NCJ Number
103761
Date Published
1986
Length
7 pages
Annotation
Information from 45 States on appellate court caseloads and operations for 1968-1984 was analyzed to determine whether the courts have handled enormous caseload pressures, court changes in response to the pressures, and which changes have been most effective.
Abstract
Information was obtained from court annual reports, unpublished statistics, court rules, case reporters, interviews with court staff, and the large body of law review and other literature on appellate court operations. Even though caseloads are growing much faster than the number of judgeships required to keep pace, appellate court dispositions are not falling behind. The number of appeals decided per judge is increasing dramatically, with about half of the increase attributable to judges' adjustment of their work habits more than to procedural changes to enhance efficiency. Courts have responded to caseload growth with a variety of changes. Adding judges generally produces a proportionate increase in decisions, and creating or expanding intermediate courts has increased output in accordance with the number of new judgeships. Among the procedural changes, deciding appeals without opinion has the greatest impact, followed by limiting opinion publication. Using memo opinions, limiting oral arguments, and adding law clerks have moderate impacts. Changes having minimal impact on decision output include reducing panel size, using summary judgment procedures, and adding staff attorneys. See NCJ 103762 for related document.