State Judiciary in Allegheny County
A. Pennsylvania’s Unified Judicial System
Pennsylvania has a unified, statewide court system, meaning every county court operates under the authority of the Commonwealth. Allegheny’s courts are part of this framework, not independent entities. The system has four levels:
- Magisterial District Courts (local entry level)
- Courts of Common Pleas (county-level trial courts)
- Intermediate Appellate Courts (Superior Court and Commonwealth Court)
- Pennsylvania Supreme Court (highest state court)
B. Local Layer – Magisterial District Courts
- Function: Handle minor criminal offenses, traffic citations, small civil cases, landlord–tenant disputes, preliminary hearings in felony cases.
- Structure in Allegheny: Dozens of magisterial districts scattered across municipalities and neighborhoods.
- Role: First point of contact for residents in legal disputes — often referred to as “people’s court.”
C. County Layer – Allegheny County Court of Common Pleas
- One of the busiest courts in Pennsylvania, located in downtown Pittsburgh at the Allegheny County Courthouse.
- Divisions:
- Civil Division: lawsuits, contracts, torts, family law.
- Criminal Division: felony and serious misdemeanor trials.
- Family Division: custody, divorce, child support, juvenile matters.
- Orphans’ Court: wills, estates, trusts, guardianship, adoption.
- Judges: Elected to 10-year terms in countywide partisan elections; may be retained in nonpartisan “yes/no” votes.
- Administration: President Judge oversees scheduling and operations.
- Direct Impact: Every major trial in Allegheny—criminal prosecutions, family cases, large civil disputes—runs through this court.
D. Intermediate Appellate Courts
- Superior Court of Pennsylvania
- Statewide court, hears criminal and civil appeals from Courts of Common Pleas.
- Sits in panels that rotate across Pittsburgh, Harrisburg, and Philadelphia.
- Commonwealth Court of Pennsylvania
- Specializes in government, administrative, and regulatory disputes.
- Handles cases involving state agencies, elections, tax law, and public employment.
- Impact on Allegheny: Any appeal from the county court can go to these bodies before reaching the Supreme Court.
E. Pennsylvania Supreme Court
- Oldest appellate court in the United States (est. 1684).
- Seven justices, elected statewide.
- Reviews cases of statewide significance, including constitutional issues, election disputes, and major criminal appeals.
- Allegheny’s Connection:
- Residents vote in Supreme Court judicial elections.
- Court decisions often directly affect Allegheny’s governance, elections, and criminal justice practices.
F. Judicial Elections & Oversight
- Judicial Selection: Pennsylvania elects judges in partisan elections (for both county and statewide courts).
- Terms:
- Magisterial District Judges: 6 years.
- Common Pleas Judges: 10 years.
- Appellate/Supreme Justices: 10 years.
- Retention: After the initial term, judges may run in nonpartisan “yes/no” retention elections.
- Oversight Bodies:
- Judicial Conduct Board: investigates misconduct.
- Court of Judicial Discipline: handles discipline cases.
- Administrative Office of Pennsylvania Courts (AOPC): manages statewide court administration.
G. Daily Presence for Residents
- Traffic ticket in Ross → Magisterial District Court.
- Divorce in Mt. Lebanon → Family Division of Court of Common Pleas.
- Felony trial in Homewood case → Criminal Division, Allegheny County Courthouse.
- Environmental lawsuit against a local steel plant → may reach Commonwealth Court in Harrisburg.
- State constitutional ruling on voting access → decided by the Pennsylvania Supreme Court, binding on Allegheny County.
Summary
The State Judiciary Layer in Allegheny County runs from local magistrates to the state’s highest court. For most residents, the touchpoint is the Court of Common Pleas, one of the busiest in the Commonwealth, but appeals link them directly to Superior, Commonwealth, and Supreme Courts. Judges are elected, making Allegheny’s voters participants in shaping the judiciary at every level. The system enforces both local justice and statewide constitutional principles, binding the county tightly into Pennsylvania’s unified legal framework.