2015 -- S 0823 | |
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LC001900 | |
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STATE OF RHODE ISLAND | |
IN GENERAL ASSEMBLY | |
JANUARY SESSION, A.D. 2015 | |
____________ | |
A N A C T | |
RELATING TO COURTS AND CIVIL PROCEDURE - COURTS - SUPERIOR COURT | |
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Introduced By: Senators Lombardi, Archambault, Conley, Lynch, and Jabour | |
Date Introduced: April 09, 2015 | |
Referred To: Senate Judiciary | |
It is enacted by the General Assembly as follows: | |
1 | SECTION 1. Sections 8-2-11.1, 8-2-39, 8-2-39.1 and 8-2-39.2 of the General Laws in |
2 | Chapter 8-2 entitled "Superior Court" are hereby amended to read as follows: |
3 | 8-2-11.1. Administrator/magistrate. -- (a) Any person holding the position of |
4 | administrative clerk in the superior court who is a member of the bar of Rhode Island may be |
5 | appointed administrator/magistrate for a term of ten (10) years and until a successor is appointed |
6 | and qualified, by the presiding justice, with the advice and consent of the senate, in his or her |
7 | capacity as administrative judge. Nothing herein shall be construed to prohibit the assignment of |
8 | an administrator/magistrate to more than one such term, subject to the advice and consent of the |
9 | senate. Any magistrate in service as of January 1, 2008 who serves at the pleasure of the |
10 | presiding justice of the superior court may be appointed for a term of ten (10) years with the |
11 | advice and consent of the senate and until a successor is appointed and qualified. |
12 | (b) (1) The administrator/magistrate shall have the power to hear and determine such |
13 | matters as may be assigned to the administrator/magistrate by the presiding justice all to the same |
14 | effect as if done by a justice of the superior court. |
15 | (2) Without limiting the generality of the foregoing powers and authority, the |
16 | administrator/magistrate is authorized and empowered to hear and determine motions in civil and |
17 | criminal proceedings, formal and special causes, to conduct arraignments, to grant or deny bail, to |
18 | accept pleas of not guilty, guilty, or nolo contendere, and to impose sentence on a plea of guilty |
19 | or nolo contendere, all to the same effect as if done by a justice of the superior court. |
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1 | (c) The administrator/magistrate may be authorized: |
2 | (1) To regulate all proceedings before him or her; |
3 | (2) To do all acts and take all measures necessary or proper for the efficient performance |
4 | of his or her duties; |
5 | (3) To require the production before him or her of books, papers, vouchers, documents, |
6 | and writings; |
7 | (4) To rule upon the admissibility of evidence; |
8 | (5) To issue subpoenas for the appearance of witnesses, to put witnesses on oath, to |
9 | examine them, and to call parties to the proceeding and examine them upon oath; |
10 | (6) To adjudicate a person in contempt and to order him or her imprisoned for not more |
11 | than seventy-two (72) hours, pending review by a justice of the court, for failure to appear in |
12 | response to a summons or for refusal to answer questions or produce evidence or for behavior |
13 | disrupting a proceeding; |
14 | (7) To adjudicate a party in contempt and to order him or her imprisoned for not more |
15 | than seventy-two (72) hours, pending review by a justice of the court, for failure to comply with a |
16 | pending order to provide payment or to perform any other act; and |
17 | (8) To issue a capias and/or body attachment upon the failure of a party or witness to |
18 | appear after having been properly served and, should the court not be in session, the person |
19 | apprehended may be detained at the adult correctional institution, if an adult, or at the Rhode |
20 | Island training school for youth, if a child, until the next session of the court. |
21 | (d) A party aggrieved by an order entered by the administrator/magistrate shall be |
22 | entitled to a review of the order by a justice of the superior court. Unless otherwise provided in |
23 | the rules of procedure of the court, the review shall be on the record and appellate in nature. The |
24 | court shall, by rules of procedure, establish procedures for review of orders entered by the |
25 | administrator/magistrate, and for enforcement of contempt adjudications of the |
26 | administrator/magistrate. |
27 | (e) Final orders of the superior court entered in a proceeding to review an order of the |
28 | administrator/magistrate may be appealed to the supreme court. |
29 | (f) The administrator/magistrate shall be: |
30 | (1) Governed by the commission on judicial tenure and discipline, chapter 16, of this |
31 | title, in the same manner as justices and judges; |
32 | (2) Subject to all provisions of the canons of judicial ethics; |
33 | (3) Subject to all criminal laws relative to judges by virtue of §§ 11-7-1 and 11-7-2. |
34 | (g) The administrator/magistrate shall: |
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1 | (1) Receive all credits and retirement allowances as afforded employees within the state |
2 | retirement system; |
3 | (2) Receive a salary as set by the state court administrator pursuant to § 8-15-4. |
4 | 8-2-39. General magistrate -- Appointment, duties and powers. -- (a) There is hereby |
5 | created within the superior court the position of general magistrate who shall be appointed by the |
6 | presiding justice of the superior court, with the advice and consent of the senate, for a term of ten |
7 | (10) years and until a successor is appointed and qualified. Nothing herein shall be construed to |
8 | prohibit the assignment of the general magistrate to more than one such term, subject to the |
9 | advice and consent of the senate. The person appointed to serve as general magistrate shall be a |
10 | member of the bar of Rhode Island. The powers and duties of the general magistrate shall be |
11 | prescribed in the order appointing him or her. |
12 | (b) (1) The general magistrate shall assist the court in: |
13 | (i) The determination of, monitoring, collection, and payment of restitution and court |
14 | ordered fines, fees, and costs or the ordering of community service in lieu of or in addition to the |
