The Honorable James Warren Smith, Jr. Frio County Attorney 500 East San Antonio, Box 1 Pearsall, Texas 78061-3100
Re: Whether a county is authorized to reimburse attorney's fees incurred in defending an election contest suit to a candidate for a political party's nomination for sheriff (RQ-914)
Dear Mr. Smith:
You ask whether Frio County (the "county") is authorized to reimburse the sheriff for attorney's fees he incurred in defending an election contest suit. You explain that the incumbent sheriff had several opponents in the March 1996 Democratic Party primary election and "was forced into a [r]un-[o]ff [e]lection in April, 1996." The victor of the runoff election was to run unopposed in the November 1996 general election. The incumbent sheriff prevailed over his opponent by 168 votes. The opponent filed an election contest against the sheriff. The sheriff was represented by private counsel and you represented the county clerk as an "unnamed defendant/contestee." The lawsuit was resolved in favor of the incumbent sheriff, but the court explicitly refused to award attorney's fees to the prevailing party. The sheriff's attorney has now presented a claim to the county on behalf of the sheriff seeking reimbursement for his attorney's fees in the election contest suit.
We agree with your analysis that none of the statutes you mention requires the county to reimburse the sheriff for his attorney's fees in the election contest.1 Moreover, we believe that the county is prohibited from doing so by the Texas Constitution, see Tex. Const. art.
In Attorney General Opinion
Although we have found no Texas case directly on point, Chandlerv. Saenz,
Here, as in Attorney General Opinion
The sheriff's attorney also argues that the election contest involved legitimate interests of the county because the contestant attacked the county clerk, election supervisor, and other county officials. These individuals were not parties to the suit and there was no possibility of a judgment against them or the county. Furthermore, we note that you filed an answer on behalf of the county clerk as an "unnamed defendant/contestee" and therefore appear to have represented any interests of the county in the suit.
Finally, the argument that the sheriff's successful defense of the suit saved the county the expense of holding a new runoff election must fail. In any election contest, it is the interest of the authority holding the election that justice be served, not that one candidate prevail over another. In this case, as in all others, it would have served the electorate's interests, and thus county's interests, to hold a new runoff election if the court had found a basis to void the contested election.2
Yours very truly,
DAN MORALES Attorney General of Texas
JORGE VEGA First Assistant Attorney General
SARAH J. SHIRLEY Chair, Opinion Committee
Prepared by Assistant Attorney General
