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AN ACT
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relating to fiscal and other matters necessary for implementation |
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of the judiciary budget as enacted by H.B. No. 1, Acts of the 82nd |
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Legislature, Regular Session, 2011, and to the operation and |
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administration of, and practice and procedures in courts in, the |
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judicial branch of state government. |
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BE IT ENACTED BY THE LEGISLATURE OF THE STATE OF TEXAS: |
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ARTICLE 1. FISCAL NECESSITY |
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SECTION 1.01. The legislature finds that this Act is |
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necessary to the state to offset the effect of the approximately $30 |
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million budget reduction for the judiciary. The provisions of this |
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Act are designed to allow the judiciary to operate with the least |
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chance of harm to fulfilling the purpose of the judiciary and to |
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allow the operation of the judiciary in the next state fiscal |
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biennium in an efficient manner. |
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ARTICLE 2. APPELLATE COURT PROVISIONS |
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SECTION 2.01. Subsection (b), Section 22.002, Government |
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Code, is amended to read as follows: |
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(b) The supreme court or, in vacation, a justice of the |
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supreme court may issue a writ of mandamus to compel a statutory |
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county court judge, a statutory probate court judge, or a district |
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judge to proceed to trial and judgment in a case [agreeable to the
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principles and usages of law, returnable to the supreme court on or
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before the first day of the term, or during the session of the term,
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or before any justice of the supreme court as the nature of the case
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requires]. |
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SECTION 2.02. (a) Section 24.007, Property Code, is |
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amended to read as follows: |
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Sec. 24.007. APPEAL. (a) [A final judgment of a county
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court in an eviction suit may not be appealed on the issue of
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possession unless the premises in question are being used for
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residential purposes only.] A judgment of a county court in an |
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eviction suit may not under any circumstances be stayed pending |
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appeal unless, within 10 days of the signing of the judgment, the |
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appellant files a supersedeas bond in an amount set by the county |
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court. In setting the supersedeas bond the county court shall |
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provide protection for the appellee to the same extent as in any |
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other appeal, taking into consideration the value of rents likely |
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to accrue during appeal, damages which may occur as a result of the |
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stay during appeal, and other damages or amounts as the court may |
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deem appropriate. |
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(b) Notwithstanding any other law, an appeal may be taken |
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from a final judgment of a county court, statutory county court, |
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statutory probate court, or district court in an eviction suit. |
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(b) The change in law made by this section applies to an |
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appeal of a final judgment rendered on or after the effective date |
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of this section. An appeal of a final judgment rendered before the |
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effective date of this section is governed by the law in effect on |
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the date the judgment was rendered, and the former law is continued |
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in effect for that purpose. |
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ARTICLE 3. GENERAL PROVISIONS FOR DISTRICT COURTS |
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SECTION 3.01. Section 24.002, Government Code, is amended |
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to read as follows: |
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Sec. 24.002. ASSIGNMENT OF JUDGE OR TRANSFER OF CASE ON |
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RECUSAL [SUBSTITUTE JUDGES]. If a district judge determines on the |
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judge's own motion that the judge should not sit in a case pending |
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in the judge's court because the judge is disqualified or otherwise |
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should recuse himself or herself, the judge shall enter a recusal |
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order, request the presiding judge of that administrative judicial |
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region to assign another judge to sit, and take no further action in |
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the case except for good cause stated in the order in which the |
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action is taken. A change of venue is not necessary because of the |
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disqualification of a district judge in a case or proceeding |
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pending in the judge's [his] court[, but the judge shall
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immediately certify his disqualification to the governor. The
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governor shall designate a district judge of another district to
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exchange benches with the disqualified judge to try the case. The
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governor shall notify both judges of his designation, and the
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judges shall exchange benches. If the judges are prevented from
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exchanging benches, the parties or their counsels may agree on an
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attorney of the court for the trial of the case. The district judge
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or special judge shall certify to the governor the fact of a failure
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of the parties or their counsels to agree on an attorney, and the
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governor shall appoint a person legally qualified to act as judge in
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the trial of the case]. |
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SECTION 3.02. Sections 24.003 and 24.007, Government Code, |
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are amended to read as follows: |
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Sec. 24.003. TRANSFER OF CASES; EXCHANGE OF BENCHES |
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[SUBSTITUTE JUDGES IN CERTAIN COUNTIES]. (a) This section applies |
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only to [civil cases in] counties with two [five] or more district |
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courts. |
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(b) Unless provided otherwise by the local rules of |
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administration, a district judge in the county may: |
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(1) transfer any civil or criminal case or proceeding |
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on the court's docket to the docket of another district court in the |
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county; |
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(2) hear and determine any case or proceeding pending |
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in another district court in the county without having the case |
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transferred; |
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(3) sit for another district court in the county and |
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hear and determine any case or proceeding pending in that court; |
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(4) temporarily exchange benches with the judge of |
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another district court in the county; |
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(5) try different cases in the same court at the same |
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time; and |
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(6) occupy the judge's own courtroom or the courtroom |
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of another district court in the county. |
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(c) If a district judge in the county is sick or otherwise |
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absent, another district judge in the county may hold court for the |
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judge. |
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(d) A district judge in the county may hear and determine |
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any part or question of any case or proceeding pending in any of the |
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district courts, and any other district judge may complete the |
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hearing and render judgment in the case or proceeding. A district |
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judge may hear and determine motions, including motions for new |
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trial, petitions for injunction, applications for the appointment |
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of a receiver, interventions, pleas in abatement, dilatory pleas, |
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and all preliminary matters, questions, and proceedings, and may |
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enter judgment or order on them in the court in which the case or |
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proceeding is pending without transferring the case or proceeding. |
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The district judge in whose court the matter is pending may proceed |
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to hear, complete, and determine the matter, or all or any part of |
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another matter, and render a final judgment. A district judge may |
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issue a restraining order or injunction that is returnable to any |
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other district court. |
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(e) A judgment or order shall be entered in the minutes of |
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the court in which the case is pending. |
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(f) This section does not limit the powers of a district |
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judge when acting for another judge by exchange of benches or |
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otherwise [If a district judge is disqualified in a case pending in
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his court and his disqualification is certified to the governor,
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the governor may require any other district judge in the county to
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exchange benches with the disqualified judge.
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[(c)
If a district judge is absent, sick, or disqualified,
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any of the district judges in the county may hold court for him or
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may transfer a pending case to the court of any other district judge
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in the county]. |
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Sec. 24.007. JURISDICTION. (a) The district court has the |
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jurisdiction provided by Article V, Section 8, of the Texas |
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Constitution. |
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(b) A district court has original jurisdiction of a civil |
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matter in which the amount in controversy is more than $500, |
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exclusive of interest. |
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SECTION 3.03. Subsection (a), Section 24.012, Government |
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Code, is amended to read as follows: |
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(a) Notwithstanding any other law, each [Each] district |
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[and criminal district] court holds in each county in the judicial |
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district [at least two] terms that commence on the first Mondays in |
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January and July of [court] each year [in each county in the
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district]. To the extent of a conflict between this subsection and |
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a specific provision relating to a particular judicial district, |
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this section controls. |
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SECTION 3.04. Subchapter A, Chapter 24, Government Code, is |
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amended by adding Sections 24.023, 24.024, 24.025, 24.026, 24.027, |
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24.028, 24.029, 24.030, and 24.031 to read as follows: |
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Sec. 24.023. OBLIGATIONS; BONDS. (a) When a case is |
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transferred from one court to another, all processes, writs, bonds, |
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recognizances, and other obligations issued by the transferring |
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court are returnable to the court to which the case is transferred |
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as if originally issued by that court. |
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(b) The obligees in all bonds and recognizances taken in and |
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for a court from which a case is transferred, and all witnesses |
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summoned to appear in a district court from which a case is |
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transferred, are required to appear before the court to which the |
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case is transferred as if the bond, recognizance, or summons was |
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taken in or for that court. |
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Sec. 24.024. FILING AND DOCKETING CASES. In a county with |
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two or more district courts, the district judges may adopt rules |
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governing the filing and numbering of cases, the assignment of |
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cases for trial, and the distribution of the work of the courts as |
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in their discretion they consider necessary or desirable for the |
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orderly dispatch of the business of the courts. |
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Sec. 24.025. SUPPLEMENTAL COMPENSATION. (a) Unless |
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otherwise provided by this subchapter, all district judges in a |
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county are entitled to equal amounts of supplemental compensation |
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from the county. |
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(b) A district judge is entitled to an amount of |
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supplemental compensation for serving on the juvenile board of a |
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county that is equal to the amount other judges serving on the |
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juvenile board receive. |
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Sec. 24.026. APPOINTMENT OF INITIAL JUDGE. On the creation |
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of a new judicial district, the initial vacancy in the office of |
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district judge is filled in accordance with Section 28, Article V, |
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Texas Constitution. |
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Sec. 24.027. GRAND AND PETIT JURORS. All grand and petit |
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jurors selected in a county before a new district court is created |
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or the composition of an existing district court is modified by an |
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amendment to this chapter are considered to be selected for the new |
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or modified district court, as applicable. |
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Sec. 24.028. CASES TRANSFERRED. If by an amendment to this |
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chapter a county is removed from the composition of an existing |
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judicial district and added to another existing or new judicial |
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district, all cases and proceedings from that county that are |
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pending in the district court of the judicial district from which |
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the county was removed are transferred to the district court of the |
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judicial district to which the county is added. The judge of each |
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affected district court shall sign the proper orders in connection |
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with the transfer. |
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Sec. 24.029. PROCESSES, WRITS, AND OTHER OBLIGATIONS REMAIN |
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VALID. (a) If by an amendment to this chapter a county is removed |
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from the composition of an existing judicial district and added to |
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another existing or new judicial district, or if an amendment to |
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this chapter changes the time or place at which the terms of court |
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are held, all processes, writs, bonds, recognizances, and other |
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obligations issued from and made returnable to that court before |
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the effective date of the transfer or other change are returnable as |
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provided by this subsection. An obligation issued from the |
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affected court is returnable to another district court in the |
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county on the date that court directs, but may not be made |
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returnable on a date that is earlier than the date on which the |
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obligation was originally returnable. The obligations are legal |
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and valid as if the obligations had been made returnable to the |
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issuing court. |
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(b) The obligees in all appearance bonds and recognizances |
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taken in and for a district court of a county before the effective |
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date of an amendment to this chapter, and all witnesses summoned to |
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appear before that district court under laws existing before the |
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effective date of an amendment to this chapter, are required to |
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appear at another district court in the county on the date that |
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court directs, but may not be required to appear on a date that is |
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earlier than the date on which the obligees or witnesses were |
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originally required to appear. |
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Sec. 24.030. LOCATION OF COURT. (a) A district court |
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shall sit in the county seat for a jury trial in a civil case. The |
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commissioners court of the county may authorize a district court to |
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sit in any municipality within the county to hear and determine |
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nonjury trials in civil cases and to hear and determine motions, |
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arguments, and other matters not heard before a jury in a civil case |
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that is within the court's jurisdiction. |
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(b) The district clerk or the clerk's deputy serves as clerk |
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of the court when a court sits in a municipality other than the |
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municipality that is the county seat and may transfer: |
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(1) all necessary books, minutes, records, and papers |
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to that municipality while the court is in session there; and |
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(2) the books, minutes, records, and papers back to |
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the clerk's office in the county seat at the end of each session. |
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(c) If the commissioners court authorizes a district court |
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to sit in a municipality other than the municipality that is the |
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county seat, the commissioners court shall provide suitable |
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facilities for the court in that municipality. |
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Sec. 24.031. COURT OFFICERS. The prosecuting attorney, the |
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sheriff, the district clerk, the bailiffs, and the other officers |
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serving the other district courts of the county shall serve in their |
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respective capacities for the courts listed in this chapter. |
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SECTION 3.05. Subsection (g), Section 25.0362, Government |
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Code, is amended to read as follows: |
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(g) In matters of concurrent jurisdiction, a judge of a |
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county court at law and a judge of a district court in Cass County |
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may transfer cases between the courts in the same manner that judges |
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of district courts may transfer cases under Section 24.003 |
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[24.303]. |
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SECTION 3.06. Subsection (w), Section 25.0732, Government |
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Code, is amended to read as follows: |
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(w) In matters of concurrent jurisdiction, a judge of a |
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statutory county court in El Paso County and a judge of a district |
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court or another statutory county court in El Paso County may |
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transfer cases between the courts in the same manner judges of |
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district courts transfer cases under Section 24.003 [24.303]. |
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SECTION 3.07. Subsection (c), Section 25.1672, Government |
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Code, is amended to read as follows: |
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(c) In matters of concurrent jurisdiction, judges of the |
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county courts at law and district courts in the county may exchange |
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benches and courtrooms and may transfer cases between their dockets |
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in the same manner that district court judges exchange benches and |
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transfer cases under Section 24.003 [24.303]. |
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SECTION 3.08. Subsection (v), Section 25.1862, Government |
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Code, is amended to read as follows: |
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(v) In matters of concurrent jurisdiction, a judge of a |
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county court at law and a judge of a district court or another |
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county court at law may transfer cases between the courts in the |
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same manner judges of district courts transfer cases under Section |
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24.003 [24.303]. |
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SECTION 3.09. Subsection (k), Section 25.2512, Government |
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Code, as effective September 1, 2011, is amended to read as follows: |
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(k) A judge of a county court at law and a judge of a |
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district court or another county court at law with concurrent |
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jurisdiction may transfer cases between the courts in the same |
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manner judges of district courts transfer cases under Section |
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24.003 [24.303]. |
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SECTION 3.10. Subsection (k), Section 25.1932, Government |
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Code, is amended to read as follows: |
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(k) Notwithstanding Section 74.121(b)(1), in matters of |
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concurrent jurisdiction, the judge of a county court at law and the |
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judges of the district courts in the county may exchange benches and |
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courtrooms and may transfer cases between their dockets in the same |
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manner that judges of district courts exchange benches and transfer |
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cases under Section 24.003 [24.303]. |
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SECTION 3.11. Subdivision (2), Subsection (b), Section |
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74.121, Government Code, is amended to read as follows: |
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(2) Notwithstanding Subdivision (1), in matters of |
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concurrent jurisdiction, a judge of a statutory county court in |
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Midland County and a judge of a district court in Midland County may |
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exchange benches and courtrooms with each other and may transfer |
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cases between their dockets in the same manner that judges of |
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district courts exchange benches and transfer cases under Section |
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24.003 [24.303]. |
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SECTION 3.12. Subsection (d), Section 659.012, Government |
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Code, is amended to read as follows: |
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(d) Notwithstanding any other provision in this section or |
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other law, in [In] a county with more than five district courts, a |
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district judge who serves as a local administrative district judge |
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under Section 74.091 is entitled to an annual salary from the state |
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that is $5,000 more than the salary from the state to which the |
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judge is otherwise entitled [under Subsection (a)(1)]. |
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SECTION 3.13. The following provisions of the Government |
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Code are repealed: |
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(1) Section 24.013; |
