2016 Annual Report of the
State Reporter
1. Introduction. The New York State Law
Reporting Bureau (LRB), established under article 14 of the Judiciary Law,
edits and publishes all of the decisions of the Court of Appeals and the
Appellate Division, as well as selected decisions of the lower courts. These
decisions are published in the New York Official Reports, which include the New
York Reports, the Appellate Division Reports and the Miscellaneous Reports.
Motion decisions of the Appellate Division and Appellate Term and additional
lower court opinions are published only online. The Official Reports are
published in print and online pursuant to a five-year commercial publishing
contract, currently held by Thomson Reuters – West; consequently, Thomson Reuters Westlaw is the sole commercial source
of the complete New York Official Reports through December 31, 2020. A free,
public access version of the Official Reports is also available on the Law
Reporting Bureau website at http://www.nycourts.gov/reporter/.
The LRB operates under the direction of
a State Reporter appointed by the Court of Appeals, with a designated Judge of
the Court — currently Judge Leslie E. Stein, who replaced Judge Eugene F.
Pigott, Jr. upon his retirement — serving as the Court's liaison to the LRB. This is a
report of the LRB's activities in 2016.
2.
Publishing activity. The LRB published in print and electronically 54,564
opinions, memoranda, abstracts and appellate motions in 2016 — a decrease of 1.1% from 2015.
A. Print
publication. During 2016, the LRB prepared for publication two volumes of
the New York Reports, 3d Series; 11 volumes of the Appellate Division Reports,
3d Series; and four volumes of the Miscellaneous Reports, 3d Series, for a
total of 17 bound volumes, as planned. Two soft-cover interim volumes of the
New York Reports, 3d Series, also were published.
In addition, 52 weekly
advance sheets and six bi-monthly Cumulative Tables and Index pamphlets were
issued. These advance sheets contained 10,554 full opinions, memorandum
decisions, and abstracts of opinions not published in print; 19,405 pages of
opinions, memoranda and abstracts; and 12,572 headnotes,
allocated as follows:
Report |
# Opinions/ Memoranda |
# Opinions/ Memoranda
Pages |
# Headnotes |
NY3d |
117 Opinions 77 Mems |
1,607 Opinion 538
Mem |
226 Opinion 86 Mem |
AD3d |
279 Opinions 7,687
Mems |
2,037 Opinion 10,841 Mem |
435 Opinion 9,146 Mem |
Misc 3d |
470 Opinions 1,924
Abstracts |
4,175 Opinion 207
Abstract |
755 Opinion 1,924 Abstract |
Compared to the
prior year, the number of opinions, memoranda and abstracts decreased 10%;
pages decreased 9.7%; and the number of headnotes
increased 1.8%.
B. Electronic
publication. All decisions published in print also are published
electronically. In addition, the LRB publishes the following decisions only
electronically:
• Appellate term
and trial court opinions not published in the printed Miscellaneous Reports. A
total of 5,212 Appellate Term and trial
court opinions were published only in electronic format in 2016, an increase of .7 %
from the prior year.
• Motion
decisions of the Appellate Division and Appellate Term. A total of 38,798 motion
decisions were published electronically in 2016, an increase of 1.4%
from the prior year.
3. Selection
of lower court opinions. During 2016, a total of 5,958 Appellate Term and trial court opinions
were submitted for publication consideration, a decrease of 1% compared to 2015.
One hundred thirty-one opinions published on websites
or in legal newspapers, or otherwise brought to our attention, were solicited
from the authoring judges for publication.
Of the opinions submitted, the LRB accepted 470
for publication in the Miscellaneous Reports and 5,212 for online publication,
for a total of 5,682 acceptances, an increase of approximately 1.1% compared to
2015. The overall acceptance rate is 90.1%, a decrease of 4.7% from the prior
year.
4. Website usage. Usage of the LRB website grew again in 2016. A total
of 1,138,060 visitors accessed the site, making 3,977,394 visits. Compared to
the prior year, visitors increased by 10.96% and visits increased by 17.28%. The
visits resulted in 35,388,108 page views, an increase of approximately 11.1%,
based upon a comparison with the combined page view and requests for
information reported in 2015.
5. Style Manual.
A total of 216 copies of the printed
Official Reports Style Manual were distributed to judges, court staff and
others in 2016. An additional 19,898 copies were
downloaded from the LRB website.
