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Pilot business court expected to debut in mid-September
A new and more efficient way of managing the state court systems growing business docket could be set into motion as early as mid-September and will likely be authorized by S.C. Chief Justice Jean Hoefer Toal.
Toal hopes to sign the order creating a pilot business court within the next few weeks, she said.
Once she takes that step, Charleston, Richland and Greenville would be the first communities to put the case management system into practice.
Toal said she and a task force including lawyers, judges and business community members have been working for a long time on creating a specialized business docket in the circuit court. The program would streamline the process by which often-complex business-related disputes are handled, added Toal, who has been the states chief justice since March 2000.
In effect, it would create a one-stop shop for business litigation beginning in pre-trial and continuing through discovery, motions and the actual trying of the case.
Toal likened the pilot program to the North Carolina Business Court, a specialized forum of the North Carolina State Courts trial division.
Cases involving complex and significant issues of corporate and commercial law in the Tar Heel state are assigned by the chief justice of the North Carolina Supreme Court to a special Superior Court judge who oversees resolution of all matters in the case through trial.
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