2/25 - State Bar
Transcription
2/25 - State Bar
February 25, 2015 • Volume 54, No. 8 Inside This Issue Table of Contents..................................................... 5 Call for Nominations: Annual Public Lawyer Award................................ 7 Update Your Contact Information for the 2015–2016 Bench & Bar Directory........................ 8 Clerk’s Certificates..................................................14 From the New Mexico Court of Appeals 2015-NMCA-005, No. 31,883: Lujan v. New Mexico Department of Transportation........................18 2015-NMCA-006, No. 32,988: Brown v. Kellogg................................................23 2015-NMCA-007, No. 31,787: State v. Green......................................................26 Color Prints 1 by Randall V. Biggers (see page 5) You’re Invited! Friday, February 27 4 p.m. CLE Planner March 6 The 30th Annual Bankruptcy Year in Review Seminar 6.0 G 1.0 EP also available via LIVE WEBCAST Friday, March 6, 2015 • 8:30 a.m.-5 p.m. State Bar Center Co-sponsor: Bankruptcy Law Section Standard fee: $275 • Bankruptcy Law Section members, government, legal service attorneys, and Paralegal Division members: $245 Webcast fee: $309 The seminar focuses on developments in case law on bankruptcy issues in 2014, both nationally and locally, with special emphasis on decisions by the U.S. Supreme Court, 10th Circuit Court of Appeals, 10th Circuit B.A.P. and U.S. Bankruptcy Court for the District of New Mexico. Also included are presentations by the Bankruptcy Judges for the District of New Mexico, the Assistant U.S. Trustee for the District of New Mexico, the Clerk of Court, and an ethics presentation. March 13 2015 Ethicspalooza 1.0-6.0 EP also available via LIVE WEBCAST This series of ethics courses taught by members of the Disciplinary Board of the New Mexico Supreme Court, Office of Disciplinary Counsel will provide concise, informative, practical and useful information for the ethical practice of law. Take one, two, three, four, five or all six. Friday, March 13, 2015 • State Bar Center, Albuquerque Registration will begin half an hour prior to each course. 9 a.m. 10 a.m. 10:15 a.m. 11:15 a.m. 11:30 a.m. 12:30 p.m. 1:30 p.m. 2:30 p.m. 2:45 p.m. 3:45 p.m. 4 p.m. 5 p.m. Ethically Managing Your Practice 1.0 EP Standard Fee: $38 Webcast Fee: $46 Christine Long, Esq. From how to confirm that new representation to how to orderly terminate representation and everything in between, this session will cover the daily challenges faced by lawyers trying to practice law and run a business. Break All Those Fees 1.0 EP Standard Fee: $38 Webcast Fee: $46 Jane Gagne, Esq. This session will discuss what is and is not a reasonable attorneys’ fee, whether you can charge flat fees, the prohibition against non-refundable fees, fee-splitting and contingency fee agreements. Break Proper Trust Accounting 1.0 EP Standard Fee: $38 Webcast Fee: $46 Ann Taylor, Esq. This “hands-on” session is designed to give participants a chance to learn about and demonstrate the proper management of a trust account, including ledger keeping and reconciliation and a discussion on the “dos and don’ts” of trust accounts. This session will also discuss the proper way to handle clients’ non-cash property. Lunch (provided at the State Bar Center) Conflicts of Interest 1.0 EP Standard Fee: $38 Webcast Fee: $46 William Slease, Esq., Chief Disciplinary Counsel How to recognize them, how to avoid them and what to do when you wake up in the middle of one; this session will cover the common conflicts that arise in practice. Break The Ethics of Social Media Use 1.0 EP Standard Fee: $38 Webcast Fee: $46 William Slease, Esq. Facebook, Twitter and G-Chats, oh my! In this session learn about the growing need to use social media in your law practice and the ethical issues associated with that use. Break Civility and Professionalism 1.0 EP Standard Fee: $38 Webcast Fee: $46 William Slease, Esq. How do and should lawyers treat one another, the Courts, their opposing parties and their own clients? This session will discuss a growing concern about incivility and unprofessionalism in the profession, whether and when such behavior violates the Rules of Professional Conduct, and what can and is being done to address the issues. Adjournment Register online at www.nmbar.org or call 505-797-6020. CENTER FOR LEGAL EDUCATION 2 Bar Bulletin - February 25, 2015 - Volume 54, No. 8 BRISTOL FAMILY LAW CELEBRATING 3 YEARS James Bristol is a Board Certified Family Law Specialist, has an AV Preeminent rating with Martindale-Hubbel, and is a Fellow in the American Academy of Matrimonial Lawyers. Looking forward to serving our Santa Fe and Northern New Mexico clients now and in the years to come. Bristol Family Law, LLC 339 W. Manhattan Ave. Santa Fe, NM 87501 Phone: 505.992.3456 Fax: 505.847.4944 bristolfamilylawfirm.com Ryan Heffernan Bar Bulletin - February 25, 2015 - Volume 54, No. 8 3 You’re Invited! The State Bar is proud of the tremendous dedication and service that our membership has given to the legal profession and the public. We hope you will join us for this important celebration. Chief Justice Barbara J. Vigil will address attendees. Martha Chicoski, President, will honor attorneys celebrating 25 and 50 years of service. What: State Bar of New Mexico’s 129th Birthday Where: State Bar Center, 5121 Masthead NE, Albuquerque, NM When: 4 p.m., February 27 For more information or to R.S.V.P., contact Evann Kleinschmidt, [email protected]. 4 Bar Bulletin - February 25, 2015 - Volume 54, No. 8 Table of Contents Officers, Board of Bar Commissioners Mary Martha Chicoski, President J. Brent Moore, President-Elect Scotty A. Holloman, Vice President Dustin K. Hunter, Secretary-Treasurer Erika E. Anderson, Immediate Past President Board of Editors Jamshid Askar Nicole L. Banks Alex Cotoia Kristin J. Dalton Curtis Hayes Bruce Herr Maureen S. Moore Andrew Sefzik Mark Standridge Carolyn Wolf State Bar Staff Executive Director Joe Conte Managing Editor D.D. Wolohan 505-797-6039 • [email protected] Communications Coordinator Evann Kleinschmidt 505-797-6087 • [email protected] Graphic Designer Julie Schwartz [email protected] Account Executive Marcia C. Ulibarri 505-797-6058 • [email protected] Digital Print Center Manager Brian Sanchez Assistant Michael Rizzo ©2015, State Bar of New Mexico. No part of this publication may be reprinted or otherwise reproduced without the publisher’s written permission. The Bar Bulletin has the authority to edit letters and materials submitted for publication. Publishing and editorial decisions are based on the quality of writing, the timeliness of the article, and the potential interest to readers. Appearance of an article, editorial, feature, column, advertisement or photograph in the Bar Bulletin does not constitute an endorsement by the Bar Bulletin or the State Bar of New Mexico. The views expressed are those of the authors, who are solely responsible for the accuracy of their citations and quotations. State Bar members receive the Bar Bulletin as part of their annual dues. The Bar Bulletin is available at the subscription rate of $125 per year and is available online at www.nmbar.org. The Bar Bulletin (ISSN 1062-6611) is published weekly by the State Bar of New Mexico, 5121 Masthead NE, Albuquerque, NM 87109-4367. Periodicals postage paid at Albuquerque, NM. Postmaster: Send address changes to Bar Bulletin, PO Box 92860, Albuquerque, NM 87199-2860. 505-797-6000 • 800-876-6227 • Fax: 505-828-3765 E-mail: [email protected]. • www.nmbar.org February 25, 2015, Vol. 54, No. 8 Notices .................................................................................................................................................................6 Legal Education Calendar..............................................................................................................................9 Writs of Certiorari .......................................................................................................................................... 11 Court of Appeals Opinions List.................................................................................................................. 13 Clerk’s Certificates.......................................................................................................................................... 14 Recent Rule-Making Activity...................................................................................................................... 17 Opinions From the New Mexico Court of Appeals 2015-NMCA-005, No. 31,883: Lujan v. New Mexico Department of Transportation............................................................... 18 2015-NMCA-006, No. 32,988: Brown v. Kellogg......................................................................... 23 2015-NMCA-007, No. 31,787: State v. Green............................................................................... 26 Advertising....................................................................................................................................................... 31 Meetings State Bar Workshops February February 26 Natural Resources, Energy, and Environmental Section BOD, Noon, via teleconference 25 Consumer Debt/Bankruptcy Workshop 6 p.m., State Bar Center 27 Immigration Law Section BOD, Noon, via teleconference 26 Consumer Debt/Bankruptcy Workshop 5:30 p.m., The Law Office of Kenneth Egan, Las Cruces March March 3 Bankruptcy Law Section BOD, Noon, U.S. Bankruptcy Court 4 Divorce Options Workshop 6 p.m., State Bar Center 3 Health Law Section BOD, 7 a.m., via teleconference 4 Civil Legal Fair 10 a.m.–1 p.m., Second Judicial District Court, Third Floor Conference Room, Albuquerque 4 Employment and Labor Law Section BOD, Noon, State Bar Center 11 Children’s Law Section BOD, Noon, Juvenile Justice Center 6 Civil Legal Fair 10 a.m.–1 p.m., First Judicial District Court, First Floor Jury Room, Santa Fe 11 Taxation Section BOD, 11 a.m., via teleconference 25 Consumer Debt/Bankruptcy Workshop 6 p.m., State Bar Center 12 Business Law Section BOD, 4 p.m., via teleconference 28 Consumer Debt/Bankruptcy Workshop 9 a.m., The Law Office of Kenneth Egan, Las Cruces Cover Artist: Randall V. Biggers was born in Roswell. He is a returned Peace Corps volunteer (Afghanistan ’74–’76) who served for 21 years in the foreign service. He has been actively painting for the past 10 years. The majority of his work is non-objective. In addition to painting with acrylics, Biggers makes collages and shoots photography. To schedule a private viewing, email [email protected] or call 505-366-3525. Bar Bulletin - February 25, 2015 - Volume 54, No. 8 5 Notices Court News Supreme Court of New Mexico Notice of Vacancies on Supreme Court Committees The Supreme Court of New Mexico is seeking applications to fill vacancies on the following Supreme Court committees: •Children’s Court Rules Committee: One vacancy for a newly created position designated at this time for a children’s court attorney who represents the state in delinquency and youthful offender proceedings • Domestic Relations Rules Committee (one vacancy) •Joint Committee on Rules of Procedure (one vacancy) •Minimum Continuing Legal Education Board (one vacancy) Unless otherwise noted, all licensed New Mexico attorneys are eligible to apply. Anyone interested in volunteering to serve on one or more of these committees may apply by sending a letter of interest and résumé by mail to Joey D. Moya, Chief Clerk, PO Box 848, Santa Fe, NM 875040848, by fax to 505-827-4837, or by email to [email protected]. The letter of interest should describe the applicant’s qualifications and should list committees in order of preference if applying to more than one committee. The deadline for applications is Feb. 27. 11th Judicial District Court Notice of Mass Reassignment to Judge Dalley Under the authority of Rule 23-109 NMRA, the Chief Judge of the 11th Judicial District Court has directed a mass reassignment of all family, probate/mental health cases, with the exception of abuse and neglect cases, effective Feb. 2 from Division VIII to Division I, Bradford J. Dalley, presiding. Pursuant to Rule 1-088.1 NMRA, parties who have not yet exercised a peremptory excusal in a case being reassigned in this mass reassignment will have 10 business days from Feb. 25 to excuse Judge Dalley. Magistrate Mediation Program Mediators Needed: Advanced Training Offered A 10-hour advanced mediation training and continuing professional development is being offered to recruit mediators for the 6 Professionalism Tip With respect to opposing parties and their counsel: I will consult with opposing counsel before scheduling depositions and meetings or before rescheduling hearings. Bernalillo, Los Lunas, and Belen Magistrate Courts. A 40-hour mediation training in the facilitative model is a prerequisite. The training by the ADR Bureau, State Risk Management, qualifies. Mediation experience is preferred and facilitative mediation will be used. This initiative’s goal is to increase mediation in the tri-county area of Sandoval, Bernalillo, and Valencia counties by building upon the experience and expertise of existing Magistrate Court Programs, the Metropolitan Court Mediation Program and area mediators. Opportunities for mediators will include gaining mediation experience and opportunities for on-going professional development. The training will include “back to basics,” advanced techniques, court procedure, and new rules regarding court-connected mediation and best practices. There will be other opportunities, including a 40-hour basic training. Magistrate Mediation Programs are planned throughout the state. By law, Magistrate Court mediators must be volunteers. This training does not include MCLE credit, which will be explored for future trainings. There is no fee for the training. In return and to complete the training experience, the participants will mediate cases in the Bernalillo, Los Lunas, and Belen Magistrate Courts. The requirement is 12 mediations of approximately two hours per mediation. Space is limited. The trainings are 8:30 a.m. to 5 p.m. on Friday, March 20, and 9 a.m. to noon on Saturday, March 21, at the State Bar Center. Application deadline is 5 p.m., February 27. Applicants will be notified of application results on March 6. To apply or for information, contact David Levin, Mediation Project Manager, Magistrate Mediation Program, 2905 Rodeo Park Dr. East, Building 5, Santa Fe NM 87505, aocdpl@ nmcourts.gov, phone 505-463-1354 or fax 505-827-4464. U.S. District Court for the District of New Mexico Attorney Federal Bar Dues With the concurrence of the Article III judges of the U.S. District Court for Bar Bulletin - February 25, 2015 - Volume 54, No. 8 the District of New Mexico, the Federal Bar dues have been set at $25 for 2015. Bar dues may be paid online via CM/ ECF. For more information regarding paying Bar dues, visit www.nmcourt.fed. us. State Bar News Attorney Support Groups • March 2, 5:30 p.m. First United Methodist Church, 4th and Lead SW, Albuquerque (The group meets the first Monday of the month.) • March 9, 5:30 p.m. UNM School of Law, 1117 Stanford NE, Albuquerque, Room 1119 (The group meets the second Monday of the month.) • March 16, 7:30 a.m. First United Methodist Church, 4th and Lead SW, Albuquerque (The group meets the third Monday of the month.) For more information, contact Hilary Noskin, 505-449-7984 or Bill Stratvert, 505-242-6845. Appellate Practice Section Brown Bag Lunch with Judge Michael D. Bustamante The Appellate Practice Section and the Young Lawyers Division invite members of the legal community to a noon lunch discussion with Appellate Court Judge Michael D. Bustamante on March 13 at the State Bar Center. These brown bag lunches in an informal setting are beneficial to lawyers and judges alike. Space is limited, so R.S.V.P. to Dolph Barnhouse at [email protected] by March 12. Judge Bustamante, a native New Mexican, graduated from the University of New Mexico in 1971 with a degree in Economics and American Studies. He received his law degree from UNM in 1974, and has been serving the New Mexico Court of Appeals as a judge since his election in December 1994. Before that, he was in private practice with Ortega and Snead, P.A., and its predecessor from 1974 until 1990, when he went into solo practice. His work as an attorney included a broad range of civil matters. He has served on the Board of Bar Examiners; the Disciplinary Board; the Bench, Bar Relations Committee of the Supreme Court; and the Judicial Information Systems Council. Public Law Section Accepting Nominations for Annual Public Lawyer Award The Public Law Section is accepting nominations for the Public Lawyer of the Year Award, which will be presented at the state capitol on May 1. Visit http:// www.nmbar.org/Nmstatebar/About_Us/ Public_L aw/L awyer_of_the_Year_ Awards.aspx to view previous recipients and award criteria. Nominations are due no later than 5 p.m. on March 2. Send nominations to James Martin, 105 Pine St., Santa Fe, NM 87501, or email [email protected]. The selection committee will consider all nominated candidates and may nominate candidates on its own. Young Lawyers Division Board Vacancies The YLD Board is seeking two regional directors for its board: Region 1, representing San Juan and McKinley counties; and Region 3, representing the greater Roswell area/southeastern New Mexico. Among the duties include attending board meetings by phone or in person, and attending and organizing YLD events in your community. Principal place of practice must be in the region applicants would represent. Residency in the region is not required. Send letters of interest and résumé to YLD Chair Ken Stalter, [email protected], by March 2. For more information, contact D.D. Wolohan, [email protected]. UNM The Federalist Society Right To Work Event The Federalist Society and Business Law Society, student organizations at the UNM School of Law, present “Right to Work Laws: Compulsory Unionism and Collective Bargaining” featuring Mark Mix from the National Right to Work Legal Defense Foundation and Fred Mowrer, an attorney with Sanchez, Mowrer & Desiderio PC. The event will be held 11:50 a.m.–1 p.m., March 4, at the UNM School of Law, Room 2401. For more information, contact Curtis Vernon, [email protected]. Law Library Hours Through May 9 Building & Circulation Monday–Thursday Friday Saturday Sunday Reference Monday–Friday Librarian on call Saturday–Sunday 8 a.m.–10 p.m. 8 a.m.–6 p.m. 8 a.m.–5 p.m. Noon–8 p.m. 9 a.m.–6 p.m. 3–6 p.m. Closed Women’s Law Caucus 2015 Justice Mary Walters Award Dinner Join the Women’s Law Caucus to honor Heidi Nesbitt of the American Indian Law Center and Hon. Anne Kass for the efforts they have made for New Mexico. The Justice Mary Walters Award dinner will be held at 6 p.m., Feb. 27, at the University of New Mexico School of Law. Tickets are $55 per person or $400 for a table of eight. To purchase tickets or for sponsorship information, visit http://lawschool. unm.edu/students/organizations/wlc/. Make checks payable to the Women’s Law Caucus and send to 1117 Stanford Drive NE, Albuquerque, NM 87106. For more information, contact Donna Baslee, [email protected], or Elizabeth Reitzel, [email protected]. Other Bars Albuquerque Bar Association Membership Luncheon Bill Slease will present “Disciplinary Board Issues and Trends” at the Albuquerque Bar Association’s membership luncheon at noon, March 3, at the Embassy Suites Hotel. After the luncheon there will be a CLE “Top 10 Reasons Lawyers are Sued” (2.0 G) from 1:15–3:15 p.m. For more information or to register, visit www. abqbar.org. Albuquerque Lawyers Club March Lunch Meeting The Albuquerque Lawyers Club invites members of the legal community to its monthly lunch meeting. The next meeting will be held on at noon, March 4, at Seasons Restaurant in Albuquerque. U.S. District Court Judge James Browning will be the featured speaker. Cost: Free to members, $30 non-members. For more information, contact Yasmin Dennig at [email protected] or 505-844-3558. Bridge the Gap Mentorship Program This mandatory program approved by the N.M. Supreme Court offers new lawyers a highly experienced attorney member to teach real-world aspects of practice. Both earn a full year of CLE credits. For more information, call 505-797-6003. CLE Opportunity: Practicing Transformative Law The Albuquerque Lawyers Club and the Women’s Bar Association present a CLE “Is It Just About the Money? Practicing Transformative Law” (3.0 EP, pending MCLE approval) from 11 a.m.