Opinion No. Oag 2-82, (1982)
This text of 71 Op. Att'y Gen. 4 (Opinion No. Oag 2-82, (1982)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Wisconsin Attorney General Reports primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
MATTHEW F. ANICH, District Attorney Ashland County
You have requested my opinion as to whether sec.
1. Whether a former member of a county highway committee is an "officer" as that term is used in sec.
895.35 , Stats.2. Whether criminal charges commenced against a former county highway committee member based upon submission of vouchers for payment for meals are charges "brought against an officer in his official capacity."
3. Whether criminal charges based upon submitting expense vouchers to a county can be said to "grow out of the performance of official duties."
Section
Whenever in any city, town, village, school district, vocational, technical and adult education district or county charges of any kind are filed or an action is brought against any officer thereof in his official capacity, or to subject any such officer, whether or not he is being compensated on a salary basis, to a personal liability growing out of the performance of official duties, and such charges or such action is discontinued or dismissed or such matter is determined favorably to such officer, or such officer is reinstated, or in case such officer, without fault on his part, is subjected to a personal liability as aforesaid, such city, town, village, school district, vocational, technical and adult education district or county may pay all reasonable expenses which such officer necessarily expended by reason thereof.
You first ask whether a member of a county highway committee is an officer of the county as that term is used in sec.
The fact that the individual involved was no longer a member of the county highway committee at the time the criminal charges were brought against him does not change my opinion. The information which you have provided for me indicates clearly that the charges arise out of the period of time when he was such a member. In my view it would be patently unreasonable to apply the statute on the basis of the time when the charges are made rather than the time when the alleged offense occurred. Furthermore, my opinion that the statute is applicable to former officers as long as the charges are based on incidents occurring while they were officers is in keeping with the position which this office has consistently taken on behalf of state officers, employes and agents pursuant to secs.
Your second question inquires whether criminal charges based upon submission of an allegedly false expense voucher are "brought against an officer in his official capacity." In my opinion, on the facts as you present them, the answer is yes. While I caution that questions concerning whether a public officer is acting in his official capacity must be determined on a case-by-case basis, it is my opinion that when a public officer is alleged to have completed an expense statement or voucher falsely then he is alleged to have acted in his official capacity in that he is alleged to have misused his official position.
Your third question inquires whether criminal charges based upon an officer's submission of expense statements or vouchers can be said to "grow out of the performance of official duties." In my opinion, the answer is yes. The phrase, "growing out of the performance of official duties," as used in sec.
You are, of course, quite correct in your conclusion thatBablitch Bablitch v. Lincoln County,
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