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Attitudinal Dimensions of Voting There is frequently disagreement among judges on State Supreme Courts Factors to explain this disagreement include partisan attitudes ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Chapter Topics


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(No Transcript)
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Chapter Topics
Nature of the Appellate Process The Business of
the Appellate Courts Caseloads and
ExpeditedProcessing Techniques Post-Conviction
Remedies
3
Chapter Topics
Decision Making on Appellate Courts Explaining
Decision Making on Appellate Courts Today State
Supreme Courts U.S. Courts of Appeals
4
The Nature of the Appellate Process
  • appellate courts subject the decision of another
    court to a second look
  • they focus on the legal controversy rather than
    the facts in a case
  • contributes to the legitimacy of the legal
    system
  • only a small number of cases decided every year
    in trial courses will be appealed

5
The Nature of the Appellate Process
  • appeals courts are multimember
  • intermediate courts of appeals typically hear
    cases as 3 member panels
  • occasionally they hear cases with all members of
    the court, referred to as en banc (can be as many
    as 28 judges)
  • appellate cases present controversies about the
    law and their decisions are binding on all courts
    in their jurisdiction

6
The Purposes of Appeal
  • error correction
  • ensure the law was correctly applied during
    trial
  • policy formulation
  • sometimes referred to as lawmaking
  • happens when the court fills in gaps in the law,
    clarifies doctrines, clarifies the law, overturns
    previous decisions

7
Scope of Appellate Review
  • the losing party at trial generally has the
    right to one appeal
  • only the losing party may file an appeal
  • prosecutors may not appeal not guilty verdicts
    the Constitution protects citizens from double
    jeopardy being prosecuted twice for the same
    crime

8
Scope of Appellate Review
  • appeals are discretionary (except capital
    punishment cases) most losing litigants will
    not file an appeal
  • appeals must be from final judgments
  • focus on questions of law not fact
  • issues appealed must have been raised during the
    trial (objections during the trial)

9
Scope of Appellate Review
  • the losing party only has a right to one appeal
  • appeals courts have
  • mandatory jurisdiction over some matters (these
    are cases they are required to hear)
  • discretionary jurisdiction (the court may pick
    and choose which cases it will hear)

10
Appellate Court Procedures
  • there are six general steps
  • launching the appeal the appellant (losing
    party in the lower court) must file a notice of
    appeal
  • preparing and transmitting the record the
    papers and exhibits (e.g., transcript) are
    transferred from the lower court
  • writing and filing briefs a brief is the
    written argument stating why one side should win.
    The appellant files a brief and then the
    appellee (or respondent) files, following by an
    another opportunity for the appellant.

11
Appellate Court Procedures
4) Oral Argument the lawyers for both parties
are given an opportunity to argue their case
before the judges. Lawyers present their case
and judges ask questions. 5) Writing the Opinion
after the case has been decided the judges will
decide the case, writing an opinion which
summarizes the facts an explains the legal issues
and the basis of the decision. Judges who
disagree may write a dissenting opinion
explaining why they disagree with their fellow
judges. 6) Disposing of the case the appellate
court may affirm (uphold) the lower court
judgment, modify (change part of the ruling, or
reverse it (set aside). Sometimes they will
remand the case (send it back to the lower court
with instructions).
12
Appellate Court Procedures
  • Appellate courts
  • Modify
  • Reverse
  • Remand
  • Reverse and Remand
  • Only when there is error at the trial level
  • Substantial error is reversible
  • Trivial errors is deemed harmless

13
The Business of Appellate Courts
  • Appellate courts have limited original
    jurisdiction (e.g., appeals from administrative
    agencies)
  • Most cases come on appeal (e.g., reviewing a
    lower court decision)
  • Most trial court filings are never appealed
    because the parties reach mutually agreeable,
    voluntary settlement

14
Civil Appeals
  • Three facts drive the decision to file an appeal
  • 1) how much litigants have lost in the lower
    court high stakes cases are appealed more
    frequently
  • 2) likelihood of success
  • 3) financial considerations appeals are
    expensive

