Minnesota Court of Appeals
| Minnesota Court of Appeals | |
|---|---|
Interactive map of Minnesota Court of Appeals | |
| 44°57′16″N 93°6′1″W / 44.95444°N 93.10028°W | |
| Established | November 1, 1983 |
| Jurisdiction | Minnesota, United States |
| Location | Saint Paul |
| Coordinates | 44°57′16″N 93°6′1″W / 44.95444°N 93.10028°W |
| Composition method | Nonpartisan election, appointment by the governor if filling midterm vacancy |
| Authorized by | Minnesota Constitution |
| Appeals to | Minnesota Supreme Court |
| Judge term length | 6 years (mandatory retirement at the age of 70) |
| Number of positions | 19 |
| Website | Official website |
| Chief Judge | |
| Currently | Jennifer Frisch |
| Since | December 31, 2024 |
| Lead position ends | December 31, 2027 |
| Jurist term ends | January 2, 2029 |
| Constitution |
|---|
The Minnesota Court of Appeals is the intermediate appellate court in the U.S. state of Minnesota. It began operating on November 1, 1983.
Jurisdiction
The Court of Appeals has jurisdiction over most appeals from the state trial courts, including the Minnesota District Courts, and from many decisions of state agencies and local governments. The only exceptions to this grant of jurisdiction are statewide election contests, first-degree murder cases, and appeals from the Minnesota Tax Court and Minnesota Workers' Compensation Court of Appeals, all of which go directly to the Minnesota Supreme Court.
The Minnesota Supreme Court has discretionary review. Only about five percent of Court of Appeals decisions are accepted by the Supreme Court for further review, meaning that the Court of Appeals makes the final ruling in the vast majority of the 2,000 to 2,400 appeals filed every year.[1]
Procedure
Under Minnesota law, the Court of Appeals must issue a decision within 90 days after oral arguments. If no oral argument is held, a decision is due within 90 days of the case's scheduled conference date. This deadline is the shortest imposed on any appellate court in the nation.[1] The court expedites decisions on child custody cases, mental health commitments and other matters in which the parties request accelerated response.
Composition
The 19 judges of the Minnesota Court of Appeals are elected to renewable six-year terms.[2] When a midterm vacancy occurs, the governor appoints a replacement to a term that ends after the general election occurring more than one year after the appointment.[3] All judges who have served on the court have been appointed by the governor.[4] The chief judge is selected by the governor from the members of the court to serve a fixed three-year term.[5]
Eight seats are associated with Minnesota's congressional districts. Judges for those seats must live in the associated district at the time of appointment or initial election. But seated judges remain eligible for those positions even if they later move to another district. Remaining seats are at-large positions that can be filled without regard to residency. The seats associated with congressional districts are redesignated every ten years following reapportionment of the districts. The most recent reapportionment occurred in 2022. The seats on the Court of Appeals were redesignated in January 2023.[6]
Members sit in three-judge panels in various locations throughout the state to hear oral arguments, all of which are open to the public.[1]
Members
| District[a] | Seat | Name[7] | Start | Term ends | Appointer | Law school |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 4th | 10 | Jennifer Frisch, Chief Judge | May 4, 2020 | January 2, 2029 | Tim Walz (D) | Minnesota |
