Sounds like a violation of separation of powers to me.
http://www.nytimes.com/2015/06/07/us/courts-budget-intensifies-kansas-dispute-over-powers.html?_r=0
QuoteThe fight between Gov. Sam Brownback of Kansas and the state's judicial branch has escalated, with the governor last week signing into law a bill that could strip state courts of their funding.
The measure, at the end of a lengthy bill that allocated money for the judiciary this year, stipulates that if a state court strikes down a 2014 law that removed some powers from the State Supreme Court, the judiciary will lose its funding.
The 2014 law took the authority to appoint chief judges for the district courts away from the Supreme Court and gave it to the district courts themselves. It also deprived the state's highest court of the right to set district court budgets. Critics said the law was an attempt by Mr. Brownback, a Republican, to stack the district courts with judges who may be more favorable to his policies.
The budget bill that Mr. Brownback signed on Thursday was related only to the judiciary. He said he wanted to ensure that the courts would remain open while lawmakers sparred over the larger budget issues. Lawmakers have been debating how to fill a $400 million shortfall, which will most likely require tax increases that Mr. Brownback and many in the conservative-dominated Legislature oppose. If a budget is not passed by Sunday, state workers may be furloughed.
But in passing a separate budget bill to keep the third branch of government from shutting down, Republican lawmakers took the opportunity to insert language that would shield the 2014 law.
"I've never seen anything like this," said Matthew Menendez, counsel at the Brennan Center for Justice in New York, which is helping to represent a Kansas judge who is challenging the constitutionality of the 2014 law. "It seems pretty clear that these mechanisms have been an effort by the governor and the Legislature to try and get a court system that is more in line with their philosophy."
Richard E. Levy, a constitutional law professor at the University of Kansas, likened the measure in the judiciary budget bill to Congress's passing a law outlawing abortion and then telling the judicial branch that it will lose its funding if it finds the law unconstitutional.
"That kind of threat to the independence of the judiciary strikes me as invalid under the separation of powers principle," Mr. Levy said in an interview on Friday.
The 2014 law was promoted by the Legislature's conservative bloc, whose members argued that the local district courts would better know the needs of their communities and should, therefore, have control over their own purses and leaders. Jeff King, the vice president of the Senate, told The Wichita Eagle at the time the law passed that it was not an attack on the courts because the measure did not give the Legislature any authority over the courts.
The very same state court system that will be affected by the 2014 law will decide whether the law is constitutional. The Brennan Center, which is representing Judge Larry T. Solomon, the chief judge of Kingman County in south-central Kansas, has argued that the law violates a provision of the State Constitution that says the Supreme Court "shall have general administrative authority over all courts in this state."
"If the people of Kansas were to adopt a constitutional amendment that changed the way that the courts were administered, I think that would be a very different situation," Mr. Menendez said Friday.
But the office of Attorney General Derek Schmidt has argued in court filings that Judge Solomon does not have standing to bring a claim and that the Legislature has the constitutional authority to determine how chief judges are selected.
"Chief Judge Solomon has not been injured in any personal and individual way," the attorney general's office wrote in a motion to dismiss the lawsuit. Later, citing the fact that the Legislature had been allowed to create a statute governing jury selection, the motion argued, "It is clear that the authority to regulate court administration and procedure is not vested exclusively in the Kansas Supreme Court."
The Kansas courts and Legislature have been at odds in recent years. Lawmakers have challenged judicial rulings that the state's school system was constitutionally underfunded, arguing that the courts were impeding on the legislative authority to appropriate money. Some lawmakers have said they would openly defy any court ruling that says they must provide additional school funding.
Mr. Brownback and his Republican allies who control the Legislature have sought to change the way that State Supreme Court justices are selected, proposing a system in which the governor would nominate a candidate and the Senate would confirm the person, similar to the federal model. The governor has also suggested the possibility of going to direct elections for Supreme Court seats.
Under the current system, the governor chooses from three nominees picked by a nine-member committee that includes lawyers and appointees of the governor.
Correction: June 8, 2015
An earlier version of this article misstated one aspect of a 2014 law that took some powers away from the State Supreme Court. The bill removed the court's authority to appoint chief judges for the district courts, not its ability to appoint district judges themselves, who are either elected or selected through a merit process.
The relevant separation is that between Sam Brownback's cerebrum and his brainstem.
