State of New York Court of Appeals
From Judgepedia
| State of New York Court of Appeals |
|---|
| Sitting judges |
| Carmen Beauchamp Ciparick Victoria Graffeo Robert Smith Theodore Jones Susan Read Eugene Pigott |
| Former justices |
| New York on Judgepedia |
Contents |
The New York Court of Appeals is New York's highest appellate court, created in 1847, replacing the Court for the Trial of Impeachments and the Correction of Errors. Its 1842 neoclassical courthouse is located in New York's capital, Albany.
Jurisdiction
According to the New York Constitution, the jurisdiction of the Court of Appeals is limited to the "review of questions of law except where the judgment is of death."[1]
Case load
In 2007, the court decided 185 appeals, 135 of which were civil, and 50 were criminal.[2] The court decided 1,440 motions in the same year.
The court's justices
Selection of justices
The New York Court of Appeals consists of seven judges; one chief judge and six associate judges. Previously, judges were elected to the seat on the bench, judges are now appointed by the governor to 14-year terms.
Qualifications
To be considered a qualified candidate to the New York Court of Appeals, a person must have been admitted to practice law for at least five years.[3] This is described in the New York Constitution, Article Six, Section 20, which is found here.
Current justices
| Name | Appointed/Elected | Term expires | Appointing Governor | Governor's Political affiliation |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Chief Justice Jonathan Lippman | February 13, 2009 | 2023 | Governor David Paterson | Democrat |
| Carmen Beauchamp Ciparick | 1993 | 2022 | Governor Mario Cuomo | Democrat |
| Victoria Graffeo | 2000 | 2014 | Governor George Pataki | Republican |
| Robert Smith | 2004 | 2018 | Governor George Pataki | Republican |
| Theodore Jones | 2007 | 2021 | Governor Eliot Spitzer | Democrat |
| Susan Read | 2003 | 2017 | Governor George Pataki | Republican |
| Eugene Pigott | 2006 | 2020 | Governor George Pataki | Republican |
Chief justice
On January 13, 2009, Governor Paterson appointed Judge Lippman to be Chief Judge of the New York Court of Appeals. This was to replace Judge Judith Kaye. Jonathan Lippman was formerly a judge on the New York Supreme Court, Appellate Division.
Notable decisions
The court is notable for being one of only two states to declare the death penalty statute unconstitutional, which the court did in the case of People v. LaValle in June 2004.
In July 2006, the court, applying rational-basis scrutiny, held 4-2 (Judge Albert M. Rosenblatt recused) that the New York Constitution does not compel recognition of same-sex marriage. Judge Robert Smith, writing for the three-judge plurality, stated that "[w]hether such marriages should be recognized is a question to be addressed by the Legislature."[4] Judge Victoria Graffeo concurred. Chief Judge Judith Kaye, in a dissent signed onto by Judge Carmen Beauchamp Ciparick, criticized the majority opinion. Arguing that homosexuals are a "suspect class" and that the law infringes "the fundamental right to marry," Kaye stated the law warranted "heightened or strict scrutiny" rather than the rational-basis analysis applied by the majority.[5]
Notable judges
The Court's most famous judge was Benjamin Cardozo (who was later appointed to the Supreme Court of the United States). Cardozo authored many landmark cases during his tenure, including Palsgraf v. Long Island Rail, MacPherson v. Buick and Wood v. Lucy. During the late 20th century, the most famous judge on the Court of Appeals was Chief Judge Sol Wachtler, who was elected to the court in 1972 and appointed Chief Judge in 1985. He was renowned for the fine quality of his legal opinions. Wachtler's career ended disastrously in November 1992 when the FBI arrested him for stalking a wealthy woman with whom he had previously been having an affair.
History of the court
To replace the Court for the Correction of Errors and the Court of Chancery, the Court of Appeals was created out of the state constitution of 1846. The court originated with eight members, four were elected and four were chosen each year by the Supreme Court justices. With the amendment to the constitution in 1869, all judges of the court were replaced with seven new judges that were elected by general ballot in 1870. These judges served terms of 14 years.[6]
Differences in nomenclature
In New York, unlike most other states, the court designated as the "Supreme Court of the State of New York" is the trial court rather than the highest court of the state; this nomenclature sometimes leads to confusion. Another quirk that leads to confusion is in the titles of the jurists who sit on the court. In most states and the federal court system, members of the highest court are titled "Justices." In New York, the members of the Court of Appeals are titled "Judges," while those who preside in the lower trial courts are known as "Justices." In New York, the Chief Judge of the Court of Appeals is also the head of the court system's administration, and is thus also known as the Chief Judge of the State of New York. Currently, that is Chief Judge Judith S. Kaye, who is spearheading an effort to reform criminal sentencing by considering the collateral consequences of criminal charges.
See also
- New York Court of Appeals
- Supreme Court of the State of New York
- New York Supreme Court, Appellate Division
- New York Civil Courts
- New York County Courts
- New York Surrogate Courts
- New York Family Courts
- New York Court of Statewide Claims
- New York Town Courts
- New York Village Courts
- New York City Civil Court
- New York City Criminal Court
- New York District Court Nassau & Suffolk
- New York City Courts (Outside New York City)
- New York judicial news
- Judicial selection in New York
- New York blogs
External links
- New York State Court of Appeals
- New York State Unified Court System
- New York Official Reports Site
- New York Official Reports for the Court of Appeals
- Caseload crisis in court
- New York Court of Appeals Annual Report 2007
References
Portions of this article have been taken from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia. Copyright Notice can be found here.
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