–2:30 p.m., March 13, at Seasons Rotisserie & Grill in Albuquerque. Speakers include Randi McGinn, author of Changing Laws, Saving Lives, Justice Edward L. Chávez, Yasmin Dennig and Rochelle Lari. The cost of the program is $125 (includes lunch). Participants may purchase the book Changing Laws, Saving Lives at a $10 discount upon registration. Members of either organization will receive a $25 discount. Space is limited so registration is required. Email Barbara Koenig at [email protected] to receive a registration form and for more information. New Mexico Lawyers and Judges Assistance Program Help and support are only a phone call away. 24-Hour Helpline Attorneys/Law Students 505-228-1948 • 800-860-4914 Judges 888-502-1289 www.nmbar.org/JLAP/JLAP.html Bar Bulletin - February 25, 2015 - Volume 54, No. 8 7 New Mexico Criminal Defense Lawyers Association Trial Skills College Need to brush up on your trial tactics? Several of New Mexico’s top trial lawyers have teamed up again this year for the New Mexico Criminal Defense Lawyers Association’s Trial Skills College on March 27–28 in Albuquerque. A two-day course of lectures, small group practice and video review aspects of a trial from voir dire to closing statements. Whether you’re a new lawyer, or need to brush up on your expertise, everyone is bound to learn something new. The CLE provides a total of 14.5 general CLE credits. There are only 36 seats available, so don’t wait to register. Visit www.nmcdla.org for more details. Other News New Mexico Foundation for Open Government Save the Date! CLE Opportunity Registration is open for the New Mexico Foundation for Open Government’s May 1 seminar on public records and open meetings laws (5.0 G, 1.0 EP, pending MCLE approval). The program will be held at the Albuquerque Journal Building in Journal Center. For more information, visit http://myemail.constantcontact.com/ New-Mexico-Foundation-for-OpenGovernment-CLE-May-1.html?soid=110 3244704435&aid=SLB8YrkY_j0. Join the New Mexico Hispanic Bar Association for a meet and greet and ethics CLE on Feb. 25 in Santa Fe. Supreme Court Justice Edward L. Chávez and Court of Appeals Judge Timothy L. Garcia will present “Tips for Achieving an Ethical and Professional Practice,” (1.0 EP) at 4 p.m. at the Inn of the Governors. A meet-andgreet event will follow from 5–7 p.m. at the Del Charro Saloon with hosted appetizers. For more information or to register, visit www.nmhba.net. 8 Enhanced Oil Recovery Institute The State Bar is co-sponsoring the Special Institute on Enhanced Oil Recovery: Legal Framework for Sustainable Management of Mature Oil Fields, May 7–8 in San Antonio, Texas, with the Rocky Mountain Mineral Law Foundation. State Bar members may register for this program at the discounted rate. For a detailed program brochure, online registration and information about discounted hotel rooms at the Westin Riverwalk Hotel, visit www.rmmlf. org. Comprehensive course materials will be provided to all registrants. 2015–2016 Bench & Bar Directory New Mexico Hispanic Bar Association Santa Fe Meet and Greet and CLE Rocky Mountain Mineral Law Foundation Update Your Contact Information by March 27 To verify your current information: Visit www.nmbar.org. Click on Find an Attorney and search by name. To submit changes: Online: Visit www.nmbar.org > for Members > Change of Address Mail: Address Changes, PO Box 92860, Albuquerque, NM 87199-2860 Fax: 505-828-3765 Email: [email protected] Publication is not guaranteed for information submitted after March 27. Bar Bulletin - February 25, 2015 - Volume 54, No. 8 Legal Education March 3 Estate Planning for Farms and Ranches 1.0 G National Teleseminar Center for Legal Education of NMSBF 505-797-6020 www.nmbar.org 10 Ethics and Professionalism: Advice from the Bench and Bar (2014) 2.0 EP Video Replay Center for Legal Education of NMSBF 505-797-6020 www.nmbar.org 2015 Ethicspalooza: The Ethics of Social Media Use 1.0 EP Live Seminar and Webcast Center for Legal Education of NMSBF 505-797-6020 www.nmbar.org 5 Spotting & Preventing Fraud in Real Estate Transactions 1.0 G National Teleseminar Center for Legal Education of NMSBF 505-797-6020 www.nmbar.org 10 Reviewing and Drafting IT Agreements 1.0 G National Teleseminar Center for Legal Education of NMSBF 505-797-6020 www.nmbar.org 13 6 The 30th Annual Bankruptcy Year in Review Seminar 6.0 G, 1.0 EP Live Seminar and Webcast Center for Legal Education of NMSBF 505-797-6020 www.nmbar.org 12 Ethical Issues When Representing the Elderly 1.0 EP National Teleseminar Center for Legal Education of NMSBF 505-797-6020 www.nmbar.org 17-18 Fundamentals of Securities Law, Parts 1–2 2.0 G National Teleseminar Center for Legal Education of NMSBF 505-797-6020 www.nmbar.org 10 Oil and Gas: From the Basics to an In-Depth Study (2014) 6.0 G, 1.0 EP Video Replay Center for Legal Education of NMSBF 505-797-6020 www.nmbar.org 13 2015 Ethicspalooza: Ethically Managing Your Practice 1.0 EP Live Seminar and Webcast Center for Legal Education of NMSBF 505-797-6020 www.nmbar.org 20 10 13 2015 Ethicspalooza: All Those Fees 1.0 EP Live Seminar and Webcast Center for Legal Education of NMSBF 505-797-6020 www.nmbar.org 23 Ethics for Transactional Lawyers 1.0 EP National Teleseminar Center for Legal Education of NMSBF 505-797-6020 www.nmbar.org 13 24 2014 Employment and Labor Law Institute 4.5 G, 1.5 EP Video Replay Center for Legal Education of NMSBF 505-797-6020 www.nmbar.org 10 New Mexico Constitution—Current Issues (2014) 2.0 G Video Replay Center for Legal Education of NMSBF 505-797-6020 www.nmbar.org 10 Don’t Call Saul: ‘Breaking Bad’ Ethics (2014 Annual Meeting) 1.0 EP Video Replay Center for Legal Education of NMSBF 505-797-6020 www.nmbar.org 2015 Ethicspalooza: Proper Trust Accounting 1.0 EP Live Seminar and Webcast Center for Legal Education of NMSBF 505-797-6020 www.nmbar.org 13 2015 Ethicspalooza: Conflicts of Interest 1.0 EP Live Seminar and Webcast Center for Legal Education of NMSBF 505-797-6020 www.nmbar.org 13 2015 Ethicspalooza: Civility and Professionalism 1.0 EP Live Seminar and Webcast Center for Legal Education of NMSBF 505-797-6020 www.nmbar.org The Impact of the Legal System on People of Color 5.5 G, 1.0 EP Live Seminar and Webcast Center for Legal Education of NMSBF 505-797-6020 www.nmbar.org Internet Investigative/Legal Research on a Budget and Legal Tech Tips (2014) 6.0 G Video Replay Center for Legal Education of NMSBF 505-797-6020 www.nmbar.org 24 Medical Malpractice Review Before the New Mexico Medical Review Commission (2014) 2.0 G, 3.0 EP Video Replay Center for Legal Education of NMSBF 505-797-6020 www.nmbar.org Bar Bulletin - February 25, 2015 - Volume 54, No. 8 9 Legal Education www.nmbar.org March 24 Nonprofit Corporations Compliance (2014) 3.5 G Video Replay Center for Legal Education of NMSBF 505-797-6020 www.nmbar.org 24 Mock Meeting of the Ethics Advisory Committee (2014) 2.0 EP Video Replay Center for Legal Education of NMSBF 505-797-6020 www.nmbar.org 24-25 Sub-leasing & Assignments, Parts 1–2 2.0 G National Teleseminar Center for Legal Education of NMSBF 505-797-6020 www.nmbar.org 26 2015 Solo and Small Firm Institute: Law Practice Management 3.0 G, 4.0 EP Live Seminar and Webcast Center for Legal Education of NMSBF 505-797-6020 www.nmbar.org 27 2015’s Best Law Office Technology, Software and Tools—Improve Client Service, Increase Speed and Lower Your Costs 4.8 G, 1.2 EP Live Seminar and Webcast Center for Legal Education of NMSBF 505-797-6020 www.nmbar.org 27–28 Trial Skills College 14.5 G Albuquerque New Mexico Criminal Defense Lawyers Association 505-992-0050 www.nmcdla.org 30 Fire in the Hole: What’s Exploding in New Mexico Mining Law (2014) 5.5 G, 1.0 EP Video Replay Center for Legal Education of NMSBF 505-797-6020 www.nmbar.org 30 How to Become a Rock Star Lawyer, the Ethical Way (2014) 2.0 EP Video Replay Center for Legal Education of NMSBF 505-797-6020 www.nmbar.org 30 VAWA 2013 and Tribal Jurisdiction Over Crimes of Domestic Violence (2014) 3.2 G Video Replay Center for Legal Education of NMSBF 505-797-6020 www.nmbar.org 31 Exempt v. Non-exempt: Overtime & Employer Liability in the Workplace 1.0 G National Teleseminar Center for Legal Education of NMSBF 505-797-6020 www.nmbar.org 30 2014 Intellectual Property Law Institute 5.0 G, 1.0 EP Video Replay Center for Legal Education of NMSBF 505-797-6020 www.nmbar.org April 1 Innocent & injured Spouse Defenses to Joint Tax Liability 1.0 G National Teleseminar Center for Legal Education of NMSBF 505-797-6020 www.nmbar.org 14 Skeptically Determining the Limits of Scientific Evidence V (2014) 5.0 G, 1.5 EP Video Replay Center for Legal Education of NMSBF 505-797-6020 www.nmbar.org Construction Lien Law in New Mexico (2014) 3.0 G Video Replay Center for Legal Education of NMSBF 505-797-6020 www.nmbar.org 7 14 14 Drafting Reps and Warranties in Business Transactions 1.0 G National Teleseminar Center for Legal Education of NMSBF 505-797-6020 www.nmbar.org 10 Navigating the Privileges Minefield (2014) 5.5 G Video Replay Center for Legal Education of NMSBF 505-797-6020 www.nmbar.org Bar Bulletin - February 25, 2015 - Volume 54, No. 8 14 The End of Law Firms: How the Cloud is Changing the Practice of Law and The ABA Model Rules with Regard to the Changing Practice of Law (2014 Annual Meeting) 1.0 G, 1.0 EP Video Replay Center for Legal Education of NMSBF 505-797-6020 www.nmbar.org Writs of Certiorari As Updated by the Clerk of the New Mexico Supreme Court Joey D. Moya, Chief Clerk New Mexico Supreme Court PO Box 848 • Santa Fe, NM 87504-0848 • (505) 827-4860 Effective February 13, 2015 Petitions for Writ of Certiorari Filed and Pending: No. 35,122 No. 35,121 No. 35,120 No. 35,115 No. 35,114 No. 35,119 No. 35,118 No. 35,113 No. 35,111 No. 35,109 No. 35,107 No. 35,106 No. 35,105 No. 35,049 No. 35,108 No. 35,101 No. 35,097 No. 35,098 No. 35,095 No. 35,094 No. 35,093 No. 35,100 No. 35,092 No. 35,089 No. 35,090 No. 35,084 No. 35,088 No. 35,086 No. 35,085 No. 35,069 No. 35,060 No. 35,050 No. 35,046 No. 35,040 No. 35,039 No. 35,037 No. 35,099 No. 35,068 No. 34,949 No. 34,937 Date Petition Filed Lente v. State 12-501 02/13/15 State v. Chakerian COA 32,872 02/13/15 State v. DeLao COA 33,870 02/10/15 State v. Garcia COA 33,796 02/10/15 State v. Duran COA 33,862 02/10/15 Lester v. Lester COA 33,926 02/09/15 City of Albuquerque v. Lester COA 33,261 02/09/15 State v. Padilla COA 33,887 02/09/15 Lea County v. Markum Ranch COA 32,510 02/05/15 Valenzuela v. N.M. Dept. of Workforce Solutions COA 34,231 02/05/15 State v. Villanueva COA 34,092 02/04/15 Salomon v. Franco 12-501 02/04/15 Pena-Kues v. Smith’s Food & Drug COA 32,790 02/03/15 State v. Surratt COA 32,881 02/02/15 Pena-Kues v. Smith’s Food & Drug COA 32,790 01/30/15 Dalton v. Santander COA 33,136 01/28/15 Marrah v. Swisstack 12-501 01/26/15 Torres v. Hatch 12-501 01/23/15 State v. Romero COA 34,162 01/23/15 State v. Venegas-Diaz COA 33,106 01/23/15 State v. Lujan COA 33,995 01/23/15 State v. Sheehan COA 33,192 01/22/15 State v. Sandoval COA 33,952 01/22/15 State v. Demory COA 33,659 01/21/15 State v. Upchurch COA 33,240 01/20/15 Branch v. State 12-501 01/16/15 Vine v. State 12-501 01/15/15 MoreNo. v. Hatch 12-501 01/13/15 Strand v. Janecka 12-501 01/12/15 Arencon v. City of Albuquerque COA 33,196 01/08/15 Response filed 1/23/15 Medina v. State 12-501 12/30/14 State v. Hernandez COA 32,110/32,109 12/22/14 Response ordered; due 2/27/15 Ramirez v. Ortiz 12-501 12/15/14 Montoya v. Wrigley 12-501 12/15/14 Ramirez v. Hatch 12-501 12/15/14 Graham v. Hatch 12-501 12/15/14 Keller v. Horton 12-501 12/11/14 Jessen v. Franco 12-501 11/25/14 State v. Chacon COA 33,748 10/27/14 Response filed 10/31/14 Pittman v. N.M. Corrections Dept. 12-501 10/20/14 No. 34,932 No. 34,881 No. 34,913 No. 34,907 No. 34,885 No. 34,878 No. 34,777 No. 34,790 No. 34,765 No. 34,793 No. 34,775 No. 34,776 No. 34,748 No. 34,731 No. 34,739 No. 34,706 No. 34,691 No. 34,589 No. 34,563 No. 34,303 No. 34,067 No. 33,868 No. 33,819 No. 33,867 No. 33,539 No. 33,630 Gonzales v. Sanchez 12-501 Paz v. Horton 12-501 Finnell v. Horton 12-501 Response ordered; due 2/16/15 Cantone v. Franco 12-501 Savage v. State 12-501 O’Neill v. Bravo 12-501 State v. Dorais COA 32,235 Response filed 7/31/14 Venie v. Velasquz COA 33,427 Response ordered; due 8/22/14 Helfferich v. Frawner 12-501 Response ordered; due 3/15/15 Isbert v. Nance 12-501 State v. Merhege COA 32,461 Serna v. Franco 12-501 Smith v. State 12-501 Helfferich v. Frawner 12-501 Response ordered; due 3/15/15 Holguin v. Franco 12-501 Camacho v. Sanchez 12-501 Wetson v. Nance 12-501 Response ordered; filed 7/14/14 Seager v. State 12-501 Response ordered; due 2/18/15 Benavidez v. State 12-501 Response ordered; filed 5/28/14 Gutierrez v. State 12-501 Gutierrez v. Williams 12-501 Burdex v. Bravo 12-501 Response ordered; filed 1/22/13 Chavez v. State 12-501 Roche v. Janecka 12-501 Contreras v. State 12-501 Response ordered; due 10/24/12 Utley v. State 12-501 10/16/14 10/08/14 09/22/14 09/11/14 09/08/14 08/26/14 07/02/14 06/27/14 06/24/14 06/23/14 06/19/14 06/13/14 06/06/14 05/29/14 05/21/14 05/13/14 05/07/14 04/23/14 02/25/14 07/30/13 03/14/13 11/28/12 10/29/12 09/28/12 07/12/12 06/07/12 Certiorari Granted but not yet Submitted to the Court: (Parties preparing briefs) No. 33,725 State v. Pasillas No. 33,837 State v. Trujillo No. 33,877 State v. Alvarez No. 33,930 State v. Rodriguez No. 33,994 Gonzales v. Williams No. 33,863 Murillo v. State No. 33,810 Gonzales v. Marcantel No. 34,363 Pielhau v. State Farm No. 34,274 State v. No.len No. 34,400 State v. Armijo No. 34,443 Aragon v. State No. 34,522 Hobson v. Hatch No. 34,582 State v. Sanchez Date Writ Issued COA 31,513 09/14/12 COA 30,563 11/02/12 COA 31,987 12/06/12 COA 30,938 01/18/13 COA 32,274 08/30/13 12-501 08/30/13 12-501 08/30/13 COA 31,899 11/15/13 12-501 11/20/13 COA 32,139 12/20/13 12-501 02/14/14 12-501 03/28/14 COA 32,862 04/11/14 Bar Bulletin - February 25, 2015 - Volume 54, No. 8 11 Writs of Certiorari No. 34,637 No. 34,694 No. 34,669 No. 34,650 No. 34,630 No. 34,789 No. 34,769 No. 34,786 No. 34,784 No. 34,805 No. 34,798 No. 34,843 No. 34,834 No. 34,772 No. 34,726 No. 34,668 No. 34,855 No. 34,728 No. 34,812 No. 34,886 No. 34,866 No. 34,854 No. 34,830 No. 34,826 No. 34,997 No. 34,993 No. 34,978 No. 34,946 No. 34,945 No. 34,940 No. 34,929 No. 35,063 No. 35,035 No. 35,029 No. 35,016 No. 35,005 No. 34,974 No. 34,995 State v. Serros COA 31,975 State v. Salazar COA 33,232 Hart v. Otero County Prison 12-501 Scott v. Morales COA 32,475 State v. Ochoa COA 31,243 Tran v. Bennett COA 32,677 State v. Baca COA 32,553 State v. Baca COA 32,523 Silva v. Lovelace Health Systems, Inc. COA 31,723 King v. Behavioral Home Care COA 31,682 State v. Maestas COA 31,666 State v. Lovato COA 32,361 SF Pacific Trust v. City of Albuquerque COA 30,930 City of Eunice v. N.M. Taxation and Revenue Dept. COA 32,955 Deutsche Bank v. Johnston COA 31,503 State v. Vigil COA 32,166 Rayos v. State COA 32,911 Martinez v. Bravo 12-501 Ruiz v. Stewart 12-501 State v. Sabeerin COA 31,412/31,895 State v. Yazzie COA 32,476 State v. Alex S. COA 32,836 State v. Mier COA 33,493 State v. Trammel COA 31,097 T.H. McElvain Oil & Gas v. Benson COA 32,666 T.H. McElvain Oil & Gas v. Benson COA 32,666 Atherton v. Gopin COA 32,028 State v. Kuykendall COA 32,612 State v. Kuykendall COA 32,612 State v. Flores COA 32,709 Freeman v. Love COA 32,542 State v. Carroll COA 32,909 State v. Stephenson COA 31,273 State v. Abeyta COA 33,485 State v. Baca COA 33,626 State v. Archuleta COA 32,794 Moses v. Skandera COA 33,002 State v. Deangelo M. COA 31,413 05/01/14 06/06/14 06/06/14 06/06/14 06/06/14 08/01/14 08/01/14 08/01/14 08/01/14 08/15/14 08/15/14 08/29/14 08/29/14 08/29/14 08/29/14 09/26/14 10/10/14 10/10/14 10/10/14 10/24/14 10/24/14 10/24/14 10/24/14 10/24/14 12/19/14 12/19/14 12/19/14 12/19/14 12/19/14 12/19/14 12/19/14 01/26/14 01/26/14 01/26/14 01/26/14 01/26/14 01/26/14 02/06/15 Certiorari Granted and Submitted to the Court: (Submission Date = date of oral argument or briefs-only submission) No. 33,548 State v. Marquez No. 33,808 State v. Nanco No. 33,862 State v. Gerardo P. No. 33,969 Safeway, Inc. v. Rooter 2000 Plumbing 12 Submission Date COA 30,565 04/15/13 COA 30,788 08/14/13 COA 31,250 08/14/13 COA 30,196 08/28/13 Bar Bulletin - February 25, 2015 - Volume 54, No. 8 No. 33,898 Bargman v. Skilled Healthcare Group, Inc. COA 31,088 No. 33,884 Acosta v. Shell Western Exploration and Production, Inc. COA 29,502 No. 34,013 Foy v. Austin Capital COA 31,421 No. 34,085 Badilla v. Walmart COA 31,162 No. 34,146 Madrid v. Brinker Restaurant COA 31,244 No. 34,093 Cordova v. Cline COA 30,546 No. 34,194/34,204 King v. Faber COA 34,116/31,446 No. 34,287 Hamaatsa v. Pueblo of San Felipe COA 31,297 No. 34,120 State v. Baca COA 31,442 No. 34,122 State v. Steven B. consol. w/ State v. Begaye COA 31,265/32,136 No. 34,286 Yedidag v. Roswell Clinic Corp. COA 31,653 No. 34,499 Perez v. N.M. Workforce Solutions Dept. COA 32,321/32,330 No. 34,546 NM Dept. Workforce Solutions v. Garduno COA 32,026 No. 34,435 State v. Strauch COA 32,425 No. 34,447 Loya v. Gutierrez COA 32,405 No. 34,295 Dominguez v. State 12-501 No. 34,501 SNo.w v. Warren Power COA 32,335 No. 34,607 Lucero v. Northland Insurance COA 32,426 No. 34,554 Miller v. Bank of America COA 31,463 No. 34,516 State v. Sanchez COA 32,994 No. 34,613 Ramirez v. State COA 31,820 No. 34,548 State v. Davis COA 28,219 No. 34,526 State v. Paananen COA 31,982 No. 34,549 State v. Nichols COA 30,783 09/11/13 10/28/13 11/14/13 12/04/13 12/09/13 01/15/14 02/24/14 03/26/14 03/26/14 08/11/14 08/11/14 08/13/14 08/13/14 08/27/14 08/27/14 09/24/14 10/01/14 10/29/14 11/10/14 12/17/14 12/17/14 01/14/15 01/14/15 02/25/15 Dispositional Order on Writ of Certiorari: No. 34,476 State v. Pfauntsch Date Order Filed COA 31,674 02/09/15 Petition for Writ of Certiorari Denied: No. 35,083 No. 35,082 No. 35,080 No. 35,079 No. 35,076 No. 35,073 No. 35,070 Partida v. Motor Vehicle Division State v. Williams State v. Barela State v. McKnight Begay v. Consumer Direct State v. Butler State v. Acosta Date Order Filed COA 33,698 COA 33,869 COA 34,034 COA 33,872 02/12/15 02/12/15 02/12/15 02/12/15 COA 33,288 02/12/15 COA 33,696 02/12/15 12-501 02/12/15 Opinions As Updated by the Clerk of the New Mexico Court of Appeals Mark Reynolds, Chief Clerk New Mexico Court of Appeals PO Box 2008 • Santa Fe, NM 87504-2008 • 505-827-4925 Effective February 13, 2015 Published Opinions No. 31935 1st Jud Dist Santa Fe CV-10-420, L NOICE v BNSF RAILWAY COMPANY (reverse) 2/10/2015 Unublished Opinions No. 33565 13th Jud Dist Valencia JQ-12-01, CYFD v ANDREA L (affirm) 2/09/2015 No. 33909 3rd Jud Dist Dona Ana CR-12-287, STATE v O OROPEZA (reverse) 2/09/2015 No. 33953 5th Jud Dist Lea CR-12-565, STATE v J HALL (affirm) 2/09/2015 No. 34062 1st Jud Dist Santa Fe CV-11-3710, V ARELLANO v NM DEPT OF HEALTH (reverse) 2/09/2015 No. 33354 1st Jud Dist Santa Fe DM-09-988, L LOPEZ v J GONZE (reverse and remand) 2/10/2015 No. 33728 3rd Jud Dist Dona Ana LR-14-9, STATE v PAUL REYES (affirm) 2/10/2015 No. 34013 6th Jud Dist Luna CR-11-223, STATE v D MCBRIDE (affirm) 2/10/2015 No. 34151 11th Jud Dist San Juan CV-14-6, NATIONAL EDUCATION CENTRAL (dismiss) 2/10/2015 No. 33969 12th Jud Dist Lincoln CR-13-61, STATE v A RAMOS (reverse) 2/11/2015 No. 33886 12th Jud Dist Otero CR-10-345, STATE v R CASTRO (affirm) 2/12/2015 No. 33905 12th Jud Dist Lea JQ-2012-24, CYFD v MARY S (dismiss) 2/12/2015 No. 33987 2nd Jud Dist Bernalillo LR-12-10, STATE v T PERALTA (affirm) 2/12/2015 No. 34002 2nd Jud Dist Bernalillo LR-12-100, STATE v R NAJAR (affirm) 2/12/2015 Slip Opinions for Published Opinions may be read on the Court’s website: http://coa.nmcourts.gov/documents/index.htm Bar Bulletin - February 25, 2015 - Volume 54, No. 8 13 Clerk’s Certificates From the Clerk of the New Mexico Supreme Court Joey D. Moya, Chief Clerk New Mexico Supreme Court PO Box 848 • Santa Fe, NM 87504-0848 • (505) 827-4860 Clerk’s Certificate of Withdrawal Effective February 3, 2015: Jude A. Cisneros 9950 Campo Road, Suite 101 Spring Valley, CA 91977 Effective February 2, 2015: Harry G.W. Griffith Jr. 33903 Cripple Creek Drive Pinehurst, TX 77362 Effective February 1, 2015: Edward J. Hendrick Jr. 1216 ParView Drive Sanibel, FL 33957 Effective February 2, 2015: Steven J. Kuehl 7887 E. Belleview Avenue, Suite 1100 Denver, CO 80111 Clerk’s Certificate of Reinstatement to Active Status As of February 