OPINION
This is the second appeal from a summary judgment in this cause. All parties below moved for summary judgment, and the trial court granted the motion filed by the El Paso County Sheriff, Leo Samaniego (the “Sheriff’), and El Paso County (the “County”).
The first summary judgment was also granted in favor of the Sheriff and the County. On appeal, this Court dismissed the case based on the trial court’s lack of jurisdiction.
Camacho v. Samaniego,
On remand with respect to the refund issue, the Sheriff and El Paso County (together “Appellees”) moved for summary judgment based on sovereign immunity, legislative immunity, official immunity, mistake of law, inapplicability of the statute to the facts, the nonretroaetivity of Camacho, the statute of limitations, and laches. Appellees also asserted that the Appellants were not entitled to prejudgment interest or to attorneys’ fees. Appellants moved for summary judgment on converse grounds, alleging that the Supreme Court had resolved both the issue of statutory authority and the entitlement of the bonding companies to a refund, and had remanded solely on issue of the amount of damages to be refunded. Because Appellants believed these damages were liquidated, they asserted that no material fact issue existed and that they were entitled to judgment as a matter of law. The trial court entered a final take-nothing judgment in favor of the Appellees. We affirm in part, and reverse and remand in part.
SUMMARY OF THE EVIDENCE
Agreed Statement of Facts
This suit involves claims brought by various bail bond companies against the Sheriff and the County. The facts are largely beyond dispute. Initially, some of the companies entered into an agreed statement of facts with the Appellees. Though not all the Appellants were parties to this agreement, it is representative of the factual situation applicable to all parties in this case. Relevant portions of this agreement are as follows:
Effective June 1, 1983, the Sheriff of El Paso County, Texas, as approved by the El Paso County Bail Bond Board on April 27, 1983, commenced requiring bailbondsmen to pay a $2.00 bail bond filing fee on bail bonds filed for release of persons from the El Paso County Jail. The fee is required from bailbondsmen on each and every surety bail bond, both felony and misdemeanor. The fee is not required for cash bonds or personal bonds. Initially, the fee was to be paid at the time of the posting of bail, but was billed instead on a monthly basis. As of January 28, 1987, the bail *815 bond filing fee is payable at the time the bail bond is presented to the El Paso County Sheriff. The El Paso County Sheriff requires that the fee be paid by any bailbondsman presenting a bail bond to the El Paso County Sheriff as a prerequisite to acceptance of the bail bond by the El Paso County Sheriff, and the release of the principal.
On September 30,1985, the Commissioner’s Court of El Paso County, Texas, raised the bail bond fee from $2.00 to $5.00, effective October 1, 1985_ On January 5,1987, the Commissioner’s Court of El Paso County Texas, raised the fee from $5.00 to $10.00, effective February 1, 1987.... On September 21, 1987, the Commissioner’s Court of El Paso County, Texas, raised the fee from $10.00 to $18.00, effective January 1,1988....
Unless [the Appellant bailbondsmen] pay to the Sheriff of El Paso County, Texas, the Sheriff will not accept [their] criminal bail bonds.
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All of the [Appellant bond companies] pay the fee as an integral part of their doing business as bondsmen in El Paso County, Texas.
Procedural History
On January 25, 1988, the first suit was brought in County Court at Law No. Two by Mary Camacho, individually and doing business as Afuera Out Bail Bonds (“Camacho”), and Nancy Merrill, doing business as Merrill Bail Bonds (“Merrill”). These plaintiffs claimed that the preconviction bail bond fee charged by the County and collected by the Sheriff was unconstitutional and illegal. They requested a declaratory judgment to that effect, a permanent injunction prohibiting the continued collection of the fees, and damages in the form of a refund of fees already collected. On April 3, 1989, Frederick Timmons, individually and doing business as Get Free Bail Bonds (“Timmons”), and Alberto De Lachica, individually and doing business as Lachica Bail Bonds (“De Lachi-ca”), filed a similar suit against the Appellees in the 210th Judicial District Court of El Paso County. On April 27, 1989, Timmons’ and De Lachica’s case was transferred to County Court at Law No. Two and ultimately consolidated with Camacho’s and Merrill’s suit. These four parties are the original plaintiffs. They filed two motions for class certification, attempting to represent other bonding companies similarly situated, which the trial court denied. On August 1, 1989, Alberto De Lachica amended his petition to add Metro Bail Bonds as another “dba.”
