PDF format 
Preamble
Our legal system is based on the principle that an
independent, fair and competent judiciary will interpret
and apply the laws that govern us. The role of the judiciary
is central to American concepts of justice and the rule
of law. Intrinsic to all sections of this Code of Judicial
Conduct are the precepts that judges, individually and
collectively, must respect and honor the judicial office
as a public trust and strive to enhance and maintain
confidence in our legal system. The judge is an arbiter
of facts and law for the resolution of disputes and
a highly visible symbol of government under the rule
of law.
The
Code of Judicial Conduct is not intended as an exhaustive
guide for the conduct of judges. They should also be
governed in their judicial and personal conduct by general
ethical standards. The Code is intended, however, to
state basic standards which should govern the conduct
of all judges and to provide guidance to assist judges
in establishing and maintaining high standards of judicial
and personal conduct.
Canon 1
Upholding the Integrity and Independence of
the Judiciary.
An
independent and honorable judiciary is indispensable
to justice in our society. A judge should participate
in establishing, maintaining and enforcing high standards
of conduct, and should personally observe those standards
so that the integrity and independence of the judiciary
is preserved. The provisions of this Code are to be
construed and applied to further that objective.
Canon 2
Avoiding Impropriety and the Appearance of
Impropriety in All of the Judge's Activities
A.
A judge shall comply with the law and should act at
all times in a manner that promotes public confidence
in the integrity and impartiality of the judiciary.
B.
A judge shall not allow any relationship to influence
judicial conduct or judgment. A judge shall not lend
the prestige of judicial office to advance the private
interests of the judge or others; nor shall a judge
convey or permit others to convey the impression that
they are in a special position to influence the judge.
A judge shall not testify voluntarily as a character
witness.
C.
A judge shall not knowingly hold membership in any organization
that practices discrimination prohibited by law.
Canon 3
Performing the Duties of Judicial Office Impartially
and Diligently
A. Judicial Duties in General. The judicial duties
of a judge take precedence over all the judge's other
activities. Judicial duties include all the duties of
the judge's office prescribed by law. In the performance
of these duties, the following standards apply:
B.
Adjudicative Responsibilities.
(1)
A judge shall hear and decide matters assigned to the
judge except those in which disqualification is required
or recusal is appropriate.
(2)
A judge should be faithful to the law and shall maintain
professional competence in it. A judge shall not be
swayed by partisan interests, public clamor, or fear
of criticism.
(3)
A judge shall require order and decorum in proceedings
before the judge.
(4)
A judge shall be patient, dignified and courteous to
litigants, jurors, witnesses, lawyers and others with
whom the judge deals in an official capacity, and should
require similar conduct of lawyers, and of staff, court
officials and others subject to the judge's direction
and control.
(5)
A judge shall perform judicial duties without bias or
prejudice.
(6)
A judge shall not, in the performance of judicial duties,
by words or conduct manifest bias or prejudice, including
but not limited to bias or prejudice based upon race,
sex, religion, national origin, disability, age, sexual
orientation or socioeconomic status, and shall not knowingly
permit staff, court officials and others subject to
the judge's direction and control to do so.
(7)
A judge shall require lawyers in proceedings before
the court to refrain from manifesting, by words or conduct,
bias or prejudice based on race, sex, religion, national
origin, disability, age, sexual orientation or socioeconomic
status against parties, witnesses, counsel or others.
This requirement does not preclude legitimate advocacy
when any of these factors is an issue in the proceeding.
(8)
A judge shall accord to every person who has a legal
interest in a proceeding, or that person's lawyer, the
right to be heard according to law. A judge shall not
initiate, permit, or consider ex parte communications
or other communications made to the judge outside the
presence of the parties between the judge and a party,
an attorney, a guardian or attorney ad litem, an alternative
dispute resolution neutral, or any other court appointee
concerning the merits of a pending or impending judicial
proceeding. A judge shall require compliance with this
subsection by court personnel subject to the judge's
direction and control. This subsection does not prohibit:
(a) communications concerning uncontested administrative
or uncontested procedural matters;
(b)
conferring separately with the parties and/or their
lawyers in an effort to mediate or settle matters, provided,
however, that the judge shall first give notice to all
parties and not thereafter hear any contested matters
between the parties except with the consent of all parties;
(c)
obtaining the advice of a disinterested expert on the
law applicable to a proceeding before the judge if the
judge gives notice to the parties of the person consulted
and the substance of the advice, and affords the parties
reasonable opportunity to respond;
(d)
consulting with other judges or with court personnel.
