GOVT2306: Texas Government
Lecture 13: Texas Judiciary

Instructor: Tom Hanna, Spring 2025

2025-01-01

Agenda and Announcements

Agenda

  • Today: Texas Judiciary

  • Next class: Criminal Policy, Due Process

      - Begin homework (50% done by class time): Chapter 10 Law, Due Process, and Criminal Justice Policy - Begin by April 16

Announcemnts

Texas Judiciary

Texas Constitution vs US Constitution

  • US Constitution Article III

      - establishes the judiciary
      - lists judicial powers
      - structure of judiciary - unitary
      - One Supreme Court with inferior courts as established by Congress
      - Judges appointed and serve for life
  • Texas Constitution Article V

      - establishes the judiciary
      - lists judicial powers
      - structure of judiciary - plural
      - Two top courts
      - lower courts defined in Constitution
      - Judges elected and serve for fixed terms

General Court Structure

  • By type of case

      - Criminal 
      - Civil
  • By level of authority

      - Trial court
      - Appellate court
      - Supreme Court and Court of Criminal Appeals

Civil vs. Criminal Cases

Description Civil Criminal
Type of case Individual or property rights Proper behavior under penal law
Parties Plaintiff or petitioner: Often a private party (may be government) Prosecutor representing the people; defendant
Initial document Petition Charges: Indictment or information
Burden of proof Preponderance of the evidence Beyond a reasonable doubt
Determines Responsibility/Liability Guilt or innocence
Result relief or compensation Punishment including fines, jail, or prison

Levels of Courts in Texas

Municipal

  • Trial court
  • Incorporated cities and towns
  • May not be on record, so appeals may involve a new trial
  • Larger city courts are courts of record
  • City charters determine qualification and selection of judges

Levels of Courts in Texas

Justice of the Peace Courts

  • Trial court
  • 1 to 8 JOP Courts in each county
  • Criminal and Civil jurisdiction
  • No specific qualifications for Justices of the Peace

Levels of Courts in Texas

County Courts

  • Trial court
  • One per county required by Constitution
  • Additional courts established by stature
  • Criminal and civil matters

Levels of Courts in Texas

District Courts

  • Trial court
  • 488 courts
  • one elected judge with 4-year term
  • Civil matters
  • Felony criminal cases

Levels of Courts in Texas: Appellate

Courts of Appeals

  • 14 Courts of Appeal

  • Civil and Criminal Cases

  • Appeals judges elected

  • 3 to 13 judges per court

      - Texarkana, El Paso, Waco, Eastland, and Tyler: 3
      - Amarillo and Beaumont: 4
      - Austin and Corpus Christi-Edinburg: 6
      - Fort Worth and San Antonio: 7
      - Houston-1st and Houston-14th: 9
      - Dallas: 13

Bifurcated Appeals

  • Texas Court of Criminal Appeals
  • Supreme Court of Texas

Texas Court of Criminal Appeals

  • Highest court of appeals for criminal matters
  • Exclusive jurisdiction over automatic appeals of death penalty cases
  • Judges elected in statewide elections
  • Presiding Judge and eight Judges

Supreme Court of Texas

  • Highest appeal court for civil cases
  • Highest appeal court for juvenile cases
  • Establishes rules for lower courts
  • Establishes rules for the state bar
  • Nine justices elected in statewide elections

Current events

“Texas Lawmakers’ Unusual Attempt to Halt the Execution of a Possibly Innocent Man”1

  • Case involved both court systems, the legislature and the Governor’s office
  • All appeals had already been denied in the criminal system and at the US Supreme Court
  • The Texas Board of Pardons and Paroles had rejected a pardon

Current events

  • Governor Abbott had declined to issue a 30-day reprieve, the only action he could legally take
  • The Criminal Jurisprudence Committee of the Texas House of Representatives subpoenaed the defendant to appear the day after the schedule execution
  • Texas Supreme Court stayed the execution
  • November 15, 2024 Texas Supreme Court unanimously ruled that the House subpoena violated separation of powers

Authorship and License

Creative Commons License