Like our sister appellate courts, we are a “court of errors.” We do not re-try cases. Our charge is to review proceedings in the courts and administrative agencies over which we have appellate jurisdiction and to correct errors that affect the outcome of those proceedings. Our ability to do that effectively and efficiently depends in large measure on how well the members of the practicing bar bring the errors to our attention for adjudication. To assist the bar in this task, I make the following observations and offer a few suggestions on what I have learned about effective appellate practice from the briefs I have read and the arguments I have heard as a member of the Federal Circuit bench
As the number of cases filed each year has surged, U.S. federal appellate courts have evolved in ord...
The standard justification for the general prohibition against the evaluation of facts by appellat...
Case management practices of appellate courts have a significant effect on the outcome of appeals. D...
Like our sister appellate courts, we are a “court of errors.” We do not re-try cases. Our charge is ...
Lawyers make four critical mistakes in current appellate practice. First, many appellants\u27 lawyer...
Every appellate decision typically begins with the standard of appellate review. The Supreme Court h...
An appellate court is often characterized by the opinions that it writes. Though an appellate opinio...
Courts of review have now become highly specialized parts of our justice system. This was not the ca...
Appellate review can be understood as an opportunity to correct errors made by lower courts and, by ...
This edition promises to redefine the canon of the study of appellate courts, continuing the compreh...
A book review on Virginia Lawyers Practice Handbook: Appellate Practice: Virginia and Federal Courts...
Case management practices of appellate courts have a significant effect on the outcome of appeals. D...
To succeed at the CAFC, the advocate must succeed in three stages of appeal. The first stage of appe...
Federal district court judges have several mechanisms for controlling civil jury functions. One mech...
In 2011 the United States Court of Appeals for the Eleventh Circuit decided a number of cases of fir...
As the number of cases filed each year has surged, U.S. federal appellate courts have evolved in ord...
The standard justification for the general prohibition against the evaluation of facts by appellat...
Case management practices of appellate courts have a significant effect on the outcome of appeals. D...
Like our sister appellate courts, we are a “court of errors.” We do not re-try cases. Our charge is ...
Lawyers make four critical mistakes in current appellate practice. First, many appellants\u27 lawyer...
Every appellate decision typically begins with the standard of appellate review. The Supreme Court h...
An appellate court is often characterized by the opinions that it writes. Though an appellate opinio...
Courts of review have now become highly specialized parts of our justice system. This was not the ca...
Appellate review can be understood as an opportunity to correct errors made by lower courts and, by ...
This edition promises to redefine the canon of the study of appellate courts, continuing the compreh...
A book review on Virginia Lawyers Practice Handbook: Appellate Practice: Virginia and Federal Courts...
Case management practices of appellate courts have a significant effect on the outcome of appeals. D...
To succeed at the CAFC, the advocate must succeed in three stages of appeal. The first stage of appe...
Federal district court judges have several mechanisms for controlling civil jury functions. One mech...
In 2011 the United States Court of Appeals for the Eleventh Circuit decided a number of cases of fir...
As the number of cases filed each year has surged, U.S. federal appellate courts have evolved in ord...
The standard justification for the general prohibition against the evaluation of facts by appellat...
Case management practices of appellate courts have a significant effect on the outcome of appeals. D...