
H. B. 4462



(By Mr. Speaker, Mr. Kiss, and Delegates Staton, R. Thompson,
Amores, Trump and Campbell)



[Introduced February 12, 2002
; referred to the



Committee on the Judiciary then Finance.]
A BILL to repeal sections thirteen and thirteen-a, article
twenty-one, chapter twenty-nine of the code of West Virginia,
one thousand nine hundred thirty-one, as amended; and to amend
and reenact sections three, six, eight, nine, ten, eleven and
twelve of said article, all relating to the public defender
services; continuing the public defender services; creating
the indigent defense commission; specifying members and their
terms; transferring powers and duties of agency to the
executive director; authorizing the executive director to
reduce or reject vouchers; removal of public defender
corporation board members; activation of corporations;
permitting the employment of both full-time and part-time
attorneys; changing the manner of appointment of panel attorneys; removing the sections relating to public defender
corporations' funding; requiring corporations to submit
budget; amending funding contracts; payment of fees to panel
attorneys; requiring services provided to public defender
corporations; authorizing imposition of administrative service
fee on vouchers by executive director; and creating a special
revenue account for the fees.
Be it enacted by the Legislature of West Virginia:

That sections thirteen and thirteen-a, article twenty-one,
chapter twenty-nine of the code of West Virginia, one thousand nine
hundred thirty-one, as amended, be repealed; and that sections
three, six, eight, nine, ten, eleven and twelve of said article be
amended and reenacted, all to read as follows:
ARTICLE 21. PUBLIC DEFENDER SERVICES.
§29-21-3. Continuation of public defender services; establishment
of indigent defense commission; termination date.
(a) There is hereby created continued an executive agency
known as public defender services. The agency shall administer,
coordinate and evaluate programs by which the state provides legal
representation to indigent persons, monitor the progress of various
delivery systems and recommend improvements. The agency shall
maintain its office at the state capital.
(b)(1) There is hereby established the indigent defense
commission to advise the executive director with regard to the
general policies and procedures of the agency, including, but not
limited to, the opening of public defender offices throughout the
state and the establishment of performance measures for qualitative
review of indigent defense.
(2) The commission shall be composed of eight members who
shall be chosen with regard for their expertise in managing
law-related organizations or their expertise in fiscal and
personnel management. Members shall demonstrate a commitment to
the delivery of legal services to the indigent and shall be chosen
from as broad a geographic area as possible. In order to
demonstrate a collaborative approach to solving criminal justice
problems, the commission shall be constituted as follows:
(A) Two former or retired circuit judges to be appointed by
the president of the West Virginia judicial association, one of
whom previously presided in a circuit without an active public
defender corporation;
(B) One lawyer experienced in providing legal services to the
poor, to be appointed by the president of the West Virginia state
bar;
(C) One current chief public defender, to be appointed by the
executive director of public defender services;
(D) The director of the prosecuting attorneys institute, ex
officio;
(E) The administrative director to the supreme court of
appeals, ex officio; and
(F) Two nonlawyers with a demonstrated commitment to providing
legal services to the indigent, one to be appointed by the
president of the Senate and one to be appointed by the speaker of
the House of Delegates.
(3) Commission members shall serve for a term of four years,
to coincide with the term of the governor. Upon first meeting
after the beginning of a new gubernatorial term, the members shall
select one of their number to serve as chair for the duration of
the governor's term. Members may be reappointed for an unlimited
number of terms.
(4) The commission shall meet upon the call of either the
chair or the executive director, but shall meet no less than twice
a year. Members shall serve without compensation but may receive
reimbursement of reasonable and necessary expenses.
(5) Whenever the indigent defense commission casts a vote and the vote is a tie, the executive director is authorized to cast the
deciding vote.
(c) Pursuant to the provisions of article ten, chapter four of
this code, public defender services shall continue to exist until
the first day of July, two thousand two, unless sooner terminated,
continued or reestablished by act of the Legislature.
§29-21-6. Powers, duties and limitations.
