Office of the Attorney General — State of Texas John Cornyn The Honorable Ben W. "Bud" Childers Fort Bend County Attorney 301 Jackson, Suite 621 Richmond, Texas 77469-3108
Re: Whether, under Falls County v. Mires,
Dear Mr. Childers:
Section
Your question raises two issues: first, whether a statute of limitationsbars the judges from filing claims for the entire sums due them, regardless of the date the claims accrued; and second, whether a two-year or four-year statute of limitations applies. We conclude first that a statute of limitations does not bar the judges' claims; rather, the county must raise the statute of limitations as an affirmative defense if the county wishes a court to apply it. We conclude second that the applicable statute of limitations is the four-year statute set forth in section
An audit revealed that the three Fort Bend County Court at Law Judges were paid not on an annual basis but on an hourly basis for several years, although the county budgeted the correct salary each year. Seeid. at 1. The Independent Accountants' Report calculates the salaries the judges should have received from the date each judge initially took office until December 31, 1998. See id.; see also Null-Lairson, Certified Public Accountants, Independent Accountants' Report, to Ms. Kathy Hynson, Fort Bend County Treasurer (June 21, 1999) (on file with Opinion Committee). The Report indicates that Judge McMeans was undercompensated in the amount of $1,709.81 from January 1, 1987, through December 31, 1998; Judge Wagenbach was undercompensated in the amount of $3,296.39 from December 8, 1990, through December 31, 1998; and Judge Lowery was undercompensated in the amount of $5,094.57 from November 7, 1996, through December 31, 1998. Id. at 2.
Judge McMeans suggests that a statute of limitations prevents the judges from claiming more than four years' unpaid salaries. See Memorandum from Honorable Walter S. McMeans, Judge, County Court at Law No. 2, to Honorable Bud Childers, Fort Bend County Attorney (Aug. 12, 1999) (on file with Opinion Committee). Accordingly, you tell us, Judge McMeans believes that "the calculation of underpayment should begin no earlier than the beginning of his term [i]n January 1995." Request Letter,supra, at 1. As we explain below, the judge is correct in part.
Statutes of limitations are set forth in chapter 16 of the Civil Practice and Remedies Code. Section 16.003 sets forth a two-year limitations period on suits for injury to, conversion of, or the taking of personal property. See Tex. Civ. Prac. Rem. Code Ann. §
Falls County v. Mires, which you cite, concludes that the two-year statute of limitations applied to a claim filed by the Falls County Treasurer to recover insufficient monthly salary from January 1, 1936, through September 29, 1947. See Mires,
Falls County has pleaded . . . our two year statute of limitations. We think it is applicable here; and since it was pleaded, it is our duty to apply it, notwithstanding we think it works a hardship on plaintiff. Under our system of jurisprudence, all of us are charged with the knowledge of the statutory provisions of our law, and plaintiff Mires was charged, as a matter of law, that he was entitled to receive the sum of $2000 per year as County Treasurer when he took office on January 1, 1936. He also had actual knowledge of the fact that the Commissioners Court was paying him less salary than he was entitled to receive, beginning with his first monthly payment, and since he had knowledge of these facts, the foregoing statute of limitations began to operate against him at the time he received his first payment.
Id.
We conclude first, consistently with Mires, that a statute of limitations does not bar the judges from recovering the full amount the county owes them unless the county raises a limitations statute as a defense. SeeMires,
We conclude second that the four-year statute of limitations for causes of action based upon debt, see Tex. Civ. Prac. Rem. Code Ann. §
Now, all actions for debt fall within the four-year statute of limitations. Amendments to the two-year and four-year statutes of limitations in 1979, see Act of May 27, 1979, 66th Leg., R.S., ch. 716, §§ 1, 2, 1979 Tex. Gen. Laws 1768, 1768-69, "eliminated the former distinction between debts evidenced by a writing, which were governed by the four-year statute, and debts not evidenced by a writing, which were governed by the two-year statute." Mokwa v. City of Houston,
Yours very truly,
JOHN CORNYN Attorney General of Texas
ANDY TAYLOR First Assistant Attorney General
CLARK KENT ERVIN Deputy Attorney General — General Counsel
ELIZABETH ROBINSON Chair, Opinion Committee
Kymberly K. Oltrogge Assistant Attorney General — Opinion Committee
