Section 71622 Of Article 2. Authority To Hire, Classification, And Compensation From California Government Code >> Title 8. >> Chapter 7. >> Article 2.
71622
. (a) Each trial court may establish and may appoint any
subordinate judicial officers that are deemed necessary for the
performance of subordinate judicial duties, as authorized by law to
be performed by subordinate judicial officers. However, the number
and type of subordinate judicial officers in a trial court shall be
subject to approval by the Judicial Council. Subordinate judicial
officers shall serve at the pleasure of the trial court.
(b) The appointment or termination of a subordinate judicial
officer shall be made by order of the presiding judge or another
judge or a committee to whom appointment or termination authority is
delegated by the court, and shall be entered in the minutes of the
court.
(c) The Judicial Council shall promulgate rules establishing the
minimum qualifications and training requirements for subordinate
judicial officers.
(d) The presiding judge of a superior court may cross-assign one
type of subordinate judicial officer to exercise all the powers and
perform all the duties authorized by law to be performed by another
type of subordinate judicial officer, but only if the person
cross-assigned satisfies the minimum qualifications and training
requirements for the new assignment established by the Judicial
Council pursuant to subdivision (c).
(e) The superior courts of two or more counties may appoint the
same person as court commissioner.
(f) As of the implementation date of this chapter, all persons who
were authorized to serve as subordinate judicial officers pursuant
to other provisions of law shall be authorized by this section to
serve as subordinate judicial officers at their existing salary rate,
which may be a percentage of the salary of a judicial officer.
(g) A subordinate judicial officer who has been duly appointed and
has thereafter retired from service may be assigned by a presiding
judge to perform subordinate judicial duties consistent with
subdivision (a). The retired subordinate judicial officer shall be
subject to the limits, if any, on postretirement service prescribed
by the Public Employees' Retirement System, the county
defined-benefit retirement system, as defined in subdivision (f) of
Section 71624, or any other defined-benefit retirement plan from
which the retired officer is receiving benefits. The retired
subordinate judicial officer shall be compensated by the assigning
court at a rate not to exceed 85 percent of the compensation of a
retired judge assigned to a superior court.