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United States Court Of Appeals For The Ninth Circuit





It also has appellate jurisdiction over the following Territorial Courts :


Headquartered in San Francisco , the Ninth Circuit is by far the largest of the thirteen Courts Of Appeals , with 28 active judgeships. The court's regular meeting places are Seattle , Portland , San Francisco, and Pasadena , but panels of the court occasionally travel to hear cases in other locations within its territorial jurisdiction. Although the judges travel around the circuit, the court arranges its hearings so that cases from the northern region of the circuit are heard in Seattle or Portland, cases from southern California are heard in Pasadena, and cases from northern California, Nevada, Arizona, and Hawaii are heard in San Francisco. For lawyers who must come and present their cases to the court in person, this administrative grouping of cases helps to reduce the time and cost of travel.


HISTORY AND BACKGROUND


The large size of the current court is due to the fact that both the population of the western states and the geographic jurisdiction of the Ninth Circuit have increased dramatically since Congress, in 1891, created the United States Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit. The court was originally granted appellate jurisdiction over federal district courts in in 1900, Arizona upon its accession to statehood in 1912, the then-territory of Alaska in 1948, Guam in 1951, and the Commonwealth Of The Northern Mariana Islands (CNMI) in 1977. The adjoining chart illustrates the scope of the Ninth Circuit's jurisdiction at its inception in 1891 and at 20-year intervals since 1900.

The cultural and political jurisdiction of the Ninth Circuit is just as varied as the land within its geographical borders. In a dissenting opinion in a , 2005 .

Many scholars and jurists, like Judge Kleinfeld, cite regional differences between states in the circuit, as well as the practical, procedural, and substantive difficulties in administering a court of this size, as reasons why Congress should split the Ninth Circuit into two or more smaller circuit courts. Opponents of such a move claim that the court is functioning smoothly from an administrative standpoint, and that the real problem is not that the circuit is too large, but that Congress has not created enough judgeships to handle the court's workload. Moreover, many who advocate the preservation of the current Ninth Circuit see politics as a motivating factor in the split movement. They claim that by implementing a scheme that isolates California from the other states in the circuit, the effect of a split will be to dilute the power of judges who have handed down rulings that have angered social conservatives.




CONTROVERSY

Most criticism of the Ninth Circuit can be summarized by the following two claims:
  • The Ninth Circuit is Politically Liberal and out of step with Supreme Court precedent.

  • The large size of the court prevents it from maintaining a coherent body of case law.



Political liberalism


According to the Most Current Count , the Ninth Circuit has the highest percentage of active judges appointed by Democratic presidents, with 59%. Until 2003, this percentage was much higher; a political stalemate over judicial nominations subsequently kept several vacancies on the court for several years.

Critics point to this preponderance of appointees of Democratic presidents as evidence that the court has a liberal bias. Such critics often point to 2002's ''Newdow v. U.S. Congress,'' in which the court declared that a public school district in Elk Grove, California could not force students to recite the Pledge Of Allegiance ; the pledge's inclusion of the words "under God," the court held, violated the Establishment Clause . The case was brought by Michael Newdow , an atheist who felt that the daily recitation of the Pledge in his daughter's school violated her First Amendment right to be free from government establishment of religion. In a 2-1 decision, a Ninth Circuit panel held for Newdow, stating that “ {Link without Title} he text of the official Pledge, codified in federal law, impermissibly takes a position with respect to the purely religious question of the existence and identity of God.” The majority opinion was written by Alfred T. Goodwin , who was appointed to the court by Richard M. Nixon , a Republican.

In ''. Rehnquist and O'Connor disagreed with the Ninth Circuit's interpretation of the precedent.

Indeed, while the Ninth Circuit had long been instrumental in striking new legal ground, particularly in the areas of Immigration Law and prisoner rights, it was the ''Newdow'' decision that galvanized criticism against what conservatives saw as “ Judicial Activism .” Reaction to the decision by prominent political leaders, especially those in the House and Senate, was passionate. President George W. Bush , through his spokesman Ari Fleischer , called the ruling “ridiculous,” while Senator Charles Grassley called it “crazy and outrageous.” Even mainstream Democrats attacked the decision, with House minority leader Richard Gephardt calling it “poorly thought out.” Criticisms of the ''Newdow'' decision were not limited to the substantive law considered by the judges who heard the case; they also attacked the legitimacy and political independence of the court itself. The result was a renewed focus on the Ninth Circuit's caseload and a targeted effort by congressional Republicans to minimize the impact of such decisions.

Another hotly contested case considered by the Ninth Circuit arose from the enactment of a California law permitting the cultivation and use of Marijuana for medicinal purposes. In '' Raich V. Ashcroft '', 352 F.3d 1222 (9th Cir. 2003), ''rev'd sub nom. Gonzales v. Raich'', 545 U.S. 1 (2005), a cancer patient sued the federal government, seeking to prevent it from seizing her supply of medical marijuana under the federal Controlled Substances Act. The United States argued that it had the right to enforce its drug laws against Raich notwithstanding the California statute. Raich argued that since the marijuana was grown within California, had never left the state's borders, and was not part of any economic transaction, Congress had no constitutional authority to regulate her cultivation and use of marijuana. In holding for Raich, the Ninth Circuit adhered to two landmark Supreme Court cases, '' United States V. Lopez '', 514 U.S. 549 ( 1995 ), and '' United States V. Morrison '', 529 U.S. 598 ( 2000 ), which had substantially restricted Congress's authority to regulate “noneconomic” activity under the guise of the Commerce Clause to the United States Constitution . In a 6-3 decision, the Supreme Court disagreed with this analysis, adhering instead to a 1942 case, '' Wickard V. Filburn '', 317 U.S. 111 ( 1942 ), in which the Court held that cultivation of wheat for personal consumption could be subject to a federal production quota even though the crop never entered the stream of commerce. Interestingly, the three dissenters—voting to uphold the Ninth Circuit—were Chief Justice William H. Rehnquist and Justice Clarence Thomas , considered to be two of the most conservative members of the Court, as well as Justice Sandra Day O'Connor , considered to be a moderate. The ''Raich'' litigation illustrates that although the result of the Ninth Circuit's decision pleased political liberals opposed to tough federal drug laws, the legal analysis employed by the court was faithful to the principles of Federalism and thus wholly “conservative” from a legal perspective.

