Untitled Texas Attorney General Opinion

CourtTexas Attorney General Reports
DecidedJuly 2, 1989
DocketJM-1099
StatusPublished

This text of Untitled Texas Attorney General Opinion (Untitled Texas Attorney General Opinion) 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, (Tex. 1989).

Opinion

THE ATTORNEY GENERAL 0F TEXAS

September 20, 1989

Ms. Brenda Milligan Opinion No. JM-1099 Montague County Auditor P. 0. Box 56 Re: Whether a county auditor Montague, Texas 76251 may require elected officials and department heads to provide details about employees' hours worked and leave taken (RQ-1548)

Dear Ms. Milligan:

You ask whether the county auditor can require elected officials and department heads to submit time sheets showing the total number of hours worked by county employees during the pay period, the amount of.sick leave and vacation leave taken, and the number of overtime and compensatory hours worked.1 As this opinion will explain, we believe the county auditor may require county officers and department heads to submit the data you describe, provided such action is not inconsistent with a rule or form prescribed by the comptroller of public accounts under section 112.003 of the Local Government Code. Before discussing the reasons for our conclusion, we will briefly review the circumstances leading to this opinion request.

You inform us that following the issuance of Attorney General Opinion JM-911 (1988) your office and the office of the county treasurer for Montague County sought to consoli- date all payroll functions for the county in the office of the county treasurer. As part of this effort, new timesheets were adopted for use by county officials which request the information described above for each employee of a particular office for a given pay period, as well as

1. Your question is submitted pursuant to section 402.042(b)(8) of the Government Code following receipt of the written opinion of the District Attorney of the 97th Judicial District. Gov’ t Code 5 41.007.

P. 5755 MS. Brenda Milligan - Page 2 (JM-1099)

or to be charged against an employee's pay.2 You further inform us that the county sheriff has refused to use the new timesheets. His refusal, you say, is based on his assertion that he alone, as head of his department, is responsible for determining an employee's entitlement to a salary and that the county treasurer has no need for the information requested on the timesheets.

In a separate letter, the county sheriff maintains that neither the county auditor nor the county treasurer may require him or any other county officer to submit the timesheets you describe. He views this requirement as nothing more than an attempt by the county auditor and county treasurer to control county personnel policy and to usurp the powers of the commissioners court and individual county officers. The sheriff acknowledges the county auditor's duty to determine whether an individual employee is performing the work for which he or she is being paid but suggests this duty ends once the commissioners court authorizes payment of the employee's salary. He also cites article 1709a, V.T.C.S. (now repealed and recodified in relevant part as section 113.042(a) of the Local Government Code), and concludes that the county treasurer's duty to endorse warrants if sufficient funds are available precludes the treasurer from requiring any further information concerning an employee's salary.3

In Attorney General Opinion JM-911 (1988) we determined that the county auditor for Harris County was not authorized to prepare the county payroll and print and distribute county paychecks. We understood these responsibilities to be part of the core functions of the constitutional office of county treasurer but subject to the legislature's power under article XVI, section 44, of the Texas Constitution to

2. In your request letter you also wrote that the form you proposed would require the signatures of the employee and the department head and the employee's social security number. The form you later submitted for our review, however, does not ask for these items.

3. It should be noted that neither the sheriff nor the district attorney offers any legal basis for the conclusion that the auditor may not require a county officer to submit time sheets for their employees.

P. 5756 Ms. Brenda Milligan - Page 3 (JM-1099)

under article XVI, section 44, of the Texas Constitution to prescribe the duties of the office. The legislature, in three sections of the Local Government Code, expressly authorized county officers in certain counties, including Harris County, to prepare the payroll and issue warrants and draw checks in payment of salaries. See Local Gov't Code 5s 113.047, 151.903, 154.043. We also concluded that the ministerial aspects of these duties, such as preparation of the payroll and salary warrants, could be delegated to the county treasurer but not to the county auditor.

Attorney General Opinions JM-986 (1988) considered the extent to which Attorney General Opinion JM-911 was applic- able to counties with lesser populations. Because there were no laws authorizing county officers to prepare the payroll in counties with populations of 500,000 or less, we concluded that the county treasurer was the appropriate official to prepare the county payroll for commissioners court approval and make deductions from the compensation of county employees. In counties with populations of 190,000 or less, we said that the commissioners court was respons- ible for approving the county payroll and issuing warrants in payment of salaries: these duties could not be delegated to either the county treasurer or the county auditor. The treasurer could, however, be delegated the ministerial task of preparing salary warrants following the commissioners court's order authorizing their issuance. We also concluded that the commissioners court could not draw checks in payment of salaries. Attorney General Opinion JM-986 is especially relevant to Montague County which, according to 1980 census figures, had a population of less than 18,000.

We mention these opinions because they apparently motivated your actions and those of the county treasurer. These opinions, however, did not conclude that either the county auditor or the county treasurer was responsible for adopting, implementing, or enforcing county personnel policy. Rather, the opinions dealt only with ministerial, nondiscretionary tasks associated with the county payroll. The courts readily acknowledge the broad power of county officers to manage the affairs of their offices:

Because of the unique structure of county government in Texas, [an elected county official] holds virtually absolute sway over the particular tasks or areas of responsibil- ity entrusted to him by state statute and is

P. 5757 Ms. Brenda Milligan - Page 4 (JM-1099)

accountable to no one other than the voters for his conduct therein.

Familias Unidas v. Briscoe, 619 F.2d 391, 404 (5th Cir. 1980) (citations omitted). The powers of county officers, including the county sheriff, over personnel matters is also quite extensive, subject to appropriate constitutional and statutory restraints. See McBee v. Jim Hooq Countv, 730 F.2d 1009 (5th Cir. 1984) (discussing constitutional prin- ciples affecting sheriff's decision to reappoint or not to reappoint subordinates of predecessor in office); Barrett v. Thomas, 649 F.2d 1193, 1199 (5th Cir. 1981), cert. denied, 102 S.Ct. 1969 (1982) ("Sheriffs, like other elected county officials in Texas, have indisputably wide-ranging discre- tion in the selection of their employees.").

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