(e)
considering an ex parte communication expressly
authorized by law.
(9)
A judge should dispose of all judicial matters promptly,
efficiently and fairly.
(10) A judge shall abstain from public comment about
a pending or impending proceeding which may come before
the judge's court in a manner which suggests to a reasonable
person the judge's probable decision on any particular
case. The judge shall require similar abstention on
the part of court personnel subject to the judge's direction
and control. This section does not prohibit judges from
making public statements in the course of their official
duties or from explaining for public information the
procedures of the court. This section does not apply
to proceedings in which the judge is a litigant in a
personal capacity.
(11)
A judge shall not disclose or use, for any purpose unrelated
to judicial duties, nonpublic information acquired in
a judicial capacity. The discussions, votes, positions
taken, and writings of appellate judges and court personnel
about causes are confidences of the court and shall
be revealed only through a court's judgment, a written
opinion or in accordance with Supreme Court guidelines
for a court approved history project.
C.
Administrative Responsibilities.
(1)
A judge should diligently and promptly discharge the
judge's administrative responsibilities without bias
or prejudice and maintain professional competence in
judicial administration, and should cooperate with other
judges and court officials in the administration of
court business.
(2)
A judge should require staff, court officials and others
subject to the judge's direction and control to observe
the standards of fidelity and diligence that apply to
the judge and to refrain from manifesting bias or prejudice
in the performance of their official duties.
(3)
A judge with supervisory authority for the judicial
performance of other judges should take reasonable measures
to assure the prompt disposition of matters before them
and the proper performance of their other judicial responsibilities.
(4)
A judge shall not make unnecessary appointments. A judge
shall exercise the power of appointment impartially
and on the basis of merit. A judge shall avoid nepotism
and favoritism. A judge shall not approve compensation
of appointees beyond the fair value of services rendered.
D.
Disciplinary Responsibilities.
(1)
A judge who receives information clearly establishing
that another judge has committed a violation of this
Code should take appropriate action. A judge having
knowledge that another judge has committed a violation
of this Code that raises a substantial question as to
the other judge's fitness for office shall inform the
State Commission on Judicial Conduct or take other appropriate
action.
(2)
A judge who receives information clearly establishing
that a lawyer has committed a violation of the Texas
Disciplinary Rules of Professional Conduct should take
appropriate action. A judge having knowledge that a
lawyer has committed a violation of the Texas Disciplinary
Rules of Professional Conduct that raises a substantial
question as to the lawyer's honesty, trustworthiness
or fitness as a lawyer in other respects shall inform
the Office of the General Counsel of the State Bar of
Texas or take other appropriate action.
Canon 4
Conducting the Judge's Extra-Judicial Activities
to Minimize the Risk of Conflict with Judicial Obligations
A. Extra-judicial activities in General. A judge shall
conduct all of the judge's extra-judicial activities
so that they do not:
(1) cast reasonable doubt on the judge's capacity to
act impartially as a judge; or
(2) interfere with the proper performance of judicial
duties.
B. Activities to Improve the Law. A judge may:
(1) speak, write, lecture, teach and participate in
extra-judicial activities concerning the law, the legal
system, the administration of justice and non-legal
subjects, subject to the requirements of this Code;
and,
(2) serve as a member, officer, or director of an organization
or governmental agency devoted to the improvement of
the law, the legal system, of the administration of
justice. A judge may assist such an organization in
raising funds and may participate in their management
and investment, but should not personally participate
in public fund raising activities. He or she may make
recommendations to public and private fund-granting
agencies on projects and programs concerning the law,
the legal system and the administration of justice.
