increased; declined
The US Supreme Court issues fewer than one hundred full opinions per year, but the exact number varies. 2009 Term.............currently 81 cases argued or scheduled for argument or reargument (originally 85) 2008 Term.............83 2007 Term.............70 (3 cases dismissed before arguments) 2006 Term.............75 2005 Term.............87
At what point in history? The US Supreme Court has changed its stance on labor laws and workplace protection a number of times.
According to Chief Justice John Roberts 2010 year-end report: "The total number of cases filed in the Supreme Court increased from 7,738 filings in the 2008 Term to 8,159 filings in the 2009 Term-an increase of 5.4%."
Yes. The Supreme Court exercises control over the number of appeals it hears every year, when it chooses 75-120 cases from the more than 7,000 submitted on appeal. The justices have full discretion over the cases they hear, provided the cases properly fall within their jurisdiction.
If the wrong electronic account number is submitted and it's an invalid number so it's rejected, the IRS issues you a paper check. If the wrong number is submitted and it's a valid number (it just isn't your account number), then the IRS has no way of knowing that, because it doesn't come back to them as rejected. In that case, it isn't the IRS' responsibility to track down the wrong account number and retrieve the deposit. It's your responsibility to talk to your bank so they can identify, according to the incorrect but valid routing code and account number, the bank and account that have your deposit.
Yes, if that is what happened!
The US Supreme Court received 7,738 petitions for Writ of Certiorari (requests for case review) in the 2008-2009 Term (the most recent year for which information is available). The Court estimated it had received more than 10,000 petitions last Term, but the number was revised downward in the Chief Justice's year-end report. This represents about a 6.1% decrease in the number of cases submitted for the 2007-2008 Term, but 234.5% more than the 2,313 the Court received in 1960. According to Court literature, the justices hear oral arguments for approximately 100 cases per Term, and issue full opinions for 75-85 of those. They write orders for another 50-60 cases reviewed without argument. The Supreme Court estimates the justices generate approximately 5,000 pages of written opinions each Term. For more information, see Related Questions, below.
the sum of the scores divided by the number of scores submitted
Certain judicial opinions are published by the government, such as the Supreme Court Reports. However, more cases are published by companies such as Westlaw and LexisNexis. For instance Westlaw publishes Federal Reports Annotated which contains many United States Circuit Court decisions. The cases are published by date. The advantage of using the reporters published by private companies is that they include, what is called key numbers that assist a legal researcher in finding additional material on specific topics addressed by a case.
The US Supreme Court received 7,738 petitions for Writ of Certiorari (requests for case review) in the 2008-2009 Term (the most recent year for which information is available). The Court estimated it had received more than 10,000 petitions last Term, but the number was revised downward in the Chief Justice's year-end report. This represents about a 6.1% decrease in the number of cases submitted for the 2007-2008 Term, but 234.5% more than the 2,313 the Court received in 1960. According to Chief Justice Roberts' year-end report for 2009, "During the 2008 Term, 87 cases were argued and 83 were disposed of in 74 signed opinions, compared to 75 cases argued and 72 disposed of in 67 signed opinions in the 2007 Term." The justices write orders for another 50-60 cases reviewed without argument. The Supreme Court estimates the justices generate approximately 5,000 pages of written opinions each Term.
The US Supreme Court issues fewer than one hundred full opinions per year, but the exact number varies. 2010 Term.............85 2009 Term.............92 2008 Term.............83 2007 Term.............70 (3 cases dismissed before arguments) 2006 Term.............75 2005 Term.............87 The Court also reviews approximately another 50-75 cases on paper without writing full opinions. Many are affirmed, reversed and remanded, or dismissed without comment.
You submitted the question before including the serial number.