Six other bond companies intervened in the consolidated action at various times over the next several months. On August 1,1989, Alberto Lopez Jr., doing business as Compa Bail Bonds and A-l Bail Bonds, Fernando Lara Basoco, doing business as El Paso Bail Bonds, and Dolores Solis, doing business as AD. Solis Bail Bonds, intervened and adopted the Plaintiffs’ First Amended Petition filed that same day by Timmons and De Lachica. On August 30, 1989, Odia Harvey, doing business as Amigo Bail Bonds, also intervened and adopted Timmons’ and De Lachica’s pleadings. On September 14,1989, Camacho and Merrill filed an amended petition. They were joined in intervention by Armando Camacho, individually and doing business as Camacho Bail Bonds. 1 On September 28, 1989, Kirsten Apodaca, doing business as Apodaca Bail Bonds, intervened and adopted Timmons’ and De Lachica’s pleadings. 2 These plaintiffs comprise the original intervenors in this ease.
After motions ior summary judgment were filed on both sides, the trial court, then CountyCourt at Law No. Two, entered a
*816
take-nothing judgment in favor of the County and the Sheriff, both individually and in his official capacity. On appeal, this Court dismissed the case, holding unconstitutional the statute
3
purporting to grant the county court at law subject matter jurisdiction to hear a case that challenged actions of the County Commissioners’ Court. The Texas Supreme Court then reversed with respect to the constitutionality of Tex.Gov’t Code Ann. § 25.0732 (Vernon 1988), and held that Tex. Loc.Gov’t Code Ann. § 118.131 did not authorize the preconviction bail bond fee as the County and the Sheriff contended. Accordingly, the surety fee was illegal pursuant to the prohibition found in Tex.Code CRIM.PROC. Ann. art. 103.002 (Vernon Supp.1997) against imposing a cost for a service on a criminal defendant that is not explicitly authorized by law.
See Camacho,
On remand, both the Camacho and the Timmons groups, the County, and the Sheriff proceeded to trial on the issue of damages 4 before the same trial judge. However, the ease was now heard in the 205th Judicial District Court. On June 30, 1992, Justice Bail Bonds (“Justice”) filed suit against the County and the Sheriff in the 34th Judicial District Court. On August 17, 1992, Raymond Telles (“Telles”), individually and doing business as Raymond Telles Bail Bonds, filed a similar suit in the same court. Upon Justice’s motion to consolidate and over the objections of the original plaintiffs and interve-nors, Justice’s and Telles’ causes of action were transferred to the 205th and consolidated with the suits by the four original plaintiffs.
On August 8, 1992, Michael York, Jaime Alvarado, Saul Mota, and Greg Swan filed a plea in intervention. 5 These intervenors asserted that they were criminal defendants released from the El Paso County Detention Center pursuant to bail bonds filed by the plaintiff bonding companies. They alleged that they, and not the bail bond companies, had paid the illegal bail bond fees and that they were entitled to a return of the fees paid. They argued that the illegal fee was an integral part of the price they paid the bond companies to secure their release from jail. In addition, they requested that a class of other criminal defendants similarly situated be certified. The Camacho group, the Timmons group, Justice,' and Telles each filed motions to strike the intervention, 6 arguing that the Supreme Court had previously determined in Camacho that the bond companies were the owners of the illegal fees paid. These plaintiffs also filed briefs in opposition to the class certification. The trial court ultimately certified a partial class of criminal defendants.
On June 1,1993, the Sheriff and the County filed separate motions for summary judgment. On July 15, 1993, the Camacho and Timmons groups responded to these motions. That same day, these plaintiffs filed their own motion for summary judgment asserting the exact same issues raised in their response. 7 The Sheriff and the County both filed separate responses to this motion. Justice,Telles, and the defendant intervenors each filed separate motions for summary *817 judgment and responses to the summary judgment motions filed by the Appellees. The issues raised by these motions for summary judgment, and the supplements filed by some of the parties, and the responses to these motions are essentially the same throughout. And, for the most part, they reflect the issues raised on appeal. The trial court granted a take-nothing judgment in favor of the Sheriff and the County.
STANDARD OF REVIEW
When both sets of parties move for summary judgment, and the trial court grants one motion but denies the other, the result is a final judgment. The set of parties that did not prevail may appeal both the summary judgment granted against it, as well as the denial of its motion for summary judgment.
