Today, we conclude our series on the originating jurisdictions, year-by-year, of the Court’s civil docket.

In 2014, as usual, Los Angeles led, originating ten of the Court’s civil cases.  Two cases between in Alameda County and the United States District Court for the Central District of California.  One case apiece started in Riverside, Ventura, Tuolumne,

This week, we conclude our series of posts on the originating jurisdictions, year-by-year, of the California Supreme Court’s civil docket – not the first trial court, but the council, agency or department where the case began.  Today, we look at the years 2011 through 2013.

As usual, in 2011, the Los Angeles County Superior Court

Today, we continue our ongoing series of posts about the originating jurisdictions of the California Supreme Court’s civil docket with the years 2009 and 2010.

The data for 2009 is reported in Table 242 below.  That year, Los Angeles County originated twelve cases.  San Diego originated five.  Orange County produced four, San Francisco County three,

For the past two weeks, we’ve been reviewing the originating jurisdictions – not the first trial court, but the first authority, whether agency, council or board – for the California Supreme Court’s civil docket between 1994 and 2016.  Today, we’ve reached 2006.

Table 239 reports the data for 2006.  The Los Angeles Superior Court originated

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Yesterday, we continued our review of the originating jurisdiction for the California Supreme Court’s civil docket – the original agency, department, council or court.  Today, we continue our review.

In 2003, thirteen cases originated in Los Angeles County.  Five began in San Francisco, three each in Santa Clara, Sacramento and San Bernardino county, and two

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Last week, we reviewed the data on the originating jurisdictions of the California Supreme Court’s civil cases between 1995 and 1999.  This week, we review the data from 2000 through 2005.

The Los Angeles Superior Court originated eighteen cases in 2000.  The court heard six cases which arose from San Francisco, three from Santa Clara

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In our recent expansion of Sedgwick’s California Supreme Court database, one of the variables we added was the originating jurisdiction.  Given that the Court always has a significant number of administrative mandate cases, originating jurisdiction is a more precise measure of where the Court’s cases are coming from than solely tracking the original trial court.

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Today, we conclude our analysis of the originating jurisdictions for the California Supreme Court’s civil, criminal and death penalty dockets between 2000 and 2015.

We began our analysis by reviewing the top ten counties in California in terms of population. How closely do those counties’ share of the population match their shares of each docket?

9111260761_d1a98ee7e4_zFor the past several weeks, we’ve been taking a close look at the originating jurisdictions for the California Supreme Court’s civil, criminal and death penalty dockets between 2000 and 2015.  Today, we take the final step in that analysis, looking at the death penalty docket since 2010.

We’ve shown in previous posts that the death