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(2) Section 24.302; |
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(3) Section 24.303; |
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(4) Section 24.304; |
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(5) Section 24.305; |
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(6) Section 24.307; |
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(7) Section 24.308; |
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(8) Section 24.309; |
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(9) Section 24.311; |
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(10) Section 24.312; |
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(11) Section 24.313; |
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(12) Section 24.314; |
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(13) Section 24.525(b); |
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(14) Section 24.526(b); |
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(15) Section 24.527(b); |
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(16) Sections 24.528(b) and (c); and |
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(17) Sections 24.529(b) and (c). |
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ARTICLE 4. STATUTORY COUNTY COURTS |
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SECTION 4.01. Section 25.0002, Government Code, is amended |
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to read as follows: |
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Sec. 25.0002. DEFINITIONS [DEFINITION]. In this chapter: |
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(1) "Criminal law cases and proceedings" includes |
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cases and proceedings for allegations of conduct punishable in part |
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by confinement in the county jail not to exceed one year. |
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(2) "Family[, "family] law cases and proceedings" |
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includes cases and proceedings under Titles 1, 2, 4, and 5, Family |
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Code [involving adoptions, birth records, or removal of disability
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of minority or coverture; change of names of persons; child
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welfare, custody, support and reciprocal support, dependency,
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neglect, or delinquency; paternity; termination of parental
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rights; divorce and marriage annulment, including the adjustment of
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property rights, custody and support of minor children involved
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therein, temporary support pending final hearing, and every other
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matter incident to divorce or annulment proceedings; independent
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actions involving child support, custody of minors, and wife or
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child desertion; and independent actions involving controversies
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between parent and child, between parents, and between spouses]. |
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(3) "Juvenile law cases and proceedings" includes all |
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cases and proceedings brought under Title 3, Family Code. |
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(4) "Mental health cases and proceedings" includes all |
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cases and proceedings brought under Chapter 462, Health and Safety |
|
Code, or Subtitle C or D, Title 7, Health and Safety Code. |
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SECTION 4.02. Subsection (c), Section 25.0003, Government |
|
Code, is amended to read as follows: |
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(c) In addition to other jurisdiction provided by law, a |
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statutory county court exercising civil jurisdiction concurrent |
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with the constitutional jurisdiction of the county court has |
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concurrent jurisdiction with the district court in: |
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(1) civil cases in which the matter in controversy |
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exceeds $500 but does not exceed $200,000 [$100,000], excluding |
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interest, statutory or punitive damages and penalties, and |
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attorney's fees and costs, as alleged on the face of the petition; |
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and |
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(2) appeals of final rulings and decisions of the |
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division of workers' compensation of the Texas Department of |
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Insurance regarding workers' compensation claims, regardless of |
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the amount in controversy. |
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SECTION 4.03. Section 25.0004, Government Code, is amended |
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by adding Subsections (f) and (g) to read as follows: |
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(f) The judge of a statutory county court does not have |
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general supervisory control or appellate review of the |
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commissioners court. |
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(g) A judge of a statutory county court has the judicial |
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immunity of a district judge. |
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SECTION 4.04. Section 25.0007, Government Code, is amended |
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to read as follows: |
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Sec. 25.0007. JURIES; PRACTICE AND PROCEDURE. (a) The |
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drawing of jury panels, selection of jurors, and practice in the |
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statutory county courts must conform to that prescribed by law for |
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county courts. |
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(b) Practice in a statutory county court is that prescribed |
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by law for county courts, except that practice, procedure, rules of |
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evidence, issuance of process and writs, and all other matters |
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pertaining to the conduct of trials and hearings in the statutory |
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county courts, other than the number of jurors, that involve those |
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matters of concurrent jurisdiction with district courts are |
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governed by the laws and rules pertaining to district courts. This |
|
section does not affect local rules of administration adopted under |
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Section 74.093. |
|
SECTION 4.05. Section 25.0010, Government Code, is amended |
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by amending Subsection (b) and adding Subsections (c), (d), (e), |
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and (f) to read as follows: |
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(b) The county attorney or criminal district attorney [and
|
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sheriff] shall serve each statutory county court as required by |
|
law. |
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(c) A county sheriff shall in person or by deputy attend a |
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statutory county court as required by the court. |
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(d) The county clerk shall serve as clerk of each statutory |
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county court. The court officials shall perform the duties and |
|
responsibilities of their offices and are entitled to the |
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compensation, fees, and allowances prescribed by law for those |
|
offices. |
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(e) The judge of a statutory county court may appoint the |
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personnel necessary for the operation of the court, including a |
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court coordinator or administrative assistant, if the |
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commissioners court has approved the creation of the position. |
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(f) The commissioners court may authorize the employment of |
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as many additional assistant district attorneys, assistant county |
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attorneys, deputy sheriffs, and clerks as are necessary for a |
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statutory county court. |
|
SECTION 4.06. (a) Section 25.0014, Government Code, is |
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amended to read as follows: |
|
Sec. 25.0014. QUALIFICATIONS OF JUDGE. The judge of a |
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statutory county court must: |
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(1) be at least 25 years of age; |
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(2) be a United States citizen and have resided in the |
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county for at least two years before election or appointment; and |
|
(3) be a licensed attorney in this state who has |
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practiced law or served as a judge of a court in this state, or both |
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combined, for the four years preceding election or appointment, |
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unless otherwise provided for by law. |
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(b) The change in law made by this Act to Section 25.0014, |
|
Government Code, does not apply to a person serving as a statutory |
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county court judge immediately before the effective date of this |
|
Act who met the qualifications of Section 25.0014, Government Code, |
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as it existed on that date, and the former law is continued in |
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effect for determining that person's qualifications to serve as a |
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statutory county court judge. |
|
SECTION 4.07. (a) Subchapter A, Chapter 25, Government |
|
Code, is amended by adding Sections 25.0016 and 25.00161 to read as |
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follows: |
|
Sec. 25.0016. TERMS OF COURT. The commissioners court, by |
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order, shall set at least two terms a year for the statutory county |
|
court. |
|
Sec. 25.00161. PRIVATE PRACTICE OF LAW. The regular judge |
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of a statutory county court shall diligently discharge the duties |
|
of the office on a full-time basis and may not engage in the private |
|
practice of law. |
|
(b) Section 25.00161, Government Code, as added by this Act, |
|
applies only to a regular judge serving a term to which the judge is |
|
elected on or after the effective date of this Act. A judge serving |
|
a term to which the judge was elected before the effective date of |
|
this Act is governed by the law in effect on the date the judge was |
|
elected, and that law is continued in effect for that purpose. |
|
SECTION 4.08. Subsection (t), Section 25.0022, Government |
|
Code, is amended to read as follows: |
|
(t) To be eligible for assignment under this section, a |
|
former or retired judge of a statutory probate court must: |
|
(1) not have been removed from office; |
|
(2) certify under oath to the presiding judge, on a |
|
form prescribed by the state board of regional judges, that: |
|
(A) the judge has not been publicly reprimanded |
|
or censured by the State Commission on Judicial Conduct; and |
|
(B) the judge: |
|
(i) did not resign or retire from office |
|
after the State Commission on Judicial Conduct notified the judge |
|
of the commencement of a full investigation into an allegation or |
|
appearance of misconduct or disability of the judge as provided in |
|
Section 33.022 and before the final disposition of that |
|
investigation; or |
|
(ii) if the judge did resign from office |
|
under circumstances described by Subparagraph (i), was not publicly |
|
reprimanded or censured as a result of the investigation; |
|
(3) annually demonstrate that the judge has completed |
|
in the past state fiscal year the educational requirements for an |
|
active statutory probate court judge; |
|
(4) have served as an active judge for at least 72 [96] |
|
months in a district, statutory probate, statutory county, or |
|
appellate court; and |
|
(5) have developed substantial experience in the |
|
judge's area of specialty. |
|
SECTION 4.09. Section 25.00231, Government Code, is amended |
|
by amending Subsection (c) and adding Subsection (e) to read as |
|
follows: |
|
(c) In lieu of the bond required by Subsection (b), a county |
|
may elect to obtain insurance or to self-insure in the amount |
|
required by Subsection (b) against losses caused by the statutory |
|
probate court judge's gross negligence in performing the duties of |
|
office. |
|
(e) This section does not apply to an assigned or visiting |
|
judge sitting by assignment in a statutory probate court. |
|
SECTION 4.10. (a) Subchapter B, Chapter 25, Government |
|
Code, is amended by adding Sections 25.0033, 25.0034, and 25.0035 |
|
to read as follows: |
|
Sec. 25.0033. QUALIFICATIONS OF JUDGE. The judge of a |
|
statutory probate court must: |
|
(1) be at least 25 years of age; |
|
(2) be a United States citizen and have resided in the |
|
county for at least two years before election or appointment; and |
|
(3) be a licensed attorney in this state who has |
|
practiced law or served as a judge of a court in this state, or both |
|
combined, for the five years preceding election or appointment, |
|
unless otherwise provided for by law. |
|
Sec. 25.0034. PRIVATE PRACTICE OF LAW. The regular judge of |
|
a statutory probate court shall diligently discharge the duties of |
|
the office on a full-time basis and may not engage in the private |
|
practice of law. |
|
Sec. 25.0035. TERMS OF COURT. The commissioners court, by |
|
order, shall set at least two terms a year for the statutory probate |
|
court. |
|
(b) Section 25.0033, Government Code, as added by this Act, |
|
does not apply to a person serving as a statutory probate court |
|
judge immediately before the effective date of this Act. The |
|
qualifications of a person serving as a statutory probate court |
|
judge on the effective date of this Act are governed by the law in |
|
effect immediately before the effective date of this Act, and the |
|
former law is continued in effect for that purpose. |
|
SECTION 4.11. Subsections (g) and (i), Section 25.0042, |
|
Government Code, are amended to read as follows: |
|
(g) The district clerk serves as clerk of a county court at |
|
law in all cases arising under the Family Code and Section 23.001 |
|
and shall establish a separate docket for a county court at law; the |
|
county clerk serves as clerk of the court in all other cases. [The
|
|
commissioners court may employ as many deputy sheriffs and bailiffs
|
|
as are necessary to serve the court.] |
|
(i) [Practice in a county court at law is that prescribed by
|
|
law for county courts, except that practice and procedure, rules of
|
|
evidence, issuance of process and writs, and all other matters
|
|
pertaining to the conduct of trials and hearings in a county court
|
|
at law involving cases under the Family Code and Section 23.001 are
|
|
governed by this section and the laws and rules pertaining to
|
|
district courts and county courts.] If a case under the Family Code |
|
or Section 23.001 is tried before a jury, the jury shall be composed |
|
of 12 members. |
|
SECTION 4.12. Subsection (h), Section 25.0102, Government |
|
Code, is amended to read as follows: |
|
(h) [Practice in a county court at law is that prescribed by
|
|
law for county courts, except that practice and procedure, rules of
|
|
evidence, issuance of process and writs, and all other matters
|
|
pertaining to the conduct of trials and hearings in the county court
|
|
at law involving family law cases and proceedings shall be governed
|
|
by this section and the laws and rules pertaining to district
|
|
courts.] If a family law case or proceeding is tried before a jury, |
|
the jury shall be composed of 12 members; in all other cases the |
|
jury shall be composed of six members. |
|
SECTION 4.13. Subsections (e) and (f), Section 25.0132, |
|
Government Code, are amended to read as follows: |
|
(e) The district clerk serves as clerk of a county court at |
|
law in family law cases and proceedings, and the county clerk serves |
|
as clerk of the court in all other cases. The district clerk shall |
|
establish a separate docket for a county court at law. [The
|
|
commissioners court may employ as many deputy sheriffs and bailiffs
|
|
as are necessary to serve a county court at law.] |
|
(f) [Practice in a county court at law is that prescribed by
|
|
law for county courts, except that practice and procedure, rules of
|
|
evidence, issuance of process and writs, and all other matters
|
|
pertaining to the conduct of trials and hearings in a county court
|
|
at law involving family law cases and proceedings is that
|
|
prescribed by law for district courts and county courts.] If a |
|
family law case or proceeding is tried before a jury, the jury shall |
|
be composed of 12 members. |
|
SECTION 4.14. Subsection (a), Section 25.0202, Government |
|
Code, is amended to read as follows: |
|
(a) In addition to the jurisdiction provided by Section |
|
25.0003 and other law, a county court at law in Bosque County has |
|
concurrent jurisdiction with the district court in: |
|
(1) family law cases and proceedings; |
|
(2) civil cases in which the matter in controversy |
|
exceeds $500 but does not exceed $200,000 [$100,000], excluding |
|
interest, court costs, and attorney's fees; and |
|
(3) contested probate matters under Section 4D [5(b)], |
|
Texas Probate Code. |
|
SECTION 4.15. Subsection (b), Section 25.0212, Government |
|
Code, is amended to read as follows: |
|
(b) A county court at law does not have [general supervisory
|
|
control or appellate review of the commissioners court or] |
|
jurisdiction of: |
|
(1) felony criminal matters; |
|
(2) suits on behalf of the state to recover penalties |
|
or escheated property; |
|
(3) misdemeanors involving official misconduct; |
|
(4) contested elections; or |
|
(5) civil cases in which the matter in controversy |
|
exceeds $200,000 [$100,000], excluding interest, statutory or |
|
punitive damages and penalties, and attorney's fees and costs, as |
|
alleged on the face of the petition. |
|
SECTION 4.16. Subsections (a) and (k), Section 25.0222, |
|
Government Code, are amended to read as follows: |
|
(a) In addition to the jurisdiction provided by Section |
|
25.0003 and other law, a statutory county court in Brazoria County |
|
has concurrent jurisdiction with the district court in: |
|
(1) civil cases in which the matter in controversy |
|
exceeds $500 but does not exceed $200,000 [$100,000], excluding |
|
interest, statutory damages and penalties, and attorney's fees and |
|
costs, as alleged on the face of the petition; |
|
(2) appeals of final rulings and decisions of the |
|
division of workers' compensation of the Texas Department of |
|
Insurance regarding workers' compensation claims, regardless of |
|
the amount in controversy; and |
|
(3) family law cases and proceedings and juvenile |
|
jurisdiction under Section 23.001. |
|
(k) The district clerk serves as clerk of the statutory |
|
county courts in cases instituted in the district courts in which |
|
the district courts and statutory county courts have concurrent |
|
jurisdiction, and the county clerk serves as clerk for all other |
|
cases. [The commissioners court may employ as many additional
|
|
assistant criminal district attorneys, deputy sheriffs, and deputy
|
|
clerks as are necessary to serve the statutory county courts.] |
|
SECTION 4.17. Subsections (e) and (f), Section 25.0302, |
|
Government Code, are amended to read as follows: |
|
(e) The district clerk serves as clerk of a county court at |
|
law in family law cases and proceedings, and the county clerk serves |
|
as clerk of the court in all other cases and proceedings. The |
|
district clerk shall establish a separate docket for a county court |
|
at law. [The commissioners court may employ the assistant district
|
|
attorneys, deputy sheriffs, and bailiffs necessary to serve each
|
|
county court at law.] |
|
(f) [Practice in a county court at law is that prescribed by
|
|
law for county courts, except that practice and procedure, rules of
|
|
evidence, issuance of process and writs, and all other matters
|
|
pertaining to the conduct of trials and hearings in a county court
|
|
at law involving family law cases and proceedings shall be governed
|
|
by this section and the laws and rules pertaining to district
|
|
courts.] If a family law case or proceeding is tried before a jury, |
|
the jury shall be composed of 12 members. |
|
SECTION 4.18. Subsection (b), Section 25.0312, Government |
|
Code, is amended to read as follows: |
|
(b) A county court at law does not have [general supervisory
|
|
control or appellate review of the commissioners court or] |
|
jurisdiction of: |
|
(1) felony cases other than writs of habeas corpus; |
|
(2) misdemeanors involving official misconduct; |
|
(3) contested elections; or |
|
(4) appeals from county court. |
|
SECTION 4.19. Subsection (b), Section 25.0362, Government |
|
Code, is amended to read as follows: |
|
(b) A county court at law does not have [general supervisory
|
|
control or appellate review of the commissioners court or] |
|
jurisdiction of: |
|
(1) misdemeanors involving official misconduct; |
|
(2) suits on behalf of the state to recover penalties |
|
or escheated property; |
|
(3) contested elections; |
|
(4) suits in which the county is a party; or |
|
(5) felony cases involving capital murder. |
|
SECTION 4.20. Subsection (f), Section 25.0482, Government |
|
Code, is amended to read as follows: |
|
(f) The district clerk serves as clerk of a county court at |
|
law for family law cases and proceedings, and the county clerk |
|
serves as clerk for all other cases and proceedings. [The district
|
|
clerk shall establish a separate docket for a county court at law.
|
|
The commissioners court may employ as many assistant county
|
|
attorneys, deputy sheriffs, and bailiffs as are necessary to serve
|
|
the county courts at law.] |
|
SECTION 4.21. Subsection (g), Section 25.0632, Government |
|
Code, is amended to read as follows: |
|
(g) [Jurors regularly impaneled for the week by the district
|
|
courts of Denton County must include sufficient numbers to serve in
|
|
the statutory county courts and statutory probate courts as well as
|
|
the district courts. The jurors shall be made available by the
|
|
district judge as necessary.] The jury in a statutory county court |
|
or statutory probate court in all civil or criminal matters is |
|
composed of 12 members, except that in misdemeanor criminal cases |
|
and any other case in which the court has jurisdiction that under |
|
general law would be concurrent with the county court, the jury is |
|
composed of six members. |
|
SECTION 4.22. Subsection (r), Section 25.0732, Government |
|
Code, is amended to read as follows: |
|
(r) Section [Sections] 25.0006(b) does [and 25.0007 do] not |
|
apply to County Court at Law No. 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, or 7 of El Paso |
|
County, Texas. |
|
SECTION 4.23. Subsection (a), Section 25.0733, Government |
|
Code, is amended to read as follows: |
|
(a) Sections 25.0732(q) and [25.0732(d), (h), (i), (j),
|
|
(m), (n), (o), (p), (q),] (r)[, and (v)], relating to county courts |
|
at law in El Paso County, apply to a statutory probate court in El |
|
Paso County. |
|
SECTION 4.24. Subsections (i) and (l), Section 25.0862, |
|
Government Code, are amended to read as follows: |
|
(i) [The clerk of the statutory county courts and statutory
|
|
probate court shall keep a separate docket for each court.] The |
|
clerk shall tax the official court reporter's fees as costs in civil |
|
actions in the same manner as the fee is taxed in civil cases in the |
|
district courts. [The district clerk serves as clerk of the county
|
|
courts in a cause of action arising under the Family Code and an
|
|
appeal of a final ruling or decision of the division of workers'
|
|
compensation of the Texas Department of Insurance regarding
|
|
workers' compensation claims, and the county clerk serves as clerk
|
|
of the court in all other cases.] |
|
(l) Each reporter may be made available when not engaged in |
|
proceedings in their court to report proceedings in all other |
|
courts. [Practice, appeals, and writs of error in a statutory
|
|
county court are as prescribed by law for county courts and county
|
|
courts at law.] Appeals and writs of error may be taken from |
|
judgments and orders of the County Courts Nos. 1, 2, and 3 of |
|
Galveston County and the judges, in civil and criminal cases, in the |
|
manner prescribed by law for appeals and writs of error. Appeals |
|
from interlocutory orders of the County Courts Nos. 1, 2, and 3 |
|
appointing a receiver or overruling a motion to vacate or appoint a |
|
receiver may be taken and are governed by the laws relating to |
|
appeals from similar orders of district courts. |
|
SECTION 4.25. Subsection (f), Section 25.0962, Government |
|
Code, is amended to read as follows: |
|
(f) [Practice in a county court at law is that prescribed by
|
|
law for county courts, except that practice and procedure, rules of
|
|
evidence, issuance of process and writs, and all other matters
|
|
pertaining to the conduct of trials and hearings in a county court
|
|
at law involving cases in the court's concurrent jurisdiction with
|
|
the district court shall be governed by this section and the laws
|
|
and rules pertaining to district courts as well as county courts.] |
|
If a case in the court's concurrent jurisdiction with the district |
|
court is tried before a jury, the jury shall be composed of 12 |
|
members. |
|
SECTION 4.26. Subsection (a), Section 25.1033, Government |
|
Code, is amended to read as follows: |
|
(a) A county criminal court at law in Harris County has the |
|
criminal jurisdiction provided by law for county courts, concurrent |
|
jurisdiction with civil statutory county courts for Harris County |
|
to hear appeals of the suspension of a driver's license and original |
|
proceedings regarding occupational driver's licenses, and |
|
appellate jurisdiction in appeals of criminal cases from justice |
|
courts and municipal courts in the county. |
|
SECTION 4.27. Subsection (g), Section 25.1042, Government |
|
Code, is amended to read as follows: |
|
(g) The criminal district attorney is entitled to the same |
|
fees prescribed by law for prosecutions in the county court. [The
|
|
commissioners court may employ as many additional deputy sheriffs
|
|
and clerks as are necessary to serve a county court at law.] |
|
SECTION 4.28. Subsections (e) and (f), Section 25.1072, |
|
Government Code, are amended to read as follows: |
|
(e) The county clerk serves as clerk of a county court at |
|
law, except that the district clerk serves as clerk of the court in |
|
family law cases and proceedings. The district clerk shall |
|
establish a separate docket for a county court at law. [The
|
|
commissioners court may employ as many assistant district
|
|
attorneys, deputy sheriffs, and bailiffs as are necessary to serve
|
|
the court.] |
|
(f) [Practice in a county court at law is that prescribed by
|
|
law for county courts, except that practice and procedure, rules of
|
|
evidence, issuance of process and writs, and other matters
|
|
pertaining to the conduct of trials and hearings in a county court
|
|
at law involving family law cases and proceedings are governed by
|
|
this section and the laws and rules pertaining to district courts,
|
|
as well as county courts.] If a family law case or proceeding is |
|
tried before a jury, the jury shall be composed of 12 members. |
|
SECTION 4.29. Subsection (b), Section 25.1142, Government |
|
Code, is amended to read as follows: |
|
(b) A county court at law does not have [general supervisory
|
|
control or appellate review of the commissioners court or] |
|
jurisdiction of: |
|
(1) civil cases in which the amount in controversy |
|
exceeds $200,000 [$100,000], excluding interest; |
|
(2) felony jury trials; |
|
(3) suits on behalf of the state to recover penalties |
|
or escheated property; |
|
(4) misdemeanors involving official misconduct; or |
|
(5) contested elections. |
|
SECTION 4.30. Subsection (b), Section 25.1182, Government |
|
Code, is amended to read as follows: |
|
(b) A county court at law's civil jurisdiction concurrent |
|
with the district court in civil cases is limited to cases in which |
|
the matter in controversy does not exceed $200,000. A county court |
|
at law does not have [general supervisory control or appellate
|
|
review of the commissioners court or] jurisdiction of: |
|
(1) suits on behalf of this state to recover penalties |
|
or escheated property; |
|
(2) felony cases involving capital murder; |
|
(3) misdemeanors involving official misconduct; or |
|
(4) contested elections. |
|
SECTION 4.31. Subsection (b), Section 25.1312, Government |
|
Code, is amended to read as follows: |
|
(b) A statutory county court in Kaufman County does not have |
|
[general supervisory control or appellate review of the
|
|
commissioners court or] jurisdiction of: |
|
(1) felony cases involving capital murder; |
|
(2) suits on behalf of the state to recover penalties |
|
or escheated property; |
|
(3) misdemeanors involving official misconduct; or |
|
(4) contested elections. |
|
SECTION 4.32. Subsection (m), Section 25.1542, Government |
|
Code, is amended to read as follows: |
|
(m) [Practice and procedure and rules of evidence governing
|
|
trials in and appeals from a county court apply to a county court at
|
|
law, except that practice and procedure, rules of evidence,
|
|
issuance of process and writs, and all other matters pertaining to
|
|
the conduct of trials and hearings involving family law cases and
|
|
proceedings shall be governed by this section and the laws and rules
|
|
pertaining to district courts as well as county courts.] In family |
|
law cases, juries shall be composed of 12 members. |
|
SECTION 4.33. Subsection (g), Section 25.1652, Government |
|
Code, is amended to read as follows: |
|
(g) [Practice in a county court at law is that prescribed by
|
|
law for county courts, except that practice and procedure, rules of
|
|
evidence, issuance of process and writs, and all other matters
|
|
pertaining to the conduct of trials and hearings involving family
|
|
law matters and proceedings shall be governed by this section and
|
|
the laws and rules pertaining to district courts.] If a family law |
|
case is tried before a jury, the jury shall be composed of 12 |
|
members. |
|
SECTION 4.34. Subsection (i), Section 25.1762, Government |
|
Code, is amended to read as follows: |
|
(i) [The laws governing the drawing, selection, service,
|
|
and pay of jurors for county courts apply to a county court at law.