Jones v. Strauss,
The standard of review on appeal of a summary judgment is whether the successful movant at the trial level carried its burden of showing that there is no genuine issue of material fact and that judgment should be granted as a matter of law.
Lear Siegler, Inc. v. Perez,
In resolving the issue of whether the movant has carried this burden, all evidence favorable to the non-movant must be taken as true and all reasonable inferences, including any doubts, must be resolved in the non-movant’s favor.
Nixon,
ISSUES ON APPEAL
Together, the Camacho and Timmons groups have filed a brief in this Court raising five general points of error, 8 alleging generally that the trial court erred in (a) granting the County’s motion for summary judgment; (b) granting the Sheriff’s motion for summary judgment in his individual and official capacities; (c) denying the bonding companies’ motion for summary judgment; (d) allowing the intervenors to intervene; and (e) certifying the intervenors as a class. Telles and Justice raise similar complaints as to the validity of the summary judgment entered in favor of both the County and the Sheriff, while the criminal defendant intervenors attack only the summary judgment granted to the County. Telles and Justice further complain of the trial court’s failure to grant Camacho’s original effort to certify the bond companies as a class. Collectively, the Ap *818 pellants raise the following issues for resolution:
• whether the County or the Sheriff are entitled to sovereign, official, legislative, and/or judicial immunity;
• whether the Supreme Court’s decision in Camacho should be applied retroactively;
• whether the bonding companies paid the fee declared illegal in Camacho under duress, entitling them to a refund;
• whether Tex.Rev.Civ.Stat.Ann. art. 3909 (Vernon 1966)[now codified as Tex.Loc. Gov’t Code Ann. § 118.801 (Vernon Supp. 1997) ], which permits limited punitive damages against officials who extort fees in excess of those prescribed by statute, applies to either the County or to the Sheriff;
• whether limitations and laches should operate to bar some or all of the asserted recovery;
• whether the trial court erred when it allowed the intervention;
• whether the trial court erred when it granted the intervenors’ motion for class certification;
• whether the trial court erred when it denied the intervenors relief;
• whether the trial court erred in denying the bonding companies’ motion for summary judgment;
• whether the trial court erred in denying Camacho’s original efforts to certify the bond companies as a class.
We will address each in turn.
OVERVIEW: ILLEGAL ACTS BY PUBLIC OFFICIALS
In order to address Appellants’ points of error, we must first discuss the issue ubiquitous to this appeal: the approach taken under Texas law to illegal acts committed by public officials. Texas counties are units of State government.
Rodriquez v. Medical Arts Hospital,
The acts of officials which are not lawfully authorized are not acts of the State, and an action against the officials by one whose rights have been invaded or violated by such acts, for the determination and protection of his rights, is not a suit against the State within the rule of immunity of the State from suit.
Bagg v. University of Texas Medical Branch,
*819
The principle that acts committed by State officials without statutory authority are not acts of the State of Texas or its subdivisions applies to two very different types of eases. The first involves a fact situation similar to this one, in which public officials acting in good faith on the instructions given to them by their superiors, commit acts that are subsequently found to lack statutory authority. Sheriff Samaniego collected the disputed fee in good faith at the behest of County Commissioners’ Court. The record contains no indication that the Sheriff collected the fee on his own volition without the Commissioners’ authorization, or for his own profit, or covertly, or in any manner that was otherwise illegal. Indeed, the Sheriff and the Commissioners all believed that the fee was authorized by statute. The Supreme Court acknowledged in
Camacho
that the County’s statutory construction had “some appeal,” noted that the legislative history concerning the application of this provision to criminal fees was “not absolutely certain,” and observed that two of the plaintiffs had conceded the accuracy of the County’s interpretation.
Camacho,
The second factual scenario belongs in the category of illegal acts by public officials which may be characterized as
ultra vires
acts: where a State official exceeds the authority conferred on him by statute on his own volition. For example, in
Bagg,
the plaintiff alleged that his supervisors had wrongfully terminated him from his employment at the University of Texas Medical Branch at Galveston and took actions that far exceeded their authority as agents of the medical school. The court concluded that the plaintiffs suit had to be brought against the individual officials who had allegedly violated his rights, since an official who takes actions outside his legal authority does not act on behalf of the State.
