On 28 October 2014, the Supreme Court transferred 258 cases to the Court of Appeal. It later transferred more, to a total of about 1,650 cases. On 10 March 2015, the Court of Appeal overturned a May 2014 High Court ruling that section 2(2) of the Misuse of Drugs Act 1977 was unconstitutional, thus annulling
statutory instruments made under section 2(2) which criminalised various
designer drugs. The government had made contingency plans for emergency legislation after the High Court ruling, and an
Act was rushed through the
Oireachtas on 10–11 March 2015. International media reported on the one-day decriminalisation of
MDMA and
methamphetamine. The ruling was overturned again by the
Irish Supreme Court in the following year in
Bederev v Ireland. In September 2016, a paper in
The Irish Law Times claimed "the Court of Appeal never had a prayer of solving the problem that was put to the people in this referendum, which was solving the backlog", with 1,814 cases pending at the end of 2015 compared to 2,001 cases at the start. In October 2017, the court's president said it was "coming to the point of being overwhelmed" by its backlog of cases, with about 600 added annually compared to about 320 dealt with. ==Composition==