Utah Admin. Code R597-4-1 - Classification of Justice Court Judges
(1) Each judge's classification
shall be made by the commission following the judge's retention
election, except that newly-appointed judges shall be classified upon
appointment.
(2)
Classification shall be based on:
(a) the dates of required retention
elections for the court or courts in which the judge serves
and;
(b) the weighted
caseload data and attorney appearance data provided by the
Administrative Office of the Courts for the 12 months preceding the
judge's most recent election or appointment.
(3) If the data specified in
subsection R597-4-1(2)(b) is unavailable or inapplicable,
classification shall be based on the best data available from the
Administrative Office of the Courts.
(4) Justice court judges shall be
classified into a single controlling cycle for the purposes of
evaluation timing.
(5)
Justice court judges shall be classified into one of three categories
for purposes of judicial evaluation, based on the timeframes
specified in sections R597-4-1(2)(b) and R597-4-1(3):
(a) full evaluation judges must
have a total of 50 or more attorneys with at least one trial
appearance or three total appearances in the combined jurisdictions
in which they serve;
(b)
mid-level evaluation judges must have fewer than 50 attorneys with at
least one trial appearance or three total appearances in the combined
jurisdictions in which they serve and a weighted caseload, as defined
by the Administrative Office of the Courts, of .2 or more in at least
one jurisdiction; and
(c)
basic evaluation judges must not qualify for full evaluation and must
have a weighted caseload of less than .2 in every jurisdiction in
which they serve.
(6) Once classified, the judge
retains the classification for the duration of the judge's
controlling cycle term of office.
(7) Once classified, the judge may
be evaluated in any court in which the judge serves, regardless of
retention year.
(8)
Evaluation data gathered from different courts served by a single
judge shall be aggregated into a single midterm report and a single
retention report.
(9) For
judges who stand for retention election in multiple years, the
retention report compiled pursuant to the controlling cycle shall be
used for all other subsequent retention elections for which that
judge stands within the controlling cycle.
Notes
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