Everything you need to know about ranked-choice voting in one spot.Click to learn more!

1st Multicounty Court at Law, Texas

From Ballotpedia
Local Courts
Trial-Courts-Ballotpedia.png
Trial courts and judges
Elections by state
Judicial selection by state
View courts by state:

Local Politics Image.jpg

Ballotpedia provides comprehensive election coverage of the100 largest cities in America by population as well as mayoral, city council, and district attorney election coverage in state capitals outside of the 100 largest cities. This page is outside of thatcoverage scope and does not receive scheduled updates.



The1st Multicounty Court at Law resides inTexas. Click on the links below to learn more about the court's...

Jurisdiction

For more information about judicial jurisdiction, clickhere.

Selection method

See also:Judicial selection in the states
See also:Partisan election of judges

Judges on theStatutory County Courts, also known as the County Courts at Law, are elected inpartisan elections at a county level. They serve four-year terms, with vacancies filled by a vote of the county commissioners.[1] The statutory county courts (county courts at law) were established by theTexas Legislature.[1]

To serve on this court, a judge must:

  • be at least 25 years old;
  • be a resident of his or her respective county for at least two years; and
  • have practiced law or served as a judge for at least four years preceding the election.[1]

Judicial elections in Texas

See also:Texas judicial elections

Texas is one of five states that usespartisan elections to select judges and does not useretention elections for subsequent terms. To read more about how states use judicial elections to select judges across the country,click here.

Primary election

Partisan primaries are held if even one candidate has filed for a position. To advance to the general election, a candidate must win a majority (over 50 percent) of the vote. If no candidate in a race wins the majority—as in cases where more than two candidates are competing for a seat—a runoff election is held between the top two candidates.[2][3]

Though Texas officially has closed primaries (requiring that voters declare party affiliation in advance in order to participate), the state's primaries arefunctionally open: registered voters may vote in any single party's primary if they have not voted in the primary of another party. The elections are closed, however, in that voters may not participate in the proceedings (a runoff primary or a convention) of another party thereafter.[2]

General election

The winning candidates from each major party's primary, as well as any additional minor party candidates, compete in a general election on the first Tuesday after the first Monday in November. If a candidate was unopposed in the general election, his or her name will still appear on the general election ballot.[2][4]

See also

External links

Footnotes


Flag of Texas
v  e
State ofTexas
Austin (capital)
Elections

What's on my ballot? |Elections in 2026 |How to vote |How to run for office |Ballot measures

Government

Who represents me? |U.S. President |U.S. Congress |Federal courts |State executives |State legislature |State and local courts |Counties |Cities |School districts |Public policy