On the other hand, not every Supreme Court reversal of a Ninth Circuit decision has come in a case where the appellate judges ruled in favor of a group championed by political liberals. In '' Kyllo V. United States '', , the Supreme Court reversed a decision of the Ninth Circuit in favor of the government. The Ninth Circuit had ruled that evidence of a marijuana-growing operation obtained without a warrant by means of a thermal imaging device could be introduced at a criminal trial because the Fourth Amendment did not recognize an expectation of privacy in radiation emanating from a private home. The Supreme Court reversed because a person's home is a place where he has always had an expectation of privacy, such that the search at issue required a warrant.

, with Senior Circuit Judge Procter Hug ]]


Size of the court

In addition to concerns over its legal doctrine, critics of the Ninth Circuit point out several adverse consequences of its large size.1 Chief among these is the Ninth Circuit's unique rules concerning the composition of an '' En Banc '' court. In other circuits, ''en banc'' courts are composed of all active circuit judges, plus (depending on the rules of the particular court) any senior judges who took part in the original panel decision. By contrast, in the Ninth Circuit it is impractical for twenty-eight or more judges to take part in a single oral argument and deliberate on a decision en masse. The court thus provides for a “limited ''en banc''” review of a randomly-selected 15 judge panel. This means that ''en banc'' reviews may not actually reflect the views of the majority of the court, and indeed may not include any of the three judges involved in the decision being reviewed in the first place. The result, according to detractors, is a high risk of ''intracircuit'' conflicts of law where different groupings of judges end up delivering contradictory opinions. This is said to cause uncertainty in the district courts and within the bar. Supporters of the existing court, however, point out that ''en banc'' review is a relatively rare occurrence and that court rules provide for full ''en banc'' review in limited circumstances.2 Supporters also point out that all currently proposed splits would leave at least one circuit with 21 judges, only two fewer than the 23 that the Ninth Circuit had when the limited ''en banc'' procedure was first adopted; in other words, after a split at least one of the circuits would still be utilizing limited ''en banc'' courts.3

In March 2007, Justices Anthony Kennedy and Clarence Thomas testified before a House Appropriations subcommittee that the consensus among the justices of the Supreme Court Of The United States was that the Ninth Circuit was too large and unwieldy and should be split.C-SPAN America and the Courts, (03/17/2007).


Most overturned court in the United States

Of the 80 cases the Supreme Court decided this past term through opinions, 56 cases arose from the federal appellate courts, three from the federal district courts, and 21 from the state courts. The court reversed or vacated the judgment of the lower court in 59 of these cases. Specifically, the justices overturned 40 of the 56 judgments arising from the federal appellate courts (or 71%), two of the three judgments coming from the federal district courts (or 67%), and 17 of the 21 judgments issued by state courts (or 81%).

Notably, the 9th Circuit accounted for both 30 percent of the cases (24 of 80) and 30 percent of the reversals (18 of 59) the Supreme Court decided by full written opinions this term. In addition, the 9th Circuit was responsible for more than a third (35%, or 8 of 23) of the High Court’s unanimous reversals that were issued by published opinions. Thus, on the whole, the 9th Circuit’s rulings accounted for more reversals this past term than all the state courts across the country combined and represented nearly half of the overturned judgments (45%) of the federal appellate courts.


NINTH CIRCUIT SPLIT PROPOSALS

The following are the most prominent of the several existing or former proposals that have been considered by congressional leaders, legislative commissions, and interest groups.

