The Honorable John B. Holmes, Jr. Harris County District Attorney 201 Fannin, Suite 200 Houston, Texas 77002-1901
Re: Whether the meetings of judges to perform statutory functions with respect to the management of a community supervision and corrections department are subject to the Open Meetings Act, chapter 551, Government Code (RQ-840)
Dear Mr. Holmes:
You ask:
Is the Harris County Committee of District and Statutory Judges [t]rying [c]riminal [c]ases overseeing the Community Supervision and Corrections Department subject to the Open Meetings Act when it meets to participate in the management of the Harris County Community Supervision and Corrections Department?
The Open Meetings Act (the "act"), chapter 551, Government Code, requires that, except as provided therein, "[e]very regular, special, or called meeting of a governmental body shall be open to the public." Gov't Code §
Provisions formerly in article
The question here is whether the meetings of the judges you ask about in connection with the CSCD are "meetings" of "governmental bodies" within the terms of and subject to the act. "Meeting" is defined in section 551.001(4) of the act as deliberation of a governmental body in which public business or policy over which the governmental body has supervision or control is discussed or in which formal action is taken. We think it clear that when the judges you ask about meet to establish a CSCD, appoint a CSCD director, or consider expenditures of funds for CSCD purposes they are either taking formal action or deliberating over public business within the definition of "meeting." But do the judges meeting in such context constitute a "governmental body" under the act?
"Governmental body" under section 551.001(3) of the act means:
(A) a board, commission, department, committee, or agency within the executive or legislative branch of state government that is directed by one or more elected or appointed members;
(B) a county commissioners court in the state;
(C) a municipal governing body in the state;
(D) a deliberative body that has rulemaking or quasi-judicial power and that is classified as a department, agency, or political subdivision of a county or municipality;
(E) a school district board of trustees;
(F) a county board of school trustees;
(G) a county board of education;
(H) the governing body of a special district created by law;
(I) [certain nonprofit water supply and wastewater companies].
In 1987, Attorney General Opinion
You argue that the committee of judges here, under the reading the Austin court of appeals gave the section 551.001(3)(H) definition of governmental body as the governing body of a "special district" in Sierra Club v. Austin Transportation Study Policy Advisory Committee,
A limited governmental structure created to bypass normal borrowing limitations, to insulate certain activities from traditional political influence, to allocate functions to entities reflecting particular expertise, to provide services in otherwise unincorporated areas, or to accomplish a primarily local benefit or improvement, e.g., parks and planning, mosquito control, sewage removal.
BLACK'S LAW DICTIONARY 1253 (5th ed. 1979).
Emphasizing the importance of the decision-making function of ATSPAC in determining highway development in the central Texas area and finding that ATSPAC was designed to "accomplish a primarily local benefit or improvement," in the words of the Black's definition of "special district," the court stated that ATSPAC was "just the sort of body the Open Meetings Act was designed to govern." Sierra Club,
We note at this juncture that it could be argued that the judges' meetings here are "within the judicial branch of state government" and therefore not covered by the act. Again, section 551.001(3)(A) provides that a committee "within the executive or legislative branch of state government" is a "governmental body" subject to the act, arguably implying that a committee within the judicial branch of state government was not intended to be covered. This result would be consistent with Attorney General Opinion
Benavides dealt with the question whether the specific exclusion of the "judiciary" from governmental bodies subject to the Open Records Act, now in section
We believe, in light of Benavides' treatment of the group of judges making up the juvenile board under the analogous provisions of the Open Records Act, that a court would probably characterize the statutory functions of the committee of judges here with respect to the CSCD — the appointment of the CSCD director and approval of CSCD expenditures — as administrative rather than judicial. Therefore, even if the committee you asked about could be considered one "within . . . state government" — and we do not reach this issue here — we do not believe it should be considered one within the "judicial branch of state government." Thus, we do not think that a court would be persuaded by the argument that the committee here is one within the judicial branch of state government and is implicitly excluded from the coverage of the act.
In conclusion, we believe that the broad construction given the "special district" component of the act's definition of a "governmental body" subject to the act in the Sierra Club opinion, discussed above, indicates that a court would find the committee of judges you ask about within that definition and thus subject to the act when it meets to perform its statutory functions in connection with the CSCD.000
Yours very truly,
DAN MORALES Attorney General of Texas
JORGE VEGA First Assistant Attorney General
SARAH J. SHIRLEY Chair, Opinion Committee
Prepared by William Walker Assistant Attorney General
