Texas 2013 - 83rd Regular

Texas House Bill HB134 Latest Draft

Bill / Introduced Version

Download
.pdf .doc .html
                            83R1803 YDB-D
 By: Raymond H.B. No. 134


 A BILL TO BE ENTITLED
 AN ACT
 relating to the criminal jurisdiction of the supreme court and the
 abolishment of the court of criminal appeals.
 BE IT ENACTED BY THE LEGISLATURE OF THE STATE OF TEXAS:
 SECTION 1.  Article 4.01, Code of Criminal Procedure, is
 amended to read as follows:
 Art. 4.01.  WHAT COURTS HAVE CRIMINAL JURISDICTION. The
 following courts have jurisdiction in criminal actions:
 1.  The Supreme Court [of Criminal Appeals];
 2.  Courts of appeals;
 3.  The district courts;
 4.  The criminal district courts;
 5.  The magistrates appointed by the judges of the
 district courts of Bexar County, Dallas County, Tarrant County, or
 Travis County that give preference to criminal cases and the
 magistrates appointed by the judges of the criminal district courts
 of Dallas County or Tarrant County;
 6.  The county courts;
 7.  All county courts at law with criminal
 jurisdiction;
 8.  County criminal courts;
 9.  Justice courts;
 10.  Municipal courts; and
 11.  The magistrates appointed by the judges of the
 district courts of Lubbock County.
 SECTION 2.  Article 4.04, Code of Criminal Procedure, is
 amended to read as follows:
 Art. 4.04.  SUPREME COURT [OF CRIMINAL APPEALS]
 Sec. 1.  The Supreme Court [of Criminal Appeals] and each
 justice of the court [judge thereof shall] have[, and is hereby
 given,] the power and authority to grant and issue and cause the
 issuance of:
 (1)  writs of habeas corpus;
 (2)  [, and,] in criminal law matters, the writs of
 mandamus, procedendo, prohibition, and certiorari; and
 (3)  any [. The court and each judge thereof shall
 have, and is hereby given, the power and authority to grant and
 issue and cause the issuance of such] other writs [as may be]
 necessary to protect its jurisdiction or enforce its judgments.
 Sec. 2.  The Supreme Court has [of Criminal Appeals shall
 have, and is hereby given,] final appellate and review jurisdiction
 in criminal cases coextensive with the limits of the state, and its
 determinations are [shall be] final. [The appeal of all cases in
 which the death penalty has been assessed shall be to the Court of
 Criminal Appeals. In addition, the Court of Criminal Appeals may,
 on its own motion, with or without a petition for such discretionary
 review being filed by one of the parties, review any decision of a
 court of appeals in a criminal case. Discretionary review by the
 Court of Criminal Appeals is not a matter of right, but of sound
 judicial discretion.]
 Sec. 3.  A reference in this code or other state law to the
 Court of Criminal Appeals means the Supreme Court, a reference to a
 judge of the Court of Criminal Appeals means a justice of the
 Supreme Court, and a reference to the presiding judge of the Court
 of Criminal Appeals means the chief justice of the Supreme Court.
 SECTION 3.  Section 52.092(c), Election Code, is amended to
 read as follows:
 (c)  Statewide offices of the state government shall be
 listed in the following order:
 (1)  governor;
 (2)  lieutenant governor;
 (3)  attorney general;
 (4)  comptroller of public accounts;
 (5)  commissioner of the General Land Office;
 (6)  commissioner of agriculture;
 (7)  railroad commissioner;
 (8)  chief justice, supreme court;
 (9)  justice, supreme court[;
 [(10)  presiding judge, court of criminal appeals;
 [(11)  judge, court of criminal appeals].
 SECTION 4.  Section 172.021(g), Election Code, is amended to
 read as follows:
 (g)  A candidate for the office of chief justice or justice,
 supreme court, [or presiding judge or judge, court of criminal
 appeals,] who chooses to pay the filing fee must also accompany the
 application with a petition that complies with the requirements
 prescribed for a petition authorized by Subsection (b), except that
 the minimum number of signatures that must appear on the petition
 required by this subsection is 50 from each court of appeals
 district.