5, 2015: Corrie Lynn Gerdts-Darr 2001 Caballo Trail Brownwood, TX 76801 512-571-0912 [email protected] Robert Y. Hirasuna 15 Tano Norte Santa Fe, NM 87506 505-983-1671 [email protected] Effective January 30, 2015: Cole B. Stinson 1684 Stockley Lane Old Hickory, TN 37138 445 Jena Road Hon. Hector H. Balderas Office of the Attorney General PO Box 1508 408 Galisteo Street (87501) Santa Fe, NM 87504-1508 505-827-6000 505-827-5826 (fax) [email protected] Nicole Beder 7150 Old Santa Fe Trail Santa Fe, NM 87505 917-204-4095 [email protected] 14 Clerk’s Certificate of Change to Inactive Status Effective January 26, 2015: Meryl Elizabeth Francolini Clark County District Attorney’s Office 3412 Lockport Street Las Vegas, NV 89129 Effective February 2, 2015: Tara Selver 16 Raft Island Drive NW Gig Harbor, WA 98335 Clerk’s Certificate of Address and/or Telephone Changes The clerk’s certificate of address and telephone changes dated January 16, 2015, reported an incorrect telephone number for Fermin A. Rubio: Fermin A. Rubio N.M. State UniversityOffice of General Counsel MSC 3UGC - PO Box 30001 2850 Weddell Road, Hadley Hall Room 135 Las Cruces, NM 88003-8001 575-646-2446 575-646-3012 (fax) [email protected] Effective January 30, 2015: Anna Sibylle Ehresmann PO Box 56773 Albuquerque, NM 87187-6773 Effective February 2, 2015: Jennifer R. Petersen 19326 Spencer Street Elkhorn, NE 68022 Dated Feb. 9, 2015 Clerk’s Certificate of Correction M. Catherine Hayden 800 Ridgecrest Drive SE Albuquerque, NM 87108 Hilary Lamberton PO Box 6933 Santa Fe, NM 87502-6933 Sara Jane Powell Law Office of Sara J. Powell PLLC 550 W. Portland Street Phoenix, AZ 85003 Effective February 1, 2015: Stefanie Lee Kyser Kyser Law Firm, LLC PO Box 9007 Santa Fe, NM 87504-9007 Hon. Robert Hayes Scott U.S. District Court District of New Mexico 333 Lomas Blvd. NW, Suite 620 Albuquerque, NM 87102 Effective January 27, 2015: Jiehoon Lee 360 S. Alvarado Street, Suite 6 Los Angeles, CA 90057 Effective December 31, 2014: Bret G. Saxe 401 4th Street NE Washington, DC 20002 Hon. Lyndy D. Bennett Eleventh Judicial District Court 207 W. Hill Avenue, Suite 200 Gallup, NM 87301 505-726-2062 505-726-5744 (fax) Scott Fuqua Fuqua Law & Policy, PC PO Box 32015 Santa Fe, NM 87594-2015 505-982-0961 [email protected] Thomas E. Hare Law Offices of the Public Defender 2395 N. Florida Avenue Alamogordo, NM 88310 575-551-7209 Tara Lynne Edgmon Office of the Seventh Judicial District Attorney 855 Van Patten Street Truth or Consequences, NM 87901 575-894-9033 575-894-9034 (fax) [email protected] Michelle S. Garcia Office of the Second Judicial District Attorney 520 Lomas Blvd. NW Albuquerque, NM 87102 505-222-1139 505-241-1000 (fax) [email protected] Andrea D. Harris Carter & Valle Law Firm 8012 Pennsylvania Circle NE Albuquerque, NM 87110 505-888-4357 505-883-5613 (fax) [email protected] Bar Bulletin - February 25, 2015 - Volume 54, No. 8 Gail A. Heglund 710 N. Washington Street Bismarck, ND 58501 505-463-0175 [email protected] Clerk’s Certificates Twila A. Hoon The Law Offices of Ramsey & Hoon, LLC PO Box 25392 116 Granite Avenue NW (87104) Albuquerque, NM 87125-5392 505-633-9017 888-878-1486 (fax) [email protected] Lisa C. Krenkel Krenkel & Krenkel, LLC 107 Main Street Allenhurst, NJ 07711 732-531-9300 732-531-9317 (fax) [email protected] Brenda M. Maloney Quarles & Brady, LLP 1700 K Street NW, Suite 825 Washington, DC 20006 202-372-9526 202-372-9599 (fax) [email protected] LynneAnne Maxwell Rose L. Brand & Associates, PC 7430 Washington Street NE Albuquerque, NM 87109 505-833-3036 lynneanne.maxwell@ roselbrand.com Hon. Cindy M. Mercer Thirteenth Judicial District Court PO Box 1089 1835 Highway 314 SW Los Lunas, NM 87031 505-865-0108 505-866-6813 (fax) Robert David Pederson Office of the Thirteenth Judicial District Attorney PO Box 637 515 W. High Street Grants, NM 87020-0637 505-285-4627 505-285-4629 (fax) [email protected] Jennifer Michelle Perkins Office of the Arizona Attorney General 1275 W. Washington Street Phoenix, AZ 85007 602-542-7826 [email protected] Robin L. Cooley Earthjustice 633 17th Street, Suite 1600 Denver, CO 80202 303-623-9466 303-623-8083 (fax) [email protected] Simone M. Seiler NM Human Services Department 455 Camino Del Rey, #C Los Lunas, NM 87031 505-222-0855 [email protected] Timothy L. Hartley 201 Laurence Drive #208 Heath, TX 75032 972-754-4844 972-722-4888 [email protected] Michelle Renee Torres 3614 Headingly Avenue NE Albuquerque, NM 87110 505-681-6982 [email protected] Richard B. Wellborn Richard Wellborn, Attorney at Law, LLC 1990 E. Lohman Avenue, Suite 204 Las Cruces, NM 88001 575-524-6867 rickwellborn@ rickwellbornlaw.com Roger E. Yarbro Yarbro & Associates, PA 12231 Academy Road NE, Suite 301, PMB 249 Albuquerque, NM 87111 505-433-5716 505-212-0464 (fax) [email protected] Laurie McFarland 3636 Goldstone Drive Idaho Falls, ID 83401 208-419-1546 Adam D. Melton Langley LLP 2001 E. Campbell Avenue, Suite 203 Phoenix, AZ 85016 602-428-7338 602-795-6077 (fax) [email protected] Roger Moore PO Box 1441 Albuquerque, NM 87103-1411 505-255-2900 505-255-2545 (fax) [email protected] Flynn Evelyn Sylvest 160 Longhorn Lane Ojai, CA 93023 505-306-9511 [email protected] Orlando R. Lopez Lopez Scott, LLC 3707 N. St. Mary’s Street, Suite 200 San Antonio, TX 78212 210-472-2100 210-472-2101 (fax) [email protected] Kevin J. McCready ([email protected]) J. Matthew Myers ([email protected]) John A. Myers ([email protected]) Myers, McCready & Myers, PC 1401 Central Avenue NW, Suite B Albuquerque, NM 87104 505-247-9080 505-247-9109 (fax) Floyd D. Wilson ([email protected]) Myers, McCready & Myers, PC 12480 Highway 14 North, Suite 105 Cedar Crest, NM 87008 505-948-0004 505-247-9109 (fax) Vickie R. Wilcox Wilcox Law Firm, PC PO Box 70238 901 Rio Grande Blvd. NW, Suite H-160 (87104) Albuquerque, NM 87197-0238 505-554-1115 505-554-1121 (fax) [email protected] Pilar L. Murray PO Box 717 El Prado, NM 87529-0717 917-669-3610 [email protected] Bar Bulletin - February 25, 2015 - Volume 54, No. 8 15 Clerk’s Certificates Clerk’s Certificate of Admission On February 9, 2015: Anita Basi Child Support Enforcement Division 1015 Tijeras Avenue NW Albuquerque, NM 87102 [email protected] Clerk’s Certificate of Name Change As of February 4, 2015: Lysette Romero Cordova f/k/a Lysette Romero New Mexico Court of Appeals PO Box 2008 237 Don Gaspar Avenue (87501) Santa Fe, NM 87504-2008 505-827-4857 [email protected] In Memoriam As of January 28, 2015: William Calvin Fleming PO Box 3023 Carlsbad, NM 88221-3023 As of November 20, 2014: Myron May PO Box 566 Wewahitchka, FL 32465-0566 Clerk’s Certificate of Withdrawal Effective February 9, 2015: Andrew Seth Lewinter 101 E. Broadway, Suite 220 Eugene, OR 97401 16 Clerk’s Certificate of Change to Inactive Status Effective February 2, 2015: Matthew Louis Altenberg 2667 Via Berrenda Santa Fe, NM 87505 Effective February 1, 2015: Ameryn Maestas PO Box 1501 Carlsbad, NM 88221-1501 Effective January 1, 2015: Carolyn S. Fudge 4600 Cayetana Place NW Albuquerque, NM 87120 Susan M. Palmer 1506 Park Avenue SW Albuquerque, NM 87104 Effective February 1, 2015: Ann Halter 315 Meadow Lake Drive Columbia Falls, MT 59912 Effective January 30, 2015: Sandra J. Clinton PO Box 7511 Albuquerque, NM 87194-7511 Effective January 26, 2015: Thomas W. Nececkas 152 Oakwood Drive Wayne, NJ 07470 Devin Delrow 7721 Inversham Drive, #128 Falls Church, VA 22042 Effective January 1, 2015: Evan Bromley Rice 4818 East Calle Tuberia Phoenix, AZ 85018 Amy Stoeckl Ybarra Travis County Attorney’s Office PO Box 1748 Austin, TX 78767-1748 Effective January 29, 2015: Andria L. Cooper PO Box 131 Wayne, NE 68787-0131 Effective January 1, 2015: Stephen D. Dillon 2404 Glenwood Court NW Los Ranchos, NM 87107 Effective January 27, 2015: Hon. Mary Dougherty PO Box 200 Corrales, NM 87048 Effective January 26, 2015: Cody R. Lujan Hall and Hall, Inc. 1559 Logan Street Denver, Co 80203 Bar Bulletin - February 25, 2015 - Volume 54, No. 8 Effective January 30, 2015: Rose Uyehara Himrod PO Box 28081 Santa Fe, NM 87592-8081 H. Elizabeth Losee 635 Applewood Road Corrales, NM 87048 Effective January 28, 2015: Erica Boutte Scott Miller Stratvert PA PO Box 25687 Albuquerque, NM 87125-0687 Effective January 29, 2015: Chad R. Prososki 3120 25th Street South, Suite Z-203 Fargo, ND 58104 Effective January 23, 2015: Luralene D. Tapahe Puyallup Tribe of Indians 3009 E. Portland Avenue Tacoma, WA 98404 Effective December 31, 2014: Charles Philip Reynolds 718 Central Avenue SW Albuquerque, NM 87102 Effective February 1, 2015: Koo Im Tong 184 Corona Street San Francisco, CA 94127 Effective February 2, 2015: Misty Briscoe-Garcia PO Box 1134 Rifle, CO 81650-1134 Effective January 1, 2015: Darin Foster 400 Goodnight Trail Justin, TX 76247 Effective January 28, 2015: Hon. Jerald Alan Valentine 3820 Paradise Lane Las Cruces, NM 88007 Effective February 2, 2015: Andrea Waye Reynolds 1619 N. Sixth Street Boise, ID 83702 Laura D. White 809 Lake County Lane Madison, MS 39110 Effective February 1, 2015: John Chapman Young 503 McKie Street Tahlequah, OK 74464 Recent Rule-Making Activity As Updated by the Clerk of the New Mexico Supreme Court Joey D. Moya, Chief Clerk New Mexico Supreme Court PO Box 848 • Santa Fe, NM 87504-0848 • (505) 827-4860 Effective February 25, 2015 Pending Proposed Rule Changes Open for Comment: Comment Deadline For 2014 year-end rule amendments that became effective December 31, 2014, please see the November 5, 2014, issue of the Bar Bulletin or visit the New Mexico Compilation Commission’s website at http:// www.nmcompcomm.us/nmrules/NMRuleSets.aspx. Recently Approved Rule Changes Since Release of 2014 NMRA: Effective Date Children’s Court Rules and Forms 10-102 10-315 10-317 10-323 10-343 10-501A 10-565 10-566 10-567 Commencement of action. 08/31/14 Custody hearing. 07/01/14 Notice of change in placement. 08/31/14 Dismissal of a respondent or child; party dismissal sheet. 08/31/14 Adjudicatory hearing; time limits; continuances.07/01/14 Abuse and neglect party information sheet. 08/31/14 Advance notice of change of placement. 08/31/14 Emergency notice of change of placement. 08/31/14 Abuse and neglect party dismissal sheet. 08/31/14 Rules of Appellate Procedure 12-206A Expedited appeals from Children’s Court custody hearings. 12-303 Appointment of counsel. 07/01/14 07/01/14 Rules Governing Admission to the Bar 15-102 Admission requirements. 15-103Qualifications. 15-105 Application fees. 15-107 Admission by motion. 06/01/15 06/01/15 06/01/15 06/01/15 Supreme Court General Rules 23-109 Chief judges. 04/23/14 To view all pending proposed rule changes (comment period open or closed), visit the New Mexico Supreme Court’s website at http://nmsupremecourt.nmcourts.gov. To view recently approved rule changes, visit the New Mexico Compilation Commission’s website at http://www.nmcompcomm.us. Bar Bulletin - February 25, 2015 - Volume 54, No. 8 17 Advance Opinions http://www.nmcompcomm.us/ From the New Mexico Supreme Court and Court of Appeals Certiorari Denied, November 21, 2014, No. 34,910 From the New Mexico Court of Appeals Opinion Number: 2015-NMCA-005 MONICA LUJAN, as Personal Representative of the Estate of PEGGY LUJANSILVA, Decedent, Plaintiff-Appellant, v. NEW MEXICO DEPARTMENT OF TRANSPORTATION, Defendant-Appellee Docket No. 31,883 (filed August 4, 2014) APPEAL FROM THE DISTRICT COURT OF SANTA FE COUNTY BARBARA J. VIGIL, District Judge PAUL MAESTAS MAESTAS & SUGGETT, P.C. Albuquerque, New Mexico for Appellant PETER J. GOULD Santa Fe, New Mexico for Appellee KATHERINE A. BASHAM BASHAM & BASHAM, P.C. Santa Fe, New Mexico Opinion Michael E. Vigil, Judge {1}Monica Lujan (Plaintiff), as personal representative of Peggy Lujan-Silva (Decedent), sued the New Mexico Department of Transportation (the Department) for wrongful death arising from a single-car accident, alleging that the Department’s negligent failure to keep the roadway clear of dangerous debris caused the accident. The district court granted the Department’s motion for summary judgment. We reverse. BACKGROUND {2}On October 29, 2004, Decedent was driving south on Interstate-25 (I-25) adjacent to the exit ramp for the St. Francis Road exit at approximately 2:00 p.m. when she encountered pieces of semi-truck tire debris on the roadway, and either struck the debris or swerved to avoid it. Decedent lost control of her vehicle, and it went into an uncontrolled slide and flipped four times, ejecting Decedent from the vehicle. Decedent died at the scene. The roadway at the location of the accident is straight and level, and at the time of the accident 18 the weather was clear, the pavement was dry, and the center and the edge lines were clearly marked. There is no evidence of precisely how long the tire debris was on the roadway, and the Department had no actual notice of the tire debris at that location prior to the accident. {3} The Department moved for summary judgment, asserting that the undisputed material facts demonstrate that the Department had no actual notice or constructive notice of the tire debris. It being undisputed that the Department had no actual notice, the Department contended that it had no constructive notice of the debris because Plaintiff was unable to pinpoint how long the debris was on the road where the accident took place. Plaintiff ’s response centered on its contention that the Department was negligent in failing to identify debris on the highway in a timely manner and that the Department’s inspection protocols are unreasonably lax and not complied with. {4}The district court granted summary judgment in favor of the Department on the grounds that the Department did not have actual or constructive notice of the tire debris and that Plaintiff ’s argument Bar Bulletin - February 25, 2015 - Volume 54, No. 8 that the Department’s failure to have a stronger or more consistent policy for the removal of debris was too speculative to prove proximate cause. Plaintiff appeals, asserting that the summary judgment order must be reversed because: (1) there are factual issues about whether the Department breached its duty to locate the tire debris on the roadway, and (2) there are factual issues regarding proximate cause. STANDARD OF REVIEW {5} On appeal, our review of an order granting summary judgment is de novo. Summers v. Ardent Health Servs., L.L.C., 2011-NMSC-017, ¶ 10, 150 N.M. 123, 257 P.3d 943. We affirm an order granting summary judgment when there is no evidence raising a reasonable doubt about any genuine issue of material fact, and the moving party is entitled to judgment as a matter of law. Self v. United Parcel Serv., Inc., 1998-NMSC-046, ¶ 6, 126 N.M. 396, 970 P.2d 582. Thus, “the movant has the burden of showing a complete absence of any genuine material issue of fact and that such party is entitled to judgment as a matter of law.” Durham v. Sw. Developers Joint Venture, 2000-NMCA-010, ¶ 42, 128 N.M. 648, 996 P.2d 911. “[O]nce the movant makes a prima facie showing that he is entitled to summary judgment, the burden shifts to the party opposing the motion to demonstrate the existence of specific evidentiary facts which would require trial on the merits.” Cain v. Champion Window Co. of Albuquerque, LLC, 2007NMCA-085, ¶ 7, 142 N.M. 209,164 P.3d 90 (internal quotation marks and citation omitted). In our de novo review of the summary judgment record, “[w]e resolve all reasonable inferences in favor of the non-movant and view the pleadings, affidavits, depositions, answers to interrogatories, and admissions in a light most favorable to a trial on the merits.” Id. ¶ 6. We do so because New Mexico courts “view summary judgment with disfavor, preferring a trial on the merits.” Romero v. Philip Morris, Inc., 2010-NMSC-035, ¶ 8, 148 N.M. 713, 242 P.3d 280. DISCUSSION {6}Plaintiff ’s complaint against the Department is for negligence under the roadway maintenance exception of the Tort Claims Act, NMSA 1978, § 41-411(A) (1991), which waives sovereign immunity for damages caused by the government’s negligent maintenance of Advance Opinions highways. Plaintiff ’s negligence action falls under this exception because “the identification and remediation of roadway hazards constitutes maintenance under Section 41-4-11.” Rutherford v. Chaves Cnty., 2003-NMSC-010, ¶ 25, 133 N.M. 756, 69 P.3d 1199. {7} NMSA 1978, Section 41-4-2(B) (1976) of the Tort Claims Act provides in part that liability under the Act “shall be based upon the traditional tort concepts of duty and the reasonably prudent person’s standard of care in the performance of that duty.” Thus, liability under the Act is “premised on traditional concepts of negligence.” Brenneman v. Bd. of Regents of Univ. of N.M., 2004-NMCA-003, ¶ 10, 135 N.M. 68, 84 P.3d 685 (quoting Methola v. Cnty. of Eddy, 1980-NMSC-145, ¶ 19, 95 N.M. 329, 622 P.2d 234 ). See Silva v. State, 1987-NMSC-107, ¶ 47, 106 N.M. 472, 745 P.2d 380 (Stowers, J., dissenting) (“The phrase ‘traditional concepts of duty and the reasonably prudent person’s standard of care, . . . refers to theories of negligence.”), limited on other grounds by Archibeque v. Moya, 1993-NMSC-079, ¶ 14, 116 N.M. 616, 866 P.2d 344. “It is axiomatic that a negligence action requires that there be a duty owed from the defendant to the plaintiff; that based on a standard of reasonable care under the circumstances, the defendant breached that duty; and that the breach was a cause in fact and proximate cause of the plaintiff ’s damages.” Romero v. Giant Stop-N-Go of N.M., Inc., 2009-NMCA-059, ¶ 5, 146 N.M. 520, 212 P.3d 408. The absence of any of these elements is fatal to a plaintiff ’s claim. Id. We address each of these elements in turn. 1.Duty {8}Whether the defendant owes a duty to the plaintiff, is a legal question for the courts to decide. Id. ¶¶ 5-6. In Rodriguez v. Del Sol Shopping Ctr. Assocs., 2014-NMSC014, ___ P.3d ___ (Nos. 33,896 and 33,949, May 8, 2014), our Supreme Court recently corrected inconsistences in New Mexico case law on how courts are to determine whether a legal duty is owed. The Court held that “[f]oreseeability is not a factor for courts to consider when determining the existence of a duty[.]” Id. ¶ 1. We follow that holding in this case. {9}In Lerma v. State Highway Department of New Mexico, our Supreme Court stated that “the Department has a duty to exercise ordinary care in the maintenance of its highways.” 1994-NMSC-069, ¶ 11, 117 N.M. 782, 877 P.2d 1085. However, the Le- http://www.nmcompcomm.us/ rma Court framed the duty inquiry around protecting the public from “foreseeable harm” on New Mexico’s roadways. Id. ¶ 8. Our appellate courts have continued to use Lerma’s foreseeability of harm language in negligent roadway maintenance cases. See, e.g., Rutherford, 2003-NMSC-010, ¶ 12 (“[The government entity] has the common law duty to exercise ordinary care to protect the general public from foreseeable harm on its roadways.”); accord Ryan v. N.M. State Highway & Transp. Dep’t, 1998NMCA-116, ¶ 12, 125 N.M. 588, 964 P.2d 149. {10} Furthermore, in cases where the government did not itself create the condition, New Mexico’s negligent highway maintenance case law was developed to examine not just whether harm was generally foreseeable, but also whether the government had notice of the particular dangerous condition at issue. See Blackburn v. State, 1982-NMCA-073, ¶ 32, 98 N.M. 34, 644 P.2d 548 (“[W]here the State has not created the dangerous condition, no duty to remedy the dangerous condition arises until actual or constructive notice is present.”). Thus, the inquiry into the government’s duty to exercise ordinary care in the maintenance of its roadways has been fact-intensive, focusing on whether the government entity had actual or constructive notice under the specific circumstances of the case. See, e.g., Martinez v. N.M. Dep’t of Transp., 2013-NMSC-005, ¶¶ 41-50, 296 P.3d 468 (determining that the Department’s duty to erect barriers depended upon whether it had notice that collisions occurred along the stretch of highway where the collision at issue occurred); Ryan, 1998-NMCA-116, ¶ 7 (determining that the Department’s duty depended upon whether it had actual or constructive notice of wild animal crossings creating a dangerous condition on a particular stretch of highway). {11}In Rodriguez, our Supreme Court rejected such a fact-intensive inquiry to determine whether a duty exists. See Rodriguez, 2014-NMSC-014, ¶¶ 1, 3, 11 (holding that “[f]oreseeability is a fact-intensive inquiry relevant only to breach of duty and legal cause considerations. . . . not [to] whether a duty exists” and overruling prior cases insofar as they conflict with the appropriate duty analysis). The Court also warned that foreseeability can mask itself behind other terms. See id. ¶¶ 12-13 (explaining that considering the “remoteness” of a potential harm, by inviting a discussion of the particularized facts in the case, is essentially a foreseeability driven analysis). Thus, we do not consider “actual or constructive notice” of the tire debris Decedent encountered as determinative of the Department’s duty to Decedent. {12} Nevertheless, the Department’s duty in this case is settled: the government has “the duty to maintain roadways in a safe condition for the benefit of the public.” Martinez, 2013-NMSC-005, ¶ 18. This includes a duty to conduct reasonable inspections of roadways, of which identification and removal of dangerous debris from roadways are necessary corollaries. See Blackburn, 1982-NMCA-073, ¶¶ 17, 32 (stating that liability for a dangerous condition on a roadway involves situations “in which the State did not create the dangerous condition, but knew or should have known about it, and corrected it”); see also Rutherford, 2003-NMSC-010, ¶ 12 (“The identification of hazards on roadways is essential if governmental entities are to fulfill their responsibilities of keeping the highways safe for the motoring public.”). We therefore conclude that the Department owed a duty to Decedent to identify and remove dangerous debris from the highway. 