Ms. Brenda Milligan Montague County Auditor P.O. Box 56 Montague, Texas 76251
Re: Whether a county auditor may require elected officials and department heads to provide details about employees' hours worked and leave taken (RQ-1548)
Dear Ms. Milligan:
You ask whether the county auditor can require elected officials and department heads to submit time sheets showing the total number of hours worked by county employees during the pay period, the amount of sick leave and vacation leave taken, and the number of overtime and compensatory hours worked.1 As this opinion will explain, we believe the county auditor may require county officers and department heads to submit the data you describe, provided such action is not inconsistent with a rule or form prescribed by the comptroller of public accounts under section
You inform us that following the issuance of Attorney General Opinion
In a separate letter, the county sheriff maintains that neither the county auditor nor the county treasurer may require him or any other county officer to submit the timesheets you describe. He views this requirement as nothing more than an attempt by the county auditor and county treasurer to control county personnel policy and to usurp the powers of the commissioners court and individual county officers. The sheriff acknowledges the county auditor's duty to determine whether an individual employee is performing the work for which he or she is being paid but suggests this duty ends once the commissioners court authorizes payment of the employee's salary. He also cites article 1709a, V.T.C.S. (now repealed and recodified in relevant part as section
In Attorney General Opinion
Attorney General Opinion
We mention these opinions because they apparently motivated your actions and those of the county treasurer. These opinions, however, did not conclude that either the county auditor or the county treasurer was responsible for adopting, implementing, or enforcing county personnel policy. Rather, the opinions dealt only with ministerial, nondiscretionary tasks associated with the county payroll. The courts readily acknowledge the broad power of county officers to manage the affairs of their offices:
Because of the unique structure of county government in Texas, [an elected county official] holds virtually absolute sway over the particular tasks or areas of responsibility entrusted to him by state statute and is accountable to no one other than the voters for his conduct therein.
Familias Unidas v. Briscoe,
Because of the broad authority of county officers to direct personnel matters in their respective offices, we must look to the powers and duties of the county auditor to determine whether the auditor may make the kind of inquiry you ask about. Section
The duties of the county auditor are spread throughout the Local Government Code. In a county with a population of less than 190,000, the county auditor is authorized to adopt and enforce regulations he considers necessary for the "speedy and proper collecting, checking, and accounting" of county funds. Id. s 112.001. These regulations may not be inconsistent with law or regulations adopted by the comptroller of public accounts pursuant to section 112.003 prescribing the manner of keeping and accounting for state funds. Id. He is given general oversight of the books and records of all county, district, and state officers authorized to collect or receive money or property belonging to the county. Id. § 112.006(a). He must maintain accounts for such purposes and must keep records of county financial transactions. Id. §§ 112.005, 112.007. The county auditor must also "see to the strict enforcement of the law governing county finances." Id. s 112.006(b).
The county auditor possesses substantial authority to audit county finances. See id. §§ 115.001-115.004. The auditor also bears significant duties concerning the expenditure of county funds. Claims against the county may not be paid until the auditor has examined and approved them. Id. § 113.064(a). The auditor may not audit or approve a claim unless it was incurred as provided by law. Id. § 113.065. Additionally, a county check or warrant may not be paid unless it is countersigned by the county auditor to validate it as a proper and budgeted item of expenditure. Id. § 113.043.
It might be argued that the county auditor's duty to approve claims against the county for salaries and wages grants the auditor the implied power to demand the information in question here. If the auditor has the discretion to approve or disapprove such claims, then the auditor certainly should be allowed to obtain information necessary to make that determination. But if the auditor's duty is purely ministerial, there is little need for information regarding a person's entitlement to a salary.
The opinions of the courts and of this office are divided on this issue. Several conclude that the auditor is under a ministerial duty to approve salary payments ordered by the commissioners court and that salary payments are not claims subject to the approval or disapproval of the auditor. See Jackson v. Leonard,
We believe the last group of opinions most reasonably and accurately reflects the state of the law concerning the county auditor's duty to approve salary payments. In Smith v. McCoy, for example, the court upheld the county auditor's refusal to approve payment of back wages to deputy sheriffs when their entitlement to the wages had not been established as a matter of law. The county sheriff requested the deputies be paid for a period in which they had been suspended from their jobs. After the auditor's initial rejection of the request, the commissioners court ordered payment of the back wages, but the auditor again withheld his approval.
Though it is arguable that the county auditor has discretion to approve or disapprove salary payments pursuant to section
An obvious example of the county auditor's need for basic payroll information is when a county officer authorizes a salary payment to an employee who was absent from his workplace during the pay period. Without such information, the auditor could only speculate whether the employee was entitled to payment on the basis of hours actually worked or hours earned as vacation, sick, or compensatory leave, or whether the employee was entitled to payment at all. A reporting requirement like the one you propose for Montague County is fully consistent with the county auditor's role in the system of checks and balances created for county finances. See Smith v. McCoy, supra; Attorney General Opinion
As for the sheriff's assertion that the timesheet requirement is nothing more than an attempt to dominate county personnel practices, we should emphasize once more that neither this opinion nor the authorities discussed in it augment the power of either the county auditor or the county treasurer over county personnel matters. The same may be said with respect to the enforcement of the federal Fair Labor Standards Act (FLSA), 29 U.S.C. § 201-219. You voice concern about compliance with the FLSA by the various county offices, but you do not indicate which provision of the FLSA or any other law gives the county auditor or county treasurer this responsibility. Again, we are aware of no provision of law that makes either the county auditor or the county treasurer generally responsible for the county's compliance with the FLSA. See, e.g.,
To summarize, we conclude that county officers may be required to supply the basic payroll information you describe on forms supplied by your office, provided such action is not inconsistent with a rule or form adopted by the comptroller of public accounts under section
Very truly yours,
Jim Mattox Attorney General of Texas
Mary Keller First Assistant Attorney General
Lou McCreary Executive Assistant Attorney General
Judge Zollie Steakley Special Assistant Attorney General
Rick Gilpin Chairman, Opinion Committee
Prepared by Steve Aragon Assistant Attorney General
