February 27, 2013
Delegates call for study of new appeals process
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CHARLESTON, W.Va. -- House Speaker Rick Thompson, D-Wayne, announced Wednesday that he and 15 delegates are calling for a yearlong study of the state Supreme Court's new appeals process.

"We want to make sure West Virginia's courts are fair and impartial," Thompson said at a morning press conference.

Thompson said the resolution (HCR44) is not a preemptive strike against any legislation to create an intermediate appeals court in the state. A perennial issue, there is at least one bill introduced this session to do that, a Senate bill (SB113), with Senate Minority Leader Mike Hall, R-Putnam, as the lead sponsor.

"We want to see if West Virginia's system is working before we go out and spend millions of dollars in a tight budget year," Thompson said, referring to the cost of setting up an intermediate court.

"This study will tell us if we need to take more action."

In December 2010, the high court adopted new procedures intended to make the appeals process more efficient and transparent, to answer critics who contend the state is a "judicial hellhole."

A key change is that the court is now required to provide a written explanation when it declines to hear an appeal of a circuit court ruling.

Previously, the court could refuse to hear appeals without comment or explanation -- something the state Chamber of Commerce contended was not business-friendly.

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