Bagg,
Both the
Cobb
and
Bagg
scenarios involve illegal acts that cannot be attributed to the State of Texas or its subdivisions. As will become clear, however, Texas law treats these two scenarios differently when evaluating the remedies available to citizens whose rights have been violated. First, however, we turn to whether there is a significant discrepancy between the Supreme Court’s opinion on the one hand, and its judgment and mandate on the other, arising from the initial appeal in
Camacho,
CONFLICT BETWEEN SUPREME COURT’S OPINION AND JUDGMENT
The
Camacho
opinion declares the bail bond fee illegal. The Supreme Court summarized its holding as follows: “We further hold, however, that the
county
was not authorized to impose the fee in question. Accordingly, we reverse the judgment of the court of appeals, render a declaration that the fee is illegal, and remand to the trial court for further proceedings.” [Emphasis added],
Camacho,
We hold that Texas Government Code section 25.0732(f) is constitutional and we reverse the court of appeals holding to the contrary. We also reverse the county court at law’s summary judgment for the Sheriff and render judgment for the bond businesses because we find that, as a matter of law, the bond approval fees imposed on bondsmen by the El Paso County Commissioners Court and collected by the Sheriff are not authorized by any Texas statute.
Camacho,
Any conflict between the language of the opinion and the judgment in
Camacho
must be resolved in favor of the judgment.
Continental Airlines, Inc. v. Kiefer,
INDIVIDUAL LIABILITY
If illegal acts by public officials cannot be attributed to the State, and a party who alleges injury from illegal acts cannot name the State or its subdivisions as parties, we must ascertain in what capacity the named public officials can be sued. Camacho is silent on the issue. Summary judgment in favor of the Sheriff was reversed without regard to whether the remand would be litigated against the Sheriff in his individual capacity, his official capacity, or both.
At first blush, the reasoning in Bagg and its progeny would appear to resolve the issue. The principle that illegal acts cannot be attributed to a unit of State government would appear to automatically preclude the assignment of illegal acts to State or county officials in their official capacities. However, this case involves a different type of illegal act. Bagg involved ultra vires acts for which the governmental entity retained immunity and the offending public officials were appropriately sued in their individual capacities. Here, however, we are presented with the illegal collection of fees by a public official acting in good faith, pursuant to what he believed to be his legal duties, but whose actions were ultimately declared to be illegal. It presents the anomalous situation in which actions are considered illegal and therefore not committed by the unit of State government, and yet the individual officials who *821 committed the actions are sued in their official capacities.
The Restatement (Second) of Judgments § 36 cmt. e. (1982) states:
e. Application to actions against officials. A public official sued as an individual nevertheless participates in the action in his official capacity if the remedy sought is that of compelling, restraining, or making declarations concerning performance of acts in the course of his official duties, or the restitution of property over which he asserts control in virtue of his official authority. If the remedy sought is damages and the public body of which he is an official is solely responsible for paying them, the public official likewise appears in his official capacity and is in effect merely a formal party. See § 37. The determination in such circumstances is therefore binding on the governmental body of which he is an official and on his successors in office, but in accordance with the rule stated in § 36, is not binding on him personally. Where, however, the remedy is for damages that he is asserted to have a personal obligation to pay, he participates in his individual capacity. [Emphasis added].
Illustration 12 to Comment (e) explains the capacity in which an individually named public official participates in a suit with facts closely analogous to the present case:
12. A sues B, the state treasurer, to compel B to refund taxes A alleges were unlawfully collected. If under applicable law B can be directed to refund the tax from state assets, B participates in his capacity as an official of the state and the state is bound, even if suit might not have been brought naming the state itself as defendant. [Emphasis added].
Illustration 13 to Comment (e) contrasts the scenario described in Illustration 12 with a suit in which the public official must participate in his individual capacity:
13. A sues B, a police captain, for damages for injuries sustained when C, a policeman under B’s command, used unnecessary force in detaining A. A seeks recovery from B personally on the ground that B was negligent in selecting and supervising C. B participates in his individual capacity. [Emphasis added].
See Restatement (Second) of Judgments § 36 cmt. e., illus. 12 and 13 (1982).
