Appeals terminology
Appellate: The adjective that refers to appeals (e.g., an “appellate” court is a court that handles appeals).
Appellant: The party bringing an appeal.
Appellee: The term used in federal court for the party defending an appeal. (In state court, this party is called the “respondent.”)
Appendix: A bound volume — or set of volumes — of documents filed in the trial court that can be made part of the record before the California Court of Appeal or, in the age of electronic filing, a PDF version of the same. This is an alternative to having a “Clerk’s Transcript” (see below). The fundamental difference is that the trial court compiles the Clerk’s Transcript based on instructions given very soon after the notice of appeal is filed, whereas the parties themselves prepare the Appendix (separately or jointly) and file this with the Court of Appeal with their briefs. There are pros and cons to both methods.
Brief: The written argument that is central to the appeals process. (It can be up to 14,000 words long — so it is actually not always all that “brief.”)
Clerk’s Transcript: Not a “transcript” in the commonly understood sense of the word, but a bound volume of documents filed in the trial court that — along with the actual transcripts of what is said in court — make up the record in the California Court of Appeal. See also “Appendix,” above.
Court of Appeal: The name of the California appellate court. (Note the absence of an “s.”)
Court of Appeals: The name of the federal appellate court. (Same as the state court name, but with “Appeals” in the plural.)
Interlocutory appeals: An “interlocutory” appeal is one that is filed before the final judgment in the case from which it arises. In most instances, an interlocutory appeal would be premature and subject to dismissal without review on the merits. But, in some circumstances, a party has to file an appeal on an interlocutory basis or waive the issue for ever. If an interlocutory appeal is not appropriate, one could, instead, consider seeking early appellate review by means of a writ (see below).
Justice: Not just what you are trying to get out of the system, but also the title of a judge in the California Court of Appeal (e.g., “Justice Smith,” not “Judge Smith”).
Reporter’s Transcript: The transcribed proceedings of what went on in the trial court.
Respondent: The term used in state court for the party defending an appeal. (In federal court, this party is called the “appellee.”)
Writ: An order from a higher court ordering a lower court to do something. Writs provide a discretionary process for review by the appellate courts of trial court rulings that are not immediately appealable.
Appellant: The party bringing an appeal.
Appellee: The term used in federal court for the party defending an appeal. (In state court, this party is called the “respondent.”)
Appendix: A bound volume — or set of volumes — of documents filed in the trial court that can be made part of the record before the California Court of Appeal or, in the age of electronic filing, a PDF version of the same. This is an alternative to having a “Clerk’s Transcript” (see below). The fundamental difference is that the trial court compiles the Clerk’s Transcript based on instructions given very soon after the notice of appeal is filed, whereas the parties themselves prepare the Appendix (separately or jointly) and file this with the Court of Appeal with their briefs. There are pros and cons to both methods.
Brief: The written argument that is central to the appeals process. (It can be up to 14,000 words long — so it is actually not always all that “brief.”)
Clerk’s Transcript: Not a “transcript” in the commonly understood sense of the word, but a bound volume of documents filed in the trial court that — along with the actual transcripts of what is said in court — make up the record in the California Court of Appeal. See also “Appendix,” above.
Court of Appeal: The name of the California appellate court. (Note the absence of an “s.”)
Court of Appeals: The name of the federal appellate court. (Same as the state court name, but with “Appeals” in the plural.)
Interlocutory appeals: An “interlocutory” appeal is one that is filed before the final judgment in the case from which it arises. In most instances, an interlocutory appeal would be premature and subject to dismissal without review on the merits. But, in some circumstances, a party has to file an appeal on an interlocutory basis or waive the issue for ever. If an interlocutory appeal is not appropriate, one could, instead, consider seeking early appellate review by means of a writ (see below).
Justice: Not just what you are trying to get out of the system, but also the title of a judge in the California Court of Appeal (e.g., “Justice Smith,” not “Judge Smith”).
Reporter’s Transcript: The transcribed proceedings of what went on in the trial court.
Respondent: The term used in state court for the party defending an appeal. (In federal court, this party is called the “appellee.”)
Writ: An order from a higher court ordering a lower court to do something. Writs provide a discretionary process for review by the appellate courts of trial court rulings that are not immediately appealable.