Office of the Attorney General — State of Texas John Cornyn The Honorable Dustanna Rabe Hopkins County Attorney 110 Main Street Sulphur Springs, Texas 75482
Re: Disposition of funds previously accumulated under pretrial diversion agreements (RQ-0437-JC)
Dear Ms. Rabe:
You ask about the disposition of funds previously accumulated under unauthorized pretrial diversion agreements.1 We conclude that the accumulated "pretrial diversion fees" and the interest earned on those fees must be returned to the individuals who paid those fees. We also conclude that unclaimed fees and interest earnings on those fees may become abandoned property that must be reported and delivered to the Comptroller of Public Accounts.
Your request is a follow-up to Attorney General Opinion
You ask:
1) [W]hat do you recommend the County Attorney's office do with money that remains in a pre-trial diversion fund set up by the previous county attorney?
2) In the event your response is [that] the money collected shall be returned to those who contributed to the account, what shall be done if we cannot locate complete records indicating who has paid into the account[?]
3) [W]hat shall be done with any interest that has accrued on the account[?]
Request Letter, supra note 1, at 1.
With respect to your first question, we conclude that pretrial diversion fee moneys that remain in the pretrial diversion fund must be returned to the individuals who paid those fees. See Camacho v. Samaniego,
We do not believe the "voluntary payment rule" precludes the return of the pretrial diversion fees. According to this rule, the fact that a fee is not authorized does not necessarily mean that a person who has paid the fee is entitled to a refund. See Tex. Att'y Gen. Op. No.
Similarly, in Camacho, the El Paso Court of Appeals held that bail bond companies were entitled to refund of illegal fees paid to the sheriff on each misdemeanor and surety bond issued by these companies because the fees were paid under duress. See id. at 814, 825-26. The Camacho court, after reviewing the cases that addressed the repayment of illegal taxes or fees, identified two elements that distinguished a fee or tax paid under duress from a voluntary payment: (1) the type of detriment that results to the taxpayer from a failure to pay; and (2) the type of mechanism available to the governmental entity to ensure payment. Seeid. at 826. The Camacho court noted that the first element is met if failure to pay the tax or fee will foreclose the ability of a business to continue operation, or cause financial loss or closure of the business.See id. With respect to the second element, the court explained that "[i]f the [governmental] entity has to seek payment through the courts, such as a suit to collect back property taxes, then no duress is present," but "[i]f the governmental authority can impose a penalty without recourse to the courts, however, then duress is present." Id. In the case before it, the Camacho court concluded that the first element was met because failure to pay the bail bond fee would have prevented the bail bond companies from issuing surety bonds, i.e., they could not conduct their business. See id. at 827. The second element was also met because failure to pay the fee would have meant that the surety bond would not be processed by the sheriff. See id. In other words, the county could impose the penalty without recourse to the courts. See id.
Here, failure to pay the pretrial diversion fees would have resulted in criminal prosecution of individuals charged with misdemeanors. And this penalty — the prosecution itself — could be imposed unilaterally by the county attorney. Therefore, there was "duress." Thus, even if the voluntary payment rule applied here, which is doubtful, individuals who paid the fees would be entitled to a refund.
In answer to your third question regarding the disposition of interest earnings, we conclude that interest earned on the pretrial diversion fees deposited in the pretrial account must also be returned to the individuals who paid those fees. Under the common law, interest follows principal, or, more poetically, "`[I]nterest shall follow the principal, as the shadow the body.'" Phillips v. Washington Legal Found.,
Finally, you ask about the disposition of the funds in the pretrial account if your office "cannot locate complete records indicating who has paid into the [pretrial] account." Request Letter, supra note 1, at 1. You note that "[w]ithout complete records, the possibility exists there will be unidentifiable funds remaining in the account." Id.
The county attorney's office must, of course, make a reasonable effort to return the pretrial diversion fees and the interest earned on those fees to the individuals who paid the fees. But assuming those individuals cannot be located or are unknown, we conclude that those funds may become abandoned property that must be reported and delivered to the Comptroller of Public Accounts pursuant to chapter 74 of the Property Code.See Tex. Prop. Code Ann. §§
Yours very truly,
JOHN CORNYN Attorney General of Texas
HOWARD G. BALDWIN, JR. First Assistant Attorney General
NANCY FULLER Deputy Attorney General — General Counsel
SUSAN DENMON GUSKY Chair, Opinion Committee
Sheela Rai Assistant Attorney General, Opinion Committee