15 | payment of restitution, fines, fees, and costs, consistent with other provisions of the general laws; |
16 | (ii) The determination and payment of claims under the violent crimes indemnity fund |
17 | for the Criminal Injuries Compensation Act of 1972, chapter 25 of title 12; |
18 | (iii) The determination and payment of claims from the Criminal Royalties Distribution |
19 | Act of 1983, chapter 25.1 of title 12; and |
20 | (iv) Such other matters as the presiding justice of the superior court determines are |
21 | necessary. |
22 | (2) The chief justice of the supreme court, with the consent of the presiding justice and, |
23 | if applicable, the chief judge of a particular court, may assign the general magistrate to serve as a |
24 | magistrate in any court of the unified system. When the general magistrate is so assigned he or |
25 | she shall be vested, authorized, and empowered with all the powers belonging to the magistrate |
26 | position to which he or she is specially assigned. |
27 | (c) The general magistrate will be empowered to hear all motions, pretrial conferences, |
28 | arraignments, probable cause hearings, bail hearings, bail and probation revocation hearings, and |
29 | to review all such matters including, but not limited to the above, and to modify the terms and |
30 | conditions of probation and other court-ordered monetary payments including, but not limited to, |
31 | the extension of time for probation and court-ordered monetary payments as provided by law. |
32 | The general magistrate shall have the power to take testimony in connection with all matters set |
33 | forth herein. |
34 | (d) The general magistrate may be authorized: |
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1 | (1) To regulate all proceedings before him or her; |
2 | (2) To do all acts and take all measures necessary or proper for the efficient performance |
3 | of his or her duties; |
4 | (3) To require the production before him or her of books, papers, vouchers, documents, |
5 | and writings; |
6 | (4) To rule upon the admissibility of evidence; |
7 | (5) To issue subpoenas for the appearance of witnesses, to put witnesses on oath, to |
8 | examine them, and to call parties to the proceeding and examine them upon oath; |
9 | (6) To adjudicate a person in contempt and to order him or her imprisoned for not more |
10 | than seventy-two (72) hours, pending review by a justice of the relevant court, for failure to |
11 | appear in response to a summons or for refusal to answer questions or produce evidence or for |
12 | behavior disrupting a proceeding; |
13 | (7) To adjudicate a party in contempt and to order him or her imprisoned for not more |
14 | than seventy-two (72) hours, pending review by a justice of the relevant court, for failure to |
15 | comply with a pending order to provide payment or to perform any other act; and |
16 | (8) To issue a capias and/or body attachment upon the failure of a party or witness to |
17 | appear after having been properly served and, should the court not be in session, the person |
18 | apprehended may be detained at the adult correctional institutions, if an adult, or at the Rhode |
19 | Island training school for youth, if a child, until the next session of the court. |
20 | (e) A party aggrieved by an order entered by the general magistrate shall be entitled to a |
21 | review of the order by a justice of the relevant court. Unless otherwise provided in the rules of |
22 | procedure of the court, such review shall be on the record and appellate in nature. The court shall, |
23 | by rules of procedure, establish procedures for review of orders entered by a general magistrate, |
24 | and for enforcement of contempt adjudications of a general magistrate. |
25 | (f) Final orders of the superior or family court entered in a proceeding to review an order |
26 | of a general magistrate may be appealed to the supreme court. Final orders of the district court |
27 | entered in a proceeding to review an order of the general magistrate may be appealed to the |
28 | superior court. |
29 | (g) The general magistrate shall: |
30 | (1) Receive all credits and retirement allowances as afforded justices under chapter 3 of |
31 | this title and any other applicable law, including without limitation, § 8-3-16; employees within |
32 | the state retirement system; |
33 | (2) Receive a salary equivalent to that of a district court judge; as set by the state court |
34 | administrator pursuant to § 8-15-4; |
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1 | (3) Be governed by the commission on judicial tenure and discipline, chapter 16, of this |
2 | title, in the same manner as justices and judges; |
3 | (4) Be subject to all provisions of the canons of judicial ethics or code of judicial |
4 | conduct; |
5 | (5) Be subject to all criminal laws relative to judges by virtue of §§ 11-7-1 and 11-7-2. |
6 | (h) The provisions of this section shall be afforded liberal construction. |
7 | (i) The presiding justice of the superior court shall initially appoint such support staff as |
8 | may be necessary, relating to preparation, investigation, and implementation of the general |
9 | magistrate's functions. Effective November 15, 1993, the support staff shall be placed under the |
10 | supervision and management of the superior court, and new appointments or personnel changes in |
11 | the support staff shall be subject to the directions and approval of the superior court, consistent |
12 | with any applicable collective bargaining agreements. The general magistrate shall have the |
13 | power and authority to issue subpoenas and to compel the attendance of witnesses at any place |
14 | within the state, to administer oaths and to require testimony under oath. The general magistrate, |
15 | or his or her designee, may serve his or her process or notices in a manner provided for the |
16 | service of process and notice in civil or criminal actions in accordance with the rules of court. |
17 | 8-2-39.1. Special magistrate. -- There is hereby created within the superior court the |
18 | position of special magistrate, who shall be appointed by the presiding justice of the superior |
19 | court, with the advice and consent of the senate, for a period of ten (10) years, and until a |
