Vermont Supreme Court |
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Court Information |
Justices: 5 |
Founded: 1777 |
Location: Montpelier |
Salary |
Chief: $177,203 Associates: $166,868 |
Judicial Selection |
Method: Assisted appointment (Hybrid) |
Term: 6 years |
Active justices |
Harold Eaton (Vermont) |
Founded in 1777, the Vermont Supreme Court is the state's court of last resort and has five judgeships. The current chief of the court is Paul Reiber. In 2018, the court decided 455 cases.
As of April 2022, four judges on the court were appointed by a Republican governor and one was appointed by a Democratic governor.
The Vermont Supreme Court is located in Montpelier, Vermont.[1]
In Vermont, state supreme court justices are selected through assisted appointment with a hybrid judicial nominating commission. Justices are appointed by the governor with the assistance of a commission who has no majority of members selected either by the governor or the state Bar Association. As of September 24, 2022, there are 10 states that use this selection method. To read more about the assisted appointment of judges, click here.
The court has jurisdiction over final appeals in all cases originating in the state courts and establishes the rules of civil, criminal, family, and appellate procedure. Additionally, the Vermont Supreme Court has the responsibility of administering the court system, must admit all attorneys in the state to practice law, and is the disciplinary authority for judicial officers and attorneys.[2]
The following text from Chapter II, Section 30 of the Vermont Constitution covers the organization and jurisdiction of the court:
“ | Supreme Court; Jurisdiction
The Supreme Court shall exercise appellate jurisdiction in all cases, criminal and civil, under such terms and conditions as it shall specify in rules not inconsistent with law. The Supreme Court shall have original jurisdiction only as provided by law, but it shall have the power to issue all writs necessary or appropriate in aid of its appellate jurisdiction. The Supreme Court shall have administrative control of all the courts of the state, and disciplinary authority concerning all judicial officers and attorneys at law in the State.[3][4] |
” |
—Vermont Constitution, Chapter II, Section 30 |
Judge | Appointed By |
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The five justices of the Vermont Supreme Court are selected through assisted appointment where the governor appoints a judge from a nominating commission's list and the Vermont Senate confirms the appointee.[5] Once confirmed, appointees serve six-year terms. At the end of each term, judges face retention by a vote of the Vermont General Assembly.[5]
To serve on the Vermont Supreme Court, a judge must:
The chief justice of the supreme court is chosen through the same assisted appointment method as the other judges on the court and serves in that capacity for a full six-year term.[5]
When a midterm vacancy occurs, the judgeship is filled through the same assisted appointment method otherwise used to select judges. Interim judges serve until the expiration of their predecessor's term, at which point they face retention by a vote of the Vermont General Assembly.[5]
The map below highlights how vacancies are filled in state supreme courts across the country.
In Vermont, judges are appointed by the governor from a list of candidates provided by a judicial selection commission and are confirmed by the state senate. At the end of each six year term, judges face a retention vote in the general assembly.
The table below details the number of cases filed with the court and the number of dispositions (decisions) the court reached in each year.[6]
Vermont Supreme Court caseload data | ||
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Year | Filings | Dispositions |
2020 | 373 | 418 |
2019 | 403 | 407 |
2018 | 438 | 455 |
2017 | 442 | 415 |
2016 | 448 | 484 |
2015 | 504 | 522 |
2014 | ---[7] | 479 |
2013 | 510 | 475 |
2012 | 423 | 430 |
2011 | 480 | 487 |
2010 | 511 | 489 |
2009 | 479 | 503 |
2008 | 503 | 585 |
2007 | 530 | 571 |
In 2020, Ballotpedia published Ballotpedia Courts: Determiners and Dissenters, a study on how state supreme court justices decided the cases that came before them. Our goal was to determine which justices ruled together most often, which frequently dissented, and which courts featured the most unanimous or contentious decisions.
The study tracked the position taken by each state supreme court justice in every case they decided in 2020, then tallied the number of times the justices on the court ruled together. We identified the following types of justices:
For the study's full set of findings in Vermont, click here.
Last updated: June 15, 2020
In 2020, Ballotpedia published Ballotpedia Courts: State Partisanship, a study examining the partisan affiliation of all state supreme court justices in the country as of June 15, 2020.
The study presented Confidence Scores that represented our confidence in each justice's degree of partisan affiliation, based on a variety of factors. This was not a measure of where a justice fell on the political or ideological spectrum, but rather a measure of how much confidence we had that a justice was or had been affiliated with a political party. To arrive at confidence scores we analyzed each justice's past partisan activity by collecting data on campaign finance, past political positions, party registration history, as well as other factors. The five categories of Confidence Scores were:
We used the Confidence Scores of each justice to develop a Court Balance Score, which attempted to show the balance among justices with Democratic, Republican, and Indeterminate Confidence Scores on a court. Courts with higher positive Court Balance Scores included justices with higher Republican Confidence Scores, while courts with lower negative Court Balance Scores included justices with higher Democratic Confidence Scores. Courts closest to zero either had justices with conflicting partisanship or justices with Indeterminate Confidence Scores.[9]
Vermont had a Court Balance Score of -1.2, indicating Split control of the court. In total, the study found that there were 15 states with Democrat-controlled courts, 27 states with Republican-controlled courts, and eight states with Split courts. The map below shows the court balance score of each state.