Consistent with Section 36, we conclude that the Sheriff faces liability in his official capacity only. The trial court properly granted summary judgment with respect to all claims brought against Sheriff Samaniego in his individual capacity. In
Pierson v. Ray,
We do not address those arguments that pertain solely to El Paso County as a separately named entity because the County was not properly named as a party. We now address the liability of the Sheriff in his official capacity.
SOVEREIGN IMMUNITY
The Camacho and Timmons groups complain that the trial court erred in granting summary judgment for the Sheriff, and argue that sovereign immunity cannot bar recovery from the Sheriff in his official capacity. Telles and Justice raise this same issue. We agree.
The trial court granted summary judgment to the County and the Sheriff on the issue of sovereign immunity. We have determined that the County was not a proper party to this suit. Since the wrongful actions cannot be characterized as actions by the State, the State cannot be the proper party to sue, and sovereign immunity cannot bar the suit:
The acts of officials which are not lawfully authorized are not acts of the State, and an action against the officials by one whose rights have been invaded or violated by such, acts, for the determination and pro *822 tection of his rights, is not a suit against the State within the rule of immunity of the State from suit.
Cobb,
OFFICIAL IMMUNITY
The Camacho and Timmons groups also argue that qualified, or official immunity does not shield the Sheriff acting in his official capacity. Again we agree. Official immunity is an affirmative defense, and the burden to prove all its elements is on the defendant who claims immunity.
Boozier v. Hambrick,
With respect to the first element, the Sheriff has demonstrated that he collected the bail bond fees in good faith in order to discharge a duty imposed on him by the County Commissioners’ Court. The second element creates more difficulties. The public official claiming the protection of official immunity must demonstrate that he carried out the disputed actions in the course and scope of employment. In one sense, the Sheriff acted within the course and scope of his employment in carrying out the task that the Commissioners’ Court required of him, and did not exceed the powers available to him in doing so. This situation is fundamentally different than one in which public officials, on their own volition, exceed their authority. However, the fact that he acted in good faith in carrying out a responsibility imposed on him by the Commissioners does not answer the question whether he acted within the course and scope of his employment when he collected the illegal fee. The course and scope of employment for a public employee is defined by statute. If the public employee acts without statutory authority, then he cannot act within the course and scope of employment. The question is not whether State officials were acting on behalf of the State to accomplish a proper governmental purpose, but whether the action is authorized by law.
Bagg,
LEGISLATIVE IMMUNITY
The Camacho and Timmons groups further argue that the Sheriff is not entitled to legislative immunity. Telles and Justice raise the same issue; once again, we agree.
Sheriff Samaniego counters that he was entitled to legislative immunity because he was performing his duties by carrying out the orders of the Commissioners’ Court, and that he was therefore entitled to the same immunity that the individual members of the Commissioners’ Court enjoyed. Other courts of appeals addressing this question have disagreed whether sheriffs collecting an illegal bail bond fee merely canned out the orders of the commissioner’s courts such as to entitle them to absolute legislative immunity. In
Bowles v. Clipp,
In
Tenney v. Brandhove,
With respect to local officials such as the County Commissioners and Sheriff here, the question arises as to what kinds of activities exist within “the sphere of legitimate legislative activity.” In
Minton v. St. Bernard Parish School Board,
The creation of the illegal bail bond fee by the Commissioners’ Court was a functionally legislative act. Had the bonding companies attempted to sue the Commissioners in their individual capacities, the Commissioners would have enjoyed absolute legislative immunity. However, we cannot conclude that the collection of the fee by the Sheriff was functionally legislative. He acted to enforce the fee once it had already been created. As a result, his collection of the fee is not entitled to absolute legislative immunity.
JUDICIAL IMMUNITY
Sheriff Samaniego urges that even if we find that legislative immunity does not protect the actions declared illegal by the Supreme Court, we should nevertheless conclude that he is protected by judicial immunity. He cites
Vondy v. Commissioners Court of Uvalde County,
Judicial officers acting in a judicial capacity enjoy common law immunity which can only be abrogated in “really extraordinary causes.”
See generally Pulliam v. Allen,
CAMACHO APPLIES RETROACTIVELY
The Camacho and Timmons groups argue that the trial court erred in denying the bond companies’ motion for summary judgment. This argument is premised on the contention that the Supreme Court’s Camacho opinion should be given both retroactive and prospective effect. Telles and Justice raise the same issue.
