Untitled Texas Attorney General Opinion: KP-0512

CourtTexas Attorney General Reports
DecidedFebruary 2, 2026
DocketKP-0512
StatusPublished

This text of Untitled Texas Attorney General Opinion: KP-0512 (Untitled Texas Attorney General Opinion: KP-0512) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Texas Attorney General Reports primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

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Untitled Texas Attorney General Opinion: KP-0512, (Tex. 2026).

Opinion

February 2, 2026

The Honorable Eduardo Serna Zavala County Attorney 200 East Uvalde Street, Suite 2 Crystal City, Texas 78839

Opinion No. KP-0512

Re: Whether a commissioners court can rescind and readopt a different county budget after the annual budget was approved (RQ-0586-KP)

Dear Mr. Serna:

Prompted by Zavala County’s budget process for fiscal year 2024–2025, you ask a series of questions about a county commissioners court’s budget authority. 1 You explain that the “County Judge . . . filed [a] proposed budget on August 15, 2024,” and the commissioners court held a public hearing regarding that proposed budget on September 4, 2024. Exhibit 1 at 1. At the conclusion of the hearing, you say the commissioners court both accepted a recommendation from the salary grievance committee to grant a compensation increase for certain elected officers 2 and approved a final budget. See id.; Exhibit 2 at 2. At least one commissioner subsequently learned of facts that led him to conclude that the commissioners court did not have to accept the salary grievance committee’s recommendation, and, in response, he requested a legal opinion from you regarding this discovery’s effect on the budget. Exhibit 1 at 3, 6. In a letter dated September 16, 2024, you advised the commissioner that the commissioners court could not rescind the approved budget and “re-adopt” a new budget in order to “take up the salaries” and that “the window to act on the budget” had closed. Id. at 1, 3. Nevertheless, the commissioners court took action on September 18, 2024, “to rescind the [a]pproved [b]udget . . . and adopt[] a ‘new’ budget, stripping the salary increases.” Exhibit 2 at 2.

Against this backdrop, you first ask “[w]hether [a] commissioners court can rescind and re[-]adopt a different county budget after the annual budget [is] approved.” Request Letter at 1. If the answer to this question is no, you wish to know whether “the commissioners subject[ed] themselves to legal liability under section 111.012 of the Local Government Code” by “adopt[ing]

See generally Letter and Exhibits from Hon. Eduardo Serna, Zavala Cnty. Att’y, to Hon. Ken Paxton, Tex. 1

Att’y Gen. (Mar. 5, 2025), https://www.texasattorneygeneral.gov/sites/default/files/request-files/request/2025/RQ 0586KP.pdf (“Request Letter” and “Exhibits,” respectively) (on file with the Op. Comm.). 2 You do not specify the elected officers at issue. See Exhibit 1 at 2 (stating you were not provided the names of the “elected officials who availed themselves” of the grievance committee process). The Honorable Eduardo Serna - Page 2

a new budget” and the County’s remedy to reduce an elected officer’s salary. Id. Finally, you ask “[w]ho . . . has the duty to file the approved budget under [s]ection 111.009 of the Local Government Code.” Id. at 2. If the duty lies with the county auditor, you inquire whether he committed an offense “under section 111.012 . . . by refusing/failing to file the September 4th budget with the county clerk.” Id.

Chapters 111 and 152 of the Local Government Code govern the process to adopt the county budget and set an elected county officer’s salary, respectively.

We begin with a general overview of the process to adopt a county budget and set an elected county officer’s salary. Chapter 111, subchapter A, of the Local Government Code sets out the budget adoption process relevant here. See Exhibit 1 at 1. It requires the county judge to prepare a proposed budget, TEX. LOC. GOV’T CODE § 111.003(a), which the judge must file with the county clerk no later than August 15 and which must be made available for public inspection, id. § 111.006. The commissioners court must then hold a public hearing on the proposed budget “not later than the 25th day after the day the budget is filed.” Id. § 111.007(a)–(b); see also id. § 111.0075(a) (requiring newspaper notice of the budget hearing). “At the conclusion of the public hearing, the commissioners court shall take action on the proposed budget,” id. § 111.008(a), which could include adopting “the final budget at the end of the hearing[,] . . . amending the proposed budget[,] or scheduling a subsequent hearing at which to adopt the amended budget,” Tex. Att’y Gen. Op. No. GA-0929 (2012) at 3 n.5; see also TEX. LOC. GOV’T CODE § 111.008(b) (“The commissioners court may make any changes in the proposed budget that it considers warranted by the law and required by the interest of the taxpayers.”). “On final approval of the budget by the commissioners court, the court shall[] . . . file the budget with the county clerk[] and . . . if the county maintains an Internet website,” post it on the website. TEX. LOC. GOV’T CODE § 111.009(a)(l)–(2). A county officer, employee, or official “who refuses to comply with” subchapter A commits a misdemeanor offense “punishable by a fine of not less than $100 or more than $1,000, confinement in the county jail for not less than one month or more than one year, or by both fine and confinement.” Id. § 111.012.

At the same time, Chapter 152 of the Local Government Code prescribes a process for setting the salary of elected county officers. 3 See generally id. §§ 152.011–.018. “[T]he commissioners court shall give written notice to each elected county . . . officer of the officer’s salary and personal expenses to be included in the budget.” Id. § 152.013(c). Should the officer be “aggrieved by the setting of the officer’s salary[,]” the officer “may request a hearing before the salary grievance committee before the approval of the county’s annual budget.” Id. § 152.016(a). After the hearing, the grievance committee may make a recommendation to increase an officer’s salary to the commissioners court. Id. § 152.016(c) (specifying the circumstances under which “the commissioners court shall include [an] increase in the budget”). “The commissioners court shall set the” elected officer’s salary “at a regular meeting of the [commissioners] court during the regular budget hearing and adoption proceedings.” Id. § 152.013(a).

3 We presume the officers at issue are subject to these provisions. See, e.g., Exhibit 2 at 1 (discussing Chapter 152). The Honorable Eduardo Serna - Page 3

A commissioners court may not wholly rescind and adopt a different county budget after the annual budget is approved.

As related to the county budget process described above, we turn first to your question concerning the rescission of the approved annual budget and adoption of “a different county budget.” 4 Request Letter at 1. As “creatures of the Texas Constitution, counties and commissioners courts are subject to the Legislature’s regulation.” City of San Antonio v. City of Boerne, 111 S.W.3d 22, 28 (Tex. 2003). Accordingly, a commissioners court’s “power is limited to that which is expressly delegated to it by the Texas Constitution or Legislature, or necessarily implied to perform its duties.” Id. at 29.

State law authorizes a county commissioners court to amend the final budget in two circumstances. See Tex. Att’y Gen. Op. No. KP-0052 (2015) at 2. A commissioners court may amend the budget for an emergency expenditure “in a case of grave public necessity to meet an unusual and unforeseen condition that could not have been included in the original budget through the use of reasonably diligent thought and attention.” TEX. LOC. GOV’T CODE § 111.010(c); see also Bexar Cnty. v. Hatley, 150 S.W.2d 980, 987 (Tex. 1941) (discussing the commissioners court’s budgetary discretion with respect to “grave public necessity”). And a commissioners court may make a non-emergency amendment “to transfer an amount budgeted for one item to another budgeted item.” TEX. LOC. GOV’T CODE § 111.010(d).

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Untitled Texas Attorney General Opinion: KP-0512, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/untitled-texas-attorney-general-opinion-kp-0512-texag-2026.