The Style Manual
was amended to update certain existing citation examples and to add some new style
rules and examples.
6. Product development. The LRB continued
to enhance its online services and website in 2016.
• A facet was
added to the Official Reports on Westlaw permitting searches limited to New
York’s Supreme Court, Commercial Division, which mirrors the Commercial
Division database introduced on the LRB website in 2013. In addition, a content
category was added to Westlaw permitting searches limited to Surrogate’s Court
decisions.
• The LRB website
(http://www.nycourts.gov/reporter/), introduced in
2000, was substantially updated to provide a modern look and improve its
responsiveness, accessibility, usability and navigability. The changes, among
other things, facilitate accessibility by persons with disabilities and ensure
the website’s compatibility with a range of devices (desktop computers; tablets
such as iPad and Surface; and smart phones such as iPhone and Galaxy). In
addition to providing free public access to the decisions of New York courts,
the website features a unique Legal Research Portal (http://www.nycourts.gov/reporter/research.htm) that contains
links to a comprehensive collection of free online legal research sources.
• The LRB’s Legal Research Portal added links
to the following content: American Law Sources Online (ALSO), a comprehensive,
uniform compilation of links to freely accessible online sources of primary and
secondary law for the United States and Canada, as well as commentary and legal
practice aids; New York Court of Claims decisions; the new Model Colloquies
published by the court system’s Criminal Jury Instructions Committee; the City
Record Online; New York City Green Book; and UCS Administrative Orders.
• The LRB website’s Advanced Search function
was updated to offer users the option of sorting search results either by party
name or by decision date (in reverse chronological order).
• All Appellate Division and Appellate
Term motion index pages from January 2016 to present were reorganized to
facilitate browsing and improve aesthetics, and a program was developed and
implemented to facilitate effective research of Court of Appeals Criminal Leave
Applications using the LRB’s Advanced Search function.
• The Official Reports Service, which
provides archival coverage of Official Reports decisions, was augmented to
provide free access to all officially published New York State court decisions
from January 1, 1956 to present. Coverage previously extended back to 1980. The
Service, which is hosted by West under provisions of the publishing contract,
is available at no cost to the public on the LRB website. Use of the Official
Reports Service more than doubled in the
wake of the expansion of coverage and the August upgrade of the LRB website.
• An Electronic
Resources User Guide was posted on the LRB website. The guide assists
researchers in locating and efficiently using the electronic resources
available on the LRB website and the Official Reports on Westlaw.
• An LRB Twitter
account was created. The LRB tweets recent postings of appellate decisions and
Court of Appeals New Filings, in addition to other LRB news. Twitter currently
supplements RSS feeds as a tool to provide website users with prompt access to
new content or news as it is posted.
• In an article
entitled “State Legal Information Census: An Analysis of Primary State Legal
Information” (Sarah Glassmeyer, JD MLS, Harvard Library Innovation Lab), New
York was one of three states recognized as being the most open publishers of
case law. Against the backdrop of the nationwide access to justice crisis and
the need for available and affordable legal self-help resources, the article
surveyed state-provided legal information websites. New York’s ranking for case
law was predicated upon the LRB website’s provision of free (no cost) and open
(fewest restrictions on or barriers to use) access, which was determined in
reference to 14 identified factors that obstruct public access of legal
information.
7. Personnel. The LRB staff numbered 30 at the close of 2016.
• Wendy Harbour
joined the LRB as a Law Reporting Aide, and Sara Patterson joined the LRB as a
Legal Typist.
• Principal
Stenographer Donna McMillen retired from the LRB.
• Law Reporting Assistant Milagros
Figueroa transitioned from the LRB to a position as Principal Stenographer at
the Court of Appeals.
8. Facilities.
• Portraits of
past State Reporters and other official reporters were hung throughout
Centennial Hall, and an original portrait of William Johnson, the second
Reporter (1806-1823), which was donated by Mr. Johnson’s family, was hung in the
foyer of the LRB’s offices.
• Evacuation and
Emergency Procedures were recirculated to staff as part of an annual reminder
protocol. Additionally, Floor Warden responsibilities were reissued to the
designated floor wardens.
• Maintenance
inspections of the Automated External Defibrillation (AED) equipment were
conducted on a monthly basis.
