Court of International Trade |
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Federal Circuit |
Judgeships |
Posts: 9 |
Judges: 9 |
Vacancies: 0 |
Judges |
Chief: Mark A. Barnett |
Active judges: Miller Baker, Mark A. Barnett, Jennifer Choe Groves, Gary S. Katzmann, Claire R. Kelly, Joseph Laroski, Timothy Reif, Stephen Vaden, Lisa Wang Senior judges: |
The United States Court of International Trade is an Article III federal court. The Customs Court Act of 1980 replaced the former United States Customs Court with the United States Court of International Trade. The court sits in New York City, although it is authorized to sit elsewhere, including in foreign nations.
Appeals from the Court of International Trade are heard by the United States Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit, which normally sits in Washington, D.C. Further appeals from the United States Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit are heard by the Supreme Court of the United States.[1]
The Court of International Trade has 9 authorized judicial posts. The chief judge of the court is Mark A. Barnett, who was appointed by President Barack Obama (D). Three of the judges on the court were appointed by Donald Trump (R).
There are no current vacancies on the United States Court of International Trade, out of the court's nine judicial positions.
There are no pending nominees for this court.
Judge | Appointed By | Assumed Office | Bachelors | Law |
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May 28, 2013 - |
Barnard College, 1987 |
Brooklyn Law School, 1993 |
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May 28, 2013 - |
Dickinson College, 1985 |
University of Michigan Law, 1988 |
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June 8, 2016 - |
Princeton University, 1991 |
Rutgers Law School, Newark, 1994 |
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September 15, 2016 - |
Columbia College, 1973 |
Yale Law School, 1979 |
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August 8, 2019 - |
Princeton University, 1980 |
Columbia Law School, 1985 |
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December 18, 2019 - |
Louisiana State University, 1981 |
Tulane University Law School, 1984 |
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December 21, 2020 - |
Vanderbilt University, 2004 |
Yale Law School, 2008 |
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February 7, 2024 - |
Cornell University, 2002 |
Georgetown University Law Center, 2006 |
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February 14, 2024 - |
Georgetown University School of Foreign Service, 1993 |
Georgetown University Law Center, 1998 |
The list below displays the number of active judges by the party of the appointing president. It does not reflect how a judge may rule on specific cases or their own political preferences.
In order to qualify for the office of chief judge in an Article III circuit or district court, or on the United States Court of International Trade, a judge must be in active service and hold seniority over the court's commissioned judges who are 64 years of age or under, have served one year or more, and have not previously served as chief judge.[2]
In the event that no judge on the court meets those qualifications, the youngest judge in regular active service aged 65 years or more and who has served as a judge for one year or more shall become chief judge. If no judge meets those qualifications, the judge holding seniority in active service who has not served as chief before shall become the chief judge.[3][4][5]
The chief judge serves for a term of seven years until another judge becomes eligible to serve in the position. No judge is permitted to serve as chief judge after reaching the age of 70 years unless no other judge is qualified to serve.[3][4][5]
Unlike the chief justice of the United States, a chief judge returns to active service after the expiration of their term and does not create a vacancy on the court by the fact of their promotion.[2][3][4][5]
On the United States Court of Federal Claims, the chief judge is selected by the president of the United States. The judge must be less than 70 years of age. A chief may serve until they reach age 70 or until another judge is designated by the president as the new chief judge. If the president selects a new chief judge, the former chief judge may continue active service on the court for the remainder of their appointed term.[6]
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For more information about the judges of the Court of International Trade, see former federal judges of the Court of International Trade.
Judge | Appointed By | Assumed Office | Bachelors | Law |
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April 2, 2001 - |
University of Miami, 1950 |
University of Miami Law, 1952 |
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December 10, 2004 - |
Drew University, 1962 |
Rutgers Law School, 1969 |
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June 2, 2011 - |
Wichita State University, 1965 |
Rutgers University Law, 1981 |
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August 22, 2014 - |
Ithaca College, 1970 |
Union University Law, 1974 |
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March 1, 2015 - |
University of California, Berkeley, 1969 |
University of California, Davis School of Law, 1973 |
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January 31, 2019 - |
University of Missouri, 1975 |
Northeastern University Law School, 1979 |
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March 22, 2019 - |
University of North Carolina, 1973 |
Emory University Law School, 1977 |
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April 5, 2021 - |
Colgate University, 1973 |
Georgetown University, 1979 |
The list below displays the number of senior judges by the party of the appointing president. It does not reflect how a judge may rule on specific cases or their own political preferences.
