| Supreme Court of Nevada | |
|---|---|
| Jurisdiction | United States |
| Location | Carson City, Nevada |
| Composition method | Election |
| Authorized by | Nevada State Constitution |
| Number of positions | 7 |
| Website | nvsupremecourt.us |
| Chief Justice | |
| Currently | Mark Gibbons |
The Supreme Court of Nevada is the state supreme court of Nevada. It is the highest judicial body of the Nevada state government.
There are seven Justices of the court, who are elected to six-year terms in officially nonpartisan elections. The Governor appoints Justices in the case of a vacancy. The most senior justice becomes Chief Justice for a two-year term.
The Court hears appeals from the Nevada District Courts.
Contents |
History
When Nevada established its statehood, there were three justices of the Supreme Court. This was increased to five justices in 1967 and to seven justices in 1997.
Despite a tremendous population boom in the 1980s, 1990s, and 2000s, Nevada has never established an intermediate appellate court like the vast majority of U.S. states. Numerous attempts have failed due to a powerful cultural tradition among Nevada residents of keeping the state government and their tax burden as small as possible. The result has been extremely severe congestion at the appellate level, as all appeals must be processed through the state supreme court.
In January 1999, to bring its soaring backlog under control, the Supreme Court of Nevada adopted for the first time a measure that was frequently used by the Supreme Court of California prior to the creation of the California Courts of Appeal in 1904 (and for a few years afterward). The Court divided itself into two three-justice panels which rotate membership every 12 months. The majority of cases are now heard and decided by the three-justice panels. The advantage of this system, of course, is that it is faster to negotiate a consensus on the key points of a majority opinion among three instead of seven justices. The disadvantages are that the two panels might inadvertently issue conflicting majority opinions; and that an appellant might be ruled against by two justices on a panel of three, who might have been a minority (that is, 5-2) if the case had been heard by a full court of seven justices.
This system has persisted since 1999 to the present, while the Court continues to lobby the people and the legislature of the state of Nevada to create an intermediate appellate court.
Present justices
| Name | Elected/Appointed | Term expires | Appointing Governor | Political Affiliation |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Mark Gibbons | 2002 | 2014 | Republican | |
| Michael Cherry | 2006 | 2012 | - | Democrat |
| Kris Pickering | 2008 | 2014 | - | Republican |
| Nancy Saitta | 2006 | 2012 | - | Democrat |
| Michael Douglas | 2004 | 2010 | Governor Kenny Guinn | Republican |
| James Hardesty | 2004 | 2010 | - | Democrat |
| Ron Parraguirre | 2004 | 2010 | - | Republican |
Further reading
- Nevada. (2000). Practice before the Supreme Court of Nevada: an overview, Carson City, Nev: Nevada State Supreme Court Clerk's Office.
- The Nevada State Supreme Court. (1986). Carson City, Nev: Administrative Office of the Courts.
See also
References
- Supreme Court of Nevada is at coordinates 39°09′46″N 119°45′54″W / 39.162872°N 119.765026°WCoordinates: 39°09′46″N 119°45′54″W / 39.162872°N 119.765026°W
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