9. Equipment. The LRB acquired the
following new equipment to replace obsolete/outdated assets and disposed of
unnecessary equipment:
• New printers supplied to the LRB by
West Publishing pursuant to the 2016-2020 Official Reports publishing contract
were installed office wide.
• New computers and monitors, also
provided by West, were received and prepared for a 2017 rollout to staff.
• The LRB surplused
30 pairs of unused desktop speakers.
• Mobile devices for
the LRB’s Technology Team were upgraded.
10. Editorial and office technology. In response to the recent
retirements and other departures of managing/programmer members of the LRB’s
technology team, a collaborative model for managing LRB technology operations
was implemented. The core team, comprising Chief Legal Editor Katie Breitenbach
(management), Eric Harrell, Nicole Kappes, Eric Van Hall, Chris Velez
(technology) and Kayleigh Gekakis and Matt Dunn (editorial), is charged with
assuring the effective functioning of the LRB’s daily technical operations,
implementing OCA-directed projects and developing the LRB’s internal technology
capabilities and the public website. The core team will work closely with
product managers and LRB staff to adapt current automation to new programs,
such as Microsoft Office, and to improve the functioning of and users’
experience with current processes.
• The LRB
continued preparations for the Unified Court System’s conversion to Microsoft
Office:
A new LRB
default database structure is under construction, which will provide the
foundation for the LRB’s eventual transition of all LRB processes to MS Office and
for content and functionality enhancement of the LRB website. The LRB Database
will form the central component of the LRB’s future technology infrastructure,
and will be the primary repository of all data currently used in editorial and
other LRB operations.
User case studies
were commenced and provide the first step in adapting the LRB’s current
processes to Microsoft Word. The studies require joint user/programmer review and
documentation of existing procedures, which will enable programmers to develop
more stable Word macros than their WordPerfect counterparts, eliminate any
obsolete macros, and incorporate new steps that currently are performed
manually by users.
A Word to
WordPerfect symbol conversion macro was designed by LRB programmers, facilitating
the initial processing of judicial decisions submitted to the LRB in Word
format. While Word documents currently comprise only a small percentage of the
trial court decisions submitted, the symbol conversion macro will figure
prominently in initial processing for all trial and appellate courts until Word
eventually replaces WordPerfect throughout the court system.
Members of the
LRB’s Technology Team assumed working roles in the Office of Court
Administration’s “WordPerfect to Word Committee,” which is charged with
planning and overseeing implementation of the Unified Court System’s Microsoft
conversion project. The project has significant court system-wide ramifications
for the production, use, preservation and retention of all documents created by
the courts and UCS agencies and will require wholesale revision of related
automated processes (macros, templates, forms, email integration, etc.). Eric
Harrell and Eric Van Hall participate in weekly meetings of the state-wide
Committee; they joined with Matt Dunn in preparing the year-end status
memorandum for the Committee’s 2016 progress report.
• The LRB
continued to employ computer solutions to improve the efficiency and
effectiveness of office and editorial functions. The following projects were completed
or introduced in 2016:
Browsers were upgraded office-wide
to Internet Explorer 11.
A link to a
spreadsheet of the LRB’s print library collection was added to the LRB’s
intranet home page. This document contains all the titles in the LRB’s collection,
author, edition and similar information, and the location of each item in
Centennial Hall.
The LRB Bulletin
Board, developed and rolled out in 2015, continued to demonstrate its value as
the most efficient and effective means for circulating editorial notes and
style clarifications and updates. In April alone, 13 topics were posted; a new
forum — Captions & Table of Cases — was added; and a new subforum —
Identification of Short/MLA Table Entry — was added to the Court of Appeals
forum, which replaces a collection of worksheets used by Court of Appeals civil
motion processors to aid in differentiating “Short” and “Table” motions.
Electronic legal
research Tips of the Week continued to be circulated to staff, providing
shortcuts and suggestions to expedite research on the LRB’s website and Thomson
Reuters Westlaw. The Tips are emailed weekly to staff and posted cumulatively
on the LRB’s Electronic Bulletin Board, which is accessed through LRB’s
intranet home page.
Migration to a
new SQL server was completed and Symantec End Point protection was updated for
all LRB PCs and laptops to enhance security from cyber threats.
