GOVT2305: AIM Section
Video 21: The Texas Judiciary

2025-04-15

Agenda and Announcements

Agenda

Video 21: The Texas Judiciary

    - Constitutional basis and comparison to Federal Judiciary
    - Structure
    - Bifurcated Appeals
    - Current events

Video 22: Judicial Ethics

    - Ethical Requirements of Judges
    - Enforcement
    - Impeachment
    

Video 23: Major Court Cases

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

Do not submit to Quizlet, Chegg, Coursehero, or other similar commercial websites.

Graphics Credit: Unless otherwise noted graphics are from Norton Publishers

Creative Commons License