Opinion No. Oag 25-88, (1988)

77 Op. Att'y Gen. 113
CourtWisconsin Attorney General Reports
DecidedMay 23, 1988
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 77 Op. Att'y Gen. 113 (Opinion No. Oag 25-88, (1988)) 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.

Bluebook
Opinion No. Oag 25-88, (1988), 77 Op. Att'y Gen. 113 (Wis. 1988).

Opinion

FRED A. RISSER, Chairperson Senate Organization Committee

The Senate Organization Committee has requested my formal opinion on a number of questions concerning the authority of an elected county executive as it relates to the administrative and management powers and duties of the other elected county constitutional officers. Your questions are sufficiently related and interdependent such that my answers to your first two questions should also effectively dispose of your remaining questions. You first ask: "Does an elected county executive have the power to reorganize another elected official's office and remove functions or responsibilities mandated by Wisconsin Statutes?"

For reasons detailed herein, it is my opinion that the county executive does not have the authority to reorganize another elected official's office so as to remove functions or responsibilities mandated by statute.

In recent years, through constitutional amendment and statutory changes, there has been a gradual but significant expansion in the authority delegated by the Legislature to counties to determine their local administrative organization, including legislative authorization for county executives and administrators with expanded powers and a legislative grant of a certain measure of county organizational autonomy. See secs. 59.025, 59.031 and 59.032, Stats. (1983-84).

I assume that your initial question arises because of the most recent of these legislative delegations dealing with the administration of county government, enacted by 1985 Wisconsin Act 29. Among the numerous changes to chapter 59, Stats., affected by this enactment, the legislation requires that every county now have *Page 114 either an elected county executive, a board-appointed county administrator or an administrative coordinator; it authorizes counties to create a department of administration and adopt certain budgetary procedures previously reserved for larger counties, and it further expands the administrative and appointment power of the county executive and administrator. The law also repealed and recreated sections 59.025 and 59.07(intro.) and created section 59.026 to read as follows:

59.025 Administrative home rule. Every county may exercise any organizational or administrative power, subject only to the constitution and any enactment of the legislature which is of statewide concern and which uniformly affects every county.

59.026 Construction of powers. For the purpose of giving to counties the largest measure of self-government in accordance with the spirit of the administrative home rule authority granted to counties in s. 59.025, it is hereby declared that this chapter shall be liberally construed in favor of the rights, powers and privileges of counties to exercise any organizational or administrative power.

59.07 General powers of board. The board of each county shall have the authority to exercise any organizational or administrative power, subject only to the constitution and any enactment of the legislature which grants the organizational or administrative power to a county executive or county administrator or to a person supervised by a county executive or county administrator or any enactment which is of statewide concern and which uniformly affects every county. Any organizational or administrative power conferred under this section shall be in addition to all other grants. A county board may exercise any organizational or administrative power under this section without limitation due to enumeration. The board of each county may exercise the following powers, which shall be broadly and liberally construed and limited only by express language . . . .

The original "executive budget bill" containing these sections, 1985 Assembly Bill 85, included the following analysis by the Legislative Reference Bureau, at 42: "Language giving counties limited administrative home-rule power is replaced by language modeled after municipal home-rule language used in the constitution and statutes. The language is intended to establish broader county administrative *Page 115 home rule." A Legislative Fiscal Bureau analysis characterized the effect of these provisions as follows:

Replace current law concerning the authority of a county to administratively organize itself by specifying that every county may exercise any organizational or administrative power, subject to the state's constitution and laws. This recommendation includes a provision stating that it is intended that the administrative home rule granted under this modification be liberally interpreted in favor of the power of counties to exercise any organizational power.1

As pointed out by the Legislative Fiscal Bureau analysis, while 1985 Wisconsin Act 29 did provide for the expansion of local administrative and organizational authority at the county level, such authority nevertheless remains "subject to the state's constitution and laws." Moreover, in interpreting and applying sections 59.025, 59.026 and 59.07(intro.), particularly those provisions excepting enactments of statewide concern, it must be recognized that the Legislature utilizes counties primarily as its agent in matters of state concern. As stated in MilwaukeeCounty v. District Council 48, 109 Wis.2d 14, 33, 325 N.W.2d 350 (Ct.App. 1982):

In Wisconsin, counties, as quasi-municipal corporations, have no inherent power to govern. The municipalities are created almost exclusively in view of the state's policy at large for purposes of political organization and civil administration in matters of state concern. Columbia County v. Board of Trustees, 17 Wis.2d 310, 317, 116 N.W.2d 142, 146 (1961).

See also Dane County v. H SS Dept., 79 Wis.2d 323, 329-30,255 N.W.2d 539 (1977); Brown County v. H SS Department,103 Wis.2d 37, 43, 307 N.W.2d 247 (1981).

In this regard, it is my opinion that the substantive statutory scheme established for elective county officers by the Legislature constitutes legislative enactments "of statewide concern and which uniformly affects every county," within the meaning of sections 59.025 and 59.07(intro.). Under such a view, neither the various elective county offices nor their constitutional or statutory duties, functions and authority can be abolished, consolidated or altered *Page 116 under the newly enacted provisions of chapter 59 here being considered.

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77 Op. Att'y Gen. 113, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/opinion-no-oag-25-88-1988-wisag-1988.