15
Civil Appeals
  • A substantial number of appeals are filed every
    year
  • In federal court civil appears are more likely
    to be reversed (12) than criminal (6)
  • Research has been conducted that shows resources
    (financial, legal) may matter at the appeals stage

16
Criminal Appeals
  • Indigents defendants have a right to appeals
    because of Warren Court decisions in the 60s
  • Today criminal appeals constitute about 50 of
    all appeals
  • Criminal appeals are a) relatively homogenous, b)
    largely routine, c) rarely successful, d) those
    who are successful are likely to be the least
    serious offenses

17
Caseloads and Expedited Processing Techniques
  • After World War II the appellate caseload grew
    dramatically
  • There has also been a shift in the type of
    casestoday they are much more complex than those
    of previous decades
  • The response has been to increase resources (more
    courts/judges) and improve efficiency

18
Increasing Resources
  • The first response was to create intermediate
    courts of appeals and additional judgeships
  • Create additional staff for judges (e.g. law
    clerks), who can do some of the routine work
  • No guarantee that increasing resources will
    result in less delay

19
Improving Efficiency
  • Assumes that all cases are not the same, some can
    be handled quickly (e.g., routine, hopeless,
    frivolous), while others require a time consuming
    review (as few as 10)
  • Some argue for eliminating oral argument
  • Issue summary affirmationsaffirms lower court
    ruling with offering an opinion

20
Improving Efficiency
  • Generate unpublished opinionshas the benefit of
    reducing workload and concern over the amount of
    law one must study to become a lawyer
  • Another reform effort focuses on settlement
    conferences--which focus on creating policy
  • Settlement conference help the parties reach
    mutually agreeable positions

21
Post Conviction Remedies
  • After the appeals process is over federal
    prisoners may challenged their convictions by
    filing a lawsuit (e.g., collateral attacks)
  • 1) Differ from appeals because they can only be
    filed by prisoners
  • 2) limited to constitutional defects
  • 3) not limited by issues raised at trial
  • 4) are unlimited in number

22
Habeas Corpus Relief
  • Post conviction remedies are referred to as
    habeas corpusan order to someone holding a
    person to bring that person before the court.
  • Protected by Article I of the U.S. Constitution,
    often described as the great writ
  • Prevents government from jailing citizens without
    filing charges

23
Habeas Corpus Relief
  • Expanding and Contracting the Great Writ
  • Originally seen as an extraordinary effort
  • Warren Court (1960s) expanded the scope of habeas
    corpus
  • 1960 2,000 petitions
  • 1996 68,000 petitions
  • Recent court have cut back on habeas relief

24
Habeas Corpus Relief
  • Expanding and Contracting the Great Writ
  • seen as an extraordinary effort
  • Warren Court (1960s) expanded the scope of habeas
    corpus
  • 1960 2,000 petitions, 1996 68,000 petitions
  • Recent Courts have cut back on habeas relief,
    petitioners are rarely successful (2)

25
Restricting Federal Habeas Corpus
  • 1996 Antiterrorism and Effective Death Penalty
    Act does
  • One year deadline for filing habeas petition
  • Limits successive positions
  • Restricts review of state petitioner claims
  • Requires a certificate of appealability
  • Limits on habeas challenged but Supreme Court
    upheld law
  • Lengthy review process is seen by some as soft on
    crime

26
Decision Making on Appellate Courts
  • Decision of court may be reviewable by another
    level of courts
  • Decisions are made by groups of judges
  • Political scientists have focused a great deal of
    energy on trying to explain appellate court
    decision making
  • A large number of appellate decisions are
    non-unanimous

27
Decision Making on Appellate Courts
  • Non-unanimous decisions are interesting to study
    because there is disagreement about the law
    across judges who are looking at the same case
  • Disagreement happens on all courts The Supreme
    Court, courts of appeals and State Supreme Courts
  • Political scientists offer four ways to explain
    decision making

