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Jury Service Reform
STATE
JURY REFORM EFFORTS
2009
Jury Service
Reform: H.B. 1686 (2009). Provides
that an individual at least 75 years of age may be exempted from jury duty if
the individual requests an exemption from jury duty.
2006
ARIZONA
Jury Service Reform: H.B.
2133 (2006); Amended A.R.S.
§ 21-222. Modifies key provisions of ALEC’s Jury Patriotism
Act that was adopted in 2003 to make jurors eligible to receive compensation
from the lengthy trial fund (up to $300 per day) for those who serve on juries
for more than five days. In such
circumstances, jurors would then receive additional compensation beginning from
the fourth day served.
INDIANA
Jury Service
Reform: S.B. 232 (2006); Amended Burns
Ind. Code
Ann. § 33-28-4-8 (repealed effective July 1, 2007). Provides a
one-time postponement to another date within one year upon a showing of
hardship, extreme inconvenience, or necessity.
Protects an individual called for jury service who provides reasonable
notice to his or her employer from being subjected to adverse employment
action. Prohibits employers from
requiring or requesting employees to use annual leave for jury service. In addition, the legislation eliminates
automatic postponement from jury service including those for ferry-keepers and
persons employed in attendance at such ferry, people age 65 and older,
government officials, legislators, armed services, veterinarians, dentists,
Indianapolis School Board members, and police and fire department members.
MISSISSIPPI
Jury Service
Reform: S.B. 2488 (2006); Amended Miss. Code Ann. § 13-5-23. Postpones
the enactment of the jury service portion of H.B. 13 (2004) until January 1,
2008.
2005
ALABAMA
Jury Service
Reform: SB 87 (special session) (2005). Provided
the right to one automatic postponement with the requirement that service be rescheduled within six months
of the original summons. Protected small
businesses (defined as having five or fewer full time employees) by requiring
the court to postpone and reschedule the service of an employee of a small
business if another employee of that employer is already serving. Limited the frequency of service to no more
than once every two years. Prohibited an
employer from taking any adverse employment action against an employee solely
because the person serves on a jury.
Clarified that employers may not require an employee to use annual,
vacation, or sick leave time for the period in which he or she leaves. Set stricter for prospective jurors to be
excused from service. Increased the
maximum fine for contempt for failure to appear from $100 to $300.
ARIZONA
Jury Service Reform: H.B.
2305 (2005); Amended A.R.S.
§ 21-202. Amends
criteria for prospective jurors to be excused from service by permitting a
person who is at least 75 years of age to have the option to be temporarily or
permanently excused from service.
Provides that a judge or jury commissioner may temporarily excuse a
prospective juror for good cause, such as a lack of transportation or absence
from the jurisdiction. Includes
technical changes to the statement required for verification of the medical
need for an excuse due to a mental or physical condition that makes the
prospective juror unfit for service.
MARYLAND
Jury Service Reform: H.B.
1185 (2005); HB 1185 (2005); Repealed Md. COURTS AND JUDICIAL PROCEEDINGS Code Ann. §
7-202(d), Md. COURTS AND JUDICIAL PROCEEDINGS
Code Ann. § 8-202(5)(i)1.C., Md.
COURTS AND JUDICIAL PROCEEDINGS Code Ann. § 8-207, Md.
COURTS AND JUDICIAL PROCEEDINGS Code Ann. § 8-209, Md. COURTS AND JUDICIAL PROCEEDINGS Code
Ann. § 8-210; Amended Md. COURTS AND JUDICIAL PROCEEDINGS Code Ann. § 8-105,
Enacted Md. COURTS AND JUDICIAL PROCEEDINGS Code Ann. § 8-106. Increases juror compensation from $15 to $50 per
day, after the fifth day of service.
Provided leave time protections for employees.
NEW MEXICO
Jury Service Reform: S.B. 240 (2005); Amended N.M. Stat. Ann. § 38-5-10.1; Amended N.M.
Stat. Ann. § 38-5-2; Amended N.M. Stat. Ann. § 38-5-3. Provides
for: automatic postponement, allowing summoned jurors to reschedule service
within six months of the original date; small business protections, allowing
jurors who work for employers with fewer than five employees to postpone
service if another employee is summoned within the same time period; leave time
protection; and an expansion of juror source lists to include income tax
filers. The legislation includes a
hardship standard, defining that an excused juror must demonstrate that
participating in their service would (1) be required to abandon another person
under the person's care or supervision due to the extreme difficulty of
obtaining an appropriate substitute caregiver during the period of jury
service; (2) incur costs that would have a substantial adverse impact on the
payment of necessary daily living expenses of the person or the person's
dependent; or (3) suffer physical hardship that would result in illness or
disease. Hardship would not exist solely because a prospective juror will be
absent from employment.
TEXAS
Jury Service Reform: S.B.
1704 (2005). Increases
juror pay in both civil and criminal cases from not less than $6 per day to not
less than $40 per day, beginning on the second day of service. The increased compensation is to be financed
by a $4 fee placed on individuals convicted of a crime. Provides prospective jurors with one
automatic postponement from service, in which case service must be rescheduled
within six months after the date of the original summons.
2004
COLORADO
Jury Service
Reform: H.B. 1159 (2004); Amended C.R.S. 13-71-104. Establishes stricter criteria for jurors to
be excused from services. Provides protections for small business by allowing
employees of small businesses to reschedule service if another employee from
the same firm already is serving on a jury.
MISSISSIPPI
Jury Service
Reform: H.B. 13 (special session) (2004); Amended Miss. Code Ann. §
13-5-23. Establishes
a lengthy trial fund to compensate jurors up to $300 per day, starting on the
eleventh day of service. In such circumstances,
jurors who can show hardship may also receive compensation of up to $100 per
day from the fourth through tenth days of service. Specifies circumstances under which jurors
may be excused from service. Provides
for penalties for those who fail to appear: fines up to $500 and/or three days
imprisonment, or alternatively community service.
MISSOURI
Jury Service
Reform: H.B. 1211 (2004); §
494.432 R.S.Mo. Provides for
stricter criteria for jurors to be excused from service. Allows one automatic postponement from
service. Specifies a maximum fine of
$500 for those who fail to appear for
jury service. Provides for employee
protections which prohibits employers from requiring employees to use personal
or sick leave for time spent responding to a summons for jury duty. Provides for small business protections which
required a court to reschedule the service of a summoned juror if the juror
works for an employer with five or fewer employees and has another employee
already summoned during the same period.
OHIO
Jury Service Reform: S.B. 71 (2004); Amended ORC Ann. 2313.12; ORC Ann. 2313.16; ORC Ann.
2313.18; ORC Ann. 2313.34; ORC Ann. 2313.251; ORC Ann. 2313.99. Provides
for one automatic postponement from service with the requirement that juror
must reschedule service within six months of the original summons. Sets stricter criteria to be excused from
service and allowed citizens 75 years of age or older to be excused upon
request. Prohibits employers from taking
any disciplinary action that could lead to the discharge of any permanent
employee due to absence from work for jury duty. Provides that employers may not require an
employee to use annual, vacation, or sick leave time for the time period of
service. Protected small business (with
twenty five or fewer full-time employees) by requiring the court to postpone
and reschedule the service of an employee of a small business if another
employee of that employer is summoned to jury service during the same
period. Reduces the maximum period of
availability for jury service from three weeks to two weeks. Provides for the establishment of an
electronic juror notification system (cellular telephone, pager, or other forms
of telecommunication) to alert the juror of the need to appear in person in
court during the period of availability provided in the juror summons. Eliminates the maximum permitted daily juror
compensation rate of $40. Provides the
Board of County Commissioners with authority to provide a higher rate of
compensation. Increases the minimum fine
for failure to appear for jury service from $25 to $100. The maximum $250 was unchanged by the new
law.