The court possesses limited subject matter jurisdiction across the United States. It may hear only cases involving particular international trade and customs law questions. The court hears disputes, such as those involving protests filed with U.S. Customs and Border Protection, decisions regarding Trade Adjustment Assistance by the U.S. Department of Labor or U.S. Department of Agriculture, customs broker licensing, and disputes relating to determinations made by the United States International Trade Commission and the Department of Commerce's International Trade Administration regarding anti-dumping and countervailing duties.
There is one notable exception to the court's jurisdiction. In cases involving anti-dumping and countervailing duties imposed on Canadian or Mexican merchandise, an interested party can request that the case be heard before a special ad hoc bi-national panel organized under Chapter 19 of the 1988 Canadian-U.S. Free Trade Agreement.
Most cases are heard by a single judge. If a case challenges the constitutionality of a U.S. law or has important implications regarding the administration or interpretation of the customs laws, then it may be heard by a three-judge panel.
Although the court maintains its own rules of procedure, they are patterned for the most part on the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure. The court has held that decisions interpreting the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure are "instructive" in interpreting its own rules.[1]
The court was established by Congress with the Customs Courts Act of 1980 and was the culmination of past attempts to regulate U.S. customs with the rule of law. The earliest predecessor of the court, the Board of General Appraisers, was formed by Congress in 1890 to review decisions by U.S. customs officials. In 1926, Congress eliminated the board and founded the United States Customs Court under Article I of the Constitution, which functioned identically to the former board. The court was converted into an Article III court in 1956, and customs acts in 1970 and 1980 slowly changed the procedural and jurisdictional qualities of the court.[1]
You can find a list of decisions at United States Court of International Trade, Slip opinions.
The current composition of the court under the final act in 1980 consists of nine judges appointed by the president for life terms.[1]
The court is located at One Federal Plaza in New York City at the Courthouse of the United States Court of International Trade.[1]
The United States courts of appeals (or circuit courts) are the intermediate appellate courts of the United States federal courts. The court of appeals was originally created in 1891 and has grown to include thirteen courts.
A court of appeals decides appeals from any of the district courts that are in its federal judicial circuit. The appeals courts also can hear appeals from some administrative agencies. Decisions of the federal appeals courts can, in turn, be appealed to the Supreme Court of the United States.
There are thirteen United States courts of appeals. In addition, there are other federal courts (such as the Court of Appeals for the Armed Forces, which hears appeals in court-martial cases) that have "Court of Appeals" in their titles.
The eleven "numbered" circuits and the D.C. Circuit are defined by geography. The thirteenth court of appeal is the Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit. This court has nationwide jurisdiction over certain types of appeals based on what the underlying legal case is about.
All of the courts of appeals also hear appeals from some administrative agency decisions and rulemaking. The largest share of this type of case is heard by the D.C. Circuit. The Federal Circuit hears appeals from specialized trial courts, primarily the Court of International Trade and the Court of Federal Claims, as well as appeals from the district courts in patent cases and certain other specialized matters.
Federal circuit court judges are appointed for life. They are paid approximately $179,500 annually. At the age of 65, a federal judge may choose to retire with his or her full salary. Judges may also choose to go on senior status at age 65, if they have served actively for 15 years.[7]
The chart below shows the number of appeals court judges confirmed by the U.S. Senate through August 1 of the fourth year of each president's term in office. At this point in the term, President Trump had the most appeals court appointments with 53.
The table below displays the number of judges in each circuit and indicates how many were appointed by presidents from each major political party. It also includes the number of vacancies on a circuit and how many pending nominations for that circuit are before the United States Senate. The table can be sorted by clicking the column headers above the line. It is updated every Monday.
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