; Commission on Structural Alternatives for the Federal Courts of Appeals, Final Report, Dec. 18, 1998: The Commission found that splitting the Ninth Circuit would be “impractical and … unnecessary.” However, it recommended that the circuit be divided into three “adjudicative divisions” each of which would hear appeals from specific regions. A fourth at-large “circuit division” would be invoked solely to resolve conflicts of law arising within a particular division. This proposal would also abolish circuit-wide en banc or limited en banc circuit panels, instead creating en banc panels from each of the three regions as necessary.
; Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals of Reorganization Act of 2003, S. 562: This proposal would split the Ninth Circuit into two, with California and Nevada being retained by the new Ninth Circuit and the remaining Ninth Circuit jurisdictions being assigned to a new Twelfth Circuit. The bill would create ten new judgeships, with 25 being retained by the Ninth Circuit and 13 being assigned to the Twelfth Circuit. Each current Ninth Circuit judge would be assigned to a new circuit based on the location of his or her duty station. This proposal was co-sponsored seven by Republican Senators from Alaska, Montana, Idaho, Oklahoma, and Oregon. After a hearing by the Senate Judiciary Subcommittee on Administrative Oversight and the Courts on April 7, 2004, no vote was held.
; Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals Judgeship and Reorganization Act of 2003, H.R. 2723: This proposal would split the Ninth Circuit into two, with Arizona, California and Nevada being retained by the new Ninth Circuit and the remaining Ninth Circuit jurisdictions being assigned to a new Twelfth Circuit. The bill would create five permanent and two temporary judgeships, all to be retained by the new Ninth Circuit. The temporary judgeships would terminate upon the existence of a vacancy ten years or more after passage of the act. Each current Ninth Circuit judge would be assigned to a new circuit based on the location of his or her duty station. This proposal was co-sponsored by Republican congressmen from Washington, Idaho, Oregon, and Washington. After a hearing by the House Judiciary Subcommittee on Courts, the Internet, and Intellectual Property on October 21, 2003, no vote was held. This bill was reintroduced in the 109th Congress as H.R. 212, the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals Judgeship and Reorganization Act of 2005. It is pending before the House Judiciary Subcommittee on Courts, the Internet, and Intellectual Property.
; Ninth Circuit Judgeship and Reorganization Act of 2004, S. 878: This proposal would create two new circuits, the Twelfth and Thirteenth. The Ninth Circuit would retain California, Hawaii, Guam, and the CNMI. The Twelfth Circuit would contain Arizona, Nevada, Idaho, and Montana. The Thirteenth Circuit would contain Alaska, Oregon, and Washington. The Act would provide that existing judges be assigned to new circuits based on the location of their duty stations, after which the number of active judgeships in the new Ninth Circuit would be increased to nineteen. This bill was reintroduced in the 109th Congress as the Ninth Circuit Judgeship and Reorganization Act of 2005, H.R. 211, co-sponsored by House Majority Leader Tom DeLay and the same Republican Congressmen who had sponsored the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals Judgeship and Reorganization Act of 2003.
; The Circuit Court of Appeals Restructuring and Modernization Act of 2005, S. 1845: This proposal would split the Ninth Circuit into two, with California, Hawaii, Guam, and the Northern Mariana Islands being retained by the Ninth Circuit, and the remaining Ninth Circuit jurisdictions being assigned to new Twelfth Circuit. It would create five permanent and two temporary judgeships, all retained by the new Ninth Circuit. The temporary judgeships would terminate upon the existence of a vacancy ten years or more after passage of the act. Each current Ninth Circuit judge would be assigned to a new circuit based on the location of his or her duty station. The proposal was co-sponsored by nine Republican senators from Alaska, Arizona, Montana, Nevada, Idaho, Oklahoma, and Oregon, including the same group of senators that had sponsored S. 562 in the previous Congress. It is pending before the Judiciary Subcommittee on Administrative Oversight and the Courts, and hearings have been held on it. It would seem to supersede S. 1296, which is similar in the states assigned to each new circuit and the number of judgeships in each new circuit; every sponsor of S. 1296 also sponsors S. 1845.


CURRENT COMPOSITION OF THE COURT

As Of Randy Smith's confirmation on February 15 , 2007 , the judges on the court are:

  Index 46
  Title Chief Judge
  Name Mary M Schroeder
  Duty Station Phoenix, AZ
  Born 1940
  Term 1979–present
  Chief Term 2000–present
  Senior Term
  Appointer Carter


  Index 50
  Title Circuit Judge
  Name Harry Pregerson
  Duty Station Woodland Hills, CA
  Born 1923
  Term 1979–present
  Chief Term
  Senior Term
  Appointer Carter


  Index 57
  Title Circuit Judge
  Name Stephen Reinhardt
  Duty Station Los Angeles, CA
  Born 1931
  Term 1980–present
  Chief Term
  Senior Term
  Appointer Carter


  Index 62
  Title Circuit Judge
  Name Alex Kozinski
  Duty Station Pasadena, CA
  Born 1950
  Term 1985–present
  Chief Term
  Senior Term
  Appointer Reagan


  Index 65
  Title Circuit Judge
  Name Diarmuid Fionntain O'Scannlain
  Duty Station Portland, OR
  Born 1937
  Term 1986–present
  Chief Term
  Senior Term
  Appointer Reagan


  Index 69
  Title Circuit Judge
  Name Pamela Ann Rymer
  Duty Station Pasadena, CA
  Born 1941
  Term 1989–present
  Chief Term
  Senior Term
  Appointer GHW Bush


  Index 71
  Title Circuit Judge
  Name Andrew Jay Kleinfeld
  Duty Station Fairbanks, AK
  Born 1945
  Term 1991–present
  Chief Term
  Senior Term
  Appointer GHW Bush


  Index 72
  Title Circuit Judge
  Name Michael Daly Hawkins
  Duty Station Phoenix, AZ
  Born 1945
  Term 1994–present
  Chief Term
  Senior Term
  Appointer Clinton


  Index 74
  Title Circuit Judge
  Name Sidney Runyan Thomas
  Duty Station Billings, MT
  Born 1953
  Term 1996–present
  Chief Term
  Senior Term
  Appointer Clinton


  Index 75
  Title Circuit Judge
  Name Barry G Silverman
  Duty Station Phoenix, AZ
  Born 1951
  Term 1998–present
  Chief Term
  Senior Term
  Appointer Clinton


  Index 76
  Title Circuit Judge
  Name Susan P Graber
  Duty Station Portland, OR
  Born 1949
  Term 1998–present
  Chief Term
  Senior Term
  Appointer Clinton


  Index 77
  Title Circuit Judge
  Name M Margaret McKeown
  Duty Station San Diego, CA
  Born 1951
  Term 1998–present
  Chief Term
  Senior Term
  Appointer Clinton


  Index 78
  Title Circuit Judge
  Name Kim McLane Wardlaw
  Duty Station Pasadena, CA
  Born 1954
  Term 1998–present
  Chief Term
  Senior Term
  Appointer Clinton


  Index 79
  Title Circuit Judge
  Name William A Fletcher
  Duty Station San Francisco, CA
  Born 1945
  Term 1998–present
  Chief Term
  Senior Term
  Appointer Clinton


  Index 80
  Title Circuit Judge
  Name Raymond C Fisher
  Duty Station Pasadena, CA
  Born 1939
  Term 1999–present
  Chief Term
  Senior Term
  Appointer Clinton