20 | successor is appointed and qualified. Nothing contained herein shall be construed to prohibit the |
21 | reappointment of a special magistrate for one or more additional ten (10) year terms, subject to |
22 | the advice and consent of the senate. The person appointed to serve as special magistrate shall be |
23 | a member of the bar of the state of Rhode Island. The special magistrate shall have the duties, |
24 | responsibilities, powers and benefits as authorized in section 8-2-39. Shall receive a salary as set |
25 | by the state court administrator pursuant to § 8-15-4, and be entitled to all credits and retirement |
26 | allowances as afforded employees within the state retirement system. |
27 | 8-2-39.2. Drug court magistrate -- Appointment, duties and powers. -- (a) For the |
28 | purposes of this chapter: |
29 | (1) "Non-violent" means and includes all charges that are not crimes of violence, the |
30 | following being a list of all charges considered to be crimes of violence for the purposes of this |
31 | section: murder, manslaughter, first degree arson, kidnapping with intent to extort, robbery, first |
32 | degree sexual assault, second degree sexual assault, first and second degree child molestation, |
33 | assault, assault with intent to murder, assault with intent to rob, assault with intent to commit first |
34 | degree sexual assault, entering a dwelling house with intent to commit murder, robbery, or sexual |
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1 | assault. |
2 | (2) "Drug addicted person" means a person who exhibits a maladaptive pattern of |
3 | behavior resulting from drug use, including one or more of the following: impaired control over |
4 | drug use; compulsive use; and/or continued use despite harm, and craving. |
5 | (b) There is hereby created within the superior court the position of Drug Court |
6 | Magistrate who shall be appointed by the presiding justice of the superior court with the advice |
7 | and consent of the senate. The persons appointed to serve as Drug Court Magistrates shall be |
8 | members of the bar of Rhode Island. The powers and duties of the Drug Court Magistrate shall be |
9 | prescribed in the order appointing him or her in addition to those described herein. |
10 | The Drug Court Magistrate's term shall be ten (10) years and until a successor is |
11 | appointed and qualified. Nothing in this article shall prohibit a Drug Court Magistrate from being |
12 | reappointed for additional ten (10) year terms by the presiding justice of the superior court with |
13 | the advice and consent of the senate. He or she shall receive a salary equivalent to that received |
14 | by the special magistrate assigned to the superior court. as set by the state court administrator |
15 | pursuant to § 8-15-4 and be entitled to all credits and retirement allowances as afforded |
16 | employees within the state retirement system. The Drug Court Magistrate shall preside over the |
17 | Adult Drug Court. The Adult Drug Court Program shall combine the coercive powers of the court |
18 | with a therapeutic regimen in order to rehabilitate drug addicted defendants. |
19 | (c) The Drug Court Magistrate shall be empowered to hear and decide as a superior court |
20 | justice all matters relating to those adult offenders who come before the jurisdiction of the |
21 | superior court on any offense relating to the offender's participation in the Adult Drug Court. In |
22 | addition, the Drug Court Magistrate shall have the power to impose a period of incarceration |
23 | upon a plea of guilty or nolo contendere, and also have the power to confine any person who has |
24 | been found to be in violation of any conditions previously imposed by the superior court. |
25 | (d) The Drug Court Magistrate shall make the final determination as to whether a |
26 | defendant is admitted into the program. Individuals meeting the following criteria, shall be |
27 | screened by staff working at the office of the attorney general upon the department's own referral, |
28 | upon a request by counsel entered on behalf of a defendant; upon request by a judge of the |
29 | superior or district court, or, in the case of a person waivable by the family court, by a judge of |
30 | that court, or the department of corrections for admittance into the Adult Drug Court: |
31 | (1) The individual is charged with or convicted of an alcohol or drug related offense or |
32 | with an appropriate non-violent offense. |
33 | (2) The individual has no pending charges or prior convictions for felony crimes of |
34 | violence. |
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1 | (3) The individual has no pending charges or prior convictions for delivery of a |
2 | controlled substance. |
3 | (4) The defendant is a drug addicted person. |
4 | (e) All individuals accepted into Drug Court will be bound by a Drug Court contract, as |
5 | defined by the Adult Drug Court, which sets forth the court's expectations, the role and |
6 | responsibilities of the Drug Court, the conditions imposed upon and the responsibilities of the |
7 | defendant, and the treatment plan goals and strategies. If a defendant fails to abide by the Drug |
8 | Court conditions and orders, he or she may be terminated from the program by the Drug Court |
9 | judge and sentenced as he or she deems appropriate. |
10 | (f) The Drug Court Magistrate shall be empowered to hear and decide as a superior court |
11 | justice all matters that may come before the superior court pursuant to chapter 37.1 of title 11 |
12 | "Sexual Offender Registration and Community Notification." |
13 | (g) The Drug Court Magistrate and/or the presiding justice of the superior court may fix |
14 | the venue of any person who is before the superior court as a participant in the Adult Drug Court |
15 | or who is alleged to be a sexual predator, and who has filed an objection to community |
16 | notification. |
17 | (h) In addition, at the discretion of the presiding justice of the superior court, the drug |
18 | court magistrate shall have the duties, responsibilities and powers authorized in subsections 8-2- |
19 | 39(b), (c) and (d). |
20 | (i) The Drug Court Magistrate shall be governed by the commission on judicial tenure |
21 | and discipline, chapter 16 of title 8 in the same manner as justices and judges; shall be subject to |