|
|
Jurors regularly impaneled for a week by a district court may, at
|
|
the request of the judge of a county court at law, be made available
|
|
by the district judge in the numbers requested and shall serve for
|
|
the week in the county court at law.] In matters of concurrent |
|
jurisdiction with the district court, if a party to a suit files a |
|
written request for a 12-member jury with the clerk of the county |
|
court at law at a reasonable time that is not later than 30 days |
|
before the date the suit is set for trial, the jury shall be |
|
composed of 12 members. |
|
SECTION 4.35. Subsection (b), Section 25.1772, Government |
|
Code, is amended to read as follows: |
|
(b) A county court at law does not have [general supervisory
|
|
control or appellate review of the commissioners court or] |
|
jurisdiction of: |
|
(1) suits on behalf of this state to recover penalties |
|
or escheated property; |
|
(2) felony cases involving capital murder; |
|
(3) misdemeanors involving official misconduct; or |
|
(4) contested elections. |
|
SECTION 4.36. Subsection (e), Section 25.1892, Government |
|
Code, is amended to read as follows: |
|
(e) [The county attorney or district attorney serves a
|
|
county court at law as required by the judge.] The district clerk |
|
serves as clerk of a county court at law in cases enumerated in |
|
Subsection (a)(2), and the county clerk serves as clerk in all other |
|
cases. The district clerk shall establish a separate docket for a |
|
county court at law. [The commissioners court may employ as many
|
|
additional assistant county attorneys, deputy sheriffs, and clerks
|
|
as are necessary to serve a county court at law.] |
|
SECTION 4.37. Subsection (i), Section 25.1932, Government |
|
Code, is amended to read as follows: |
|
(i) [Practice in a county court at law is that prescribed by
|
|
law for county courts, except that practice and procedure, rules of
|
|
evidence, issuance of process and writs, and all other matters
|
|
pertaining to the conduct of trials and hearings in a county court
|
|
at law involving cases in the court's concurrent jurisdiction with
|
|
the district court shall be governed by this section and the laws
|
|
and rules pertaining to district courts as well as county courts.] |
|
If a case in the court's concurrent jurisdiction with the district |
|
court is tried before a jury, the jury shall be composed of 12 |
|
members. |
|
SECTION 4.38. Subsection (b), Section 25.2012, Government |
|
Code, is amended to read as follows: |
|
(b) A county court at law does not have [general supervisory
|
|
control or appellate review of the commissioners court or] |
|
jurisdiction of: |
|
(1) felony cases involving capital murder; |
|
(2) suits on behalf of the state to recover penalties |
|
or escheated property; |
|
(3) misdemeanors involving official misconduct; or |
|
(4) contested elections. |
|
SECTION 4.39. Subsection (n), Section 25.2142, Government |
|
Code, is amended to read as follows: |
|
(n) [A special judge of a county court at law is entitled to
|
|
receive for services actually performed the same amount of
|
|
compensation as the regular judge.] A former judge sitting as a |
|
visiting judge of a county court at law is entitled to receive for |
|
services performed the same amount of compensation that the regular |
|
judge receives, less an amount equal to the pro rata annuity |
|
received from any state, district, or county retirement fund. An |
|
active judge sitting as a visiting judge of a county court at law is |
|
entitled to receive for services performed the same amount of |
|
compensation that the regular judge receives, less an amount equal |
|
to the pro rata compensation received from state or county funds as |
|
salary, including supplements. |
|
SECTION 4.40. (a) Subsection (b), Section 25.2222, |
|
Government Code, as amended by Chapter 22 (S.B. 124), Acts of the |
|
72nd Legislature, Regular Session, 1991, and Chapter 265 (H.B. 7), |
|
Acts of the 79th Legislature, Regular Session, 2005, is reenacted |
|
and amended to read as follows: |
|
(b) A county court at law has concurrent jurisdiction with |
|
the district court in: |
|
(1) civil cases in which the matter in controversy |
|
exceeds $500 and does not exceed $200,000 [$100,000], excluding |
|
mandatory damages and penalties, attorney's fees, interest, and |
|
costs; |
|
(2) nonjury family law cases and proceedings; |
|
(3) final rulings and decisions of the division of |
|
workers' compensation of the Texas Department of Insurance |
|
regarding workers' compensation claims, regardless of the amount in |
|
controversy; |
|
(4) eminent domain proceedings, both statutory and |
|
inverse, regardless of the amount in controversy; |
|
(5) suits to decide the issue of title to real or |
|
personal property; |
|
(6) suits to recover damages for slander or defamation |
|
of character; |
|
(7) suits for the enforcement of a lien on real |
|
property; |
|
(8) suits for the forfeiture of a corporate charter; |
|
(9) suits for the trial of the right to property valued |
|
at $200 or more that has been levied on under a writ of execution, |
|
sequestration, or attachment; and |
|
(10) suits for the recovery of real property. |
|
(b) Subsection (b), Section 25.2222, Government Code, as |
|
amended by Chapter 746 (H.B. 66), Acts of the 72nd Legislature, |
|
Regular Session, 1991, is repealed as duplicative of Subsection |
|
(b), Section 25.2222, Government Code, as amended by Subsection (a) |
|
of this section. |
|
SECTION 4.41. Subsection (a), Section 25.2232, Government |
|
Code, is amended to read as follows: |
|
(a) In addition to the jurisdiction provided by Section |
|
25.0003 and other law, a county court at law in Taylor County has: |
|
(1) concurrent jurisdiction with the county court in |
|
the trial of cases involving insanity and approval of applications |
|
for admission to state hospitals and special schools if admission |
|
is by application; and |
|
(2) concurrent jurisdiction with the district court in |
|
civil cases in which the matter in controversy exceeds $500 but does |
|
not exceed $200,000 [$100,000], excluding interest. |
|
SECTION 4.42. Subsection (i), Section 25.2352, Government |
|
Code, is amended to read as follows: |
|
(i) [Practice in a county court at law is that prescribed by
|
|
law for county courts, except that practice and procedure, rules of
|
|
evidence, issuance of process and writs, and all other matters
|
|
pertaining to the conduct of trials and hearings involving family
|
|
law cases and proceedings shall be governed by this section and the
|
|
laws and rules pertaining to district courts.] If a family law case |
|
is tried before a jury, the jury shall be composed of 12 members. |
|
SECTION 4.43. Subsection (i), Section 25.2382, Government |
|
Code, is amended to read as follows: |
|
(i) [Practice in a county court at law is that prescribed by
|
|
law for county courts, except that practice and procedure, rules of
|
|
evidence, issuance of process and writs, and all other matters
|
|
pertaining to the conduct of trials and hearings in a county court
|
|
at law involving matters enumerated in Subsection (a)(2)(B) or (C)
|
|
shall be governed by this section and the laws and rules pertaining
|
|
to district courts.] If a family law case [in Subsection (a)(2)(B)
|
|
or (C)] is tried before a jury, the jury shall be composed of 12 |
|
members. |
|
SECTION 4.44. (a) Subsection (a), Section 25.2421, |
|
Government Code, is amended to read as follows: |
|
(a) Webb County has the following statutory county courts: |
|
(1) the County Court at Law No. 1 of Webb County; [and] |
|
(2) the County Court at Law No. 2 of Webb County; and |
|
(3) the County Court at Law No. 3 of Webb County. |
|
(b) Notwithstanding Subsection (a), Section 25.2421, |
|
Government Code, as amended by this Act, the County Court at Law No. |
|
3 of Webb County is created January 1, 2031, or on an earlier date |
|
determined by the Commissioners Court of Webb County by an order |
|
entered in its minutes. |
|
SECTION 4.45. Subsections (g) and (h), Section 25.2422, |
|
Government Code, are amended to read as follows: |
|
(g) The district attorney of the 49th Judicial District |
|
serves as district attorney of a county court at law, except that |
|
the county attorney of Webb County prosecutes all juvenile, child |
|
welfare, mental health, and other civil cases in which the state is |
|
a party. The district clerk serves as clerk of a county court at law |
|
in the cases enumerated in Subsection (a)(2), and the county clerk |
|
serves as clerk of a county court at law in all other cases. [The
|
|
commissioners court may employ as many deputy sheriffs and bailiffs
|
|
as are necessary to serve the court.] |
|
(h) [Practice and procedure, rules of evidence, issuance of
|
|
process and writs, and all other matters pertaining to the conduct
|
|
of trials and hearings in a county court at law involving those
|
|
matters of concurrent jurisdiction enumerated in Subsection
|
|
(a)(2)(B) or (C) are governed by this section and the laws and rules
|
|
pertaining to district courts, as well as county courts.] If a |
|
family law case [enumerated in Subsection (a)(2)(B) or (C)] is |
|
tried before a jury, the jury shall be composed of 12 members. |
|
SECTION 4.46. Subsections (d) and (k), Section 25.2452, |
|
Government Code, are amended to read as follows: |
|
(d) A county court at law does not have jurisdiction of: |
|
(1) a case under: |
|
(A) the Alcoholic Beverage Code; |
|
(B) the Election Code; or |
|
(C) the Tax Code; |
|
(2) a matter over which the district court has |
|
exclusive jurisdiction; or |
|
(3) a civil case, other than a case under the Family |
|
Code or the Texas Probate Code, in which the amount in controversy |
|
is: |
|
(A) less than the maximum amount in controversy |
|
allowed the justice court in Wichita County; or |
|
(B) more than $200,000 [$100,000], exclusive of |
|
punitive or exemplary damages, penalties, interest, costs, and |
|
attorney's fees. |
|
(k) Except as otherwise required by law, if a case is tried |
|
before a jury, the jury shall be composed of six members and may |
|
render verdicts by a five to one margin in civil cases and a |
|
unanimous verdict in criminal cases. [The laws governing the
|
|
drawing, selection, service, and pay of jurors for county courts
|
|
apply to the county courts at law. Jurors regularly impaneled for a
|
|
week by a district court may, on request of the county judge
|
|
exercising the jurisdiction provided by this section or a county
|
|
court at law judge, be made available and shall serve for the week
|
|
in the county court or county court at law.] |
|
SECTION 4.47. Subsection (h), Section 25.2462, Government |
|
Code, is amended to read as follows: |
|
(h) [The county attorney and the county sheriff shall attend
|
|
a county court at law as required by the judge.] The district clerk |
|
serves as clerk of a county court at law in family law cases and |
|
proceedings, and the county clerk serves as clerk of the court in |
|
all other cases and proceedings. |
|
SECTION 4.48. Subsection (i), Section 25.2482, Government |
|
Code, is amended to read as follows: |
|
(i) [The county attorney and the county sheriff shall attend
|
|
a county court at law as required by the judge.] The district clerk |
|
serves as clerk of a county court at law in family law cases and |
|
proceedings, and the county clerk serves as clerk of the court in |
|
all other cases and proceedings. |
|
SECTION 4.49. Subsection (e), Section 25.2512, Government |
|
Code, as effective September 1, 2011, is amended to read as follows: |
|
(e) In addition to the qualifications required by Section |
|
25.0014, a regular judge of a county court at law must have the |
|
qualifications of a district judge as required by Section 7, |
|
Article V, Texas Constitution. [A special judge of a county court
|
|
at law with the same qualifications as the regular judge may be
|
|
appointed in the manner provided by law for the appointment of a
|
|
special county judge. A special judge is entitled to the same rate
|
|
of compensation as the regular judge.] |
|
SECTION 4.50. (a) The following provisions of the |
|
Government Code are repealed: |
|
(1) Subsections (b), (d), (f), and (j), Section |
|
25.0042; |
|
(2) Subsections (b), (f), (g), and (h), Section |
|
25.0052; |
|
(3) Subsections (b), (d), (f), and (i), Section |
|
25.0102; |
|
(4) Subsections (d), (g), and (h), Section 25.0132; |
|
(5) Subsections (c) and (e), Section 25.0152; |
|
(6) Subsections (b), (f), (g), (h), and (i), Section |
|
25.0162; |
|
(7) Subsections (d), (k), (l), (m), (n), (o), (q), |
|
(s), and (t), Section 25.0172; |
|
(8) Subsections (c), (d), (h), (i), and (k), Section |
|
25.0173; |
|
(9) Subsections (c), (d), and (g), Section 25.0202; |
|
(10) Subsections (c), (e), and (g), Section 25.0212; |
|
(11) Subsections (d), (e), (i), (j), and (n), Section |
|
25.0222; |
|
(12) Subsections (b), (d), (f), (h), and (i), Section |
|
25.0232; |
|
(13) Subsections (b), (c), and (e), Section 25.0272; |
|
(14) Subsections (b), (c), (g), (h), and (i), Section |
|
25.0292; |
|
(15) Subsections (b), (d), and (g), Section 25.0302; |
|
(16) Subsections (c), (e), and (j), Section 25.0312; |
|
(17) Subsections (e), (g), (i), (k), (l), and (m), |
|
Section 25.0332; |
|
(18) Subsection (c), Section 25.0362; |
|
(19) Subsections (b), (d), (f), (i), (j), and (k), |
|
Section 25.0392; |
|
(20) Subsections (b), (c), and (d), Section 25.0452; |
|
(21) Subsections (a), (c), (d), and (e), Section |
|
25.0453; |
|
(22) Subsections (b), (d), (e), (g), and (h), Section |
|
25.0482; |
|
(23) Subsections (a), (b), (d), (g), and (h), Section |
|
25.0512; |
|
(24) Subsections (b), (d), (f), and (g), Section |
|
25.0522; |
|
(25) Subsections (b), (h), (i), (j), and (k), Section |
|
25.0592; |
|
(26) Subsections (d), (f), (g), (h), (i), and (j), |
|
Section 25.0593; |
|
(27) Subsections (d), (e), (g), (h), (i), (j), and |
|
(k), Section 25.0594; |
|
(28) Subsections (c), (d), (f), and (g), Section |
|
25.0595; |
|
(29) Section 25.0596; |
|
(30) Subsections (a), (b), and (d), Section 25.0632; |
|
(31) Subsections (b), (g), (h), (j), (k), and (l), |
|
Section 25.0702; |
|
(32) Subsections (b), (d), (f), (j), and (k), Section |
|
25.0722; |
|
(33) Subsections (d), (g), (h), (i), (j), (m), (n), |
|
(o), (p), (s), and (v), Section 25.0732; |
|
(34) Subsections (c), (d), and (f), Section 25.0733; |
|
(35) Subsection (b), Section 25.0742; |
|
(36) Subsections (d), (f), (h), (j), and (l), Section |
|
25.0812; |
|
(37) Subsections (f) and (j), Section 25.0862; |
|
(38) Subsections (e), (f), and (i), Section 25.0932; |
|
(39) Subsections (c), (f), (g), (j), and (k), Section |
|
25.0942; |
|
(40) Subsections (d), (e), and (g), Section 25.0962; |
|
(41) Subsections (d), (e), (g), (h), and (k), Section |
|
25.1032; |
|
(42) Subsections (d), (e), (f), (m), and (o), Section |
|
25.1033; |
|
(43) Subsections (c), (h), (k), and (l), Section |
|
25.1034; |
|
(44) Subsections (b), (d), (f), (h), and (i), Section |
|
25.1042; |
|
(45) Subsections (b), (d), (g), and (h), Section |
|
25.1072; |
|
(46) Subsections (e), (f), (l), and (o), Section |
|
25.1092; |
|
(47) Subsections (d), (e), (h), (i), (j), and (l), |
|
Section 25.1102; |
|
(48) Section 25.1103; |
|
(49) Subsections (b), (c), (f), and (k), Section |
|
25.1112; |
|
(50) Subsections (f), (g), (h), (j), (l), (m), and |
|
(p), Section 25.1132; |
|
(51) Subsections (c), (e), and (g), Section 25.1142; |
|
(52) Subsections (b), (e), (f), (h), and (i), Section |
|
25.1152; |
|
(53) Subsections (c), (e), and (h), Section 25.1182; |
|
(54) Subsections (c), (g), and (i), Section 25.1252; |
|
(55) Subsections (b), (d), (f), (h), and (i), Section |
|
25.1282; |
|
(56) Subsections (d), (e), (i), (k), (l), and (n), |
|
Section 25.1312; |
|
(57) Subsections (d), (e), (f), (i), and (j), Section |
|
25.1322; |
|
(58) Subsections (d) and (h), Section 25.1352; |
|
(59) Subsections (e), (g), and (i), Section 25.1392; |
|
(60) Subsections (b), (c), (e), (h), (i), and (k), |
|
Section 25.1412; |
|
(61) Subsections (d), (g), (h), (l), and (m), Section |
|
25.1482; |
|
(62) Subsections (f), (i), (k), and (n), Section |
|
25.1542; |
|
(63) Subsections (e), (f), and (g), Section 25.1572; |
|
(64) Subsections (d), (f), and (h), Section 25.1652; |
|
(65) Subsections (b) and (f), Section 25.1672; |
|
(66) Subsections (b), (c), and (g), Section 25.1722; |
|
(67) Subsections (d), (e), (f), (h), and (i), Section |
|
25.1732; |
|
(68) Subsections (b), (e), (f), and (h), Section |
|
25.1762; |
|
(69) Subsections (c), (e), and (h), Section 25.1772; |
|
(70) Subsections (e), (f), (h), (i), and (j), Section |
|
25.1792; |
|
(71) Subsections (c), (h), (i), (j), (k), (l), and |
|
(q), Section 25.1802; |
|
(72) Subsections (b), (d), and (j), Section 25.1832; |
|
(73) Subsections (e), (f), and (i), Section 25.1852; |
|
(74) Subsections (c), (f), (h), (i), (j), (m), (n), |
|
(p), (q), and (u), Section 25.1862; |
|
(75) Subsection (d), Section 25.1892; |
|
(76) Subsections (e), (g), (i), (j), and (k), Section |
|
25.1902; |
|
(77) Subsections (b), (c), (f), (h), and (j), Section |
|
25.1932; |
|
(78) Subsections (b), (d), (f), (h), and (j), Section |
|
25.1972; |
|
(79) Subsections (d), (e), (i), (k), (l), and (n), |
|
Section 25.2012; |
|
(80) Subsections (c), (e), and (h), Section 25.2032; |
|
(81) Subsections (c), (e), (f), (h), and (i), Section |
|
25.2072; |
|
(82) Subsections (c), (e), (i), (r), (t), and (u), |
|
Section 25.2142; |
|
(83) Subsections (d), (f), (h), (j), and (k), Section |
|
25.2162; |
|
(84) Subsections (c), (g), (h), (i), (k), and (n), |
|
Section 25.2222; |
|
(85) Subsections (c), (e), (g), and (h), Section |
|
25.2223; |
|
(86) Subsections (b), (c), (f), (g), (i), and (j), |
|
Section 25.2224; |
|
(87) Subsections (b), (e), (f), and (g), Section |
|
25.2232; |
|
(88) Subsections (b), (d), (f), (g), (i), and (j), |
|
Section 25.2282; |
|
(89) Subsections (b), (e), (i), (k), and (l), Section |
|
25.2292; |
|
(90) Subsections (e), (f), (g), (k), and (l), Section |
|
25.2293; |
|
(91) Subsections (b), (d), (f), (g), and (j), Section |
|
25.2352; |
|
(92) Subsections (c), (e), and (h), Section 25.2362; |
|
(93) Subsections (c), (f), (g), (h), and (i), Section |
|
25.2372; |
|
(94) Subsections (b), (d), (f), and (j), Section |
|
25.2382; |
|
(95) Subsections (b), (d), (f), and (j), Section |
|
25.2392; |
|
(96) Subsections (b), (d), (f), (i), and (k), Section |
|
25.2412; |
|
(97) Subsections (b), (d), (f), (i), and (j), Section |
|
25.2422; |
|
(98) Subsections (f), (h), and (j), Section 25.2452; |
|
(99) Subsections (c), (d), (e), (g), (i), and (j), |
|
Section 25.2462; |
|
(100) Subsections (d), (e), (f), (h), (j), and (k), |
|
Section 25.2482; and |
|
(101) Subsections (b) and (i), Section 25.2512. |
|
(b) The repeal of Subsection (d), Section 25.1042, and |
|
Subsection (d), Section 25.2162, Government Code, apply only to a |
|
regular judge serving a term for which the judge is elected on or |
|
after the effective date of this Act. A judge serving a term for |
|
which the judge was elected before the effective date of this Act is |
|
governed by the law in effect on the date the judge was elected, and |
|
that law is continued in effect for that purpose. |
|
ARTICLE 5. PROVISIONS RELATING TO JUSTICE AND SMALL CLAIMS COURTS |
|
SECTION 5.01. (a) Subsection (a), Section 27.005, |
|
Government Code, is amended to read as follows: |
|
(a) For purposes of removal under Chapter 87, Local |
|
Government Code, "incompetency" in the case of a justice of the |
|
peace includes the failure of the justice to successfully complete: |
|
(1) within one year after the date the justice is first |
|
elected, an 80-hour course in the performance of the justice's |
|
duties; and |
|
(2) each following year, a 20-hour course in the |
|
performance of the justice's duties, including not less than 10 |
|
hours of instruction regarding substantive, procedural, and |
|
evidentiary law in civil matters. |
|
(b) Subsection (a), Section 27.005, Government Code, as |
|
amended by this section, applies to a justice of the peace serving |
|
on or after the effective date of this article, regardless of the |
|
date the justice was elected or appointed. |
|
SECTION 5.02. Subchapter C, Chapter 27, Government Code, is |
|
amended by adding Section 27.060 to read as follows: |
|
Sec. 27.060. SMALL CLAIMS. (a) A justice court shall |
|
conduct proceedings in a small claims case, as that term is defined |
|
by the supreme court, in accordance with rules of civil procedure |
|
promulgated by the supreme court to ensure the fair, expeditious, |
|
and inexpensive resolution of small claims cases. |
|
(b) Except as provided by Subsection (c), rules of the |
|
supreme court must provide that: |
|
(1) if both parties appear, the judge shall proceed to |
|
hear the case; |
|
(2) formal pleadings other than the statement are not |
|
required; |
|
(3) the judge shall hear the testimony of the parties |
|
and the witnesses that the parties produce and shall consider the |
|
other evidence offered; |
|
(4) the hearing is informal, with the sole objective |
|
being to dispense speedy justice between the parties; |
|
(5) discovery is limited to that considered |
|
appropriate and permitted by the judge; and |
|
(6) the judge shall develop the facts of the case, and |
|
for that purpose may question a witness or party and may summon any |
|
party to appear as a witness as the judge considers necessary to a |
|
correct judgment and speedy disposition of the case. |
|
(c) The rules of the supreme court must provide specific |
|
procedures for an action by: |
|
(1) an assignee of a claim or other person seeking to |
|
bring an action on an assigned claim; |
|
(2) a person primarily engaged in the business of |
|
lending money at interest; or |
|
(3) a collection agency or collection agent. |
|
(d) The rules adopted by the supreme court may not: |
|
(1) require that a party in a case be represented by an |
|
attorney; |
|
(2) be so complex that a reasonable person without |
|
legal training would have difficulty understanding or applying the |
|
rules; or |
|
(3) require that discovery rules adopted under the |
|
Texas Rules of Civil Procedure or the Texas Rules of Evidence be |
|
applied except to the extent the justice of the peace hearing the |
|
case determines that the rules must be followed to ensure that the |
|
proceeding is fair to all parties. |
|
(e) A committee established by the supreme court to |
|
recommend rules to be adopted under this section must include |
|
justices of the peace. |
|
SECTION 5.03. Subchapter C, Chapter 27, Government Code, is |
|
amended by adding Section 27.061 to read as follows: |
|
Sec. 27.061. RULES OF ADMINISTRATION. The justices of the |
|
peace in each county shall, by majority vote, adopt local rules of |
|
administration. |
|
SECTION 5.04. Subchapter E, Chapter 15, Civil Practice and |
|
Remedies Code, is amended by adding Section 15.0821 to read as |
|
follows: |
|
Sec. 15.0821. ADMINISTRATIVE RULES FOR TRANSFER. The |
|
justices of the peace in each county shall, by majority vote, adopt |
|
local rules of administration regarding the transfer of a pending |
|
case from one precinct to a different precinct. |
|
SECTION 5.05. Article 4.12, Code of Criminal Procedure, is |
|
amended by adding Subsection (e) to read as follows: |
|
(e) The justices of the peace in each county shall, by |
|
majority vote, adopt local rules of administration regarding the |
|
transfer of a pending misdemeanor case from one precinct to a |
|
different precinct. |
|
SECTION 5.06. (a) Chapter 28, Government Code, is |
|
repealed. |
|
(b) On the effective date of this section, each small claims |
|
court under Chapter 28, Government Code, is abolished. |
|
SECTION 5.07. Not later than May 1, 2013, the Texas Supreme |
|
Court shall promulgate: |
|
(1) rules to define cases that constitute small claims |
|
cases; |
|
(2) rules of civil procedure applicable to small |
|
claims cases as required by Section 27.060, Government Code, as |
|
added by this article; and |
|
(3) rules for eviction proceedings. |
|
SECTION 5.08. (a) Immediately before the date the small |
|
claims court in a county is abolished in accordance with this |
|
article, the justice of the peace sitting as judge of that court |
|
shall transfer all cases pending in the court to a justice court in |