  Index 81
  Title Circuit Judge
  Name Ronald M Gould
  Duty Station Seattle, WA
  Born 1946
  Term 1999–present
  Chief Term
  Senior Term
  Appointer Clinton


  Index 82
  Title Circuit Judge
  Name Richard A Paez
  Duty Station Pasadena, CA
  Born 1947
  Term 2000–present
  Chief Term
  Senior Term
  Appointer Clinton


  Index 83
  Title Circuit Judge
  Name Marsha L Berzon
  Duty Station San Francisco, CA
  Born 1945
  Term 2000–present
  Chief Term
  Senior Term
  Appointer Clinton


  Index 84
  Title Circuit Judge
  Name Richard C Tallman
  Duty Station Seattle, WA
  Born 1953
  Term 2000–present
  Chief Term
  Senior Term
  Appointer Clinton


  Index 85
  Title Circuit Judge
  Name Johnnie B Rawlinson
  Duty Station Las Vegas, NV
  Born 1952
  Term 2000–present
  Chief Term
  Senior Term
  Appointer Clinton


  Index 86
  Title Circuit Judge
  Name Richard R Clifton
  Duty Station Honolulu, HI
  Born 1950
  Term 2002–present
  Chief Term
  Senior Term
  Appointer GW Bush


  Index 87
  Title Circuit Judge
  Name Jay Bybee
  Duty Station Las Vegas, NV
  Born 1953
  Term 2003–present
  Chief Term
  Senior Term
  Appointer GW Bush


  Index 88
  Title Circuit Judge
  Name Consuelo Maria Callahan
  Duty Station Sacramento, CA
  Born 1950
  Term 2003–present
  Chief Term
  Senior Term
  Appointer GW Bush


  Index 89
  Title Circuit Judge
  Name Carlos T Bea
  Duty Station San Francisco, CA
  Born 1934
  Term 2003–present
  Chief Term
  Senior Term
  Appointer GW Bush


  Index 90
  Title Circuit Judge
  Name Milan D Smith, Jr
  Duty Station Pasadena, CA
  Born 1942
  Term 2006–present
  Chief Term
  Senior Term
  Appointer GW Bush


  Index 91
  Title Circuit Judge
  Name Sandra Segal Ikuta
  Duty Station Pasadena, CA
  Born 1954
  Term 2006–present
  Chief Term
  Senior Term
  Appointer GW Bush


  Index 92
  Title Circuit Judge
  Name N Randy Smith
  Duty Station Pocatello, Idaho
  Born 1949
  Term 2007–present
  Chief Term
  Senior Term
  Appointer GW Bush


  Index
  Title Circuit Judge
  Name ''(vacant - seat 5)''
  Duty Station ''(n/a)''
  Born ''(n/a)''
  Term ''(n/a)''
  Chief Term ''(n/a)''
  Senior Term ''(n/a)''
  Appointer ''(n/a)''


  Index 29
  Title Senior Circuit Judge
  Name James R Browning
  Duty Station San Francisco, CA
  Born 1918
  Term 1961–2000
  Chief Term 1976–1988
  Senior Term 2000–present
  Appointer Kennedy


  Index 38
  Title Senior Circuit Judge
  Name Alfred Theodore Goodwin
  Duty Station Pasadena, CA
  Born 1923
  Term 1971–1991
  Chief Term 1988–1991
  Senior Term 1991–present
  Appointer Nixon


  Index 39
  Title Senior Circuit Judge
  Name J Clifford Wallace
  Duty Station San Diego, CA
  Born 1928
  Term 1972–1996
  Chief Term 1991–1996
  Senior Term 1996–present
  Appointer Nixon


  Index 40
  Title Senior Circuit Judge
  Name Joseph Tyree Sneed III
  Duty Station San Francisco, CA
  Born 1920
  Term 1973–1987
  Chief Term ''(none)''
  Senior Term 1987–present
  Appointer Nixon


  Index 43
  Title Senior Circuit Judge
  Name Procter Ralph Hug, Jr
  Duty Station Reno, NV
  Born 1931
  Term 1977–2002
  Chief Term 1996–2000
  Senior Term 2002–present
  Appointer Carter


  Index 45
  Title Senior Circuit Judge
  Name Betty Binns Fletcher
  Duty Station Seattle, WA
  Born 1923
  Term 1979–1998
  Chief Term ''(none)''
  Senior Term 1998–present
  Appointer Carter


  Index 47
  Title Senior Circuit Judge
  Name Otto Richard Skopil, Jr
  Duty Station Portland, OR
  Born 1919
  Term 1979–1986
  Chief Term ''(none)''
  Senior Term 1986–present
  Appointer Carter


  Index 48
  Title Senior Circuit Judge
  Name Joseph Jerome Farris
  Duty Station Seattle, WA
  Born 1930
  Term 1979–1995
  Chief Term ''(none)''
  Senior Term 1995–present
  Appointer Carter


  Index 49
  Title Senior Circuit Judge
  Name Arthur Lawrence Alarcon
  Duty Station Los Angeles, CA
  Born 1925
  Term 1979–1992
  Chief Term ''(none)''
  Senior Term 1992–present
  Appointer Carter


  Index 51
  Title Senior Circuit Judge
  Name Warren John Ferguson
  Duty Station Santa Ana, CA
  Born 1920
  Term 1979–1986
  Chief Term ''(none)''
  Senior Term 1986–present
  Appointer Carter


  Index 53
  Title Senior Circuit Judge
  Name Dorothy Wright Nelson
  Duty Station Pasadena, CA
  Born 1928
  Term 1979–1995
  Chief Term ''(none)''
  Senior Term 1995–present
  Appointer Carter


  Index 54
  Title Senior Circuit Judge
  Name William Cameron Canby, Jr
  Duty Station Phoenix, AZ
  Born 1931
  Term 1980–1996
  Chief Term ''(none)''
  Senior Term 1996–present
  Appointer Carter