22 | all provisions of the canons of judicial ethics or code of judicial conduct; and shall be subject to |
23 | all criminal laws relative to judges by virtue of §§ 11-7-1 and 11-7-2. |
24 | (j) A party aggrieved by an order entered by the Drug Court Magistrate shall be entitled |
25 | to a review of the order by a justice of the superior court. Unless otherwise provided in the rules |
26 | of procedure of the court, such review shall be on the record and appellate in nature. The superior |
27 | court shall, by rules of procedure, establish procedures for reviews of orders entered by a Drug |
28 | Court Magistrate, and for enforcement of contempt adjudications of a Drug Court Magistrate. |
29 | SECTION 2. Sections 8-8-8.1 and 8-8-16.2 of the General Laws in Chapter 8-8 entitled |
30 | "District Court" are hereby amended to read as follows: |
31 | 8-8-8.1. Administrator/clerk -- Magistrate. -- (a) Administrator/clerk. - There shall be a |
32 | district court administrator/clerk who shall be appointed by the chief judge in his or her capacity |
33 | as administrative head of the court, and who shall hold office at the pleasure of the administrative |
34 | judge. The administrator/clerk shall perform such duties and attend to such matters as may be |
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1 | assigned to the administrator/clerk by the administrative judge, other than those duties assigned to |
2 | the chief clerk in section 8-8-19. Said duties may be assigned by the chief judge. |
3 | (b) Magistrate. - Any person holding the position of district court administrator/clerk |
4 | who is a member of the bar of Rhode Island may be appointed district court magistrate by the |
5 | chief judge in his or her capacity as administrative head of the court, subject to the advice and |
6 | consent of the senate. The district court magistrate shall hold said office for a term of ten (10) |
7 | years and until a successor is appointed and qualified; and the magistrate shall retain whatever |
8 | right he or she may have to the position of district court administrator/clerk pursuant to this |
9 | section. Nothing herein shall be construed to prohibit the appointment of the magistrate for more |
10 | than one term, subject to the advice and consent of the senate. Any person holding office of |
11 | district court magistrate on July 1, 1999 may continue in full authority in said position until such |
12 | time as an appointment is made and the nominee qualified pursuant to this subsection. |
13 | (c) The district court magistrate shall have the power to hear and determine such matters |
14 | as may be assigned to the district court magistrate by the chief judge all to the same effect as if |
15 | done by a judge of the district court, including but not limited to: |
16 | (1) Matters relating to the determination of, monitoring, collection, and payment of |
17 | restitution and court ordered fines, fees, and costs or the ordering of community service in lieu of |
18 | or in addition to the payment of restitution, fines, fees, and costs, consistent with other provisions |
19 | of the general laws; |
20 | (2) Arraignments and pretrial motions in misdemeanor, petty misdemeanor, violation, |
21 | and ordinance cases and initial appearances and probable cause hearings in felony cases; |
22 | (3) Bail hearings pursuant to R.I. Const., Art. I, Sec. IX and all other bail matters |
23 | pursuant to chapter 13 of title 12 and the rules of criminal procedure, including but not limited to |
24 | motions to modify bail, bail revocation hearings, bail forfeiture hearings, and bail source |
25 | hearings; |
26 | (4) All matters relating to fugitives from justice pursuant to chapter 9 of title 12; |
27 | (5) Probation revocation hearings; |
28 | (6) All matters relating to small claims and consumer claims pursuant to chapter 16 of |
29 | title 10, including any pretrial motions including motions relating to the special service of |
30 | process, the entry of defaults and default judgments, the trial of such cases and the entry of |
31 | judgment after such trials, and all matters relating to the enforcement of such judgments, |
32 | including but not limited to the ordering of installment payments and trustee process; and |
33 | (7) Complaints for judicial review of the decision of an administrative agency pursuant |
34 | to chapter 35 of title 42 by making proposed findings of fact and recommendations for the |
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1 | disposition of the complaints to a judge of the court. Any party may object to any portion of the |
2 | magistrate's proposed findings and recommendations within ten (10) days after receipt of a copy |
3 | thereof. That party shall file with the clerk of the sixth division of the district court and serve on |
4 | all parties written objections which shall specifically identify the portions of the proposed |
5 | findings and recommendations to which objection is made and the basis for the objection. A |
6 | judge shall make a de novo determination of those portions to which objection is made and may |
7 | accept, reject, or modify, in whole or in part, the findings or recommendations made by the |
8 | magistrate. Absent a timely objection filed in accordance with this subdivision, the proposed |
9 | prevailing party shall, upon expiration of the ten (10) days following the service of the |
10 | magistrate's proposed findings and recommendations, submit a proposed order for signature of |
11 | the judge to whom the case has been assigned. |
12 | (d) The magistrate may be authorized: |
13 | (1) To regulate all proceedings before him or her; |
14 | (2) To do all acts necessary or proper for the efficient performance of his or her duties; |
15 | (3) To require the production before him or her of books, papers, vouchers, documents, |
16 | and writings; |
17 | (4) To rule upon the admissibility of evidence; |
18 | (5) To issue subpoenas for the appearance of witnesses, to put witnesses on oath, to |
19 | examine them, and to call parties to the proceeding and examine them upon oath; |
20 | (6) To adjudicate a person in contempt and to order him or her fined or to order him or |
21 | her imprisoned for not more than seventy-two (72) hours, pending review by a judge of the court, |