C. Civic or Charitable Activities. A judge may participate
in civic and charitable activities that do not reflect
adversely upon the judge's impartiality or interfere
with the performance of judicial duties. A judge may
serve as an officer, director, trustee or non-legal
advisor of an educational, religious, charitable, fraternal,
or civic organization not conducted for the profit of
its members, subject to the following limitations:
(1) A judge should not serve if it is likely that the
organization will be engaged in proceedings that would
ordinarily come before the judge or will be regularly
or frequently engaged in adversary proceedings in any
court.
(2) A judge shall not solicit funds for any educational,
religious, charitable, fraternal or civic organization,
but may be listed as an officer, director, delegate,
or trustee of such an organization, and may be a speaker
or a guest of honor at an organization's fund raising
events.
(3) A judge should not give investment advice to such
an organization, but may serve on its board of directors
or trustees even though it has the responsibility for
approving investment decisions.
D. Financial Activities.
(1) A judge shall refrain from financial and business
dealings that tend to reflect adversely on the judge's
impartiality, interfere with the proper performance
of the judicial duties, exploit his or her judicial
position, or involve the judge in frequent transactions
with lawyers or persons likely to come before the court
on which the judge serves. This limitation does not
prohibit either a judge or candidate from soliciting
funds for appropriate campaign or officeholder expenses
as permitted by state law.
(2) Subject to the requirements of subsection (1),
a judge may hold and manage investments, including real
estate, and engage in other remunerative activity including
the operation of a business. A judge shall not be an
officer, director or manager of a publicly owned business.
For purposes of this Canon, a "publicly owned business"
is a business having more than ten owners who are not
related to the judge by consanguinity or affinity within
the third degree of relationship.
(3) A judge should manage any investments and other
economic interests to minimize the number of cases in
which the judge is disqualified. As soon as the judge
can do so without serious financial detriment, the judge
should divest himself or herself of investments and
other economic interests that might require frequent
disqualification. A judge shall be informed about the
judge's personal and fiduciary economic interests, and
make a reasonable effort to be informed about the personal
economic interests of any family member residing in
the judge's household.
(4) Neither a judge nor a family member residing in
the judge's household shall accept a gift, bequest,
favor, or loan from anyone except as follows:
(a) a judge may accept a gift incident to a public
testimonial to the judge; books and other resource materials
supplied by publishers on a complimentary basis for
official use; or an invitation to the judge and spouse
to attend a bar-related function or activity devoted
to the improvement of the law, the legal system, or
the administration of justice;
(b) a judge or a family member residing in the judge's
household may accept ordinary social hospitality; a
gift, bequest, favor, or loan from a relative; a gift
from a friend for a special occasion such as a wedding,
engagement, anniversary, or birthday, if the gift is
fairly commensurate with the occasion and the relationship;
a loan from a lending institution in its regular course
of business on the same terms generally available to
persons who are not judges; or a scholarship or fellowship
awarded on the same terms applied to other applicants;
(c) a judge or a family member residing in the judge's
household may accept any other gift, bequest, favor,
or loan only if the donor is not a party or person whose
interests have come or are likely to come before the
judge.
(d) a gift, award or benefit incident to the business,
profession or other separate activity of a spouse or
other family member residing in the judge's household,
including gifts, awards and benefits for the use of
both the spouse or other family member and the judge
(as spouse or family member), provided the gift, award
or benefit could not reasonably be perceived as intended
to influence the judge in the performance of judicial
duties;
E. Fiduciary Activities.
(1) A judge shall not serve as executor, administrator
or other personal representative, trustee, guardian,
attorney in fact or other fiduciary, except for the
estate, trust or person of a member of the judge's family,
and then only if such service will not interfere with
the proper performance of judicial duties.
(2) A judge shall not serve as a fiduciary if it is
likely that the judge as a fiduciary will be engaged
in proceedings that would ordinarily come before the
judge, or if the estate, trust, or ward becomes involved
in adversary proceedings in the court on which the judge
serves or one under its appellate jurisdiction.
(3) The same restrictions on financial activities that
apply to a judge personally also apply to the judge
while acting in a fiduciary capacity.
F. Service as Arbitrator or Mediator. An active full-time
judge shall not act as an arbitrator or mediator for
compensation outside the judicial system, but a judge
may encourage settlement in the performance of official
duties.