  Index 55
  Title Senior Circuit Judge
  Name Robert Boochever
  Duty Station Pasadena, CA
  Born 1917
  Term 1980–1986
  Chief Term ''(none)''
  Senior Term 1986–present
  Appointer Carter


  Index 58
  Title Senior Circuit Judge
  Name Robert R Beezer
  Duty Station Seattle, WA
  Born 1928
  Term 1984–1996
  Chief Term ''(none)''
  Senior Term 1996–present
  Appointer Reagan


  Index 59
  Title Senior Circuit Judge
  Name Cynthia Holcomb Hall
  Duty Station Pasadena, CA
  Born 1929
  Term 1984–1997
  Chief Term ''(none)''
  Senior Term 1997–present
  Appointer Reagan


  Index 61
  Title Senior Circuit Judge
  Name Melvin T Brunetti
  Duty Station Reno, NV
  Born 1933
  Term 1985–1999
  Chief Term ''(none)''
  Senior Term 1999–present
  Appointer Reagan


  Index 63
  Title Senior Circuit Judge
  Name John T Noonan, Jr
  Duty Station San Francisco, CA
  Born 1926
  Term 1985–1996
  Chief Term ''(none)''
  Senior Term 1996–present
  Appointer Reagan


  Index 64
  Title Senior Circuit Judge
  Name David R Thompson
  Duty Station San Diego, CA
  Born 1930
  Term 1985–1998
  Chief Term ''(none)''
  Senior Term 1998–present
  Appointer Reagan


  Index 66
  Title Senior Circuit Judge
  Name Edward Leavy
  Duty Station Portland, OR
  Born 1929
  Term 1987–1997
  Chief Term ''(none)''
  Senior Term 1997–present
  Appointer Reagan


  Index 67
  Title Senior Circuit Judge
  Name Stephen S Trott
  Duty Station Boise, ID
  Born 1939
  Term 1988–2004
  Chief Term ''(none)''
  Senior Term 2005–present
  Appointer Reagan


  Index 68
  Title Senior Circuit Judge
  Name Ferdinand Francis Fernandez
  Duty Station Pasadena, CA
  Born 1937
  Term 1989–2002
  Chief Term ''(none)''
  Senior Term 2002–present
  Appointer GHW Bush


  Index 70
  Title Senior Circuit Judge
  Name Thomas G Nelson
  Duty Station Boise, ID
  Born 1936
  Term 1990–2003
  Chief Term ''(none)''
  Senior Term 2003–present
  Appointer GHW Bush


  Index 73
  Title Senior Circuit Judge
  Name Atsushi Wallace Tashima
  Duty Station Pasadena, CA
  Born 1934
  Term 1996–2004
  Chief Term ''(none)''
  Senior Term 2004–present
  Appointer Clinton



PENDING NOMINATIONS


  • There are no pending nominations at this time.



LIST OF FORMER JUDGES


  Index 1
  Name Lorenzo Sawyer
  State CA
  Borndied 1820–1891
  Term 1891–1891
  Chief Term ''(none)''
  Senior Term ''(none)''
  Appointer Sawyer was appointed as a Circuit Judge for the Ninth Circuit in 1869 by Ulysses S Grant The Judiciary Act Of 1891 reassigned his seat to what is now the US Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit
  Termination death


  Index 2
  Name Joseph McKenna
  State CA
  Borndied 1843–1926
  Term 1892–1897
  Chief Term ''(none)''
  Senior Term ''(none)''
  Appointer B Harrison
  Termination resignation


  Index 3
  Name William Ball Gilbert
  State OR
  Borndied 1847–1931
  Term 1892–1931
  Chief Term ''(none)''
  Senior Term ''(none)''
  Appointer B Harrison
  Termination death


  Index 4
  Name Erskine Mayo Ross
  State CA
  Borndied 1845–1928
  Term 1895–1925
  Chief Term ''(none)''
  Senior Term 1925–1928
  Appointer Cleveland
  Termination death


  Index 5
  Name William W Morrow
  State CA
  Borndied 1843–1929
  Term 1897–1923
  Chief Term ''(none)''
  Senior Term ''(none)''
  Appointer McKinley
  Termination resignation


  Index
  Name William Henry Hunt
  State MT
  Borndied 1857–1949
  Term 1911–1928
  Chief Term ''(none)''
  Senior Term 1928–1928
  Appointer Hunt did not have a permanent seat on this court Instead, he was appointed to the ill-fated United States Commerce Court in 1911 by William Howard Taft Aside from their duties on the Commerce Court, the judges of the Commerce Court also acted as at-large appellate judges, able to be assigned by the Chief Justice Of The United States to whichever circuit most needed help Hunt was assigned to the Ninth Circuit upon his commission
  Termination resignation


  Index 6
  Name Frank H Rudkin
  State WA
  Borndied 1864–1931
  Term 1923–1931
  Chief Term ''(none)''
  Senior Term ''(none)''
  Appointer Harding
  Termination death


  Index 7
  Name Wallace McCamant
  State OR
  Borndied 1867–1944
  Term 1925Recess appointment–1926
  Chief Term ''(none)''
  Senior Term ''(none)''
  Appointer Coolidge
  Termination recess appointment not confirmed by the Senate


  Index 8
  Name Frank Sigel Dietrich
  State ID
  Borndied 1863–1930
  Term 1927–1930
  Chief Term ''(none)''
  Senior Term ''(none)''
  Appointer Coolidge
  Termination death


  Index 9
  Name Curtis D Wilbur
  State CA
  Borndied 1867–1954
  Term 1929–1945
  Chief Term ''(none)''
  Senior Term 1945–1954
  Appointer Hoover
  Termination death


