The Law Offices of Albert Goodwin, PLLC, represents clients in appeals arising from Westchester County trial courts. If a trial court in Westchester has ruled against you — or if you prevailed and now need to defend that result — an appeal asks a higher court to review the record for legal or factual error. An appeal is not a new trial. There are no new witnesses and no new evidence; the appellate court decides the case on the existing record and the parties’ written briefs. Because appellate practice follows its own strict deadlines and procedural rules, it is a distinct discipline from the litigation that produced the judgment.
Our firm is based in Midtown Manhattan, and we handle appeals throughout the New York City region, including Westchester County. Wherever your case began — in White Plains, Yonkers, New Rochelle, Mount Vernon, or one of the county’s many town and village courts — we can help you understand where the appeal goes, what the deadlines are, and whether the trial court’s decision presents a genuine ground for reversal. For a general overview of how this works, see our explanation of the appeals process in New York.
The court that hears your appeal depends on the court that issued the decision. New York’s appellate system divides the state into departments and districts, and Westchester County falls within the Second Department.
Decisions of the Supreme Court, Westchester County, and of the Westchester County Surrogate’s Court and Family Court, are appealed to the Appellate Division, Second Department. The Second Department is the intermediate appellate court for Westchester and the surrounding counties, and it is where the great majority of substantive Westchester civil appeals are decided.
Westchester’s city courts — such as the Yonkers, New Rochelle, and White Plains City Courts — together with the county’s town and village justice courts, follow a different path. Appeals from these lower courts generally go to the Appellate Term of the Second Department, or to the appellate body designated for that judicial district. These appeals frequently involve landlord-tenant disputes, small civil claims, and similar matters that begin in the local courts rather than in Supreme Court.
Not every Westchester case is a state-court case. Federal civil matters arising in Westchester County are litigated in the Southern District of New York (SDNY), which maintains a courthouse in White Plains in addition to its Manhattan courthouse. Appeals from final SDNY judgments go to the United States Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit in Manhattan. Federal appellate practice is governed by the Federal Rules of Appellate Procedure, and its deadlines and rules differ from the state system, so it is important to know at the outset which track your case is on.
We handle the kinds of appeals most often arising from Westchester trial courts, representing both appellants (the party challenging a decision) and respondents (the party defending it):
Our firm does not handle criminal or commercial business appeals. If your matter falls within our civil, Surrogate’s Court, or Family Court practice, we are glad to review it.
The single most important fact about any appeal is the deadline to take it. In a typical New York civil case, the notice of appeal must generally be filed within 30 days after you are served with the order or judgment together with written notice of its entry. This deadline is jurisdictional, which means the court has no power to extend it for good cause once it has passed. Miss it, and the right to appeal is ordinarily lost no matter how strong the underlying arguments might have been.
Other contexts carry their own clocks. Federal civil appeals to the Second Circuit generally allow 30 days (60 days when the United States is a party). Because the timing rules vary by court and by case type, the safest course is to identify the deadline immediately after an adverse decision rather than waiting. Filing the notice of appeal is only the first step, but it is the step that preserves every step that follows.
When you work with our firm, you work directly with Albert Goodwin, Esq. Appellate work is detail-driven — it turns on a careful reading of the record, precise legal research, and disciplined written argument — and it benefits from the attorney handling the case having read every page. We give an honest assessment of an appeal’s prospects rather than an optimistic one. Most appeals result in affirmance, and reversal rates are generally low, so we will tell you candidly whether the record presents a real issue worth pursuing before you commit to the cost and time of an appeal. A typical appeal takes roughly twelve to twenty-four months from the notice of appeal to a decision.
If you have received an adverse decision from a Westchester County trial court, do not wait. Appellate deadlines are strict and unforgiving, and the 30-day window to file a notice of appeal can close quickly. Contact the Law Offices of Albert Goodwin, PLLC, promptly to discuss your case by calling 212-233-1233 or emailing email@appealappeal.com, or reach us through our contact page.