Albuquerque Journal

Constituti­onal Amendment 1 could streamline appeals, save money

Vote ‘yes’ to allow legislator­s to adjust the appellate process to best serve NM

- BY EDWARD CHÁVEZ RETIRED N.M. SUPREME COURT JUSTICE Justice Chávez retired from the Supreme Court in March and now chairs the Criminal Justice and Public Safety Task Force.

New Mexico voters can lay the groundwork for the speedier resolution of certain legal matters and save taxpayer money by adopting Constituti­onal Amendment No. 1 on the general election ballot.

The proposed amendment would authorize the Legislatur­e to adjust or streamline the appeals process by enacting a statute — passing a bill and having it signed by the governor —- rather than changing the state constituti­on.

By itself, approval of the constituti­onal amendment will not alter which court hears an appeal. Those decisions would be left to legislator­s to decide after careful study in the future.

Currently, the New Mexico Constituti­on is very restrictiv­e. All decisions of probate, magistrate and metropolit­an courts must be appealed initially to a district court. Further appeals could be made to the Court of Appeals and state Supreme Court.

That language dates to the early 1900s when the state Constituti­on was drafted. At the time, no court below a district court was considered a “court of record,” meaning the court maintained a permanent record of its proceeding­s. In hearing an appeal, the district court would create a record of its decision that could be reviewed by a higher court.

However, New Mexico’s court system has evolved over time to better meet the needs of communitie­s across the state. For example, the Legislatur­e created the Bernalillo County Metropolit­an Court in 1979 and made it a “court of record” for civil cases and certain misdemeano­r criminal cases – DWI and domestic violence.

Yet because of the current constituti­onal language, appeals of those small claims civil cases and specified misdemeano­r cases must go first to the district court in Albuquerqu­e for an appeal. A district court judge reviews the record of the evidence and legal issues to determine whether the lower court erred in its decision.

From the district court, the case could be appealed to the Court of Appeals and possibly the Supreme Court.

By contrast, a case of armed robbery would go to trial in the district court, which creates a permanent record of the proceeding, and then the case could be appealed to the Court of Appeals and potentiall­y the Supreme Court.

If the constituti­onal amendment is adopted by voters, the Legislatur­e would have the authority to streamline the process. Legislator­s might decide in the future that DWI cases in Metro Court could be appealed directly to the Court of Appeals rather than first going to the district court. That would provide the same appeal rights for a misdemeano­r DWI as now exist for armed robbery.

Such a change could save taxpayers the costs of prosecutor­s, public defenders, judges and court staff who must dedicate time and resources to each step of what can be multiple levels of judicial review in the current appeals process.

Constituti­onal Amendment No. 1 represents common sense, good government at its best. It allows legislator­s to adjust the appellate process to best meet the needs of New Mexicans today as well as in the future as the state grows.

 ??  ?? Edward Chavez
Edward Chavez

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