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Eric Turkewitz, The Turkewitz Law Firm, New York, NY |
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Thursday, January 4, 2007Spitzer Moves To Restructure Courts With Chief Judge Kaye's Plans
In yesterday's State of the State address, New York Gov. Eliot Spitzer asked for "a Constitutional amendment that incorporates Judge Kaye's recommendations to consolidate and integrate our balkanized courts."
Perhaps the happiest person to hear that (aside from a multitude of practitioners), was Chief Judge Judith Kaye. At her own State of the Judiciary speech for 2006, she described the frustrations involved with fixing New York's arachaic court structure, and the decades long struggle to do so: ![]() Since 1993 I have urged simplifying the archaic structure of New York's courts, by far the most complex in America. Supreme Court and Family Court, Surrogate's Court and the Court of Claims, superior criminal courts and local criminal courts -- time and time again, whether the issue is matrimonials, or indigent defense, or simple efficiency, we have seen that jurisdictional barriers among New York's trial courts fragment related cases, risk inconsistent judgments, discourage effective outcomes, encourage costly litigation, and confuse litigants and lawyers. We have had some notable operational successes, such as the Integrated Domestic Violence Courts and the Bronx Criminal Division. Despite these heroic efforts to work around the problems, however, there is no escaping the conclusion that our court structure is in need of repair.Will Gov. Spitzer, with the help of Judge Kaye, be able to marshall the forces for long needed change? Stay tuned... Labels: Eliot Spitzer, Judiciary
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About the New York Personal Injury Law Blog:
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