(a) Consistent with the provisions of this article, the agency
executive director is authorized to make grants to and contracts
with public defender corporations and with individuals,
partnerships, firms, corporations and nonprofit organizations, for
the purpose of providing legal representation under this article,
and may make such any other grants and contracts as that are
necessary to carry out the purposes and provisions of this article.
(b) The agency executive director is authorized to accept, and
employ or dispose of in furtherance of the purposes of this
article, any money or property, real, personal or mixed, tangible
or intangible, received by gift, devise, bequest or otherwise.
(c) The agency executive director shall establish and the
executive director or his or her designee shall operate a criminal
law research center as provided for in section seven of this article. This center shall undertake directly, or by grant or
contract, to serve as a clearinghouse for information; to provide
training and technical assistance relating related to the delivery
of legal representation; and to engage in research, except that
broad general legal or policy research unrelated to direct
representation of eligible clients may not be undertaken.
(d) The agency shall establish and the executive director or
his or her designate designee shall operate an accounting and
auditing division to require and monitor the compliance with this
article by public defender corporations and other persons or
entities receiving funding or compensation from the agency. The
executive director may reduce or reject vouchers or requests for
payment submitted by panel attorneys appointed pursuant to section
nine of this article. This division The accounting and auditing
division shall review all plans and proposals for grants and
contracts and shall make a recommendation of approval or
disapproval to the executive director. The accounting and auditing
division shall prepare, or cause to be prepared, reports concerning
the evaluation, inspection or monitoring of public defender
corporations and other grantees, contractors, persons or entities
receiving financial assistance under this article, and shall further carry out the agency's responsibilities for records and
reports as set forth in section eighteen of this article.
The accounting and auditing division shall require each public
defender corporation to periodically submit financial statements
monthly and to report monthly on the billable and nonbillable time
of its professional employees, including time utilized used in
administration of the respective offices, so as to compare such the
time to similar time expended in nonpublic law offices for like
similar activities.
The accounting and auditing division shall provide to the
executive director assistance in the fiscal administration of all
of the agency's divisions. Such This assistance shall include, but
not be limited to, budget preparation and statistical analysis.
(e) The agency shall establish and the executive director or
a person designated by the executive director shall operate an
appellate advocacy division for the purpose of prosecuting
litigation on behalf of eligible clients in the supreme court of
appeals. The executive director or a person designated by the
executive director shall be the director of the appellate advocacy
division. The appellate advocacy division shall represent eligible
clients upon appointment by the circuit courts or by the supreme court of appeals. The division may, however, refuse such the
appointments due to a conflict of interest or if the executive
director has determined the existing caseload cannot be increased
without jeopardizing the appellate division's ability to provide
effective representation. In order to effectively and efficiently
utilize use the resources of the appellate division, the executive
director may restrict the provision of appellate representation to
certain types of cases.
The executive director is empowered to may select and employ
staff attorneys to perform the duties prescribed by this
subsection. The division shall maintain vouchers and records for
of representation of eligible clients for record purposes only.
(f) Notwithstanding any other provision of this code to the
contrary, the executive director may, after consultation with the
indigent defense commission, remove any board member of any
corporation, the existence of which is authorized by the provisions
of section eight of this article, upon a determination by the
executive director that this member has committed gross negligence
or gross malfeasance.
§29-21-8. Public defender corporations; establishment thereof.
(a) In each judicial circuit of the state there is hereby created a "public defender corporation" of the circuit. The
purpose of these public defender corporations is to provide legal
representation in the respective circuits in accordance with the
provisions of this article.
(b) If the judge of a single-judge circuit, the chief judge of
a multi-judge circuit or a majority of the active members of the
bar in the circuit determine executive director determines there is
a need to activate the any corporation, they shall certify that
fact in writing to the executive director the executive director
shall notify the chief judge of the circuit and the president of
each county bar association, if any. Following notification, the
executive director shall allocate funds to those corporations so
certifying in the order in which he or she deems considers most
efficient and cost effective.
