Mr. Thomas A. Davis Jr., Director Texas Department of Public Safety 5805 North Lamar Boulevard Post Office Box 4087 Austin, Texas 78773-0001
Re: Whether section
Dear Mr. Davis:
You ask whether section
1702.323 (e) of the Occupations Code makes a paralegal or other person working under an attorney's direct supervision subject to regulation by the Texas Private Security Board.1
Your question involves investigations company licenses. Chapter 1702 provides that
"a person may not . . . act as an investigations company" unless the person "holds a license as an investigations company." Id. § 1702.101. In chapter 1702, the term "person" includes an "individual" or a "firm, association, company, partnership, corporation, nonprofit organization, institution, or similar entity." Id. § 1702.002(16). The term "investigations company" means "a person who performs the activities described by Section 1702.104." Id. § 1702.002(10).
Section 1702.104 provides that a person acts as an investigations company for purposes of chapter 1702 if the person:
(1) engages in the business of obtaining or furnishing, or accepts employment to obtain or furnish, information related to:
(A) crime or wrongs done or threatened against a state or the United States;
(B) the identity, habits, business, occupation, knowledge, efficiency, loyalty, movement, location, affiliations, associations, transactions, acts, reputation, or character of a person;
(C) the location, disposition, or recovery of lost or stolen property; o
(D) the cause or responsibility for a fire, libel, loss, accident, damage, or injury to a person or to property;
(2) engages in the business of securing, or accepts employment to secure, evidence for use before a court, board, officer, or investigating committee;
(3) engages in the business of securing, or accepts employment to secure, the electronic tracking of the location of an individual or motor vehicle other than for criminal justice purposes by or on behalf of a governmental entity; or
(4) engages in the business of protecting, or accepts employment to protect, an individual from bodily harm through the use of a personal protection officer.
Id. § 1702.104.
Subchapter N of chapter 1702 provides numerous exceptions to the chapter's scope. For example, section 1702.321 generally excepts government employees. See id. § 1702.321(a) ("Except as provided by this section, this chapter does not apply to an officer or employee of the United States, this state, or a political subdivision of this state while the employee or officer is performing official duties."). Significantly, section 1702.324 provides that the chapter does not apply to certain occupations, including "an attorney while engaged in the practice of law." Id. § 1702.324(b)(9). A letter opinion from this office addressed the scope of the attorney exception in 1998, prior to the Act's 1999 codification in the Occupations Code:
The exception for "an attorney-at-law in performing his duties" appears to have been designed to allow attorneys to perform the type of investigative work normally required in the course of rendering legal services, such as the discovery of evidence, witnesses, and facts, without having to be licensed as investigators under the act.
Tex. Att'y Gen. LO-98-005, at 2.3 As a predecessor to the Board explained the exception's basis to the Sunset Commission, "[a]n attorney is licensed by another state agency and part of his authority would be to investigate matters for a client as an attorney and not as a private investigator." Texas Board of Private Investigators and Private Security Agencies, Report to the Sunset Advisory Commission (1979) at 75.
Chapter 1702 does not expressly provide that exempt attorneys' employees must be licensed or registered with the Board. And we gather that from 1969, when the legislature first adopted the statutory predecessor to chapter 1702, until 2003, when the legislature last amended chapter 1702, the Texas Commission on Private Security and its predecessors had not interpreted the Act to apply to employees working under exempt attorneys' direct supervision.4 This is a reasonable interpretation of chapter 1702's regulatory scope given that state law recognizes that attorneys rely on paralegals and other employees to assist them in practicing law,5 and attorneys themselves, to the extent they are engaged in the practice of law, are expressly excepted under section 1702.324. See Tex. Occ. Code Ann. §
Moreover, as the State Bar notes,6 chapter 1702 distinguishes between the business of investigating, which chapter 1702 regulates, and the practice of law, which it does not. See Tex. Occ. Code Ann. §§
You ask whether "section 1702.323(e) applies to paralegals and others performing work under the direct supervision of attorneys." Request Letter, supra note 1, at 1-2. Section 1702.323(e) must be read in its statutory context, not in isolation. See Tex. Att'y Gen. Op. No.
(a) Except as provided by Subsections (b), (d), and (e), this chapter does not apply to an individual employed in an employee-employer relationship exclusively and regularly by one employer in connection with the affairs of the employer.
(b) An individual described by Subsection (a) who carries a firearm in the course of employment must obtain a private security officer commission under this chapter.