OKLAHOMA
Jury Service
Reform: S.B. 479 (2004). Provides
jurors the right to automatically postpone service one time. Reduced the length of service from a two-week
term to no more than one day unless selected to serve on a jury. Limits jury service to once every two
years. Creates a lengthy trial fund
which compensates jurors up to $200 per day, starting on the eleventh day of
service – the fund is to be financed by a $10 filing fee on all civil cases. Provides jurors employment protections by
prohibiting employers from penalizing jurors who serve. Provides small business protections by
allowing an employee of a small business to differ service if another employee
from the same firm is already serving in the same period. Increases penalties for no-shows.
2003
ARIZONA
Jury Service Reform: HB 2520 (2003); A.R.S. § 21-115; A.R.S. § 21-222; A.R.S. § 21-335;
A.R.S. § 21-336, A.R.S. § 21-336.01; amended A.R.S. § 21-202; A.R.S. § 21-236;
A.R.S. § 21-315; A.R.S. § 21-334; repealed A.R.S. § 21-115; A.R.S. § 21-222.
Requires
all people to serve on juries unless they experience undue or extreme physical
or financial hardship. Establishes a
lengthy trial fund from a modest filing fee to compensate jurors a minimum of
$40 and a maximum of $300 per juror, per day for trials lasting more than 10
days, starting on the eleventh day of trial.
In such circumstances, jurors would also be eligible to retroactively
collect at least $40 but not more than $100 per day from the fourth day to the
tenth day of service. Provides for
employee protection by prohibiting an employer to require an employee to use
annual or sick leave for the time spent in the jury service process. In addition, it prohibits employers to
dismiss or in any other way penalize employees for responding to a jury service
summons. Provides for protection of
small business owners by requiring the court to postpone the service of an
employee if another employee of that business is already serving on a jury. Allows for one automatic postponement from
service. Provides for jurors to serve no
more than one day unless selected to serve on a trial. Provides that a willful failure to appear for
jury duty is a Class 3 misdemeanor.
LOUISIANA
Jury Service
Reform: HB 2008 (2003); Amended
La. R.S. 13:3041; La.
R.S. 13:3042; La. R.S. 13:3044(c); La. R.S. 13:3106; La.
R.S. 23:965(A)(1); Enacted La.
R.S. 13:3042.1; La.
R.S. 13.3050. Requires all people to serve on juries unless
they experience undue or extreme physical or financial hardship. Establishes a lengthy trial fund to
compensate jurors up to $300 per juror, per day for trials lasting more than 10
days, starting on the eleventh day of trial.
In such circumstances, jurors would also be eligible to retroactively
collect up to $100 per day from the fourth day to the tenth day of
service. The bill did not specify a
financing mechanism, but tasked the Louisiana Supreme Court to develop
recommendations for the Legislature to consider at some point in the future. Prohibits employers from dismissing or
otherwise subjecting employees to any adverse employment action for responding
to a jury service summons. Allows for
one automatic postponement from service.
UTAH
Jury Service Reform: HB 324 (2003). Requires
all people to serve on juries unless they experience undue or extreme physical
or financial hardship or incur substantial costs or lost opportunities due to
missing an event that was scheduled prior to the initial notice of potential
jury service. Provides that a person who
fails to appear for jury duty is in contempt of court and subject to penalties
under Title 78, Chapter 32, Contempt.
Provides that a person who willfully misrepresents a material fact
regarding qualification for, excuse from, or postponement of jury service is
guilty of a class C misdemeanor.
Provides for employee protection by prohibiting an employer to require
an employee to use annual, vacation, or sick leave for the time spent in the
jury service process. In addition, it
prohibits employers to dismiss or in any other way penalize employees for
responding to a jury service summons.
1999
TEXAS
In 1999, the Texas Legislature adopted several
recommendations of the Texas Supreme Court’s Jury Task Force. These
reforms included increasing juror pay from $6 per day to a rate that varies based
on the length of jury service, establishing a uniform juror summons and
questionnaire form, exempting from jury service those who have served within
the past three years, and strengthening civil penalties and adding criminal
penalties against employers who fire or threaten employees for performing jury
duties.
