In 1994, the New Mexico State Legislature enacted legislation establishing the Municipal Court Automation Fund (MCAF):
Municipal courts are funded by their respective municipalities and are not part of the state court system (although the Supreme Court has superintending authority over them). The MCAF provides municipal courts with the resources needed to fulfill the previously-unfunded mandate of NMSA 35-14-12, which requires that municipal courts be automated to provide electronic records for DWI and domestic violence.
The fund is administered by the AOC, with the Automation Committee of the New Mexico Municipal Judges Association (NMMJA) assuming primary oversight of the program. Two full-time individuals, employed by AOC, complete the day-to-day work of the program.
Fee Remittance. Municipalities are required (per NMSA 35-14-11) to enact ordinances for the assessment of fines and fees upon persons convicted of violating any municipal ordinance relating to the operation of a motor vehicle or any ordinance that may be enforced by imposing a term of imprisonment. Fees currently assessed, collected, and remitted or retained include:
In DWI cases, additional fees are collected and remitted to the AOC (NMSA 31-12-7): (REPEALED EFFECTIVE 7/1/2024)
Except in home-rule municipalities, municipal courts may impose and collect only these fees.
Disposition Reporting. Municipal courts are required to report DWI dispositions in an electronic format specified by the Judicial Information Systems Council (JIFFY) from September 1991 forward. This date is three years prior to program inception and is based on state records retention guidelines (ref. Fern Goodman, AOC General Counsel).
Initially only convictions were reported, but now all DWI dispositions are reported. JIFFY added the requirement to report dismissal and not-guilty verdicts in September 2000; the requirement was upheld by the New Mexico Supreme Court in 2010 (Order 10-8500).
Only historic domestic violence dispositions are currently reported; 2002 legislation increased penalties for Battery Against a Household Member, thus taking domestic violence out of the jurisdiction of municipal courts.
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