"Downright Indifference": Examining Unpublished Decisions in the Federal Courts of Appeals

Author:

McAlister Merritt1

Affiliation:

1. University of Florida Fredric G. Levin College of Law

Abstract

Nearly 90 percent of the work of the federal courts of appeals looks nothing like the opinions law students read in casebooks. Over the last fifty years, the so-called “unpublished decision” has overtaken the federal appellate courts in response to a caseload volume “crisis.” These are often short, perfunctory decisions that make no law; they are, one federal judge said, “not safe for human consumption.” The creation of the inferior unpublished decision also has created an inferior track of appellate justice for a class of appellants: indigent litigants. The federal appellate courts routinely shunt indigent appeals to a second-tier appellate process in which judicial staff attorneys resolve appeals without oral argument or meaningful judicial oversight. For the system’s most vulnerable participants, the promise of an appeal as of right often becomes a rubber stamp: “You lose.” This work examines the product of that second-class appellate justice system by filling two critical gaps in the existing literature. First, it compiles comprehensive data on the use of unpublished decisions across the circuits over the last twenty years. The data reveal, for the first time, that the courts’ continued—and increasing—reliance on unpublished decisions has no correlation to overall caseload volume. Second, it examines the output of the second-tier appellate justice system from the perspective of the litigants themselves. Relying on a procedural justice framework, this work develops a taxonomy of unpublished decisions and argues for minimum standards for reason-giving in most unpublished decisions.

Publisher

University of Michigan Law Library

Subject

Law

Cited by 4 articles. 订阅此论文施引文献 订阅此论文施引文献,注册后可以免费订阅5篇论文的施引文献,订阅后可以查看论文全部施引文献

1. Publication and Strategy in the U.S. Courts of Appeals;Journal of Institutional and Theoretical Economics;2023

2. Mooting Unilateral Mootness;Michigan Law Review;2023

3. Vacatur Pending En Banc Review;Michigan Law Review;2021

4. Decisionmaking on Multimember Courts: The Assignment Power in the Circuits;SSRN Electronic Journal;2017

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