The Sheriff argues against retroactive application and cites as authority decisions such
*825
as
Bacchus Imports, Ltd. v. Dias,
In both
Bacchus
and
Beam,
the United States Supreme Court explained that a legal decision on the constitutional validity of a state taxing scheme could be applied either retroactively or prospectively on remand. In
Beam,
the Court further found that even though it had agreed with the taxpayers by declaring that the taxing scheme violated the Commerce Clause, the taxpayers were not automatically entitled to a refund. The Court remanded on the issue of refund in order to give the state court the opportunity to develop the record and determine what remedy was appropriate, considering the equitable and reliance interests of the parties.
Beam,
In Edgewood, the Texas Supreme Court adopted a three-part test to determine retro-activity of its opinions:
• whether the decision announces a new rule of law by overruling past precedent or by deciding an issue of first impression whose outcome was not clearly foreshadowed;
• whether an evaluation of the rule’s prior history suggests that a retroactive application of the decision would further or retard the policy concerns underlying the rule;
• whether an evaluation of the facts of the case suggests that a retroactive application would result in greater inequities than a strictly prospective holding.
Edgewood,
Arguably, an evaluation of the facts of this ease under these factors could lead to a strictly prospective application of
Camacho.
This is especially true with respect to the first
factor—Camacho
announced a new rule of law by overruling past precedent. With respect to the third factor, while we believe that a retroactive application will have a considerable economic impact on the County and those who benefit from its services, we reiterate that this form of hardship should not prevent a refund that is otherwise justified. A tax or fee collected without statutory authority should not be considered the property of the governmental entity.
Cobb,
Still further, the Texas Supreme Court has determined that its decisions operate “retroactively unless this Court exercises its discretion to modify that application.”
Bowen v. Aetna Casualty and Surety Co.,
DURESS
The Camacho and Timmons groups argue that the illegal fees should be refunded because they were paid under duress. Telles and Justice raise the identical issue. We agree for two reasons. First, the failure to pay the illegal fee would have had a drastic effect on the bond companies’ ability to conduct their business. Second, the County could impose this detriment on the companies without recourse to the courts.
Texas courts have consistently held that voluntary payment of an illegal tax will not support a claim for repayment.
City of Houston v. Feizer,
We observe that any failure to pay a tax or fee ultimately results in some detriment or penalty. As a result, a claimant who seeks the refund of an illegally paid fee must do more than demonstrate that a penalty or other detriment would have resulted from nonpayment.
See for example Johnson Controls,
After reviewing the cases that address the repayment of illegal taxes or fees, we conclude that two factors distinguish a fee or tax paid under duress from a voluntary payment: (1) the type of detriment that results to the taxpayer from a failure to pay; and (2) the type of mechanism available to the governmental entity to ensure payment.
Type of Detriment
If the failure to pay an illegal tax or fee will foreclose the ability of a business to continue operating, or causes financial loss or closure of the business, this first element will be satisfied.
See Metropolitan Life Insurance Co. v. Mann,
Type of Enforcement
The second element common to those cases requiring a refund of illegally collected taxes concerns the enforcement mechanism available to the governmental entity. If the entity has to seek payment through the courts, such as a suit to collect back property taxes, then no duress is present. If the governmental authority can impose a penalty without recourse to the courts, however, then duress is present. This requirement is logical when one considers the options available to the taxpayer. If the governmental entity must resort to legal action, then the taxpayer can realistically protest the tax and refuse to pay it without suffering irreparable harm. Under these circumstances, payment can be characterized as voluntary even if the tax or fee is illegal. However, if the penalties for nonpayment can be exacted without legal action, a taxpayer’s refusal to pay can have drastic consequences. For example, in Sheppard, the Court explained the possible consequences of a refusal to pay, given that no court action was required to revoke the taxpayer corporation’s charter:
If the asphalt company had refused to pay such fee, it could not have gotten its charter amendment filed without resorting to the courts, and would have run the risk of *827 having its right to do business in this state and its right to resort to the courts of this state called in question during the litigation. Also during such period it would have run the risk of having its business greatly hampered and injured.
Here, the bonding companies did not suffer the same kind of penalties at issue in Sheppard, National Biscuit, Metropolitan Life, or Connecticut General Life. The County could not have revoked the companies’ right to do business for failure to pay the bond fees. However, the companies could not conduct their business without paying the illegal fees because the Sheriff would not approve a bond unless the fee had been paid. In this instance, the companies would have suffered the penalty immediately—failure to pay the fee would have prevented them from issuing bonds. We find that the bond companies have satisfied the first element necessary to show payment under duress.