 SECTION 5.  Section 22.001(a), Government Code, is amended
 to read as follows:
 (a)  The supreme court has appellate jurisdiction [, except
 in criminal law matters,] coextensive with the limits of the state
 and extending to all questions of law arising in the following cases
 when they have been brought to the courts of appeals from appealable
 judgment of the trial courts:
 (1)  a case in which the justices of a court of appeals
 disagree on a question of law material to the decision;
 (2)  a case in which one of the courts of appeals holds
 differently from a prior decision of another court of appeals or of
 the supreme court on a question of law material to a decision of the
 case;
 (3)  a case involving the construction or validity of a
 statute necessary to a determination of the case;
 (4)  a case involving state revenue;
 (5)  a case in which the railroad commission is a party;
 and
 (6)  any other case in which it appears that an error of
 law has been committed by the court of appeals, and that error is of
 such importance to the jurisprudence of the state that, in the
 opinion of the supreme court, it requires correction, but excluding
 those cases in which the jurisdiction of the court of appeals is
 made final by statute.
 SECTION 6.  Section 22.002(a), Government Code, is amended
 to read as follows:
 (a)  The supreme court or a justice of the supreme court may
 issue writs of procedendo and certiorari and all writs of quo
 warranto and mandamus agreeable to the principles of law regulating
 those writs, against a statutory county court judge, a statutory
 probate court judge, a district judge, a court of appeals or a
 justice of a court of appeals, or any officer of state government
 except the governor[, the court of criminal appeals, or a judge of
 the court of criminal appeals].
 SECTION 7.  The heading to Subchapter B, Chapter 22,
 Government Code, is amended to read as follows:
 SUBCHAPTER B. SUPREME COURT: [OF] CRIMINAL APPEALS
 SECTION 8.  Subchapter B, Chapter 22, Government Code, is
 amended by adding Section 22.1011 to read as follows:
 Sec. 22.1011.  REFERENCE TO COURT OF CRIMINAL APPEALS.  A
 reference in this code or other state law to the court of criminal
 appeals means the supreme court, a reference to a judge of the court
 of criminal appeals means a justice of the supreme court, and a
 reference to the presiding judge of the court of criminal appeals
 means the chief justice of the supreme court.
 SECTION 9.  Sections 22.102 and 22.103, Government Code, are
 amended to read as follows:
 Sec. 22.102.  MANDATE. When the court from which an appeal
 is taken is deprived of jurisdiction over the case pending the
 appeal and the case is determined by a court of appeals or the
 supreme court [of criminal appeals], the mandate of the appellate
 court that determined the case shall be directed to the court that
 had jurisdiction over the case, as also provided by Section 22.226.
 Sec. 22.103.  ASCERTAINMENT OF FACTS. The supreme court [of
 criminal appeals] may ascertain, on affidavit or otherwise, the
 matters of fact that are necessary to the exercise of its
 jurisdiction.
 SECTION 10.  Section 22.105(a), Government Code, is amended
 to read as follows:
 (a)  The fact that a justice [judge] of the supreme court [of
 criminal appeals] is disqualified under the constitution and laws
 of this state to hear and determine a case shall be certified to the
 governor.
 SECTION 11.  The heading to Section 22.106, Government Code,
 is amended to read as follows:
 Sec. 22.106.  COMMISSIONERS OF SUPREME COURT [OF CRIMINAL
 APPEALS].
 SECTION 12.  Sections 22.106(a), (c), and (d), Government
 Code, are amended to read as follows:
 (a)  The chief justice [presiding judge] of the supreme court
 [of criminal appeals], with the concurrence of a majority of the
 justices [judges] of the supreme court [of criminal appeals], may
 designate and appoint a retired appellate judge or district judge
 who has consented to be subject to appointment, or an active
 appellate judge or district judge, to sit as a commissioner of the
 supreme court [of criminal appeals]. A designated judge must
 consent to the designation and appointment. The chief justice
 [presiding judge] may designate and appoint as many commissioners
 as the chief justice considers [he deems] necessary to aid the court
 in disposing of its business.
 (c)  The opinions of a commissioner shall be submitted to the
 supreme court [of criminal appeals] for approval. When approved by
 a majority of the court, an opinion of a commissioner has the same
 weight and legal effect as an opinion originally prepared by the
 supreme court [of criminal appeals].
 (d)  The compensation of a judge while sitting as a
 commissioner of the supreme court [of criminal appeals] shall be
 paid out of money appropriated from the general revenue fund for
 that purpose in an amount equal to the salary of the justices
 [judges] of the supreme court [of criminal appeals] and shall be in
 lieu of the retirement allowance that the judge receives or in lieu
 of the compensation the judge [he] receives as an active judge of
 another court. In addition to the compensation, a judge sitting as
 a commissioner of the court is entitled to receive the judge's [his]
 actual travel expenses to and from Austin and a $25 per diem while
 the judge [he] is assigned to the supreme court [of criminal
 appeals] in Austin.