|
the county. |
|
(b) When a case is transferred as provided by Subsection (a) |
|
of this section, all processes, writs, bonds, recognizances, or |
|
other obligations issued from the transferring court are returnable |
|
to the court to which the case is transferred as if originally |
|
issued by that court. The obligees on all bonds and recognizances |
|
taken in and for the transferring court and all witnesses summoned |
|
to appear in the transferring court are required to appear before |
|
the court to which the case is transferred as if originally required |
|
to appear before that court. |
|
SECTION 5.09. Sections 5.02 and 5.06 of this article take |
|
effect May 1, 2013. |
|
ARTICLE 6. ASSOCIATE JUDGES |
|
SECTION 6.01. Subtitle D, Title 2, Government Code, is |
|
amended by adding Chapter 54A to read as follows: |
|
CHAPTER 54A. ASSOCIATE JUDGES |
|
SUBCHAPTER A. CRIMINAL ASSOCIATE JUDGES |
|
Sec. 54A.001. APPLICABILITY. This subchapter applies to a |
|
district court or a statutory county court that hears criminal |
|
cases. |
|
Sec. 54A.002. APPOINTMENT. (a) A judge of a court subject |
|
to this subchapter may appoint a full-time or part-time associate |
|
judge to perform the duties authorized by this subchapter if the |
|
commissioners court of the county in which the court has |
|
jurisdiction has authorized the creation of an associate judge |
|
position. |
|
(b) If a court has jurisdiction in more than one county, an |
|
associate judge appointed by that court may serve only in a county |
|
in which the commissioners court has authorized the appointment. |
|
(c) If more than one court in a county is subject to this |
|
subchapter, the commissioners court may authorize the appointment |
|
of an associate judge for each court or may authorize one or more |
|
associate judges to share service with two or more courts. |
|
(d) If an associate judge serves more than one court, the |
|
associate judge's appointment must be made as established by local |
|
rule, but in no event by less than a vote of two-thirds of the judges |
|
under whom the associate judge serves. |
|
Sec. 54A.003. QUALIFICATIONS. To qualify for appointment |
|
as an associate judge under this subchapter, a person must: |
|
(1) be a resident of this state and one of the counties |
|
the person will serve; |
|
(2) have been licensed to practice law in this state |
|
for at least four years; |
|
(3) not have been removed from office by impeachment, |
|
by the supreme court, by the governor on address to the legislature, |
|
by a tribunal reviewing a recommendation of the State Commission on |
|
Judicial Conduct, or by the legislature's abolition of the judge's |
|
court; and |
|
(4) not have resigned from office after having |
|
received notice that formal proceedings by the State Commission on |
|
Judicial Conduct had been instituted as provided by Section 33.022 |
|
and before final disposition of the proceedings. |
|
Sec. 54A.004. COMPENSATION. (a) An associate judge shall |
|
be paid a salary determined by the commissioners court of the county |
|
in which the associate judge serves. |
|
(b) If an associate judge serves in more than one county, |
|
the associate judge shall be paid a salary as determined by |
|
agreement of the commissioners courts of the counties in which the |
|
associate judge serves. |
|
(c) The associate judge's salary is paid from the county |
|
fund available for payment of officers' salaries. |
|
Sec. 54A.005. TERMINATION. (a) An associate judge who |
|
serves a single court serves at the will of the judge of that court. |
|
(b) The employment of an associate judge who serves more |
|
than two courts may only be terminated by a majority vote of all the |
|
judges of the courts the associate judge serves. |
|
(c) The employment of an associate judge who serves two |
|
courts may be terminated by either of the judges of the courts the |
|
associate judge serves. |
|
(d) To terminate an associate judge's employment, the |
|
appropriate judges must sign a written order of termination. The |
|
order must state: |
|
(1) the associate judge's name and state bar |
|
identification number; |
|
(2) each court ordering termination; and |
|
(3) the date the associate judge's employment ends. |
|
Sec. 54A.006. PROCEEDINGS THAT MAY BE REFERRED. (a) A |
|
judge may refer to an associate judge any matter arising out of a |
|
criminal case involving: |
|
(1) a negotiated plea of guilty or no contest before |
|
the court; |
|
(2) a bond forfeiture; |
|
(3) a pretrial motion; |
|
(4) a writ of habeas corpus; |
|
(5) an examining trial; |
|
(6) an occupational driver's license; |
|
(7) an appeal of an administrative driver's license |
|
revocation hearing; |
|
(8) a civil commitment matter under Subtitle C, Title |
|
7, Health and Safety Code; |
|
(9) setting, adjusting, or revoking bond; |
|
(10) the issuance of search warrants, including a |
|
search warrant under Article 18.02(10), Code of Criminal Procedure, |
|
notwithstanding Article 18.01(c), Code of Criminal Procedure; and |
|
(11) any other matter the judge considers necessary |
|
and proper. |
|
(b) An associate judge may accept an agreed plea of guilty |
|
or no contest from a defendant charged with misdemeanor, felony, or |
|
both misdemeanor and felony offenses and may assess punishment if a |
|
plea agreement is announced on the record between the defendant and |
|
the state. |
|
(c) An associate judge has all of the powers of a magistrate |
|
under the laws of this state and may administer an oath for any |
|
purpose. |
|
(d) An associate judge may select a jury. Except as |
|
provided in Subsection (b), an associate judge may not preside over |
|
a trial on the merits, whether or not the trial is before a jury. |
|
Sec. 54A.007. ORDER OF REFERRAL. (a) To refer one or more |
|
cases to an associate judge, a judge must issue a written order of |
|
referral that specifies the associate judge's duties. |
|
(b) An order of referral may: |
|
(1) limit the powers of the associate judge and direct |
|
the associate judge to report only on specific issues, do |
|
particular acts, or receive and report on evidence only; |
|
(2) set the time and place for the hearing; |
|
(3) prescribe a closing date for the hearing; |
|
(4) provide a date for filing the associate judge's |
|
findings; |
|
(5) designate proceedings for more than one case over |
|
which the associate judge shall preside; |
|
(6) direct the associate judge to call the court's |
|
docket; and |
|
(7) set forth general powers and limitations or |
|
authority of the associate judge applicable to any case referred. |
|
Sec. 54A.008. POWERS. (a) Except as limited by an order of |
|
referral, an associate judge to whom a case is referred may: |
|
(1) conduct hearings; |
|
(2) hear evidence; |
|
(3) compel production of relevant evidence; |
|
(4) rule on the admissibility of evidence; |
|
(5) issue summons for the appearance of witnesses; |
|
(6) examine a witness; |
|
(7) swear a witness for a hearing; |
|
(8) make findings of fact on evidence; |
|
(9) formulate conclusions of law; |
|
(10) rule on pretrial motions; |
|
(11) recommend the rulings, orders, or judgment to be |
|
made in a case; |
|
(12) regulate proceedings in a hearing; |
|
(13) order the attachment of a witness or party who |
|
fails to obey a subpoena; |
|
(14) accept a plea of guilty from a defendant charged |
|
with misdemeanor, felony, or both misdemeanor and felony offenses; |
|
(15) select a jury; |
|
(16) notwithstanding Article 18.01(c), Code of |
|
Criminal Procedure, issue a search warrant, including a search |
|
warrant under Article 18.02(10), Code of Criminal Procedure; and |
|
(17) take action as necessary and proper for the |
|
efficient performance of the duties required by the order of |
|
referral. |
|
(b) An associate judge may not enter a ruling on any issue of |
|
law or fact if that ruling could result in dismissal or require |
|
dismissal of a pending criminal prosecution, but the associate |
|
judge may make findings, conclusions, and recommendations on those |
|
issues. |
|
(c) Except as limited by an order of referral, an associate |
|
judge who is appointed by a district or statutory county court judge |
|
and to whom a case is referred may accept a plea of guilty or nolo |
|
contendere in a misdemeanor case for a county criminal court. The |
|
associate judge shall forward any fee or fine collected for the |
|
misdemeanor offense to the county clerk. |
|
(d) An associate judge may, in the interest of justice, |
|
refer a case back to the referring court regardless of whether a |
|
timely objection to the associate judge hearing the trial on the |
|
merits or presiding at a jury trial has been made by any party. |
|
Sec. 54A.009. ATTENDANCE OF BAILIFF. A bailiff shall |
|
attend a hearing by an associate judge if directed by the referring |
|
court. |
|
Sec. 54A.010. COURT REPORTER. At the request of a party, |
|
the court shall provide a court reporter to record the proceedings |
|
before the associate judge. |
|
Sec. 54A.011. WITNESS. (a) A witness appearing before an |
|
associate judge is subject to the penalties for perjury provided by |
|
law. |
|
(b) A referring court may issue attachment against and may |
|
fine or imprison a witness whose failure to appear after being |
|
summoned or whose refusal to answer questions has been certified to |
|
the court. |
|
Sec. 54A.012. PAPERS TRANSMITTED TO JUDGE. At the |
|
conclusion of the proceedings, an associate judge shall transmit to |
|
the referring court any papers relating to the case, including the |
|
associate judge's findings, conclusions, orders, recommendations, |
|
or other action taken. |
|
Sec. 54A.013. JUDICIAL ACTION. (a) Not later than the |
|
30th day after the date an action is taken by an associate judge, a |
|
referring court may modify, correct, reject, reverse, or recommit |
|
for further information the action taken by the associate judge. |
|
(b) If the court does not modify, correct, reject, reverse, |
|
or recommit an action to the associate judge, the action becomes the |
|
decree of the court. |
|
Sec. 54A.014. JUDICIAL IMMUNITY. An associate judge has |
|
the same judicial immunity as a district judge. |
|
[Sections 54A.015-54A.100 reserved for expansion] |
|
SUBCHAPTER B. CIVIL ASSOCIATE JUDGES |
|
Sec. 54A.101. APPLICABILITY. This subchapter applies to a |
|
district court or a statutory county court that is assigned civil |
|
cases. |
|
Sec. 54A.102. APPOINTMENT. (a) A judge of a court subject |
|
to this subchapter may appoint a full-time or part-time associate |
|
judge to perform the duties authorized by this subchapter if the |
|
commissioners court of the county in which the court has |
|
jurisdiction has authorized the creation of an associate judge |
|
position. |
|
(b) If a district court has jurisdiction in more than one |
|
county, an associate judge appointed by that court may serve only in |
|
a county in which the commissioners court has authorized the |
|
appointment. |
|
(c) If more than one court in a county is subject to this |
|
subchapter, the commissioners court may authorize the appointment |
|
of an associate judge for each court or may authorize one or more |
|
associate judges to share service with two or more courts. |
|
(d) If an associate judge serves more than one court, the |
|
associate judge's appointment must be made as established by local |
|
rule, but in no event by less than a vote of two-thirds of the judges |
|
under whom the associate judge serves. |
|
Sec. 54A.103. QUALIFICATIONS. To qualify for appointment |
|
as an associate judge under this subchapter, a person must: |
|
(1) be a resident of this state and one of the counties |
|
the person will serve; |
|
(2) have been licensed to practice law in this state |
|
for at least four years; |
|
(3) not have been removed from office by impeachment, |
|
by the supreme court, by the governor on address to the legislature, |
|
by a tribunal reviewing a recommendation of the State Commission on |
|
Judicial Conduct, or by the legislature's abolition of the judge's |
|
court; and |
|
(4) not have resigned from office after having |
|
received notice that formal proceedings by the State Commission on |
|
Judicial Conduct had been instituted as provided in Section 33.022 |
|
and before final disposition of the proceedings. |
|
Sec. 54A.104. COMPENSATION. (a) An associate judge shall |
|
be paid a salary determined by the commissioners court of the county |
|
in which the associate judge serves. |
|
(b) If an associate judge serves in more than one county, |
|
the associate judge shall be paid a salary as determined by |
|
agreement of the commissioners courts of the counties in which the |
|
associate judge serves. |
|
(c) The associate judge's salary is paid from the county |
|
fund available for payment of officers' salaries. |
|
Sec. 54A.105. TERMINATION. (a) An associate judge who |
|
serves a single court serves at the will of the judge of that court. |
|
(b) The employment of an associate judge who serves more |
|
than two courts may only be terminated by a majority vote of all the |
|
judges of the courts the associate judge serves. |
|
(c) The employment of an associate judge who serves two |
|
courts may be terminated by either of the judges of the courts the |
|
associate judge serves. |
|
(d) To terminate an associate judge's employment, the |
|
appropriate judges must sign a written order of termination. The |
|
order must state: |
|
(1) the associate judge's name and state bar |
|
identification number; |
|
(2) each court ordering termination; and |
|
(3) the date the associate judge's employment ends. |
|
Sec. 54A.106. CASES THAT MAY BE REFERRED. (a) Except as |
|
provided by this section, a judge of a court may refer any civil |
|
case or portion of a civil case to an associate judge for |
|
resolution. |
|
(b) Unless a party files a written objection to the |
|
associate judge hearing a trial on the merits, the judge may refer |
|
the trial to the associate judge. A trial on the merits is any final |
|
adjudication from which an appeal may be taken to a court of |
|
appeals. |
|
(c) A party must file an objection to an associate judge |
|
hearing a trial on the merits or presiding at a jury trial not later |
|
than the 10th day after the date the party receives notice that the |
|
associate judge will hear the trial. If an objection is filed, the |
|
referring court shall hear the trial on the merits or preside at a |
|
jury trial. |
|
Sec. 54A.107. METHODS OF REFERRAL. (a) A case may be |
|
referred to an associate judge by an order of referral in a specific |
|
case or by an omnibus order. |
|
(b) The order of referral may limit the powers or duties of |
|
an associate judge. |
|
Sec. 54A.108. POWERS. (a) Except as limited by an order of |
|
referral, an associate judge may: |
|
(1) conduct hearings; |
|
(2) hear evidence; |
|
(3) compel production of relevant evidence; |
|
(4) rule on the admissibility of evidence; |
|
(5) issue summons for the appearance of witnesses; |
|
(6) examine a witness; |
|
(7) swear a witness for a hearing; |
|
(8) make findings of fact on evidence; |
|
(9) formulate conclusions of law; |
|
(10) rule on pretrial motions; |
|
(11) recommend the rulings, orders, or judgment to be |
|
made in a case; |
|
(12) regulate proceedings in a hearing; |
|
(13) order the attachment of a witness or party who |
|
fails to obey a subpoena; and |
|
(14) take action as necessary and proper for the |
|
efficient performance of the duties required by the order of |
|
referral. |
|
(b) An associate judge may, in the interest of justice, |
|
refer a case back to the referring court regardless of whether a |
|
timely objection to the associate judge hearing the trial on the |
|
merits or presiding at a jury trial has been made by any party. |
|
Sec. 54A.109. WITNESS. (a) A witness appearing before an |
|
associate judge is subject to the penalties for perjury provided by |
|
law. |
|
(b) A referring court may fine or imprison a witness who: |
|
(1) failed to appear before an associate judge after |
|
being summoned; or |
|
(2) improperly refused to answer questions if the |
|
refusal has been certified to the court by the associate judge. |
|
Sec. 54A.110. COURT REPORTER; RECORD. (a) A court |
|
reporter may be provided during a hearing held by an associate judge |
|
appointed under this subchapter. A court reporter is required to be |
|
provided when the associate judge presides over a jury trial. |
|
(b) A party, the associate judge, or the referring court may |
|
provide for a reporter during the hearing if one is not otherwise |
|
provided. |
|
(c) Except as provided by Subsection (a), in the absence of |
|
a court reporter or on agreement of the parties, the record may be |
|
preserved by any means approved by the associate judge. |
|
(d) The referring court or associate judge may assess the |
|
expense of preserving the record under Subsection (c) as costs. |
|
(e) On appeal of the associate judge's report or proposed |
|
order, the referring court may consider testimony or other evidence |
|
in the record if the record is taken by a court reporter. |
|
Sec. 54A.111. NOTICE OF DECISION; APPEAL. (a) After |
|
hearing a matter, an associate judge shall notify each attorney |
|
participating in the hearing of the associate judge's decision. An |
|
associate judge's decision has the same force and effect as an order |
|
of the referring court unless a party appeals the decision as |
|
provided by Subsection (b). |
|
(b) To appeal an associate judge's decision, other than the |
|
issuance of a temporary restraining order or temporary injunction, |
|
a party must file an appeal in the referring court not later than |
|
the seventh day after the date the party receives notice of the |
|
decision under Subsection (a). |
|
(c) A temporary restraining order issued by an associate |
|
judge is effective immediately and expires on the 15th day after the |
|
date of issuance unless, after a hearing, the order is modified or |
|
extended by the associate judge or referring judge. |
|
(d) A temporary injunction issued by an associate judge is |
|
effective immediately and continues during the pendency of a trial |
|
unless, after a hearing, the order is modified by a referring judge. |
|
(e) A matter appealed to the referring court shall be tried |
|
de novo and is limited to only those matters specified in the |
|
appeal. Except on leave of court, a party may not submit on appeal |
|
any additional evidence or pleadings. |
|
Sec. 54A.112. NOTICE OF RIGHT TO DE NOVO HEARING; WAIVER. |
|
(a) Notice of the right to a de novo hearing before the referring |
|
court shall be given to all parties. |
|
(b) The notice may be given: |
|
(1) by oral statement in open court; |
|
(2) by posting inside or outside the courtroom of the |
|
referring court; or |
|
(3) as otherwise directed by the referring court. |
|
(c) Before the start of a hearing by an associate judge, a |
|
party may waive the right of a de novo hearing before the referring |
|
court in writing or on the record. |
|
Sec. 54A.113. ORDER OF COURT. (a) Pending a de novo |
|
hearing before the referring court, a proposed order or judgment of |
|
the associate judge is in full force and effect and is enforceable |
|
as an order or judgment of the referring court, except for an order |
|
providing for the appointment of a receiver. |
|
(b) If a request for a de novo hearing before the referring |
|
court is not timely filed or the right to a de novo hearing before |
|
the referring court is waived, the proposed order or judgment of the |
|
associate judge becomes the order or judgment of the referring |
|
court only on the referring court's signing the proposed order or |
|
judgment. |
|
(c) An order by an associate judge for the temporary |
|
detention or incarceration of a witness or party shall be presented |
|
to the referring court on the day the witness or party is detained |
|
or incarcerated. The referring court, without prejudice to the |
|
right to a de novo hearing provided by Section 54A.115, may approve |
|
the temporary detention or incarceration or may order the release |
|
of the party or witness, with or without bond, pending a de novo |
|
hearing. If the referring court is not immediately available, the |
|
associate judge may order the release of the party or witness, with |
|
or without bond, pending a de novo hearing or may continue the |
|
person's detention or incarceration for not more than 72 hours. |
|
Sec. 54A.114. JUDICIAL ACTION ON ASSOCIATE JUDGE'S PROPOSED |
|
ORDER OR JUDGMENT. Unless a party files a written request for a de |
|
novo hearing before the referring court, the referring court may: |
|
(1) adopt, modify, or reject the associate judge's |
|
proposed order or judgment; |
|
(2) hear additional evidence; or |
|
(3) recommit the matter to the associate judge for |
|
further proceedings. |
|
Sec. 54A.115. DE NOVO HEARING. (a) A party may request a |
|
de novo hearing before the referring court by filing with the clerk |
|
of the referring court a written request not later than the seventh |
|
working day after the date the party receives notice of the |
|
substance of the associate judge's decision as provided by Section |
|
54A.111. |
|
(b) A request for a de novo hearing under this section must |
|
specify the issues that will be presented to the referring court. |
|
The de novo hearing is limited to the specified issues. |
|
(c) Notice of a request for a de novo hearing before the |
|
referring court shall be given to the opposing attorney in the |
|
manner provided by Rule 21a, Texas Rules of Civil Procedure. |
|
(d) If a request for a de novo hearing before the referring |
|
court is filed by a party, any other party may file a request for a |
|
de novo hearing before the referring court not later than the |
|
seventh working day after the date the initial request was filed. |
|
(e) The referring court, after notice to the parties, shall |
|
hold a de novo hearing not later than the 30th day after the date the |
|
initial request for a de novo hearing was filed with the clerk of |
|
the referring court. |
|
(f) In the de novo hearing before the referring court, the |
|
parties may present witnesses on the issues specified in the |
|
request for hearing. The referring court may also consider the |
|
record from the hearing before the associate judge, including the |
|
charge to and verdict returned by a jury, if the record was taken by |
|
a court reporter. |
|
(g) The denial of relief to a party after a de novo hearing |
|
under this section or a party's waiver of the right to a de novo |
|
hearing before the referring court does not affect the right of a |
|
party to file a motion for new trial, a motion for judgment |
|
notwithstanding the verdict, or other posttrial motions. |
|
(h) A party may not demand a second jury in a de novo hearing |
|
before the referring court if the associate judge's proposed order |
|
or judgment resulted from a jury trial. |
|
Sec. 54A.116. APPELLATE REVIEW. (a) A party's failure to |
|
request a de novo hearing before the referring court or a party's |
|
waiver of the right to request a de novo hearing before the |
|
referring court does not deprive the party of the right to appeal to |
|
or request other relief from a court of appeals or the supreme |
|
court. |
|
(b) Except as provided by Subsection (c), the date an order |
|
or judgment by the referring court is signed is the controlling date |
|
for the purposes of appeal to or request for other relief from a |
|
court of appeals or the supreme court. |
|
(c) The date an agreed order or a default order is signed by |
|
an associate judge is the controlling date for the purpose of an |
|
appeal to, or a request for other relief relating to the order from, |
|
a court of appeals or the supreme court. |
|
Sec. 54A.117. JUDICIAL ACTION. (a) Not later than the |
|
30th day after the date an action is taken by an associate judge, a |
|
referring court may modify, correct, reject, reverse, or recommit |
|
for further information the action taken by the associate judge. |
|
(b) If the court does not modify, correct, reject, reverse, |
|
or recommit an action to the associate judge, the action becomes the |
|
decree of the court. |
|
Sec. 54A.118. JUDICIAL IMMUNITY. An associate judge |
|
appointed under this subchapter has the judicial immunity of a |