We also conclude that they have established the second element. The County could impose the penalty for failing to pay the bond approval fees without recourse to the courts. Had the companies failed to pay, the bond would not have been processed. Thus, they suffered an immediate detriment for refusing to pay. As the Sheppard Court explained, where the governmental entity requires no decision from a court before it imposes the penalty, the taxpayer’s refusal to pay pending the outcome of a declaratory judgment action could result in serious harm to the taxpayer’s business. Having demonstrated that they paid the bond approval fees under implied duress, and the companies are entitled to a refund, we now move to the question of what monies are recoverable.
ARTICLE 3909
The Camacho and Timmons groups argue that they are entitled to fourfold damages under Tex.Rev.Civ.Stat.Ann. art. 3909 (current version at TexLoc.Gov’t Code Ann. § 118.801) which provided that “[i]f any officer named in this title shall demand and receive any higher fees than are prescribed to them in this title, or any fees that are not allowed by this title, such officer shall be hable to the party aggrieved for fourfold the fees so unlawfully demanded and received by him.” Id. We conclude that Appellants’ claim for fourfold damages pursuant to the extortion provision of the Local Government Code rests on a misunderstanding of the type of illegal acts involved here. As we have already discussed, acts committed without statutory authority are not considered acts of the State of Texas or its subdivisions. The Sheriff collected the disputed fee in good faith at the direction of the County Commissioners, all of whom believed that the fee was authorized by Texas statute. The illegal acts were not deliberate attempts to seek gain for the County or for individual public officials through deliberate violations of the law. The type of willful misuse of public office to extort excessive fees contemplated by Tex.Loc. Gov’t Code Ann. § 118.801 would require a public official’s willful abuse of his office, the type of ultra vires acts addressed in Bagg and its progeny.
STATUTE OF LIMITATIONS AND LACHES
In addressing the argument that the trial court erred in granting summary judgment to the Sheriff, the Camacho and Timmons groups argue that a two-year statute of limitations should not apply to their claims. Telles and Justice join in this argument. We disagree.
Suits for the conversion of personal property and the taking or detaining of personal property are governed by a two-year statute of limitations. Tex.Civ.PRAC. & Rem.Code Ann. § 16.003 (Vernon 1986). Texas courts have applied this provision to claims against county governments and officials for repayment of fees and fines.
See Falls County v. Mires,
Regardless of the merits of the Sheriffs argument, actions against a county are governed by TexXoc.Gov’t Code Ann. § 81.041(a) which provides that “[a] person may not sue on a claim against a county unless the person has presented the claim to the commissioners court and the commissioners court has neglected or refused to pay all or part of the claim.”
See El Paso County v. Elam,
We recognize that
National Biscuit
did not apply laches to bar the claim of a taxpayer seeking the recovery of illegal taxes paid under duress, relying on the principle articulated in
Sheppard
that a person does not have to refuse to pay illegal taxes in order to receive a refund if the State can impose penalties for nonpayment without first filing suit.
National Biscuit Co.,
135S.W.2d at 693;
Sheppard,
Appellants’ claims for a refund of fees paid more than two years prior to the presentation of their claims to the Commissioners’ Court are barred by laches. A fact question exists as to whether and when the claims for each Appellant were presented to the Commissioners’ Court.
THE CRIMINAL DEFENDANTS INTERVENTION
The Camacho and Timmons groups assert that the trial court erred in overruling their motions to strike the criminal defendants’ plea in intervention. Appellants assert that the Supreme Court in Camacho determined the ownership issue concerning the fees paid to the County. They argue that the interve-nors’ petition is nothing more than an attempt to re-litigate issues decided by the Supreme Court. Telles and Justice also raise the issue. We agree, but not for the reasons advanced by the bond companies.
The trial court has broad discretion in ruling on a motion to strike an intervention.
See Guaranty Fed. Sav. Bank v. Horseshoe Operating Co.,
This argument disregards the fact that the Supreme Court repeatedly referred to the
*829
fees as having been “imposed on bondsmen.”
Camacho,
We conclude that the trial court abused its discretion in overruling the motions to strike. We do not address the issue of class certification.