  Index 10
  Name William Henry Sawtelle
  State AZ
  Borndied 1868–1934
  Term 1931–1934
  Chief Term ''(none)''
  Senior Term ''(none)''
  Appointer Hoover
  Termination death


  Index 11
  Name Francis Arthur Garrecht
  State WA
  Borndied 1870–1948
  Term 1933–1948
  Chief Term ''(none)''
  Senior Term ''(none)''
  Appointer F Roosevelt
  Termination death


  Index 12
  Name William Denman
  State CA
  Borndied 1872–1959
  Term 1935–1957
  Chief Term 1948–1957
  Senior Term 1957–1959
  Appointer F Roosevelt
  Termination death


  Index 13
  Name Clifton Mathews
  State AZ
  Borndied 1880–1962
  Term 1935–1953
  Chief Term ''(none)''
  Senior Term 1953–1962
  Appointer F Roosevelt
  Termination death


  Index 14
  Name Bert Emory Haney
  State OR
  Borndied 1879–1943
  Term 1935–1943
  Chief Term ''(none)''
  Senior Term ''(none)''
  Appointer F Roosevelt
  Termination death


  Index 15
  Name Albert Lee Stephens, Sr
  State CA
  Borndied 1874–1965
  Term 1937–1961
  Chief Term 1957–1959
  Senior Term 1961–1965
  Appointer F Roosevelt
  Termination death


  Index 16
  Name William Healy
  State ID
  Borndied 1881–1962
  Term 1937–1958
  Chief Term ''(none)''
  Senior Term 1958–1962
  Appointer F Roosevelt
  Termination death


  Index 17
  Name Homer Bone
  State WA
  Borndied 1883–1970
  Term 1944–1956
  Chief Term ''(none)''
  Senior Term 1956–1970
  Appointer F Roosevelt
  Termination death


  Index 18
  Name William Edwin Orr
  State NV
  Borndied 1881–1965
  Term 1945–1956
  Chief Term ''(none)''
  Senior Term 1956–1965
  Appointer Truman
  Termination death


  Index 19
  Name Walter Lyndon Pope
  State MT
  Borndied 1889–1969
  Term 1949–1961
  Chief Term 1959–1959
  Senior Term 1961–1969
  Appointer Truman
  Termination death


  Index 20
  Name Dal Millington Lemmon
  State CA
  Borndied 1887–1958
  Term 1954–1958
  Chief Term ''(none)''
  Senior Term ''(none)''
  Appointer Eisenhower
  Termination death


  Index 21
  Name Richard Harvey Chambers
  State AZ
  Borndied 1906–1994
  Term 1954–1976
  Chief Term 1959–1976
  Senior Term 1976–1994
  Appointer Eisenhower
  Termination death


  Index 22
  Name James Alger Fee
  State OR
  Borndied 1888–1959
  Term 1954–1959
  Chief Term ''(none)''
  Senior Term ''(none)''
  Appointer Eisenhower
  Termination death


  Index 23
  Name Stanley Nelson Barnes
  State CA
  Borndied 1900–1990
  Term 1956–1970
  Chief Term ''(none)''
  Senior Term 1970–1990
  Appointer Eisenhower
  Termination death


  Index 24
  Name Frederick George Hamley
  State WA
  Borndied 1903–1975
  Term 1956–1971
  Chief Term ''(none)''
  Senior Term 1971–1975
  Appointer Eisenhower
  Termination death


  Index 25
  Name Oliver Deveta Hamlin, Jr
  State CA
  Borndied 1892–1973
  Term 1958–1963
  Chief Term ''(none)''
  Senior Term 1963–1973
  Appointer Eisenhower
  Termination death


  Index 26
  Name Gilbert H Jertberg
  State CA
  Borndied 1897–1973
  Term 1958–1967
  Chief Term ''(none)''
  Senior Term 1967–1973
  Appointer Eisenhower
  Termination death


  Index 27
  Name Charles Merton Merrill
  State NV
  Borndied 1907–1996
  Term 1959–1974
  Chief Term ''(none)''
  Senior Term 1974–1996
  Appointer Eisenhower
  Termination death


  Index 28
  Name Montgomery Oliver Koelsch
  State ID
  Borndied 1912–1992
  Term 1959–1976
  Chief Term ''(none)''
  Senior Term 1976–1992
  Appointer Eisenhower
  Termination death


  Index 30
  Name Benjamin Cushing Duniway
  State CA
  Borndied 1907–1986
  Term 1961–1976
  Chief Term ''(none)''
  Senior Term 1976–1986
  Appointer Kennedy
  Termination death


  Index 31
  Name Walter Raleigh Ely, Jr
  State CA
  Borndied 1913–1979
  Term 1964–1979
  Chief Term ''(none)''
  Senior Term 1979–1984
  Appointer L Johnson
  Termination death


  Index 32
  Name James Marshall Carter
  State CA
  Borndied 1904–1979
  Term 1967–1971
  Chief Term ''(none)''
  Senior Term 1971–1979
  Appointer L Johnson
  Termination death


  Index 33
  Name Shirley Hufstedler
  State CA
  Borndied 1925–
  Term 1968–1979
  Chief Term ''(none)''
  Senior Term ''(none)''
  Appointer L Johnson
  Termination Appointed US Secretary of Education


  Index 34
  Name Eugene Allen Wright
  State WA
  Borndied 1913–2002
  Term 1969–1983
  Chief Term ''(none)''
  Senior Term 1983–2002
  Appointer Nixon
  Termination death


  Index 35
  Name John Francis Kilkenny
  State OR
  Borndied 1901–1995
  Term 1969–1971
  Chief Term ''(none)''
  Senior Term 1971–1995
  Appointer Nixon
  Termination death