2.Breach {13} “The responsibility for determining whether the defendant has breached a duty owed to the plaintiff entails a determination of what a reasonably prudent person would foresee, what an unreasonable risk of injury would be, and what would constitute an exercise of ordinary care in light of all the surrounding circumstances.” Pollock v. State Highway & Transp. Dep’t, 1999-NMCA-083, ¶ 11, 127 N.M. 521, 984 P.2d 768 (alteration, internal quotation marks, and citation omitted). One can be negligent by either acting or failing “to do an act which one is under a duty to do and which a reasonably prudent person, in the exercise of ordinary care, would do in order to prevent injury.” UJI 13-1601 NMRA. Ordinary care is “that care which a reasonably prudent person would use in the conduct of the person’s own affairs.” UJI 13-1603 NMRA. What constitutes ordinary care will vary under the circumstances. Id. “As the risk of danger that should reasonably be foreseen increases, the amount of care required also increases.” Id. All of the surrounding circumstances should be considered when evaluating whether ordinary care was used. Id. Bar Bulletin - February 25, 2015 - Volume 54, No. 8 19 Advance Opinions {14} The Department argued that it owed Decedent no duty to clear the debris because it had no actual or constructive knowledge of its presence at the particular location and the particular time that the accident occurred. Following Rodriguez, and having concluded that the Department had a duty in this case, we consider notice to determine whether there is a question of fact as to whether the Department breached its duty of reasonable inspection. See Martinez, 2013-NMSC-005, ¶ 21 (“[T]he term maintenance requires a reasonable response to a known dangerous condition on a roadway.” (emphasis added)); Blackburn, 1982-NMCA-073, ¶ 17 (stating the plaintiff must prove that the defendant “had actual or constructive notice of the dangerous condition a sufficient time prior to the time of the accident so that measures could have been taken to protect against the dangerous condition”). {15} Here, although it is undisputed that the Department had no actual notice of the particular debris at issue, the Department does not argue that it was not aware of the risk to motorists that roadway debris creates generally. Indeed, in the Department’s motion for summary judgment, it acknowledged that its maintenance responsibilities include identifying and removing hazardous litter from roadways. Thus, the issue before us in this case is whether there are material issues of fact about whether the Department can be charged with constructive notice of the tire debris. See Phillips v. N.C. Dep’t of Transp., 684 S.E.2d 725, 731 (N.C. Ct. App. 2009) (stating that constructive notice “is defined as information or knowledge of a fact imputed by law to a person (although he may not actually have it), because he could have discovered the fact by proper diligence, and his situation was such as to cast upon him the duty of inquiring about it.” (quoting State v. Poteat, 594 S.E.2d 253, 255-56 (N.C. Ct. App. 2004)); Kemer v. Ohio Dep’t of Transp., No. 09AP-248, 2009 WL 3495006, at * 5 (Ohio Ct. App. Oct. 29, 2009) (“Constructive notice of a defective condition can be imputed to a defendant when the plaintiff presents evidence establishing that the defect could or should have been discovered.”). {16} The depositions of the Department’s employees who were responsible for maintaining the stretch of road where the accident occurred are sufficient for us to determine whether summary judgment was properly granted to the Department. Edward Martinez is the Department’s main20 http://www.nmcompcomm.us/ tenance supervisor for the Santa Fe area. He reports to Mark Anaya, the area maintenance supervisor which includes Santa Fe County. Mark Anaya’s supervisor in turn is Miguel Gabaldon, the maintenance engineer, and Mr. Gabaldon in turn reports to John McElroy, the District 5 engineer. {17} Mr. Martinez is in charge of all maintenance of state highways in the area where the accident occurred. His responsibilities include litter pickup as well as repair of potholes, signs, guardrails, fences, snow removal, and traffic control at accidents. However, he has received no training regarding procedures for removal of litter or debris from state highways and, before this accident, to his knowledge, no members of his crew received training on removal of debris or litter from roadways. {18} His crew members are responsible for removing debris from the highway within a “reasonable amount of time”— within two hours—once they are notified of debris on the highway. In addition, his crew is told to remove debris, such as a tire tread, from the highway when they actually see it, whether or not they are performing their duties at the time. On the day of the accident, two crew members passed the scene of the accident on their way to work, sometime before 7:30 a.m. when their shift started, and they did not report seeing any debris on the highway at the accident scene. {19} According to Mr. Martinez, the Department has an obligation to patrol highways with enough frequency to locate debris on the highway that is not reported in a call to the Department. Thus, the Highway Maintenance Management System (HMMS) Handbook requires “litter pick up” which “means to go out there and pick up litter in right of way fences of New Mexico DOT.” However, there is no specification in the HMMS Handbook as to how often to conduct “litter pick up.” Moreover, although Mr. Martinez recognizes that a highway with dangerous debris on it has a greater chance for an accident than a highway with less traffic, he has not made a set schedule for doing litter pick up, and it is performed randomly at his discretion. {20} The HMMS Handbook also requires that “road patrols” be conducted, and if tire tread is encountered during a road patrol, it is to be picked up. However, the HMMS Handbook in effect on the day of the accident did not specify how often a road patrol should be conducted, even on a heavily traveled road such as I-25. The daily work reports which he or his assistant prepares Bar Bulletin - February 25, 2015 - Volume 54, No. 8 every day show that between October 25 and October 29, 2004, his crew performed no work in the area around I-25 and the St. Francis exit. He also cannot tell from the daily work reports when a road patrol was last performed by the Department where the accident occurred before October 29, 2004. In fact, Mr. Martinez did nothing to identify and remove debris from the highway, other than to remove debris actually reported to the Department, although he recognizes that the Department also has an obligation, at some point, to remove dangerous debris from the highway that is not reported. {21} Mr. Martinez’s supervisor is Mark Anaya, the area maintenance supervisor for the Santa Fe area. Mr. Anaya agrees that the Department is responsible for keeping highways safe for the motoring public, and this includes removing hazards from the highway. Its responsibility notwithstanding, Mr. Anaya is unaware of any administrative directives put out by the Department that outline a policy for dealing with debris in roadways that create hazards to the motoring public. {22} Mr. Anaya testified that the Department has a duty to remove hazards that are reported to exist in the highway. The Department also has an obligation to conduct road patrols to go out and discover unreported road hazards. At some point, the Department should discover an unreported hazard, but he cannot state how long—one hour, one day, one week, or one month—before it is unacceptable for the hazard to remain undiscovered. {23} These duties notwithstanding, he has never considered requiring an employee to drive every day in both directions of the area of I-25 under his supervision to make sure there are no hazards or dangerous conditions in the highway due to the volume of traffic it handles. Furthermore, he cannot say that Mr. Martinez’s crew performs daily visual inspections of I-25 where the accident occurred, and he cannot tell when, before October 29, 2004, Mr. Martinez’s crew last performed a road patrol on I-25 in the area of the accident. The only documented litter pick up done in the area was by an inmate crew on October 28, 2004. {24} Miguel Gabaldon is the Department maintenance engineer for the area where the accident occurred. He said there is no written standard of care in the HMMS Handbook regarding removal of debris from state highways. However, he testified the Department satisfies its obligation to Advance Opinions remove debris from the highways, such as the tire debris in this case, by requiring the Department workers to remove it if they see it while performing their duties, and by removing it as soon as possible upon being notified of such debris. As to unreported debris, such as the tire debris in this case, Mr. Gabaldon stated that the Department should find it “[w]ithin a reasonable time frame” if the Department employees are doing their patrols. In this regard, while the Department has no criteria for how often a highway maintenance crew worker should drive the highways, the HMMS Handbook does specify that the supervisor (Mr. Martinez) is to drive or patrol all of the roads he is responsible for once per week, if possible. Mr. Gabaldon said that according to the HMMS Handbook, the last documented patrol of the accident scene should have been the week before the accident by Mr. Martinez, the supervisor. {25} John McElroy was the District 5 engineer for the Department. Before October 2004, the means for identifying road debris in District 5 consisted of road patrols by the Department personnel going to work sites, and notification to the Department by a member of the public or a police agency. Mr. McElroy believes there are signs placed on the highway with a 1-800 number to call, although he does not know where such signs are placed. {26} Mr. McElroy testified that before October, 2004, there was a big problem with a lot of debris on this stretch of I-25 where the accident occurred. Because of this problem, the area should have been given a lot of priority in terms of where maintenance crews were performing their patrols. From his perspective, the Santa Fe patrol crew should have been conducting litter pickup on this stretch of I-25 on a regular basis, probably twice per week. However, before October 2004, the patrol supervisor was not required to travel on I-25 where the accident occurred to survey the roadway for debris that might present a hazard or danger. {27} Mr. McElroy testified that if the Department has actual notice that semi-truck debris is on the highway, it is “probably not” acceptable for the debris to remain on the highway for one hour. If the Department has no actual notice of such debris, it is not acceptable, according to Mr. McElroy, for it to remain on the roadway for one day, twelve hours, or even six hours before the Department identifies and removes it. It is unknown how long the tire debris was on the highway in this case before the accident. http://www.nmcompcomm.us/ {28} The foregoing evidence notwithstanding, the Department points to daily work reports, which it asserts show that between January 1, 2004, and the date of the accident on October 29, 2004, six hundred and seventy-six “separate activities” were logged and that one hundred fiftyseven “separate litter pickup activities” were performed on I-25 “between Glorieta and La Bajada Hill,” which includes the area where the accident occurred. Moreover, according to the Department, these same daily work reports show that in the twenty-nine days prior to the accident, the Santa Fe Patrol performed ten litter pickup activities “within a few miles of the accident location” and five road patrols between Glorieta and La Bajada Hill. These included “five separate litter pickup activities, all within five miles of the accident location” between October 25, 2004, and the date of the accident. In addition to the foregoing, the Department states that under contract with the Department of Corrections, inmate crews performed litter pickup “at or near the accident location” on thirty-five separate locations between January 17, 2003, and November 10, 2005, and that “one of these events” was the day before the accident. {29} We conclude that the foregoing evidence raises issues of fact as to whether the Department had constructive notice of the tire debris and whether the Department breached its duty to Decedent to timely identify it and remove it. Specifically, the evidence presents issues of fact about whether the Department failed to exercise ordinary care in its duty to perform reasonable inspections of the roadway and remove dangerous tire debris from it by: (1) failing to provide its employees and supervisors with adequate training to remove litter or debris from the highway; (2) failing to patrol the highway with sufficient frequency to locate and remove dangerous debris from the highway; (3) failing to comply with its own standards on how often the highway should be patrolled; (4) failing to locate and remove the tire debris in a timely manner; (5) failing to have an adequate system by which it can be notified of debris on the highway. Thus, whether the Department had constructive notice of the tire debris is a question of fact for the jury to decide. See Rutherford, 2003-NMSC-010, ¶ 15 (“Whether a governmental entity exercises ordinary care in the identification of the hazard is a question of fact for the jury.”); Herrera v. Quality Pontiac, 2003-NMSC-018, ¶ 33, 134 N.M. 43, 73 P.3d 181 (refusing to address whether the defendant breached the duty of ordinary care because it is a question of fact for the jury); Ryan, 1998NMCA-116, ¶ 8 (stating constructive notice is a question of fact); cf. Martinez, 2013-NMSC-005, ¶ 41 (“Notice becomes a question of law only if no room for ordinary minds to differ exists.” (internal quotation marks and citation omitted)). {30} The Department nevertheless argues that because it is unknown how long the tire debris was actually on the road before the accident occurred, and imputing constructive notice of a danger depends on how long the dangerous hazard was present, it is entitled to summary judgment. We disagree. Ortega v. Kmart Corp., 36 P.3d 11, 13 (Cal. 2001), acknowledged that in a premises liability case, a plaintiff has the burden of proving that the business owner had actual or constructive notice of the defect in sufficient time to correct it. In light of this requirement, the question presented in that case was: If the plaintiff has no evidence of the source of the dangerous condition or the length of time it existed, may the plaintiff rely solely on the owner’s failure to inspect the premises within a reasonable period of time in order to establish an inference that the defective condition existed long enough for a reasonable person exercising ordinary care to have discovered it? Id. The court held: “[E]vidence of the owner’s failure to inspect the premises within a reasonable period of time is sufficient to allow an inference that the condition [existed] long enough to give the owner the opportunity to discover and remedy it.” Id. We agree. When there is a duty to inspect, evidence showing that there was a failure to inspect within a reasonable period of time under the circumstances is evidence that the dangerous condition could or should have been discovered but for the untimely inspection. “Where a condition has existed for such a length of time that the public entity might have known of the condition by the exercise of reasonable care and diligence, constructive notice exists.” Mtengule v. City of Chicago, 628 N.E.2d 1044, 1048 (Ill. App. Ct. 1993). {31} The foregoing principles were applied in Imburgia v. Ohio Department of Transportation, 114 Ohio Misc.2d 38, 759 N.E.2d 482 (Ohio Ct. Cl. 1999), a “Decision of Liability” made by a trial judge Bar Bulletin - February 25, 2015 - Volume 54, No. 8 21 Advance Opinions sitting on the Ohio Court of Claims. After the car in which the plaintiff was a passenger pulled over onto a highway median with a flat tire, she got out of the car and stepped into an electrical junction box, severely injuring her left foot, ankle, and calf. Id. at 40-41, 759 N.E. at 484. These boxes are cylindrical in shape and recessed into the ground in the median next to roadway lights with underground lighting circuit cable splices. Id. at 40, 759 N.E.2d at 484. They are normally covered with a concrete lid, but the concrete lid on this box was broken and had partially fallen into the junction box, which was cluttered with additional debris. Id. at 40-41, 759 N.E.2d at 484. The court first determined that the Ohio Department of Transportation (ODOT) had a duty to maintain the electrical boxes as part of its duty to maintain the roadways in a reasonably safe condition. Id. at 41, 759 N.E.2d at 485. The ODOT had no actual notice that the concrete lid covering the box was damaged, and the case turned on whether the ODOT was charged with constructive notice of the damage. Id. at 42, 759 N.E.2d at 486. The ODOT had no policy regarding routine inspection of the boxes, but it had actual notice that mowers had previously damaged such boxes in other locations, and upon becoming aware that a concrete lid was broken, it would make the necessary repairs. Id. at 4, 759 N.E.2d at 485-86. Given the condition of the box, and its concrete lid, and the apparent length of time that the debris had accumulated in the box, the court concluded, as a fact finder, that the ODOT had constructive notice of the dangerous condition of the box. Id. at 42, 759 N.E.2d at 486. See City of Jackson v. Internal Engine Parts Grp., Inc., 2003-CA-02772-SCT (¶ 10) (Miss. 2005) (affirming the trial court finding that the defendant city had either actual or constructive notice of debris obstructions in a drainage ditch by its negligent failure to inspect and maintain the drainage ditch). We find these cases and their reasoning persuasive and consistent with New Mexico jurisprudence. See Pollock, 1999-NMCA-083, ¶ 13 (rejecting the Department’s argument that the plaintiff needed to show where a wrong-way driver entered the highway and how long she had been driving the wrong way to establish notice); Martinez, 2013-NMSC-005, ¶ 42 22 http://www.nmcompcomm.us/ (rejecting the defendant’s argument that it needed notice of a recurring accident problem at the particular accident site and concluding “more latitude” was appropriate to decide the question of notice). This case presents no basis for modifying our existing precedent. We therefore do not require Plaintiff to supply evidence demonstrating precisely how long the tire debris was on the highway to overcome summary judgment. {32} We emphasize that the length of time which must pass before constructive notice may be found varies with each specific situation, and the fact that a dangerous condition exists is not sufficient, by itself, to conclude that a duty to inspect was breached. Furthermore, nothing we have said herein is meant to imply that the Department is an insurer of the safety of the highways in New Mexico. However, when the Department has actual or constructive knowledge of a dangerous condition on the highways, it has a duty to exercise ordinary care under the circumstances to prevent injury to the motoring public. {33} The jury must decide whether the Department’s system for identifying and removing specific pieces of debris is so lacking as to impute notice of this particular debris on the Department or if the Department’s actions were reasonable under the circumstances. Reasonable minds could differ in answering that question. A reasonable juror could agree with Plaintiff that the Department’s policies of identifying and removing dangerous debris were inadequate; or the jury could conclude that the Department acted reasonably and that any additional policies would be unreasonable. “Questions of ‘reasonableness’ are quintessential issues for a jury to resolve. In our system of justice, we place special confidence in juries to sort through conflicting evidence and come to a reasonable conclusion.” Martinez, 2013-NMSC-005, ¶ 47. 