In 2005, the Court decided four cases from San Diego, three from Riverside, two from San Bernardino and one from Orange county. In 2006 and 2007, the Fourth District’s smallest counties, Imperial and Inyo, finally broke through with their first civil cases since our data begins in 1990. In 2006, the Court decided four cases
Superior Court
Where Did the Fourth District’s Civil Cases Come From, 1990-2004?
For the past several weeks, we’ve been looking at the data on which trial courts produced the Supreme Court’s civil and criminal cases for each District of the Court of Appeal, year by year since 1990. This week, we’re looking at the data for civil cases from the Fourth District.
The Fourth District is comprised …
Where Did the Third District’s Criminal Cases Come From, 2005-2019?
Last time, we reviewed the data on which county trial courts originated the Third District criminal cases decided by the Supreme Court between 1990 and 2004. Now let’s finish up with the years 2005 to 2019.
In 2005, the Court decided two criminal cases from Sacramento and one from San Joaquin. In 2006, the Court …
Where Did the Third District’s Criminal Cases Come From, 1990-2004?
Last week, we reviewed the data on which trial court produced the Supreme Court’s Third District civil cases from 1990 to 2019. This week, we’re reviewing the Court’s criminal cases from the Third District. There are twenty-three counties in California’s Third District: Alpine, Amador, Butte, Calaveras, Colusa, El Dorado, Glenn, Lassen, Modoc, Mono, Nevada, Placer, …
Where Did the Third District’s Civil Cases Come From, 2005-2019?
In 2005, the Court decided five civil cases which originated in Sacramento and two from El Dorado. In 2006, the Court decided five Sacramento cases and one each from Shasta and Sierra. The following year, five cases originated in Sacramento and one each came from San Joaquin, Shasta and Sutter. In 2008, four cases came …
Where Did the Third District’s Civil Cases Come From, 1990-2004?
Over the past two weeks, we’ve reviewed the Supreme Court’s Second District civil and criminal cases since 1990. This week and next, we’re looking at the Court’s Third District cases.
The Third District covers twenty-three California counties: Alpine, Amador, Butte, Calaveras, Colusa, El Dorado, Glenn, Lassen, Modoc, Mono, Nevada, Placer, Plumas, Sacramento, San Joaquin, Shasta, …
Where Did the Court’s Second District’s Criminal Cases Come From (2005-2019)?
In 2005, the Court decided eight criminal cases from Los Angeles county. In 2006, the Court decided five cases from Los Angeles and one from Santa Barbara. The following year, the Court decided a dozen cases from Los Angeles and one from San Luis Obispo. In 2008, the Court decided another dozen cases from Los …
Where Did the Court’s Second District Criminal Cases Come From (1990-2004)?
Last week, we examined the data for the county-by-county spread of the Supreme Court’s Second District civil cases. This week, we’re looking at the Second District criminal cases.
In 1990, the Court decided no Second District criminal cases at all. In 1991, the Court decided one case from Los Angeles. In 1992, the Court decided …
Where Did the Supreme Court’s Second District Civil Cases Come From (2005-2019)?
In 2005, Los Angeles produced fifteen civil cases and one was from Santa Barbara. In 2006, the Court decided eighteen cases from Los Angeles, two from Santa Barbara and one from San Luis Obispo. In 2007, seventeen cases were decided which originated in Los Angeles and one was from Santa Barbara. In 2008, the Court …
Where Did the Supreme Court’s Second District Civil Cases Come From (1990-2004)?
Last week, we reviewed the data on how the Supreme Court’s First District civil and criminal cases were distributed among the counties of the District. Today, we’re looking at the Second District.
There are only four counties in the Second District – Los Angeles, Ventura, Santa Barbara and San Luis Obispo. Given that Los Angeles …