|
district judge. |
|
SECTION 6.02. Subchapter G, Chapter 54, Government Code, is |
|
transferred to Chapter 54A, Government Code, as added by this Act, |
|
redesignated as Subchapter C, Chapter 54A, Government Code, and |
|
amended to read as follows: |
|
SUBCHAPTER C [G]. STATUTORY PROBATE COURT ASSOCIATE JUDGES |
|
Sec. 54A.201 [54.601]. DEFINITION. In this subchapter, |
|
"statutory probate court" has the meaning assigned by Section 3, |
|
Texas Probate Code. |
|
Sec. 54A.202. APPLICABILITY. This subchapter applies to a |
|
statutory probate court. |
|
Sec. 54A.203 [54.603]. APPOINTMENT. (a) After obtaining |
|
the approval of the commissioners court to create an associate |
|
judge position, the judge of a statutory probate court by order may |
|
appoint one or more full-time or part-time [a person to act as] |
|
associate judges to perform the duties authorized by this |
|
subchapter [judge for the statutory probate court]. |
|
(b) If a statutory probate court has jurisdiction in more |
|
than one county, an associate judge appointed by that court may |
|
serve only in a county in which the commissioners court has |
|
authorized the appointment. |
|
(c) The commissioners court may authorize the appointment |
|
of an associate judge for each court or may authorize one or more |
|
associate judges to share service with two or more courts, if more |
|
than one statutory probate court exists in a county. |
|
(d) [(c)] If an associate judge serves more than one court, |
|
the associate judge's appointment must be made with the unanimous |
|
approval of all the judges under whom the associate judge serves. |
|
[(d)
An associate judge must meet the qualifications to
|
|
serve as a judge of the court to which the associate judge is
|
|
appointed.] |
|
(e) An associate judge appointed under this subchapter may |
|
serve as an associate judge appointed under Section 574.0085, |
|
Health and Safety Code. |
|
Sec. 54A.204. QUALIFICATIONS. To qualify for appointment |
|
as an associate judge under this subchapter, a person must: |
|
(1) be a resident of this state and one of the counties |
|
the person will serve; |
|
(2) have been licensed to practice law in this state |
|
for at least five years; |
|
(3) not have been removed from office by impeachment, |
|
by the supreme court, by the governor on address to the legislature, |
|
by a tribunal reviewing a recommendation of the State Commission on |
|
Judicial Conduct, or by the legislature's abolition of the judge's |
|
court; and |
|
(4) not have resigned from office after having |
|
received notice that formal proceedings by the State Commission on |
|
Judicial Conduct had been instituted as provided in Section 33.022 |
|
and before final disposition of the proceedings. |
|
Sec. 54A.205 [54.605]. COMPENSATION. (a) An associate |
|
judge is entitled to the compensation set by the appointing judge |
|
and approved by the commissioners court or commissioners courts of |
|
the counties in which the associate judge serves. [The salary of
|
|
the associate judge may not exceed the salary of the appointing
|
|
judge.] |
|
(b) If an associate judge serves in more than one county, |
|
the associate judge shall be paid a salary as determined by |
|
agreement of the commissioners courts of the counties in which the |
|
associate judge serves. |
|
(c) Except as provided by Subsection (d) [(c)], the |
|
compensation of the associate judge shall be paid by the county from |
|
the county general fund. The compensation must be paid in the same |
|
manner that the appointing judge's salary is paid. |
|
(d) [(c)] On the recommendation of the statutory probate |
|
court judges in the county and subject to the approval of the county |
|
commissioners court, the county may pay all or part of the |
|
compensation of the associate judge from the excess contributions |
|
remitted to the county under Section 25.00212 and deposited in the |
|
contributions fund created under Section 25.00213. |
|
Sec. 54A.206 [54.604]. TERMINATION OF ASSOCIATE JUDGE. |
|
(a) An associate judge who serves a single court serves at the will |
|
of the judge of that court. |
|
(b) The employment of an associate judge who serves more |
|
than two courts may only be terminated by a majority vote of all the |
|
judges of the courts that the associate judge serves. |
|
(c) The employment of an associate judge who serves two |
|
courts may be terminated by either of the judges of the courts that |
|
the associate judge serves. |
|
(d) The appointment of the associate judge terminates if: |
|
(1) the associate judge becomes a candidate for |
|
election to public office; or |
|
(2) the commissioners court does not appropriate funds |
|
in the county's budget to pay the salary of the associate judge. |
|
(e) If an associate judge serves a single court and the |
|
appointing judge vacates the judge's office, the associate judge's |
|
employment continues, subject to Subsections (d) and (h), unless |
|
the successor appointed or elected judge terminates that |
|
employment. |
|
(f) If an associate judge serves two courts and one of the |
|
appointing judges vacates the judge's office, the associate judge's |
|
employment continues, subject to Subsections (d) and (h), unless |
|
the successor appointed or elected judge terminates that employment |
|
or the judge of the other court served by the associate judge |
|
terminates that employment as provided by Subsection (c). |
|
(g) If an associate judge serves more than two courts and an |
|
appointing judge vacates the judge's office, the associate judge's |
|
employment continues, subject to Subsections (d) and (h), unless: |
|
(1) if no successor judge has been elected or |
|
appointed, the majority of the judges of the other courts the |
|
associate judge serves vote to terminate that employment; or |
|
(2) if a successor judge has been elected or |
|
appointed, the majority of the judges of the courts the associate |
|
judge serves, including the successor judge, vote to terminate that |
|
employment as provided by Subsection (b). |
|
(h) Notwithstanding the powers of an associate judge |
|
provided by Section 54A.209 [54.610], an associate judge whose |
|
employment continues as provided by Subsection (e), (f), or (g) |
|
after the judge of a court served by the associate judge vacates the |
|
judge's office may perform administrative functions with respect to |
|
that court, but may not perform any judicial function, including |
|
any power prescribed by Section 54A.209 [54.610], with respect to |
|
that court until a successor judge is appointed or elected. |
|
Sec. 54A.207 [54.608]. CASES THAT MAY BE REFERRED. |
|
(a) Except as provided by this section, a judge of a court may |
|
refer to an associate judge any aspect of a suit over which the |
|
probate court has jurisdiction, including any matter ancillary to |
|
the suit. |
|
(b) Unless a party files a written objection to the |
|
associate judge hearing a trial on the merits, the judge may refer |
|
the trial to the associate judge. A trial on the merits is any final |
|
adjudication from which an appeal may be taken to a court of |
|
appeals. |
|
(c) A party must file an objection to an associate judge |
|
hearing a trial on the merits or presiding at a jury trial not later |
|
than the 10th day after the date the party receives notice that the |
|
associate judge will hear the trial. If an objection is filed, the |
|
referring court shall hear the trial on the merits or preside at a |
|
jury trial. |
|
Sec. 54A.2071 [54.606]. OATH. An associate judge must take |
|
the constitutional oath of office required of appointed officers of |
|
this state. |
|
[Sec.
54.607.
MAGISTRATE. An associate judge appointed
|
|
under this subchapter is a magistrate.] |
|
Sec. 54A.208 [54.609]. METHODS [ORDER] OF REFERRAL. (a) A |
|
case may be referred to an associate judge by an order of referral |
|
in a specific case or by an omnibus order [In referring a case to an
|
|
associate judge, the judge of the referring court shall render:
|
|
[(1) an individual order of referral; or
|
|
[(2) a general order of referral] specifying the class |
|
and type of cases to be referred [heard by the associate judge]. |
|
(b) The order of referral may limit the power or duties of an |
|
associate judge. |
|
Sec. 54A.209 [54.610]. POWERS OF ASSOCIATE JUDGE. (a) |
|
Except as limited by an order of referral, an associate judge may: |
|
(1) conduct a hearing; |
|
(2) hear evidence; |
|
(3) compel production of relevant evidence; |
|
(4) rule on the admissibility of evidence; |
|
(5) issue a summons for the appearance of witnesses; |
|
(6) examine a witness; |
|
(7) swear a witness for a hearing; |
|
(8) make findings of fact on evidence; |
|
(9) formulate conclusions of law; |
|
(10) rule on pretrial motions; |
|
(11) recommend the rulings, orders, or judgment [an
|
|
order] to be made [rendered] in a case; |
|
(12) [(11)] regulate all proceedings in a hearing |
|
before the associate judge; |
|
(13) [(12)] take action as necessary and proper for |
|
the efficient performance of the [associate judge's] duties |
|
required by the order of referral; |
|
(14) [(13)] order the attachment of a witness or party |
|
who fails to obey a subpoena; |
|
(15) [(14)] order the detention of a witness or party |
|
found guilty of contempt, pending approval by the referring court |
|
as provided by Section 54A.214 [54.616]; |
|
(16) [(15)] without prejudice to the right to a de novo |
|
hearing under Section 54A.216 [54.618], render and sign: |
|
(A) a final order agreed to in writing as to both |
|
form and substance by all parties; |
|
(B) a final default order; |
|
(C) a temporary order; |
|
(D) a final order in a case in which a party files |
|
an unrevoked waiver made in accordance with Rule 119, Texas Rules of |
|
Civil Procedure, that waives notice to the party of the final |
|
hearing or waives the party's appearance at the final hearing; |
|
(E) an order specifying that the court clerk |
|
shall issue: |
|
(i) letters testamentary or of |
|
administration; or |
|
(ii) letters of guardianship; or |
|
(F) an order for inpatient or outpatient mental |
|
health, mental retardation, or chemical dependency services or an |
|
order authorizing psychoactive medications; and |
|
(17) [(16)] sign a final order that includes a waiver |
|
of the right to a de novo hearing in accordance with Section 54A.216 |
|
[54.618]. |
|
(b) An associate judge may, in the interest of justice, |
|
refer a case back to the referring court regardless of whether a |
|
timely objection to the associate judge hearing the trial on the |
|
merits or presiding at a jury trial has been made by any party. |
|
(c) An order described by Subsection (a)(16) [(a)(15)] that |
|
is rendered and signed by an associate judge constitutes an order of |
|
the referring court. The judge of the referring court shall sign |
|
the order not later than the 30th day after the date the associate |
|
judge signs the order. |
|
(d) An answer filed by or on behalf of a party who previously |
|
filed a waiver described in Subsection (a)(16)(D) [(a)(15)(D)] |
|
revokes that waiver. |
|
Sec. 54A.2091 [54.611]. ATTENDANCE OF BAILIFF. A bailiff |
|
shall attend a hearing conducted by an associate judge if directed |
|
to attend by the referring court. |
|
[Sec.
54.612.
COURT REPORTER. (a) A court reporter may be
|
|
provided during a hearing held by an associate judge appointed
|
|
under this subchapter unless required by other law.
A court
|
|
reporter is required to be provided when the associate judge
|
|
presides over a jury trial.
|
|
[(b)
A party, the associate judge, or the referring court
|
|
may provide for a reporter during the hearing, if one is not
|
|
otherwise provided.
|
|
[(c)
Except as provided by Subsection (a), in the absence of
|
|
a court reporter or on agreement of the parties, the record may be
|
|
preserved by any means approved by the referring court.
|
|
[(d)
The referring court or associate judge may impose on a
|
|
party the expense of preserving the record as a court cost.
|
|
[(e)
On a request for a de novo hearing, the referring court
|
|
may consider testimony or other evidence in the record, if the
|
|
record is taken by a court reporter, in addition to witnesses or
|
|
other matters presented under Section 54.618.] |
|
Sec. 54A.210 [54.613]. WITNESS. (a) A witness appearing |
|
before an associate judge is subject to the penalties for perjury |
|
provided by law. |
|
(b) A referring court may issue attachment against and may |
|
fine or imprison a witness whose failure [who:
|
|
[(1) fails] to appear [before an associate judge] |
|
after being summoned or whose refusal to answer questions has been |
|
certified to the court[; or
|
|
[(2)
improperly refuses to answer a question if the
|
|
refusal has been certified to the court by the associate judge]. |
|
Sec. 54A.211. COURT REPORTER; RECORD. (a) A court |
|
reporter may be provided during a hearing held by an associate judge |
|
appointed under this subchapter. A court reporter is required to be |
|
provided when the associate judge presides over a jury trial. |
|
(b) A party, the associate judge, or the referring court may |
|
provide for a reporter during the hearing if one is not otherwise |
|
provided. |
|
(c) Except as provided by Subsection (a), in the absence of |
|
a court reporter or on agreement of the parties, the record may be |
|
preserved by any means approved by the associate judge. |
|
(d) The referring court or associate judge may assess the |
|
expense of preserving the record as court costs. |
|
(e) On appeal of the associate judge's report or proposed |
|
order, the referring court may consider testimony or other evidence |
|
in the record if the record is taken by a court reporter. |
|
Sec. 54A.212 [54.614]. REPORT. (a) The associate judge's |
|
report may contain the associate judge's findings, conclusions, or |
|
recommendations and may be in the form of a proposed order. |
|
(b) The associate judge shall prepare a [written] report in |
|
the form directed by the referring court, including in the form of: |
|
(1) a notation on the referring court's docket sheet or |
|
in the court's jacket; or |
|
(2) a proposed order. |
|
(c) [(b)] After a hearing, the associate judge shall provide |
|
the parties participating in the hearing notice of the substance of |
|
the associate judge's report, including any proposed order. |
|
(d) [(c)] Notice may be given to the parties: |
|
(1) in open court, by an oral statement, or by |
|
providing a copy of the associate judge's written report, including |
|
any proposed order; |
|
(2) by certified mail, return receipt requested; |
|
(3) by facsimile transmission; or |
|
(4) by electronic mail. |
|
(e) [(d)] There is a rebuttable presumption that notice is |
|
received on the date stated on: |
|
(1) the signed return receipt, if notice was provided |
|
by certified mail; |
|
(2) the confirmation page produced by the facsimile |
|
machine, if notice was provided by facsimile transmission; or |
|
(3) a printout evidencing submission of the electronic |
|
mail message, if notice was provided by electronic mail. |
|
(f) [(e)] After a hearing conducted by an associate judge, |
|
the associate judge shall send the associate judge's signed and |
|
dated report, including any proposed order, and all other papers |
|
relating to the case to the referring court. |
|
Sec. 54A.213 [54.615]. NOTICE OF RIGHT TO DE NOVO HEARING |
|
BEFORE REFERRING COURT. (a) An associate judge shall give all |
|
parties notice of the right to a de novo hearing before the |
|
referring court. |
|
(b) The notice may be given: |
|
(1) by oral statement in open court; |
|
(2) by posting inside or outside the courtroom of the |
|
referring court; or |
|
(3) as otherwise directed by the referring court. |
|
(c) Before the start of a hearing by an associate judge, a |
|
party may waive the right to a de novo hearing before the referring |
|
court in writing or on the record. |
|
Sec. 54A.214 [54.616]. ORDER OF COURT. (a) Pending a de |
|
novo hearing before the referring court, the decisions and |
|
recommendations of the associate judge or a proposed order or |
|
judgment of the associate judge has the full force and effect, and |
|
is enforceable as, an order or judgment of the referring court, |
|
except for an order providing for the appointment of a receiver. |
|
(b) Except as provided by Section 54A.209(c) [54.610(c)], |
|
if a request for a de novo hearing before the referring court is not |
|
timely filed or the right to a de novo hearing before the referring |
|
court is waived, the decisions and recommendations of the associate |
|
judge or the proposed order or judgment of the associate judge |
|
becomes the order or judgment of the referring court at the time the |
|
judge of the referring court signs the proposed order or judgment. |
|
(c) An order by an associate judge for the temporary |
|
detention or incarceration of a witness or party shall be presented |
|
to the referring court on the day the witness or party is detained |
|
or incarcerated. The referring court, without prejudice to the |
|
right to a de novo hearing provided by Section 54A.216, may approve |
|
the temporary detention or incarceration or may order the release |
|
of the party or witness, with or without bond, pending a de novo |
|
hearing. If the referring court is not immediately available, the |
|
associate judge may order the release of the party or witness, with |
|
or without bond, pending a de novo hearing or may continue the |
|
person's detention or incarceration for not more than 72 hours. |
|
Sec. 54A.215 [54.617]. JUDICIAL ACTION ON ASSOCIATE JUDGE'S |
|
PROPOSED ORDER OR JUDGMENT. (a) Unless a party files a written |
|
request for a de novo hearing before the referring court, the |
|
referring court may: |
|
(1) adopt, modify, or reject the associate judge's |
|
proposed order or judgment; |
|
(2) hear further evidence; or |
|
(3) recommit the matter to the associate judge for |
|
further proceedings. |
|
(b) The judge of the referring court shall sign a proposed |
|
order or judgment the court adopts as provided by Subsection (a)(1) |
|
not later than the 30th day after the date the associate judge |
|
signed the order or judgment. |
|
Sec. 54A.216 [54.618]. DE NOVO HEARING BEFORE REFERRING |
|
COURT. (a) A party may request a de novo hearing before the |
|
referring court by filing with the clerk of the referring court a |
|
written request not later than the seventh working day after the |
|
date the party receives notice of the substance of the associate |
|
judge's report as provided by Section 54A.212 [54.614]. |
|
(b) A request for a de novo hearing under this section must |
|
specify the issues that will be presented to the referring court. |
|
The de novo hearing is limited to the specified issues. |
|
(c) In the de novo hearing before the referring court, |
|
the parties may present witnesses on the issues specified in the |
|
request for hearing. The referring court may also consider the |
|
record from the hearing before the associate judge, including the |
|
charge to and verdict returned by a jury, if the record was taken by |
|
a court reporter. |
|
(d) Notice of a request for a de novo hearing before the |
|
referring court must be given to the opposing attorney in the manner |
|
provided by Rule 21a, Texas Rules of Civil Procedure. |
|
(e) If a request for a de novo hearing before the referring |
|
court is filed by a party, any other party may file a request for a |
|
de novo hearing before the referring court not later than the |
|
seventh working day after the date of filing of the initial request. |
|
(f) The referring court, after notice to the parties, shall |
|
hold a de novo hearing not later than the 30th day after the date on |
|
which the initial request for a de novo hearing was filed with the |
|
clerk of the referring court[, unless all of the parties agree to a
|
|
later date]. |
|
(g) Before the start of a hearing conducted by an associate |
|
judge, the parties may waive the right of a de novo hearing before |
|
the referring court. The waiver may be in writing or on the record. |
|
(h) The denial of relief to a party after a de novo hearing |
|
under this section or a party's waiver of the right to a de novo |
|
hearing before the referring court does not affect the right of a |
|
party to file a motion for new trial, motion for judgment |
|
notwithstanding the verdict, or other post-trial motion. |
|
(i) A party may not demand a second jury in a de novo hearing |
|
before the referring court if the associate judge's proposed order |
|
or judgment resulted from a jury trial. |
|
Sec. 54A.217 [54.619]. APPELLATE REVIEW. (a) A party's |
|
failure to request a de novo hearing before the referring court or a |
|
party's waiver of the right to request a de novo hearing before the |
|
referring court does not deprive the party of the right to appeal to |
|
or request other relief from a court of appeals or the supreme |
|
court. |
|
(b) Except as provided by Subsection (c), the date the judge |
|
of a referring court signs an order or judgment is the controlling |
|
date for the purposes of appeal to or request for other relief from |
|
a court of appeals or the supreme court. |
|
(c) The date an order described by Section 54A.209(a)(16) |
|
[54.610(a)(15)] is signed by an associate judge is the controlling |
|
date for the purpose of an appeal to, or a request for other relief |
|
relating to the order from, a court of appeals or the supreme court. |
|
Sec. 54A.218 [54.620]. IMMUNITY. An associate judge |
|
appointed under this subchapter has the judicial immunity of a |
|
probate judge. All existing immunity granted an associate judge by |
|
law, express or implied, continues in full force and effect. |
|
SECTION 6.03. Chapter 201, Family Code, is amended by |
|
adding Subchapter D to read as follows: |
|
SUBCHAPTER D. ASSOCIATE JUDGE FOR JUVENILE MATTERS |
|
Sec. 201.301. APPLICABILITY. This subchapter applies only |
|
to an associate judge appointed under this subchapter and does not |
|
apply to a juvenile court master appointed under Subchapter K, |
|
Chapter 54, Government Code. |
|
Sec. 201.302. APPOINTMENT. (a) A judge of a court that is |
|
designated as a juvenile court may appoint a full-time or part-time |
|
associate judge to perform the duties authorized by this chapter if |
|
the commissioners court of a county in which the court has |
|
jurisdiction has authorized creation of an associate judge |
|
position. |
|
(b) If a court has jurisdiction in more than one county, an |
|
associate judge appointed by that court may serve only in a county |
|
in which the commissioners court has authorized the appointment. |
|
(c) If more than one court in a county has been designated as |
|
a juvenile court, the commissioners court may authorize the |
|
appointment of an associate judge for each court or may authorize |
|
one or more associate judges to share service with two or more |
|
courts. |
|
(d) If an associate judge serves more than one court, the |
|
associate judge's appointment must be made as established by local |
|
rule, but in no event by less than a vote of two-thirds of the judges |
|
under whom the associate judge serves. |
|
Sec. 201.303. QUALIFICATIONS. To qualify for appointment |
|
as an associate judge under this subchapter, a person must: |
|
(1) be a resident of this state and one of the counties |
|
the person will serve; |
|
(2) have been licensed to practice law in this state |
|
for at least four years; |
|
(3) not have been removed from office by impeachment, |
|
by the supreme court, by the governor on address to the legislature, |
|
by a tribunal reviewing a recommendation of the State Commission on |
|
Judicial Conduct, or by the legislature's abolition of the judge's |
|
court; and |
|
(4) not have resigned from office after having |
|
received notice that formal proceedings by the State Commission on |
|
Judicial Conduct had been instituted as provided in Section 33.022, |
|
Government Code, and before final disposition of the proceedings. |
|
Sec. 201.304. COMPENSATION. (a) An associate judge shall |
|
be paid a salary determined by the commissioners court of the county |
|
in which the associate judge serves. |
|
(b) If an associate judge serves in more than one county, |
|
the associate judge shall be paid a salary as determined by |