22 | for failure to appear in response to a summons or for refusal to answer questions or produce |
23 | evidence or for behavior disrupting a proceeding or other contempt of his or her authority; |
24 | (7) To adjudicate a person in contempt and to order him or her fined or to order him or |
25 | her imprisoned for not more than seventy-two (72) hours, pending review by a judge of the court, |
26 | for failure to comply with a pending order to provide payment or to perform any other act; |
27 | (8) To issue a capias and/or body attachment for the failure of a party or witness to |
28 | appear after having been properly served or given notice by the court and, should the court not be |
29 | in session, the person apprehended may be detained at the adult correctional institution, if an |
30 | adult, or at the Rhode Island training school for youth, if a child, until the next session of the |
31 | court; |
32 | (9) To issue writs of habeas corpus to bring before him or her or a judge of the court any |
33 | person in jail or in prison to be examined as a witness in a suit or proceeding, civil or criminal, |
34 | pending before the court, or whose presence is necessary as a party or otherwise necessary so that |
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1 | the ends of justice may be attained, and for no other purpose; and |
2 | (10) To issue warrants of arrest and search warrants to the same extent as an associate |
3 | judge of the court. |
4 | (e) Except as otherwise indicated, a party aggrieved by an order entered by the district |
5 | court magistrate shall be entitled to a review of the order, whether by appeal or otherwise, by a |
6 | judge of the court. The court shall, by rules of procedure, establish procedures for review of |
7 | contempt and adjudications of the magistrate. |
8 | (f) The magistrate shall be: |
9 | (1) Governed by the commission on judicial tenure and discipline, chapter 16 of this |
10 | title, in the same manner as justices and judges; |
11 | (2) Subject to all provisions of the canons of judicial ethics; |
12 | (3) Subject to all criminal laws relative to judges by virtue of §§ 11-7-1 and 11-7-2. |
13 | (g) The magistrate shall: |
14 | (1) Receive all credits and retirement allowances as afforded employees within the state |
15 | retirement system; |
16 | (2) Receive a salary as set by the state court administrator pursuant to § 8-15-4. |
17 | (g)(h) The provisions of this section shall be afforded liberal construction. |
18 | 8-8-16.2. District court clerk/magistrate. -- (a) Any person who is a member of the bar |
19 | of Rhode Island may be appointed district court clerk/magistrate by the chief judge in his or her |
20 | capacity as administrative head of the court, subject to the advice and consent of the senate. The |
21 | district court clerk/magistrate shall hold that office for a term of ten (10) years and until a |
22 | successor is appointed and qualified. Nothing herein shall be construed to prohibit the assignment |
23 | of the district court clerk/magistrate to more than one such term, subject to the advice and consent |
24 | of the senate. The district court clerk/magistrate shall have the power to hear and determine any |
25 | matters that may be assigned to the district court clerk/magistrate by the chief judge all to the |
26 | same effect as if done by a judge of the district court, including, but not limited to, matters |
27 | relating to the determination of, monitoring, collection and payment of restitution and court |
28 | ordered fines, fees and costs or the ordering of community service in lieu of or in addition to the |
29 | payment of restitution, fines, fees and costs, consistent with other provisions of the general laws. |
30 | (b) The clerk/magistrate may be authorized: |
31 | (1) To regulate all proceedings before him or her; |
32 | (2) To do all acts necessary or proper for the efficient performance of his or her duties; |
33 | (3) To require the production before him or her of books, papers, vouchers, documents |
34 | and writings; |
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1 | (4) To rule upon the admissibility of evidence; |
2 | (5) To issue subpoenas for the appearance of witnesses, to put witnesses on oath, to |
3 | examine them and to call parties to the proceeding and examine them upon oath; |
4 | (6) To adjudicate a person in contempt and to order him or her fined or to order him or |
5 | her imprisoned for not more than seventy-two (72) hours, for failure to appear in response to a |
6 | summons or for refusal to answer questions or produce evidence or for behavior disrupting a |
7 | proceeding or other contempt of his or her authority; provided; however, that no such |
8 | imprisonment shall occur prior to review by a judge of the court. |
9 | (7) To adjudicate a person in contempt and to order him or her fined or to order him or |
10 | her imprisoned for not more than seventy-two (72) hours, for failure to comply with a pending |
11 | order to provide payment or to perform any other act; provided, however, that no such |
12 | imprisonment shall occurr prior to review by a judge of the court. |
13 | (8) To issue a capias and/or body attachment for the failure of a party or witness to |
14 | appear after having been properly served or given notice by the court and, should the court not be |
15 | in session, the person apprehended may be detained at the adult correctional institutions, if an |
16 | adult, or at the Rhode Island training school for youth, if a child, until the next session of the |
17 | court; |
18 | (9) To issue writs of habeas corpus to bring before him or her or a judge of the court any |
19 | person in jail or in prison to be examined as a witness in a suit or proceeding, civil or criminal, |
20 | pending before the court, or whose presence is necessary as a party or otherwise necessary so that |
21 | the ends of justice may be attained, and for no other purpose; and |
22 | (10) To issue warrants of arrest and search warrants to the same extent as an associate |
23 | judge of the court. |
24 | (c) Except as otherwise indicated, a party aggrieved by an order entered by the district |
25 | court clerk/magistrate shall be entitled to a review of the order, whether by appeal or otherwise, |
26 | by a judge of the court. The court shall, by rules of procedure, establish procedures for review of |