G. Practice of Law. A judge shall not practice law
except as permitted by statute or this Code. Notwithstanding
this prohibition, a judge may act pro se and may, without
compensation, give legal advice to and draft or review
documents for a member of the judge's family.
H. Extra-Judicial Appointments. A judge should not
accept appointment to a governmental committee, commission,
or other position that is concerned with issues of fact
or policy on matters other than the improvement of the
law, the legal system, or the administration of justice.
A judge, however, may represent his or her country,
state, or locality on ceremonial occasions or in connection
with historical, educational, and cultural activities.
I. Compensation, Reimbursement and Reporting.
(1) Compensation and Reimbursement. A judge may receive
compensation and reimbursement of expenses for the extra-judicial
activities permitted by this Code, if the source of
such payments does not give the appearance of influencing
the judge's performance of judicial duties or otherwise
give the appearance of impropriety.
(a) Compensation shall not exceed a reasonable amount
nor shall it exceed what a person who is not a judge
would receive for the same activity.
(b) Expense reimbursement shall be limited to the actual
cost of travel, food, and lodging reasonably incurred
by the judge and, where appropriate to the occasion,
by the judge's family. Any payment in excess of such
an amount is compensation.
(2) Public Reports. A judge shall file financial and
other reports as required by law.
Canon 5
Refraining from Inappropriate Political Activity
(1) A judge or judicial candidate shall not make statements
that indicate an opinion on any issue that may be subject
to judicial interpretation by the office which is being
sought or held, except that discussion of an individual's
judicial philosophy is appropriate if conducted in a
manner which does not suggest to a reasonable person
a probable decision on any particular case.
(2) A judge or judicial candidate shall not:
(i) make pledges or promises of conduct in office regarding
judicial duties other than the faithful and impartial
performance of the duties of the office, but may state
a position regarding the conduct of administrative duties;
(ii) knowingly or recklessly misrepresent the identity,
qualifications, present position, or other fact concerning
the candidate or an opponent.
(3) A judge or judicial candidate shall not authorize
the public use of his or her name endorsing another
candidate for any public office, except that either
may indicate support for a political party. A judge
or judicial candidate may attend political events and
express his or her views on political matters in accord
with this Canon and Canon 3B(10).
(4) A judge shall resign from judicial office upon
becoming a candidate in a contested election for a non-judicial
office either in a primary or in a general or in a special
election. A judge may continue to hold judicial office
while being a candidate for election to or serving as
a delegate in a state constitutional convention of while
being a candidate for election to any judicial office.
Canon 6
Compliance With The Code Of Judicial Conduct
A. The following persons shall comply with all provisions
of this Code:
(1) An active, full-time justice or judge of one of
the following courts:
(a) the Supreme Court,
(b) the Court of Criminal Appeals,
(c) courts of appeals,
(d) district courts,
(e) criminal district courts, and
(f) statutory county courts.
(2) A full-time commissioner, master, magistrate, or
referee of a court listed in (1) above.
B. A County Judge who performs judicial functions shall
comply with all provisions of this Code except the judge
is not required to comply:
(1) when engaged in duties which relate to the judge's
role in the administration of the county;
(2) with Canons 4D(2), 4D(3), or 4H ;
(3) with Canon 4G, except practicing law in the court
on which he or she serves or in any court subject to
the appellate jurisdiction of the county court, or acting
as a lawyer in a proceeding in which he or she has served
as a judge or in any proceeding related thereto.
(4) with Canon 5(4).
C. Justices of the Peace and Municipal Court Judges.
(1) A justice of the peace or municipal court judge
shall comply with all provisions of this Code, except
the judge is not required to comply:
(a) with Canon 3B(7) pertaining to ex parte communications; in lieu thereof a justice of the peace
or municipal court judge shall comply with 6C(2) below;
(b) with Canons 4D(2), 4D(3), 4E, or 4H;
(c) with Canon 4F, unless the court on which the judge
serves may have jurisdiction of the matter or parties
involved in the arbitration or mediation; or
(d) if an attorney, with Canon 4G, except practicing
law in the court on which he or she serves, or acting
as a lawyer in a proceeding in which he or she has served
as a judge or in any proceeding related thereto.
(e) with Canons 5(4).
