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SPONSOR: |
SJC |
DATE TYPED: |
|
HB |
|
||
SHORT TITLE: |
Magistrate and Metro Courts Realignment |
SB |
143/SJCS |
||||
|
ANALYST: |
Hayes |
|||||
APPROPRIATION
Appropriation
Contained |
Estimated
Additional Impact |
Recurring or
Non-Rec |
Fund Affected |
||
FY03 |
FY04 |
FY03 |
FY04 |
|
|
|
$5,173.1 |
|
|
Recurring* |
General
Fund |
(Parenthesis
( ) Indicate Expenditure Decreases)
Relates
to: HB 52 Judicial Salary Increases
HB 230 Increase
9th Judicial District
HB 297 Additional
SB 39 Increase 3rd Judicial
District
SB
SB 78 Create 14th Judicial
District
SB 176 Increase 6th Judicial
District
SB
251 Chief
Judges’ Salaries
SB
906 Increase
Judgeships in Certain Districts
Duplicates
Appropriations in the General Appropriation Act for two district court
judgeships
Responses
Received From
Administrative
Office of the Courts (AOC)
Public
Defender Department (PDD)
Second
District Attorney’s Office
SUMMARY
Synopsis
of Bill
The Senate Judiciary Committee
Substitute for SB 143 amends various parts of Section 34 NMSA 1978 in order to
create and eliminate judgeships and circuit courts in
1. SB 143/SJCS provides an appropriation
for the creation of seven district court judgeships, four metropolitan
court judges and two magistrate court judgeships. The allocation of judgeships throughout the
state is as follows:
·
one new judgeship in the Third Judicial
District,
·
one new judgeship in the Sixth Judicial
District,
·
one new judgeship in the Ninth Judicial
District,
·
two new judgeships in the Eleventh
Judicial District,
·
two new judgeships in the Thirteenth Judicial
District,
·
four judgeships for the
·
one additional magistrate judgeship in
·
one additional magistrate judgeship in
2.
SB
143/SJCS abolishes one existing judgeship in
3.
SB
143/SJCS abolishes four
circuit courts on
§
§
§
§
4. SB 143/SJCS also re-allocates the composition of precincts in divisions as follows:
·
Lea District - Divisions 1 and 2 in
· San Juan District - Division 5 created from the re-allocation of
Divisions
1 through 4 (effective
·
McKinley District – Divisions 1, 2 and 3 as a
single court in
5. Appointments and Elections:
The
committee substitute states that magistrate judges shall not be elected
at-large from the district, but shall be elected by the voters of the division
for which the magistrate sits.
Magistrate judges shall reside in their divisions, but shall have
district-wide jurisdiction.
The
magistrate court judgeships in
SB 143/SJCS states the metropolitan court judgeships “shall be appointed, elected and retained in accordance with Article 6 of the Constitution of New Mexico” (page 3).
The bill also states that “The additional district and metropolitan judgeships provided for in this act shall be filled by appointment by the governor pursuant to the provisions of Article 6 of the Constitution of New Mexico (page 9).
6. SB 143/SJCS does not eliminate existing clerk positions as a result of these actions. Clerk positions shall be reassigned from the abolished magistrate court and circuits to other magistrate courts as directed by the Administrative Office of the Courts.
7. SB
143/SJCS provides appropriations for salaries and benefits and furniture, supplies
and equipment for the additional judges and staff. There is also an appropriation in each of the
respective areas affected by these additional judgeships for the District Attorneys
and Public Defenders. See specific appropriations per district on page 4
of this analysis.
Significant Issues
1. In November 1998, the Administrative
Offices of the Courts (AOC) completed and updated an expanded study to provide
the legislature with a methodology for determining the needs for additional
judgeships – the Weighted Caseload Study.
This study assigns a weight, expressed in minutes, for each type of case
heard in a court. The weight represents
the average amount of a judge’s time necessary to process a case of that
type. Each weight is multiplied by the
number of new cases filed per category to determine “workload.”
2.
The Chief Judges Council reviewed all
district, metropolitan, and magistrate judgeship requests statewide and
considered both the need as determined by the Weighted Caseload Study applied
to FY02 data, as well as additional narrative and testimonial information. The Council voted to support the judgeship requests
in this bill.
3. SB 143/SJCS may have an impact on the
performance measures in FY04:
Number of
cases adjudicated,
Number of
cases awaiting judicial action, and
Amount of
criminal case fees and fines assessed.
Cases
cleared as a percent of cases filed
FISCAL
IMPLICATIONS
The
$5,173,133 appropriation in this bill is a recurring* expense to the general
fund. Any unexpended or unencumbered
balance remaining from any of the appropriations at the end of fiscal year 2004
shall revert to the general fund.
*Part
of the appropriations to each court, district attorney and public defender is
specifically for furniture and equipment.
These are considered capital items (defined by DFA as purchases over
$1,500) and are a one-time expense. Therefore,
a portion of this appropriation must be designated as non-recurring.
Also,
part of the FY04 General Appropriation Act for the Magistrate Court Program
will need to be reduced as a result of the elimination of four circuit courts.
JUDGESHIP
AND RELATED APPROPRIATIONS
Judgeships |
Appropriation to Court or AOC |
Appropriation to District Attorney |
Appropriation to Public Defender |
Total |
3rd
Judicial (1
judge) |
293,290 |
78,665 |
105,530 |
477,485 |
6th
Judicial (1
judge) |
293,290 |
78,665 |
0 |
371,955 |
9th
Judicial (1
judge) |
293,288 |
78,665 |
105,530 |
477,483 |
11th
Judicial (2
judges) |
586,580 |
0 |
0 |
586,580 |
13th
Judicial (2
judge) |
586,580 |
157,330 |
0 |
743,910 |
(4
judges) |
1,096,260 |
419,830 |
458,000 |
1,974,090 |
Magistrate Court: (1 judge) |
99,380 |
75,925 |
88,020 |
263,325 |
Magistrate Court: (1 judge) |
99,380 |
75,925 |
103,000 |
278,305 |
Totals |
$3,348,050 |
$965,005 |
$860,080 |
$5,173,133 |
CMH/sb:yr