This article is about a court in the New York state court system. For federal district courts, see United States district court.
In the U.S. state of New York, district courts are state courts that are a type of trial court of inferior jurisdiction. They are established in Nassau County[1] and the five western towns in Suffolk County.[2] Each contains individual districts for civil cases which are organized along town lines, while criminal cases are heard in a separate countywide (in Nassau) or half-countywide (in Suffolk) district. They effectively replace town justice courts in these localities, but have subject-matter jurisdiction and operations similar to city courts.
The court has subject-matter jurisdiction over civil matters seeking monetary damages up to $15,000, small-claims matters seeking monetary damages up to $5,000, and landlord and tenant matters. The criminal jurisdiction of the court includes trials over misdemeanors, violations, and infractions, preliminary jurisdiction over felonies, and jurisdiction over traffic tickets charging a crime. In Suffolk County, the jurisdiction of the court also includes town ordinance offenses prosecuted by the towns.[1][2] This subject-matter jurisdiction is the same as the city courts within New York State.[4]
Organization
The Nassau County District Court is divided into four districts, all of which sit in Hempstead, New York.[1] The first district covers criminal cases countywide.[5] The other three districts cover civil cases, and are organized by town and city: the second covers Hempstead and Long Beach,[6] the third covers North Hempstead,[7] and the fourth covers Oyster Bay and Glen Cove.[8]
The Suffolk County District Court is divided into six districts. The first, having a "central location", covers criminal cases in all five towns. The other five districts, having "outlying courthouses", are each coextensive with one of the towns, and have jurisdiction over civil matters, small claims, landlord and tenant matters, and town ordinances.[3] The six districts are: