Mandamus deadline enforced

The timeliness of a mandamus petitions is ordinarily determined by equitable principles rather than a set deadline. An exception to that general practice appeared in In re: Texas House Republican Caucus PAC, which presented a claim that certain Libertarian candidates had not paid the proper filing fees for the upcoming election. The Texas Supreme Court found that the applicable part of the Elections Code (relating to candidates selected by convention rather than application) set a hard deadline of August 21, making a mandamus petition filed after that date per se untimely. No. 20-0663 (Sept. 5, 2020) (per curiam) (Justices Hecht & Boyd, not participating).

New TRCP

The Texas Supreme Court recently entered an order amending (effective Jan. 1, 2021) several rules of civil procedure about discovery, including:

— Amendment of Tex. R. Civ. P. 47, 169, and 190 so that expedited discovery procedures will apply to any case with $250,000 or less in controversy (amended from $100,000). This also changes the Rule 47 pleading requirement.

— Rule 194 is amended to follow Fed. R. Civ. P. 26 and require initial disclosure of, among other matters,“all documents, electronically stored information, and tangible things that the responding party has in its possession, custody, or control, and may use to support its claims or defenses, unless the use would be solely for impeachment.”

Thanks to my LPHS colleague John Adams for his careful review of this order.

SCORTX podcast episodes. Yes, SCORTX!

While you are looking forward towards the Texas Supreme Court’s term starting up, you can look backwards at the work of the Supreme Court of the Republic of Texas in two episodes of my “Coale Mind” podcast:

The Liberty to Sell a Slave reviews an 1843 opinion that invalidated the sale of a slave because of (seriously) economic duress in the transaction, and —

The Case of the Missing Mule reviews another 1843 opinion, this time about the theft of Mr. Herbert’s mule by a Comanche raiding party, and considers how the principles in it helped shape the U.S. Supreme Court’s recent opinion about whether much of Eastern Oklahoma is an Indian reservation.

Voir dire – impermissible commitment?

This is a crosspost from 600 Commerce – while this is a Dallas Court of Appeals opinion, it is an important and uncommon interpretation of the Texas Supreme Court’s opinion in In re Commitment of Hill, and the Court of Criminal Appeals’ opinion in Standefer v. State.

In re Commitment of Barnes, No. 05-19-00702-CV (Aug. 5, 2020) (mem. op.), involved a challenge to a voir dire limitation. The trial was to determine whether Barnes should be civilly committed as a sexual predator. His counsel sought to ask these voir dire questions, which the trial court found to be improper “commitment” questions:

 “If you hear evidence of a pedophilic disorder diagnosis, if you hear evidence of child victims, are you going to automatically assume that the person has a behavioral abnormality as defined by what you hear in this case?”

– and –

“If you are presented with evidence by an expert that the diagnosis of a person is pedophilic disorder, are you going to automatically assume that that person has a condition that by [a]ffecting the emotional or volitional capacity predisposes the person to commit a sexually violent offense to the extent that they become a menace to the
health and safety of another person?

The Fifth Court found that this ruling was erroneous, but also no harm because, inter alia, a similar question was allowed: “If you hear evidence of child victims,
is that going to make it to where you turn everything off and don’t listen to the rest
of the facts and you are done? Anyone?”

To review the propriety of the question, the Court applied a 3-part test based on the Court of Criminal Appeals’ Standefer opinion:

  1. “[W]hether this is a commitment question, meaning one to which ‘one or more of the possible answers is that the prospective juror would resolve or refrain from resolving an issue in the case on the basis of one or more facts contained in the question.’” The Court held that it was, because “one answer is that the juror would automatically find a behavioral abnormality if the juror hears evidence of pedophilic disorder or child victims.”
  2. “[I]s this commitment question proper, meaning one of the possible answers gives rise to a valid challenge for cause. The Court held that it was, noting: “The law requires a ‘certain type of commitment from jurors’ in every trial, and that includes following the law.” From there, the Court held: “If a juror answered that she would stop listening to additional evidence regarding ‘behavioral abnormality’ after hearing a diagnosis of pedophilic disorder or hearing of prior child victims, that juror would be committing to not listening to all the evidence. It would not be a ‘fact-specific opinion,’ but rather evidence of a disqualifying and ‘improper subject-matter bias.'”
  3. “[D]oes the question contain ‘only those facts necessary to test whether a prospective juror is challengeable for cause.'” Here, where “[t]he subject matter of the case was child victims and a pedophilic disorder diagnosis,” the Court concluded: “The question added no more, especially in light of what the State had previously introduced to the venire, and thus contained only the facts necessary to test whether the juror is challengeable for cause.”