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The presiding judge must: (A) Designate a judge to preside in each department, including a master calendar judge when appropriate, and designate a presiding judge of the juvenile division and a supervising judge for each division, district, or branch court.
- Rule 10.741. Duties and authority of the presiding judge
(a) General duties . The presiding judge is responsible for...
- Resources for Presiding and Supervising Trial Court Judges
CJEO has collected the following sources of support and...
- Rule 10.741. Duties and authority of the presiding judge
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A presiding judge is a key figure in the judicial system, responsible for handling the administrative duties of the court. Depending on the court, the presiding judge may also hear cases. Their role is crucial for ensuring the efficient operation of the court and the fair administration of justice. At TPS, The Process Server, we provide ...
Jan 1, 2007 · (a) General duties . The presiding judge is responsible for the recruitment, selection, training, appointment, supervision, assignment, performance, and evaluation of court-appointed temporary judges. In carrying out these responsibilities, the presiding judge is assisted by the Temporary Judge Administrator as provided in rule 10.743.
CJEO has collected the following sources of support and practical guidance for presiding and supervising judges in the performance of their duties.
It outlines the basic duties each of the court’s top court leaders – the presiding or chief judge, and the court executive officer or court administrator – are expected to perform, the competencies required to do a good job, and the relationships that they must nurture with each other and other justice system stakeholders to be successful.
This canon prohibits a judge who is presiding over a case from discussing that case with another judge who has already been disqualified from hearing that case. A judge also must be careful not to talk to a judge whom the judge knows* would be disqualified from hearing the matter.
The National Association for Presiding Judges and Court Executive Officers (NAPCO) has developed a monograph, funded by SJI, for use as a guide in structuring modern-day activities and functions for governing and leading state and local trial courts regardless of size or jurisdiction.