- (1) A third party under contract with the commission shall conduct a judicial performance survey. The third party may not be affiliated with a legal firm or a legal professional.
(2)
(a) Each judicial performance survey must survey respondents in each of the following classifications:
- (i) attorneys who have appeared before the judge as counsel either pro hac vice or while licensed to practice law in Montana;
- (ii) jurors who have served in one or more cases before the judge; and
- (iii) court staff who have worked with the judge.
- (b) Only a respondent under subsection (2)(a)(i) who is admitted to practice law in the state and in good standing with the state bar of Montana may evaluate a judge's legal ability under subsection (7)(a).
- (3) The commission may establish by rule additional classifications that the commission considers helpful to voters.
- (4) All survey responses are confidential, including added comments.
- (5) If the commission provides information to a judge or the court administrator, it must do so in a manner that protects the anonymity of survey respondents.
- (6) A survey must be provided to a juror respondent no more than 30 days after the completion of the case in which the juror served.
(7) Surveys must include questions inquiring into the judge's:
(a) legal ability, including the following:
- (i) understanding of the substantive law and rules of procedure and evidence;
- (ii) attentiveness to factual and legal issues;
- (iii) adherence to precedent and ability to justify clearly any departures from precedent;
- (iv) appreciation of the practical impact on the parties of the judge's rulings, including rulings that cause delay or increased litigation expense;
- (v) clarity in writing; and
- (vi) clarity in explaining the bases for judicial opinions;
(b) judicial conduct, including the following:
- (i) courtesy toward attorneys, court staff, witnesses, and others interacting with the judge's court;
- (ii) appropriate courtroom decorum;
- (iii) demeanor and personal attributes that promote public trust and confidence in the judicial system;
- (iv) preparedness;
- (v) avoidance of impropriety or the appearance of impropriety;
- (vi) avoidance of bias and conflicts of interest;
- (vii) fairness, open-mindedness, and impartiality;
- (viii) ability to communicate clearly, including the ability to explain the basis for written rulings, court procedures, and decisions; and
- (ix) compliance with 2-2-121 and 2-2-122 and the applicable rules of judicial conduct;
(c) administrative performance, including the following:
- (i) workload management;
- (ii) sharing proportionally the workload within the court or district; and
- (iii) issuance of opinions and orders without unnecessary delay; and
(d) fidelity to:
- (i) the Montana constitution, including Article III, section 1; and
- (ii) 1-2-101 and 1-2-102.
- (8) If the commission determines that a survey question is not appropriate for a respondent category, the commission may omit the question from the survey provided to that respondent group.
(9)
- (a) The survey must allow respondents to indicate responses either on a numerical scale from one to five or in the affirmative or negative, with an option for an inability to respond in the affirmative or negative.
- (b) The commission may allow respondents to provide written comments other than those that could, if used in a hiring process, trigger a violation of federal or state employment law.
- (10) The commission shall compile and make available to each judge that judge's survey results. (Terminates June 30, 2035--sec. 14, Ch. 765, L. 2025.)
History: En. Sec. 5, Ch. 765, L. 2025.