A public defender corporation may be activated solely by the
indigent defense commission upon a finding supported by objective
evidence that effective representation of eligible indigent
defendants can be accomplished more effectively and economically by
the implementation of a public defender corporation.
(c) The executive director may require public defender
corporations may apply in writing to the executive director for permission to merge to form multicircuit or regional public
defender corporations where a merger would improve the quality of
services and efficient use of resources. Applications for mergers
shall be subject to the review procedures set forth in section
eleven of this article Public defender corporations may employ
both full-time and part-time attorneys in whatever combination may
be most cost effective. Public defender corporations may, when
cost effective, establish an office to accept appointments which
the primary office may not accept due to a conflict of interest.
§29-21-9. Panel attorneys.
(a) In each circuit of the state, the circuit court shall
establish and maintain regional and local panels of private
attorneys-at-law who shall be are available to serve as counsel for
eligible clients.
An attorney-at-law may become a panel attorney and be enrolled
on the regional or local panel, or both, to serve as counsel for
eligible clients by informing the court. An agreement to accept
cases generally or certain types of cases particularly shall may
not prevent a panel attorney from declining an appointment in a
specific case.
(b) In all cases where an attorney-at-law is required to be appointed for an eligible client, the appointment shall be made by
the circuit judge as follows:
(1) In circuits where a public defender office is in
operation, the judge shall appoint the public defender office
unless such an appointment is not appropriate due to a conflict of
interest or unless the public defender corporation board of
directors or the public defender, with the approval of the board,
has notified the court that the existing caseload cannot be
increased without jeopardizing the ability of defenders to provide
effective representation
;
(2) If the public defender office is not available for
appointment, the court shall appoint one or more permanent
part-time attorneys employed by the public defender corporation in
that circuit; panel attorneys from the local panel

(3) If there is no local panel permanent part-time attorney
available, the judge shall appoint one or more panel attorneys from
the regional panel circuit;
(4) If there is no regional local panel attorney available,
the judge may appoint a public defender office from an adjoining
circuit if such the public defender office agrees to the appointment;
(5) If the adjoining public defender office does not accept
the appointment, the judge may appoint a panel attorney from an
adjoining circuit; or
(6) If a panel attorney from an adjoining circuit is
unavailable, the judge may appoint a panel attorney from any
circuit.

In circuits where no public defender office is in operation,
the judge shall first refer to the local panel and then to the
regional panel in making appointments, and if an appointment cannot
be made from the panel attorneys, the judge may appoint the public
defender office of an adjoining circuit if the office agrees to the
appointment. In any circuit, when there is no public defender, or
assistant public defender, local panel attorney or regional panel
attorney available, the judge may appoint one or more qualified
private attorneys to provide representation, and such private
attorney or attorneys shall be treated as panel attorneys for that
specific case. In any given case, the appointing judge may alter
the order in which attorneys are appointed if the case requires
particular knowledge or experience on the part of the attorney to
be appointed.
§29-21-10. Public defender corporation funding; annual budgets;
funding; record keeping by public defender
corporations.
(a) On or before the first day of May of each year, every
public defender corporation shall submit to the executive director
a proposed budget for the next ensuing fiscal year. The accounting
and auditing division shall review all funding applications and the
executive director shall prepare recommendations for an operating
plan and annual budget for each public defender corporation. Upon
consultation with each corporation board, the executive director
shall execute a funding contract for the fiscal year and shall
commit funds for that purpose.
(b) Upon final approval of a funding application by the
executive director, the approved budget shall be set forth in an
approval notice. The total cost to the agency shall not exceed the
amount set forth in the approval notice and the agency may not be
obligated to reimburse the recipient for costs incurred in excess
of that amount unless and until a program modification has been
approved in accordance with the provisions of this article. At the
discretion of the executive director, when case loads rise or
unusual expenses occur, funding contracts may be amended during a
fiscal year when an amended contract is necessary to provide cost-effective representation.
(c) Funding of public defender corporations or other programs
or entities providing legal representation under the provisions of
this article shall be by annual grants disbursed in periodic
allotments that the executive director considers appropriate.
