The Honorable Bruce Isaacks Denton County Criminal District Attorney 1450 East McKinney, Suite 3100 Post Office Box 2850 Denton, Texas 76202
Re: Whether sections 85.003 and 86.011 of the Local Government Code provide that a deputy constable's appointment is revoked on the deputy's indictment for a felony (RQ-0268-GA)
Dear Mr. Isaacks:
You ask whether sections 85.003 and 86.011 of the Local Government Code provide that a deputy constable's appointment is revoked on the deputy's indictment for a felony.1
Section
By implication, section 86.011(b) references the statute governing deputy sheriff appointments, section
(a) The appointment of a deputy sheriff must be in writing.
(b) A person appointed as a deputy, before beginning to perform the duties of office, must take and subscribe the official oath, which, together with the certificate of the officer administering the oath, must be endorsed on the appointment. The appointment and oath shall be deposited and recorded in the county clerk's office. A list of the appointments shall be posted in a conspicuous place in that office.
(c) A deputy serves at the pleasure of the sheriff. However, the appointment of a deputy is revoked on indictment of the deputy for a felony.
(d) A sheriff is responsible for the official acts of a deputy and may require that a deputy execute a bond or other security. A sheriff has the same remedies against a deputy and the deputy's sureties as any other person has against the sheriff and the sheriff's sureties.
(e) A deputy may perform the acts and duties of the deputy's principal.
Id. § 85.003 (emphasis added).
You wish to know whether the language in section 85.003(c) providing that the appointment of a deputy sheriff is revoked on indictment of the deputy for a felony applies to a deputy constable. See Request Letter, supra note 1, at 1-2. This depends upon the meaning of the term "qualify" in section 86.011: "Each deputy must qualify in the manner provided for deputy sheriffs." Tex. Loc. Gov't Code Ann. § 86.011(b) (Vernon 1999) (emphasis added).
In construing section 86.011(b), we must give effect to the legislature's intent. See Tex. Gov't Code Ann. §§
You suggest that the word "qualify" in section 86.011(b) refers to whether a deputy is qualified to hold the position, in the sense that he or she must meet certain statutory eligibility requirements to serve as deputy constable. See Request Letter,supra note 1, at 2. However, the term's use in this particular context does not support this construction. As one Texas court has noted, the words qualify and qualified are legal terms of art with significantly different meanings:
The definition of "qualify" is "[t]o make one's self fit or prepared to exercise a right, office, or franchise. To take the steps necessary to prepare one's self for an office or appointment, as by taking oath, giving bond, etc." Black's Law Dictionary p. 1241 (6th ed. 1990). While "qualified" is defined as "[a]dapted; fitted; entitled; susceptible; capable; competent; fitting; possessing legal power or capacity; eligible; as a `qualified voter.'" Id.
Nichols v. Lincoln Trust Co.,
Moreover, we note that this construction is consistent with a number of statutes that use the term "qualify," including variants of the phrase "qualify in the manner," in connection with holding office, to describe actions a person takes to assume office. See, e.g., Tex. Elec. Code Ann. §§
For these reasons, we construe the phrase "qualify in the manner provided for deputy sheriffs" in section 86.011(b) to refer to the steps a deputy sheriff must take to assume office set out in section 85.003. Tex. Loc. Gov't Code Ann. § 86.011(b) (Vernon 1999). Specifically, section 85.003(b) provides that, before beginning to perform the duties of office, a person appointed as a deputy sheriff must "take and subscribe the official oath, which, together with the certificate of the officer administering the oath, must be endorsed on the appointment. The appointment and oath shall be deposited and recorded in the county clerk's office."Id. § 85.003(b). Section 86.011(b) requires a deputy constable to take the same procedural steps before beginning to perform the duties of office. See Tex. Att'y Gen. Op. No.
We do not construe section 86.011(b) to incorporate section 85.003(c), which provides that a deputy sheriff serves "at the pleasure of the sheriff" and that "the appointment of a deputy is revoked on indictment of the deputy for a felony." Tex. Loc. Gov't Code Ann. § 85.003(c) (Vernon 1999). Section 85.003(c) does not govern the steps a deputy sheriff must take to assume the position but rather governs a deputy sheriff's right to continue to hold the position after formally qualifying under section 85.003(b). By its plain terms, section 86.011(b) governs the steps a deputy constable must take to assume the position and does not address deputy constables' employment status thereafter. See id. § 86.011(b) ("Each deputy must qualify in the manner provided for deputy sheriffs."). Applying Texas common-law principles assuming at-will employment and acknowledging county officers' authority to select and dismiss their employees, courts have held that under common law a deputy constable serves at the pleasure of the constable who sought his or her appointment. See Renken v. HarrisCounty,
Finally, we note that a deputy constable who is indicted for a felony is not necessarily immune from adverse employment consequences. A deputy constable who is an at-will employee, and whose employment thus may be terminated with or without cause, may be dismissed by the appointing constable.6 In addition, state law expressly provides that a person who has been convicted
of a felony is disqualified to be a peace officer and that "a law enforcement agency may not appoint or employ the person." Tex. Occ. Code Ann. §
Sections 85.003 and 86.011 of the Local Government Code do not provide that a deputy constable's appointment is revoked on the deputy's indictment for a felony.
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