|
agreement of the commissioners courts of the counties in which the |
|
associate judge serves. |
|
(c) The associate judge's salary is paid from the county |
|
fund available for payment of officers' salaries. |
|
Sec. 201.305. TERMINATION. (a) An associate judge who |
|
serves a single court serves at the will of the judge of that court. |
|
(b) The employment of an associate judge who serves more |
|
than two courts may only be terminated by a majority vote of all the |
|
judges of the courts which the associate judge serves. |
|
(c) The employment of an associate judge who serves two |
|
courts may be terminated by either of the judges of the courts which |
|
the associate judge serves. |
|
(d) To terminate an associate judge's employment, the |
|
appropriate judges must sign a written order of termination. The |
|
order must state: |
|
(1) the associate judge's name and state bar |
|
identification number; |
|
(2) each court ordering termination; and |
|
(3) the date the associate judge's employment ends. |
|
Sec. 201.306. CASES THAT MAY BE REFERRED. (a) Except as |
|
provided by this section, a judge of a juvenile court may refer to |
|
an associate judge any aspect of a juvenile matter brought: |
|
(1) under this title or Title 3; or |
|
(2) in connection with Rule 308a, Texas Rules of Civil |
|
Procedure. |
|
(b) Unless a party files a written objection to the |
|
associate judge hearing a trial on the merits, the judge may refer |
|
the trial to the associate judge. A trial on the merits is any final |
|
adjudication from which an appeal may be taken to a court of |
|
appeals. |
|
(c) A party must file an objection to an associate judge |
|
hearing a trial on the merits or presiding at a jury trial not later |
|
than the 10th day after the date the party receives notice that the |
|
associate judge will hear the trial. If an objection is filed, the |
|
referring court shall hear the trial on the merits or preside at a |
|
jury trial. |
|
(d) The requirements of Subsections (b) and (c) apply when a |
|
judge has authority to refer the trial of a suit under this title, |
|
Title 1, or Title 4 to an associate judge, master, or other |
|
assistant judge regardless of whether the assistant judge is |
|
appointed under this subchapter. |
|
Sec. 201.307. METHODS OF REFERRAL. (a) A case may be |
|
referred to an associate judge by an order of referral in a specific |
|
case or by an omnibus order. |
|
(b) The order of referral may limit the power or duties of an |
|
associate judge. |
|
Sec. 201.308. POWERS OF ASSOCIATE JUDGE. (a) Except as |
|
limited by an order of referral, an associate judge may: |
|
(1) conduct a hearing; |
|
(2) hear evidence; |
|
(3) compel production of relevant evidence; |
|
(4) rule on the admissibility of evidence; |
|
(5) issue a summons for: |
|
(A) the appearance of witnesses; and |
|
(B) the appearance of a parent who has failed to |
|
appear before an agency authorized to conduct an investigation of |
|
an allegation of abuse or neglect of a child after receiving proper |
|
notice; |
|
(6) examine a witness; |
|
(7) swear a witness for a hearing; |
|
(8) make findings of fact on evidence; |
|
(9) formulate conclusions of law; |
|
(10) recommend an order to be rendered in a case; |
|
(11) regulate proceedings in a hearing; |
|
(12) order the attachment of a witness or party who |
|
fails to obey a subpoena; |
|
(13) order the detention of a witness or party found |
|
guilty of contempt, pending approval by the referring court; and |
|
(14) take action as necessary and proper for the |
|
efficient performance of the associate judge's duties. |
|
(b) An associate judge may, in the interest of justice, |
|
refer a case back to the referring court regardless of whether a |
|
timely objection to the associate judge hearing the trial on the |
|
merits or presiding at a jury trial has been made by any party. |
|
Sec. 201.309. REFEREES. (a) An associate judge appointed |
|
under this subchapter may serve as a referee as provided by Sections |
|
51.04(g) and 54.10. |
|
(b) A referee appointed under Section 51.04(g) may be |
|
appointed to serve as an associate judge under this subchapter. |
|
Sec. 201.310. ATTENDANCE OF BAILIFF. A bailiff may attend a |
|
hearing by an associate judge if directed by the referring court. |
|
Sec. 201.311. WITNESS. (a) A witness appearing before an |
|
associate judge is subject to the penalties for perjury provided by |
|
law. |
|
(b) A referring court may fine or imprison a witness who: |
|
(1) failed to appear before an associate judge after |
|
being summoned; or |
|
(2) improperly refused to answer questions if the |
|
refusal has been certified to the court by the associate judge. |
|
Sec. 201.312. COURT REPORTER; RECORD. (a) A court |
|
reporter may be provided during a hearing held by an associate judge |
|
appointed under this subchapter. A court reporter is required to be |
|
provided when the associate judge presides over a jury trial or a |
|
contested final termination hearing. |
|
(b) A party, the associate judge, or the referring court may |
|
provide for a reporter during the hearing if one is not otherwise |
|
provided. |
|
(c) Except as provided by Subsection (a), in the absence of |
|
a court reporter or on agreement of the parties, the record may be |
|
preserved by any means approved by the associate judge. |
|
(d) The referring court or associate judge may assess the |
|
expense of preserving the record as costs. |
|
(e) On a request for a de novo hearing, the referring court |
|
may consider testimony or other evidence in the record, if the |
|
record is taken by a court reporter, in addition to witnesses or |
|
other matters presented under Section 201.317. |
|
Sec. 201.313. REPORT. (a) The associate judge's report may |
|
contain the associate judge's findings, conclusions, or |
|
recommendations and may be in the form of a proposed order. The |
|
associate judge's report must be in writing and in the form directed |
|
by the referring court. |
|
(b) After a hearing, the associate judge shall provide the |
|
parties participating in the hearing notice of the substance of the |
|
associate judge's report, including any proposed order. |
|
(c) Notice may be given to the parties: |
|
(1) in open court, by an oral statement or by providing |
|
a copy of the associate judge's written report, including any |
|
proposed order; |
|
(2) by certified mail, return receipt requested; or |
|
(3) by facsimile. |
|
(d) A rebuttable presumption exists that notice is received |
|
on the date stated on: |
|
(1) the signed return receipt, if notice was provided |
|
by certified mail; or |
|
(2) the confirmation page produced by the facsimile |
|
machine, if notice was provided by facsimile. |
|
(e) After a hearing conducted by an associate judge, the |
|
associate judge shall send the associate judge's signed and dated |
|
report, including any proposed order, and all other papers relating |
|
to the case to the referring court. |
|
Sec. 201.314. NOTICE OF RIGHT TO DE NOVO HEARING; WAIVER. |
|
(a) An associate judge shall give all parties notice of the right |
|
to a de novo hearing to the judge of the referring court. |
|
(b) The notice may be given: |
|
(1) by oral statement in open court; |
|
(2) by posting inside or outside the courtroom of the |
|
referring court; or |
|
(3) as otherwise directed by the referring court. |
|
(c) Before the start of a hearing by an associate judge, a |
|
party may waive the right of a de novo hearing before the referring |
|
court in writing or on the record. |
|
Sec. 201.315. ORDER OF COURT. (a) Pending a de novo |
|
hearing before the referring court, a proposed order or judgment of |
|
the associate judge is in full force and effect and is enforceable |
|
as an order or judgment of the referring court, except for an order |
|
providing for the appointment of a receiver. |
|
(b) If a request for a de novo hearing before the referring |
|
court is not timely filed or the right to a de novo hearing before |
|
the referring court is waived, the proposed order or judgment of the |
|
associate judge becomes the order or judgment of the referring |
|
court only on the referring court's signing the proposed order or |
|
judgment. |
|
(c) An order by an associate judge for the temporary |
|
detention or incarceration of a witness or party shall be presented |
|
to the referring court on the day the witness or party is detained |
|
or incarcerated. The referring court, without prejudice to the |
|
right to a de novo hearing provided by Section 201.317, may approve |
|
the temporary detention or incarceration or may order the release |
|
of the party or witness, with or without bond, pending a de novo |
|
hearing. If the referring court is not immediately available, the |
|
associate judge may order the release of the party or witness, with |
|
or without bond, pending a de novo hearing or may continue the |
|
person's detention or incarceration for not more than 72 hours. |
|
Sec. 201.316. JUDICIAL ACTION ON ASSOCIATE JUDGE'S PROPOSED |
|
ORDER OR JUDGMENT. Unless a party files a written request for a de |
|
novo hearing before the referring court, the referring court may: |
|
(1) adopt, modify, or reject the associate judge's |
|
proposed order or judgment; |
|
(2) hear additional evidence; or |
|
(3) recommit the matter to the associate judge for |
|
further proceedings. |
|
Sec. 201.317. DE NOVO HEARING. (a) A party may request a de |
|
novo hearing before the referring court by filing with the clerk of |
|
the referring court a written request not later than the seventh |
|
working day after the date the party receives notice of the |
|
substance of the associate judge's report as provided by Section |
|
201.313. |
|
(b) A request for a de novo hearing under this section must |
|
specify the issues that will be presented to the referring court. |
|
The de novo hearing is limited to the specified issues. |
|
(c) Notice of a request for a de novo hearing before the |
|
referring court shall be given to the opposing attorney in the |
|
manner provided by Rule 21a, Texas Rules of Civil Procedure. |
|
(d) If a request for a de novo hearing before the referring |
|
court is filed by a party, any other party may file a request for a |
|
de novo hearing before the referring court not later than the |
|
seventh working day after the date the initial request was filed. |
|
(e) The referring court, after notice to the parties, shall |
|
hold a de novo hearing not later than the 30th day after the date the |
|
initial request for a de novo hearing was filed with the clerk of |
|
the referring court. |
|
(f) In the de novo hearing before the referring court, the |
|
parties may present witnesses on the issues specified in the |
|
request for hearing. The referring court may also consider the |
|
record from the hearing before the associate judge, including the |
|
charge to and verdict returned by a jury, if the record was taken by |
|
a court reporter. |
|
(g) The denial of relief to a party after a de novo hearing |
|
under this section or a party's waiver of the right to a de novo |
|
hearing before the referring court does not affect the right of a |
|
party to file a motion for new trial, a motion for judgment |
|
notwithstanding the verdict, or other posttrial motions. |
|
(h) A party may not demand a second jury in a de novo hearing |
|
before the referring court if the associate judge's proposed order |
|
or judgment resulted from a jury trial. |
|
Sec. 201.318. APPELLATE REVIEW. (a) A party's failure to |
|
request a de novo hearing before the referring court or a party's |
|
waiver of the right to request a de novo hearing before the |
|
referring court does not deprive the party of the right to appeal to |
|
or request other relief from a court of appeals or the supreme |
|
court. |
|
(b) Except as provided by Subsection (c), the date an order |
|
or judgment by the referring court is signed is the controlling date |
|
for the purposes of appeal to or request for other relief from a |
|
court of appeals or the supreme court. |
|
(c) The date an agreed order or a default order is signed by |
|
an associate judge is the controlling date for the purpose of an |
|
appeal to, or a request for other relief relating to the order from, |
|
a court of appeals or the supreme court. |
|
Sec. 201.319. JUDICIAL IMMUNITY. An associate judge |
|
appointed under this subchapter has the judicial immunity of a |
|
district judge. |
|
Sec. 201.320. VISITING ASSOCIATE JUDGE. (a) If an |
|
associate judge appointed under this subchapter is temporarily |
|
unable to perform the judge's official duties because of absence or |
|
illness, injury, or other disability, a judge of a court having |
|
jurisdiction of a suit under this title or Title 1 or 4 may appoint a |
|
visiting associate judge to perform the duties of the associate |
|
judge during the period of the associate judge's absence or |
|
disability if the commissioners court of a county in which the court |
|
has jurisdiction authorizes the employment of a visiting associate |
|
judge. |
|
(b) To be eligible for appointment under this section, a |
|
person must have served as an associate judge for at least two |
|
years. |
|
(c) Sections 201.001 through 201.017 apply to a visiting |
|
associate judge appointed under this section. |
|
SECTION 6.04. Subsection (b), Section 22.110, Government |
|
Code, is amended to read as follows: |
|
(b) The court of criminal appeals shall adopt the rules |
|
necessary to accomplish the purposes of this section. The rules |
|
must require each district judge, judge of a statutory county |
|
court, associate judge appointed under Chapter 54A [54] of this |
|
code or Chapter 201, Family Code, master, referee, and magistrate |
|
to complete at least 12 hours of the training within the judge's |
|
first term of office or the judicial officer's first four years of |
|
service and provide a method for certification of completion of |
|
that training. At least four hours of the training must be |
|
dedicated to issues related to child abuse and neglect and must |
|
cover at least two of the topics described in Subsections |
|
(d)(8)-(12). At least six hours of the training must be dedicated |
|
to the training described by Subsections (d)(5), (6), and (7). The |
|
rules must require each judge and judicial officer to complete an |
|
additional five hours of training during each additional term in |
|
office or four years of service. At least two hours of the |
|
additional training must be dedicated to issues related to child |
|
abuse and neglect. The rules must exempt from the training |
|
requirement of this subsection each judge or judicial officer who |
|
files an affidavit stating that the judge or judicial officer does |
|
not hear any cases involving family violence, sexual assault, or |
|
child abuse and neglect. |
|
SECTION 6.05. Section 602.002, Government Code, is amended |
|
to read as follows: |
|
Sec. 602.002. OATH MADE IN TEXAS. An oath made in this |
|
state may be administered and a certificate of the fact given by: |
|
(1) a judge, retired judge, or clerk of a municipal |
|
court; |
|
(2) a judge, retired judge, senior judge, clerk, or |
|
commissioner of a court of record; |
|
(3) a justice of the peace or a clerk of a justice |
|
court; |
|
(4) an associate judge, magistrate, master, referee, |
|
or criminal law hearing officer; |
|
(5) a notary public; |
|
(6) [(5)] a member of a board or commission created by |
|
a law of this state, in a matter pertaining to a duty of the board or |
|
commission; |
|
(7) [(6)] a person employed by the Texas Ethics |
|
Commission who has a duty related to a report required by Title 15, |
|
Election Code, in a matter pertaining to that duty; |
|
(8) [(7)] a county tax assessor-collector or an |
|
employee of the county tax assessor-collector if the oath relates |
|
to a document that is required or authorized to be filed in the |
|
office of the county tax assessor-collector; |
|
(9) [(8)] the secretary of state or a former secretary |
|
of state; |
|
(10) [(9)] an employee of a personal bond office, or |
|
an employee of a county, who is employed to obtain information |
|
required to be obtained under oath if the oath is required or |
|
authorized by Article 17.04 or by Article 26.04(n) or (o), Code of |
|
Criminal Procedure; |
|
(11) [(10)] the lieutenant governor or a former |
|
lieutenant governor; |
|
(12) [(11)] the speaker of the house of |
|
representatives or a former speaker of the house of |
|
representatives; |
|
(13) [(12)] the governor or a former governor; |
|
(14) [(13)] a legislator or retired legislator; |
|
(15) [(14)] the attorney general or a former attorney |
|
general; |
|
(16) [(15)] the secretary or clerk of a municipality |
|
in a matter pertaining to the official business of the |
|
municipality; or |
|
(17) [(16)] a peace officer described by Article 2.12, |
|
Code of Criminal Procedure, if: |
|
(A) the oath is administered when the officer is |
|
engaged in the performance of the officer's duties; and |
|
(B) the administration of the oath relates to the |
|
officer's duties. |
|
SECTION 6.06. Article 2.09, Code of Criminal Procedure, is |
|
amended to read as follows: |
|
Art. 2.09. WHO ARE MAGISTRATES. Each of the following |
|
officers is a magistrate within the meaning of this Code: The |
|
justices of the Supreme Court, the judges of the Court of Criminal |
|
Appeals, the justices of the Courts of Appeals, the judges of the |
|
District Court, the magistrates appointed by the judges of the |
|
district courts of Bexar County, Dallas County, or Tarrant County |
|
that give preference to criminal cases, the criminal law hearing |
|
officers for Harris County appointed under Subchapter L, Chapter |
|
54, Government Code, the criminal law hearing officers for Cameron |
|
County appointed under Subchapter BB, Chapter 54, Government Code, |
|
the magistrates or associate judges appointed by the judges of the |
|
district courts of Lubbock County, Nolan County, or Webb County, |
|
the magistrates appointed by the judges of the criminal district |
|
courts of Dallas County or Tarrant County, the associate judges |
|
[masters] appointed by the judges of the district courts and the |
|
county courts at law that give preference to criminal cases in |
|
Jefferson County, the associate judges [magistrates] appointed by |
|
the judges of the district courts and the statutory county courts of |
|
Brazos County, Nueces County, or Williamson County, the magistrates |
|
appointed by the judges of the district courts and statutory county |
|
courts that give preference to criminal cases in Travis County, the |
|
criminal magistrates appointed by the Brazoria County |
|
Commissioners Court, the criminal magistrates appointed by the |
|
Burnet County Commissioners Court, the county judges, the judges of |
|
the county courts at law, judges of the county criminal courts, the |
|
judges of statutory probate courts, the associate judges appointed |
|
by the judges of the statutory probate courts under [Subchapter G,] |
|
Chapter 54A [54], Government Code, the associate judges appointed |
|
by the judge of a district court under Chapter 54A [Subchapter II,
|
|
Chapter 54], Government Code, the magistrates appointed under |
|
Subchapter JJ, Chapter 54, Government Code, as added by H.B. No. |
|
2132, Acts of the 82nd Legislature, Regular Session, 2011, the |
|
justices of the peace, and the mayors and recorders and the judges |
|
of the municipal courts of incorporated cities or towns. |
|
SECTION 6.07. Subsection (d), Article 102.017, Code of |
|
Criminal Procedure, is amended to read as follows: |
|
(d) Except as provided by Subsection (d-2), the clerks of |
|
the respective courts shall collect the costs and pay them to the |
|
county or municipal treasurer, as appropriate, or to any other |
|
official who discharges the duties commonly delegated to the county |
|
or municipal treasurer, as appropriate, for deposit in a fund to be |
|
known as the courthouse security fund or a fund to be known as the |
|
municipal court building security fund, as appropriate. Money |
|
deposited in a courthouse security fund may be used only for |
|
security personnel, services, and items related to buildings that |
|
house the operations of district, county, or justice courts, and |
|
money deposited in a municipal court building security fund may be |
|
used only for security personnel, services, and items related to |
|
buildings that house the operations of municipal courts. For |
|
purposes of this subsection, operations of a district, county, or |
|
justice court include the activities of associate judges, masters, |
|
magistrates, referees, hearing officers, criminal law magistrate |
|
court judges, and masters in chancery appointed under: |
|
(1) Section 61.311, Alcoholic Beverage Code; |
|
(2) Section 51.04(g) or Chapter 201, Family Code; |
|
(3) Section 574.0085, Health and Safety Code; |
|
(4) Section 33.71, Tax Code; |
|
(5) Chapter 54A [Chapter 54], Government Code; or |
|
(6) Rule 171, Texas Rules of Civil Procedure. |
|
SECTION 6.08. Subsection (a), Section 54.10, Family Code, |
|
is amended to read as follows: |
|
(a) Except as provided by Subsection (e), a hearing under |
|
Section 54.03, 54.04, or 54.05, including a jury trial, a hearing |
|
under Chapter 55, including a jury trial, or a hearing under the |
|
Interstate Compact for Juveniles (Chapter 60) may be held by a |
|
referee appointed in accordance with Section 51.04(g) or an |
|
associate judge [a master] appointed under Chapter 54A [54], |
|
Government Code, provided: |
|
(1) the parties have been informed by the referee or |
|
associate judge [master] that they are entitled to have the hearing |
|
before the juvenile court judge; and |
|
(2) after each party is given an opportunity to |
|
object, no party objects to holding the hearing before the referee |
|
or associate judge [master]. |
|
SECTION 6.09. A magistrate, master, referee, associate |
|
judge, or hearing officer appointed as provided by Subchapters A, |
|
B, C, E, F, I, O, P, S, T, U, V, X, CC, FF, and II, Chapter 54, |
|
Government Code, before the effective date of this Act, continues |
|
to serve as an associate judge under Chapter 54A, Government Code, |
|
as added by this article, with the powers and duties provided by |
|
that chapter, provided the court for which the magistrate, master, |
|
referee, associate judge, or hearing officer serves has authority |
|
to appoint an associate judge under Chapter 54A, Government Code. |
|
SECTION 6.10. The changes in law made by this article apply |
|
to a matter referred to an associate judge on or after the effective |
|
date of this article. A matter referred to an associate judge |
|
before the effective date of this article is governed by the law in |
|
effect on the date the matter was referred to the associate judge, |
|
and the former law is continued in effect for that purpose. |
|
SECTION 6.11. The following subchapters of Chapter 54, |
|
Government Code, are repealed: |
|
(1) Subchapter A; |
|
(2) Subchapter B; |
|
(3) Subchapter C; |
|
(4) Subchapter E; |
|
(5) Subchapter F; |
|
(6) Subchapter I; |
|
(7) Subchapter O; |
|
(8) Subchapter P; |
|
(9) Subchapter S; |
|
(10) Subchapter T; |
|
(11) Subchapter U; |
|
(12) Subchapter V; |
|
(13) Subchapter X; |
|
(14) Subchapter CC; |
|
(15) Subchapter FF; and |
|
(16) Subchapter II. |
|
ARTICLE 7. COURT ADMINISTRATION |
|
SECTION 7.01. Section 74.005, Government Code, is amended |
|
to read as follows: |
|
Sec. 74.005. APPOINTMENT OF [REGIONAL] PRESIDING JUDGES OF |
|
ADMINISTRATIVE JUDICIAL REGIONS. (a) The governor, with the |
|
advice and consent of the senate, shall appoint one judge in each |
|
administrative judicial region as presiding judge of the region. |
|
(b) On the death, resignation, removal, or expiration of the |
|
term of office of a presiding judge, the governor immediately shall |
|
appoint or reappoint a presiding judge. |
|
SECTION 7.02. Section 74.050, Government Code, is amended |
|
to read as follows: |
|
Sec. 74.050. SUPPORT STAFF [ADMINISTRATIVE ASSISTANT]. (a) |
|
The presiding judge may employ, directly or through a contract with |
|
another governmental entity, a full-time or part-time |
|
administrative assistant. |
|
(b) An administrative assistant [must have the
|
|
qualifications established by rule of the supreme court.
