A litigant should exhaust any prescribed administrative remedies available before seeking judicial review. Where relief is available from an administrative agency, the plaintiff is ordinarily required to pursue that avenue of redress before proceeding to the courts. Until that recourse is exhausted, the suit is premature and must be dismissed.
Please explain for the people in the back. We all like a good presentation.
Source: https://administrativelaw.uslegal.com/judicial-review-of-administrative-decisions/exhaustion-of-administrative-remedies/
Not a legal pede, I just know how to DuckDuckGo things :)
Oh Christ. How many times do I have to explain original jurisdiction in these threads? Exhausting administrative remedies doesn't apply.
It only applies to the particular case at hand. In a case where it's state vs state, THERE ARE NO ADMINISTRATIVE REMEDIES.
Any sources for this claim to read more..? Very unfamiliar with the legal rights of states as far as court room proceedings are concerned.