A new Outlook
account (LRBpublications@nycourts.gov) was created to
assist with management of Official Reports subscriptions and Style Manual
distribution.
A programming
solution was developed to resolve anomalies with the LRB website’s advanced
search function for certain Court of Appeals criminal leave applications.
An office-wide
upgrade from the 2013 version of MS Office 365 to the 2016 version was
completed.
A draft of an MS
Expression Web User Guide was completed to assist staff with correction of
decisions posted on the LRB website and editing of internal procedures that are
posted on the LRB’s intranet.
Centralized
Skype for Business (S4B) was rolled out for the LRB group. Among other things,
S4B is integral to the daily trouble shooting process for editorial and
decision processing programs.
Processing
procedures for Appellate Division decisions were revised to incorporate
measures that prevent recurring errors in particular types of captions. The
revised procedure saves significant time and effort in correcting captions at
other stages of the publication process, while adding minimally to time
required to complete initial processing.
Development of modified
or replacement applications was initiated to process the following decisions
that courts recently began submitting with changed formats: Appellate Division,
First Department, motions and attorney disciplinary decisions and Appellate
Term, Second Department, decisions.
Kayleigh Gekakis
assisted members of OCA’s Office of Legal Information with incorporation of
Official Reports materials in the Westlaw Navigator Pages that the Office of
Legal Information provides for judges and court staff on the Unified Court
System intranet.
11. Continuing Legal Education (CLE). LRB attorneys
attended and presented various CLE programs in 2016.
• Members of the
LRB's staff attended: “Emerging Appellate Issues Regarding Special Immigrant
Juveniles,” “Update on Evidence,” “The Court of Appeals’ Role in Attorney
Admissions in New York,” “Ethics for Court Attorneys and Law Clerks,” “Recent
Developments in New York Practice,” “Modern Trends in New York Criminal Law:
Recurring and Emerging Issues in the New York Court of Appeals in This (and
Likely the Next) Decade,” “The Seven: About the Court, by the Court,” “Immigration
Consequences in Criminal and Family Court,” “Westlaw Updates,” “New Rules for
Attorney Disciplinary Matters and Pitfalls of Practice,” “Lexis Updates,” and “Addressing
the Individualized Needs of Criminal Defendants.”
• Assistant State
Reporter Cara Brousseau presented a CLE program at Centennial Hall and Court of
Appeals Hall: “Survey of Attorney Disciplinary Proceedings” covering public
disciplinary decisions reported in the Official Reports during the period from
November 2013 through October 2015.
• The LRB presented
a CLE program on “Preparation of Opinions for Publication in the Official
Reports” to new Judges’ Clerks and Central Staff members at Court of Appeals
Hall. Faculty members were Bill Hooks, Kelli Flansburg, Maureen Clements and
Katie Breitenbach.
• The LRB developed
a Continuing Legal Education program to provide instruction in the processes
employed in editing and publishing decisions, the online tools supplied by the
LRB to assist in efficient research of New York law and the drafting of
decisions and reports, application of the Official Style Manual, and effective
use of online versions of New York’s Official Reports on Westlaw and the Law
Reporting Bureau’s website. The program is designed to be adapted for
particular audiences, including court attorneys and local bar associations for
those in private practice. The program was presented to the Appellate Division,
Third Department (Sept.), and First Department (Oct.). Presentations to other
courts and to the Albany County Bar Association are planned for 2017.
12. Professional and volunteer activities.
LRB staff members participated in various professional activities, community
events and charitable causes.
Professional
activities:
• Eric Harrell
and Nicole Kappes attended monthly OCA LAN Committee meetings.
• Eric Harrell attended an
OCA Microsoft System Center Configuration Manager training session; the OCA
SCCM Creating Applications, Programs and Queries session; the Windows 10
Orientation to the Training Notebook session; the Division of Technology OCA
SCCM “Operating System Deployment and Task Sequences” training; OCA’s training
sessions for Operating System Deployment Part II and System Center
Configuration Manager; and a New Horizons course entitled Automating Administration
with Windows Powershell.
• As part of the
orientation program for recently appointed Chief Judge DiFiore and Judge
Garcia, Bill Hooks presented an overview of LRB operations and the interaction
between the LRB and chambers during the editorial and publication processes.
