SUPERIOR COURT
Message
From
President Judge Vaughn
Fiscal Year 2007
 |
| President Judge James
T. Vaughn Jr. |
Welcome to the Superior Court
of Delaware!
Superior Court proudly celebrated its 175th Anniversary this year on April 9, the day of the first session of the Court in
1892. To
commemorate this anniversary, a special session of Superior Court
was held in the New Castle Court House in historic old New Castle.
Here, Delaware judges, government officials, and distinguished guests
gathered to honor and recall the Court's history and the people who,
As of April 1, 2007, all new Alternative
Dispute Resolution (ADR) complaints filed in Superior Court are filed
electronically (e-filed). With the addition of the ADR cases,
the majority of the Court's civil caseload is now e-filed. On the Superior
Court Web site, the ADR membership listing pages were reformatted
and upgraded. ADR filings across the state for 2007 numbered 3,453.
Statewide for 2007, Superior Court filings totaled 23,075, a 10 percent
increase over last year; dispositions totaled 22,231, an 11 percent
increase. The number of non-first degree murder cases moving through
the system within allotted time frames remains consistent. At the
end of June this year, 30 Murder 1st cases were pending in Superior
Court. Additionally, the Court disposed of 5,134 Violation of Probation
cases.
Superior Court's mortgage foreclosure filings have been steadily on
the rise this year, and the trend is expected to continue. In keeping
with its commitment to serving the public, the Court is involved in
two projects associated with mortgage foreclosures-one initiated by
the Office of the State Bank Commissioner (OSBC), and one initiated
on its own.
At the request of the OSBC, the Court agreed to give access to its
JIC database for a study on mortgage foreclosure filings. This in-depth
study was released this fiscal year. The study, in part, estimated
"that 46% of owners in foreclosure either lost or sold their
home subsequent to the foreclosure filing." OSBC has established
initiatives to help home owners avoid foreclosures, and it continues
to monitor monthly data supplied by the Superior Court Prothonotary
Offices. Last quarter's data showed a 32% increase in foreclosures
across the state.
Project
Rightful Owner went live on May 10, 2007. Conceived by Superior
Court Judge Susan Del Pesco, the project is designed to help give
something back to those citizens who have already lost their homes
through Sheriff's sales. Project Rightful Owner seeks to unite nearly
$5 million in excess proceeds of Sheriff's sales with those to whom
it rightfully belongs. The project has received some media coverage,
and the process is fully outlined on the Court's Web site. It takes
some time and effort to recover these excess proceeds. Even so, to
date, over 30 disbursements of surplus funds have been released to
As the COTS initiative moves forward, with each successful implementation
seemingly coming faster and faster, Superior Court prepares for Phase
3, in early 2008. Phase 3 will bring the Sussex County civil cases
on to the new Contexte case management system. Superior Court
judges and staff meet regularly with our Core Team members and Project
Team representatives so that the Contexte system will work
for us and the entire Judiciary.
Finally, it is six
years in a row now that Superior Court has been recognized as the
premier court of general jurisdiction in the country by The Harris
Poll State Liability Systems Ranking Study. It is gratifying to
know that the Court's core values of unity, neutrality, integrity,
timeliness, equality, and dedication, are working for the public it
serves.
President
Judge James T. Vaughn Jr.