(d) All recipients of funding under this article shall
maintain the records required by the executive director.
§29-21-11. Compensation and expenses for panel attorneys.
(a) All panel attorneys shall maintain detailed and accurate
records of the time expended and expenses incurred on behalf of
eligible clients and upon completion of each case, exclusive of
appeal, shall submit to the appointing court a voucher for
services. Claims for fees and expense reimbursements shall be
submitted to the appointing court on forms approved by the
executive director after the first day of January, two thousand
two. Absent just cause, the executive director shall reject claims
for attorney services by public defender services received more
than one hundred eighty calendar days after the last date of
service.
The appointing court shall review the voucher to determine if
the time and expense claims are reasonable, necessary and valid and shall forward the voucher to the agency with an order approving
payment of the claimed amount or of a lesser sum the court
considers appropriate.
(b) Notwithstanding any other provision of this section to the
contrary, public defender services may pay by direct bill, prior to
the completion of the case, litigation expenses incurred by
attorneys appointed under this article.
(c) Notwithstanding any other provision of this section to the
contrary, a panel attorney may be compensated for services rendered
and reimbursed for expenses incurred prior to the completion of the
case where: (1) More than six months have expired since the
commencement of the panel attorney's representation in the case;
and (2) no prior payment of attorney fees has been made to the
panel attorney by public defender services during the case. The
executive director, in his or her discretion, may authorize
periodic payments where ongoing representation extends beyond six
months in duration. The amounts of any fees or expenses paid to
the panel attorney on an interim basis, when combined with any
amounts paid to the panel attorney at the conclusion of the case,
may not exceed the limitations on fees and expenses imposed by this
section.
(d) In each case in which a panel attorney provides legal
representation under this article and in each appeal after
conviction in circuit court, the panel attorney shall be
compensated at the following rates for actual and necessary time
expended for services performed and expenses incurred subsequent to
the effective date of this article:
(1) For attorney's work performed out of court, compensation
is at the rate of forty-five dollars per hour. For paralegal's
work performed out of court for the attorney, compensation is at
the rate of the paralegal's regular compensation on an hourly basis
or, if salaried, at the hourly rate of compensation which would
produce the paralegal's current salary, but in no event may the
compensation exceed twenty dollars per hour. Out-of-court work
includes, but is not limited to, interviews of clients or
witnesses, preparation of pleadings, prehearing or pretrial
research and all time spent waiting for hearings before judges,
magistrates, special masters or other judicial officers. Time
spent in travel may not be billed. Only travel expenses authorized
by rules promulgated pursuant to section eleven, article eight,
chapter twelve of this code may be allowed.
(2) For attorney's work performed in court, compensation shall be at the rate of sixty-five dollars per hour. No compensation for
paralegal's work performed in court may be allowed. In-court work
includes only time spent in hearing or trial before a judge,
magistrate, special master or other judicial officer.
(3) The maximum amount of compensation for out-of-court and
in-court work under this subsection is as follows: For proceedings
of any kind involving felonies for which a penalty of life
imprisonment may be imposed, the amount approved by the court; for
all other eligible proceedings, three thousand dollars unless the
court, for good cause shown, approves payment of a larger sum.
(e) Actual and necessary expenses incurred in providing legal
representation for proceedings of any kind involving felonies for
which a penalty of life imprisonment may be imposed, including, but
not limited to, expenses for travel, transcripts, salaried or
contracted investigative services and expert witnesses, shall be
reimbursed in an amount approved by the court. For all other
eligible proceedings, actual and necessary expenses incurred in
providing legal representation, including, but not limited to,
expenses for travel, transcripts, salaried or contracted
investigative services and expert witnesses, shall be reimbursed to
a maximum of fifteen hundred dollars unless the court, for good cause shown, approves reimbursement of a larger sum.
Expense vouchers shall specifically set forth the nature,
amount and purpose of expenses incurred and shall provide receipts,
invoices or other documentation required by the executive director
and the state auditor.