(2) A justice of the peace or a municipal court judge,
except as authorized by law, shall not directly or indirectly
initiate, permit, nor consider ex parte or other
communications concerning the merits of a pending judicial
proceeding. This subsection does not prohibit communications
concerning:
(a) uncontested administrative matters,
(b) uncontested procedural matters,
(c) magistrate duties and functions,
(d) determining where jurisdiction of an impending
claim or dispute may lie,
(e) determining whether a claim or dispute might more
appropriately be resolved in some other judicial or
non-judicial forum,
(f) mitigating circumstances following a plea of nolo
contendere or guilty for a fine-only offense, or
(g) any other matters where ex parte communications
are contemplated or authorized by law.
D. A Part-time commissioner, master, magistrate, or
referee of a court listed in 6A(1) above:
(1) shall comply with all provisions of this Code,
except he or she is not required to comply with Canons
4D(2), 4E, 4F, 4G or 4H, and
(2) should not practice law in the court which he or
she serves or in any court subject to the appellate
jurisdiction of the court which he or she serves, or
act as a lawyer in a proceeding in which he or she has
served as a commissioner, master, magistrate, or referee,
or in any other proceeding related thereto.
E. A Judge Pro Tempore, while acting as such:
(1) shall comply with all provisions of this Code applicable
to the court on which he or she is serving, except he
or she is not required to comply with Canons 4D(2),
4D(3), 4E, 4F, 4G or 4H, and
(2) after serving as a judge pro tempore, should not
act as a lawyer in a proceeding in which he or she has
served as a judge or in any other proceeding related
thereto.
F. A Senior Judge, or a former district judge or a
retired or former statutory county court judge who has
consented to be subject to assignment as a judicial
officer:
(1) shall comply with all the provisions of this Code
except he or she is not required to comply with Canon
4D(2), 4E, 4F, 4G, or 4H, but
(2) should refrain from judicial service during the
period of an extra-judicial appointment permitted by
Canon 4H.
G. Candidates for Judicial Office. office listed in
Canon 6A(1) shall be subject to the same standards of
Canon 5 that are required of members of the judiciary.
(2) Any judge who violates this Code shall be subject
to sanctions by the State Commission on Judicial Conduct.
(3)
Any lawyer who is a candidate seeking judicial office
who violates Canon 5 or other relevant provisions of
this Code is subject to disciplinary action by the State
Bar of Texas.
(4)
The conduct of any other candidate for elective judicial
office, not subject to paragraphs (2) and (3) of this
section, who violates Canon 5 or other relevant provisions
of the Code is subject to review by the Secretary of
State, the Attorney General, or the local District Attorney
for appropriate action.
H.
Attorneys.
Any
lawyer who contributes to the violation of Canons 3B(7),
3B(10), 4D(4), 5, or 6C(2), or other relevant provisions
of this Code, is subject to disciplinary action by the
State Bar of Texas.
Canon 7
Effective Date of Compliance
A
person to whom this Code becomes applicable should arrange
his or her affairs as soon as reasonably possible to
comply with it.
Canon 8
Construction and Terminology of the Code
A. Construction
The Code of Judicial Conduct is intended to establish
basic standards for ethical conduct of judges. It consists
of specific rules set forth in Sections under broad
captions called Canons.
The Sections are rules of reason, which should be applied
consistent with constitutional requirements, statutes,
other court rules and decisional law and in the context
of all relevant circumstances. The Code is to be construed
so as not to impinge on the essential independence of
judges in making judicial decisions.
The Code is designed to provide guidance to judges
and candidates for judicial office and to provide a
structure for regulating conduct through the State Commission
on Judicial Conduct. It is not designed or intended
as a basis for civil liability of criminal prosecution.
Furthermore, the purpose of the Code would be subverted
if the Code were invoked by lawyers for mere tactical
advantage in a proceeding.
It is not intended, however, that every transgression
will result in disciplinary action. Whether disciplinary
action is appropriate, and the degree of discipline
to be imposed, should be determined through a reasonable
and reasoned application of the text and should depend
on such factors as the seriousness of the transgression,
whether there is a pattern of improper activity and
the effect of the improper activity on others or on
the judicial system.
