Government of Guam is a
presidential representative democratic system,
whereby the
Governor is
head of government, and of a
multi-party system.
Guam
is an
organized, unincorporated territory of the United States
with policy relations between Guam and the US under
the jurisdiction of the Office
of Insular Affairs.
Executive branch
The governor and lieutenant governor are elected on the same ticket
by popular vote for four-year terms.
Legislative branch
The Guam
Legislature, I
Liheslaturan Guåhan
, is a unicameral body consisting of 15
senators.Senators are elected by popular vote to serve
two-year terms. The Guam Legislature is currently led by Speaker
Judith T. Won Pat, Ed.D.
Guam is also represented in the United States Congress by a
non-voting delegate to
U.S.House of Representatives.
Guam's current delegate is
Congresswoman Madeleine Z.Bordallo. Mrs. Bordallo serves on the
House Armed Services Committee and on the House Committee on
Natural Resources. She is the Chairwoman of the Natural Resources
Subcommittee on Insular Affairs, Oceans and Wildlife.
Judicial branch
On August 1, 1950, President
Trumansigned into law the
Organic Act of Guamwhich gave Guamanians
certain rights and protections under the U.S. Constitution. The
people of Guam were afforded the opportunity to set and administer
policy and laws for the island of Guam. Included in this was the
Judicial Branch of the Government of Guam.
In 1950 as part of the Judiciary Act, a judiciary reorganization
bill was prepared to strengthen the island court system. Judge
Albert B.Maris, then Chairman of the
United States Judicial
Conference, Judge of the
Third Circuit Court of
Appeals, and Chief Judge of the
Emergency Court of Appeals, came
to Guam to assist in the review of the court system and the
preparation of the judiciary bill. He was assisted by Attorney John
Bohn in the development of an act that vested in the District Court
of Guam territorial jurisdiction in civil cases having a value of
more than $2,000 and, in criminal cases, jurisdiction over all
felonies.
Known as Public Law 17, the "Judiciary Act" abolished the Justice
Court, the Traffic Branch of the Police Court, and the Court of
Appeals. The duties of the latter were assumed by the District
Court. Before the Act, the court system consisted of the Court of
Appeals, the Island Court and the Police Court. The reorganization
reduced the number of courts to the
District Court of Guam, the Island
Court, the Police Court and the Commissioners Court.
The Judiciary Act gave the Island Court of Guam jurisdiction over
misdemeanors and civil cases having a value of less than $2,000 and
created a Police Court with jurisdiction over misdemeanor cases in
which the maximum penalty did not exceed a fine of $100 or
imprisonment of six months, or both.
The Act also created a Commissioner’s Court to be presided over by
the commissioner of each municipality to deal with petty offenses
for which the maximum punishment did not exceed $5. The law also
defined the powers, qualifications, and disqualifications of judges
and referees and specified the duties of court clerks, reporters,
marshals, the attorney general, and the island attorney or
prosecuting attorney. It provided requisites for admission to the
practice of law and for a probation system.
After 1950, the District Court of Guam, which had the same
jurisdiction as a District Court in the US over federal questions,
was established. For the first time, the judiciary in Guam,
exercised its powers independent of the executive branch. However,
a dual judicial structure began—the District Court with
responsibility both for federal and local cases, and the Island
Court established by the Guam Legislature with responsibility
strictly for local cases.
In 1974, Public Law 12-85, the Court Reorganization Act would
substantially alter the judicial jurisdiction of the local island
court and rename it the Superior Court of Guam. The Superior Court
was given jurisdiction over all cases arising out of Guam laws. The
District Court retained its appellate function. Under the act
establishing the Superior Court of Guam, the title of senior judge
was changed to Presiding Judge of the Superior Court. Chief Judge
of the Island Court Joaquin Perez became Guam’s first Presiding
Judge.
In 1973, Guam's leaders made their first attempt at creating a Guam
Supreme Court but the Court's existence was short lived.
A 1977
ruling by the U.S.
