New York State Unified Court System

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New York State Unified Court System

Court of Appeals
Supreme Court, Appellate Division
Supreme Court
Court of Claims
Surrogate's Court
New York City Courts (Civil, Criminal)

The New York State Unified Court System is the official name of the judicial system of New York in the United States. Based in Albany, the New York State Judiciary is a unified state court system that functions under the Chief Judge of the New York Court of Appeals who is its administrator-in-chief and known as "The Chief Judge of New York." Note that this terminology differs from that of other states.

Contents

Chief Judge

The chief judge supervises the seven-judge Court of Appeals.[1] In addition, the chief judge oversees the work of the state's Unified Court system, which as of 2009, had a $2.5 billion annual budget and more than 16,000 employees.[1]

Chief Administrative Judge

The Chief Administrative Judge oversees the administration and operation of the Statewide court system with a $2 billion budget, 3,600 State and locally paid Judges and over 15,000 nonjudicial employees in over 300 locations around the State.

Principal Courts

There are three levels of courts in the state: 1) the courts of original instance, where the initial court proceedings occur; 2) the intermediate appellate courts; and 3) the courts of final appeal. Jurisdiction differs for civil and criminal courts.

Court of final appeal

The New York State Court of Appeals is the State's highest court, and makes binding decisions over appeals from the lower courts upon transfer from a) the Appellate Division alone for civil cases; and b) (1) the Appellate Division, (2) the Appellate Terms of the Supreme Court 1st and 2nd Department, and (3) County Courts, for criminal cases.

Appellate Terms of the Supreme Court 1st and 2nd Departments

This court may review decisions made by City, Town and Village Courts, and District Courts for civil and criminal cases.

Additionally, it may review cases from NYC Civil and Criminal Courts. It may review cases from County Courts for criminal cases.

Appeals from its decisions are made directly to the highest court of the state for criminal cases, The Court of Appeals. For civil cases, appeals may be made to the Appellate Divisions of the Supreme Court.

Court of final appeal for civil; an intermediate appellate court for criminal

The New York Supreme Court, Appellate Division is the State's second highest court that reviews appeals from state trial court or agency decisions. Its decisions, under certain circumstances, are subject to the New York Court of Appeals review. Note that this terminology for this court is different from most other states where "supreme" means highest instead of "superior." This court is divided into four departments, one court for each department. This court is also responsible for admission of new lawyers to the state's bar—a duty which in almost all other states is carried out by the jurisdiction's highest court.

Intermediate appellate court for both civil and criminal cases; a court of original instance for criminal cases

The New York State County Courts is the first level of appeal from the City, Town, and Village Courts for both criminal and civil matters. After it rules, civil cases may be appealed to the Appellate Division of the Supreme Court; criminal cases may be appealed directly to the highest court, the Court of appeals.

Civil and criminal cases may be initially tried here in certain cases. Rulings from those cases may be appealed to either the Appellate Division of the Supreme Court or the Appellate Terms if the Supreme Court 1st and 2nd Departments.

Courts of original instance

The court system is different at the trial court and civil court level in New York City. See New York City Criminal Court and the New York City Civil Court. The following describes the system for the rest of the state outside of New York City.

Other Courts

Historical Courts

See also

External links

References