3. Proximate Cause {34} The Department argues that even if it owed Decedent a duty and breached that duty, her death was not the proximate result of its negligence. {35} This element concerns “whether and to what extent the defendant’s conduct foreseeably and substantially caused the specific injury that actually occurred.” Herrera, 2003-NMSC-018, ¶ 8. “An act Bar Bulletin - February 25, 2015 - Volume 54, No. 8 or omission may be deemed a ‘proximate cause’ of an injury if it contributes to bringing about the injury, if the injury would not have occurred without it, and if it is reasonably connected as a significant link to the injury.” Talbott v. Roswell Hosp. Corp., 2005-NMCA-109, ¶ 34, 138 N.M. 189, 118 P.3d 194; see UJI 13-305 NMRA (defining causation); Galvan v. City of Albuquerque, 1973-NMCA-049, ¶ 18, 85 N.M. 42, 508 P.2d 1339 (“Proximate cause is that which, in a natural or continuous sequence, produces the injury and without which the injury would not have occurred.”). Determining proximate cause is a question of fact for the jury. Id. ¶ 12. Only when the facts are undisputed “and the reasonable inferences from those facts are plain and consistent,” does proximate cause become an issue of law. Id. {36} The Department argues that even if Plaintiff shows that the Department breached its duty by failing to provide more litter patrols, without being able to show that the tire debris was on the road for an unreasonable length of time, Plaintiff cannot prove that the Department’s failure to act proximately caused the accident. The Department insists that since the “tire debris could have been deposited mere seconds before the accident[,]” no reasonable juror could find that the Department’s negligence caused the accident. (Emphasis added.) This argument is too speculative to decide as a matter of law. The jury must decide whether remedies could have prevented this accident. See Ryan, 1998-NMCA-116, ¶ 17 (deciding that the jury must decide between the parties’ disputing theories about whether animal crossing warning signs could have prevented the plaintiff ’s collision with an elk). We are therefore unpersuaded that no reasonable juror could find proximate cause under the facts before us. CONCLUSION {37} The district court order granting summary judgment in favor of the Department is reversed. {38} IT IS SO ORDERED. MICHAEL E. VIGIL, Judge WE CONCUR: MICHAEL D. BUSTAMANTE, Judge J. MILES HANISEE, Judge Advance Opinions http://www.nmcompcomm.us/ Certiorari Denied, November 20, 2014, No. 34,925 From the New Mexico Court of Appeals Opinion Number: 2015-NMCA-006 DEBORAH BROWN, Individually and on Behalf of Her Minor Children, H.B and B.S., Plaintiff-Appellant, v. ROBERT KELLOGG, M.D., ROBERT OLSEN, M.D., and PRESBYTERIAN HEALTHCARE SERVICES d/b/a KASEMAN PRESBYTERIAN HOSPITAL, Defendants-Appelleese Docket No. 32,988 (filed September 17, 2014) APPEAL FROM THE DISTRICT COURT OF BERNALILLO COUNTY VALERIE A. HULING, District Judge JAMES P. LYLE LAW OFFICES OF JAMES P. LYLE, P.C. Albuquerque, New Mexico for Appellant Opinion Timothy L. Garcia, Judge {1}Plaintiff, Deborah Brown, appeals from the district court’s grant of summary judgment in favor of Defendants, Robert Kellogg, M.D., Robert Olsen, M.D., and Presbyterian Healthcare Services d/b/a Kaseman Presbyterian Hospital. Plaintiff contends the district court erred in failing to recognize that Defendants had a legal duty to order that Plaintiff ’s husband, Jeremy Brown, undergo a fitness for duty evaluation before releasing him to return to work as a police officer. We agree with the district court that Defendants did not have a legal duty to order a fitness for duty evaluation. We affirm. BACKGROUND {2} Jeremy Brown was a detective with the Pueblo of Laguna Police Department. On May 17, 2007, Brown presented himself to the emergency room with thoughts of suicide stemming from the breakup of his marriage. Brown was found to exhibit “[n]o current . . . psychosis” and was discharged after a few hours. Brown returned to the emergency room on May 21, 2007, and was admitted to the hospital “in order to evaluate [his] dangerousness in view of JEFFREY M. CROASDELL SHANNON M. SHERRELL EDWARD RICCO RODEY, DICKASON, SLOAN, AKIN & ROBB, P.A. Albuquerque, New Mexico for Appellees expressed suicidal ideation and to evaluate for depression.” {3}On May 23, 2007, Brown was discharged from the hospital with a diagnosis of depression and adjustment reaction with anxiety and depression. The followup plan provided for individual therapy and for Brown to contact a psychologist at work. Brown received medical authorization from his doctors to return to work without restriction on May 26, 2007. A fitness for duty examination was not performed on Brown before he received authorization to return to work. On June 8, 2007, Brown used his service weapon to shoot Plaintiff and kill himself. Plaintiff suffered permanent brain injuries as a result of the shooting and lost custody of her minor children. {4}Plaintiff, individually and on behalf of her minor children, filed a complaint against Defendants on May 14, 2010, asserting a claim for medical malpractice. Defendants filed a motion to dismiss that was denied by the district court. Defendants next filed a motion for summary judgment, arguing that they did not owe a duty to Plaintiff as a matter of law. Following a hearing, the district court granted Defendants’ motion and entered summary judgment in favor of Defendants. Plaintiff appeals from this order granting summary judgment. DISCUSSION {5} We review the district court’s grant of summary judgment de novo. See Farmington Police Officers Ass’n v. City of Farmington, 2006-NMCA-077, ¶ 13, 139 N.M. 750, 137 P.3d 1204. Summary judgment should be granted “if the pleadings, depositions, answers to interrogatories and admissions on file, together with the affidavits, if any, show that there is no genuine issue as to any material fact and that the moving party is entitled to a judgment as a matter of law.” Rule 1-056(C) NMRA. {6}“To prove medical malpractice, a plaintiff must show that (1) the defendant owed the plaintiff a duty recognized by law; (2) the defendant breached the duty by departing from the proper standard of medical practice recognized in the community; and (3) the acts or omissions complained of proximately caused the plaintiff ’s injuries.” Diaz v. Feil, 1994NMCA-108, ¶ 5, 118 N.M. 385, 881 P.2d 745. The district court concluded that Defendants did not owe a duty to Plaintiff as a matter of law. Plaintiff contends the district court erred in failing to recognize that Defendants had a duty to order a fitness for duty evaluation for Brown before authorizing him to return to work as a police officer with access to a service weapon. {7}In Wilschinsky v. Medina, our Supreme Court explained that “[t]he finding of a duty involves the court in a careful balancing.” 1989-NMSC-047, ¶ 7, 108 N.M. 511, 775 P.2d 713. In determining whether to recognize a duty, the court “must take into account the likelihood of injury, the magnitude of the burden of guarding against it and the consequences of placing that burden upon the defendant.” Id. (internal quotation marks and citation omitted). Our Supreme Court has recently clarified that “foreseeability is not a factor for courts to consider when determining the existence of a duty . . . [because it] is a fact-intensive inquiry relevant only to breach of duty and legal cause considerations.” Rodriguez v. Del Sol Shopping Ctr. Assoc., 2014-NMSC-014, ¶ 1, 326 P.3d 465. “Instead, courts must articulate specific policy reasons, unrelated to foreseeability considerations, when deciding whether a defendant does or does not have a duty or that an existing duty should be limited.” Id. ¶ 25. We thus undertake an analysis of the policy considerations and interests involved without regard to whether the Bar Bulletin - February 25, 2015 - Volume 54, No. 8 23 Advance Opinions injury sustained by Plaintiff was foreseeable. Unfortunately, the district court addressed the issue of whether Defendants owed Plaintiff a duty to require Brown to undergo a fitness for duty evaluation prior to the issuance of the Supreme Court’s ruling in Rodriguez. As a result, neither party developed a significant record addressing the policy-based considerations to be weighed by the district court. This Court’s analysis of Defendant’s duty to Plaintiff is reflective of the limited record that was developed in the district court. {8}Our courts have recognized three sources of duty for medical professionals to third parties. See Wilschinsky, 1989NMSC-047, ¶ 8. In the first instance, a doctor or institution can potentially be liable for injury caused by patients with known “dangerous propensities” if the doctor exerts control over the patient. See id.; see e.g., Kelly v. Bd. of Trustees of Hillcrest Gen. Hosp. Inc., 1974-NMCA139, ¶¶ 5-7, 87 N.M. 112, 529 P.3d 1233 (holding summary judgment was improperly entered in favor of the defendant because the defendant failed to make a prima facie showing that it did not have actual knowledge of patient’s “dangerous propensities”); see also Stake v. Woman’s Div. of Christian Serv., 1963-NMSC-221, ¶¶ 4-5, 73 N.M. 303, 387 P.2d 871 (recognizing the potential duty to warn of patient’s “dangerous propensities” when the defendant has actual knowledge of such propensities). In the second instance, a doctor who is aware of specific threats to the life of an individual can potentially be liable for failing to disclose those threats to the authorities or to the person threatened. See Wilschinsky, 1989-NMSC-047, ¶ 9 (discussing Tarasoff v. Regents of Univ. of Cal., 551 P.2d 334 (Cal. 1976)). In the third instance, a doctor who administers powerful drugs in his office that result in impairment to a patient can potentially be liable to those injured by the impaired patient. Wilschinsky, 1989-NMSC-047, ¶¶ 11, 28. {9}Plaintiff does not suggest that the duty it seeks to impose on Defendants falls within any of the three categories identified in Wilschinsky. Instead, Plaintiff argues that under Wilschinsky, a duty exists based upon a factual analysis of 1) foreseeability—a likelihood of injury to http://www.nmcompcomm.us/ the plaintiff, and 2) the burden placed upon a defendant—the magnitude of the burden on a defendant and the consequences of doing so. See id ¶ 9. Plaintiff bases her argument on a consideration of “the uniquely dangerous perspective posed by law enforcement officers who are trained in all aspects of lethal force, combined with the well known need among mental [healthcare] professionals to order a fitness for duty evaluation under these [factual] circumstances.” Effectively, Plaintiff argues that this Court should impose a new, more focused duty to order a fitness for duty evaluation on independent healthcare professionals who treat individuals with access to firearms as part of their workplace environment. Plaintiff cites to neither New Mexico nor outside authority that would impose such a duty on independent healthcare professionals. The only fitness for duty examination requirement identified and recognized under existing law would apply to certain federal law enforcement agencies.1 Even under the federal regulation referenced by Plaintiff, it is the discretionary function of the federal agency, as employer, to consider imposing a psychiatric evaluation on a federal employee. Id. Plaintiff does not even assert that such a duty is imposed upon Brown’s employer in this case. In addition, Plaintiff does not dispute that a fitness for duty evaluation is not imposed on public agencies in New Mexico and is not required by independent healthcare professionals pursuant to existing law. Finally, Plaintiff ’s fact-based analysis of foreseeability is inconsistent with the policy-based analysis required under Rodriguez. 2014-NMSC-014, ¶¶ 1, 25. {10} Based upon the record presented in this case, there appear to be good policy reasons for rejecting the imposition of a fitness for duty legal obligation on independent healthcare professionals who treat individuals with access to firearms as part of their workplace environment. It appears from the testimony of Plaintiff ’s own expert, Peter DiVasto, a fitness for duty evaluation is a complex evaluation that “takes about two weeks to complete.” DiVasto also testified that he has never been in a situation where a hospital has ordered a fitness for duty evaluation. It is unclear who would conduct the evalu- ation, who would pay for the evaluation, and how the outcome of the evaluation would affect a patient’s medical care and workplace limitations. It is also unclear what negative effects a fitness for duty evaluation requirement on independent healthcare professionals would have on law enforcement personnel and their desire to seek medical assistance. {11} We do not believe it is appropriate for this Court to impose an entirely new and novel legal duty upon healthcare professionals without an extensive development of the policy considerations in the record for review. A balancing of the various policy interests presented in this case does not clearly support the imposition of such a new duty. These are the types of policy considerations that should be publicly addressed as part of the legislative process if a fitness for duty evaluation is to be imposed as a new duty upon healthcare professionals. We find the following Supreme Court language to be particularly instructive: Policy determines duty. With deference always to constitutional principles, it is the particular domain of the [L]egislature, as the voice of the people, to make public policy. Elected executive officials and executive agencies also make policy, to a lesser extent, as authorized by the constitution or the [L]egislature. The judiciary, however, is not as directly and politically responsible to the people as are the legislative and executive branches of government. Torres v. State, 1995-NMSC-025, ¶ 10, 119 N.M. 609, 894 P.2d 386. {12} DiVasto testified at his deposition that he believed Defendants’ responsibility was to provide Brown with an outpatient appointment upon discharge, and Defendants satisfied that responsibility. Brown’s follow-up plan also required him to contact a psychologist at work. The Legislature and our courts have not imposed any additional duty upon healthcare professionals regarding their patients with jobs that involve carrying firearms as part of their workplace functions. In addition, this Court is not aware of any other jurisdiction that has recognized a duty on the part of a healthcare professional to order 1 Plaintiff cites to a portion of the Office of Personnel Management regulations setting forth the circumstances under which a federal agency has discretion to order a psychiatric examination. See 5 C.F.R. § 339.301(e)(1) (2014). However these regulations involve the federal agency as an employer, do not address the specific situation involving independent healthcare professionals presented in the present case, and do not place a duty on any healthcare professional to order or compel a fitness for duty evaluation upon a patient. 24 Bar Bulletin - February 25, 2015 - Volume 54, No. 8 Advance Opinions a fitness for duty evaluation under similar circumstances. See 5 C.F.R. § 339.301(e) (1). The duty imposed upon federal law enforcement agencies would be evaluated under a different and distinct set of policy considerations focusing upon employment and workplace considerations. The relationship between a healthcare professional and a patient is uniquely different, necessitating policy considerations that http://www.nmcompcomm.us/ focus on the medical circumstances present. We agree with the district court that Defendants did not have a legal duty to order Brown to undergo a fitness for duty evaluation before releasing him from the hospital and later authorizing him to return to the workplace as a police officer pursuant to the specific requirements set forth in his medical follow-up plan. CONCLUSION {13} For the foregoing reasons, we affirm the district court’s grant of summary judgment in favor of Defendants. {14} IT IS SO ORDERED. TIMOTHY L. GARCIA, Judge WE CONCUR: RODERICK T. KENNEDY, Chief Judge JAMES J. WECHSLER, Judge Bar Bulletin - February 25, 2015 - Volume 54, No. 8 25 Advance Opinions http://www.nmcompcomm.us/ Certiorari Denied, December 11, 2014, No. 34,939 From the New Mexico Court of Appeals Opinion Number: 2015-NMCA-007 STATE OF NEW MEXICO, Plaintiff-Appellee, v. JOHN GREEN, Defendant-Appellant Docket No. 31,787 (filed September 22, 2014) APPEAL FROM THE DISTRICT COURT OF BERNALILLO COUNTY CARL J. BUTKUS, District Judge GARY K. KING Attorney General Santa Fe, New Mexico JACQUELINE R. MEDINA Assistant Attorney General Albuquerque, New Mexico for Appellee Opinion J. Miles Hanisee, Judge {1} This appeal follows the revocation of Defendant’s probation and his ensuing return to incarceration in order to conclude his original term of imprisonment in full. In 2003, after pleading guilty to second-degree kidnapping and murder, Defendant was sentenced to nineteen years, of which nine were suspended by the district court. In 2008, after about five years in prison, Defendant was released on probation. Within months of his release, however, the State began to allege what became a series of ensuing violations that culminated in the revocation of Defendant’s probation. Ultimately, the district court ordered Defendant to serve the balance of his sentence in prison, including a previously imposed one year habitual offender enhancement. Defendant appeals both the revocation of his probation, as well as the conditions of probation. We affirm. BACKGROUND {2} In 2001 Defendant was indicted for the kidnapping, rape, and murder of Kathryn JORGE A. ALVARADO Chief Public Defender KIMBERLY CHAVEZ COOK Assistant Public Defender Santa Fe, New Mexico for Appellant Dockweiller, an Albuquerque attorney, in 1988. Defendant was allowed to plead guilty, pursuant to North Carolina v. Alford, 400 U.S. 25 (1970) (holding that a district court may accept a defendant’s guilty plea despite an absence of admission to criminal wrongdoing), to second-degree murder, contrary to NMSA 1978, § 302-1(B) (1980) and kidnapping, contrary to NMSA 1978, § 30-4-1 (1973).1 During the plea hearing, Defendant did not oppose the State’s request that the district court take judicial notice of the grand jury proceedings and content of the indictment to establish a factual basis for the plea. {3}The record reveals that Detective Bill Peters of the cold-case unit of the Bernalillo County Sheriff ’s Department provided testimony to the grand jury that indicted Defendant. He informed the grand jury that Ms. Dockweiller had disappeared on May 12, 1988, and was found several days later in a shallow grave, still bound and gagged. The Office of the Medical Investigator (OMI) concluded that the nature and manner of death had been homicide by strangulation. Pursuant to the death investigation conducted by OMI, vaginal swabs were taken from Ms. Dockweiller that revealed the presence of semen within Ms. Dockweiller’s body that had been deposited there “at or near the time of her death.” Defendant was originally a suspect in Ms. Dockweiller’s murder, and following a report from his ex-wife over a decade later, wherein she disclosed her discovery of Ms. Dockweiller’s calendar concealed within Defendant’s vehicle, Detective Peters obtained a search warrant for Defendant’s DNA, which was found to match the DNA obtained from Ms. Dockweiler’s body. Based on this discovery, Defendant was indicted and chose to plead guilty in lieu of trial. {4}Following the plea colloquy, the district court observed that the murder of Ms. Dockweiller was in fact the second murder Defendant had committed. A presentencing report informed the district court that Defendant had been previously sentenced to serve a twenty-year period of imprisonment in Texas based upon an unrelated homicide and attempt to commit criminal rape in 1979.2 Based on the circumstances of the instant case and in light of Defendant’s past criminal history, the district court ordered that he serve the statutory maximum penalty of nine years for the second-degree murder of Ms. Dockweiller, nine additional years for her kidnapping, and an extra year because he was a habitual offender. Due to the tenyear sentencing cap established within the plea agreement, however, the district court suspended nine of Defendant’s nineteen year cumulative sentence. It imposed the maximum available period of probation of five years, alongside two years of supervised parole. In its judgment and sentence, the district court ordered probation to be wholly conditioned upon Defendant “obey[ing] all rules, regulations[,] and orders of the [p]robation [a]uthorities.” {5}When Defendant was released from prison, he signed a sex offender behavioral contract. Although not required to register as a sex offender under the Sex Offender Registration and Notification Act (SORNA), NMSA 1978, §§ 29-11A-1 to -10 (1995, as amended through 2013), Defendant was compelled to comply with various sex-offender-related terms of 1 We note that on the “Repeat Offender Plea and Disposition Agreement” (plea agreement), the words “no contest” are crossed out and the phrase “guilty pursuant to Alford” is written in its place. The plea agreement, which also established the sentencing parameters agreed to by the parties, was signed by the prosecutor as well as by Defendant and his attorney. 