The State Bar Association of North Dakota Winter 2015 Gavel Magazine | Page 16

New judges, state court building, being considered by legislators New judges and staff, and the relocation of the North Dakota Supreme Court to new building on the State Capitol grounds are among the bills being considering during the current session of the legislature. The North Dakota Court system is requesting four new judges and 15 additional court staff for Burleigh, Morton, Stark, McKenzie, Ward and Williams Counties. Chief Justice Gerald VandeWalle described the need for the new staff in his State of the Judiciary address to legislators on January 7. “In the past 10 years, the caseload in our courts has increased dramatically, particularly in the oil-impacted counties. In these counties, it is easy to see the connection to increased population, increased business activity, and increased law enforcement,” said VandeWalle. “In other areas of the state, most notably Burleigh and Morton counties, it has been more of a gradual increase, yet one that is so persistent that these two counties are now home to the most active courts in the state.” VandeWalle described how a shortage of judges and court staff affects communities. “Those charged with crimes sit in jail longer while they wait for their day in court and a judgment of guilt or innocence. This is disruptive to their own lives and those of their families; it is hard on the alleged victims and the witnesses who wait to testify, and it costs the counties thousands of dollars in incarceration costs,” he said. “But criminal cases, while a majority in the court system, are not the only cases. Without an adequate number of judges and staff, children wait to learn if they will remain in foster care or return home; adults wait in uncertainty for divorces to be finalized and issues of child custody and property division to be decided; businesses wait for contracts to be interpreted and enforced, and thousands of dollars go into trust accounts until heirs and mineral rights issues can be adjudicated,” he said. He said the rule of law depends on courts being available in a timely manner. “Without additional resources we are losing the ability to meet on a timely basis the needs of those who come to the court for help. The lack of resources, particularly in the criminal arena, has led to a system of ‘conveyor-belt justice’ where hearings are too often run by script and concluded in less than five minutes,” VandeWalle said. The proposal to remodel and expand the Liberty Memorial Building to be the new home of the North Dakota Supreme Court was outlined by Governor Jack Dalrymple in his executive budget address in December. Now the location of the State Library, which is pictured on page 14. the Supreme Court was the first occupant of the building, along with the State Library, in 1924. The Court offices moved to the second floor of the new State Capitol in 1934, and to the Judicial Wing of the State Capitol in 1981. Early plans were to build another building on the Capitol Grounds in the same style as the Liberty Memorial Building to house the Supreme Court, but it was never completed. 16 THE GAVEL The proposal, estimated at $40 million, would remodel the current building and add nearly 40,000 more square feet of building space over the parking lot to the south of the building. Should this be approved, the State Library would relocate to another site, and other state agencies to take the space currently used by the Supreme Court in the Capitol’s Judicial Wing. Legislators to consider five Uniform Law acts During each session of the North Dakota Legislature, the North Dakota Uniform Law Commission recommends that certain uniform laws be introduced. Five uniform acts have been introduced in the 64th Legislative Assembly. They are: • S.B. 2107, the Uniform Act on Prevention and Remedies for Human Trafficking; • S.B. 2106, the Uniform Fiduciary Access to Digital Assets Act; • H.B. 1134, an amendment to the Uniform Commercial Code Article 4A, which provides that Article 4A does apply to a remittance transfer that is not an electronic funds transfer under the Federal Electronic Funds Transfer Act; • H.B. 1135, an amendment to the Uniform Fraudulent Transfer Act, renamed the Uniform Voidable Transactions Act, to address narrowly-defined issues, such as choice of law rules and burden of proof rules for claims under the Act, and • H.B. 1136, the Revised Uniform Limited Liability Company Act. The North Dakota Uniform Law Commission promotes uniformity in state laws. The commission meets during the annual meeting of the National Conference of Commissioners on Uniform State Laws. During this meeting, the commission determines its legislative package for the upcoming legislative session. The North Dakota Legislative Management staff appoints one member of each chamber to the 10-member commission. They are Senator David Hogue and Re