Defending People

the tao of criminal-defense trial lawyering

New Improved Docket Policy

Judge Mike Fields of Har­ris County Crim­i­nal Court at Law Num­ber Four­teen, has announced a new docket policy:

  1. At arraign­ment a defen­dant with counsel,will be reset for four months for motions;
  2. After the motions set­ting the defen­dant is set for a plea in thirty days or a trial in sixty.

That’s three—count ‘em, three—court appear­ances from the lawyer’s first appear­ance to trial of the case.

I think this is a great step for­ward. The pre­vail­ing pol­icy in Har­ris County requires defen­dants to appear monthly or semi­monthly for “court appearances”—not tri­als nor hearings—at which they don’t have to do any­thing but be on time and sit patiently until released.

In most Har­ris County courts, a work­ing defen­dant has to miss a morning’s work for each court appear­ance, going to court just because some party hack in a robe likes the feel­ing of impor­tance. (Too much? How about just because some petty tyrant in a black dress feels the need to exert a lit­tle more con­trol over his lit­tle king­dom? No? Okay, just because some closet pros­e­cu­tor with a lit­tle wooden ham­mer wants to pres­sure him to plead guilty? No? Can you do better?)

It has been my observation—and I won’t swear to its accu­racy, much less its universality—that Judge Fields will hold the state’s feet to the fire at least as much as he will the defense’s. If he con­tin­ues to do so, his new pol­icy is a good thing. Fewer court appear­ances are bet­ter than more (face it, pros­e­cu­tors: you want to see me as lit­tle as I want to see you), and six months is, in the vast major­ity of cases, plenty of time to pre­pare for trial if both the state and the defense are tak­ing care of their to-dos. (The pol­icy allows for excep­tions where the par­ties are tak­ing care of busi­ness but delay is forced by things out of their control.)

I’ll have to adopt a new way of prac­tic­ing in Judge Fields’s court. I’ll have to have a lit­tle more cal­en­dar dis­ci­pline, remind­ing myself in the long inter­reg­num between my first appear­ance and the motion set­ting to com­mu­ni­cate with the state and make sure I have every­thing I need to help my client decide whether to plead or go to trial. That’s okay with me—long stretches between court appear­ances are the norm in fed­eral court, so I know I can get it done. Such dis­ci­pline may be new to many of the state-court prac­ti­tion­ers, but they can learn.

The new pol­icy may improve the over­all qual­ity of lawyer­ing in Judge Fields’s court another way: the $X-per-appearance lawyers will stop appear­ing there, which is a good start to drum­ming them out of the cour­t­house entirely. Will the $Y-for-a-plea-and-$Z-if-it’s-set-for-trial lawyers do their trial prep when it is meant to be done, in the begin­ning, rather than after get­ting their trial fees? The longer period before the go/no-go deci­sion than after it ought to be an incentive.

I’ll have to ask Judge Fields what he means by “motions set­ting.” Does he mean that he will give us hear­ings on nondis­pos­i­tive motions to suppress—that is, motions to sup­press when we haven’t already agreed on a plea if we lose? Gen­er­ally Har­ris County judges will carry motions to sup­press with trial, but Norm Sil­ver­man and I had a nondis­pos­i­tive motion to sup­press hear­ing in the 185th recently. It took about an hour, and it worked to resolve two cases with min­i­mal wasted court time and other resources. There’s no good rea­son not to have a hear­ing on motions to sup­press if the defense wants a hear­ing. I hope Judge Fields will con­sider, while he’s try­ing some­thing new, try­ing some­thing else new.

How does this affect the other courts? If it works, I expect that other courts will adopt it. Maybe some of them will have the gump­tion to try some­thing dif­fer­ent. And when they see that sev­eral poli­cies work well, maybe more of them will lighten up a bit and let their court coor­di­na­tors and coun­sel work out sched­ul­ing matters.

(Now if Judge Fields and Judge Stan­d­ley would just put aside hurt feel­ings and make up, together they could be a pow­er­ful force for good.)

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About The Author

Mark Bennett got his letter of marque from the Supreme Court of Texas in May 1995. He is famous for having no sense of humor when it comes to totalitarianism.

Comments

4 Responses to “New Improved Docket Policy”

  1. Robb Fickman says:

    It is an out­stand­ing step for­ward for clients on Bond. As in fed­eral court the Judge can always issue a new docket con­trol order.

    Every other county court judge should adopt the same approach on bond cases. Mak­ing work­ing folks, who are pre­sumpively inno­cent, come to court every 3 weeks has been the idi­otic stan­dard for too long. Mak­ing accused & lawyers come all the the time to court for no pur­pose is a col­losal waste of time. Wastes the courts time call­ing long dock­ets. Waste DA & defense lawyers time reset­ting cases. Most impor­tantly it wastes the time of the accused. It’s par­tic­u­larly egre­gious while we are in this reces­sion and jobs are hard to keep.

    The only pur­pose the cur­rent sys­tem serves is to coerce pleas by wear­ing peo­ple out and help­ing do bonds­mans job.

    It’s s great idea for those on Bond.
    If it applied to those in cus­tody it an awful idea and will sim­ply per­pet­u­ate the Evil God Damn Plea Mill. I hope the judge has a dif­fer­ent idea, like grant­ing more PR bonds, for those in custody.

    Robb

  2. Kiatta says:

    One fore­see­able prob­lem will be with dis­cov­ery. For instance, in a DWI case, the tech­ni­cal super­vi­sors rarely pro­duce any­thing with­out a signed order. You won’t be able to wait until the motion’s set­ting to get a dis­cov­ery order signed because 30 days may not be enough time to receive and review the discovery.

    You can bring a few gen­eral motions to the first set­ting but usu­ally some inves­ti­ga­tion is needed before decid­ing what dis­cov­ery is needed.

  3. david ryan says:

    Judge Kara­han usu­ally signs his stand­ing dis­cov­ery order at the first set­ting. Does Fields?

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