The Honorable Laura Garza Jimenez Nueces County Attorney Nueces County Courthouse 901 Leopard, Room 207 Corpus Christi, Texas 78401-3680
Re: Authority of a county attorney to represent the Texas Department of Aging and Disability Services, in prosecuting an application for placement under chapter 593, Health and Safety Code (RQ-0510-GA)
Dear Ms. Garza Jimenez:
You inform us that the Texas Department of Aging and Disability Services ("DADS"), a state agency, requested you as county attorney to "file an Application for Placement under the [Persons with] Mental Retardation Act in accordance [with] Chapter 593 of the Texas Health Safety Code," and you inquire about your authority.1
You characterize your question differently throughout your request. You initially state that the issue is whether you have the "authority to represent [DADS] in . . . prosecuting" the application. See Request Letter, supra note 1, at 1. You state that DADS requested you to "pursue litigation, specifically to file" the application. Id. You also state that "it must be determined whether the County Attorney has the authority to represent [DADS] in such a proceeding." Id. at 2. Finally, you state that you believe you are "not authorized to pursue litigation under Chapter 593 on behalf of the State" and inquire about your authority to "represent this state agency in a proceeding pursuant to Chapter 593." Id. at 3. When we consider your request in its entirety, we understand you to ask not about any ministerial authority you may have to "file" the application on behalf of DADS by submitting it to the court clerk but about your authority as the county attorney to act as legal counsel for DADS in initiating and prosecuting the proceeding.
Before we consider the authority of a county attorney under applicable statutory and constitutional provisions, we must address DADS' assertion that it has not requested you to serve as its legal counsel in this matter. In its brief to this office, DADS affirmatively states that it has not asked you to pursue the application in question.2 Attorneys generally act on behalf of clients. The attorney-client relationship is formed when the parties manifest an intention, explicitly or impliedly, to create an attorney-client relationship. See Parker v. Carnahan,
As part of the Persons with Mental Retardation Act (the "Act"), chapter 593 of the Health and Safety Code governs commitment proceedings for persons with mental retardation.3 See Tex. Health Safety Code Ann. ch. 593 (Vernon 2003) (entitled "Admission and Commitment to Mental Retardation Services"); see also id. subtit. D (Vernon 2003 Supp. 2006) (consisting of chapters 591, 592, 593, 594, 595, 597) ("Persons With Mental Retardation Act"); cf. id. subtit. C (Vernon 2003 Supp. 2006) ("Texas Mental Health Code" pertaining to mental illness4). Chapter 593 contains provisions governing voluntary commitment to mental retardation services, see id. §§ 593.021-.030 (Vernon 2003), and provisions governing involuntary commitment to residential mental retardation services,5 see id. §§ 593.041-.056. Section 593.041(a) authorizes a
proposed resident, if an adult, a parent if the proposed resident is a minor, the guardian of the person, the court, or any other interested person, including a community center or agency that conducted a determination of mental retardation of the proposed resident, [to] file an application for an interdisciplinary team report and recommendation that the proposed client is in need of long-term placement in a residential care facility.
Id. § 593.041(a). The application is to be filed with the county clerk in specified appropriate counties, and the county court has original jurisdiction over the judicial proceedings. See id. § 593.041(b)-(c). Once an application has been filed, the court is required to set the "earliest practicable date for a hearing to determine the appropriateness of the proposed commitment." Id. § 593.047. If requested by a party, the hearing is to be before a jury. Id. § 593.049(a). Moreover, the hearing is to be conducted in the open unless the proposed resident6 or the proposed resident's representative requests a closed hearing on good cause. See id. § 593.050(a). The hearing is a civil matter to which the Texas Rules of Civil Procedure apply. Seeid. § 593.049(b); see also In re G.D.,
By contrast, the Mental Health Code expressly authorizes a county attorney to initiate an action "for court-ordered mental health services" for an individual with mental illness.7 Id. § 574.001(a) (Vernon Supp. 2006). Moreover, when a county attorney initiates such an action, the Mental Health Code expressly provides that a "county attorney shall represent the state." Id. § 571.016(1) (Vernon 2003). In addition, "[a]ll applications" filed under the Mental Health Code "shall be filed on behalf of the State of Texas" and styled in the name of the State of Texas as specified. Id. § 571.0166. These sections of the Mental Health Code indicate to us that the Legislature knows how to expressly authorize a county attorney to initiate a proceeding for mental health services and to prosecute it on behalf of the state.Cf. Tex. Natural Res. Conservation Comm'n v. IT-Davy,
We also consider the general duties and authority of a county attorney. The office of county attorney is a constitutional office.See Tex. Const. art.
[t]he County Attorneys shall represent the State in all cases in the District and inferior courts in their respective counties; but if any county shall be included in a district in which there shall be a District Attorney, the respective duties of District Attorneys and County Attorneys shall in such counties be regulated by the Legislature.
Id. The 105th Judicial District, which includes Nueces County, elects a district attorney. See Tex. Gov't Code Ann. §
For the counties in the 105th Judicial District, the district attorney "shall attend each term and session of the district, county, and justice courts of Nueces County . . . and shall represent the state in criminal cases pending in those courts." Tex. Gov't Code Ann. §
We note that chapter 593 authorizes an "interested person" to file an application but does not define the term "interested person." Under the Code Construction Act, "person" is defined broadly to include "government or governmental subdivision or agency . . . and any other legal entity." Tex. Gov't Code Ann. §
However, a county may also be an "interested person." As a governmental subdivision, it is a person under the Code Construction Act. We believe a county has an interest in the individuals with mental retardation that reside in the county. Counties are charged generally with providing for the health and welfare of persons within the county.See Tex. Health Safety Code Ann. §§
Generally, a county attorney does not "represent the county in its general legal business or the conduct of ordinary civil actions."Hill Farm, Inc. v. Hill County,
In sum, absent a request from DADS, we do not believe you have authority to serve as its legal counsel in the initiation and prosecution of an application for placement under section 593.041. And we find nothing in the Act or in the statutes pertaining to the general authority of a county attorney that authorizes a county attorney to independently initiate and prosecute an application under section 593.041 on behalf of the state. You may still be able to participate in such a proceeding to the extent the county is an interested person and the commissioners court has requested your legal services.
A county attorney is not authorized to serve as legal counsel to the Texas Department of Aging and Disability Services, absent its request, in the initiation and prosecution of an application for placement of a person with mental retardation under section593.041 of the Health and Safety Code. Applicable statutes do not authorize a county attorney to independently initiate and prosecute such an application. However, to the extent a county is an interested person under the statute, a county attorney, when requested and authorized by the commissioners court, may initiate and prosecute a section 593.041 application on behalf of the county.Very truly yours,
GREG ABBOTT Attorney General of Texas
KENT C. SULLIVAN First Assistant Attorney General
ELLEN L. WITT Deputy Attorney General for Legal Counsel
NANCY S. FULLER Chair, Opinion Committee
CHARLOTTE M. HARPER Assistant Attorney General, Opinion Committee
