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Unit of Count: Other Appellate The application or petition begins an Other Appellate case for both intermediate appellate courts and courts of last resort. Count the filing of the application/petition with the clerk of court as the beginning of an Other Appellate case. The Grand Total Dispositions figure should be an aggregate count of the total number of cases in that category resolved by the court during the reporting period. Report the number of Other Appellate filings and dispositions according to the subject matter at issue as defined in the Appellate Case Type Definitions. The Manner of Disposition matrix provides a means to report the manner in which Other Appellate cases were resolved. Note that in the Manner of Disposition matrix, the subcategories for the major case categories have been aggregated, for ease of reporting. For example, while in the Other Appellate–Caseload Summary matrix there are four subcategories of Original Proceeding cases, in the Other Appellate–Manner of Disposition matrix there is a single row labeled Original Proceeding, which reports on all the original proceeding cases, and thus corresponds to the TOTAL Original Proceedings row in the Other Appellate–Caseload Summary matrix. Notes: Consolidated case: This is a case in which two or more applications/petitions are combined and heard as one case. In reporting appellate court dispositions, all the cases except the one into which the cases were consolidated should be reported as resolved at the time of consolidation, and the resolution(s) should be reported under Other Resolution. When the consolidated case has been decided, the resolution should be reported under the appropriate manner of resolution category. Terminated or Inactive case: Cases that are treated as terminated for statistical purposes, but have not been removed from the jurisdiction of the court, should be reported under Other Resolution. Such cases include those that are transferred to an inactive status. If the case is reactivated, report it as a new case, classified by the subject matter of the case as defined in the Appellate Case Type Definitions. |