1998
MARYLAND
In 1998, the Maryland Court of Appeals established the
Council on Jury Use and Management. The Council completed a study through
the work of three committees: Jury Pool and Summonsing Process; Quality of Jury
Experience; and Trial Procedures and Role of Jury. One of the Council’s
top recommendations was for the legislature to consider enactment of a law
requiring employers to compensate employees called for jury duty, paying the
difference between daily juror pay provided by the court and the normal daily
rate of compensation, with the employer obligation extending to a maximum of
three days. The Council also recommended various reforms to the court
system such as increasing juror comprehension and more actively involving
jurors in the trial, expanding juror sources lists, providing better
orientation of jurors before they report for duty, and offering jurors day care
services. It appears that the legislature has not yet adopted the Council’s
recommendations. Jurors continue to receive $15 per day from the state
for their service and counties may supplement the State per diem amount by
local ordinance. Employers may not fire employees for lost time due to
jury service, but are under no legal obligation to pay their employees for time
spent as jurors.
MISSISSIPPI
In 1988, Mississippi enacted HB 774, which removed
the exemption from jury service previously enjoyed by doctors and lawyers.
TENNESSEE
In 1998, the Tennessee Bar Association formed the Jury
Reform Commission. In its May 1999 report, the Commission recommended
that the legislature increase juror pay from $10 to $40 per day, plus parking
costs, with a cost of living adjustment. The Committee also recommended
that the legislature eliminate occupational and disability exemptions from jury
service, expand juror source lists, and adopt a one-day/one-trial model. The
report also included recommendations to the court system for various reforms to
improve juror comprehension such as juror note taking, juror questioning of
witnesses, juror notebooks, instructions at the beginning of trial, and written
jury instructions in civil cases. The court implemented many of the
reforms aimed at improving comprehension during a six-month pilot project
commencing in September of 2001. The court recently extended this pilot
project, which includes model jury instructions on notetaking
and juror questioning of witnesses, indefinitely.
Despite the Commission’s success in implementing jury trial
reforms, Tennessee
continues to have numerous professional exemptions, which provide members of
chosen professions with an automatic postponement of jury service not enjoyed
by others. These include all persons holding elected office; practicing
attorneys, certified public accountants, public accountants, physicians and
clergy; acting professors or teachers of any college, school or institution of
learning; members of fire companies and all full-time law enforcement officers;
persons over sixty-five (65) years of age, disabled by bodily infirmity or
specially exempted by any other positive law; pharmacists; persons not in the
full possession of the senses of hearing or seeing; and practicing registered
professional nurses upon written confirmation by the hospital administrator
that jury duty service would compromise patient care. Tennessee jurors also
continue to receive a mere $10 per diem fee. Tennessee law does, however, require
businesses with over five employees to pay their employees their regular wage,
minus the juror fee, during the entire period of jury service.
1996
DISTRICT
OF COLUMBIA
The Council for Court Excellence, a nonprofit organization,
established the D.C. Jury Project Planning Committee in April 1996. In
1998, the Council published its recommendations in “Juries for the Year 2000
and Beyond.” The District court system has implemented several of these
recommendations. It changed the jury selection process to have every
potential juror answer at least one question in open court and to provide
attorneys with more information about jurors so that they could make decisions
based on biases rather than appearance. The District also expanded and
improved the accuracy of its juror source lists; a change that has saved
thousands of dollars in postage for undeliverable summonses. The District’s
court system expanded communication with and education of jurors through a new
orientation video, handouts, and brochures. The court system has
encouraged judges to adopt various comprehension reforms through judicial
training such as allowing jurors to take notes, providing jurors with exhibit
notebooks in extended trials, permitting counsel to make interim summations,
and providing written jury instructions for the jury’s use in
deliberations.
Prior to the D.C. Jury Project, jurors received a $2
transportation fee and $30 per day for every day they are seated on a
jury. Thus, on the first day of trial, jurors received only a negligible
transportation fee. District of
Columbia law already required that businesses with
over ten employees pay employees their daily wage, minus the court fee, for up
to five days of service. However, the Council recognized that the
self-employed, unemployed, contract workers, and those who work for small
employers receive no compensation for the first day of service. The
Council, noting that the federal courts pay $40 per day for the first thirty
days of jury service and $50 thereafter, recommended that the District raise
the daily fee to at least cover the minimum cost of transportation. The
Council also recommended that jurors receive a lunch stipend on the first day.
