- Florida District Courts of Appeal
The Florida District Courts of Appeal (DCAs) were created in
1957 to provide an intermediate level of appellate review between the county courts and state circuit courts on the one hand and theFlorida Supreme Court on the other. This was done, as in other parts of theUnited States , to relieve the state supreme court from ever increasing appellate workloads.History
In 1957, the Florida Legislature created the District Courts of Appeal. This was thanks in part to a lobbying effort by Florida Supreme Court Justice
Elwyn Thomas . The DCAs were to help handle the ever-increasing court docket. The DCAs would provide another layer ofjudicial review before a case would reach the supreme court (if supreme court review would still be deemed necessary).Three DCAs were created at first. The Third DCA was given jurisdiction over cases arising from Dade and Monroe counties. Later, two additional DCAs (the Fourth and Fifth) would found to be required.
The existence of the DCAs is now constitutional in nature. The
Florida Constitution now requires the Legislature to divide the State into appellate court districts, providing each with a DCA.The Final Five
At this point, there are five District Courts of Appeal:
*The First District Court of Appeal is headquartered in
Tallahassee
*The Second District Court of Appeal is headquartered inLakeland and has a branch inTampa
*The Third District Court of Appeal is headquartered inMiami
*The Fourth District Court of Appeal is headquartered inWest Palm Beach
*The Fifth District Court of Appeal is headquartered inDaytona Beach Judges
DCA
judge s, like Florida Supreme Court Justices, are first recommended by theFlorida Judicial Nominating Commission . They are then appointed by thegovernor , but they must be retained by the voters every six years. DCAs have different numbers of judges - currently ranging from 11 to 15 - based on regional needs.Jurisdiction
Appeals are usually heard by a three-judge panel. Occasionally a DCA will hold an "
en banc " hearing, in which all the judges participate.The decisions and case law precedent of each district court of appeal are binding upon all circuit and county courts within that district court's jurisdiction. Case law and decisions from another district court of appeal are persuasive and often cited within the courts of other appellate districts, but are not binding precedent in those other districts. In the event of conflict between the precedent of different district courts of appeal, county and circuit courts must adhere to the case law of their own district. District courts of appeal may recede from certain case law and precedent in subsequent decisions, or the Supreme Court may override a district court's precedent in favor of conflicting case law from another district.
Because the Florida Supreme Court has predominantly
discretionary jurisdiction (i.e., can choose which cases it wants to hear), the DCAs provide the final word on the vast majority of cases appealed in the State of Florida. Cases that are affirmed without comment by the district courts cannot be appealed to the Supreme Court, even as a request for discretionary review. Cases involving thedeath penalty are heard directly and automatically by the Florida Supreme Court, bypassing the district courts of appeal.External links
* [http://www.flcourts.org/courts/dca/dca.shtml Website of the Florida District Courts of Appeal]
* [http://www.1dca.org Florida First District Court of Appeal Website]
* [http://www.2dca.org Florida Second District Court of Appeal Website]
* [http://www.3dca.flcourts.org Florida Third District Court of Appeal Website]
* [http://www.4dca.org Florida Fourth District Court of Appeal Website]
* [http://www.5dca.org Florida Fifth District Court of Appeal Website]A decision by a district court is binding on all the courts of the state. In the event of a conflict with another district court, the Florida Supreme Court will decide. See State v. Bynum, 921 So.2d 513, 523 (Fla. 2005).
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