2 Although the record does not shed light on how much of his sentence Defendant actually served in Texas, it was clearly less than the twenty years as he murdered Ms. Dockweiller in 1988, merely nine years later. 26 Bar Bulletin - February 25, 2015 - Volume 54, No. 8 Advance Opinions probation, including abstention from the purchase, possession, or subscription to “any sexually oriented or sexually stimulating material.” In the contract, Defendant agreed that probation authorities were free to examine any computer Defendant could access for inappropriate content, including, but not limited to pornography. Within months of Defendant’s release and placement on probation in 2008, probation authorities alleged that he was in violation of specific prohibitions to which he had agreed. Specifically, the probation violation report alleged that Defendant had associated with other probationers and parolees, responded to personal dating ads on the internet, and left the county without permission. He was arrested on the probation violations, and the State sought revocation of his probation. {6} At the time, Defendant challenged the allegations on the grounds that the sex offender behavioral contract he was required to sign was not reasonably related to the charges of conviction, and that the “overbroad, pervasive, and undifferentiated restrictions” associated with sex offender probation violated his due process rights. He relied on State v. Williams, in which we held that a defendant not convicted of a sex offense under SORNA cannot be subjected to SORNA requirements. 2006NMCA-092, ¶ 12, 140 N.M. 194, 141 P.3d 538. The State, through the New Mexico Corrections Department (NMCD), filed a response, maintaining that the crimes of conviction, considered alongside what was known regarding his prior murder conviction, justified the probationary supervision he received. NMCD asserted that probation authorities have broad discretion to supervise probationers with those conditions it deems appropriate and that NMSA 1978, Section 31-21-4 (1963) requires that the post-release probationary treatment of persons convicted of crimes “shall take into consideration their individual characteristics, circumstances, need[s,] and potentialities.” Following a hearing, the district court denied Defendant’s motion to modify the terms and conditions of his probation, yet did not then revoke Defendant’s probation. {7} In May 2011 Defendant was again arrested for what were alleged to be additional probation violations. This time, the probation report asserted that Defendant: (1) was in violation of his behavioral contract as he was found to have pornographic imagery on his computer; (2) had responded to personal advertisements on his laptop http://www.nmcompcomm.us/ computer in violation of the behavioral contract; and (3) had violated his probation by associating with other probationers and parolees. During the ensuing violation hearing, Officer Baum, Defendant’s probation supervisor, testified that when Defendant had initially signed the behavioral contract and Defendant had reviewed the conditions contained within it, specifically including the conditions on computer usage that disallowed pornography and sexually explicit material. The officer testified that upon opening and examining Defendant’s computer, he observed a “photo of a nude woman.” Officer Baum testified that he asked Defendant if “there [were] any porn images” on the computer, and Defendant replied that there were. Officer Baum stated that he and a colleague later conducted a forensic examination of the computer and found numerous pornographic images. Over Defendant’s objection as to foundation, a collage of the images found were entered into evidence as State’s Exhibit 2 (Exhibit 2) during Defendant’s revocation hearing. Following the hearing, the court revoked Defendant’s probation and ordered that he serve the remainder of his original sentence. {8}Defendant appeals the revocation of his probation on three bases, arguing that: (1) the requirement that he sign a sex offender behavior contract was an illegal condition of probation; (2) there was insufficient evidence to support any of the probation violations found by the district court or, in the alternative, he lacked notice that his conduct could constitute violations of the conditions of probation; and (3) the images found on Defendant’s laptop lacked a proper foundation and should have been determined to be inadmissible. LEGALITY OF CONDITIONS OF PROBATION {9}New Mexico law places squarely within purview of the district court the authority to order a defendant to “satisfy any other conditions reasonably related to . . . rehabilitation.” NMSA 1978, § 3120-6(F) (2007). An award of probation is a discretionary act of the sentencing court, and a challenge to its terms and conditions is reviewed on appeal only for an abuse of discretion. Williams, 2006-NMCA-092, ¶ 3. “However, a sentencing court may not impose an illegal sentence. [I]t does not have the discretion to impose a probation term or condition that is contrary to law.” Id. ¶ 4. “We review the legality of a [criminal] sentence under the de novo standard of review.” Id. The Conditions of Probation Imposed by NMCD were Authorized by the District Court {10} Defendant first contends that the conditions of probation to which he was required to adhere were illegal because NMCD lacked the authority to mandate that his release be conditioned upon his being party to any “sex offender behavior contract” that included conditions not expressly provided within the district court’s judgment and sentence. To support his argument, Defendant relies upon Section 31-20-6, which requires that the sentencing court attach to its order “reasonable conditions as it may deem necessary to ensure that the defendant will observe the laws of the United States and the various states and the ordinances of any municipality.” Defendant additionally relies on State v. Martinez, which states that “[c]onditions [of probation] may not be added by amendment subsequent to imposition of a valid original judgment.” 1972-NMCA-135, ¶ 4, 84 N.M. 295, 502 P.2d 320. {11} Considering this same issue, our Court determined that a district court’s enumeration of a special probationary condition that the defendant “comply with any other reasonable conditions specified by the Probation and Parole Division[,]” is sufficient indicia to justify placement of a defendant on sex offender supervision. State v. Leon, 2013-NMCA-011, ¶ 24, 292 P.3d 493 (internal quotation marks omitted), cert. quashed, 2013-NMCERT-010, 313 P.3d 251. In Leon, we cited to Martinez, where the defendant “argued that the conditions imposed by the probation office were without legal effect because they were not part of the district court’s order deferring his sentence.” Leon, 2013-NMCA-011, ¶ 25. We determined that the language of the order in Martinez made the conditions imposed by the probation office the conditions of the defendant’s probation. 1972-NMCA-135, ¶ 5. {12} Here, the district court’s order generally stated that “Defendant is ordered to be placed on supervised probation . . . on condition that Defendant obey all rules, regulations[,] and orders of the [p]robation [a]uthorities.” As in both Martinez and Leon, the district court’s judgment and sentence incorporates language which justified specific, individual requirements of probation. “That the terms and conditions set by the probation office were not spelled out in the order itself did not establish that those terms and conditions were not Bar Bulletin - February 25, 2015 - Volume 54, No. 8 27 Advance Opinions imposed by the court.” Leon, 2013-NMCA011, ¶ 26. On both our precedent and the facts of this case, we determine that the conditions of probation were sufficiently stated in the district court’s original judgment and sentence. {13} Relying on United States v. Carter, 463 F.3d 526 (6th Cir. 2006), Defendant nonetheless argues that NMCD failed to adequately justify its decision imposing sex offender conditions upon Defendant and that it never established that a sexual offense was committed in the first place. Carter stated that a district court must justify special conditions of supervised release at the time of sentencing and must “state in open court the reasons for its imposition of the particular sentence[.]” Id. at 528 (internal quotation marks and citation omitted). But we do not find Carter to be helpful or supportive of Defendant’s position. Specifically, Carter does not support Defendant’s contention that NMCD was required “to state its reasons and rationale for mandating special sex offender conditions of probation.” Carter imposes, in a federal context, explanatory requirements solely upon the district court, not upon any probationary entity. More importantly, this requirement is imposed pursuant to federal statute, 18 U.S.C. § 3553(c) (2010), a mandate the New Mexico Legislature has not adopted. See State v. Lack, 1982NMCA-111, ¶ 15, 98 N.M. 500, 650 P.2d 22 (“Authority to grant probation is a matter of legislative grace, and the district court’s power to impose probation is purely statutory.”). {14} We conclude that Defendant has not established that Carter, or any argument he has made regarding the behavioral contract, is able to overcome the probationary discretion authorized by Martinez and Leon that extends from the district court to probation authorities when worded as the district court did in this case. The behavioral contract Defendant was required to sign upon his release from prison and commencement of probation was a proper exercise of probationary authority pursuant to the judgment and sentence that followed and was based upon the plea agreement Defendant also signed. Defendant’s signature on the plea agreement, provided in the presence of his attorney, acknowledged his understanding of its terms that included the five-year period of probation and warned that any violation could lead to Defendant’s return to incarceration for the balance of the original sentence imposed. 28 http://www.nmcompcomm.us/ The District Court Did Not Err in Denying Defendant’s Motion to Modify the Conditions of Probation {15} Defendant next argues that the district court abused its discretion in denying Defendant’s motion to modify the conditions of release as no reasonable relationship existed between Defendant’s convictions and the conditions of probation. He additionally argues that there was insufficient evidence in the record to support sex offender probation. Among other conditions, the sex offender supervision behavioral contract required that Defendant abstain from purchasing, possessing, or subscribing “to any sexually oriented or sexually stimulating material.” He was also prohibited from possessing pornography. Defendant asserts that he was not convicted of a sexual offense, nor was there a factual basis or evidence supporting an inference that a sexual offense occurred, and therefore, these conditions were not reasonably related to his convictions of second-degree murder and kidnapping. {16} Under the abuse of discretion standard appropriate for our review of conditions of probation, “we will not set . . . aside [the terms and conditions of a probation] unless they[:] (1) have no reasonable relationship to the offense for which the defendant was convicted, (2) relate to activity which is not itself criminal in nature, and (3) require or forbid conduct which is not reasonably related to deferring future criminality.” Williams, 2006-NMCA-092, ¶ 3 (emphasis, alteration, internal quotation marks, and citation omitted). “To be reasonably related, the probation condition must be relevant to the offense for which probation was granted.” State v. Gardner, 1980NMCA-122, ¶ 19, 95 N.M. 171, 619 P.2d 847. On appeal, it is Defendant’s burden to persuade us that the district court erred and abused its discretion in holding that a reasonable relationship existed between Defendant’s kidnapping and murder convictions and his conditions of probation. Leon, 2013-NMCA-011, ¶ 28; State v. Baca, 2004-NMCA-049, ¶ 16, 135 N.M. 490, 90 P.3d 509. We determine Defendant failed to do so, and we remain unpersuaded by his conclusions to the contrary. {17} As we have stated, Defendant pleaded guilty to the second-degree kidnapping of Ms. Dockweiler. The statute at the time of her kidnapping and murder defined kidnapping as “the unlawful taking, restraining or confining of a person, by force or deception, with intent that the Bar Bulletin - February 25, 2015 - Volume 54, No. 8 victim . . . (3) be held to service against the victim’s will.” Section 30-4-1(A)(3). Our Supreme Court has recognized that “ ‘h[olding] for service[s]’ ” can include holding a victim for sexual purposes. See State v. McGuire, 1990-NMSC-067, ¶¶ 8, 12, 110 N.M. 304, 795 P.2d 996. The district court record indeed contains evidence supporting the State’s assertion that there was a sexual element to Defendant’s crime. There was testimony before the grand jury that Defendant’s semen was located within Ms. Dockweiler’s deceased body and that it was “deposited at or near the time of her death.” Furthermore, Defendant had been indicted by the grand jury on a charge of first degree criminal sexual penetration, a fact that the district court addressed at the hearing on Defendant’s motion to modify in response to Defendant’s assertion that the State did not present evidence that it believed a sex crime was committed. Lastly, the pre-sentence report indicates that this was not the first instance in which Defendant was charged with a sexually based crime; Defendant was previously charged with “[a]ttempt to [c]ommit [c]riminal [r]ape” in the state of Texas. {18} Thus, Defendant’s contention that the requirement that he sign and adhere to a sex offender behavior contract bore no relation to facts suitable for the district court’s or probation authorities’ reliance is inaccurate and incomplete. His contention that these things are too remote in time or that he “never had an opportunity to challenge those assertions” misunderstands the distinction between what would have been required to convict him of sex offenses during a trial on the merits and what is properly relied upon to inform those tasked with maintaining community safety at the time Defendant was permitted to leave prison before his sentence was complete. {19} Again in this regard, we rely on Leon, 2013-NMCA-011, ¶¶ 27-34. There, the defendant pled no contest to contributing to the delinquency of a minor and selling or giving alcohol to a minor. Id. ¶ 2. Upon suspension of his sentence, the defendant was ordered by NMCD to sign a sex offender behavior contract. The defendant already had a prior felony conviction for a sex offense. Id. ¶ 3. This Court acknowledged that the defendant’s current convictions involved criminal contact with minors and based on these circumstances, in addition to the defendant’s criminal history, the district court did not err in Advance Opinions determining that a sex offender behavior contract was reasonably related to the current convictions, rehabilitation, and public safety. Id. ¶¶ 30-31. {20} Although we recognize that in the case before us Defendant had not been convicted of a sexual offense, as had the defendant in Leon, such is not fatal to the conditions of Defendant’s probation. Defendant was in fact charged with a sexual offense on two prior occasions and indicted by a grand jury on one of those charges. As in Leon, Defendant’s current conviction involved criminal contact with Ms. Dockweiller, and what is more crucial to our analysis is, not only was it criminal contact, but of a sexual nature. What had become the cold case of Ms. Dockweiller’s murder was solved solely as a result of the discovery that the semen found in her deceased body was Defendant’s. It would be inappropriate that our Legislature’s instruction that probation authorities study a defendant’s case to determine that individual’s “characteristics, circumstances, needs and potentialities[,]” Section 31-21-4, somehow be viewed to require exclusion of such a material fact. Given the available facts regarding Defendant’s current convictions, considered alongside his alarmingly similar criminal history, we cannot conclude that the district court abused its discretion in ruling that the conditions of his probation were reasonably related to his current convictions, rehabilitation, or public safety. See Leon, 2013-NMCA-011, ¶ 27 (“The court has broad discretion to effect rehabilitation and may impose conditions designed to protect the public against the commission of other offenses during the term, and which have as their objective the deterrence of future misconduct.” (internal quotation marks and citation omitted)); Baca, 2004-NMCA-049, ¶ 36 (“The general purposes of probation . . . are rehabilitation and deterrence for community safety[.]”). SUFFICIENCY OF EVIDENCE TO SUPPORT PROBATION REVOCATION {21} Defendant next asserts that there was insufficient evidence to support any of the alleged probation violations upon which his probation was revoked. The probation violation report alleged numerous violations, one being violation of the sex http://www.nmcompcomm.us/ offender behavior contract that directly prohibited possession of sexual images on Defendant’s laptop.3 Defendant contends that this condition was overly vague such that a “reasonable person would not have known that the nude images would be considered pornography[,]” and thus he contends that the evidence was insufficient to support revocation of his probation. The State argues that the images depict pornographic, sexually oriented, or sexually stimulating photographic depictions, the very content Defendant was disallowed from possessing and was forewarned would constitute violative conduct. {22} Proof of a probation violation need not be established beyond a reasonable doubt. State v. Martinez, 1989-NMCA036, ¶ 4, 108 N.M. 604, 775 P.2d 1321. Instead, the evidentiary standard is that the violation must be established with a reasonable certainty, such that a reasonable and impartial mind would believe that the defendant violated the terms of probation. State v. Sanchez, 2001-NMCA-060, ¶ 13, 130 