28
Legal Factors
  • The legal model asserts that judges make
    decisions primarily based on the facts of the
    case, the legal statutes involved and the
    controlling legal precedent (stare decisis)
  • Advocates argue the law cannot be the only factor
    because otherwise all judges would reach the same
    decision
  • the law is often contradictory

29
Attitudinal Dimensions
  • Advocates argue that judges are similar to other
    policy makers
  • Votes are one way to express their views about
    politics and society
  • Advocates focus on judges ideologies and their
    values to explain decisions

30
Institutional Differences
  • Advocates argue that the format of multi-member
    judicial panels affects decision making
  • Small groups make decisions differently than
    individuals
  • An individual judge may moderate their views to
    reach agreement with others on the panel

31
Strategic Differences
  • This approach assumes that judges act on their
    attitudes in a sophisticated way
  • Their goal is to get the most preferred outcome
    in this particular case, but also to try and
    influence the law in later cases
  • A strategic judge may give up their position in a
    less preferred legal matter to get support later

32
State Supreme Courts
  • Decide 25,000 cases a year
  • Most decisions will be the final word (very few
    are reviewed by the Supreme Court)
  • Engage primarily in error correction, but
    increasingly they are involved in policy
    formulation
  • An increasing focus on their decisions

33
Legal Factors and State Supreme Courts
  • Decisions based on state constitutional law
  • State constitutions are typically longer than the
    U.S. Constitution
  • New Judicial Federalism refers to the movement in
    state courts to use State Constitutions as
    sources of individual rights (in contrast to
    using the U.S. Constitution)

34
Attitudinal Dimensions of Voting
  • There is frequently disagreement among judges on
    State Supreme Courts
  • Factors to explain this disagreement include
    partisan attitudes, religion, gender, age, race,
    pre-judicial career, etc.
  • Some cases leave little room for judges policy
    preferences to have an impact (i.e., the law is
    clear)

35
Institutional Differences
  • The legal and political contexts of state supreme
    courts varies considerably
  • Rules and operating procedures are different
    across the states
  • Important differences include judicial voting
    order, opinion assignment, control over their
    dockets (discretionary v. mandatory jurisdiction)

36
Strategic Considerations
  • These models include legal, attitudinal and
    institutional factors
  • Institutional factors include such forces as
    whether the judges have prior representative
    service, whether they are from single member
    districts and whether the case is heard near the
    beginning or end of their term
  • Models show a complex decision making process

37
U.S. Courts of Appeals
  • A new focus on courts of appeals judges and their
    decisions
  • Decisions set the contours of law and policy
  • Most of their decisions will not be reviewed by
    the Supreme Court
  • Determine precedent in their respective circuits

38
Legal Factors and Courts of Appeals
  • Decide over 60,000 cases a year
  • Most cases generate unanimous decisions
  • Studies have demonstrated that precedent (i.e.,
    the law) is important in case outcomes
  • Judges are obligated to apply the precedent
    established by the Supreme Court

39
Attitudinal Dimensions of Voting
  • Sheldon Goldman (1966) concluded that Republican
    judges tend to be more conservative than their
    Democratic colleagues
  • Research shows that Democratic presidents appoint
    different types of judges than Republicans
  • Judges appointed by Democrats render a greater
    percentage of liberal decisions

40
Institutional Differences
  • The 13 circuit courts of appeals are separated
    geographically
  • Research shows different ideological and policy
    environments across the circuits
  • The composition of the three-judge panels is
    constantly changing
  • The relationship of panels to the views of the
    full circuit varies (en banc review)

41
Strategic Considerations
  • New research on the Courts of Appeals applies,
    legal, attitudinal, and institutional models to
    explain decision-making
  • Studies have looked at a) when en banc review is
    granted, whether panel judges write separately,
    the home-state influence
  • Research concludes that all factors influence
    Circuit court judicial behavior

42
Conclusion
  • Appellate courts review the decisions of lower
    courts
  • Appellate court caseloads have been increasing
    rapidly
  • Primarily engaged in error correction but also
    involved in policy making
  • Decision making is a complex combination of
    legal, attitudinal, institutional and strategic
    factors
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