Supreme Court
--Territory of Guam
v.Olsen, 431 U.S. 195—found Guam's Supreme
Court to be inorganic. In Olsen, the Court held that Guam's Organic
Act did not authorize the transfer of appellate jurisdiction from
the appellate division of the District Court of Guam to a locally
established appellate court.
In response to
Guam v.Olsen, Congress passed the
1984 Omnibus Territories Act. The Act amended Guam's Organic Act
allowing the Guam Legislature to create an appellate court to hear
all cases in Guam over which any court established by the
Constitution and laws of the United States does not have exclusive
jurisdiction, with the provision that for the first 15 years after
establishment that of that court, the 9th Circuit Court would still
maintain judicial overview in the appeals process. In all other
aspects, the appeals process would be the same as each state. The
Act, however, did not provide a structure for a newly created
judicial system once the appellate court was established. Nor did
the Act mention that the responsibility should be left to the Guam
Legislature.
In 1992, the 21st Guam Legislature unanimously passed Public Law
21-147, the Frank G. Lujan Memorial Court Reorganization Act. The
Act reestablished the Supreme Court of Guam to serve as the highest
appellate court on the island. The author of the Frank G. Lujan
Memorial Court Reorganization Act stated, in testimony submitted to
the Committee in 1997, that it was the intent of the Guam
Legislature to make the Supreme Court of Guam the highest local
court and be vested with those powers traditionally held and
exercised by the highest court of a jurisdiction.
In authorizing the creation of a Guam Supreme Court however, the
U.S. Congress had unintentionally left the newly created court
subordinate to Guam's other two branches of government. Guam's
executive and legislative branches were established in the Organic
Act, which in lieu of an adopted constitution serves to provide the
framework and powers for the island's executive and legislative
branches. Because the judiciary was established in Guam law, some
theorized that the judiciary was therefore subject to changes based
upon shifts in the majority control of Guam's legislature. In March
1996, hours after the first Justices of the Supreme Court of Guam
were confirmed, the 23rd Guam Legislature passed Bill 404, which
removed certain inherent powers from the Supreme Court. A second
bill, Bill 494, aimed to strip the supervisory jurisdiction of the
Supreme Court over all lower courts. That bill was debated, but
tabled by the Legislative Committee on the Judiciary. Eight months
later, the Legislature attached the contents of the shelved Bill
494 as a "midnight" rider to Bill 776. The legislation passed, but
was vetoed by the Governor. An override attempt failed by only a
slim margin.
After years of lobbying to confirm the status of the Supreme Court
of Guam as the ultimate court of appeals for the island, on October
30, 2004, H.R. 2400 (Public Law No. 108-378) became federal law. It
amended the Organic Act of Guam to revise the local judicial
structure of Guam to vest judicial authority, not only in the
District Court of Guam, but also in "a unified judicial system
composed of: (1) an appellate court designated as the "Supreme
Court of Guam"; (2) a trial court designated as the "Superior Court
of Guam"; and (3) such other lower local courts as may have been or
may hereafter be established by the laws of Guam."
Further, Public Law No. 108-378 authorized the Supreme Court of
Guam to create divisions of the Superior Court and other local
courts of Guam, and stated that the Supreme Court of Guam "shall be
the highest court of the judicial branch of Guam (excluding the
District Court of Guam) and shall: (1) have original jurisdiction
over proceedings necessary to protect its appellate jurisdiction
and supervisory authority and such other original jurisdiction as
the laws of Guam may provide; (2) have jurisdiction to hear appeals
over any cause in Guam decided by the Superior Court of Guam or
other courts established under the laws of Guam; (3) have
jurisdiction to issue all orders and writs in aid of its appellate,
supervisory, and original jurisdiction, including those orders
necessary for the supervision of the judicial branch of Guam; (4)
have supervisory jurisdiction over the Superior Court of Guam and
all other courts of the judicial branch of Guam; (5) hear and
determine appeals by a panel of three of the justices of the
Supreme Court of Guam and a concurrence of two such justices shall
be necessary to a decision of the Supreme Court of Guam on the
merits of an appeal; (6) make and promulgate rules governing the
administration of the judiciary and court practice and procedure,
including appeal en banc procedures; and (7) govern attorney and
judicial ethics and the practice of law in Guam."