N.M. 602, 28 P.3d 1143. The burden of proving a violation with reasonable certainty lies with the State. Leon, 2013NMCA-011, ¶ 36. “We review [a district] court’s decision to revoke probation under an abuse of discretion standard. To establish an abuse of discretion, it must appear the [district] court acted unfairly or arbitrarily, or committed manifest error.” Martinez, 1989-NMCA-036, ¶ 5 (citations omitted). We conclude that the State has met its burden, and the district court did not abuse its discretion in revoking Defendant’s probation. {23} Upon his release from custody, Defendant signed the sex offender behavior contract, and he acknowledged that he “read, or . . . had read to [him], and underst[ood] these additional supervision conditions.” The contract stated, under condition A of the “computers/electronics/ entertainment” provision, that Defendant was prohibited from possessing “any sexually oriented or sexually stimulating material.” The condition explains that this “includes, but is not limited to: [s]exual devices, books, magazines, video/audio tapes, DVDs, CD ROMs, and [i]nternet websites.” Condition C of the same provision stated that any computer to which Defendant had access would be subject to examination for inappropriate content, including but not limited to pornography or adult websites. Officer Baum had reviewed the conditions of probation with Defendant, and specifically informed Defendant that probation authorities would have “full access to [his] computer to do any searches on it for pornography or sexually explicit material.” He testified that he informed Defendant that he was not to possess “any sexually explicit material[,]” including “[p]ictures[,] [n]aked women [or] [m]en. Anything that’s sexually explicit.” {24} Baum additionally testified that upon performing a field visit, he and another probation officer located and searched Defendant’s computer. Baum explained that in conducting the computer search he initially saw “a photo of a nude woman,” and that Defendant “acknowledged that there was pornography on his computer[.]” Baum testified that he was present during a forensic examination that was conducted on Defendant’s computer and viewed the resulting report containing the nude images. Exhibit 2 is the report and collage of nude images the State entered into evidence. At the conclusion of the hearing, the district court found that Defendant violated paragraph C of the “computers/electronics/entertainment” provision of the sex offender behavior contract, ruling that the images discovered on Defendant’s computer were in fact pornography and revoked Defendant’s probation. {25} Although our case law contains little guidance on the definition of adult pornography, we are helped by our Supreme Court’s definition of “ ‘sexually explicit exhibition’ ” and our Legislature’s definition of “sexual conduct” in the context of sexual exploitation of children and sexually oriented material harmful to minors, respectively. Our Supreme Court has defined the term “sexually explicit exhibition” as a “graphic and unequivocal display or portrayal of nudity or sexual activity.” State v. Myers, 2009-NMSC-016, ¶ 19, 146 N.M. 128, 207 P.3d 1105. Furthermore, our Legislature defines “sexual conduct” as an “act of masturbation, . . . physical contact with a person’s clothed or unclothed genitals, pubic area, buttocks or, if such 3Because we affirm the district court’s ruling with regard to the violation of the sex offender behavior contract, contrary to Condition 5 of Defendant’s conditions of probation, we will not reach the issue of whether there was sufficient evidence to prove the State’s remaining allegations of probation violations. See Leon, 2013-NMCA-011, ¶ 37 (stating that “although [the d]efendant challenges the sufficiency of the evidence supporting each of his probation violations, if there is sufficient evidence to support just one violation, we will find the district court’s order was proper”). Bar Bulletin - February 25, 2015 - Volume 54, No. 8 29 Advance Opinions person be female, breast[.]” NMSA 1978, § 30-37-1(C) (1973). We conclude each of these definitions encompasses that which is “sexually oriented” within the terms of Defendant’s sex offender behavior contract. Moreover, each such category was included within the many images collected by Defendant on his laptop hard drive. {26} What Defendant contends to be “mere nudity,” we, like the district court before us, hold to be at least nine images of or depicting sexual activity and/or physical contact with unclothed female genitals or buttocks. Given the highly sexual nature of these images, in conjunction with Officer Baum’s testimony that he informed Defendant that possession of these types of images were disallowed under the sex offender behavior contract, we conclude that not only did Defendant have notice of the prohibitions, but that there was sufficient evidence for a reasonable mind to conclude that Defendant violated this condition of probation and that the district court’s revocation of Defendant’s probation did not constitute an abuse of discretion. ADMISSIBILITY OF PHOTOGRAPHS {27} As his last point of appeal, Defendant argues that the photographs contained in Exhibit 2 were improperly admitted on the basis that the State failed to properly authenticate or lay a sufficient foundation for their admission. “We review the district court’s evidentiary rulings for an abuse of discretion.” State v. Neal, 2007-NMCA-086, ¶ 36, 142 N.M. 487, 167 P.3d 935. Although Defendant acknowledges that the rules of evidence do not apply to probation revocation hearings, he nonetheless argues that his due process rights were violated because Exhibit 2 was improperly admitted. {28} At the probation revocation hearing, Officer Baum testified that, after he saw the initial nude photograph on Defendant’s computer, he arrested Defendant for a probation violation, and was present while another officer conducted a forensic examination on Defendant’s computer. Baum testified that he saw the report containing the images that was generated from the examination and printed that report. Baum identified Exhibit 2 as the report he printed from the scan of Defendants computer based on a sticky note he placed on the document and the docu- 30 http://www.nmcompcomm.us/ ment itself. When the State sought admission of Exhibit 2 into evidence, Defendant objected on the grounds that the State had failed to lay the proper foundation. Defendant argued that another officer ran the software on Defendant’s computer, and Baum merely “went and grabbed documents off the printer[, and] he ha[d] no idea how it all happened before then.” Defendant asserted that it was too far of a stretch for Baum “to say that [the images] that came off the printer necessarily [were] on [Defendant’s] computer.” The district court disagreed and admitted the photos into evidence, explaining that Baum “was present at all times that the forensic examination was conducted[,]” and that he was “able to identify it . . . in court as the material that he saw at the time that the scan was done.” {29} Defendant now argues that Officer Baum could not provide proper authentication testimony to establish that Exhibit 2 was originally located on Defendant’s computer. He also suggests that the images were placed on the computer by the software used by probation authorities, and notes that Baum cannot testify that the images were not already stored on the software prior to the forensic analysis of Defendant’s computer. Defendant additionally contests Baum’s identification of the document containing the images, asserting that “[i]t is inconceivable that Officer Baum actually recognized the images themselves from a single prior viewing” and that “Baum’s recognition of the sticky note is an improper authentication for admission of the attached packet.” {30} The primary problem with Defendant’s challenge to the admission of Exhibit 2 is that rules of evidence do not apply during probation revocation hearings. See Rule 11-1101(D)(3)(d) NMRA; Rule 11-901 NMRA. Moreover, Defendant fails to cite any authority in support of his request that we apply an evidentiary standard to the contrary. Despite the detail in which he addresses what he perceives to be the failed evidentiary and admissibility underpinnings of Exhibit 2, we will not consider this argument. See State v. Vaughn, 2005-NMCA-076, ¶ 42, 137 N.M. 674, 114 P.3d 354 (stating that “this Court will not consider an argument that lacks citation to any legal authority in support of that argument”). Bar Bulletin - February 25, 2015 - Volume 54, No. 8 {31} Defendant additionally argues that he was denied the opportunity to question the officer who performed the forensic scan of his computer regarding the forensic software or the administration of the scan. Defendant asserts that the technique used in the software search to locate the images on Defendant’s computer is vital to establishing that Defendant had knowledge that the images were on his computer, and the district court erred in finding knowing possession “without any foundational testimony.” Although Defendant acknowledges that he is not alleging a confrontation violation, he maintains that his due process rights were violated as a result of allowing Officer Baum to lay the foundation for the admission of Exhibit 2. We disagree. {32} In our review of the record we notice that Officer Baum testified that after he located the first nude image on Defendant’s computer, he questioned Defendant about whether “there [were] any porn images” on the computer, and Defendant acknowledged that there were. In probation violation hearings, the district court performs two separate roles, fact finding and disposition. Martinez, 1989-NMCA-036, ¶ 11. In this context, Officer Baum’s testimony bore the capacity to establish that Defendant knew there was prohibited material on his computer. “It is the court’s sound judgment that is invoked, and the exercise of that judgment will not be reversed on appeal unless it was mistakenly exercised.” Id. (internal quotation marks and citation omitted). Given this testimony, we cannot conclude that the district court’s decision to revoke Defendant’s probation was “clearly against the logic and effect of the facts and circumstances of the case[,]” or that its ruling was “clearly untenable or not justified by reason.” State v. Layne, 2008-NMCA-103, ¶ 6, 144 N.M. 574, 189 P.3d 707 (internal quotation marks and citation omitted). Accordingly, we affirm. CONCLUSION {33} For the foregoing reasons, we affirm the revocation of Defendant’s probation. {34} IT IS SO ORDERED. J. MILES HANISEE, Judge WE CONCUR: MICHAEL D. BUSTAMANTE, Judge M. MONICA ZAMORA, Judge Experience and Expertise At Work For You We are pleased to acknowledge our colleagues who received recognition as “Best Lawyers in America®—2015.” MARK H. DONATELLI (Since 1989) Santa Fe, NM ERIC N. DAHLSTROM (Since 2005) Tempe, AZ (LOTY 2013, Santa Fe) 2014, Phoenix) Criminal Defense: Non-White-Collar; Criminal Defense: White-Collar Gaming Law (LOTY 2013 & 2015, Phoenix); Native American Law (LOTY 2011 & JOHN C. BIENVENU (Since 2008) Santa Fe, NM Employment Law–Individuals (LOTY 2015, Santa Fe); Litigation–Labor & Employment (LOTY 2013, Santa Fe); RICHARD W. HUGHES (Since 2007) Santa Fe, NM Gaming Law; Native American Law (LOTY 2012 & 2014, Santa Fe) Natural Resources Law PETER SCHOENBURG (Since 1995) Albuquerque, NM Bet-the-Company Litigation; Criminal Defense: Non-White-Collar; Criminal Defense: White-Collar Mass Tort Litigation/Class Actions– Plaintiffs SARAH E. BENNETT (Since 2001) Santa Fe, NM (LOTY 2010, Albuquerque) (Year) Designates first year the lawyer was listed; LOTY designates Lawyer of the Year Collaborative Law: Family Law; Family Law (LOTY 2012, Santa Fe) A complete listing of the Firm’s rankings is as follows: Santa Fe Tier 1 Criminal Defense: Non-White-Collar Criminal Defense: White-Collar Employment Law—Individuals Family Law Gaming Law Litigation—Labor & Employment Native American Law Personal Injury Litigation—Plaintiffs 505.988.8004 Santa Fe Albuquerque Tier 1 Criminal Defense: Non-White-Collar Criminal Defense: White-Collar Phoenix Tier 1: Gaming Law Native American Law 505.243.1443 Albuquerque 480.921.9296 Tempe www.RothsteinLaw.com Bar Bulletin - February 25, 2015 - Volume 54, No. 8 31 LITTLE GILMAN-TEPPER BATLEY & LEIGH You spent years preparing for the Bar Exam... Luckily, you could save right now with GEICO’S SPECIAL DISCOUNT. Years of preparation come down to a couple days of testing and anxiety. Fortunately, there’s no studying required to save with a special discount from GEICO just for being a member of State Bar of New Mexico. Let your professional status help you save some money. geico.com/bar/SBNM MENTION YOUR STATE BAR OF NEW MEXICO MEMBERSHIP TO SAVE EVEN MORE. Some discounts, coverages, payment plans and features are not available in all states or in all GEICO companies. See geico.com for more details. GEICO and Affiliates. Washington DC 20076. GEICO Gecko image © 1999-2012. © 2012 GEICO. 32 Bar Bulletin - February 25, 2015 - Volume 54, No. 8 Wilcox Law Firm, P.C. “Providing Exceptional Estate Planning Services for Exceptional Clients”® Thursday, May 14, 2015 7:45 a.m. – 5:00 p.m. Annual Estate Planning Update 2015 State Bar of New Mexico 5121 Masthead N.E. Albuquerque, New Mexico 87109 Please donate $75 to the Independent Community Foundation, Inc. to register for this seminar. Please mail your donation to Wilcox Law Firm, P.C. to confirm your registration. Seating is limited, so you must RSVP to attend. Professional Credit Pending (MCLE, CE, CFP, CPA and Insurance [Ethics]) Agenda Sign-in Estate and Gift Tax Update 2015 It’s All About the Basis? Estate Planning in 2015: Income Tax Planning, IRA Beneficiary Designations After Clark, Charitable Giving, Grantor Trusts, Etc. Vickie R. Wilcox, J.D., LL.M. 7:45 – 8:15 a.m. 8:30 – 9:30 a.m. Vickie R. Wilcox, J.D., LL.M. 9:30 – 10:30 a.m. Break 10:30 – 10:45 a.m. All You Ever Wanted to Know About Real Estate With Respect to Estate Planning and Probate: Ask the Expert Scott E. Turner, J.D., Certified Real Estate Specialist Lunch: Pizza, Drinks, and Networking in the charity exhibit hall Website Disasters (and How to Avoid Them): Practical Advice for Lawyers, CPAs, Insurance Agents, and Financial Advisors 10:45 – 12:00 p.m. 12:00 – 1:00 p.m. Seth J. Gardenswartz, J.D. Jeffrey D. Myers, J.D. Break 1:00 – 2:30 p.m. 2:30– 2:45 p.m. How to Die in New Mexico: Update on Death with Dignity, Living Wills, HIPAA Releases, POLST, DNR/DNH Orders, Etc. Vickie R. Wilcox, J.D., LL.M. 2:45 – 3:45 p.m. Ethics: Advisor Collaboration in Estate Planning: Interdisciplinary Ethical Considerations for Estate Planning Professionals/ Best Practices for a Team Approach Jesse D. Gallegos, J.D. 3:45 – 5:00 p.m. Presented By: Wilcox Law Firm, P.C. Post Office Box 70238, Albuquerque, New Mexico 87197 Phone: (505) 554-1115 • Fax: (505) 554-1121 www.wilcoxlawnm.com Please RSVP to: (505) 554-1115 or by email at: [email protected] Bar Bulletin - February 25, 2015 - Volume 54, No. 8 33 New Mexico Criminal Defense Lawyers Association Only 36 Seats! TRIAL SKILLS COLLEGE PRACTICAL HANDS-ON TRAINING March 27-28, 2015 1635 University Blvd. NE Albuquerque 14.5 General Credits Don’t miss this opportunity to learn basic and intermediate skills or brush up on additional sophisticated approaches in: Voir Dire Opening Statements Cross Examination Closing Statements Lectures and demonstrations by some of New Mexico’s best trial lawyers. Individual practice sessions followed by one-on-one video review. Attendance at both days required, lunch provided. Limited to 36 participants. Faculty: Dennis Candelaria, Teri Duncan, Mark Earnest, Shannon Kennedy, Molly Schmidt Nowara, Barry Porter, Maureen Sanders, Peter Schoenburg, Michael Stout, Ray Twohig, David Urias, Joleen Youngers New Mexico Criminal Defense Lawyers Association Visit our website WWW.NMCDLA.ORG to register before March 10th Thank You to The New Mexico Defense Lawyers Association for its Generous Support of the Civil Legal Clinic! The Second Judicial District Pro Bono Committee and the Volunteer Attorney Program would like to thank the New Mexico Defense Lawyers Association and its attorneys for volunteering their time and expertise at the February 4, 2015 Civil Legal Clinic. The Clinic is held on the first Wednesday of every month at the Second Judicial District Courthouse in the 3rd floor conference room from 10 a.m. until 1 p.m. Thirty individuals received assistance at the February clinic thanks to the dedication of three attorneys who are members of the New Mexico Defense Lawyers Association and three attorneys who assist with the clinic on a regular basis. Thank you: NMDLA Clinic Attorneys: Mark Standridge Billy Burgett Sean Garrett Susan Page David Gonzales Brian Gaddy If you or your firm is interested in volunteering, please contact Aja Brooks at [email protected] or (505)797-6040. PROGRAM SPECIALIST The Southwest Indian Law Clinic seeks a professional, highly organized person to assist in the overall management of a law office in an educational setting. The Program Specialist is responsible for managing confidential files, administering program budgets, preparing reports, and professional interaction with clients, students, faculty, staff and court personnel in support of daily tasks to serve the legal needs of our communities. Excellence in written and oral communication, problem-solving, and customer service required. Experience working with Native people and communities desirable. Must have the ability to work as a liaison with university and governmental positions and public relations. TO APPLY: https://unmjobs.unm.edu/applicants/ Central?quickFind=81482. EEO/AA/Minorities/Females/Vets/Disabled/ and other protected classes. 