Testimony on Judicial Selection in Kansas

Publication year2019
Pages34
CitationVol. 88 No. 10 Pg. 34
Testimony on Judicial Selection in Kansas
No. 88 J. Kan. Bar Assn 10, 34 (2019)
Kansas Bar Journal
December, 2019

November 2019

F. James Robinson

TO: SPECIAL COMMITTEE ON JUDICIARY

FROM: F. JAMES ROBINSON, JR. KANSAS BAR ASSOCIATION

Dated: OCTOBER 1, 2019

RE: JUDICIAL SELECTION IN KANSAS

Chairperson Rucker, Chairperson Patton, members of the committee, we thank you for the opportunity to appear today and comment on your review of the judicial selection process in Kansas. I am here today for the Kansas Bar Association.

If those who select judges for our highest courts are knowledgeable and insulated from partisan politics, focus on professional qualifications, and are guided by proper rules and procedures, they will choose good judges.

History of Judicial Selection

Before charting a course for the future, we must have a clear understanding of the past. Several times since the state's founding, Kansans have had to rethink how to select Kansas Supreme Court justices. Early in this nation's history, governors and legislators chose state court judges. Concerns that some judges received their judicial appointments as a reward for their previous work for political elites, party machines, and special interests led reformers around the time of Kansas' statehood to propose judicial elections.[1] The first Kansans preferred non-partisan judicial elections, while allowing the governor to appoint judges to fill vacancies. Early in the 20th century Kansans switched to partisan elections, but a few years later switched back to nonpartisan elections. However, critics were not convinced that non-partisan elections cured the problems plaguing partisan elections. Political parties continued to play a role in selecting and supporting candidates.[2]

During the mid-part of the 20th century political scandals in some states prompted reformers to move to a system using independent non-partisan nominating commissions. First adopted in Missouri in 1940 after Missouri courts fell victim to the control of machine politics by notorious Democratic Party boss Tom Pendergast, merit selection was created as a means for selecting judges based on their professional qualifications and experience, not on their politics.[3]

About the Author

Forrest James "Jim" Robinson, Jr. is a business litigation partner in the law firm of Hite, Fanning & Honeyman, L.L.P., in Wichita, Kansas. He received degrees from Southwestern College (1980) and the University of Kansas School of Law (1983).

In 2018, he was appointed by the Kansas Supreme Court to serve as a member of the Kansas Judicial Council.

He has held leadership positions in Wichita Bar Association (WBA) (Board of Governors; Chair, Legislative Committee; Past Chair, Professionalism Committee); Kansas Bar Association (KBA) (Chair, Legislative Committee, 2014-2018), Kansas Association of Defense Counsel (KADC) (President; Board of Directors; Chair, Legislative Committee); and Defense Research Institute (DRI) (Kansas State Representative; DRI Center for Law and Public Policy's Judicial Task Force, and Issues and Advocacy Committee).

Jim has earned a great deal of recognition, including the KBA's Philip H. Lewis Medal of Distinction in 2017.

robinson@hitefanning.com

Kansas was the second state to adopt the Missouri Plan. In 1956, the Republican party was deeply divided. Republican Governor Fred Hall lost the party nomination to Warren Shaw. Democratic candidate George Docking defeated Shaw in the general election. Chief Justice Bill Smith was Hall's political ally. Smith was ill and wanted to retire but could not countenance an appointee by a Democratic governor. Hall negotiated a scheme to retire Smith. Smith retired on December 31. Hall resigned on January 3. Lieutenant Governor John McCuish held office for eleven days before Docking's inauguration. McCuish's only official act was to appoint Hall as Chief Justice of the Kansas Supreme Court[4]

That scandal prompted super-majorities in the House and the Senate to approve a constitutional amendment establishing merit selection based on the "Missouri Plan." Those who favored the move argued the Missouri Plan would lead to better qualified justices than in contested elections. Also, they believed the Plan would more effectively free judges from political pressure and influence. A Kansas Chamber of Commerce brochure[5] from the 1958 campaign for merit selection argued:

What's Wrong with Electing Judges? First, the partisan elective process puts the judiciary into politics. Candidates for legislative or executive offices may run on the basis of advocacy of certain policies; a judge should have no policy other than to administer the law honestly and competently. Judges should not be influenced by political alliances or political debts.

Kansas voters in 1958 overwhelmingly amended the Constitution to provide for merit selection.[6]

Unlike the Kansas Supreme Court, which was created by the Kansas Constitution, the Kansas Court of Appeals was created by statute. The selection process for its judges was amended in 2013 to allow the governor, with the consent of the Senate, to appoint a judge to fill a vacancy.

Today, 34 states and the District of Columbia use a commission as part of the selection process for at least some of their high court judges.[7]

A May 2019 study of nominating commissions by the Brennan Center for Justice at New York University School of Law finds that while "the work of commissioners varies only slightly from state to state," the composition and selection of commission

members vary among the states.[8] Governors appoint a majority of commissioners in 15 of the 35 commission jurisdictions. In 16 commission states no single authority appoints a majority of commissioners. In 26 jurisdictions, lawyers comprise a majority of commissioners, even though only 15 states require lawyer majorities. Nonlawyer commissioners comprise a majority of commissioners in just 6 states, and half of the seats in 3 states. Nearly two-thirds of the nonlawyer commissioners come from either private industry or the legislative or executive branches of government.[9]

No state has ever moved away from a constitutionally based merit selection process. Indeed, in 2012, voters in Arizona, Florida, and Missouri, by wide margins, rejected efforts to move away from merit selection.[10]

The Kansas Supreme Court Nominating Commission and Retention Elections

Article 3, Section 5 of the Kansas Constitution, as amended in 1958, provides for the non-partisan Kansas Supreme Court Nominating Commission. The Commission has 9 members. The Chair is an attorney who is selected based on a vote of licensed Kansas attorneys. One member from each congressional district is an attorney who is elected by the licensed attorneys in that district. One non-attorney member from each congressional district is appointed by the Governor.

The Commission’s composition ensures a balance between professional assessment of an applicant’s legal ability and the voice of citizens. Lawyer members understand the work of courts, can critique the applicant’s written materials, and are aware of the specialized knowledge and experience needed to serve as a judge. Citizen members appointed by the Governor provide public input, ensure...

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