Magistrate court (West Virginia)
In West Virginia, magistrate courts are non-lawyer small claims and petty crime courts, established to replace the justice of the peace system in 1976. There are at least two magistrates in every county, and ten in the largest county, Kanawha.[1] Magistrates have jurisdiction over civil cases in which the financial amount in dispute is less than five thousand dollars. They hear misdemeanor cases and conduct preliminary examinations in felony cases. In criminal cases they issue and record affidavits, complaints, arrest warrants, and search warrants, as well as set bail and make decisions concerning proposed plea agreements, the collection of courts costs, cash bonds, and fines. Magistrates issue emergency protective orders in cases involving domestic violence.
Magistrates were previously elected in partisan elections for four year terms in a form of "jungle election" with voters voting for whatever number of magistrates their county had in a single election. In 2015 the Legislature provided that future elections will be held on a non-partisan basis and will be by numbered divisions, so that a separate vote-for-one election will be held for each magistrate.[2] Magistrates are not lawyers, although there is nothing preventing a lawyer from running for the office, which has happened rarely. Magistrates are simply required to be high school graduates.
References
- ↑ "Kanawha County Court Information - West Virginia Judiciary". www.courtswv.gov. Retrieved 14 June 2017.
- ↑ webmaster@wvlegislature.gov. "West Virginia Code". www.legis.state.wv.us.