• Bill Hooks and
Cara Brousseau attended the annual meeting of the Association of Reporters of
Judicial Decisions in Columbus, Ohio, from August 3 through August 7. There
were a variety of presentations involving the official publication of court
decisions and issues of significance to official reporters.
• Members of the
LRB staff completed an editing project in connection with a book of Chief Judge
Judith Kaye’s most notable decisions to be published by the Historical Society
of the Courts of New York.
• Eric Harrell
and Eric Van Hall attended OCA’s weekly MS Word Conversion Working Committee
meetings and presented to the Committee on the topics of File Merlin – software
that assists with converting files from one format, such as Word, to another,
such as WordPerfect; and the capabilities of .XML – the markup language that
the LRB uses to store and transmit court decisions – within MS Word.
• The LRB will provide editorial support
for the drafting of the New York Guideline Evidence Code that is being compiled
by the Chief Judge’s Advisory Committee on Evidence. The Code will comprise the
rules of New York evidence accompanied by explanatory notes and serve as a
non-binding New York evidence “guideline” for the bench and bar.
Volunteer activities:
• An LRB team including Kristen Quaresimo,
Kayleigh Gekakis, Jackie Bunce, Maureen Clements, Heath Hardman, Christopher
Velez and Jennifer Davidick participated in the 2016 CDPHP Workforce Team Challenge 3.5 mile race in downtown Albany.
• The LRB
received an Award for Excellence based upon per capita giving to the State
Employees Federated Appeal campaign. Milagros Figueroa chaired the annual SEFA campaign
for the LRB.
• The LRB continued
its annual holiday tradition of "adopting" families through the
Ronald McDonald House. Gifts donated and purchased through staff contributions
were delivered to the Ronald McDonald “Family Room” in the NICU (neonatal
intensive care unit) at Albany Medical Center. Jackie Bunce and Lauren Grygiel
coordinated the collection and delivery.
13. Visits and visitors. Among visits made in 2016:
• John Caher, OCA’s Senior Advisor for
Strategic Communications, met with Bill Hooks to record a session for the
Unified Court System’s Amici Podcast Series concerning the operations of the
Law Reporting Bureau and the role of the State Reporter. The podcast is
available at http://www.nycourts.gov/admin/amici/.
• Bill Hooks, Kathy LaBoda and Cara
Brousseau attended the investitures of Chief Judge Janet DiFiore and Associate Judge
Michael Garcia at the Court of Appeals.
• Representatives from Lexis visited the
LRB to discuss the bid process in connection with the 2016-2020 Official
Reports Publishing Contract.
• Bill Hooks, Kathy LaBoda and Cara
Brousseau attended Law Day Ceremonies at the Court of Appeals.
• Associate Judge Michael Garcia visited
Centennial Hall and toured the LRB offices in June.
• Michael Convertino, the lead architect
for the Centennial Hall renovation, and a party of OGS representatives toured
Centennial Hall in September.
• Chief Judge DiFiore, accompanied by
Clerk of the Court John Asiello, toured Centennial Hall and addressed a
gathering of LRB staff in September.
• In October, former Associate Judge of
the Court of Appeals Albert Rosenblatt and students from his NYU Law School
Constitutional Law class toured Centennial Hall and met with Bill Hooks.
• In November, Bill Hooks and Cara
Brousseau attended an informal ceremony marking the final oral arguments heard
by Senior Associate Judge Eugene F. Pigott, Jr. before his December 31, 2016
retirement.
• In December, Bill Hooks and Cara
Brousseau attended a farewell ceremony for Judge Eugene F. Pigott, Jr. at Court
of Appeals Hall.
• In December,
representatives from West Publishing visited the LRB to discuss implementation
of the 2016-2020 Official Reports Publishing Contract and the status of other
joint projects.
14.
Organization. Of significance in 2016:
• Founders Day, April 7, marked the 212th anniversary of the enactment of legislation creating the
system of official law reporting in New York.
• A meeting of the LRB's management
group was held in January to review the LRB's progress in completing its 2015 objectives and to set
objectives for 2016.
• Weekly technology team meetings were
held to formalize information sharing between and among LRB management and
network and programming staff.
• In addition to monthly management
meetings, a series of institutional knowledge meetings were held to memorialize
various aspects of LRB policy, history and operations that have never been
formally documented.