Honorable Merrill L. Hartman Chairman Court Reporters Certification Board P. O. Box 13131 Austin, Texas 78711-3131
Re: Whether the Court Reporters Certification Board is subject to article 6252-13f, V.T.C.S., which establishes the State Office of Administrative Hearings (RQ-138)
Dear Judge Hartman:
In 1991, the legislature created the State Office of Administrative Hearings ("the office") by enacting into law Senate Bill 884. Acts 1991, 72d Leg., ch. 591, at 2127-28. Senate Bill 884 has been codified as article 6252-13f, V.T.C.S. Section 2(b) of article 6252-13f provides that the office
shall conduct all administrative hearings in contested cases under the Administrative Procedure and Texas Register Act (Article
6252-13a , Vernon's Texas Civil Statutes) that are before an agency that does not employ a person whose only duty is to preside as a hearings officer over matters related to contested cases before the agency.
See also V.T.C.S. art. 6252-13a, § 3(2) (definition of "contested case"). Article 6252-13f applies only to state agencies. V.T.C.S. art. 6252-13f, § 3(a). Section 1(3) of that article defines "state agency" as "a state board, commission, department, or other agency that is subject to the Administrative Procedure and Texas Register Act."
You ask whether article 6252-13f applies to the Court Reporters Certification Board ("the board"). We conclude that the board is not subject to the Administrative Procedure and Texas Register Act ("APTRA" or "the act"), and consequently, that article 6252-13f does not apply to the board.1
By its terms, article 6252-13f applies only to a state agency that is subject to APTRA and that does not employ a person whose only duty is to conduct administrative hearings in contested cases before the agency. We are advised that the board does not employ such a person, and that instead, the chairman of the board or his designee preside at all disciplinary hearings before the board in accordance with chapter 52 of the Government Code, which establishes the board and defines its powers and duties.2 One of the two requirements for application of article 6252-13f to a state agency is thus satisfied. To determine if the other requirement, that the board be subject to APTRA, is met, we must examine the language and legislative history of APTRA and relevant case law.
APTRA applies only to state agencies. See V.T.C.S. art. 6252-13a, §§ 4(a), 4A, 5(a). While certain personnel practices of all state agencies and certain functions of some state agencies are specifically exempted in section 21 of the act, no provision of the act specifically exempts the board as a whole or the hearing activities of the board from APTRA. See id. § 21.
Section 3(1) of APTRA, however, excludes "the courts" from the definition of "agency" for purposes of the act.3 Since the act does not define that phrase, we turn to its legislative history. APTRA was enacted in 1975 on adoption of Senate Bill 41. Acts 1975, 64th Leg., ch. 61. The definition of "agency" in section 3(1) of Senate Bill 41 contained the exclusion for "the courts" that appears in the current law. Id. § 3(1), at 137. The legislative history of Senate Bill 41, however, does not elucidate the scope of the exclusion. See Testimony before the Senate Comm. on Intergovernmental Relations (January 30, 1975) and the House Comm. on Judicial Affairs (March 19, 1975); see also that House committee's bill analysis, S.B. 41, Bill File; House Comm. on the Judiciary, An Administrative Procedure Act for Texas (1974).
Senate Bill 41 was based on the Model State Administrative Procedure Act adopted in 1961 by the National Conference of Commissioners on Uniform State Laws ("the commissioners"). McCalla, Proposed Administrative Procedure Act, 37 TEX. B.J. 1163 (1974); see also 15 UNIFORM LAWS ANNOTATED 147 (1990) (includes copy of 1961 model act) (hereinafter "U.L.A."). Section (1)(1) of the 1961 model act defines "agency" to include "each state board, commission, department or officer, other than the legislature or the courts, authorized by law to make rules or determine contested cases." 15 U.L.A. at 147 (brackets deleted and emphasis added). The 1961 model act, like the Texas act, contains no definition of the phrase "the courts."
The 1961 act was the second model administrative act adopted by the commissioners. The first model administrative procedure act was adopted in 1946. See generally 9C U.L.A. 174 (1957) (includes copy of 1946 model act). The 1946 act defines "agency" as "any state board, commission, department, or officer authorized by law to make rules or adjudicate contested cases, except those in the legislative or judicial branches." 9C U.L.A. at 179 (brackets deleted and emphasis added).4 The commissioners' comments accompanying the 1946 and 1961 acts do not elaborate on the meaning of the respective phrases. 9C U.L.A. at 174-78 (1946 act); 15 U.L.A. at 148-49 (1961 act). Nor do the comments to the 1961 act explain the reason for the change in language. 15 U.L.A. at 148-49.
The third and most recent model administrative procedure act was adopted in 1981. 15 U.L.A. 1. Section 1-102 of the 1981 act defines "agency," and like the 1961 act, excludes "the courts." 15 U.L.A. at 10-11. The commissioners' comments to section 1-102 state in part:
The 1961 Revised Model Act also excluded, as does this definition, the legislature and the courts. Note that it is only `the legislature' and `the courts' that are excluded, and not `the legislative branch' and `the judicial branch,' and that exemptions from the Act are to be construed narrowly. [Emphasis in original.]
15 U.L.A. at 12.5 We found no indication in the legislative history of the Texas act that the Texas legislature was aware of or intended the narrower meaning of the phrase "the courts." See page 3 supra. Nor did we find any mention of a narrower meaning for the phrase in the commentary about the Texas act published soon after its enactment. See, e.g., McCalla, The Administrative Procedure and Texas Register Act, 28 BAYLOR L. REV. 445 (1976); State Bar of Texas, Workshop Guide for the New Administrative Procedure and Texas Register Act (1975); see also F. E. Cooper, 1 State Administrative Law 97-107 (1965) (stating in discussion on 1961 model act definitions that "agency" was purposefully drafted in general terms to accommodate varying state needs).