(c) Although the security department of a private business that hires or employs an individual as a private security officer to possess a firearm in the course and scope of the individual's duties is required to apply for a security officer commission for the individual under this chapter, the security department of a private business is not required to apply to the commission for any license under this chapter.
(d) This chapter applies to an individual described by Subsection (a) who in the course of employment:
(1) comes into contact with the public;
(2) wears a uniform with any type of badge commonly associated with security personnel or law enforcement or a patch or apparel with "security" on the patch or apparel; or
(3) performs a duty described by Section 1702.222.
(e) This chapter applies to any person who conducts an investigation if the investigation involves a person, or the affairs of a person, who is not employed by the same employer as the person conducting the investigation and the investigation is not conducted on the premises of the employer. Premises of the employer include walkways, parking areas, and other areas relating to the affairs of the employer.
Tex. Occ. Code Ann. §
As its title reflects,7 section 1702.323 is concerned with an employee who conducts investigations for a private business for the business' own internal use, as opposed to the use of the business' clients or other third parties. Section 1702.323(a) provides that with certain exceptions chapter 1702 "does not apply to an individual employed in an employee-employer relationship exclusively and regularly by one employer inconnection with the affairs of the employer." Id.
§ 1702.323(a) (emphasis added). The employees you are concerned about who assist attorneys in their practice of law do not fall within section 1702.323(a) because, to the extent these employees investigate, they do so not "in connection with the affairs of the employer," the employing attorney or law firm, but in connection with legal clients' affairs.
Section 1702.323, subsections (b) through (e) modify section 1702.323(a). See id.
§ 1702.323(b)-(e). You are concerned about section 1702.323(e), which was added in 2003 by House Bill 1769. See Act of May 28, 2003, 78th Leg., R.S., ch. 593, § 3, 2003 Tex. Gen. Laws 1965, 1966. Section 1702.323(e) limits the scope of section 1702.323(a), which does not apply to investigations that attorneys or their employees conduct in connection with legal clients' affairs. When viewed in the context of section 1702.323 as a whole, it is clear that the legislature intended section 1702.323(e) merely to narrow the 1702.323(a) exception for a private business' security department's employees, applying chapter 1702 to an individual otherwise excepted under section 1702.323(a) who leaves the employer's premises to investigate a person who is not employed by the business. The legislative history is consistent with the plain language. A bill analysis indicates that the legislature intended amendments to section 1702.323 to affect only individuals employed by private businesses' security departments. See House Comm. on Government Reform, Bill Analysis, Tex. H.B. 1769, 78th Leg., R.S. (2003) ("Changes the description of individuals to whom the provisions regarding the security department of a private business applies.").
In sum, section 1702.323(e) merely limits the section 1702.323(a) exception. It does not expand chapter 1702's scope to regulate individuals who are not the subject of section 1702.323(a). Section 1702.323(e) does not require a paralegal or other employee working under an exempt attorney's direct supervision to obtain an investigations company license or otherwise make such a person subject to regulation under chapter 1702, because section 1702.323(a) does not apply to investigations that attorneys or their employees conduct in connection with legal clients' affairs.
The 1971 bill analyses do not explain the reasons for this change or discuss its implications.8 However, on its face, the 1971 amendment does not indicate that the legislature intended to extend the licensing requirement to attorneys' employees. The term "agent" is a legal term of art that refers to a person "who is authorized by another to transact business or manage some affair for him."Ackley v. State,
As a final note, whatever the legislature's intent was in 1971, we understand that thereafter the Act was not construed by the entities charged with enforcing it to apply to exempt attorneys' employees. See supra note 4. Given the passage of time and the legislature's failure to act to subject attorneys' employees to regulation, we question the 1971 amendment's legal relevance to this issue in 2004. See Humble Oil Ref. Co. v. Calvert,
Very truly yours,
GREG ABBOTT Attorney General of Texas
BARRY McBEE First Assistant Attorney General
DON R. WILLETT Deputy Attorney General for Legal Counsel
NANCY S. FULLER Chair, Opinion Committee
Mary R. Crouter Assistant Attorney General, Opinion Committee
the preparation of a pleading or other document incident to an action or special proceeding or the management of the action or proceeding on behalf of a client before a judge in court as well as a service rendered out of court, including the giving of advice or the rendering of any service requiring the use of legal skill or knowledge, such as preparing a will, contract, or other instrument, the legal effect of which under the facts and conclusions involved must be carefully determined.
Tex. Gov't Code Ann. §