SUMMARY JUDGMENT FOR THE BONDING COMPANIES
Appellants contend that summary judgment should have been granted in their favor. However, significant fact issues exist concerning when claims were lodged with the Commissioners’ Court for the purpose of applying the doctrine of laches and concerning the calculation of damages. The County vigorously disputes the damages alleged in the affidavits of various bondsmen used as summary judgment evidence, asserting that the bond companies are attempting to collect fees paid by other bond companies not a part of this suit. Because such genuine issues of material fact remain, summary judgment in favor of the Appellants was properly denied. Inasmuch as the trial court did not address the damages issue in this case, any discussion of prejudgment interest and attorneys’ fees at this point would be advisory only.
CAMACHO’S ORIGINAL MOTION FOR CLASS CERTIFICATION
Telles and Justice allege that the trial court abused its discretion in not granting Camacho’s original effort to certify the El Paso County bail bondsmen as a class.
9
Camacho and Merrill did not undertake an interlocutory appeal of this issue pursuant to Tex.Civ.PRAC. & Rem.Code Ann. § 51.014(3)(Vernon 1997) nor did they raise the issue in the prior appeal.
See Camacho,
CONCLUSION
We affirm the summary judgment in favor of the County. As a result, we overrule the Camacho and Timmons groups’ Point of Error No. One, Telles’ and Justice’s Point of Error No. One to the extent it attacks summary judgment in favor of the County, and the criminal defendants’ Point of Error No. One. We affirm the summary judgment as to the Sheriff in his individual capacity, but reverse and render as to his official capacity. Accordingly, we sustain in part and overrule in part the Camacho and Timmons groups’ Point of Error No. Two and Telles’ and Justice’s Point of Error No. One. Because we find genuine issues of material fact precluding summary judgment for Appellants, we overrule the Camacho and Timmons groups’ Point of Error No. Three. We sustain the Camacho and Timmons groups’ Point of Error No. Four and Telles’ and Justice’s Point of Error No. Two, and conclude that the trial court erred in denying Appellants’ motion to strike the criminal defendants’ intervention. Because of our ruling with regard to Point of Error No. Four, we do not reach Point of Error No. Five urged by the Camacho and *830 Timmons groups. This opinion does not address or adjudicate the merits of any potential claim of the criminal defendants against the bonding companies. Lastly, we overrule Telles’ and Justice’s Point of Error No. Three, challenging the denial of the original class certification sought by Camacho. We remand solely on the issue of the amount of the refund due Appellants within the parameters of this opinion.
Notes
. For convenience, these plaintiffs may be referred to as the Camacho group. These groupings reflect the fact that various plaintiffs or groups of plaintiffs have filed separate pleadings to which the Appellees have separately responded. To further confuse matters, these plaintiff groupings do not match the groups of plaintiffs that filed motions for summary judgment or that responded to Appellees’ motions for summary judgment. The result is a paper crossfire riddling the record with arguments and other allegations.
. Timmons and De Lachica, and the group of intervenors adopting their pleadings, are referred to as the Timmons group.
. Tex.Gov't Code Ann. § 25.0732(t)(Vemon Supp. 1997).
. The Supreme Court decided the declaratory judgment issue when it ruled in Camacho. The injunction issue became moot because the County and the Sheriff ceased charging and collecting the preconviction bail bond fee after the Camacho decision issued. The only remaining issues were the claims for damages: whether damages in the form of refunds for illegally collected taxes were warranted, and if so, what level of damages was appropriate. Prior to granting summary judgment, the trial court had separated the issue of legal authority to collect the fees and whether damages in the form of refunds were warranted. It is the second issue that concerns us now.
. These intervenors are referred to as the defendant intervenors.
. Odia Harvey filed a motion to adopt the Tim-mons group’s motion to strike. Kirsten Apodaca filed a separate motion to strike. A supplemental motion to strike and a brief in support of that motion were filed by both the Camacho and Timmons groups.
. The only issues that differed in these two documents were various objections to the Sheriff's affidavit in support of his motion for summary judgment.
. Both Justice and Telles filed a separate brief adopting the arguments in this brief.
. Camacho d/b/a Afuera Bail Bonds and Merrill d/b/a Merrill Bail Bonds moved for class certification on July 26, 1988. The trial court denied class certification on June 14, 1989.