In October 2012, political science professors Adam Bonica and Michael Woodruff of Stanford University attempted to determine the partisan outlook of state supreme court justices in their paper, "State Supreme Court Ideology and 'New Style' Judicial Campaigns." A score above 0 indicated a more conservative-leaning ideology while scores below 0 were more liberal. The state Supreme Court of Vermont was given a campaign finance score (CFscore), which was calculated for judges in October 2012. At that time, Vermont received a score of -0.60. Based on the justices selected, Vermont was the 7th most liberal court. The study was based on data from campaign contributions by judges themselves, the partisan leaning of contributors to the judges, or—in the absence of elections—the ideology of the appointing body (governor or legislature). This study was not a definitive label of a justice but rather an academic gauge of various factors.[10]
The following are noteworthy cases heard before the Vermont Supreme Court. For a full list of opinions published by the court, click here. Know of a case we should cover here? Let us know by emailing us.
• The right to a speedy trial - Michael Brillon | Click for summary→ | ||||||
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The Vermont Supreme Court came under scrutiny over a ruling in which they overturned the assault conviction of Michael Brillon, who sat in jail without bail for nearly three years and went through six public defenders before being tried for assault.[11] Brillon needed a public defender to represent himself in court and the case inched along as lawyer after lawyer asked for postponements, withdrew or were replaced at Brillon's request. The sixth lawyer took the case to trial in 2004 where Brillon was convicted and sentenced to 12 to 20 years in prison because the judge who sentenced Brillon believed he was a habitual offender with three prior felony convictions.[11] Brillon appealed the case to the Vermont Supreme Court, claiming his Sixth Amendment rights to a speedy and fair trial were violated. The court ruled in his favor and dismissed his assault conviction, saying the delays were the fault of the state to provide a public defender in a timely fashion.[11] The ruling prompted outrage among victim's rights advocates and other pro-law enforcement organizations because Brillon was freed and they feared that other suspects would take his cue hoping for a similar outcome. The case was appealed to the Supreme Court of the United States by the Vermont Attorney General's Office. The Court reversed the state court's decision on March 9, 2009, ruling:
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In December 2013, the Center for Public Integrity (CPI) released a study on disclosure requirements for state supreme court judges. According to their website, CPI's purpose is "[t]o serve democracy by revealing abuses of power, corruption and betrayal of public trust by powerful public and private institutions, using the tools of investigative journalism."[13] Analysts from the Center reviewed the rules governing financial disclosure in each of the 50 states and the District of Columbia, as well as personal financial disclosures for the previous three years. The study gave 42 states and Washington, D.C., failing grades. Vermont earned a grade of F in the study. No state received a grade higher than "C." The study also reported 35 instances of questionable gifts, investments overlapping with caseloads, and similar potential ethical quandaries, along with 14 cases in which justices participated although they or their spouses held stock in the company involved in the litigation.[14]
The selection method of justices has changed four times since 1777, when all judges were appointed by the governor with consent of the executive council. In 1786, the system of selecting justices was changed to one in which all judges were elected to one-year terms by the state legislature. In 1870, justices were elected to the court by the state legislature to two-year terms. In 1967, the general assembly enacted a statute that established a panel to review candidates for judicial vacancies and to provide the governor with a list of qualified candidates. In 1974, the state's voters approved a constitutional amendment creating the current system, under which a judicial nominating board gives a list of names for appointment to the governor, whose selection must be confirmed by the senate.[15]
The judicial branch in Vermont, including the supreme court, has a $32 million annual budget; the state judiciary was originally targeted for $2.4 million in reductions as part of general reductions in the state's budget.[16]
In addition to the federal courts in Vermont, there is one appellate court (the supreme court) that administers the rest of the trial court system. Their infrastructure and relationship are illustrated in the flow chart below.
A state government trifecta is a term that describes single-party government, when one political party holds the governor's office and has majorities in both chambers of the legislature in a state government. A state supreme court plays a role in the checks and balances system of a state government.
Vermont has a divided government where neither party holds a trifecta. The Republican Party controls the office of governor, while the Democratic Party controls both chambers of the state legislature.
Federal courts:
Second Circuit Court of Appeals • U.S. District Court: District of Vermont • U.S. Bankruptcy Court: District of Vermont
State courts:
Vermont Supreme Court • Vermont Superior Courts • Vermont Probate Court • Vermont Judicial Bureau
State resources:
Courts in Vermont • Vermont judicial elections • Judicial selection in Vermont
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