 SECTION 13.  Sections 22.107, 22.108, 22.109, and 22.1095,
 Government Code, are amended to read as follows:
 Sec. 22.107.  COMMISSION IN AID OF SUPREME COURT [OF
 CRIMINAL APPEALS]. (a)  In addition to the authority granted by
 Section 22.106 [of this code], the supreme court [of criminal
 appeals] may appoint a commission for the aid of the court in
 disposing of the business before the court. The commission in aid
 of the court shall discharge the duties that are assigned it by the
 supreme court [of criminal appeals].
 (b)  The commission shall be composed of two attorneys having
 the qualifications fixed by the constitution and laws of this state
 for a justice [judge] of the supreme court [of criminal appeals].
 Commissioners serve two-year terms that expire September 1 of each
 odd-numbered year.
 (c)  The opinions of the commissioners in aid of the court
 shall be submitted to the supreme court [of criminal appeals] for
 approval. When approved by a majority of the court and handed down
 as an opinion of the court, an opinion of a commissioner in aid of
 the court has the same weight and legal effect as an opinion
 originally prepared and handed down by the supreme court [of
 criminal appeals].
 (d)  Each member of the commission is entitled to receive for
 the member's [his] services the salary that is provided by law.
 (e)  The supreme court [of criminal appeals] by appointment
 may fill a vacancy on the commission in aid of the court that is
 created by the death, resignation, or removal of a member of the
 commission. A person appointed to fill a vacancy continues in
 office for the unexpired portion of the term for which the
 commissioner vacating the office was appointed.
 (f)  The supreme court [of criminal appeals] shall appoint
 two stenographers for the commission.
 Sec. 22.108.  RULES OF APPELLATE PROCEDURE IN CRIMINAL
 CASES. (a)  The supreme court [of criminal appeals] is granted
 rulemaking power to promulgate rules of posttrial, appellate, and
 review procedure in criminal cases except that its rules may not
 abridge, enlarge, or modify the substantive rights of a litigant.
 (b)  The supreme court [of criminal appeals] may promulgate a
 comprehensive body of rules of posttrial, appellate, and review
 procedure in criminal cases and from time to time may promulgate a
 specific rule or rules of posttrial, appellate, or review procedure
 in criminal cases or an amendment or amendments to a specific rule
 or rules. Rules and amendments adopted under this subsection are
 effective at the time the supreme court [of criminal appeals]
 considers expedient in the interest of a proper administration of
 justice. The rules and amendments to rules remain in effect unless
 and until disapproved, modified, or changed by the legislature.
 The clerk of the supreme court [of criminal appeals] shall file with
 the secretary of state the rules or amendments to rules promulgated
 by the supreme court [of criminal appeals] under this subsection.
 (c)  The rules of posttrial, appellate, and review procedure
 in criminal cases shall be published in the Texas Register and in
 the Texas Bar Journal. The supreme court [of criminal appeals] may
 adopt the method it considers expedient for the printing and
 distribution of the rules.
 Sec. 22.109.  RULES OF EVIDENCE IN CRIMINAL CASES. (a)  The
 supreme court [of criminal appeals] has the full rulemaking power
 in the promulgation of rules of evidence in the trials of criminal
 cases, except that its rules may not abridge, enlarge, or modify the
 substantive rights of a litigant.
 (b)  The supreme court [of criminal appeals] may promulgate a
 comprehensive body of rules of evidence in the trials of criminal
 cases and from time to time may promulgate a specific rule or rules
 of evidence or an amendment or amendments to a specific rule or
 rules. Rules and amendments adopted under this subsection are
 effective at the time the supreme court [of criminal appeals]
 considers expedient in the interest of a proper administration of
 justice. The rules and amendments to rules remain in effect unless
 and until disapproved by the legislature. The secretary of state
 shall report the rules or amendments to rules to the next regular
 session of the legislature by mailing a copy of the rules or
 amendments to rules to each elected member of the legislature on or
 before December 1 immediately preceding the session.
 (c)  The rules of evidence in the trials of criminal cases
 shall be published in the Texas Register and in the Texas Bar
 Journal. The supreme court [of criminal appeals] may adopt the
 method it considers expedient for the printing and distribution of
 the rules.