And Kansas was suppose to be the shining example of the conservative ideology in action. :(
Quote from: Razgovory on June 10, 2015, 10:58:05 AM
And Kansas was suppose to be the shining example of the conservative ideology in action. :(
It is!
Kansas constitution sez:
QuoteThe judicial power of this state shall be vested exclusively in one court of justice, which shall be divided into one supreme court, district courts, and such other courts as are provided by law . . . The supreme court shall have general administrative authority over all courts in this state.
So it certainly looks like the underlying law is unconstitutional.
I dunno, "general administrative authority" is a pretty vague statement.
Quote from: Berkut on June 10, 2015, 11:24:41 AM
I dunno, "general administrative authority" is a pretty vague statement.
Yeah. I hope there is an entity in charge of interpreting what general vague statements in constitution mean.
QuoteChief Judge Solomon
America. :bleeding:
Just like Polish king Jesus. Jesus.
Quote from: DGuller on June 10, 2015, 11:36:10 AM
Quote from: Berkut on June 10, 2015, 11:24:41 AM
I dunno, "general administrative authority" is a pretty vague statement.
Yeah. I hope there is an entity in charge of interpreting what general vague statements in constitution mean.
A bunch of unelected God-Emperors who need to be held accountable to the will of the people :angry:
Unless the people elect Democrats.
Quote from: DGuller on June 10, 2015, 11:36:10 AM
Quote from: Berkut on June 10, 2015, 11:24:41 AM
I dunno, "general administrative authority" is a pretty vague statement.
Yeah. I hope there is an entity in charge of interpreting what general vague statements in constitution mean.
Indeed.
However, I wonder if from a legal standpoint the SC of Kansas is allowed to look at the motivation of those passing a law when ruling on it's constitutionality.
For example, in this case, I could see a perfectly reasonable justification for passing legislation to change how judges are assigned.
In this case, I don't think the justification is valid at all - it is simply trying to legislate politics, and I hope they do overturn it.
But can they consider that when trying to over-turn legislation, or do they have to look at the legislation absent the actual motives of those passing it?
Quote from: Berkut on June 10, 2015, 11:58:36 AM
For example, in this case, I could see a perfectly reasonable justification for passing legislation to change how judges are assigned.
In this case, I don't think the justification is valid at all - it is simply trying to legislate politics, and I hope they do overturn it.
But can they consider that when trying to over-turn legislation, or do they have to look at the legislation absent the actual motives of those passing it?
?
I thought you were kidding about the vagueness stuff
"General administrative authority" is pretty straightforward. Usually the position of the "chief judge" in a lower court is a designation of administrative responsibility. Assuming that is true in Kansas, it's hard to read the constitution in a way that would deny the Kansas Supreme Court the power to designate the chief judges within each district.
Not kidding at all. It is incredibly vague, no matter how amazed you are that someone might think so.
Maybe it'a lawyer vs. layman thing. It sounds pretty vague to me. Appointment of judges to me seems like a political, not an administrative, action.
What about it is unclear?
Quote from: DGuller on June 10, 2015, 12:53:06 PM
Maybe it'a lawyer vs. layman thing. It sounds pretty vague to me. Appointment of judges to me seems like a political, not an administrative, action.
I think in this case it is appointing the head judge from amongst the judges, so slightly more administrative, but hardly a slam dunk. Appointing positions doesn't strike me as a necessarily administrative function. Certainly something that could go either way, but if historically it was considered part of that "administrative authority", then legislation changing that doesn't strike me as certainly a violation, at least in theory.
The position of chief judge in Kansas exists only accordance with a rule established by the KS Supreme Court. It's not a independent job or position that would otherwise exist - indeed it would be quite possible to have no chief judge at all. The duties consist of things like personnel functions, supervising clerks, supervising budget, assignment plans, vacation plans, etc.
This is not an unusual setup. Most of the 50 state court systems operate the same way and have similar or even identical constitutional language. The one big difference is that some states give that authority to the Chief Justice of the highest court, a few others - like Kansas - grant the authority to the entire highest court as a body.
OK, then that does sound pretty purely administrative - if the position exists because they have administrative authority, and the position is intended for administrative purposes, then clearly it falls under that.
However, if that is the case, then why do the Republicans want the lower courts to pick them? How does that help them in any fashion?
Quote from: Berkut on June 10, 2015, 01:24:54 PM
However, if that is the case, then why do the Republicans want the lower courts to pick them? How does that help them in any fashion?
I have no idea. It has no bearing on who becomes a judge.