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Appellate Court Operations and Reversal Rates

NCJ Number
139462
Author(s)
T B Marvell
Date Published
1992
Length
17 pages
Annotation
The impacts of caseload growth, delays, and unpublished opinions on reversal rates in appellate courts were examined using the Granger test, a commonly used econometric procedure for exploring causal direction when simultaneity bias is suspected.
Abstract
The Granger test was applied to data from five intermediate appellate courts for cases filed in 1971 to 1987, applying the fixed effects model, the standard regression procedure for pooled data. The courts were Division One of the Arizona Court of Appeals, the Colorado Court of Appeals, the New Mexico Court of Appeals, the Oregon Court of Appeals, and Division III of the Washington Courts of Appeals. The sample consisted of 2,094 criminal and 1,966 civil appeals in Arizona; 1,457 and 2,016 in Colorado; 2,311 and 2,043 in new Mexico; 1,800 and 2,248 in Oregon; and 1,418 and 2,539 in Washington. The data were aggregated according to court and year of filing, for a total sample size of 81 for criminal cases and 84 for civil. Results indicated that higher caseloads per judge lead to lower reversal rates in civil appeals. The data also indicated that reducing the portion of opinions published leads to lower reversal rates in criminal appeals, although the impact is slight. Tables and 10 references