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Do judges in Montana have separate CLE requirements?

Yes — judges in Montana are subject to continuing judicial education (CJE) requirements that are separate from, and in addition to, the general CLE rules for attorneys (or the exemptions therein).

Judicial education responsibilities are imposed by statute and court rule, distinct from the Montana CLE rules for attorneys.

Details

  • Montana’s Judicial Education page states that district court judges, supreme court justices, and limited jurisdiction judges must complete a minimum of 15 hours of continuing judicial education each year.
  • Judicial rule documents require that “Each Judge and Justice shall complete a minimum of fifteen hours of accredited continuing judicial education.”
  • For municipal court judges, Montana statute (MCA 3-6-202) mandates “a municipal court judge shall complete a minimum of 15 hours of continuing judicial education requirements each year.”
  • In contrast, the Montana CLE rules impose a 15-hour requirement on active attorneys, but full-time judges (and retired judges serving by assignment and not engaged in law practice) are explicitly exempt from the attorney CLE rules.

Key Takeaway

Montana enforces a distinct judicial education mandate requiring 15 hours per year for judges of various levels; at the same time, its CLE rules exempt full-time judges from the attorney CLE regime.

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