In January 2002, the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals affirmed a
Supreme Court of Guam decision to invalidate a Guam law, based upon
a claim the Governor of Guam pocket-vetoed the enacting
legislation. This decision allowed the Supreme Court to reestablish
itself, administratively, as the highest court within the
Judiciary. A Unified Judiciary Committee, composed of the Chief
Justice of Guam, two Supreme Court Associate Justices, the
Presiding Judge of the Superior Court, one Judge of the Superior
Court, the Administrator of the Supreme Court, and the
Administrator of the Superior Court, has since been established by
the Supreme Court of Guam.
On March 15, 2006, the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals dismissed a
case brought by Attorney General Douglas Moylan against Governor
Felix Camacho on the basis of its lack of jurisdiction, confirming
for the first time that the Ninth Circuit no longer would review
the Supreme Court of Guam's decisions. This was the final
transition of the Supreme Court of Guam from its probationary
status under the original permissive federal legislation, to the
equal of other states' highest courts, since it meant appeals from
decisions of the Supreme Court of Guam would be subject to review
only if accepted for such by the United States Supreme Court.
Federal Courts (U.S. Government)
The
U.S.District Court for
the District of Guamis one of three territorial courts within
the federal court system. The others are the district courts for
the Commonwealth of the Northern Mariana Islands, also located
within the Ninth Circuit, and the U.S. Territory of the Virgin
Islands, located within the Third Circuit. Territorial courts
exercise the same jurisdiction as U.S. district courts, as well as
local jurisdiction.
Guam's Federal District Court is housed on the 4th floor of the
U.S. Courthouse, 520 West Soledad Avenue, in Hagåtña, Guam. Its
lone federal District Court
Chief Judgeis one of the few
Article IV territorial judgeships, appointed by the President of
the United States and confirmed by the United States Senate to a
ten-year term.
The current Chief Judge of the U.S.District
Court of Guam is The
Hon.Frances Marie
Tydingco-Gatewood, the first female Chamorro federal judge for the United
States.
Other former district judges include:
- The Hon. Paul D. Shriver (1946-1956, first Chief Judge of the
District Court of Guam; 1961-1970)
- The Hon. Eugene Gilmartin (1956-1961, died in office and was
replaced by Judge Shriver, who rejoined the bench)
- The Hon. Cristobal C. Duenas (1970-1990, first Guamanian to
serve on the federal bench)
- The Hon. John S. Unpingco (1992-2002)
The district also seats one federal
Magistrate,
currently the Hon. Joaquin V.E. Manibusan, Jr.
Judiciary of Guam (Territorial Courts)
The Judiciary of Guam is housed in the Guam Judicial Center at 120
West O'Brien Drive in Hagåtña. The Supreme Court is located on the
3rd floor, and convenes for appeals and hearing in the Monessa G.
Lujan Memorial Courtroom, while the Superior Court is located on
the 1st and 2nd floors and convenes in various trial courtrooms.
The main court clerks' office for each body is located on the same
floor.
The Supreme Court of Guam
The
Supreme Court of Guamis
the highest judicial body of the Government of Guam.
The Court hears all
appeals from the Superior Court of Guam and is subject to original
jurisdiction only in cases where a certified question is submitted
to it by a U.S. federal court, the Governor of Guam, or the
Guam
Legislature
.The Supreme Court of Guam is the final
judicial authority on local matters, and an appeal of its decisions
can only be heard by the Supreme Court of
the United States
.
The Court
is composed of three justices who are appointed by the Governor of
Guam and confirmed by the Guam Legislature
.Justices serve for life, subject to a
retention election every ten years after his/her appointment. The
three justices preside over cases brought before them, and they all
sit on the Judicial Council of Guam, which is ultimately in charge
of the administration of the Guam Judiciary.