In contrast to the narrow meaning of the phrase "the courts" suggested by the change in the model act definition of "agency" and the comments to the 1981 model act, a number of other states' judicial decisions have construed the phrase "the courts" more expansively.6 For instance, the supreme courts of Rhode Island and Louisiana have construed the phrase to mean the judicial branch of government.7 The Rhode Island court in two different decisions has held that the Rhode Island administrative procedure act does not apply to either the state bar association or the Disciplinary Board of the Rhode Island Supreme Court. See Berberian v. Disciplinary Bd. of Rhode Island Supreme Court,
In support of its holding in Petition of Rhode Island Bar Association, the Rhode Island court cited the decision of the Louisiana Supreme Court in Babineaux v. Judiciary Comm'n,
The Supreme Court of Connecticut has not as clearly defined the scope of the phrase "the courts" in the Connecticut administrative procedure act. In one case, the court held the Connecticut act did not apply to a statewide committee required by statute to review complaints concerning attorney misconduct. Sobocinski v. Statewide Grievance Comm.,
The Texas Supreme Court has not expressly equated the exclusion in APTRA for "the courts" with entities within the judicial branch of government as have the Rhode Island and Louisiana Supreme Courts. Nor has the Texas court expressly stated that disciplinary entities within the judicial branch are covered by the exclusion. In Cameron v. Greenhill,
The Texas Supreme Court also addressed the application of APTRA to judges in Lindsay v. Sterling,
Neither Cameron nor Lindsay resolves your question. On the basis of those decisions, we can state with certainty only that APTRA will not apply to the administrative activities of a court acting solely as a court, but will apply to the activities if the court undertakes them on behalf of and as part of an agency within the executive branch. Neither Cameron nor Lindsay establishes that the phrase "the courts" means the entire judicial branch or includes along with the courts themselves the disciplinary entities within that branch.12 Nor do we read those decisions as precluding either construction of the phrase.
We demonstrate below that the board is an entity within the judicial branch that engages in disciplinary activities on behalf of the judiciary. Consequently, the issue here is whether APTRA applies to such activities. Since no Texas court has addressed that issue, we must decide if a Texas court faced with the issue here, would follow the lead of the state and federal courts that have broadly construed the exclusion for "the courts." We believe that the court would do so.
We now turn to the history of the statutory provisions in chapter 52 of the Government Code authorizing regulation of court reporters since that history documents the status of the board as a disciplinary arm of the courts. In 1975, the legislature enacted into a law a provision providing that the Texas Supreme Court, under its rulemaking authority, "provide for the duties and fees of court reporters in all civil judicial proceedings." Acts 1975, 64th Leg., ch. 319, § 1, at 826 (now codified as Gov't Code §
Justice Jack Pope, then a member of the Texas Supreme Court, testified at the senate committee hearing on March 8, 1977, about the need to regulate the profession of shorthand reporting, and to enact Senate Bill 586 and bring "the court reporting profession into the judiciary of Texas." See also Testimony of Senator Schwartz during debate on Second Reading in the Senate, March 17, 1977 (bill sets up within the supreme court the capacity to issue certifications); Testimony of Representative Powers during debate on Second Reading in the House, May 19, 1977 (bill creates a committee under the supervision and direction of the supreme court, which would have control of the committee). Justice Pope also described the new law "as the additional pieces of legislation that we [the court] felt were necessary to implement" regulatory control by the court. This comment may refer to the provisions in the new law investing the board with supervisory powers over anyone practicing as a shorthand reporter in the state courts, including the powers to issue certifications to shorthand reporters and to revoke the certification of any shorthand reporter engaged in prohibited conduct. Such powers generally are considered to be within the domain of licensing boards in the executive branch.13
The legislature amended the 1977 law in 1983 by enacting Senate Bill 565. Acts 1983, 68th Leg., ch. 541, at 3139. According to the available legislative history, the name of the committee was changed to the Court Reporters Certification Board to indicate that it was a state entity, and not a private association for court reporters. House Study Group Bill Analysis to Senate Bill 565 (April 27, 1983), at 2; Testimony of Senator Washington during second reading of the bill (March 29, 1983). That history also indicates that no substantive change was intended with regard to the jurisdiction of the Texas Supreme Court over the board.14 Testimony of Senator Washington and C. Raymond Judice, then executive director of the board, Public Hearing on S.B. 565, Senate Comm. on Jurisprudence (March 1, 1983). The amended article subsequently was codified as part of chapter 52 of the Government Code.
In summary, we believe a Texas court would construe the exclusion for "the courts" in APTRA to cover the board. The history of the statutory provisions authorizing regulation of the practice of shorthand reporting documents the status of the board as a disciplinary entity within the judicial branch. Thus, we also believe that a Texas court would find that APTRA does not apply to the board, and consequently, that the board is not subject to article 6252-13f.
Very truly yours,
DAN MORALES Attorney General of Texas
WILL PRYOR First Assistant Attorney General
MARY KELLER Deputy Assistant Attorney General
RENEA HICKS Special Assistant Attorney General
MADELEINE B. JOHNSON Chair, Opinion Committee
Prepared by Celeste A. Baker Assistant Attorney General
