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U.S. Court of Claims judge John Marvin Jones (1980) Court House & Post Office† Austin: 601 Colorado Street: W.D. Tex. 1881–1936 Now offices of the Texas State University System: n/a U.S. Courthouse† Austin: 200 West 8th Street: W.D. Tex. 1936–2012: n/a Homer Thornberry Judicial Building: Austin: 903 San Jacinto Boulevard: W.D. Tex ...
The Paul Brown Federal Building and United States Courthouse, also known as Sherman U.S. Federal Building, is a historic government building in Sherman, Texas. It was built during 1906-1907 and reflects Renaissance Revival architecture. The building was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 2000 as the US Post Office and ...
By the 2000s, Austin's population growth in the intervening decades had increased the court's caseload beyond what the courthouse could support. [2] In 2002 the General Services Administration retained architects to design a new, larger courthouse complex for Austin, [ 3 ] and in 2004 the GSA purchased a parcel of land in downtown Austin to ...
The first federal judge in Texas was John C. Watrous, who was appointed on May 26, 1846, and had previously served as Attorney General of the Republic of Texas. He was assigned to hold court in Galveston, at the time, the largest city in the state. As seat of the Texas Judicial District, the Galveston court had jurisdiction over the whole state ...
In 2015, a staggering 43.6% of federal patent suits (2,540 suits) were filed in the Eastern District, which was more than the number of lawsuits filed in the United States District Court for the District of Delaware (545 cases or 9.3%), the United States District Court for the Central District of California (300 cases or 5.1%), the United ...
Plans are in the works for a five-story hotel in East Austin on a half-acre at 1604, 1606, 1610 and 1612 E. Seventh St., according to site plans filed with the city.
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As of 2017, it now houses two county civil courts, a justice of the peace court, thirteen Texas district courts, two district clerks, and two probate courts, [2] though the probate courts are set to be relocated into the former federal courthouse building by 2020. [18]