Opinion No. 75-146 (1975) Ag

CourtOklahoma Attorney General Reports
DecidedOctober 3, 1975
StatusPublished

This text of Opinion No. 75-146 (1975) Ag (Opinion No. 75-146 (1975) Ag) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Oklahoma Attorney General Reports primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Opinion No. 75-146 (1975) Ag, (Okla. Super. Ct. 1975).

Opinion

STATE EMPLOYEES — DUAL EMPLOYMENT It is a violation of the Oklahoma Code of Ethics, and possibly the Oklahoma Budget Law of 1947 and the Oklahoma Criminal Code as well, for a person who is a full-time employee of one state agency to accept employment from another state agency when the hours of work for both jobs are contemporaneous and when the person so employed receives compensation from both agencies. When a full-time employee of a state agency accepts employment on a temporary or other basis from another state agency with the hours of work for both agencies being contemporaneous, and when the person so employed receives compensation for both employments, the State Ethics Commission is responsible for determining the applicability of the penalty provisions of the Oklahoma Code of Ethics, the District Attorney for the county where the alleged illegality occurred is responsible for determining the applicability of the Oklahoma Criminal Code, and the State Budget Director is responsible for ascertaining the proper course of action required by the Oklahoma Budget Law of 1947. The Attorney General has received your request for an opinion wherein you ask the following questions: "1. Is it a violation of the Oklahoma Code of Ethics for State Officials and Employees or any other law of the State of Oklahoma for a person who is a full-time employee of a State Agency to accept employment on a temporary basis from another state agency when the hours of work for both jobs are contemporaneous and when the person so employed receives compensation from both agencies? "2. If the foregoing set of circumstances does constitute a violation, what is the appropriate remedy and who is responsible for administering it?" The Oklahoma Code of Ethics for state officials and employees is set out in Section 74 O.S. 1401 [74-1401] (1971), et seq., of Title 74 of the Oklahoma Statutes. Section 74 O.S. 1402 [74-1402] of the act delineates the policy considerations involved in the enactment of the Code of Ethics, and reads as follows: "It is hereby declared to be the policy of the State of Oklahoma that no officer or employee or member of the executive, judicial or legislative branch of state government shall have any interest, financial or otherwise, or engage in any business or transaction of any nature which is in substantial conflict with the proper discharge of his public duties or with the public interest. To protect the public from improper use of authority and to protect public officials and employees from unwarranted assaults on their integrity, the following code of ethics for state government is hereby adopted." Section 74 O.S. 1404 [74-1404] prohibits certain acts by state employees and provides, in pertinent part, as follows: "No state employee shall: "(f) Accept other employment which would impair his efficiency or independence of judgment in the performance of his public duties." In addition, it should be noted that Article II, Section 11, of the Oklahoma Constitution reads in pertinent part as follows: "Every person elected or appointed to any office or employment of trust or profit under the laws of this state, or under any ordinance of any municipality thereof, shall give personal attention to the duty of the office to which he is elected or appointed . . ." Title 74 O.S. 1413 [74-1413] (1971), clearly provides that the Oklahoma Code of Ethics for State Officials and Employees Act shall be cumulative to existing laws. Thus the common law governing conflicts of interest remains viable in Oklahoma and under which it is clear that a public employee owes an undivided loyalty to the public, and may not accept any employment which will impair his efficiency or subject him to the temptation of acting in any manner not in the publics' best interest. 63 Am. Jur.2d, Public Officers and Employees, 275, et seq. It is not, per se, a violation of the Code of Ethics for a state employee to accept employment with more than one state agency. Only if the specific facts of an individual case disclose a violation of Section 1404, is such employment prohibited. However, it is apparent that under the fact situation set forth in your opinion request that for a full-time state employee to purportedly work for one state agency or department during the same hours for which he is actually working for another state agency or department would violate the spirit and the letter of both the Code of Ethics and the Oklahoma Constitution. Contemporaneous hours of work necessarily constitute a violation. Such a dual employment situation would necessarily impair the employee's efficiency and deprive the public of the quality and quantity of service to which it is entitled. In addition, it should be noted that 74 O.S. 250.6 [74-250.6](b) (1971), requires that prescribed payroll forms be used by the various agencies of the State of Oklahoma, and 62 O.S. 41.17 [62-41.17] (1971), grants the State Budget Director the authority to revise and prescribe such forms. Section 62 O.S. 250.6 [62-250.6](b) reads as follows: "State officers and employees shall not be paid any salary, fee, wage, remuneration, expense allowance, or other compensation on warrants issued by the State Auditor except when claim for payment is made on the prescribed payroll form of the agency for which services are performed. Except, reimbursement for travel expenses incurred on official state business shall be made as provided by statute on approved travel claims. "Nothing in this Section is intended to keep a state agency from being reimbursed for services performed by employees of one agency for another. "Nothing in this Sections shall affect the method of payment of any expense allowance to any state officer or employee specifically authorized by statute, or the payment to uniformed employees for maintenance and cleaning of uniforms." Section 62 O.S. 41.17 [62-41.17] reads in pertinent part: "The State Budget Director is hereby authorized to revise and prescribe the blank claim forms and payroll forms to be used by the various agencies of the State . . . Payroll forms are hereby authorized for use in claiming amounts due individually to all employees, within a department, board, commission, institution or agency of the State when the bonded executive head or bonded employee of such spending agency certifies on the payroll form that the amount shown after each named employee is the amount due for the period of time shown on the payroll form. Each payroll form shall show in separate columns the total earnings, the amount of each type of withholding and the net amount due each employee. . . ." The payroll form which the State Budget Director has prescribed pursuant to the authority of these statutes contains the following language referring to the employees whose names appear on said payroll sheet: "That such official, officials, employee, or employees were present at their official duty stations or assigned place of duty, or were in an approved travel status for official purposes, without exception save as specially noted opposite such official, officials, employee or employees' name and entry upon the payroll forms." It should be further noted that the agency payroll sheet requires that the hours each individual employee or official worked during the pay period be set out thereon. Title 61 O.S. 3 [61-3

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
Opinion No. 75-146 (1975) Ag, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/opinion-no-75-146-1975-ag-oklaag-1975.