In Re Certification for Add'l Judges

755 So. 2d 79, 2000 WL 226340
CourtSupreme Court of Florida
DecidedFebruary 29, 2000
DocketSC00-372
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 755 So. 2d 79 (In Re Certification for Add'l Judges) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Florida primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re Certification for Add'l Judges, 755 So. 2d 79, 2000 WL 226340 (Fla. 2000).

Opinion

755 So.2d 79 (2000)

In re CERTIFICATION OF the NEED FOR ADDITIONAL JUDGES.

No. SC00-372.

Supreme Court of Florida.

February 29, 2000.

HARDING, C.J.

Under the provisions of article V, section 9 of the Florida Constitution, the Supreme Court of Florida is responsible for determining the need for additional judges or the necessity for decreasing the number of judges required to consider cases filed before the respective courts. To this end, we have analyzed case filings and disposition data, and evaluated the growth in judicial workload over the past several years. These data and the requests of the various circuit and district courts have been made available to the Legislature through the Office of the State Courts Administrator.

After carefully reviewing requests for a total of 51 new judges, we hereby certify the need for 30 additional circuit judges and 13 additional county judges, for a total of 43 new judicial positions. A comparison of the requests for new judges filed by the respective courts and the new judges certified as needed for Fiscal Year 2000-01 follows:

                  Judgeships      Judgeships                       Judgeships      Judgeships
Circuit Court      Requested       Certified      County Court      Requested       Certified
First                 1                 1         Okaloosa              1               1
Second                2                 1
Third                 1                 1
Fourth                2                 2         Duval                 2               1
Fifth                 3                 2         Lake                  1               1
Sixth                 2                 1         Pasco                 1               1
                                                  Pinellas              1               1
Seventh               1                 1
Eighth                1                 0
Ninth                 3                 3         Orange                1               0
Tenth                 1                 1         Polk                  1               1
Eleventh              3                 3
Twelfth               0                 0         Sarasota              1               1
Thirteenth            2                 2         Hillsborough          2               2
Fourteenth            1                 1
Fifteenth             3                 3         Palm Beach            2               0
Sixteenth             0                 0
Seventeenth           4                 4         Broward               2               2
Eighteenth            1                 1         Brevard               2               2
Nineteenth            1                 1
Twentieth             2                 2
Totals               34                30         Totals               17              13

DISTRICT COURTS OF APPEAL

The criteria for certification of the need for additional judges in the district courts of appeal are set forth in rule 2.035(b)(2), Florida Rules of Judicial Administration. The Court did not receive any requests for additional judges from the five district courts of appeal. The last new judgeship for the district courts was authorized in 1999, for the Fifth District Court of Appeal. This was the first new judgeship at the district court level since 1993.

The number of net annual filings in the district courts is forecast to undergo a slight decrease, although some of the individual district courts will still experience modest increases. It is forecast that a total of 21,176 cases will be filed in the district courts in the year 2000, which is less than a one percent decrease from 1998. This decrease comes after a period of steady growth in caseloads, from 1993 through 1997.

*80 In previous years, the district courts have addressed workload pressures through various means. They have improved internal operating procedures, established central legal research staffs to handle selected matters, assigned senior judges to hear appeals on a temporary basis, and experimented with mediation of selected matters. We encourage the district courts to continue developing alternative means to efficiently and fairly resolve the cases brought before them.

For the foregoing reasons, we are not certifying the need for any additional district court of appeal judgeships. However, we urge the Legislature's favorable consideration of requests by the district courts of appeal for workload-related resources.

TRIAL COURTS

The criteria for certification of the need for judges in trial courts, which the Court has used in the past, are set forth in rule 2.035(b)(1), Florida Rules of Judicial Administration. Consistent with previous practice, we have placed the greatest weight on quantitative data reflecting the growth and composition of caseloads in the various circuit and county courts.

Additionally, this year we applied a Delphi-based caseload weighting system in assessing judicial workload, pursuant to a request by the Florida Legislature in proviso language in the 1998 General Appropriations Act. In doing so, we have made a good faith effort to satisfy both the letter and intent of the proviso language adopted by the Florida Legislature, which states that:

$75,000 shall be used to contract for the development of a Delphi-based caseload weighting system to determine the optimum caseloads for circuit and county judges and, in conjunction with other factors, to determine the need for additional circuit and county court judges. The judicial branch shall consult with the Office of Program Policy Analysis and Government Accountability on defining the scope of work, selecting a consultant, and choosing a methodology for developing case weights and determining available judge time. A report shall be issued not later than February 1, 1999 on the development of case weights and their use in the judicial certification process.

The overall effort to develop case weights was highly inclusive of judges representing all twenty judicial circuits and every division of court in urban as well as rural jurisdictions. The Delphi Policy Committee, appointed by the Chief Justice to guide the project, worked closely with the National Center for State Courts and the Office of the State Courts Administrator to achieve a successful conclusion. Continuous input was also solicited from chief judges and the Court Statistics and Workload Committee. Acceptance of the results of the Florida Delphi-based weighted caseload project by chief judges and participating trial judges is high. The consulting team from the National Center for State Courts was comprised of professionals with experience developing weighted caseload systems for a number of states, including Michigan, Minnesota, Colorado, Wisconsin, and New Mexico. Their experience contributed significantly to the quality of the work product. Further, we have sought the active participation and advice of the Office of Program Policy Analysis and Government Accountability throughout this project.

The high level of interest and participation in the study and the methodology utilized by the National Center for State Courts resulted in a rigorous assessment of judicial workload. The Florida Delphi Weighted Caseload Final Report (hereinafter referred to as the Delphi Report) details the rationale for and methodology employed in development of the recommended case weights. The decisions of the Delphi Policy Committee which set the parameters for the project were validated by a time study. We find the assumptions made by the consultants, as outlined in *81 Appendix G of the Delphi Report, to be reasonable.

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Related

In Re Certification for Additional Judges
863 So. 2d 1191 (Supreme Court of Florida, 2003)
In Re Certification of Need for Add. Judges
842 So. 2d 100 (Supreme Court of Florida, 2003)
Certification of Need for Additional Judges
806 So. 2d 446 (Supreme Court of Florida, 2002)
In Re Certif. of Need for Add'l Judges
780 So. 2d 906 (Supreme Court of Florida, 2001)
MW v. Davis
756 So. 2d 90 (Supreme Court of Florida, 2000)

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755 So. 2d 79, 2000 WL 226340, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-certification-for-addl-judges-fla-2000.