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Florida 9th Circuit Court

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The Florida 9th Circuit Court resides in Florida in Orange and Osceola counties. Click on the links below to learn more about the court's...

Jurisdiction

This court holds the following jurisdiction:[1]

(1) Circuit courts shall have jurisdiction of appeals from final administrative orders of local government code enforcement boards and of reviews and appeals as otherwise expressly provided by law.

(2) Circuit courts shall have exclusive original jurisdiction:
(a) In all actions at law not cognizable by the county courts;
(b) Of proceedings relating to the settlement of the estates of decedents and minors, the granting of letters testamentary, guardianship, involuntary hospitalization, the determination of incompetency, and other jurisdiction usually pertaining to courts of probate;
(c) In all cases in equity including all cases relating to juveniles except traffic offenses as provided in chapters 316 and 985;
(d) Of all felonies and of all misdemeanors arising out of the same circumstances as a felony which is also charged;
(e) In all cases involving legality of any tax assessment or toll or denial of refund, except as provided in s. 72.011;
(f) In actions of ejectment; and
(g) In all actions involving the title and boundaries of real property.
(3) The circuit court may issue injunctions.
(4) The chief judge of a circuit may authorize a county court judge to order emergency hospitalizations pursuant to part I of chapter 394 in the absence from the county of the circuit judge; and the county court judge shall have the power to issue all temporary orders and temporary injunctions necessary or proper to the complete exercise of such jurisdiction.
(5) A circuit court is a trial court.[2]

Judges


Office Name Party Date assumed office
Florida 9th Circuit Court Chad Alvaro Nonpartisan March 12, 2018
Florida 9th Circuit Court Christine Arendas
Florida 9th Circuit Court Elaine Barbour
Florida 9th Circuit Court Denise Beamer Nonpartisan 2019
Florida 9th Circuit Court John Beamer Nonpartisan February 10, 2020
Florida 9th Circuit Court Mark S. Blechman Nonpartisan
Florida 9th Circuit Court Luis Calderon
Florida 9th Circuit Court Keith A. Carsten
Florida 9th Circuit Court Vincent Chiu Nonpartisan October 28, 2019
Florida 9th Circuit Court Christy Collins Nonpartisan January 5, 2021
Florida 9th Circuit Court A. James Craner Nonpartisan 2014
Florida 9th Circuit Court Michael Deen Nonpartisan January 4, 2022
Florida 9th Circuit Court Holly Derenthal Nonpartisan May 3, 2023
Florida 9th Circuit Court Robert J. Egan August 15, 2008
Florida 9th Circuit Court Hal Epperson
Florida 9th Circuit Court Vincent Falcone January 5, 2021
Florida 9th Circuit Court Elizabeth Joy Gibson Nonpartisan May 3, 2023
Florida 9th Circuit Court Heather L. Higbee
Florida 9th Circuit Court LaShawnda Jackson Nonpartisan January 7, 2025
Florida 9th Circuit Court John E. Jordan
Florida 9th Circuit Court Alison Kerestes Nonpartisan January 3, 2023
Florida 9th Circuit Court Lawrence R. Kirkwood
Florida 9th Circuit Court Mike Kraynick June 21, 2019
Florida 9th Circuit Court Alicia L. Latimore
Florida 9th Circuit Court Gisela Laurent Nonpartisan 2021
Florida 9th Circuit Court Barbara Leach January 5, 2021
Florida 9th Circuit Court Diego Madrigal June 21, 2019
Florida 9th Circuit Court Leticia Marques Nonpartisan
Florida 9th Circuit Court Craig McCarthy Nonpartisan 2022
Florida 9th Circuit Court Lisa Taylor Munyon July 18, 2003
Florida 9th Circuit Court Michael Murphy Nonpartisan
Florida 9th Circuit Court Eric Netcher Nonpartisan 2021
Florida 9th Circuit Court Mikaela Nix January 5, 2021
Florida 9th Circuit Court Alicia Peyton Nonpartisan January 7, 2025
Florida 9th Circuit Court Heather P. Rodriguez
Florida 9th Circuit Court Brian Sandor
Florida 9th Circuit Court Margaret H. Schreiber
Florida 9th Circuit Court Laura Shaffer Nonpartisan 2018
Florida 9th Circuit Court Michael Snure Nonpartisan September 20, 2021
Florida 9th Circuit Court Patricia Strowbridge 2015
Florida 9th Circuit Court Diana Tennis
Florida 9th Circuit Court Greg Tynan 2014
Florida 9th Circuit Court Kevin B. Weiss
Florida 9th Circuit Court Reginald K. Whitehead
Florida 9th Circuit Court Tanya Davis Wilson Nonpartisan 2017
Florida 9th Circuit Court Wayne Wooten Nonpartisan
Florida 9th Circuit Court Tom Young Nonpartisan 2018


Elections

Florida is one of 43 states that hold elections for judicial positions. To learn more about judicial selection in Florida, click here.

Selection method

See also: Judicial selection in the states
See also: Nonpartisan elections

There are 597 judges on the Florida Circuit Court, each elected via nonpartisan elections. They serve six-year terms, after which they must run for re-election if they wish to retain their seat.[3]

The chief judge is selected by peer vote and serves in that capacity for two years.

Qualifications
To serve on this court, a judge must be:[3]

  • a qualified elector;
  • a state resident;
  • admitted to practice law in the state for five years; and
  • under the age of 75 (retirement at 75 is mandatory).

Judicial elections in Florida

See also: Florida judicial elections

Florida is one of seven states that use nonpartisan elections to initially select judges and then use retention elections to determine whether judges should remain on the bench. To read more about how states use judicial elections to select judges across the country, click here.

Primary election

To get on the ballot, candidates for judicial office are required to obtain signatures equal to at least one percent of the number of registered electors in the geographic boundary of the district.[4] Trial court judicial candidates compete in nonpartisan primaries designed to narrow the field to two candidates for the general election. Candidates who receive a simple majority (fifty percent plus one vote) of the vote in the primary are considered winners and are not on the ballot in the general election unless a write-in candidate qualifies for the same office. Candidates who are unopposed for any office do not appear on the ballot and are considered automatically elected.[5][6]

General election

In the general election, trial court candidates compete in nonpartisan elections. Partisan organizations and political parties are forbidden from endorsing, supporting, or opposing candidates for office.[7]

Retention election

Retention elections for appellate judges ask voters a "yes" or "no" question of whether or not to retain a judge to another term. The judges do not face competition on the ballot. If a majority of votes are in favor of a particular judge, that judge will be retained to a new term.[8]

See also



External links

Footnotes