27 | contempt and adjudications of the clerk/magistrate. |
28 | (d) The district court clerk/magistrate shall: |
29 | (1) Be governed by the commission on judicial tenure and discipline, pursuant to chapter |
30 | 16 of this title, in the same manner as justices and judges; |
31 | (2) Be subject to all provisions of the canons of judicial ethics; |
32 | (3) Be subject to all criminal laws relative to judges by virtue of §§ 11-7-1 and 11-7-2. |
33 | (4) Receive any salary that may be established by the state court administrator pursuant |
34 | to § 8-15-4. |
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1 | (5) Receive all credits and retirement allowances as afforded employees within the state |
2 | retirement systems. |
3 | The provisions of this section shall be afforded liberal construction. |
4 | SECTION 3. Section 8-8.2-1 of the General Laws in Chapter 8-8.2 entitled "Traffic |
5 | tribunal" is hereby amended to read as follows: |
6 | 8-8.2-1. Establishment -- Rule-making authority -- Adjudication of violations. -- (a) |
7 | There is hereby established a traffic tribunal which shall be charged with the administration and |
8 | adjudication of traffic violations within its jurisdiction. The traffic tribunal shall be under the |
9 | supervision of the chief magistrate of the traffic tribunal, who shall be the administrative head of |
10 | the traffic tribunal and shall have the power to make rules for regulating practice, procedure and |
11 | business within the traffic tribunal. Pursuant to § 8-6-2, said rules shall be subject to the approval |
12 | of the supreme court. Such rules, when effective, shall supersede any statutory regulation in |
13 | conflict therewith. Any person who has been a member of the bar of Rhode Island may be |
14 | appointed chief magistrate of the traffic tribunal. The chief magistrate of the traffic tribunal shall |
15 | be appointed by the chief justice of the supreme court, with the advice and consent of the senate, |
16 | for a period of ten (10) years and until a successor is appointed and qualified. Nothing contained |
17 | herein shall be construed to prohibit the reappointment of the chief magistrate for one or more ten |
18 | (10) year terms subject to the advice and consent of the senate. Compensation for the chief |
19 | magistrate shall be equal to that of an associate judge of the district court. |
20 | (b) The judges and magistrates of the traffic tribunal shall hear and determine cases as |
21 | provided by law. No district court judge appointed pursuant to chapter 8 of this title shall be |
22 | assigned to perform duties of a judge or magistrate of the traffic tribunal under this chapter. The |
23 | chief magistrate of the traffic tribunal may assign a judge or magistrate who is authorized to hear |
24 | and decide cases in the traffic tribunal to serve as administrative judge or magistrate of the traffic |
25 | tribunal and the administrative judge or magistrate shall perform such administrative duties as |
26 | may be delegated to him or her by the chief magistrate. Once assigned to the position, the |
27 | administrative judge or magistrate shall hold said administrative position for the remainder of his |
28 | or her respective term as a judge or magistrate of the traffic tribunal. |
29 | (c) (1) Those judges of the administrative adjudication court in active service on July 1, |
30 | 1999 shall serve within the traffic tribunal. Whenever the total number of judges and magistrates |
31 | in the traffic tribunal exclusive of the chief magistrate shall be less than seven (7), the chief |
32 | justice of the supreme court, with the advice and consent of the senate, may, as needed, assign a |
33 | duly qualified member of the bar of this state to act as a magistrate to fill such vacancy and shall |
34 | submit his or her name to the senate for confirmation. In the event of a vacancy in the position of |
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1 | chief magistrate, the chief justice of the supreme court shall appoint a successor in accordance |
2 | with subsection 8-8.2-1(a). Any magistrate assigned under this section shall serve a term of ten |
3 | (10) years and until a successor is appointed and qualified, and shall be in the unclassified service |
4 | of the state. Nothing herein shall be construed to prohibit the assignment of a magistrate to more |
5 | than one such term, subject to the advice and consent of the senate. Compensation for any such |
6 | magistrate shall in no event be equal to or more than that of an associate judge of the district court |
7 | be set by the state court administrator pursuant to § 8-15-4. Magistrates of the traffic tribunal |
8 | shall participate in the state retirement system in the same manner as all members of the |
9 | unclassified service. |
10 | (2) If any judge of the traffic tribunal shall retire, or a vacancy becomes available |
11 | through death, disability or any other reason, the position shall be filled by a magistrate consistent |
12 | with the provisions of this section. |
13 | (d) Each judge and magistrate of the traffic tribunal shall devote full time to his or her |
14 | judicial duties, except as may be otherwise provided by law. He or she shall not practice law |
15 | while holding office, nor shall he or she be a partner or associate of any person in the practice of |
16 | law. |
17 | (e) Judges and magistrates of the traffic tribunal shall be subject to the provisions of R.I. |
18 | Const. Art. XI; to the code of judicial conduct or successor code promulgated by the supreme |
19 | court of this state, to the jurisdiction of the Commission on Judicial Tenure and Discipline in |
20 | accordance with chapter 16 of this title; and to the administrative authority and control of the |
21 | chief justice of the supreme court in accordance with chapter 15 of this title, except that §§ 8-15-3 |
22 | and 8-15-3.1 shall not apply to judges of the traffic tribunal. |
23 | (f) The traffic tribunal shall be a tribunal of record and shall have a seal with such words |
24 | and devices as it shall adopt. |
25 | (g) Judges and magistrates of the traffic tribunal shall have the power to administer oaths |
26 | and affirmations. |
27 | (h) Administrative/supervisory officials. |