  Index 36
  Name Ozell Miller Trask
  State AZ
  Borndied 1909–1984
  Term 1971–1984
  Chief Term ''(none)''
  Senior Term ''(none)''
  Appointer Nixon
  Termination death


  Index 37
  Name Herbert Choy
  State HI
  Borndied 1916–2004
  Term 1971–1984
  Chief Term ''(none)''
  Senior Term 1984–2004
  Appointer Nixon
  Termination death


  Index 41
  Name Anthony Kennedy
  State CA
  Borndied 1936–
  Term 1975–1988
  Chief Term ''(none)''
  Senior Term ''(none)''
  Appointer Ford
  Termination elevation to Supreme Court


  Index 42
  Name J Blaine Anderson
  State ID
  Borndied 1922–1988
  Term 1976–1988
  Chief Term ''(none)''
  Senior Term ''(none)''
  Appointer Ford
  Termination death


  Index 44
  Name Thomas Tang
  State AZ
  Borndied 1922–1995
  Term 1977–1993
  Chief Term ''(none)''
  Senior Term 1993–1995
  Appointer Carter
  Termination death


  Index 52
  Name Cecil F Poole
  State CA
  Borndied 1914–1997
  Term 1979–1996
  Chief Term ''(none)''
  Senior Term 1996–1997
  Appointer Carter
  Termination death


  Index 56
  Name William Albert Norris
  State CA
  Borndied 1927–
  Term 1980–1994
  Chief Term ''(none)''
  Senior Term 1994–1997
  Appointer Carter
  Termination retirement


  Index 60
  Name Charles Edward Wiggins
  State CA
  Borndied 1927–2000
  Term 1984–1996
  Chief Term ''(none)''
  Senior Term 1996–2000
  Appointer Reagan
  Termination death



CHIEF JUDGES

  Name Denman
  Term 1948–1957


  Name Stephens
  Term 1957–1959


  Name Pope
  Term 1959–1959


  Name Chambers
  Term 1959–1976


  Name Browning
  Term 1976–1988


  Name Goodwin
  Term 1988–1991


  Name Wallace
  Term 1991–1996


  Name Hug
  Term 1996–2000


  Name '''Schroeder'''
  Term 2000–present



  { Align "center" cellspacing="5"
  Text Established on December 10 , 1869 by the Judiciary Act Of 1869 as a circuit judgeship for the Ninth Circuit


  Text Reassigned to the United States Circuit Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit by the Judiciary Act Of 1891


  Name Sawyer
  State CA
  Term 1891–1891


  Name McKenna
  State CA
  Term 1892–1897


  Name Morrow
  State CA
  Term 1897–1923


  Name Rudkin
  State WA
  Term 1923–1931


  Name Garrecht
  State WA
  Term 1933–1948


  Name Pope
  State MT
  Term 1949–1961


  Name Browning
  State DC
  Term 1961–2000


  Name '''Ikuta'''
  State CA
  Term 2006–present


  Valign "top"
  Seat Title Seat 2


  Text Established on June 16 , 1891 by the Judiciary Act Of 1891


  Name Gilbert
  State OR
  Term 1892–1931


  Name Denman
  State CA
  Term 1935–1957


  Name Hamlin
  State CA
  Term 1958–1963


  Name Ely
  State CA
  Term 1964–1979


  Name Norris
  State CA
  Term 1980–1994


  Name '''W Fletcher'''
  State CA
  Term 1998–present


  Valign "top"
  Seat Title Seat 3


  Text Established on February 18 , 1895 by 28&nbspStat&nbsp665


  Name Ross
  State CA
  Term 1895–1925


  Name McCamant
  State OR
  Term 1925–1926


  Name Dietrich
  State ID
  Term 1927–1930


  Name Sawtelle
  State AZ
  Term 1931–1934


  Name Mathews
  State AZ
  Term 1935–1953


  Name Fee
  State OR
  Term 1954–1959


  Name Koelsch
  State ID
  Term 1959–1976


  Name Anderson
  State ID
  Term 1976–1988


  Name T Nelson
  State ID
  Term 1990–2003


  Name '''NR Smith'''
  State ID
  Term 2007–present


  Valign "top"
  Seat Title Seat 4


  Text Established as a temporary judgeship on March 1 , 1929 by 45&nbspStat&nbsp1414


  Text Made permanent on June 16 , 1933 by 48&nbspStat&nbsp310


  Name Wilbur
  State CA
  Term 1929–1945


  Name Orr
  State NV
  Term 1945–1956


  Name Barnes
  State CA
  Term 1956–1970


  Name Choy
  State HI
  Term 1971–1984


  Name Brunetti
  State NV
  Term 1985–1999


  Name '''Rawlinson'''
  State NV
  Term 2000–present




  { Align "center" cellspacing="5"
  Text Established on August 2 , 1935 by 49&nbspStat&nbsp508


  Name Haney
  State OR
  Term 1935–1943


  Name Bone
  State WA
  Term 1944–1956


  Name Hamley
  State WA
  Term 1956–1971


  Name Sneed
  State CA
  Term 1973–1987


  Name '''Trott'''
  State ID
  Term 1988–2004


  Name ''(vacant)''
  State ''(n/a)''
  Term 2004–present


  Valign "top"
  Seat Title Seat 6


  Text Established on April 14 , 1937 by 50&nbspStat&nbsp64


  Name Stephens
  State CA
  Term 1937–1961


  Name Duniway
  State CA
  Term 1961–1976


  Name Hug
  State NV
  Term 1977–2002


  Name '''Bybee'''
  State NV
  Term 2003–present


  Valign "top"
  Seat Title Seat 7


  Text Established on April 14 , 1937 by 50&nbspStat&nbsp64


  Name Healy
  State ID
  Term 1937–1958


  Name Merrill
  State NV
  Term 1959–1974


  Name Kennedy
  State CA
  Term 1975–1988


  Name '''Rymer'''
  State CA
  Term 1989–present


  Valign "top"
  Seat Title Seat 8


  Text Established on February 10 , 1954 by 68&nbspStat&nbsp871


  Name Lemmon
  State CA
  Term 1954–1958


  Name Jertberg
  State CA
  Term 1958–1967


  Name Carter
  State CA
  Term 1967–1971


  Name Wallace
  State CA
  Term 1972–1996


  Name '''Wardlaw'''
  State CA
  Term 1998–present




  { Align "center" cellspacing="5"
  Text Established on February 10 , 1954 by 68&nbspStat&nbsp871


