Honorable F. Duncan Thomas District Attorney P.O. Box 441 Greenville, Texas 75401
Re: Whether certain fees may be charged by a district clerk
Dear Mr. Thomas:
You ask about the fees a district clerk may charge in connection with a lawsuit filed in district court. At the time a suit is filed in district court a fee of $75.00 is due and payable. Gov't Code §
We base our conclusion on the structure and language of the applicable fee statutes. Gov't Code §§
A 1980 case supports our reading of section 51.317(b)(1). Rodeheaver v. Aldridge,
For each adverse action or contest, other than the filing of a claim against an estate, in a cause or docket in a probate court, a fee to be due and payable and to be paid by the party or parties starting or initiating such adverse action or contest, but excluding other items listed in Paragraphs A, B, C, and D of this Section 1, of $25.00.
V.T.C.S. art. 3930(b), § 1B(1)(c). The court concluded that the $25 fee covered various duties performed by the county clerk during the course of the suit:
A reading of Article 3930(b) shows that the $25.00 fee which the county clerk is to collect for each filed adverse action or contest covers not only the clerk's services for the initial filing of the action but also many other services which will accrue during the processing of the suit. Thus, the statutory fee is, in effect, an advance payment for the cost of services which have not been rendered at the time the fee is collected.
Rodeheaver,
Because the legislature has set a $75 fee1 that covers the filing of orders and payments in a suit, the catchall provision is inapplicable to such filings since it applies only when the legislature has not set a fee to cover the clerk's performance of a duty.
Very truly yours,
Jim Mattox Attorney General of Texas
Jack Hightower
First Assistant Attorney General
Mary Keller Executive Assistant Attorney General
Robert Gray Special Assistant Attorney General
Rick Gilpin Chairman, Opinion Committee
Prepared by Sarah Woelk Assistant Attorney General
