United States Court of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit

From Ballotpedia
Jump to: navigation, search
Eighth Circuit
Court of Appeals
US-CourtOfAppeals-8thCircuit-Seal.png
Judgeships
Posts: 11
Judges: 11
Vacancies: 0
Judges
Chief: Steven Colloton
Active judges: William D. Benton, Steven Colloton, Ralph Erickson, L. Steven Grasz, Raymond Gruender, Jane Kelly, Jonathan Kobes, James Loken, Bobby Shepherd, Lavenski Smith, David Stras

Senior judges:
Morris Arnold, Clarence Arlen Beam, Pasco Bowman, David Hansen, Michael Melloy, Roger Wollman


The United States Court of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit is a federal appellate court with appellate jurisdiction. It hears appeals from all of the circuit courts within its jurisdiction and its rulings may be appealed to the Supreme Court of the United States.

The Eighth Circuit has 11 authorized judicial posts. The chief judge of the court is Lavenski Smith, who was appointed by President George W. Bush (R). Four of the judges on the court were appointed by Donald Trump (R).

Appeals are heard in the Thomas Eagleton U.S. Courthouse in St. Louis, Missouri.

Three judges of the Eighth Circuit went on to serve on the Supreme Court of the United States. Willis Van Devanter was appointed to the Supreme Court in 1910 by William Howard Taft, Charles Evans Whittaker was appointed in 1957 by Dwight Eisenhower, and Harry Blackmun was appointed in 1970 by Richard Nixon.

This page contains the following information on the Eighth Circuit.

Vacancies

See also: Current federal judicial vacancies

There are no current vacancies on the Eighth Circuit, out of the court's 11 judicial positions.

Pending nominations

There are no pending nominees for this court.


Active judges

Article III judges

Judge Appointed By Assumed Office Bachelors Law

James Loken

George H.W. Bush (R)

October 17, 1990 -

University of Wisconsin, 1962

Harvard Law School, 1965

Lavenski Smith

George W. Bush (R)

July 19, 2002 -

University of Arkansas, 1981

University of Arkansas School of Law, 1987

Steven Colloton

George W. Bush (R)

September 10, 2003 -

Princeton University, 1985

Yale Law School, 1988

Raymond Gruender

George W. Bush (R)

June 5, 2004 -

Washington University of St. Louis, 1984

Washington University of St. Louis, 1987

William D. Benton

George W. Bush (R)

July 2, 2004 -

Northwestern University, 1972

Yale Law School, 1975

Bobby Shepherd

George W. Bush (R)

October 10, 2006 -

Ouachita Baptist University, 1973

University of Arkansas School of Law, 1975

Jane Kelly

Barack Obama (D)

April 25, 2013 -

Duke University, 1987

Harvard Law School, 1991

Ralph Erickson

Donald Trump (R)

October 12, 2017 -

Jamestown College, 1980

University of North Dakota School of Law, 1984

L. Steven Grasz

Donald Trump (R)

January 3, 2018 -

University of Nebraska, Lincoln, 1984

University of Nebraska College of Law, 1989

David Stras

Donald Trump (R)

January 31, 2018 -

University of Kansas, 1995

University of Kansas, School of Law, 1999

Jonathan Kobes

Donald Trump (R)

December 12, 2018 -

Dordt College, 1996

Harvard Law School, 2000


Active Article III judges by appointing political party

Below is a display of 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.

  • Democrat appointed: 1
  • Republican appointed: 10

Senior judges

Senior status is a classification for federal judges at all levels who are semi-retired. Senior judges are Article III judges who, having met eligibility through age and service requirements, continue to serve on federal courts while typically hearing a reduced number of cases. Some senior judges, however, elect to retain a full caseload after taking senior status. According to the Administrative Office of U.S. Courts, senior judges "typically handle about 15 percent of the federal courts' workload annually."[1] The date listed under assumed office in the table below reflects the date that the judge took senior status.

Judge Appointed By Assumed Office Bachelors Law

Clarence Arlen Beam

Ronald Reagan (R)

February 1, 2001 -

University of Nebraska, 1951

University of Nebraska College of Law, 1965

David Hansen

George H.W. Bush (R)

April 1, 2003 -

Northwest Missouri State University, 1960

George Washington University Law Center, 1963

Pasco Bowman

Ronald Reagan (R)

August 1, 2003 -

Bridgewater College, 1955

New York University School of Law, 1958

Morris Arnold

George H.W. Bush (R)

October 9, 2006 -

University of Arkansas, 1965

University of Arkansas School of Law, 1968

Michael Melloy

George W. Bush (R)

February 1, 2013 -

Loras College, 1970

University of Iowa College of Law, 1974

Roger Wollman

Ronald Reagan (R)

December 14, 2018 -

Tabor College, 1957

University of South Dakota School of Law, 1962


Senior judges by appointing political party

Below is a display of 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.

