In Re the Judicial Vacancy in District Judgeship No. 5

2006 ND 88, 713 N.W.2d 95, 2006 N.D. LEXIS 92, 2006 WL 1084309
CourtNorth Dakota Supreme Court
DecidedApril 26, 2006
Docket20060035
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 2006 ND 88 (In Re the Judicial Vacancy in District Judgeship No. 5) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering North Dakota Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re the Judicial Vacancy in District Judgeship No. 5, 2006 ND 88, 713 N.W.2d 95, 2006 N.D. LEXIS 92, 2006 WL 1084309 (N.D. 2006).

Opinion

PER CURIAM.

[¶ 1] On February 3, 2006, Governor John Hoeven officially notified the Supreme Court that the Honorable Ronald E. Goodman, Judge of the District Court, designated as Judgeship No. 5 with chambers in Ellendale, Southeast Judicial District, is retiring on August 1, 2006. Judge Goodman’s impending retirement will create a vacancy under Section 27-05-02.1, N.D.C.C.

I. Judicial Vacancy

[¶ 2] Under Section 27-05-02.1, N.D.C.C., this Court is required to review vacancies that occur and determine, within 90 days of receiving notice of a vacancy, whether the office is necessary for effective judicial administration. This Court may, consistent with that determination, order the vacancy filled in its current location or order the vacant office transferred to any location in which a judge is necessary for effective judicial administration. N.D.C.C. § 27-05-02.1(5).

[¶ 3] Under N.D. Sup.Ct. Admin. R. 7.2, notice of a written consultation with the attorneys and judges of the Southeast Judicial District was posted February 8, 2006, on the website of the Supreme Court. Notice was also electronically provided to all presiding judges of the state. Written comments on the vacancy were invited and a hearing held March 27, 2006. This procedure is sufficient for purposes of the consultation required under N.D.C.C. § 27-05-02.1.

[¶ 4] ■ A Report containing population and caseload trends, and other criteria identified in N.D. Sup.Ct. Admin. R. 7.2, Section 4, was filed March 13, 2006, by the Southeast Judicial District.

[¶ 5] Under the criteria of Section 4 of N.D. Sup.Ct. Admin. R. 7.2, the Court has considered all submissions received by the Court and its own administrative records on state-wide weighted caseload data. As noted below in ¶ 8, the district, as a whole, experiences a shortage of judicial resources with the current number of judges chambered within the district. We determine that Judgeship No. 5 is necessary for effective judicial administration in the Southeast Judicial District.

II. Chamber Location

[¶ 6] The Southeast Judicial District has six district judgeships serving eleven *96 comities. The judgeships are currently chambered in Ellendale, Jamestown, New Rockford, Valley City and Wahpeton. The counties served are Barnes, Dickey, Eddy, Foster, Griggs, LaMoure, Ransom, Rich-land, Sargent, Stutsman and Wells. While chamber location may always be considered by this Court when a judgeship is being vacated, no Petition for Relocation of Judgeship No. 5, with chambers in Ellen-dale, has been filed. Nonetheless, we have reviewed information under the criteria identified in N.D. Sup.Ct. Admin. R. 7.1, § 4. Discussion of the factors follows.

a. Annual district court combined civil, criminal and formal juvenile caseload for the most recent three-year period and any discernible caseload trends or patterns.

[¶ 7] Our weighted caseload study allocates judicial resources (including judges and judicial referees) needed to handle cases after weighting each type of case by the time required to process an average case of that type. The study also allocates time not available for handling cases but which is required from a judge, such as for travel and for the presiding judge to handle administrative matters. The resulting computation expresses the minimum judicial resources as the judicial Full Time Equivalent (“judicial FTE”) required to meet the needs of the district based upon weighted case filings. When minimum judicial FTE’s are compared to available judicial FTE’s, the difference is expressed as a positive number, indicating there are more judicial resources available than current weighted case filings require, or a negative number, indicating there are fewer judicial resources than are needed to serve those weighted case filings. Ideally a judicial district as a whole would show a small positive number, indicating judicial resources for that district have a margin for contingencies such as the prolonged illness of a judge and similar circumstances not currently accounted for in the weighted caseload study as well as some margin for error in the' structure of the study.

[¶ 8] Our study shows the Southeast Judicial District continues to have a shortage of judicial resources.

Weighted Judicial PTE

Year Pilings Required Difference

2003 419,243 6.96 -0.96

2004 443,445 7.35 -1.35

2005 430,669 7.15 -1.15

See Petition to Change Judgeship from Valley City to Jamestown, 2002 ND 124 ¶¶ 6 and 7, 650 N.W.2d 808, regarding judicial resources in the Southeast Judicial District from 1997 through 2001.

[¶ 9] Judicial overages and shortages in counties in which judgeships are chambered are listed in the chart below.

Year Barnes Dickey Eddy Richland Stutsman

-2003 0.86 0.64 0.80 -0.35 -1.07

2004 0.68 0.62 0.79 -0.48 -1.23

2005 0.68 0.61 0.79 -0.44 -1.20

Judicial shortages for counties that have no chambered judgeships are listed in the chart below.

Year Foster Griggs LaMoure Ransom Sargent Wells

2003 -0.25 -0.14 -0,46 -0.40 -0.24 -0.33

2004 -0.27 -0.18 -0.28 -0.44 -0.26 -0.32

2005 -0.25 -0.17 -0.20 -0.43 -0.22 -0.32

[¶ 10] The Report filed by the Southeast Judicial District indicates that Judgeship No. 5, while chambered in Dickey County, is responsible for the caseload in *97 Dickey, LaMoure and Sargent Counties, as well as a share of the caseload in Ransom and Richland Counties. These five counties currently have a combined judge shortage of 0.68. The remaining six counties in the Southeast Judicial District have a combined judge shortage of 0.47. Eddy, Dickey and Barnes Counties, which have chambered judgeships, are the only counties with judicial overages. Both Richland and Stutsman Counties have chambered judgeships, and show a judicial shortage, with the largest shortage being in Stuts-man County.

[¶ 11] An overage in a chambered county addresses the needs of non-chambered counties as well as other chambered counties within the district, because judges regularly provide services in counties other than the chambered county. Given the geographical proximity of chambered and non-chambered counties in the district, the judicial overages in Barnes and Eddy Counties are most proximate to the judicial shortage in Stutsman County, and the overage in Dickey County is most proximate to the shortage in Richland County.

b. Number and location of attorneys.

[¶ 12] There are 31 licensed attorneys in Dickey, LaMoure, Ransom, Richland and Sargent Counties. The majority of those attorneys, 16, are in Wahpeton. Dickey County, where Judgeship No. 5 is chambered, has 4 attorneys. The remaining counties in the Southeast Judicial District have 51 attorneys, with 21 of those in Jamestown, and 17 in Valley City.

c. Community facilities (restaurants, motels, etc.), and d. Convenience of travel access from surrounding communities (highway, bus, train, air, and parcel services, etc.).

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2006 ND 88, 713 N.W.2d 95, 2006 N.D. LEXIS 92, 2006 WL 1084309, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-the-judicial-vacancy-in-district-judgeship-no-5-nd-2006.