State ex rel. Barber v. Cline

391 S.E.2d 359, 182 W. Va. 669, 1990 W. Va. LEXIS 33
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 22, 1990
DocketNo. 19457
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 391 S.E.2d 359 (State ex rel. Barber v. Cline) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering West Virginia Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State ex rel. Barber v. Cline, 391 S.E.2d 359, 182 W. Va. 669, 1990 W. Va. LEXIS 33 (W. Va. 1990).

Opinion

McHUGH, Justice:

In this original prohibition proceeding the relator, Timothy N. Barber, an attorney at law residing and engaged in private law practice in Kanawha County, West Virginia, seeks to prevent the respondent, the Honorable Danny 0. Cline, as Judge of the Fourteenth Judicial Circuit, from enforcing an order appointing the relator to represent an indigent criminal defendant in a felony proceeding in Braxton County, West Virginia. We award the writ of prohibition for the reasons set forth in this opinion.

I

The relator has engaged in the private practice of law in Kanawha County, West Virginia, since his admission to the bar in this state in 1962. While he has practiced law in some other counties in this state, he has never appeared in person or by pleading before the Circuit Court of Braxton County, West Virginia. At the time in question he was engaged in the solo practice of law.

Braxton County is part of a four-county judicial circuit in this state, namely, the Fourteenth Judicial Circuit. W.Va.Code, [671]*67151-2-ln [1980].1 All four of these counties are basically rural, and there are few lawyers engaged in the private practice of law in these counties. We have recognized previously that “lawyers in rural counties” in this state are “deluged with criminal appointments[.]” Jewell v. Maynard, 181 W.Va. 571, 582, 383 S.E.2d 536, 547 (1989), opinion as modified on rek’g. The record in this case confirms this point with respect to the Fourteenth Judicial Circuit. In syllabus point 3 of Jewell this Court held that no lawyer in this state may be required “to devote more than ten percent of his or her normal work year involuntarily to court appointed cases.” As of November 29, 1989, when the respondent circuit court judge made the criminal appointment in question, almost all of the lawyers in the Fourteenth Judicial Circuit had been temporarily excused from further representation of indigents because such lawyers had already devoted more than ten percent of their time to representation of indigents.

The record indicates that at the time in question there were two lawyers from Braxton County who were available for appointment in that county to represent indigents. However, one of these lawyers is seventy-four years old and has a “limited practice,” and the other lawyer had already exceeded the ten percent limit but had not asked to be excused from further representation of indigents. Also available for appointment in Braxton County at the time in question was a lawyer from Fayette County who had requested his name to be placed on the appointment list in Braxton, Clay and Webster Counties (only for felony cases in Braxton County).

Lawyers from counties within the Fourteenth Judicial Circuit, other than Braxton County, who at the time in question had not reached the ten percent limit consist of two lawyers from Clay County, one of whom has a “limited practice,” and one lawyer from Gilmer County.2

At the time in question no public defender office was in operation in the Fourteenth Judicial Circuit, and no public defender office was available in any adjoining circuits, such as the Thirteenth Judicial Circuit (Ka-nawha County).

The relator has not alleged and shown that he had reached the ten percent limit in his practice at the time of the appointment in question by the respondent. The relator does contend, however, that the respondent has exceeded his jurisdiction by allegedly not following the attorney-appointment sequence set forth in W.Va.Code, 29-21-9(c) [1989].

II

In syllabus point 6 of Jewell v. Maynard, 181 W.Va. 571, 383 S.E.2d 536 (1989), opinion as modified on reh’g, this Court held: “Circuit courts may appoint lawyers from in-circuit and out-of-circuit pursuant to the guidelines in W. Va. Code, 29-21-9 [1989] to represent indigent defendants in court-appointed cases, ... [0]ut-of-circuit lawyers should not be required to travel an unreasonable distance.” Circuit courts ordinarily must follow the attorney-appointment sequence set forth in W.Va.Code, 29-21-9(c) [1989]. Cunningham v. Sommerville, 182 W.Va. 427, 429, 388 S.E.2d 301, 303 (1989). The attorney-appointment sequence in circuits, like the Fourteenth Judicial Circuit, where no public defender office is in operation, is ordinarily as follows: (1) a voluntary member of the local panel of attorneys; (2) a voluntary member of the regional panel of attorneys; (3) any public defender office in an adjoining circuit which agrees to the appointment; (4) qualified private attorneys from in-circuit or out-of-circuit. W.Va. Code, 29-21-9(c) [1989].3

[672]*672“In each circuit” the circuit court “shall establish and maintain” a local panel and a regional panel of private attorneys who shall be available generally to serve as counsel for clients eligible to receive publicly funded legal representation. W. Va. Code, 29-21-9(a) [1989]. Thus, each circuit court has a mandatory duty to establish these panels. A lawyer may become a member of the local or regional panel by informing the court in writing, on forms provided by the executive director of public defender services, of a desire to accept appointments generally, or of the specific types of cases in which he or she normally will accept appointments. W. Va. Code, 29-21-9(b) [1989]. The lawyer shall also indicate whether he or she will accept appointments in “adjoining circuits” and, if so, in “which [adjoining] circuits.” Id.

The statute does not define the terms “local panel” and “regional panel” of private attorneys. Based upon an examination of the statute in its entirety, with its repeated references to (1) “circuit,” as opposed to “county,” and to (2) “adjoining” circuits, this Court concludes that a “local panel” under W. Va. Code, 29-21-9 [1989] is a panel of private attorneys whose principal offices are located within the circuit of the court establishing and maintaining such panel. A “regional panel” under W.Va. Code, 29-21-9 [1989] is a panel of private attorneys whose principal offices are located in circuits adjoining the circuit of the court establishing and maintaining such panel.

Pursuant to W.Va.Code, 29-21-5(a) [1989], the executive director of public defender services has “the authority to promulgate rules, and shall have such other authority and perform such duties as may be required or necessary to effectuate” the article on delivery of public defender services, W. Va. Code, 29-21-1 to 29-21-20 [1989].4 Reading W. Va. Code, 29-21-5(a) [1989] and W.Va.Code, 29-21-9(a)-(b) [1989] in pari materia, we hold that the executive director of public defender services has the obligation to assist each circuit court in establishing and maintaining local and regional panels of private attorneys desirous of appointments.

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Bluebook (online)
391 S.E.2d 359, 182 W. Va. 669, 1990 W. Va. LEXIS 33, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-barber-v-cline-wva-1990.