|
|
[(c) An administrative assistant] shall aid the presiding |
|
judge in carrying out the judge's duties under this chapter. The |
|
administrative assistant shall: |
|
(1) perform the duties that are required by the |
|
presiding judge and by the rules of administration; |
|
(2) conduct correspondence for the presiding judge; |
|
(3) under the direction of the presiding judge, make |
|
an annual report of the activities of the administrative region and |
|
special reports as provided by the rules of administration to the |
|
supreme court, which shall be made in the manner directed by the |
|
supreme court; and |
|
(4) attend to other matters that are prescribed by the |
|
council of judges. |
|
(c) [(d)] An administrative assistant, with the approval of |
|
the presiding judge, may purchase the necessary office equipment, |
|
stamps, stationery, and supplies and employ additional personnel as |
|
authorized by the presiding judge. |
|
(d) [(e)] An administrative assistant is entitled to |
|
receive the compensation from the state provided by the General |
|
Appropriations Act, from county funds, or from any public or |
|
private grant. |
|
SECTION 7.03. Subsection (c), Section 74.093, Government |
|
Code, is amended to read as follows: |
|
(c) The rules may provide for: |
|
(1) the selection and authority of a presiding judge |
|
of the courts giving preference to a specified class of cases, such |
|
as civil, criminal, juvenile, or family law cases; |
|
(2) other strategies for managing cases that require |
|
special judicial attention; |
|
(3) [(2)] a coordinated response for the transaction |
|
of essential judicial functions in the event of a disaster; and |
|
(4) [(3)] any other matter necessary to carry out this |
|
chapter or to improve the administration and management of the |
|
court system and its auxiliary services. |
|
SECTION 7.04. Chapter 74, Government Code, is amended by |
|
adding Subchapter J to read as follows: |
|
SUBCHAPTER J. ADDITIONAL RESOURCES FOR CERTAIN CASES |
|
Sec. 74.251. APPLICABILITY OF SUBCHAPTER. This subchapter |
|
does not apply to: |
|
(1) a criminal matter; |
|
(2) a case in which judicial review is sought under |
|
Subchapter G, Chapter 2001; or |
|
(3) a case that has been transferred by the judicial |
|
panel on multidistrict litigation to a district court for |
|
consolidated or coordinated pretrial proceedings under Subchapter |
|
H. |
|
Sec. 74.252. RULES TO GUIDE DETERMINATION OF WHETHER CASE |
|
REQUIRES ADDITIONAL RESOURCES. (a) The supreme court shall adopt |
|
rules under which courts, presiding judges of the administrative |
|
judicial regions, and the judicial committee for additional |
|
resources may determine whether a case requires additional |
|
resources to ensure efficient judicial management of the case. |
|
(b) In developing the rules, the supreme court shall include |
|
considerations regarding whether a case involves or is likely to |
|
involve: |
|
(1) a large number of parties who are separately |
|
represented by counsel; |
|
(2) coordination with related actions pending in one |
|
or more courts in other counties of this state or in one or more |
|
United States district courts; |
|
(3) numerous pretrial motions that present difficult |
|
or novel legal issues that will be time-consuming to resolve; |
|
(4) a large number of witnesses or substantial |
|
documentary evidence; |
|
(5) substantial postjudgment supervision; |
|
(6) a trial that will last more than four weeks; and |
|
(7) a substantial additional burden on the trial |
|
court's docket and the resources available to the trial court to |
|
hear the case. |
|
Sec. 74.253. JUDICIAL DETERMINATION. (a) On the motion of |
|
a party in a case, or on the court's own motion, the judge of the |
|
court in which the case is pending shall review the case and |
|
determine whether, under rules adopted by the supreme court under |
|
Section 74.252, the case will require additional resources to |
|
ensure efficient judicial management. The judge is not required to |
|
conduct an evidentiary hearing for purposes of making the |
|
determination but may, in the judge's discretion, direct the |
|
attorneys for the parties to the case and the parties to appear |
|
before the judge for a conference to provide information to assist |
|
the judge in making the determination. |
|
(b) On determining that a case will require additional |
|
resources as provided by Subsection (a), the judge shall: |
|
(1) notify the presiding judge of the administrative |
|
judicial region in which the court is located about the case; and |
|
(2) request any specific additional resources that are |
|
needed, including the assignment of a judge under this chapter. |
|
(c) If the presiding judge of the administrative judicial |
|
region agrees that, in accordance with the rules adopted by the |
|
supreme court under Section 74.252, the case will require |
|
additional resources to ensure efficient judicial management, the |
|
presiding judge shall: |
|
(1) use resources previously allotted to the presiding |
|
judge; or |
|
(2) submit a request for specific additional resources |
|
to the judicial committee for additional resources. |
|
Sec. 74.254. JUDICIAL COMMITTEE FOR ADDITIONAL RESOURCES. |
|
(a) The judicial committee for additional resources is composed |
|
of: |
|
(1) the chief justice of the supreme court; and |
|
(2) the nine presiding judges of the administrative |
|
judicial regions. |
|
(b) The chief justice of the supreme court serves as |
|
presiding officer. The office of court administration shall |
|
provide staff support to the committee. |
|
(c) On receipt of a request for additional resources from a |
|
presiding judge of an administrative judicial region under Section |
|
74.253, the committee shall determine whether the case that is the |
|
subject of the request requires additional resources in accordance |
|
with the rules adopted under Section 74.252. If the committee |
|
determines that the case does require additional resources, the |
|
committee shall make available the resources requested by the trial |
|
judge to the extent funds are available for those resources under |
|
the General Appropriations Act and to the extent the committee |
|
determines the requested resources are appropriate to the |
|
circumstances of the case. |
|
(d) Subject to Subsections (c) and (f), additional |
|
resources the committee may make available under this section |
|
include: |
|
(1) the assignment of an active or retired judge under |
|
this chapter, subject to the consent of the judge of the court in |
|
which the case for which the resources are provided is pending; |
|
(2) additional legal, administrative, or clerical |
|
personnel; |
|
(3) information and communication technology, |
|
including case management software, video teleconferencing, and |
|
specially designed courtroom presentation hardware or software to |
|
facilitate presentation of the evidence to the trier of fact; |
|
(4) specialized continuing legal education; |
|
(5) an associate judge; |
|
(6) special accommodations or furnishings for the |
|
parties; |
|
(7) other services or items determined necessary to |
|
try the case; and |
|
(8) any other resources the committee considers |
|
appropriate. |
|
(e) Notwithstanding any provision of Subchapter C, a |
|
justice or judge to whom Section 74.053(d) applies may not be |
|
assigned under Subsection (d). |
|
(f) The judicial committee for additional resources may not |
|
provide additional resources under this subchapter in an amount |
|
that is more than the amount appropriated for this purpose. |
|
Sec. 74.255. COST OF ADDITIONAL RESOURCES. The cost of |
|
additional resources provided for a case under this subchapter |
|
shall be paid by the state and may not be taxed against any party in |
|
the case for which the resources are provided or against the county |
|
in which the case is pending. |
|
Sec. 74.256. NO STAY OR CONTINUANCE PENDING DETERMINATION. |
|
The filing of a motion under Section 74.253 in a case is not grounds |
|
for a stay or continuance of the proceedings in the case in the |
|
court in which the case is pending during the period the motion or |
|
request is being considered by: |
|
(1) the judge of that court; |
|
(2) the presiding judge of the administrative judicial |
|
region; or |
|
(3) the judicial committee for additional resources. |
|
Sec. 74.257. APPELLATE REVIEW. A determination made by a |
|
trial court judge, the presiding judge of an administrative |
|
judicial region, or the judicial committee for additional resources |
|
under this subchapter is not appealable or subject to review by |
|
mandamus. |
|
SECTION 7.05. (a) The Texas Supreme Court shall request |
|
the president of the State Bar of Texas to appoint a task force to |
|
consider and make recommendations regarding the rules for |
|
determining whether civil cases pending in trial courts require |
|
additional resources for efficient judicial management required by |
|
Section 74.252, Government Code, as added by this article. The |
|
president of the State Bar of Texas shall ensure that the task force |
|
has diverse representation and includes judges of trial courts and |
|
attorneys licensed to practice law in this state who regularly |
|
appear in civil cases before courts in this state. The task force |
|
shall provide recommendations on the rules to the Texas Supreme |
|
Court not later than March 1, 2012. |
|
(b) The Texas Supreme Court shall: |
|
(1) consider the recommendations of the task force |
|
provided as required by Subsection (a) of this section; and |
|
(2) adopt the rules required by Section 74.252, |
|
Government Code, as added by this article, not later than May 1, |
|
2012. |
|
SECTION 7.06. The changes in law made by this article apply |
|
to cases pending on or after May 1, 2012. |
|
ARTICLE 8. GRANT PROGRAMS |
|
SECTION 8.01. Subchapter C, Chapter 72, Government Code, is |
|
amended by adding Section 72.029 to read as follows: |
|
Sec. 72.029. GRANTS FOR COURT SYSTEM ENHANCEMENTS. (a) The |
|
office shall develop and administer, except as provided by |
|
Subsection (c), a program to provide grants from available funds to |
|
counties for initiatives that will enhance their court systems or |
|
otherwise carry out the purposes of this chapter. |
|
(b) To be eligible for a grant under this section, a county |
|
must: |
|
(1) use the grant money to implement initiatives that |
|
will enhance the county's court system, including initiatives to |
|
develop programs to more efficiently manage cases that require |
|
special judicial attention, or otherwise carry out the purposes of |
|
this chapter; and |
|
(2) apply for the grant in accordance with procedures |
|
developed by the office and comply with any other requirements of |
|
the office. |
|
(c) The judicial committee for additional resources shall |
|
determine whether to award a grant to a county that meets the |
|
eligibility requirements prescribed by Subsection (b). |
|
(d) If the judicial committee for additional resources |
|
awards a grant to a county, the office shall: |
|
(1) direct the comptroller to distribute the grant |
|
money to the county; and |
|
(2) monitor the county's use of the grant money. |
|
(e) The office may accept gifts, grants, and donations for |
|
purposes of this section. The office may not use state funds to |
|
provide a grant under this section or to administer the grant |
|
program. |
|
SECTION 8.02. Subchapter A, Chapter 22, Government Code, is |
|
amended by adding Section 22.017 to read as follows: |
|
Sec. 22.017. GRANTS FOR CHILD PROTECTION. (a) In this |
|
section, "commission" means the Permanent Judicial Commission for |
|
Children, Youth and Families established by the supreme court. |
|
(b) The commission shall develop and administer a program to |
|
provide grants from available funds for initiatives that will |
|
improve safety and permanency outcomes, enhance due process, or |
|
increase the timeliness of resolution in child protection cases. |
|
(c) To be eligible for a grant under this section, a |
|
prospective recipient must: |
|
(1) use the grant money to improve safety or |
|
permanency outcomes, enhance due process, or increase timeliness of |
|
resolution in child protection cases; and |
|
(2) apply for the grant in accordance with procedures |
|
developed by the commission and comply with any other requirements |
|
of the supreme court. |
|
(d) If the commission awards a grant, the commission shall: |
|
(1) direct the comptroller to distribute the grant |
|
money; and |
|
(2) monitor the use of the grant money. |
|
(e) The commission may accept gifts, grants, and donations |
|
for purposes of this section. The commission may not use state |
|
funds to provide a grant under this section or to administer the |
|
grant program. |
|
ARTICLE 9. VEXATIOUS LITIGANTS |
|
SECTION 9.01. Subdivision (3), Section 11.001, Civil |
|
Practice and Remedies Code, is amended to read as follows: |
|
(3) "Local administrative judge" means a local |
|
administrative district judge, a local administrative statutory |
|
probate court judge, or a local administrative statutory county |
|
court judge. |
|
SECTION 9.02. Section 11.101, Civil Practice and Remedies |
|
Code, is amended by adding Subsection (c) to read as follows: |
|
(c) A litigant may appeal from a prefiling order entered |
|
under Subsection (a) designating the person a vexatious litigant. |
|
SECTION 9.03. Section 11.102, Civil Practice and Remedies |
|
Code, is amended by adding Subsection (c) to read as follows: |
|
(c) A decision of a local administrative judge denying a |
|
litigant permission to file a litigation under Subsection (a), or |
|
conditioning permission to file a litigation on the furnishing of |
|
security under Subsection (b), is not grounds for appeal, except |
|
that the litigant may apply for a writ of mandamus with the court of |
|
appeals not later than the 30th day after the date of the decision. |
|
The denial of a writ of mandamus by the court of appeals is not |
|
grounds for appeal to the supreme court or court of criminal |
|
appeals. |
|
SECTION 9.04. Section 11.103, Civil Practice and Remedies |
|
Code, is amended by amending Subsection (a) and adding Subsection |
|
(d) to read as follows: |
|
(a) Except as provided by Subsection (d), a [A] clerk of a |
|
court may not file a litigation, original proceeding, appeal, or |
|
other claim presented by a vexatious litigant subject to a |
|
prefiling order under Section 11.101 unless the litigant obtains an |
|
order from the local administrative judge permitting the filing. |
|
(d) A clerk of a court of appeals may file an appeal from a |
|
prefiling order entered under Section 11.101 designating a person a |
|
vexatious litigant or a timely filed writ of mandamus under Section |
|
11.102(c). |
|
SECTION 9.05. Section 11.104, Civil Practice and Remedies |
|
Code, is amended to read as follows: |
|
Sec. 11.104. NOTICE TO OFFICE OF COURT ADMINISTRATION; |
|
DISSEMINATION OF LIST. (a) A clerk of a court shall provide the |
|
Office of Court Administration of the Texas Judicial System a copy |
|
of any prefiling order issued under Section 11.101 not later than |
|
the 30th day after the date the prefiling order is signed. |
|
(b) The Office of Court Administration of the Texas Judicial |
|
System shall post on the agency's Internet website [maintain] a |
|
list of vexatious litigants subject to prefiling orders under |
|
Section 11.101 [and shall annually send the list to the clerks of
|
|
the courts of this state]. On request of a person designated a |
|
vexatious litigant, the list shall indicate whether the person |
|
designated a vexatious litigant has filed an appeal of that |
|
designation. |
|
SECTION 9.06. The posting, before the effective date of |
|
this article, of the name of a person designated a vexatious |
|
litigant under Chapter 11, Civil Practice and Remedies Code, on a |
|
list of vexatious litigants on the Internet website of the Office of |
|
Court Administration of the Texas Judicial System is not: |
|
(1) grounds for a cause of action; |
|
(2) a defense against a finding that a plaintiff is a |
|
vexatious litigant under Chapter 11, Civil Practice and Remedies |
|
Code; or |
|
(3) grounds for relief or appeal from a stay, order, or |
|
dismissal or any other action taken by a court or a clerk of a court |
|
under Chapter 11, Civil Practice and Remedies Code. |
|
ARTICLE 10. STUDY BY OFFICE OF COURT ADMINISTRATION OF TEXAS |
|
JUDICIAL SYSTEM |
|
SECTION 10.01. In this article, "office of court |
|
administration" means the Office of Court Administration of the |
|
Texas Judicial System. |
|
SECTION 10.02. (a) The office of court administration |
|
shall study the district courts and statutory county courts of this |
|
state to determine overlapping jurisdiction in civil cases in which |
|
the amount in controversy is more than $200,000. The study must |
|
determine the feasibility, efficiency, and potential cost of |
|
converting to district courts those statutory county courts with |
|
jurisdiction in civil cases in which the amount in controversy is |
|
more than $200,000. |
|
(b) Not later than January 1, 2013, the office of court |
|
administration shall submit a report regarding the determinations |
|
made by the office relating to statutory county courts to the |
|
governor, the lieutenant governor, the speaker of the house of |
|
representatives, the chairs of the standing committees of the |
|
senate and house of representatives with primary jurisdiction over |
|
the judicial system, and the commissioners court of any county with |
|
a statutory county court with jurisdiction in civil cases in which |
|
the amount in controversy is more than $200,000. |
|
(c) The office of court administration may accept gifts, |
|
grants, and donations to conduct the study under this section. The |
|
office of court administration may not use state funds to conduct |
|
the study and, notwithstanding Subsection (a) of this section, is |
|
required to conduct the study only to the extent gifts, grants, and |
|
donations are available for that purpose. |
|
ARTICLE 11. SUITS AFFECTING THE PARENT-CHILD RELATIONSHIP |
|
SECTION 11.01. Section 263.601, Family Code, is amended by |
|
amending Subdivision (1) and adding Subdivision (3-a) to read as |
|
follows: |
|
(1) "Foster care" means a voluntary residential living |
|
arrangement with a foster parent or other residential child-care |
|
provider that is: |
|
(A) licensed or approved by the department or |
|
verified by a licensed child-placing agency; and |
|
(B) paid under a contract with the department. |
|
(3-a) "Trial independence period" means a period of |
|
not less than six months, or a longer period as a court may order not |
|
to exceed 12 months, during which a young adult exits foster care |
|
with the option to return to foster care under the continuing |
|
extended jurisdiction of the court. |
|
SECTION 11.02. Section 263.602, Family Code, is amended to |
|
read as follows: |
|
Sec. 263.602. EXTENDED JURISDICTION. (a) A court that had |
|
continuing, exclusive jurisdiction over a young adult on the day |
|
before [may, at] the young adult's 18th birthday continues to have |
|
extended [request, render an order that extends the court's] |
|
jurisdiction over the young adult and shall retain the case on the |
|
court's docket while the young adult remains in extended foster |
|
care and during a trial independence period described [as provided] |
|
by this section [subchapter]. |
|
(b) A court with extended jurisdiction over a young adult |
|
who remains in extended foster care shall conduct extended foster |
|
care review hearings every six months for the purpose of reviewing |
|
and making findings regarding: |