  • Democrat appointed: 0
  • Republican appointed: 6

Former chief judges

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]


Former judges

For more information on judges of the Eighth Circuit, see former federal judges of the Eighth Circuit.

Jurisdiction

United States Court of Appeals for the Eighth CircuitUnited States District Court for the Western District of ArkansasUnited States District Court for the Eastern District of ArkansasUnited States District Court for the Eastern District of MissouriUnited States District Court for the Western District of MissouriUnited States District Court for the Southern District of IowaUnited States District Court for the Northern District of IowaUnited States District Court for the District of MinnesotaUnited States District Court for the District of NebraskaUnited States District Court for the District of South DakotaUnited States District Court for the District of North Dakota
Map of the Eighth Circuit. Click on a district to find out more about it.


The Eighth Circuit has appellate jurisdiction over cases heard in one of its subsidiary districts. These cases can include civil and criminal matters that fall under federal law. Appeals of rulings by the Eighth Circuit Court of Appeals are petitioned to the Supreme Court of the United States. Justice Brett Kavanaugh is the circuit justice for the Eighth Circuit.

The United States Court of Appeals for the 8th Circuit has jurisdiction over the United States district courts in the following federal judicial districts:

Caseloads

This section contains court management statistics dating back to 2010. It was last updated in September 2024. Click [show] below for more information on caseload terms and definitions.


United States Court of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit caseload stats, 2010-2023
Year Appeals Filed Appeals Terminated Pending Appeals Terminations on the Merits (per Active Judge) Procedural Terminations (per Active Judge) Total Written Decisions (per Active Judge) Number of Judgeships Number of Sitting Senior Judges Number of Vacant Judgeship Months Median Time From Filing Notice of Appeal to Disposition
2010 2,900 3,281 1,415 502 140 168 11 6 0 9
2011 2,919 2,934 1,399 448 112 141 11 6 0 7
2012 3,084 2,957 1,527 524 46 162 11 4 0 6
2013 2,838 2,835 1,529 520 48 162 11 5 3 6
2014 2,968 3,000 1,500 578 51 181 11 4 0 6
2015 3,048 2,845 1,703 496 53 159 11 5 8 5
2016 3,649 3,121 2,231 597 46 189 11 6 13 6
2017 2,890 3,225 1,896 650 52 203 11 7 31 8
2018 2,802 2,789 1,908 547 52 176 11 7 9 7
2019 2,831 2,907 1,833 528 62 165 11 6 0 8
2020 2,772 3,025 1,580 591 58 188 11 4 0 6
2021 3,079 3,105 1,554 618 56 193 11 3 0 4
2022 2,621 2,704 1,481 556 63 166 11 3 0 4
2023 2,809 2,847 1,504 548 58 172 11 3 0 5
Average 2,944 2,970 1,647 550 64 173 11 5 5 6

History

Court history

The Eighth Circuit was established by the United States Congress in 1891 with the Evarts Act of 1891, which established the first nine appeals circuits. Over the years, nine additional seats were added to the court resulting in a total of eleven seats.[7] To learn more about the history of the Eighth Circuit, please contact the Historical Society of the United States Courts in the Eighth Circuit.

Judicial posts

The following table highlights the development of judicial posts for the Eighth Circuit:[7]

Year Statute Total Seats
March 3, 1891 26 Stat. 826 2
July 23, 1894 28 Stat. 115 3
January 31, 1903 32 Stat. 791 4
March 3, 1925 43 Stat. 1116 6
February 28, 1929 45 Stat. 1346 5
May 24, 1940 54 Stat. 219 7
March 18, 1966 80 Stat. 75 8
October 20, 1978 92 Stat. 1629 9
July 10, 1984 98 Stat. 333 10
December 1, 1990 104 Stat. 5089 11

Reversal rate

See also: SCOTUS case reversal rates (2007 - Present)

Since 2007, SCOTUS has released opinions in 1,250 cases. Of those, it reversed a lower court decision 891 times (71.3 percent) while affirming a lower court decision 347 times (27.8 percent).

In that time period, SCOTUS has decided 56 cases originating from the Eighth Circuit, affirming in 14 cases and reversing in 42 cases, for a reversal rate of 75 percent. As of the end of the 2023 term, of the Article III circuits—the ordinal circuits, the D.C. Circuit, and the Federal Circuit—the court with the lowest rate of overturned decisions is the Fourth Circuit at 62.1 percent.


Noteworthy cases

The following are noteworthy cases heard before this court. To suggest cases we should cover here, email us. To read opinions published by this court, click here.

Before the U.S. Supreme Court

This section focuses on cases the U.S. Supreme Court heard that originated in this court. To suggest cases we should cover here, email us.

2023-2024 term

See also: Supreme Court cases, October term 2023-2024

The following case was heard by the U.S. Supreme Court during the 2023-2024 term.

