South Carolina Supreme Court

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Databases Updated on Oct 13, 2025

South Carolina Supreme Court cases in Richland County, Columbia, SC

Columbia Municipal Court is a municipal (summary) court serving the City of Columbia, South Carolina. It handles lower-level criminal and traffic matters arising within city limits, enforcing municipal ordinances and adjudicating state-law misdemeanors within summary-court limits (offenses punishable by up to a $500 fine or 30 days' imprisonment). Typical cases include traffic violations (such as speeding and first-offense DUI), municipal code and ordinance violations, and minor criminal charges. The court processes citations, hearings, and trials (bench or jury) for these matters and imposes fines, fees, and restitution as authorized by law. It does not hear civil lawsuits or family/probate matters, which are handled by other South Carolina courts.

South Carolina Supreme Court Contact and Location Information

Court Type: Supreme Court
County: Richland
Street Address: 1231 Gervais St.
City: Columbia
Zip Code: 29201
Phone: 803-734-1800
Fax: 803-734-1821
Hours: Monday - Friday 8:30AM - 5:00PM
Website URL: https://www.sccourts.org/supreme/
Directions: The Supreme Court Building is located at the corner of Gervais and Sumter Streets in downtown Columbia.Driving Directions:From I-20 W, merge onto SC-277 S via Exit 73A toward Columbia. Stay straight to go onto Bull Street. Turn right onto Gervais Street.From I-26 E, merge onto I-126 E via Exit 108B toward downtown Columbia. Merge onto Huger Street. Turn left onto Gervais Street.From I-26 W, merge onto US-1 Augusta Hwy via Exit 111A toward Columbia. US-1 becomes Gervais Street.
Forms & Filing: https://www.sccourts.org/forms/searchType.cfm
Dockets / Schedule / Calendar: https://www.sccourts.org/calendar/dspSearchEvents.cfm
Languages: Multiple
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/pages/South-Carolina-Supreme-Court/128859110489737
About / Additional Info: The Supreme Court is the highest court in South Carolina. The Court is composed of a Chief Justice and four Associate Justices who are elected to ten year terms by the General Assembly.The Supreme Court is located in Columbia. Until 1971, the court operated in a portion of the State House. In that year, the old Columbia Post Office, which had been purchased by the State in 1966, was reopened as the Supreme Court Building.Primarily the Supreme Court is an appellate court, which means that it reviews rulings of law reached by lower courts at trial or on appeal from other tribunals and agencies. A matter on appeal to the Supreme Court may be orally argued or decided simply on the briefs submitted by attorneys for each side. On occasion, a third party is permitted to submit a brief as a "friend of the Court" (amicus curiae) to allow the Court to receive additional views and information.The decisions of the South Carolina Supreme Court are printed in permanent form in volumes called the South Carolina Reports, which are found in law libraries throughout the State and which record our legal history back to the 1790s.
Wikipedia: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/South_Carolina_Supreme_Court

Services and Case Types Handled in South Carolina Supreme Court

Columbia Municipal Court serves the public by adjudicating city ordinance, misdemeanor, and traffic violations. Services include case intake and filings (citations, complaints, warrants, motions), scheduling and conducting arraignments, bond hearings, pretrial conferences, bench and jury trials, and sentencings. It manages jury services (summons, qualification, deferrals, orientation), accepts fine and fee payments, sets and modifies bonds, issues subpoenas and bench warrants, and oversees probation/compliance, diversion, and community service when ordered. The court provides calendars, case-status and court-date information, continuance requests, records/certified copies, interpreter and accessibility accommodations, and remote-hearing instructions where available. Protective relief is generally limited to no-contact or stay-away orders in criminal matters; domestic orders of protection or broader restraining orders are typically addressed in other courts, with information and referrals provided.

Other Municipal Courts in SC