The Honorable Joe Black Harrison County Criminal District Attorney Post Office Box 776 Marshall, Texas 75671-0776
Re: Whether a judge of a statutory county court, the jurisdiction of which is limited to misdemeanor cases, is among the group of judges described in section
Dear Mr. Black:
You ask whether
a judge of a County Court at Law the jurisdiction of which is limited to misdemeanors, [is] as a matter of law among those," . . . statutory county court judges trying criminal cases in the county or counties served by the judicial district . . .", as stated in §
76.002 , Government Code, and thus one of, "the judges described in § 76.002[.]"1
You explain that Harrison County (the "county") has one district court judge and one statutory county court judge. See Request Letter at 1;see also TEX. Gov'T CODE ANN. §§
The focus of your inquiry is Government Code section
*Page 2[t]he district judge or district judges trying criminal cases in each judicial district and the statutory county court judges trying criminal cases in the county or counties served by the judicial district shall:
(1) establish a community supervision and corrections department; and
(2) approve the department's budget and community justice plan.
Id. (emphasis added). Specifically, you seek to understand whether the judge of a county court at law with jurisdiction over only misdemeanor cases, rather than felony or felony and misdemeanor cases, falls within the group of judges described in Government Code section
Your question requires us to construe section 76.002(a). When construing a statute, the objective is to determine and give effect to the Legislature's intent, which is determined first by examining the language of the statute. See Lelandv. Brandal,
In order for a county court at law judge to be included in the group of judges described in section 76.002(a), the judge must (1) preside over a "statutory county court" and (2) "try[] criminal cases in the county or counties served by the judicial district." TEX. GOV'T CODE ANN. §
Chapter 76 does not define the phrase "trying criminal cases" and we find no other relevant statutory or common-law definition. This office, in a 2005 attorney general opinion, examined the meaning of the phrase "district judges trying criminal cases" under section 76.002(a). Seegenerally Tex. Att'y Gen. Op. No.
In addition, nothing in the text of section 76.002(a) excludes a statutory county court judge who is trying criminal cases but who has criminal jurisdiction over only misdemeanor cases. See HEB Ministries,Inc. v. Tex. Higher Educ. Coordinating Bd,
Very truly yours,
ANDREW WEBER First Assistant Attorney General
JONATHAN K. FRELS Deputy Attorney General for Legal Counsel
NANCY S. FULLER Chair, Opinion Committee
Christy Drake-Adams Assistant Attorney General, Opinion Committee