2023-2024 U.S. Supreme Court cases from the 8th Circuit
Case Opinion author Decision Vote
Pulsifer v. United States Elena Kagan affirmed 6-3
Muldrow v. City of St. Louis, Missouri Elena Kagan vacated and remanded 9-0
Connelly v. Internal Revenue Service Clarence Thomas affirmed 9-0
Corner Post, Inc. v. Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System TBD TBD TBD

2022-2023 term

See also: Supreme Court cases, October term 2022-2023

The following cases were heard by the U.S. Supreme Court during the 2022-2023 term.

2022-2023 U.S. Supreme Court cases from the 8th Circuit
Case Opinion author Decision Vote
Jones v. Hendrix Clarence Thomas affirmed 6-3
Biden v. Nebraska Chief Justice John Roberts reversed and remanded 6-3
Tyler v. Hennepin County, Minnesota Chief Justice John Roberts reversed 9-0

2021-2022 term

See also: Supreme Court cases, October term 2021-2022

The following cases were heard before the U.S. Supreme Court during the 2021-2022 term.

2021-2022 U.S. Supreme Court cases from the 8th Circuit
Case Opinion author Decision Vote
Boechler, P.C. v. Commissioner of Internal Revenue Amy Coney Barrett reversed and remanded 9-0
Morgan v. Sundance, Inc. Elena Kagan vacated and remanded 9-0
Missouri v. Biden Per curiam Application granted 5-4

2020-2021 term

See also: Supreme Court cases, October term 2020-2021

The following cases were heard before the U.S. Supreme Court during the 2020-2021 term.

2020-2021 U.S. Supreme Court cases from the 8th Circuit
Case Opinion author Decision Vote
Pereida v. Barr Neil Gorsuch affirmed 5-3
Rutledge v. Pharmaceutical Care Management Association Sonia Sotomayor reversed and remanded 8-0
Lombardo v. City of St. Louis, Missouri (Decided without argument) Per curiam vacated and remanded 6-3


2019-2020 term

See also: Supreme Court cases, October term 2019-2020

The following cases were heard before the U.S. Supreme Court during the 2019-2020 term.

2019-2020 U.S. Supreme Court cases from the 8th Circuit
Case Opinion author Decision Vote
Thole v. U.S. Bank Brett Kavanaugh affirmed 5-4

Federal courthouse

The court is located at Thomas Eagleton U.S. Courthouse in St. Louis, Missouri. The twenty-nine-story building was completed in 2000, and contains more than 1.3 million square feet of space. It is the tallest U.S. Federal courthouse, standing at 557 feet.[16]

About United States Court of Appeals

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.[17]

Appointments by president

The chart below shows the number of appeals court judges confirmed by the U.S. Senate through November 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.


Judges by circuit

See also: Judicial vacancies in federal courts

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.



See also

External links


Footnotes

  1. United States Courts, "FAQs: Federal Judges: What is a senior judge?" accessed December 19, 2016
  2. 2.0 2.1 United States Courts, "Frequently Asked Questions," accessed January 25, 2022
  3. 3.0 3.1 3.2 Cornell Law School Legal Information Institute, "28 U.S. Code § 136 - Chief judges; precedence of district judges," accessed January 25, 2022
  4. 4.0 4.1 4.2 Cornell Law School Legal Information Institute, "28 U.S. Code § 258 - Chief judges; precedence of judges," accessed January 25, 2022
  5. 5.0 5.1 5.2 Cornell Law School Legal Information Institute, "28 U.S. Code § 45 - Chief judges; precedence of judges," accessed January 25, 2022
  6. Cornell Law School Legal Information Institute, "28 U.S. Code § 171 - Appointment and number of judges; character of court; designation of chief judge," accessed January 25, 2022
  7. 7.0 7.1 Federal Judicial Center, "History of the Eighth Circuit," accessed April 17, 2021
  8. Bloomberg, "North Dakota Targets 'Roe v. Wade'," April 18, 2013
  9. Daily Record, "North Dakota, Arkansas challenge Roe in federal court," January 13, 2015
  10. Associated Press, "Court agrees with tossing strict North Dakota abortion law," July 22, 2015
  11. St. Louis Today, “Federal appeals decision deals blow to Missouri death row inmates,” January 29, 2014
  12. Chicago Tribune, "Appeals court upholds South Dakota abortion law's suicide advisory," July 24, 2012
  13. 13.0 13.1 EducationWeek, "Court Backs White Administrator in Reverse Race-Bias Case," Feb. 28, 2012
  14. 14.0 14.1 ESPN, "Retirees appeal dismissed lawsuit," June 21, 2012
  15. 15.0 15.1 Fox News, "Retirees' lawsuit against NFLPA dismissed," May 30, 2012
  16. U.S. General Services Administration, "Thomas F. Eagleton U.S. Courthouse," accessed May 5, 2021
  17. United States Courts, "FAQs: Federal Judges," accessed May 5, 2021