(1) (A) Reimbursement of expenses for production of
transcripts of proceedings reported by a court reporter is limited
to the cost per original page and per copy as set forth in section
four, article seven, chapter fifty-one of this code.
(B) (i) There may be no reimbursement of expenses for or
production of a transcript of a preliminary hearing before a
magistrate or juvenile referee, or of a magistrate court bench or
jury trial, where the preliminary hearing or jury trial has also
been recorded electronically in accordance with the provisions of
section eight, article five, chapter fifty of this code or court
rule.
(ii) Reimbursement of an appearance fee for a court reporter
who reports a proceeding other than one described in subparagraph
(i) of this paragraph, is limited to twenty-five dollars. Where a
transcript of a proceeding is produced, there may be no
reimbursement for the expense of any appearance fee.
(iii) There may be no reimbursement for hourly court
reporters' fees or fees for other time expended by the court
reporter, either at the proceeding or traveling to or from the
proceeding.
(C) Reimbursement of the cost of transcription of tapes
electronically recorded during preliminary hearings or magistrate
court jury trials is limited to one dollar per page.
(2) Reimbursement for any travel expense incurred in an
eligible proceeding is limited to the rates for the reimbursement
of travel expenses established by rules promulgated by the governor
pursuant to the provisions of section eleven, article eight,
chapter twelve of this code and administered by the secretary of
the department of administration pursuant to the provisions of
section forty-eight, article three, chapter five-a of this code.
(3) Reimbursement for investigative services is limited to a
rate of thirty dollars per hour for work performed by an
investigator.
(f) For purposes of compensation under this section, an appeal
from a final order of the circuit court, or a writ seeking an
extraordinary remedy made to the supreme court of appeals, is
considered a separate case. An appeal from magistrate court to circuit court is considered a separate case.
(g) Vouchers submitted under this section shall specifically
set forth the nature of the service rendered, the stage of
proceeding or type of hearing involved, the date and place the
service was rendered and the amount of time expended in each
instance. All time claimed on the vouchers shall be itemized to
the nearest tenth of an hour. If the charge against the eligible
client for which services were rendered is one of several charges
involving multiple warrants or indictments, the voucher shall
indicate that fact and sufficiently identify the several charges so
as to enable the court to avoid a duplication of compensation for
services rendered. The executive director shall refuse to
requisition payment for any voucher which is not in conformity with
the record keeping, compensation or other provisions of this
article, or of the voucher instructions issued pursuant to section
six of this article, and in that circumstance shall return the
voucher to the court or to the service provider for further review
or correction. The voucher instructions control all matters not
specifically covered in this article.
§29-21-12. Administrative service fee; special revenue account.
The executive director may impose an administrative service fee of five dollars for each voucher submitted. The fee may be
collected by discounting the payment due to the service provider.
The fee shall be deposited into a special revenue account to be
known as the "Public Services Administrative Fee Account" and shall
accrue solely to the benefit of public defender services.
NOTE: The purpose of this bill is to
create an indigent
defense commission to advise the executive director on policies and
procedures of public defender services. The bill gives the
executive director the authority to reduce or reject vouchers and
after consultation with the indigent defense commission may remove
certain board members of corporations for gross negligence or gross
malfeasance. The bill also allows the indigent defense commission
to activate a public defender corporation if the activation may be
accomplished effectively and economically. The bill authorizes the
employment of permanent part-time attorneys in addition to
full-time attorneys and it makes other procedural and technical
changes to the budgeting processes of public defender corporations'
and the public defender services voucher claim system. The bill
also changes the manner of appointment of panel attorneys and it
authorizes the imposition of administrative service fee five
dollars on submitted vouchers.
Strike-throughs indicate language that would be stricken from
the present law, and underscoring indicates new language that would
be added.
§§29-21-10, 11 and 12 have been completely rewritten,
therefore underscoring and strike-throughs are omitted from those
sections.
§§29-21-13 and 13a are repealed.



