28 | (1) There shall be an assistant to the administrative magistrate of the traffic tribunal who |
29 | shall be appointed by and serve at the pleasure of the chief magistrate and who shall perform such |
30 | clerical and administrative duties as may be assigned to him or her by the chief magistrate of the |
31 | traffic tribunal and the administrative judge or magistrate of the traffic tribunal. The assistant to |
32 | the administrative judge or magistrate shall have the power to administer oaths and affirmations |
33 | within the state. |
34 | (2) There shall be a clerk of the traffic tribunal who shall be appointed by and serve at |
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1 | the pleasure of the chief magistrate of the traffic tribunal; provided, however, that, effective July |
2 | 1, 1999, the first clerk of the traffic tribunal shall be that person holding the position of |
3 | administrator/clerk of the administrative adjudication court as of May 1, 1998, and that person |
4 | shall hold office for the balance of a term of twelve (12) years which began on September 1, |
5 | 1992, without the necessity of appointment by the governor or advice and consent of the senate. |
6 | The clerk of the traffic tribunal shall exercise his or her functions under the direction and control |
7 | of the chief magistrate of the traffic tribunal and the administrative judge or magistrate of the |
8 | traffic tribunal. The clerk of the traffic tribunal shall have the power to administer oaths and |
9 | affirmations within the state. |
10 | (i) Clerical Personnel/Court Recorders. |
11 | (1) The chief magistrate of the traffic tribunal shall appoint deputy clerks and assistance |
12 | clerks for the traffic tribunal to serve at his or her pleasure. All such clerks may administer oaths |
13 | and affirmations within the state. |
14 | (2) The chief magistrate of the traffic tribunal shall appoint sufficient court recorders to |
15 | enable all proceedings to be recorded by electronic means and who shall assist in such other |
16 | clerical duties as may be prescribed from time to time by the chief magistrate of the traffic |
17 | tribunal. |
18 | (3) The chief magistrate of the traffic tribunal shall employ such clerical assistants in |
19 | addition to deputy clerks as may be required in the traffic tribunal to perform clerical duties. |
20 | SECTION 4. Sections 8-10-3.1 and 8-10-3.2 of the General Laws in Chapter 8-10 |
21 | entitled "Family Court" are hereby amended to read as follows: |
22 | 8-10-3.1. Magistrates -- Appointment, duties, and powers. -- (a) The chief judge of the |
23 | family court may appoint magistrates, with the advice and consent of the senate, to assist the |
24 | court in the conduct of its business. A person appointed to serve as a magistrate shall be a |
25 | member of the bar of Rhode Island. The powers and duties of magistrates shall be prescribed in |
26 | the order appointing them. |
27 | (b) In addition, magistrates may assist the court in: |
28 | (1) the enforcement and implementation of chapter 23.1 of title 15, |
29 | (2) the determination of matters that come before the court pursuant to section 8-10-4, |
30 | chapter 1 of title 14, chapters 5, 7, 8, 9, 10 and 16 of title 15, chapter 19 of title 16, chapter 11 of |
31 | title 40, and chapter 5 of title 40.1. |
32 | Magistrates shall be empowered to hear and determine all motions, pretrial conferences, |
33 | arraignments of juvenile offenders, probable cause hearings, and review of all such matters, |
34 | including but not limited to, the temporary placement, custody, disposition and adoption of |
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1 | children, orders of support, final divorce decrees, and the taking of testimony in conducting all |
2 | hearings relative thereto subject to the review provided for in subsection (d). |
3 | (c) The magistrates shall serve a term of ten (10) years and until a successor is appointed |
4 | and qualified and his or her powers and duties shall be prescribed in the order appointing him or |
5 | her or in the rules of procedure of the family court. Any magistrate in service as of January 1, |
6 | 2008 who serves at the pleasure of the chief judge of the family court may be appointed for a |
7 | term of ten (10) years with the advice and consent of the senate and until a successor is appointed |
8 | and qualified. Nothing herein shall be construed to prohibit the assignment of a magistrate to |
9 | more than one such term, subject to the advice and consent of the senate. The magistrates may be |
10 | authorized: |
11 | (1) To regulate all proceedings before him or her; |
12 | (2) To do all acts and take all measures necessary or proper for the efficient performance |
13 | of his or her duties; |
14 | (3) To require the production before him or her of books, papers, vouchers, documents, |
15 | and writings; |
16 | (4) To rule upon the admissibility of evidence; |
17 | (5) To issue subpoenas for the appearance of witnesses, to put witnesses on oath, to |
18 | examine them, and to call parties to the proceeding and examine them upon oath; |
19 | (6) To adjudicate a person in contempt and to order him or her imprisoned for not more |
20 | than seventy-two (72) hours, pending review by a justice of the court, for failure to appear in |
21 | response to a summons or for refusal to answer questions or produce evidence or for behavior |
22 | disrupting a proceeding; |
23 | (7) To adjudicate a party in contempt and to order him or her imprisoned for not more |
24 | than seventy-two (72) hours, pending review by a justice of the court, for failure to comply with a |
25 | pending order to provide support or to perform any other act; and |
26 | (8) To issue a capias and/or body attachment upon the failure of a party or witness to |
27 | appear after having been properly served and, should the family court not be in session, the |
28 | person apprehended may be detained at the adult correctional institution, if an adult, or at the |
29 | Rhode Island training school for youth, if a child, until the next session of the family court. |
30 | (d) A party aggrieved by an order entered by a magistrate shall be entitled to a review of |
31 | the order by a justice of the family court. Unless otherwise provided in the rules of procedure of |
