The district courts of appeal were created by the
Florida Legislature in 1957 to provide an intermediate level of
appellate review between the
trial courts (the county courts and
circuit courts) and the
Florida Supreme Court. This was done, as in other parts of the
United States, to relieve the state supreme court of the pressure of its ever-increasing appellate docket; the lobbying effort by Florida Supreme Court Justice
Elwyn Thomas played a large role in the DCAs' creation. Three DCAs were initially created, with the Third District Court of Appeal was given jurisdiction over cases arising from
Dade and
Monroe counties. The Fourth DCA was created in 1965; the Fifth DCA was created in 1979; and Sixth District Courts of Appeal was created in 2023. The existence of the DCAs was provided for in the
Florida Constitution, which now requires the legislature to divide the state into appellate court districts, providing each with a DCA. At the time, Florida was the second state to have district courts of appeal, as California had created its own district courts of appeal in 1904. However, in 1966, California dropped the word "district" from the names of the
California Courts of Appeal, thus leaving Florida as the sole state with DCAs. The DCAs were originally intended to serve as the final appellate courts for the vast majority of cases. During the 1960s, the Florida Supreme Court decided several cases which had the cumulative effect of turning the DCAs into non-final "way-stations in the appellate process." Chief Justice
Arthur J. England Jr. played a major role in bringing about the 1980 constitutional amendment which effectively overruled those cases and again narrowed the state supreme court's jurisdiction "to resolve its uncontrollable caseload." ==New DCA==