|
(1) whether the young adult's living arrangement is |
|
safe and appropriate and whether the department has made reasonable |
|
efforts to place the young adult in the least restrictive |
|
environment necessary to meet the young adult's needs; |
|
(2) whether the department is making reasonable |
|
efforts to finalize the permanency plan that is in effect for the |
|
young adult, including a permanency plan for independent living; |
|
(3) whether, for a young adult whose permanency plan |
|
is independent living: |
|
(A) the young adult participated in the |
|
development of the plan of service; |
|
(B) the young adult's plan of service reflects |
|
the independent living skills and appropriate services needed to |
|
achieve independence by the projected date; and |
|
(C) the young adult continues to make reasonable |
|
progress in developing the skills needed to achieve independence by |
|
the projected date; and |
|
(4) whether additional services that the department is |
|
authorized to provide are needed to meet the needs of the young |
|
adult [The extended jurisdiction of the court terminates on the
|
|
earlier of:
|
|
[(1) the young adult's 21st birthday; or
|
|
[(2)
the date the young adult withdraws consent to the
|
|
extension of the court's jurisdiction in writing or in court]. |
|
(c) Not later than the 10th day before the date set for a |
|
hearing under this section, the department shall file with the |
|
court a copy of the young adult's plan of service and a report that |
|
addresses the issues described by Subsection (b). |
|
(d) Notice of an extended foster care review hearing shall |
|
be given as provided by Rule 21a, Texas Rules of Civil Procedure, to |
|
the following persons, each of whom has a right to present evidence |
|
and be heard at the hearing: |
|
(1) the young adult who is the subject of the suit; |
|
(2) the department; |
|
(3) the foster parent with whom the young adult is |
|
placed and the administrator of a child-placing agency responsible |
|
for placing the young adult, if applicable; |
|
(4) the director of the residential child-care |
|
facility or other approved provider with whom the young adult is |
|
placed, if applicable; |
|
(5) each parent of the young adult whose parental |
|
rights have not been terminated and who is still actively involved |
|
in the life of the young adult; |
|
(6) a legal guardian of the young adult, if |
|
applicable; and |
|
(7) the young adult's attorney ad litem, guardian ad |
|
litem, and volunteer advocate, the appointment of which has not |
|
been previously dismissed by the court. |
|
(e) If, after reviewing the young adult's plan of service |
|
and the report filed under Subsection (c), and any additional |
|
testimony and evidence presented at the review hearing, the court |
|
determines that the young adult is entitled to additional services, |
|
the court may order the department to take appropriate action to |
|
ensure that the young adult receives those services. |
|
(f) A court with extended jurisdiction over a young adult as |
|
described in Subsection (a) shall continue to have jurisdiction |
|
over the young adult and shall retain the case on the court's docket |
|
until the earlier of: |
|
(1) the last day of the: |
|
(A) sixth month after the date the young adult |
|
leaves foster care; or |
|
(B) 12th month after the date the young adult |
|
leaves foster care if specified in a court order, for the purpose of |
|
allowing the young adult to pursue a trial independence period; or |
|
(2) the young adult's 21st birthday. |
|
(g) A court with extended jurisdiction described by this |
|
section is not required to conduct periodic hearings for a young |
|
adult during a trial independence period and may not compel a young |
|
adult who has exited foster care to attend a court hearing. |
|
SECTION 11.03. Subchapter G, Chapter 263, Family Code, is |
|
amended by adding Section 263.6021 to read as follows: |
|
Sec. 263.6021. VOLUNTARY EXTENDED JURISDICTION FOR YOUNG |
|
ADULT RECEIVING TRANSITIONAL LIVING SERVICES. |
|
(a) Notwithstanding Section 263.602, a court that had continuing, |
|
exclusive jurisdiction over a young adult on the day before the |
|
young adult's 18th birthday may, at the young adult's request, |
|
render an order that extends the court's jurisdiction beyond the |
|
end of a trial independence period if the young adult receives |
|
transitional living services from the department. |
|
(b) The extended jurisdiction of the court under this |
|
section terminates on the earlier of: |
|
(1) the young adult's 21st birthday; or |
|
(2) the date the young adult withdraws consent to the |
|
extension of the court's jurisdiction in writing or in court. |
|
(c) At the request of a young adult who is receiving |
|
transitional living services from the department and who consents |
|
to voluntary extension of the court's jurisdiction under this |
|
section, the court may hold a hearing to review the services the |
|
young adult is receiving. |
|
(d) Before a review hearing scheduled under this section, |
|
the department must file with the court a report summarizing the |
|
young adult's transitional living services plan, services being |
|
provided to the young adult under that plan, and the young adult's |
|
progress in achieving independence. |
|
(e) If, after reviewing the report and any additional |
|
testimony and evidence presented at the hearing, the court |
|
determines that the young adult is entitled to additional services, |
|
the court may order the department to take appropriate action to |
|
ensure that the young adult receives those services. |
|
SECTION 11.04. Subsections (a) and (c), Section 263.603, |
|
Family Code, are amended to read as follows: |
|
(a) Notwithstanding Section 263.6021 [263.602], if the |
|
court believes that a young adult may be incapacitated as defined by |
|
Section 601(14)(B), Texas Probate Code, the court may extend its |
|
jurisdiction on its own motion without the young adult's consent to |
|
allow the department to refer the young adult to the Department of |
|
Aging and Disability Services for guardianship services as required |
|
by Section 48.209, Human Resources Code. |
|
(c) If the Department of Aging and Disability Services |
|
determines a guardianship is not appropriate, or the court with |
|
probate jurisdiction denies the application to appoint a guardian, |
|
the court under Subsection (a) may continue to extend its |
|
jurisdiction over the young adult only as provided by Section |
|
263.602 or 263.6021. |
|
SECTION 11.05. Section 263.609, Family Code, is repealed. |
|
SECTION 11.06. This article takes effect immediately if |
|
this Act receives a vote of two-thirds of all the members elected to |
|
each house, as provided by Section 39, Article III, Texas |
|
Constitution. If this Act does not receive the vote necessary for |
|
immediate effect, this article takes effect on the 91st day after |
|
the last day of the legislative session. |
|
ARTICLE 12. INMATE LITIGATION |
|
SECTION 12.01. Subsection (a), Section 14.002, Civil |
|
Practice and Remedies Code, is amended to read as follows: |
|
(a) This chapter applies only to an action, including an |
|
appeal or original proceeding, [a suit] brought by an inmate in a |
|
district, county, justice of the peace, or small claims court or an |
|
appellate court, including the supreme court or the court of |
|
criminal appeals, in which an affidavit or unsworn declaration of |
|
inability to pay costs is filed by the inmate. |
|
SECTION 12.02. Subsections (a) and (b), Section 14.004, |
|
Civil Practice and Remedies Code, are amended to read as follows: |
|
(a) An inmate who files an affidavit or unsworn declaration |
|
of inability to pay costs shall file a separate affidavit or |
|
declaration: |
|
(1) identifying each action [suit], other than an |
|
action [a suit] under the Family Code, previously brought by the |
|
person and in which the person was not represented by an attorney, |
|
without regard to whether the person was an inmate at the time the |
|
action [suit] was brought; and |
|
(2) describing each action [suit] that was previously |
|
brought by: |
|
(A) stating the operative facts for which relief |
|
was sought; |
|
(B) listing the case name, cause number, and the |
|
court in which the action [suit] was brought; |
|
(C) identifying each party named in the action |
|
[suit]; and |
|
(D) stating the result of the action [suit], |
|
including whether the action or a claim that was a basis for the |
|
action [suit] was dismissed as frivolous or malicious under Section |
|
13.001 or Section 14.003 or otherwise. |
|
(b) If the affidavit or unsworn declaration filed under this |
|
section states that a previous action or claim [suit] was dismissed |
|
as frivolous or malicious, the affidavit or unsworn declaration |
|
must state the date of the final order affirming the dismissal. |
|
SECTION 12.03. Subsection (a), Section 14.007, Civil |
|
Practice and Remedies Code, is amended to read as follows: |
|
(a) An order of a court under Section 14.006(a) shall |
|
include the costs described by Subsection (b) if the court finds |
|
that: |
|
(1) the inmate has previously filed an action to which |
|
this chapter applies [in a district, county, justice of the peace,
|
|
or small claims court]; and |
|
(2) a final order has been issued that affirms that the |
|
action was dismissed as frivolous or malicious under Section 13.001 |
|
or Section 14.003 or otherwise. |
|
SECTION 12.04. The change in law made by this article |
|
applies only to an action brought on or after the effective date of |
|
this Act. An action brought before the effective date of this Act is |
|
governed by the law in effect immediately before the effective date |
|
of this Act, and that law is continued in effect for that purpose. |
|
ARTICLE 13. PROVISIONS RELATED TO EXEMPTING CERTAIN JUDICIAL |
|
OFFICERS FROM CERTAIN CONCEALED HANDGUN LICENSING REQUIREMENTS |
|
SECTION 13.01. Subdivision (1), Subsection (a), Section |
|
411.201, Government Code, is amended to read as follows: |
|
(1) "Active judicial officer" means: |
|
(A) a person serving as a judge or justice of the |
|
supreme court, the court of criminal appeals, a court of appeals, a |
|
district court, a criminal district court, a constitutional county |
|
court, a statutory county court, a justice court, or a municipal |
|
court; [or] |
|
(B) a federal judge who is a resident of this |
|
state; or |
|
(C) a person appointed and serving as an |
|
associate judge under Chapter 201, Family Code. |
|
SECTION 13.02. Subsection (a), Section 46.15, Penal Code, |
|
is amended to read as follows: |
|
(a) Sections 46.02 and 46.03 do not apply to: |
|
(1) peace officers or special investigators under |
|
Article 2.122, Code of Criminal Procedure, and neither section |
|
prohibits a peace officer or special investigator from carrying a |
|
weapon in this state, including in an establishment in this state |
|
serving the public, regardless of whether the peace officer or |
|
special investigator is engaged in the actual discharge of the |
|
officer's or investigator's duties while carrying the weapon; |
|
(2) parole officers and neither section prohibits an |
|
officer from carrying a weapon in this state if the officer is: |
|
(A) engaged in the actual discharge of the |
|
officer's duties while carrying the weapon; and |
|
(B) in compliance with policies and procedures |
|
adopted by the Texas Department of Criminal Justice regarding the |
|
possession of a weapon by an officer while on duty; |
|
(3) community supervision and corrections department |
|
officers appointed or employed under Section 76.004, Government |
|
Code, and neither section prohibits an officer from carrying a |
|
weapon in this state if the officer is: |
|
(A) engaged in the actual discharge of the |
|
officer's duties while carrying the weapon; and |
|
(B) authorized to carry a weapon under Section |
|
76.0051, Government Code; |
|
(4) an active judicial officer as defined by Section |
|
411.201, Government Code, [a judge or justice of a federal court,
|
|
the supreme court, the court of criminal appeals, a court of
|
|
appeals, a district court, a criminal district court, a
|
|
constitutional county court, a statutory county court, a justice
|
|
court, or a municipal court] who is licensed to carry a concealed |
|
handgun under Subchapter H, Chapter 411, Government Code; |
|
(5) an honorably retired peace officer or federal |
|
criminal investigator who holds a certificate of proficiency issued |
|
under Section 1701.357, Occupations Code, and is carrying a photo |
|
identification that: |
|
(A) verifies that the officer honorably retired |
|
after not less than 15 years of service as a commissioned officer; |
|
and |
|
(B) is issued by a state or local law enforcement |
|
agency; |
|
(6) a district attorney, criminal district attorney, |
|
county attorney, or municipal attorney who is licensed to carry a |
|
concealed handgun under Subchapter H, Chapter 411, Government Code; |
|
(7) an assistant district attorney, assistant |
|
criminal district attorney, or assistant county attorney who is |
|
licensed to carry a concealed handgun under Subchapter H, Chapter |
|
411, Government Code; |
|
(8) a bailiff designated by an active judicial officer |
|
as defined by Section 411.201, Government Code, who is: |
|
(A) licensed to carry a concealed handgun under |
|
Chapter 411, Government Code; and |
|
(B) engaged in escorting the judicial officer; or |
|
(9) a juvenile probation officer who is authorized to |
|
carry a firearm under Section 142.006, Human Resources Code. |
|
SECTION 13.03. The change in law made by this article to |
|
Section 46.15, Penal Code, applies only to an offense committed on |
|
or after the effective date of this article. An offense committed |
|
before the effective date of this article is covered by the law in |
|
effect when the offense was committed, and the former law is |
|
continued in effect for that purpose. For purposes of this section, |
|
an offense was committed before the effective date of this article |
|
if any element of the offense occurred before that date. |
|
SECTION 13.04. This article takes effect on the 91st day |
|
after the last day of the legislative session. |
|
ARTICLE 14. COURT COSTS |
|
SECTION 14.01. Subsection (b), Section 51.005, Government |
|
Code, is amended to read as follows: |
|
(b) The fees are: |
|
(1) application for petition for review [writ of
|
|
error]$ 50 |
|
(2) additional fee if application for petition for |
|
review [writ of error] is granted$ 75 |
|
(3) motion for leave to file petition for writ of |
|
mandamus, prohibition, injunction, and other similar proceedings |
|
originating in the supreme court$ 50 |
|
(4) additional fee if a motion under Subdivision (3) |
|
is granted$ 75 |
|
(5) certified question from a federal court of appeals |
|
to the supreme court$ 75 |
|
(6) case appealed to the supreme court from the |
|
district court by direct appeal$100 |
|
(7) any other proceeding filed in the supreme |
|
court$ 75. |
|
SECTION 14.02. Subsection (a), Section 51.207, Government |
|
Code, is amended to read as follows: |
|
(a) The clerk of a court of appeals shall collect the fees |
|
described in Subsection (b) in a civil case before the court for the |
|
following services: |
|
(1) filing records, applications, motions, briefs, |
|
and other necessary and proper papers; |
|
(2) docketing and making docket and minute book |
|
entries; |
|
(3) issuing notices, citations, processes, and |
|
mandates; |
|
(4) preparing transcripts on application for petition |
|
for review [writ of error] to the supreme court; and |
|
(5) performing other necessary clerical duties. |
|
SECTION 14.03. Section 101.021, Government Code, is amended |
|
to read as follows: |
|
Sec. 101.021. SUPREME COURT FEES AND COSTS: GOVERNMENT |
|
CODE. The clerk of the supreme court shall collect fees and costs |
|
as follows: |
|
(1) application for petition for review [writ of
|
|
error] (Sec. 51.005, Government Code) . . . $50; |
|
(2) additional fee if application for petition for |
|
review [writ of error] is granted (Sec. 51.005, Government Code) |
|
. . . $75; |
|
(3) motion for leave to file petition for writ of |
|
mandamus, prohibition, injunction, and other similar proceedings |
|
originating in the supreme court (Sec. 51.005, Government Code) |
|
. . . $50; |
|
(4) additional fee if a motion under Subdivision (3) |
|
is granted (Sec. 51.005, Government Code) . . . $75; |
|
(5) certified question from a federal court of appeals |
|
to the supreme court (Sec. 51.005, Government Code) . . . $75; |
|
(6) case appealed to the supreme court from the |
|
district court by direct appeal (Sec. 51.005, Government Code) |
|
. . . $100; |
|
(7) any other proceeding filed in the supreme court |
|
(Sec. 51.005, Government Code) . . . $75; |
|
(8) administering an oath and giving a sealed |
|
certificate of the oath (Sec. 51.005, Government Code) . . . $5; |
|
(9) making certain copies, including certificate and |
|
seal (Sec. 51.005, Government Code) . . . $5, or $0.50 per page if |
|
more than 10 pages; |
|
(10) any official service performed by the clerk for |
|
which a fee is not otherwise provided (Sec. 51.005, Government |
|
Code) . . . reasonable amount set by order or rule of supreme court; |
|
(10-a) supreme court support account filing fee (Sec. |
|
51.0051, Government Code) . . . amount set by the supreme court, |
|
not to exceed $50; |
|
(11) issuance of attorney's license or certificate |
|
(Sec. 51.006, Government Code) . . . $10; and |
|
(12) additional filing fee to fund civil legal |
|
services for the indigent (Sec. 51.941, Government Code) . . . $25. |
|
ARTICLE 15. COMPOSITION OF CERTAIN COUNTY JUVENILE BOARDS |
|
SECTION 15.01. Subsection (a), Section 152.2051, Human |
|
Resources Code, is amended to read as follows: |
|
(a) The Rockwall County Juvenile Board is composed of: |
|
(1) the judge of the County Court at Law of Rockwall |
|
County; |
|
(2) the district judges [judge] in Rockwall County; |
|
(3) one county commissioner appointed by the |
|
commissioners court; |
|
(4) one member of the board of trustees of the Rockwall |
|
Independent School District selected by the board of trustees of |
|
the Rockwall Independent School District; and |
|
(5) one member of the board of trustees of the Royse |
|
City Independent School District selected by the board of trustees |
|
of the Royse City Independent School District. |
|
ARTICLE 16. NO APPROPRIATION; EFFECTIVE DATE |
|
SECTION 16.01. This Act does not make an appropriation. A |
|
provision in this Act that creates a new governmental program, |
|
creates a new entitlement, or imposes a new duty on a governmental |
|
entity is not mandatory during a fiscal period for which the |
|
legislature has not made a specific appropriation to implement the |
|
provision. |
|
SECTION 16.02. Except as otherwise provided by this Act, |
|
this Act takes effect January 1, 2012. |
|
|
|
______________________________ |
______________________________ |
|
President of the Senate |
Speaker of the House |
|
|
|
I certify that H.B. No. 79 was passed by the House on June 22, |
|
2011, by the following vote: Yeas 117, Nays 18, 1 present, not |
|
voting; and that the House concurred in Senate amendments to H.B. |
|
No. 79 on June 29, 2011, by the following vote: Yeas 94, Nays 44, 1 |
|
present, not voting. |
|
|
|
______________________________ |
|
Chief Clerk of the House |
|
|
I certify that H.B. No. 79 was passed by the Senate, with |
|
amendments, on June 27, 2011, by the following vote: Yeas 28, Nays |
|
3. |
|
|
|
______________________________ |
|
Secretary of the Senate |
|
APPROVED: __________________ |
|
Date |
|
|
|
__________________ |
|
Governor |