In 1999, the Council had limited success when the District increased juror
travel pay from $2 to $4 per day. The District has not otherwise
increased juror fees or provided a lunch stipend.
COLORADO
In 1996, the Colorado Supreme Court established its
Committee on the Effective and Efficient Use of Juries using Arizona and California as its models. Based on the
Committee’s recommendations, the legislature eliminated occupation as a lawyer
as ground for challenge for cause in a criminal trial and developed a procedure
for insuring exemption from the jury pool after service. The Supreme
Court also implemented various comprehension reforms through rule changes,
judicial training, and court order. These include permitting juror
notebooks, allowing use of deposition summaries, instructing jurors that note
taking is permitted, and experimenting with pre-deliberative discussions through
a pilot program. Although the Committee developed legislation for
sanctioning those who do not respond to juror summonses, it does not appear
that the legislature enacted this proposal.
1995
CALIFORNIA
In 1995, the Chief Justice of the California Supreme Court
and the California Judicial Council, the research and policymaking body of the
court system, established a Blue Ribbon Commission on jury reform.
Several of the Commission’s recommendations involved universal service such as
providing mandatory procedures for enforcing jury summonses, increasing juror
fees, requiring all employers to continue paying usual compensation for the
first three days of jury service, developing tax credits for employers
continuing to pay employees during jury service, and providing a list of
factors judges should use when making the “good cause” determination. The
Judicial Council appears to have had limited success convincing the legislature
to implement its recommendations. In
2002, California trial courts adopted a one-day/one-trial system to lessen the
burden of service on jurors and the California Supreme Court amended California
Rules of Court 701 to strengthen standards for hardship excuses.
1993
Arizona
In 1993, Arizona became one of the first states to initiate
a major jury reform initiative when the Arizona Supreme Court established its
Committee on the More Effective Use of Juries. The Committee adopted 55
recommendations. Fifteen of these recommendations resulted in immediate
changes to the Supreme Court Rules. The implemented reforms primarily aim
to increase juror comprehension and involvement in trials. These reforms
include encouraging mini-opening statements prior to voir
dire, giving jurors copies of jury instructions, providing juror notebooks, allowing
jurors to ask questions, and allowing jurors to discuss the evidence among
themselves during civil trials. Arizona’s
reform is viewed as a model by other states. Arizona did not succeed,
however, in implementing universal service recommendations such as expanding
juror source lists, using follow-up procedures for non-respondents to jury
service, carefully monitoring deferral or excuses from service, and revising
statutory provisions for jury pay.
NEW YORK
In 1993, Chief Judge Judith Kaye established the Jury
Project, a statewide jury reform commission, in order to improve the response
rate to juror summonses, ensure more representative juror pools, and improve
the public’s understanding of jury service. Prior to its reform effort,
New York had 26 professional exemptions ranging from judges, lawyers,
physicians, and police officers to ministers, podiatrists, optometrists,
volunteer firefighters, and Christian Scientists. Remarkably, these exemptions excluded over
one million of New York’s citizens from the jury pool and contributed to a
shortage of jurors in the 1990s. At that
time, New York
courts only paid $15 per day to jurors for their service. In December
1995, the New York legislature passed a law expanding juror source lists,
eliminating all occupational disqualifications, eliminating all exemptions from
jury service, providing for one deferral of jury service as of right and a 800
number to reschedule, simplifying summons enforcement procedures, increasing
the juror fee to $40 and abolishing separate reimbursement for transportation
costs, requiring employers with over 10 employees to pay the juror-employee’s
fee for the first three days, and creating an ombudsman to administer and
enforce the law prohibiting employers from penalizing employees who miss work
because of jury service. The court also adopted various reforms to
increase juror comprehension and public education, and invested significant
resources to improve court facilities and services. Following New York’s reform, press
reports hailed the increased diversity of the jury pool and the greater
willingness of those summoned to serve.
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