The current
Justices of the Supreme Court of
Guamare:
- The Hon. Robert J. Torres, Jr., Chief Justice
- appointed by Governor
Felix P. Camacho
- sworn in as an Associate Justice on January 16, 2004
- elected Chief Justice on January 15, 2008 to serve a three year
term
- appointed by Governor
Carl T.C. Gutierrez
- sworn in as an Associate Justice on October 27, 2000
- elected Chief Justice on January 22, 2003 to serve the
unexpired term of former Chief Justice Peter C. Siguenza
- reelected Chief Justice on January 23, 2004 to serve a three
year term
- The Hon. Katherine A. Maraman, Associate Justice
Retired
Justices include:
The
Clerk of the Supreme Court, who receives all
appeals and filings to that body, is Hanah Gutierrez.
The Superior Court of Guam
Judges of the Superior Court are appointed by the governor with the
advice and consent of the Legislature for a term of eight years. If
they wish to continue in office, their names are placed on the
ballot at a general election. They must garner at least 50 percent
plus one favorable vote of the number of cast ballots to remain in
office. Judge Richard Benson and Judge Joaquin E. Manibusan were
the first to be placed on a ballot. They both received the
overwhelming approval of the voters.
The Superior Court is a court of general jurisdiction, and its
seven judges preside over criminal, civil, juvenile, probate, small
claims, traffic and child support cases brought before them. The
hearing officer generally does not preside over all of these
subjects, but is utilized predominantly in small claims, family,
and traffic matters. In December 2005, the Adult and Juvenile Drug
Courts were recognized as courts of record of the Judiciary of
Guam. These programs are examples of "therapeutic justice" which
focuses on rehabilitation of offenders and their reintegration into
society. Judges are assigned to cases on a rotating basis, though
one is rotated into assignment as designated Drug Court judge
exclusively for a specified period (currently yearly). The
Presiding Judge's additional responsibility is primarily procedural
and administrative concerns, though formerly the "PJ," as the
position is commonly referred to, assigned cases to the various
judges.
The current
Judges of the Superior Court of Guam
are:
- The Hon. Alberto C. Lamorena III (Presiding Judge)
- The Hon. Katherine A. Maraman
- The Hon. Steven S. Unpingco
- The Hon. Michael J. Bordallo
- The Hon. Elizabeth Barrett-Anderson
- The Hon. Anita A. Sukola
- The Hon. Arthur R. Barcinas
Former
Judges include:
- The Hon. Joaquin C. Perez (Guam’s first Presiding Judge)
- The Hon. Vicente C. Reyes (Guam's first island attorney)
- The Hon. Joaquin V.E. Manibusan
- The Hon. Paul J. Abbate, Jr. (Presiding Judge)
- The Hon. Janet Healy-Weeks (Elevated to Guam Supreme
Court)
- The Hon. John Raker
- The Hon. Richard Benson
- The Hon. Judge Ramon Diaz
- The Hon. Peter C. Siguenza, Jr. (Elevated to Guam Supreme
Court)
- The Hon. Benjamin J. Cruz. (Elevated to Guam Supreme
Court)
- The Hon. Frances Marie Tydingco-Gatewood (Elevated to Guam
Supreme Court. Appointed Chief Judge for Guam/CNMI Federal District
Court)
- The Hon. Joaquin V.E. Manibusan Jr. (Appointed Magistrate for
Guam/CNMI Federal District Court)
The current
Administrative Hearing Officer of the Superior
Court is Linda L. Ingles.
The Courts and Ministerial Division of the Superior Court, is the
first point of contact for people seeking the services of the
courts of justice, as this division accepts the filing of all legal
pleadings, and is responsible for processing and distributing these
documents appropriately. This division is also responsible for
providing court clearances. The current
Clerk of the
Superior Court is Richard B. Martinez.
Unified Courts
of Guam Retrieved June 12, 2006.
District
Court of Guam Retrieved June 12, 2006.
United States Courts for the Ninth Circuit Public Information
Office (April 26, 2006).
"Guam Supreme Court Justice Nominated for Federal
Judgeship." Press release.
Guam Organic Act Amendment, per THOMAS (Library of
Congress reports)
International organization participation
Guam is
affiliated to the ESCAP (associate), Interpol
(sub-bureau), IOC
, and SPC.