| 1st | 6 | Renee Worke | June 9, 2005 | January 6, 2031 | Tim Pawlenty (R) | Mitchell |
| 3rd | 15 | Kevin Ross | February 23, 2006 | January 4, 2027 | Tim Pawlenty (R) | Iowa |
| At-large | 19 | Francis Connolly | January 1, 2008 | January 2, 2029 | Tim Pawlenty (R) | Georgetown |
| At-large | 17 | Matthew Johnson | January 1, 2008 | January 2, 2029 | Tim Pawlenty (R) | Mitchell |
| At-large | 11 | Michelle Larkin | July 14, 2008 | January 2, 2029 | Tim Pawlenty (R) | Mitchell |
| At-large | 5 | Lisa Beane | January 26, 2026 | January 2, 2029 | Tim Walz (D) | Minnesota |
| At-large | 16 | Peter Reyes | April 7, 2014 | January 2, 2029 | Mark Dayton (D) | Mitchell |
| At-large | 4 | Tracy Smith | February 3, 2016 | January 6, 2031 | Mark Dayton (D) | Minnesota |
| At-large | 12 | Diane Bratvold | March 24, 2016 | January 6, 2031 | Mark Dayton (D) | Minnesota |
| 6th | 13 | Jeanne Cochran | November 7, 2018 | January 4, 2027 | Mark Dayton (D) | Minnesota |
| 7th | 9 | Anne Rasmusson | February 17, 2026 | January 4, 2027 | Tim Walz (D) | Minnesota |
| 2nd | 3 | Sarah Wheelock | December 1, 2021 | January 6, 2031 | Tim Walz (D) | Iowa |
| 8th | 14 | Elise Larson | July 1, 2022 | January 6, 2031 | Tim Walz (D) | Minnesota |
| At-large | 2 | Jon Schmidt | September 5, 2023 | January 6, 2031 | Tim Walz (D) | Mitchell |
| At-large | 8 | Keala Ede | September 11, 2023 | January 6, 2031 | Tim Walz (D) | Berkeley |
| At-large | 18 | JaPaul Harris | March 18, 2024 | January 4, 2027 | Tim Walz (D) | Hamline |
| At-large | 1 | Elizabeth Bentley | August 1, 2024 | January 4, 2027 | Tim Walz (D) | Harvard |
| 5th | 7 | Rachel Bond | January 3, 2025 | January 4, 2027 | Tim Walz (D) | Boston |
- ^ All judges are elected statewide in nonpartisan elections. Eight seats are tied to Minnesota’s congressional districts, and candidates for those seats must reside in the associated district at the time of appointment or initial election. The remaining 11 seats have no residency requirement.
Chief judges
- Peter Popovich (1983–1987)
- D.D. Wozniak (1987–1992)
- Paul Anderson (1992–1994)
- Anne Simonett (1994–1995)
- Edward Toussaint (1995–2010)
- Matthew Johnson (2010–2013)
- Edward Cleary (2013–2020)
- Susan Segal (2020–24)
- Jennifer Frisch (2024-present)
Former judges
- Barry Anderson
- Paul Anderson
- Jeffrey Bryan
- Margaret Chutich
- Theodora Gaïtas
- Sam Hanson
- Natalie Hudson
- David Minge
- Fred Norton
- Randolph W. Peterson
- Peter Popovich
- Robert A. Randall
- John Rodenberg
- Larry Stauber
- Terri Stoneburner
- Edward Toussaint
- Wilhelmina Wright
References
- ^ a b c "Court of Appeals" (PDF). Minnesota Judicial Branch. Retrieved February 20, 2014.
- ^ "Minn. Const. art. VI, sec. 7". Minnesota Constitution. Office of the Revisor of Statutes. Retrieved February 20, 2014.
- ^ "Minn. Const. art. VI, sec. 8". Minnesota Constitution. Office of the Revisor of Statutes. Retrieved February 20, 2014.
- ^ "Judges of the Minnesota Court of Appeals". Chronological Listing of Judges and Justices of the Minnesota Appellate Courts. Minnesota State Law Library. Retrieved February 21, 2014.
- ^ "Minnesota Statutes 2013, section 480A.03, subdivision 1". Office of the Revisor of Statutes. Retrieved February 20, 2014.
- ^ "Administrative Order Filed In re Designations of Court of Appeals Judges for Congressional Districts Pursuant to Minnesota Statutes Section 480A.02, Subdivision 5" (PDF). Minnesota Judicial Branch. January 4, 2013. Retrieved February 20, 2014.
- ^ "Court of Appeals Judges". Minnesota Judicial Branch. Retrieved September 8, 2020.