ENROLLED
H. B. 2893
(By Delegates Mahan, Kominar, Linch, Tillis,
Hutchins, White and Riggs)
[Passed April 12, 1997; in effect from passage.]
A BILL to amend and reenact section seventeen, article one, chapter
four of the code of West Virginia, one thousand nine hundred
thirty-one, as amended, relating to the priority of
legislative business for members and designated employees over
actions and matters pending before tribunals of the executive
and judicial branches.
Be it enacted by the Legislature of West Virginia:
That section seventeen, article one, chapter four of the code
of West Virginia, one thousand nine hundred thirty-one, as amended,
be amended and reenacted to read as follows:
ARTICLE 4. OFFICERS, MEMBERS AND EMPLOYEES; APPROPRIATIONS;
INVESTIGATIONS; DISPLAY OF FLAGS; RECORDS; USE OF CAPITOL BUILLDING; PREFILING OF BILLS AND
RESOLUTIONS; STANDING COMMITTEES; INTERIM MEETINGS; NEXT MEETING OF THE SENATE.
ยง4-1-17. Priority of legislative business for members and
designated employees.
(a) In accordance with the constitutional separation of powers
and principles of comity, it is the purpose of this section to
provide that members of the Legislature and certain designated
legislative employees are not required to attend to matters pending
before tribunals of the executive and judicial branches of
government when the timing of those matters may present conflicts
with the discharge of the public duties and responsibilities that
are incumbent upon members or employees of the Legislature. During
legislative sessions or meetings and for reasonable time periods
before and after, the judicial and executive branches should
refrain from requiring the personal presence and attention of a
legislator or designated employee who is engaged in conducting the
business of the Legislature.
(b) For the purposes of this section, the words or terms
defined in this subsection have the meanings ascribed to them.
These definitions are applicable unless a different meaning clearly
appears from the context.
(1) "Applicable time period" means and includes the following:
(A) The ten-day time period immediately before any regular or
extraordinary session of the Legislature;
(B) The time period during any regular or extraordinary
session of the Legislature;
(C) The thirty-day time period immediately following the
adjournment sine die of any regular or extraordinary session of the
Legislature;
(D) The four-day time period before any interim meetings of
any committee of the Legislature or before any party caucus;
(E) The time period during any interim meetings of the
Legislature or any party caucus; or
(F) The four-day time period following the conclusion of any
interim meetings of any committee of the Legislature or party
caucus.
(2) "Designated employee" means any legislative employee
designated in writing by the speaker of the West Virginia House of
Delegates to the clerk of the House of Delegates or by the
president of the West Virginia Senate to the clerk of the West
Virginia Senate to be necessary to the operation of the
Legislature, such that the legislative employee will be afforded
the protections of this section.
(3) "Member" means a member of the West Virginia House of
Delegates or the West Virginia Senate.
(4) "Tribunal" means a judicial or quasi-judicial entity of
the judicial or executive branch of government, or any legislative,
judicial or quasi-judicial entity of a political subdivision,
created or authorized under the CCconstitution or laws of this state.
(c) A notice filed with a tribunal pursuant to subsection (e) of this section operates as an automatic stay of a judicial or
administrative action or proceeding commenced before or after the
notice was filed. The automatic stay is in force for the
applicable time period or periods described in the notice, unless
it is otherwise waived in accordance with the provisions of
subsection (f) of this section. In the event a session or meeting
of the Legislature is extended, the notice may be amended to
reflect a longer applicable time period. The filing of the notice
and the automatic stay do not prohibit the commencement of an
action or proceeding, the issuance or employment of process, or
other preliminary procedures that do not require the presence or
personal attention of the member or designated employee.
(d) During any applicable time period, a member or designated
employee who does not otherwise consent to a waiver of the stay is
not required to do any of the following:
(1) Appear in any tribunal, whether as an attorney, party,
witness or juror;
(2) Respond in any tribunal to any complaint, petition,
pleading, notice or motion that would require a personal appearance
or the filing of a responsive pleading;
(3) File in any tribunal any brief, memorandum or motion;
(4) Respond to any motion for depositions upon oral
examination or written questions;
(5) Respond to any written interrogatories, request for production of documents or things, request for admissions or any
other discovery procedure, whether or not denominated as such; or
(6) Appear or respond to any other act or thing in the nature
of those described in subdivisions (1), (2), (3), (4) or (5) of
this subsection,; or
(7) Make any other appearance before a tribunal or attend to
any other matter pending in a tribunal that in the discretion of
the member or designated employee would inhibit the member or
designated employee in the exercise of the legislative duties and
responsibilities owed to the public.
(e) A member or designated employee who desires to exercise
the protections afforded by this section shall not be required to
appear in any tribunal to assert the protections. In all cases, it
shall be sufficient if the member or designated employee notifies
the tribunal in question orally or in writing, stating that he or
she is invoking the protections of this section, describing the
action, proceeding or act to be stayed, and further identifying the
applicable period or periods for which the notice will operate as
a stay. An oral communication with the tribunal shall be followed
by a written notice or facsimile transmission to the tribunal
mailed or transmitted no later than two business days after the
oral communication. From the time of the oral communication or the
mailing or transmission of the written notice, whichever is
earlier, the notice operates as a stay of all proceedings in the pending matter until the applicable time periods have passed and
expired.
(f) Notwithstanding the filing of a notice that operates as a
stay, a member or designated employee may later consent to waive the stay and make an appearance or attend to a matter that would
otherwise be stayed. However, a waiver as to a particular
appearance or act does not terminate, annul, modify or condition
the stay for any other purpose.
(g) The deference afforded by this section to members and
designated employees who are serving a client in a representative
capacity is also fully and completely extended to their clients, so
that no person whose representative before a tribunal is a member
or designated employee may be required, during any applicable time
period, to do anything that his or her representative is not
required to do under subsection (d) above.
(h) Unless the member or designated employee consents
thereto, no co-counsel, partner, associate, spouse or employee of
the member or designated employee may be required to make any
appearance or do any act during any applicable time period in the
place and stead of the member or designated employee.
(I) Any sentence, judgment, order, decree, finding, decision,
recommendation or award made contrary to the provisions of this
section in any action or proceeding in any tribunal, without the
consent of the member or designated employee, is void.