The Legacy of Justice Arthur J. England, Jr: A Supreme Court of Limited Jurisdiction

Justice Arthur England

–Justice Arthur England. Photo courtesy State Archives of Florida, Florida Memory, http://floridamemory.com/items/show/19904

The Florida Bar Journal this month contains a fascinating analysis of the legacy of recently deceased former Florida Supreme Court Justice Arthur J. England. If you’ve ever gotten a PCA opinion from a District Court of Appeal and lamented the fact that you couldn’t seek further review from the Florida Supreme Court, it seems you have Justice England to thank. The article goes into great detail about Justice England’s consistent string of concurring and dissenting opinions in the late 1970s, all of which argued that the Florida Supreme Court should not go behind a no-opinion DCA decision to further review the underlying “record proper,” as the Court held it could in Foley v. Weaver Drugs, Inc., 177 So.2d 221, 225 (Fla. 1965). In 1978, then Chief Justice England appointed an Appellate Structure Commission, which analyzed the jurisdiction of the court system and eventually recommended a constitutional amendment to limit the Supreme Court’s jurisdiction. By 1980, the Florida Supreme Court, interpreting it’s new constitutional scope, ruled that it lacked conflict jurisdiction over unelaborated PCAs. See Jenkins v. State, 385 So.2d 1356, 1359 (Fla. 1980).

The article provides lots of interesting background about the political and judicial workings at play to create such a sea-change in the jurisdiction of the Florida Supreme Court, and in the Florida court system as a whole. If you’re a rules geek like me, it is definitely worth the read!

RSVP Today for HCBA Appellate Section Luncheon on January 7, 2014!

Don’t wait — RSVP today for the Hillsborough County Bar Association’s Appellate Section Luncheon at Noon on Tuesday January 7, 2014. The Honorable Stevan T. Northcutt from the Second District Court of Appeal will address “The Impact of Recent Technology Changes on the Second District’s Processing and Resolution of Cases.” The Second District Court of Appeal was the first of the DCAs to go to eFiling using the statewide portal, with electronic filing becoming mandatory on October 1, 2013. Judge Northcutt’s talk promises to provide practitioners with valuable insight into the changes to the Court’s internal procedures since the migration to eFiling. Here’s the RSVP details:

Noon
The Chester H. Ferguson Law Center
1610 N. Tampa Street
Tampa, Fl 33602

Members: $18.00 Non-Members: $30.00

RSVP by Phone: 813-221-7777, E-Mail: hcbarsvp@hillsbar.com, or online.

Don’t wait to walk-in — walk-ins are charged $5 extra, and they may not have enough meals. Hope to see you there!

Dineen Pashoukos Wasylik is the co-chair of the HCBA Appellate Section.

Wasylik Named to Tampa’s Top Rated Lawyers for Intellectual Property 2012

http://www.law.com/jsp/law/ads.jsp?p=tampa_reprints
Not only am I certified by the Florida Bar as an expert in Intellectual Property law, but now I am pleased to share that my peers have recognized me as one of Tampa’s top rated intellectual property lawyers for 2012 [.pdf]. My inclusion in the directory is based in part on my AV®Preeminent ranking by Martindale-Hubbell, as well as peer review.