  Name Chambers
  State AZ
  Term 1954–1976


  Name Tang
  State AZ
  Term 1977–1993


  Name '''Hawkins'''
  State AZ
  Term 1994–present


  Valign "top"
  Seat Title Seat 10


  Text Established on June 18 , 1968 by 82&nbspStat&nbsp184


  Name Hufstedler
  State CA
  Term 1968–1979


  Name Boochever
  State AK
  Term 1980–1986


  Name '''O'Scannlain'''
  State OR
  Term 1986–present


  Valign "top"
  Seat Title Seat 11


  Text Established on June 18 , 1968 by 82&nbspStat&nbsp184


  Name Wright
  State WA
  Term 1969–1983


  Name Beezer
  State WA
  Term 1984–1996


  Name '''Gould'''
  State WA
  Term 1999–present


  Valign "top"
  Seat Title Seat 12


  Text Established on June 18 , 1968 by 82&nbspStat&nbsp184


  Name Kilkenny
  State OR
  Term 1969–1971


  Name Goodwin
  State OR
  Term 1971–1991


  Name '''Kleinfeld'''
  State AK
  Term 1991–present




  { Align "center" cellspacing="5"
  Text Established on June 18 , 1968 by 82&nbspStat&nbsp184


  Name Trask
  State AZ
  Term 1969–1979


  Name Canby
  State AZ
  Term 1980–1996


  Name '''Silverman'''
  State AZ
  Term 1998–present


  Valign "top"
  Seat Title Seat 14


  Text Established on October 20 , 1978 by 92&nbspStat&nbsp1629


  Name B Fletcher
  State WA
  Term 1979–1998


  Name '''Tallman'''
  State WA
  Term 2000–present


  Valign "top"
  Seat Title Seat 15


  Text Established on October 20 , 1978 by 92&nbspStat&nbsp1629


  Name '''Schroeder'''
  State AZ
  Term 1979–present


  Valign "top"
  Seat Title Seat 16


  Text Established on October 20 , 1978 by 92&nbspStat&nbsp1629


  Name Skopil
  State OR
  Term 1979–1986


  Name Leavy
  State OR
  Term 1987–1997


  Name '''Graber'''
  State OR
  Term 1998–present




  { Align "center" cellspacing="5"
  Text Established on October 20 , 1978 by 92&nbspStat&nbsp1629


  Name Farris
  State WA
  Term 1979–1995


  Name '''McKeown'''
  State WA
  Term 1998–present


  Valign "top"
  Seat Title Seat 18


  Text Established on October 20 , 1978 by 92&nbspStat&nbsp1629


  Name Alarcon
  State CA
  Term 1979–1992


  Name Tashima
  State CA
  Term 1996–2004


  Name '''MD Smith'''
  State CA
  Term 2006–present


  Valign "top"
  Seat Title Seat 19


  Text Established on October 20 , 1978 by 92&nbspStat&nbsp1629


  Name '''Pregerson'''
  State CA
  Term 1979–present


  Valign "top"
  Seat Title Seat 20


  Text Established on October 20 , 1978 by 92&nbspStat&nbsp1629


  Name Ferguson
  State CA
  Term 1979–1986


  Name Fernandez
  State CA
  Term 1989–2002


  Name '''Callahan'''
  State CA
  Term 2003–present




  { Align "center" cellspacing="5"
  Text Established on October 20 , 1978 by 92&nbspStat&nbsp1629


  Name Poole
  State CA
  Term 1979–1996


  Name '''Paez'''
  State CA
  Term 2000–present


  Valign "top"
  Seat Title Seat 22


  Text Established on October 20 , 1978 by 92&nbspStat&nbsp1629


  Name D Nelson
  State CA
  Term 1979–1995


  Name '''Thomas'''
  State MT
  Term 1996–present


  Valign "top"
  Seat Title Seat 23


  Text Established on October 20 , 1978 by 92&nbspStat&nbsp1629


  Name '''Reinhardt'''
  State CA
  Term 1980–present


  Valign "top"
  Seat Title Seat 24


  Text Established on July 10 , 1984 by 98&nbspStat&nbsp333


  Name Hall
  State CA
  Term 1984–1997


  Name '''Clifton'''
  State HI
  Term 2002–present




  { Align "center" cellspacing="5"
  Text Established on July 10 , 1984 by 98&nbspStat&nbsp333


  Name Wiggins
  State NV
  Term 1984–1996


  Name '''Bea'''
  State CA
  Term 2003–present


  Valign "top"
  Seat Title Seat 26


  Text Established on July 10 , 1984 by 98&nbspStat&nbsp333


  Name '''Kozinski'''
  State DC
  Term 1985–present


  Valign "top"
  Seat Title Seat 27


  Text Established on July 10 , 1984 by 98&nbspStat&nbsp333


  Name Noonan
  State CA
  Term 1985–1996


  Name '''Berzon'''
  State CA
  Term 2000–present


  Valign "top"
  Seat Title Seat 28


  Text Established on July 10 , 1984 by 98&nbspStat&nbsp333


  Name Thompson
  State CA
  Term 1985–1998


  Name '''Fisher'''
  State CA
  Term 1999–present