Honorable Tracey Bright County Attorney Ector County Courthouse, Room 201 Odessa, Texas 79761
Re: Whether a school district may contract with off-duty police officers and deputy sheriffs for security services, and related questions (RQ-427)
Dear Ms. Bright:
You have requested an opinion from this office regarding the Ector County Independent School District's practice of hiring off-duty peace officers to provide security services. You indicate that the district maintains its own security department and officers under section 21.483 of the Education Code, but that it often needs additional officers to provide security at various school events, including football games, basketball games, and play nights. The district obtains the additional officers by contracting directly with off-duty peace officers in the community, including off-duty City of Odessa Police Officers, Ector County Sheriff's Department Deputies, and Texas Department of Public Safety Officers. The City of Odessa claims that this practice violates article
Your request raises three specific questions. The first question is whether a city police officer may contract directly with the school district to serve as a part-time security officer without violating article
Article XVI, section 40 applies to people who profit monetarily from "civil offices." Attorney General Opinion
We conclude that neither city police officers nor sheriff's deputies hold civil offices within the meaning of article XVI, section 40 as a matter of law. We also conclude that security officers for school districts do not hold civil offices as a matter of law. Depending on the factual circumstances of their employment, however, some such individuals may hold civil offices. As will be discussed below, the determination whether a particular police officer, sheriff's deputy, or security officer holds a civil office depends upon the resolution of factual issues and is therefore not amenable to the opinion process.
In the past, this office has concluded that city police officers and sheriff's deputies, as well as other peace officers,1 hold civil offices within the meaning of article XVI, section 40 as a matter of law. Letter Advisory No. 63 (1973) (overruled on other grounds); Attorney General Opinion V-70 (1947). However, we now believe that the Texas Courts would apply the test adopted by the Texas Supreme Court in Aldine Indep. Sch. Dist. v. Standley,
The Texas Supreme Court has held that the decisive factor distinguishing a public officer from a public employee is "whether any sovereign function of the government is conferred upon the individual to be exercised by him for the benefit of the public largely independent of the control of others." Aldine,
In more recent decisions, both the Texas Supreme Court and the courts of appeals have further emphasized that an office involves not only the authority to perform certain sovereign functions, but also the authority to perform these functions largely independent of the control of others. In other words, individuals who perform sovereign functions under the direction of another are not officers. See, e.g., Green v. Stewart,
In contrast, the previous decisions holding that peace officers are officers focused on whether the position was invested with some portion of the sovereign function, even if the person in the position acted as an agent for a principal. For example, in holding that a deputy constable is an officer authorized by law to demand or receive fees of office, the court of criminal appeals stated:
It is well settled that a deputy sheriff is a public officer. He is invested by law with some portion of the sovereign functions of the government, to be exercised by him for the benefit of the public. Deputy constables are provided for by law and qualify in the same manner as deputy sheriffs. They are also vested by law with some portion of the sovereign functions of the government, to be exercised by them for the benefit of the public. They are public officers clothed with the power and authority of their principals.
Murray v. State,
Furthermore, most of the previous decisions dealt with issues other than whether a peace officer holds a civil office under article XVI, section 40. In Ex parte Preston,
The only court decision expressly stating that a peace officer is an officer for the purposes of article XVI, section 40 is Irwin v. State,
The result reached in Irwin is no longer the law in Texas; city police officers now have county-wide jurisdiction. See Angel v. State,
At least some city police officers perform their duties under the direction and control of others. The Local Government Code gives municipalities organized and operating under general law the authority to establish and regulate their own police forces. See Local Gov't Code §§
The statute permitting a sheriff to appoint deputies makes the position of deputy sheriff slightly different from that of a city police officer. The statute provides that deputy sheriffs "have the power and authority to perform all the acts and duties of their principal." Nearly a century ago, this language was interpreted to mean that a sheriff could not appoint a "special deputy" with the authority to perform only some acts. Trammel v. Shelton,
We do not believe, however, that this limitation on the sheriff's authority makes all sheriff's deputies civil officers as a matter of law for the purposes of article XVI, section 40. Although the statute controls part of the agency relationship between a sheriff and his or her deputy, it does not alter the essential nature of the relationship. A deputy sheriff is still an agent of the sheriff and subject to the orders of the sheriff. Naill v. State,
For these reasons, we believe that the Texas courts would no longer follow the reasoning in Irwin to find that city police officers and deputy sheriffs hold civil offices as a matter of law under article
We also conclude that security officers for school districts do not as a matter of law hold civil offices under article XVI, section 40. Like in the statutes governing city police officers, nothing in the statutes governing security officers for school districts requires the district to permit each officer to exercise his or her functions largely independent of the control of others. The statute provides that a school board may employ security officers "for the purpose of carrying out the provisions of [subchapter M of chapter 21 of the Education Code]" and that these officers are "vested with all the powers, privileges, and immunities of peace officers while on the property under the control and jurisdiction of the district or otherwise in the performance of his duties." Educ. Code § 21.483. This office has interpreted this language as giving the school boards the authority to define the duties of district security officers. Attorney General Opinion
We are unable to determine, however, whether any particular police officer, sheriff's deputy, or security officer for a school district holds a civil office as that term is used in article XVI, section 40. Making this determination raises fact questions, which we cannot address in the opinion process. Therefore, even if we had the relevant facts, we would be unable to tell you whether a particular city police officer or deputy sheriff is prohibited from serving as a security officer for the Ector Independent School District.
In response to your second question, we can find nothing in Texas law that would prevent a school district from contracting directly with a private security service for security officers. Of course, the contract must comply with sections
We can find nothing in Texas law that would prevent a school district from contracting with a private security service for security officers.
Very truly yours,
DAN MORALES Attorney General of Texas
WILL PRYOR First Assistant Attorney General
MARY KELLER Deputy Attorney General for Litigation
RENEA HICKS State Solicitor
MADELEINE B. JOHNSON Chair, Opinion Committee
Prepared by Margaret A. Roll Assistant Attorney General
