Yes — judges in North Dakota are subject to a distinct continuing judicial education (CJE) requirement, separate from the CLE rules for attorneys.
North Dakota law requires that judges of courts of record complete 45 hours of approved judicial education per three-year period, including at least 3 hours in judicial ethics; municipal judges must complete 8 hours annually.
Details
- North Dakota’s continuing judicial education rules mandate that each judge of a court of record (including supreme, appellate, district courts) complete 45 hours of approved judicial education every three years, with at least 3 hours in judicial ethics.
- Municipal judges in North Dakota must complete at least 8 hours of approved continuing judicial training per year, and newly appointed municipal judges must undergo an orientation course within their first three months in office.
- The North Dakota CLE rules for attorneys explicitly exempt judges from the attorney CLE requirement. Under Rule 7 of the North Dakota Rules for Continuing Legal Education, judges are exempt from attorney CLE obligations.
- The judicial education credit may be applied only to judicial education obligations; attorney CLE and judicial education are distinct regimes.
Key Takeaway
Judges in North Dakota must fulfill a separate judicial education requirement (45 hours per three years for courts of record; 8 hours annually for municipal judges), and they are exempt from the attorney CLE requirement under state CLE rules.