 Sec. 22.1095.  RULES ON ELECTRONIC FILING OF DOCUMENTS FOR
 CAPITAL CASES IN SUPREME COURT [OF CRIMINAL APPEALS].
 [(a)]  Notwithstanding Subchapter I, Chapter 51, or any other law,
 the supreme court [of criminal appeals] may adopt rules and
 procedures providing for and governing the electronic filing of
 briefs, pleadings, and other documents for capital cases in that
 court.
 [(b)     In the adoption of rules and procedures under
 Subsection (a), the court of criminal appeals shall coordinate with
 the supreme court and the rules and procedures adopted by that
 court.]
 SECTION 14.  Sections 22.110(a), (b), (c), and (e),
 Government Code, are amended to read as follows:
 (a)  The supreme court [of criminal appeals] shall assure
 that judicial training related to the problems of family violence,
 sexual assault, and child abuse and neglect is provided.
 (b)  The supreme 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 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.
 (c)  In adopting the rules, the supreme court [of criminal
 appeals] may consult with [the supreme court and with] professional
 groups and associations in the state that have expertise in the
 subject matter to obtain the recommendations of those groups or
 associations for instruction content.
 (e)  The supreme court [of criminal appeals] or the court's
 designee shall report the name of a judge or judicial officer who
 does not comply with the requirements of this section to the State
 Commission on Judicial Conduct.
 SECTION 15.  Sections 22.1105(b) and (c), Government Code,
 are amended to read as follows:
 (b)  The supreme court [of criminal appeals] shall adopt the
 rules necessary to provide for the training required under
 Subsection (a). The rules must require a judge described by
 Subsection (a) to complete two hours of the required training every
 judicial academic year that ends in a 0 or a 5 as part of the
 training the judge is required to complete under rules adopted by
 the supreme court [of criminal appeals] or other law.
 (c)  In adopting the rules, the supreme court [of criminal
 appeals] may consult with [the supreme court and with] professional
 groups and associations in this state that have expertise in the
 subject matter to obtain the recommendations of those groups or
 associations for instructional content.
 SECTION 16.  Section 22.111, Government Code, is amended to
 read as follows:
 Sec. 22.111.  TRAINING FOR PROSECUTING ATTORNEYS RELATED TO
 PUNISHMENT ENHANCEMENT BECAUSE OF BIAS OR PREJUDICE. The supreme
 court [of criminal appeals] shall provide to prosecuting attorneys
 training related to the use of Section 12.47, Penal Code, and
 Article 42.014, Code of Criminal Procedure, for enhancing
 punishment on a finding that an offense was committed because of the
 defendant's bias or prejudice as defined in Article 42.014, Code of
 Criminal Procedure.
 SECTION 17.  Sections 22.226 and 22.301, Government Code,
 are amended to read as follows:
 Sec. 22.226.  MANDATE. When the court from which an appeal
 is taken is deprived of jurisdiction over the case pending the
 appeal and the case is determined by a court of appeals or the
 supreme court [of criminal appeals], the mandate of the appellate
 court that determines the case shall be directed to the court that
 had jurisdiction over the case, as also provided by Section 22.102.
 Sec. 22.301.  SALARIES OF OFFICERS AND PERSONNEL OF
 APPELLATE COURTS. The salaries of the state prosecuting attorney
 and the clerks, other officers, and employees of the supreme
 court[, court of criminal appeals,] and courts of appeals shall be
 determined by the legislature in its appropriation acts for the
 support of the judiciary.
 SECTION 18.  Section 22.302(a), Government Code, is amended
 to read as follows:
 (a)  At the discretion of its chief justice [or presiding
 judge], the supreme court[, the court of criminal appeals,] or a
 court of appeals may order that oral argument be presented through
 the use of teleconferencing technology. The court and the parties
 or their attorneys may participate in oral argument from any
 location through the use of teleconferencing technology.
 SECTION 19.  The following sections of the Government Code
 are repealed:
 (1)  Sections 22.0035(d) and (e);
 (2)  Section 22.101; and
 (3)  Section 22.112.
 SECTION 20.  This Act takes effect on the date on which the
 constitutional amendment proposed by the 83rd Legislature, Regular
 Session, 2013, to abolish the court of criminal appeals and
 establish one supreme court with civil and criminal appellate
 jurisdiction takes effect. If that amendment is not approved by the
 voters, this Act has no effect.