The Honorable Dan W. Heard Calhoun County Criminal District Attorney 211 South Ann Street Port Lavaca, Texas 77979
Re: Authority of a county auditor to refuse payment to a former employee of a county hospital on the ground that such payment is unconstitutional (RQ-0640-GA)
Dear Mr. Heard:
You write to inquire about the authority of a county auditor to refuse to approve a payment proposed and approved by a county-owned hospital.1 After providing details regarding the proposed payment and describing the county auditor's concerns, you ask whether the county auditor has the "right to refuse payment of county hospital payroll on grounds that [the payment] is a[n] unconstitutional grant of public money, or must the county auditor accept the hospital administrator's determination that there is adequate quid pro quo so as to avoid the payment being a violation of the Texas Constitution[.]"2 Request Letter, supra note 1, at 2.
The subject of your question is a payment proposed by the hospital administrator of the county-owned hospital to a former employee. See id.
at 1. You inform us that the employee has terminated employment and that the proposed payment is being offered to the former employee by the hospital for some continuing obligations.3 See id. You tell us the hospital administrator has obtained a legal opinion concluding that the proposed payment conforms to the requirements of article
County hospitals are governed by chapter 263 of the Health and Safety Code. See TEX. HEALTH SAFETY CODE ANN. ch. 263 (Vernon 2001). Chapter 263 authorizes the commissioners court of a county to create a county hospital. See id. § 263.021. A county hospital is governed by a board of managers, the members of which are appointed by the county commissioners court. See id. § 263.041 (a). The board of managers is charged with the general management and control of the hospital including management and control of the hospital's employees and "all matters relating to its government, discipline, contracts, and fiscal concerns." Id. § 263.046(a). And as the governing body of the county hospital, the board of managers has a duty to expend its public funds in accordance with article III, section 52. See Tex. Att'y Gen. Op. No.
Charges against the county are paid by the county treasurer as required or directed by the county commissioners court. SeeTEX.Loc.Gov'TCODEANN. § 113.041(a) (Vernon 2008). Before the commissioners court may direct a payment, each claim, bill, and account against the county must be examined and approved by the county auditor. See id. § 113.064(a); see alsoAnderson v. Ashe,
As one component of the "system of checks and balances," the county auditor has a duty to ensure that claims paid by the county strictly comply with the law. TEX. LOC. GOV'T CODE ANN. *Page 3
§ 113.065 (Vernon 2008); see Smith,
We believe it important to note, especially in the circumstances you describe, that the county auditor's authority and discretion is not unfettered. The county auditor may "neither arbitrarily nor in contravention of law withhold approval of payment." Smith, 533 S.W.2dat460. In circumstances such as you describe where the county auditor has withheld approval of a payment that the appropriate governing body has evaluated and approved under article III, section 52, the courts would be the final arbiter of whether the payment satisfied the constitution. See id. (discussing a challenge to a county auditor's withholding of approval of a payment and contrasting the circumstances that support a mandamus action against the auditor or a suit against the county); Tex. Att'y Gen. Op. No.
The bills and accounts of a county hospital must be certified by the hospital's board of managers and transmitted to the county commissioners court. All bills and accounts, including salaries and wages, of a county hospital are paid in the same manner as charges made against a county, which charges must be approved by the county auditor and paid by order of the commissioners court. The county auditor has authority to determine whether any proposed payment strictly complies with the law. The county auditor, in an exercise of reasonable discretion, may refuse to approve a payment on the grounds that it is unconstitutional. As between the county hospital board of managers and county auditor, a court would be the final arbiter of whether the payment satisfied the constitution.
Yours very truly,
GREG ABOTT, Attorney General of Texas
KENT C. SULLIVAN, First Assistant Attorney General
ANDREW WEBER, Deputy Attorney General for Legal Counsel
NANCY S. FULLER, Chair, Opinion Committee
CHARLOTTE M. HARPER, Assistant Attorney General, Opinion Committee