B. Terminology
(1) "Shall" or "shall not" denotes
binding obligations the violation of which can result
in disciplinary action.
(2) "Should" or "should not" relates
to aspirational goals and as a statement of what is
or is not appropriate conduct but not as a binding rule
under which a judge may be disciplined.
(3) "May" denotes permissible discretion
or, depending on the context, refers to action that
is not covered by specific proscriptions.
(4) "De minimis" denotes an insignificant
interest that could not raise reasonable question as
to a judge's impartiality.
(5) "Economic interest" denotes ownership
of a more than de minimis legal or equitable interest,
or a relationship as officer, director, advisor or other
active participant in the affairs of a party, except
that:
(i) ownership of an interest in a mutual or common
investment fund that holds securities is not an economic
interest in such securities unless the judge participates
in the management of the fund or a proceeding pending
or impending before the judge could substantially affect
the value of the interest;
(ii) service by a judge as an officer, director, advisor
or other active participant, in an educational, religious,
charitable, fraternal, or civic organization or service
by a judge's spouse, parent or child as an officer,
director, advisor or other active participant in any
organization does not create an economic interest in
securities held by that organization;
(iii) a deposit in a financial institution, the proprietary
interest of a policy holder in a mutual insurance company,
of a depositor in a mutual savings association or of
a member in a credit union, or a similar proprietary
interest, is not an economic interest in the organization
unless a proceeding pending or impending before the
judge could substantially affect the value of the interest;
and
(iv) ownership of government securities is not an economic
interest in the issuer unless a proceeding pending or
impending before the judge could substantially affect
the value of the securities.
(6) "Fiduciary" includes such relationships
as executor, administrator, trustee, and guardian.
(7) "Knowingly," "knowledge," "known"
or "knows" denotes actual knowledge of the
fact in question. A person's knowledge may be inferred
from circumstances.
(8) "Law" denotes court rules as well as
statutes, constitutional provisions and decisional law.
(9) "Member of the judge's (or the candidate's)
family" denotes a spouse, child, grandchild, parent,
grandparent or other relative or person with whom the
candidate maintains a close familial relationship.
(10) "Family member residing in the judge's household"
means any relative of a judge by blood or marriage,
or a person treated by a judge as a member of the judge's
family, who resides at the judge's household.
(11) "Require." The rules prescribing that
a judge "require" certain conduct of others
are, like all of the rules in this Code, rules of reason.
The use of the term "require" in that context
means a judge is to exercise reasonable direction and
control over the conduct of those persons subject to
the judge's direction and control.
(12) "Third degree of relationship." The
following persons are relatives within the third degree
of relationship: great-grandparent, grandparent, parent,
uncle, aunt, brother, sister, child, grandchild, great-grandchild,
nephew or niece.
(13) "Retired Judge" means a person who receives
from the Texas Judicial Retirement System, Plan One
or Plan Two, an annuity based on service that was credited
to the system. (Secs. 831.001 and 836.001, V.T.C.A.
Government Code [Ch. 179, Sec. 1, 71st Legislature(1989)])
(14) "Senior Judge" means a retired appellate
or district judge who has consented to be subject to
assignment pursuant to Section 75.001, Government Code.
[Ch. 359, 69th Legislature, Reg. Session (1985)]
(15) "Statutory County Court Judge" means
the judge of a county court created by the legislature
under Article V, Section 1, of the Texas Constitution,
including county courts at law, statutory probate courts,
county criminal courts, county criminal courts of appeals,
and county civil courts at law. (Sec. 21.009, V.T.C.A.
Government Code [Ch. 2, Sec. 1601(18), 71st Legislature(1989)])
(16) "County Judge" means the judge of the
county court created in each county by Article V, Section
15, of the Texas Constitution. (Sec. 21.009, V.T.C.A.
Government Code [Ch. 2, Sec. 1601(18), 71st Legislature(1989)])
(17) "Part-time" means service on a continuing
or periodic basis, but with permission by law to devote
time to some other profession or occupation and for
which the compensation for that reason is less than
that for full-time service.
(18) "Judge Pro Tempore" means a person who
is appointed to act temporarily as a judge.
|