, which hear appeals from parties who disagree with the outcome of their case before a trial court. In some cases, particular courts may serve as trial courts for some kinds of actions, but have appellate authority over lower courts for others.

A judge is a person who, depending on the laws of the jurisdiction, has been elected or appointed to preside over a court. A judge of the highest appellate court in a jurisdiction is often known as a justice. A courthouse is a building or structure built for the purpose of housing trials, containing courtrooms and offices for the presiding judge and necessary staff members.

Federal courts, judges, and courthouses of the United States[edit]

United States federal courts

All courts constituted by the United States, including extraterritorial courts, and temporary or emergency courts, are inherently notable. These courts are constituted by acts of the United States Congress, signed into law by the President of the United States, and are assigned jurisdiction over matters of national importance. Although such courts are legally required to exercise authority only within the constraints of the Constitution of the United States, occasionally courts have been formed which have later been found to be unconstitutional.

United States federal courts are generally created by the passage of a law by the United States Congress establishing the court, its authority, location, and number of judges. The determination that a court is unconstitutional is an inherently notable event, as it requires the judicial branch of the United States (usually involving the United States Supreme Court) to strike down an act of Congress, or to find that the President has acted without authorization of Congress in creating a court.

Federal districts and duty stations

The primary Federal trial courts of the United States are the United States District Courts. Historically, these have usually been created with jurisdiction over a single entire state, and thereafter occasionally subdivided into units with smaller geographic coverage. Individual District Courts usually have a number of cities within their geographic jurisdiction in which they conduct proceedings. For example, the United States District Court for the Eastern District of Virginia, has courthouses in Norfolk, Richmond, and Alexandria. These locations are sometimes referred to as "duty stations" with respect to the judges assigned to them. However, even though a single duty station may see the use of different courthouses over time, these are not considered separate courts. It is possible that such important events occur in the federal district courts of a particular city that a separate article on the history of that duty station might be merited, but a duty station would need to have an extraordinary level of notable activity to merit an article separate from that of the district that contains it.

United States federal judges

Justices of the Supreme Court of the United States

Judges of the United States courts of appeals

Judges of the United States district courts

Note that many presidents have articles in Category:Federal judicial appointment controversies in the United States (presently, these exist for all presidents since Lyndon B. Johnson). Where a rejected nominee is not notable enough to merit a separate entry, it is appropriate to redirect their name to the section of such an article where their nomination and rejection or withdrawal is noted.

Magistrate judges and bankruptcy judges

Specialty court judges

Administrative law judges

United States federal courthouses

Most United States federal courthouses are buildings constructed solely or primarily for the purpose of housing federal court proceedings, including courtrooms and judicial chambers, and other facilities such as a clerk's office for receiving filings. Most federal courthouses have been built in accordance with specific congressional legislation directing the construction of such a building and appropriating funds for it. Occasionally, courthouses have been created through the federal purchase of existing privately owned or state-owned buildings, or through the conversion of federally owned buildings initially built for other purposes. In each of these cases, substantial renovations are often required before the structure is suitable for use as a federal courthouse. Rarely, the federal government has leased space in privately owned buildings for use by a particular federal court for the period of the term of the lease, particularly to serve as temporary quarters while existing facilities are renovated or while new facilities are constructed.

State courts, judges, and courthouses of the United States[edit]

United States state courts

State Supreme Courts are inherently notable for being the highest judicial body of their jurisdiction.

All appellate courts and trial courts of general jurisdiction constituted by a state of the United States, including temporary or emergency courts, are inherently notable. These courts generally have the ability to hear both criminal and civil matters, including the disposition of capital cases and civil cases of substantial import.

Most states have courts that are designated as state courts, and courts that are designated as county or municipal courts. However, most of these courts exist under the constitutions and laws of the state itself, and should be treated as courts of the state. State courts are also usually divided into geographic jurisdictions, either by county or by region in the state. These individual jurisdictions are not inherently notable, although an individual state jurisdiction might be notable if other evidence exists of notable events occurring in the court of that jurisdiction.

United States state court judges

Justices of state Supreme Courts

Judges of state courts of appeals

Judges of state trial courts of general jurisdiction

State specialty court judges

United States state courthouses

There are a wide variety of buildings in use as state courthouses in the United States. Many of these are buildings constructed solely or primarily for the purpose of housing state court proceedings, including courtrooms and judicial chambers, and other facilities such as a clerk's office for receiving filings.

  1. ^ This is a secondary criterion. People who satisfy this criterion will almost always satisfy the primary criterion. Biographers and historians will usually have already written about the past and present holders of major political offices. However, this criterion ensures that our coverage of major political offices, incorporating all of the present and past holders of that office, will be complete regardless.