Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court Explained

42.3593°N -71.061°W

Court Name:Supreme Judicial Court
of Massachusetts
Location:Boston, Massachusetts, U.S.
Coordinates:42.3591°N -71.0613°W
Type:Executive appointments with quasi-legislative consent
Authority:Massachusetts Constitution
Appealsto:Supreme Court of the United States
Terms:Mandatory retirement at 70 years of age
Positions:7
Website:Official website
Chiefjudgetitle:Chief Justice
Chiefjudgename:Kimberly S. Budd
Termstart:December 1, 2020
Termend:October 23, 2036

The Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court (SJC) is the highest court in the Commonwealth of Massachusetts. Although the claim is disputed by the Supreme Court of Pennsylvania,[1] [2] the SJC claims the distinction of being the oldest continuously functioning appellate court in the Americas,[3] with a recognized history dating to the establishment of the Massachusetts Superior Court of Judicature in 1692 under the charter of the Province of Massachusetts Bay.[4]

Although it was historically composed of four associate justices and one chief justice, the court is currently composed of six associate justices and one chief justice.

History

The Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court traces its history back to the high court of the British Province of Massachusetts Bay, which was chartered in 1692. Under the terms of that charter, Governor Sir William Phips established the Superior Court of Judicature as the province's local court of last resort (some of the court's decisions could be appealed to courts in England). When the Massachusetts State Constitution was established in 1780, legislative and judicial records show that the state's high court, although renamed, was a continuation of provincial high court. During and after the period of the American Revolution the court had members who were appointed by royal governors, the executive council of the Massachusetts Provincial Congress (which acted as the state's executive from 1775 to 1780), and governors elected under the state constitution.

Location and citation

The SJC sits at the John Adams Courthouse, One Pemberton Square, Boston, Massachusetts 02108, which also houses the Massachusetts Appeals Court and the Social Law Library.[5] The legal citation for the Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court is "Mass."

Landmark cases

Composition

The Court consists of a Chief Justice and six Associate Justices appointed by the Governor of Massachusetts with the consent of the Governor's Council.

The Justices hold office until the mandatory retirement age of seventy, like all other Massachusetts judges since 1972.

Current composition

See main article: List of justices of the Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court.,

JusticeBornJoinedMandatory retirementAppointed byLaw school
, Chief Justice23 October 19662036Charlie Baker (R)Harvard
8 September 19632034Charlie Baker (R)Suffolk
24 April 19592029Charlie Baker (R)Chicago
2039Charlie Baker (R)Stanford
2040Charlie Baker (R)Suffolk
4 July 19802050Maura Healey (D)Yale
16 December 19602030Maura Healey (D)Columbia

Notable members

Works cited

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Supreme Court - Courts - Unified Judicial System of Pennsylvania . 7 July 2017.
  2. The Virginia Supreme Court was founded as a appellate Court in 1623; it became a Supreme Court in 1779; The Supreme Court of Pennsylvania was founded as a Provincial Court in 1684; it became a Supreme Court in 1722;the New York Supreme Court was established as the Supreme Court of Judicature by the Province of New York on May 6, 1691. It became the New York Supreme Court under the New York Constitutional Convention of 1846.
  3. Web site: Supreme Judicial Court of Massachusetts home page. 2013-10-16. 2013-11-06. https://web.archive.org/web/20131106030803/http://www.massreports.com/. live.
  4. Book: Eichholz, Alice. Red Book: American State, County, and Town Sources. 2004. Ancestry Publishing. 978-1593311667. 316. 3rd Revised. Alice Eichholz. registration.
  5. Web site: John Adams Courthouse Mass.gov . 2024-03-15 . www.mass.gov . en.
  6. Zobel, Hiller (1970). Boston Massacre, pp. 243–265
  7. Zobel, pp. 269–286
  8. [Delmar R. Lowell|Lowell, Delmar R.]