32 | the family court, such review shall be on the record and appellate in nature. The family court shall |
33 | by rules of procedure establish procedures for review of orders entered by a magistrate, and for |
34 | enforcement of contempt adjudications of a magistrate. |
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1 | (e) Final orders of the family court entered in a proceeding to review an order of a |
2 | magistrate may be appealed to the supreme court. |
3 | (f) The magistrates shall be empowered to hear de novo all applications for income |
4 | withholding pursuant to chapter 16 of title 15 and appeals of administrative agency orders of the |
5 | department of human services to withhold income under chapter 16 of title 15. |
6 | (g) The magistrates shall be empowered to hear all matters relating to the revocation or |
7 | nonrenewal of a license of an obligor due to non-compliance with a court order of support, in |
8 | accordance with chapter 11.1 of title 15. |
9 | (h) The magistrates may be authorized by the chief judge to hear those matters on the |
10 | domestic abuse prevention calendar and the nominal calendar. |
11 | (i) The magistrates shall: |
12 | (1) Receive all credits and retirement allowances as afforded employees within the state |
13 | retirement system; |
14 | (2) Receive a salary as set by the state court administrator pursuant to § 8-15-4. |
15 | [See section 12-1-15 of the General Laws.] |
16 | 8-10-3.2. General magistrate of the family court. -- (a) There is hereby created within |
17 | the family court the position of general magistrate of the family court who shall be appointed by |
18 | the chief judge of the family court with the advice and consent of the senate for a term of ten (10) |
19 | years and until a successor is appointed and qualified. Nothing herein shall be construed to |
20 | prohibit the assignment of the general magistrate to more than one such term, subject to the |
21 | advice and consent of the senate. |
22 | (b) The general magistrate shall be an attorney at law and a member in good standing of |
23 | the Rhode Island bar. |
24 | (c) The primary function of the general magistrate shall be the enforcement of child |
25 | support decrees, orders, and law relative to child support. The general magistrate shall have all |
26 | the authority and powers vested in magistrates by virtue of §§ 8-10-3, 8-10-3.1, 9-15-19, 9-15-21, |
27 | 9-14-26, 9-18-8, 9-18-9, and 36-2-3, and any other authority conferred upon magistrates by any |
28 | general or public law or by any rule of procedure or practice of any court within the state. |
29 | (d) The chief justice of the supreme court with the agreement of the chief judge of the |
30 | family court may specially assign the general magistrate to any court of the unified judicial |
31 | system; provided, however, that the general magistrate may be assigned to the superior court |
32 | subject to the prior approval of the presiding justice of the superior court. When the general |
33 | magistrate is so assigned he or she shall be vested, authorized, and empowered with all the |
34 | powers belonging to the magistrates of the court to which he or she is specially assigned. |
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1 | (e) The general magistrate shall: |
2 | (1) Receive all credits and retirement allowances as afforded justices under chapter 3 of |
3 | this title and any other applicable law; employees within the state retirement system; |
4 | (2) Be governed by the commission on judicial tenure and discipline, chapter 16 of this |
5 | title, in the same manner as justices and workers' compensation judges; |
6 | (3) Be entitled to a special license plate under § 31-3-47; |
7 | (4) Receive a salary equivalent to that of a district court judge; as set by the state court |
8 | administrator pursuant to § 8-15-4; |
9 | (5) Be subject to all the provisions of the canons of judicial ethics; and |
10 | (6) Be subject to all criminal laws relative to judges by virtue of §§ 11-7-1 and 11-7-2. |
11 | (f) The general magistrate of the family court who shall at the time of passage of this |
12 | section hold the position of general magistrate, shall upon retirement, at his or her own request |
13 | and at the direction of the chief justice of the supreme court, subject to the retiree's physical and |
14 | mental competence, be assigned to perform such services as general magistrate of the family |
15 | court, as the chief judge of the family court shall prescribe. When so assigned and performing |
16 | such service, the general magistrate shall have all the powers and authority of general magistrate |
17 | of the family court, but otherwise shall have no powers nor be authorized to perform any judicial |
18 | duties. For any such service or assignments performed after retirement, the general magistrate |
19 | shall receive no compensation whatsoever, either monetary or in kind. Such a retired general |
20 | magistrate shall not be counted in the number of judicial officers provided by law for the family |
21 | court. |
22 | (g) The provisions of this section shall be afforded liberal construction. |
23 | SECTION 5. This act shall take effect upon passage and apply prospectively to any |
24 | vacancy which occurs after the date of passage as to retirement credits and allowances and the |
25 | application of the state retirement system with no effect on the retirement credit or allowance of |
26 | any incumbent magistrate upon appointment or reappointment. |
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EXPLANATION | |
BY THE LEGISLATIVE COUNCIL | |
OF | |
A N A C T | |
RELATING TO COURTS AND CIVIL PROCEDURE - COURTS - SUPERIOR COURT | |
*** | |
1 | This act would authorize the state court administrator to set the salaries of all magistrates |
2 | pursuant to § 8-15-4 and prospectively make uniform the receipt of state employee pension |
3 | benefits for all magistrates within the state court. |
4 | This act would take effect upon passage and apply prospectively to any vacancy which |
5 | occurs after the date of passage as to retirement credits and allowances and the application of the |
6 | state retirement system with no effect on the retirement credit or allowance of any incumbent |
7 | magistrate upon appointment or reappointment. |
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