34 Bar Bulletin - February 25, 2015 - Volume 54, No. 8 Letherer Insurance Consultants, Inc. Representing 24 Insurance Companies MORNINGSTAR ENTERPRISES, LLC MARIE SUSAN LEE, CPA MBA CFE FORENSIC ACCOUNTING (505) 235-3500 • [email protected] www.morningstarcpa.com No need for another associate Bespoke lawyering for a new millennium THE BEZPALKO LAW FIRM Legal Research and Writing (505) 341-9353 www.bezpalkolawfirm.com CLE Program Manager Don Letherer State Bar of New Mexico seeks FT CLE Program Manager. Successful applicant will have project, financial, marketing and staff management experience. Prior work in legal field or adult education a plus. Compensation $45,000 - $50,000 DOE. Email cover letter and resume to [email protected], EOE. Brian Letherer We solve Professional Liability Insurance Problems We Shop, You Save. New programs for small firms. Request for Applications City of Albuquerque Assistant City Attorney Position(s) [email protected] • [email protected] 505.433.4266 • www.licnm.com Manzano Day School Small class size Environmental studies program Extended Day Program Financial aid available Now accepting applications for the 2015-2016 school year. Sunday Open House November 9 2-4 p.m. Albuquerque’s only elementary school accredited by the Independent Schools Association of the Southwest. Assistant City Attorney positions available with the Litigation Division with desired experience in civil litigation in handling pretrial discovery, motion practice, trial preparation and trial. We are seeking attorneys who have an interest in defending civil rights, personal injury, and premises liability cases within a positive team environment. Salary will be based upon experience and the City of Albuquerque Attorney's Personnel and Compensation Plan with a City of Albuquerque Benefits package. Please submit resume to attention of "Litigation Attorney Application"; c/o Roberta Duran, Fiscal Officer; P.O. Box 2248, Albuquerque, NM 87103. Application deadline is February 27, 2015 Las Cruces Attorney Miller Stratvert P.A. is looking for an attorney for its Las Cruces office. Litigation experience would be preferred. E-mail cover letter, resume, and references to [email protected] Classified Positions Associate Attorney Chapman and Charlebois, P.C. is seeking an experienced insurance defense attorney to join our litigation team, providing legal analysis, representation and advice to local and national clients. Attorney must have 3+ years of insurance defense experience and be licensed in NM. Please submit resume and salary requirements to: [email protected]. Experienced Attorney Associate Attorney Experienced attorney sought to assist with Indian water rights litigation and related matters on behalf of Tribal clients of busy, small law office in downtown Santa Fe. Contract attorney or associate arrangement will be considered. Compensation DOE. Please email or fax cover letter, resumé, writing sample, and reference list to [email protected], (505) 726-4689. Busy law firm practicing in the areas of Family Law, Worker’s Compensation and Personal Injury seeking Associate Attorney to immediately join our growing firm. Attorney will primarily practice in the area of Family Law and will be responsible for legal analysis, representation, document preparation, mediations and litigation. Salary will be consistent with experience. Please submit cover letter and resume to [email protected]. No phone calls. Bar Bulletin - February 25, 2015 - Volume 54, No. 8 35 The New Mexico Environmental Law Center The New Mexico Environmental Law Center, a non-profit public interest law office seeks an attorney to represent New Mexico community and environmental groups and Pueblos in their efforts to protect their air, land, water, and public health and to seek environmental justice. Office based in Santa Fe; casework throughout New Mexico. Minimum of five years of experience, including litigation before administrative agencies and courts, required. New Mexico bar membership preferred. Competitive non-profit salary DOE; generous benefits. Send applications (a cover letter, resume, writing sample, and three references) to Yana Merrill at ymerrill@ nmelc.org or at 1405 Luisa Street, Suite 5, Santa Fe, N.M. 87505. Applications will be received until the position is filled. No telephone calls. The Law Center is an equal opportunity employer; women and people of color are encouraged to apply. www.nmelc.org Investigator State of NM Judicial Standards Commission (www.nmjsc.org), located in Albuquerque, is hiring an Investigator. At-will, exempt, unclassified, part-time position with part-time benefits. Initial target salary is $33.00/hour DOE and budget availability (Exempt Range 99). Up to 19 hours per week. Assists investigation and prosecution of cases involving removal, retirement, or discipline of judges. Must possess, exhibit, and maintain exemplary ethics and have no history of professional discipline. Knowledge and experience of NM law, court procedures, and trial preparation necessary. Excellent interpersonal and oral and written communication skills required. Skill in research, report writing, all aspects of investigation, witness interview/ interrogation techniques, evidence gathering, information analysis, and surveillance techniques. Ability to use sound discretion and judgment, and to adapt to frequently changing priorities and high stress. Must be able to work independently and excel in a collaborative, small office environment. Fluency in Spanish is an asset. No telephone calls, e-mails, faxes, or walk-ins accepted. Full announcement and application instructions at www.nmcourts.gov/ jobs/jobselectpage.php or on announcements page of Commission website. Experienced Attorney Albuquerque Business Law is seeking an experienced attorney to join a growing law firm. We are currently expanding and are open to many practice areas. However, you must be licensed to practice in the state of New Mexico. The ideal candidate is a highly motivated professional that can take initiative and work independently. If interested, please send a cover letter, resume, and salary requirements to [email protected]. 36 13th Judicial District Attorney Senior Trial Attorney, Assistant Trial Attorney, Associate Trial Attorney Cibola, Sandoval, Valencia Counties Senior Trial Attorney - This position requires substantial knowledge and experience in criminal prosecution, rules of criminal procedure and rules of evidence, as well as the ability to handle a full-time complex felony caseload. Admission to the New Mexico State Bar and a minimum of five years as a practicing attorney are also required. Assistant Trial Attorney - The 13th Judicial District Attorney’s Office is accepting applications for an entry to mid level attorney to fill the positions of Assistant Trial Attorney. This position requires misdemeanor and felony caseload experience. Associate Trial Attorney - an entry level position for Cibola (Grants), Sandoval (Bernalillo) or Valencia (Belen) County Offices. The position requires misdemeanor, juvenile and possible felony cases. Upon request, be prepared to provide a summary of cases tried. Salary for each position is commensurate with experience. Send resumes to Kathleen Colley, District Office Manager, PO Box 1750, Bernalillo, NM 87004, or via E-Mail to: [email protected]. Deadline for submission of resumes: Open until positions are filled. Associate Attorney Hatcher & Tebo, PA is still growing and so we’re seeking another associate attorney with two-plus years of legal experience for our downtown Santa Fe office. We are looking for someone not only ready for the challenge of a heavy caseload, but also motivated to excel at the practice of law in a litigation-focused practice; you should be a self-starter who will hit the ground running to support our growing practice. Hatcher & Tebo, PA defends individuals, state and local governments and institutional clients in the areas of insurance defense, coverage, workers compensation, employment and civil rights. We offer a great work environment, competitive salary and opportunities for future growth. Send your cover letter, resume and a writing sample via email to [email protected]. Associate Attorney Whitener Law Firm, P.A. is currently seeking a full-time associate attorney to handle Personal Injury cases. Candidates must be highly motivated, client oriented and will enjoy working in a fast-paced environment. Candidates must be licensed to practice in the state of New Mexico. Salary competitive and commensurate to experience and qualifications. Please send resume to Nichole Henry, Whitener Law Firm, P.A., 4110 Cutler Avenue, N.E., Albuquerque, NM 87110, fax to 505-242-3322 or e-mail to [email protected] Bar Bulletin - February 25, 2015 - Volume 54, No. 8 Associate Attorney McCarthy Holthus, LLP, a well-established multi-state law firm representing financial institutions and specializing in mortgages in default is currently seeking an Associate Attorney to join our team in its Albuquerque, NM office. The responsibilities of the qualified candidate will include, but are not limited to, providing legal advice to financial institutions and foreclosure trustees; research and analyze legal sources and legal codes; prepares legal briefs, pleadings, appeals, contracts, and any other necessary legal documentation during the course of litigation; handle civil litigation cases from referral to resolution, which may necessitate the use of written and oral advocacy, motion practice, discovery, and trial preparation; participation in mediation, willingness and ability to understand complex loan documentation and loss mitigation processes; desire to provide exceptional customer service; exceptional written and oral advocacy skills; and openness to creatively engage in setting new standards in our industry. The qualified candidate must possess 0-3 years' experience preferably in the area of finance or representation of financial institutions in real estate related matters. Licensed to practice law in New Mexico and all New Mexico District Courts. McCarthy Holthus offers a comprehensive benefits package including competitive paid time-Off (PTO). Please send your resumes to: [email protected] Request for Applications City of Albuquerque Various Paralegal Position Four (4) Paralegal positions are available within the Litigation and Safe City Strike Force Divisions (DWI Unit & Traffic Arraignment Sections) of the Legal Department of the City of Albuquerque. Position Summary: Paralegal with a civil litigation background who has the skills, knowledge, and ability to assist attorneys in civil litigation practice, employment litigation and/or administrative hearings, including from the inception of a civil lawsuit through trial. Minimum education and experience requirements: Associates Degree in Paralegal Studies, plus three (3) years’ experience as a paralegal; may substitute two (2) years of additional paralegal experience for the Associates Degree in Paralegal Studies or a Certificate in Paralegal Studies, plus five (5) years’ experience as a Legal Secretary/Assistant. ProLaw and/or experience with a case management system is desirable. To Apply: All applicants must submit, by February 27, 2015, a City Application. Resumes will not be accepted in lieu of the application. An On-Line Application Process can be accessed at the web site :http:// www.cabq.gov/jobs. Albuquerque NM 87103. Copies of required certifications, registrations, and/or licenses, if not attached on-line, must be provided at the time of interview Attorney Gorence & Oliveros, P.C. is seeking a fulltime associate attorney with at least five years experience in civil litigation. The position requires exceptional research and writing skills, as well as, experience in litigation. This is primarily a research and writing position. Competitive salary and benefits DOE. Apply in confidence by emailing resume, references and a writing sample to [email protected]. Las Cruces Attorney Holt Mynatt Martínez P.C., an AV-rated law firm in Las Cruces, New Mexico is seeking an associate attorney with 1–5 years of experience to join our team. Duties would include providing legal research, analysis, and writing, drafting pleadings and other documents, conducting discovery, preparing for and attending administrative and judicial hearings, up to and including trial. The firm’s practice areas include insurance defense, civil rights defense, commercial litigation, municipal law, employment defense, and the occasional plaintiff’s case. Candidates need to have strong organizational and writing skills, exceptional communication skills, and the ability to interact and develop collaborative relationships. Excellent salary and benefits. Please send your cover letter, resume, writing sample and references to Blaine Mynatt, Managing Director, at [email protected]. Immigration Attorney Vacancy Catholic Charities of Las Cruces Applicants should submit a resume and cover letter to our Exec Director Ken Ferrone, [email protected] or [email protected]. Billing Clerk/Courier BILLING CLERK/COURIER needed fulltime for downtown law firm. Strong knowledge of TABS III required. Other duties include mail processing, court filings/errands, and scanning. Two to three years of experience in a law firm is desired. Please submit resumes to [email protected]. Paralegal The Santa Fe office of Hinkle Shanor LLP seeks a paralegal for the practice areas of environmental, water, natural resources, real property, public utility and administrative law. Candidates should have a strong academic background, excellent research skills and the ability to work independently. Competitive salary and benefits. All inquires kept confidential. Please email resume to: [email protected] Legal Secretary/Assistant Civil litigation firm seeking Legal Secretary/ Assistant with minimum 3- 5 years’ experience, including knowledge of local court rules and filing procedures. Excellent clerical, organizational, computer & word processing skills required. Fast-paced, friendly environment. Benefits. If you are highly skilled, pay attention to detail & enjoy working with a team, email resume to: [email protected] Legal Secretary SONOSKY, CHAMBERS, SACHSE, MIELKE & BROWNELL, LLP, the Albuquerque office (3 attorneys) of a national Indian law firm seeks an experienced legal secretary/ assistant, full or part-time. Must be highly organized, professional, have top-notch computer and communication skills, and be a team player. Excellent salary and benefits package. To be considered for this position please e-mail cover letter, resume and 3 references to [email protected]. Paralegal/ Legal Secretary KENNEDY KENNEDY & IVES, LLC, a civil litigation firm in Albuquerque, is seeking a Paralegal/ Legal Secretary with minimum 3 years’ experience, including knowledge of local court rules, filing procedures and trial experience. Excellent clerical, organizational, computer & word processing skills required. Must be highly organized and detail oriented with good customer service and multi-tasking skills. This is a fast-paced and friendly environment. Salary & benefits are negotiable depending on experience. Email letter of interest with professional references, and resume to: [email protected]. Paralegal Litigation paralegal with background in large volume document control/management, trial experience, and familiar with use of computerized databases. This is an opportunity for a highly motivated, task & detail-oriented professional to work for an established, well-respected downtown law firm. Competitive benefits. Email resume to: [email protected] Paralegal Request for Applications City of Albuquerque Legal Secretary Position Legal Secretary Position is available within the Litigation of the Legal Department of the City of Albuquerque. Position Summary: will perform a variety of responsible legal secretarial duties in support of a assigned attorney or attorneys including preparing and reviewing legal documents; perform the more difficult and complex clerical duties with the assigned work unit and provide secretarial and administrative support to an assigned division head. Minimum Education and Experience requirements: Associates’ degree in business administration or a related field, may substitute three (3) years secretarial experience to include two (2) years as a Legal Secretary. ProLaw and/or experience with a case management system is desirable. To Apply: All applicants must submit, by February 27, 2015, a City Application. Resumes will not be accepted in lieu of the application. An On-Line Application Process can be accessed at the web site www.cabq.gov\jobs. Copies of required certifications, registrations, and/ or licenses, if not attached on-line, must be provided at the time of interview. Paralegal wanted for Plaintiffs civil litigation firm. Growing uptown firm seeks a full time experienced paralegal that is well organized; detail oriented, and has the ability to work independently. Candidate must have prior experience in civil litigation with an emphasis in personal injury. 3+ years experience preferred. Salary commensurate with experience. Please forward resume to: Hiring Partner, Bleus & Assoc. LLC, 2633 Dakota, NE, Albuquerque, NM 87110 or email attn. Tony at bleuslawhotmail.com. Legal Secretary/ Receptionist Albuquerque, NM The Albuquerque office of Butler Snow LLP seeks a Legal Secretary/ Receptionist with 3+ years’ experience and a high school diploma or equivalent. Candidates should have excellent clerical, organizational, computer and word processing skills. The position requires the ability to work independently in a fast-paced environment. If you are highly skilled, pay attention to detail and enjoy working with a team, please view the full job description and apply for the position at www.butlersnow.com. Bar Bulletin - February 25, 2015 - Volume 54, No. 8 37 Discovery Legal Assistant/ Paralegal Busy Personal Injury Law Firm in search of FT Discovery Legal Assistant/ Paralegal M-F 9:00 - 5:00. One year related experience and/ or training, or equivalent combination of education and experience. Individual must have exceptional organizational skills, be able to multitask, work under pressure, and understand the importance of deadlines. Daily tasks include potential client intake, draft discovery pleadings and other legal documents. Other daily tasks would include calendaring, preparing hearing, deposition, witness and mediation binders, copy, fax and file (if clerical support not available) related to client matters as well as conduct research, including but not limited to Accurint, Internet, etc. The ideal candidate will be proficient with Microsoft Outlook, Word and Excel. Please send resume with references, as an attachment, to [email protected]. Please include "Discovery LA - Paralegal" in the subject line to be considered. No phone calls or walk-ins please Office Space Office Available for Rent One office available for rent, including secretarial area, at 2040 4th St. NW (I-40 & 4th St.), ABQ. Rent includes receptionist, use of conference rooms, high speed internet, phone system, free parking for staff and clients, use of copy machine, fax machine and employee lounge. Contact Jerry or George at 505-2436721 or [email protected] 620 Roma N.W. 620 ROMA N.W., located within two blocks of the three downtown courts. Rent includes utilities (except phones), fax, internet, janitorial service, copy machine, etc. All of this is included in the rent of $550 per month. Up to three offices are available to choose from and you’ll also have access to five conference rooms, a large waiting area, access to full library, receptionist to greet clients and take calls. Call 243-3751 for appointment to inspect. Offices Available Two offices available for rent in Jefferson/ Masthead area. Share one-story building with established law firm. Reception, conference room, kitchen, wifi, copier, phones included. Short walk to restaurants. Referral work available. $500 per month. 505-830-2076 ext. 108 or [email protected]. Brand New All Inclusive Beautiful Law Offices Available Now! Starting at only $379 per month! We have space available in the 500 Marquette building in downtown Albuquerque, the II Park Square building in Uptown Albuquerque and the 150 Washington building next to the Plaza in Santa Fe. Call or email Christina Sharp at [email protected] 505.203.5754. Taos Conference and Office Space Taos conference and office space available for depositions and mediations. Call Robyn 575-758-1225 Services Available for Research and Writing Assignments Attorney with 7 years appellate court experience available for research and writing assignments. Reliable and thorough: motions, briefs, research. Email llhouselaw@gmail. com or call 505-715-6566 or 505-281-9293. Orthopedic Surgeon Orthopedic Surgeon available for case review, opinions, exams. Rates quoted per case. Send inquiries to: odewitt@ alumni.rice.edu Experienced Attorney Available for Contract Work Not ready to hire full time or part time attorneys, but need help? Licensed NM attorney with 25+ years of civil practice experience (plaintiff and defendant). Available for small research projects, or to be your second chair in lengthy, complex litigation. Extensive experience in document organization and analysis, depositions, motions practice and trial preparation. Willing to enter my appearance with you or work in the background! Brief-writing is my forte; but I am available to do what you need to successfully litigate your case. Reasonable rates. References and writing samples available. Diane Donaghy at (505)281-3514, or email me: [email protected]. 38 SUBMISSION DEADLINES All advertising must be submitted via e-mail by 4 p.m. Wednesday, two weeks prior to publication (Bulletin publishes every Wednesday). Advertising will be accepted for publication in the Bar Bulletin in accordance with standards and ad rates set by the publisher and subject to the availability of space. No guarantees can be given as to advertising publication dates or placement although every effort will be made to comply with publication request. The publisher reserves the right to review and edit ads, to request that an ad be revised prior to publication or to reject any ad. Cancellations must be received by 10 a.m. on Thursday, 13 days prior to publication. Bar Bulletin - February 25, 2015 - Volume 54, No. 8 For more advertising information, contact: Marcia C. Ulibarri at 505-797-6058 or email [email protected] 2015 Annual Meeting– Bench and Bar Conference Save the date! Sept. 30-Oct. 2 (Wed.-Fri.) k Boo ! now 1 Lake Avenue, Colorado Springs, CO 80906 • 800-634-7711 https://resweb.passkey.com/go/SBARNM $229 single/double* Suites – contact the Broadmoor at 719-471-6254 or [email protected]. Parking - $22 self/day; $24 overnight valet/day * Cutoff date: Aug. 30, 2015 Bar Bulletin - February 25, 2015 - Volume 54, No. 8 39 To make your space reservation, please contact Marcia Ulibarri 505-797-6058 • [email protected] e: 20 vert Be 15 ising nc - sa Ad M ve h 20 les ar rtis & 1 no ch ing 6 w B 31 sp a , 2 ac op rD 01 e re en 5 se i rv re fo at rt io c n t he o de r ad y lin Ad