Mr. Pasco Parker Collin County Auditor 210 South McDonald Street McKinney, Texas 75069
Re: Whether a county auditor may prescribe a weekly revenue reporting format which requires certification by an elected official (RQ-1760)
Dear Mr. Parker:
You ask whether a county auditor may prescribe a weekly revenue reporting format which requires the notarized signature of elected county officials. Your question is prompted by an order of the commissioners court of Collin County adopted at the request of the county auditor. The order requires weekly remittances of collections made by the county tax assessor-collector. The order also authorizes the auditor to prepare a weekly reporting format pursuant to sections
Your letter suggests that the order of the commissioners court was adopted pursuant to section
(a) Each month the collector of taxes for a taxing unit1 shall prepare and submit to the governing body of the unit a written report made under oath accounting for all taxes collected for the unit during the preceding month. Reports of collections made in the months of October through January are due on the 25th day of the month following the month that is the subject of the report. Reports of collections made in all other months are due on the 15th day of the month following the month that is the subject of the report. A collector for more than one taxing unit may prepare one report accounting for taxes collected for all units, and he may submit a certified copy of the report as his monthly report to the governing body of each unit.
(b) The collector for a taxing unit shall prepare and submit to the governing body of the unit an annual report made under oath accounting for all taxes of the unit collected or delinquent on property taxed by the unit during the preceding 12-month period. . . .
(c) . . . [A]t least monthly the collector for a taxing unit shall deposit in the unit's depository all taxes collected for the unit. The governing body of a unit may require deposits to be made more frequently.
The language of subsection (c) would appear to grant the commissioners court the authority to adopt the order requiring the county tax assessor-collector to make weekly remittances of tax collections. However, a separate statute appears to specifically address the duty of the county tax assessor-collector to make deposits of tax collections in a manner that conflicts with section 31.10. In order to demonstrate that section 31.10 is the governing provision, a review of the second provision is necessary.
Section
The fees, commissions, funds, and other money belonging to a county shall be deposited with the county treasurer by the officer who collects the money. The officer must deposit the money in accordance with any applicable procedures prescribed by or under Section 112.001 or 112.002. However, the county tax assessor-collector must deposit the money in accordance with the procedures prescribed by or under the Tax Code and other laws. (Emphasis added.)
Section
A county tax assessor-collector shall immediately deposit in the county depository taxes collected on behalf of the state, the county, or a district or municipal subdivision of the county. The taxes remain on deposit pending the preparation and settlement of the assessor-collector's report on the tax collections. (Emphasis added.)
A familiar and well-established rule of statutory construction provides that when a general statutory provision and a specific statutory provision are in conflict, the former provision yields and the latter prevails. See 67 Tex.Jur.3d Statutes § 126 (1989) and cases cited therein; see also Gov't Code §
311.026 (a special or local provision prevails over a general provision in the event of irreconcilable conflict). It would therefore appear that section116.113 of the Local Government Code, giving more specific instructions to the county tax assessor-collector regarding the deposit of tax collections, would prevail over section31.10 of the Tax Code as it relates to such deposits.
Section 116.113, however, was enacted as part of the nonsubstantive revision of statutes relating to local governments. Local Gov't Code §
All other general, local, or special laws in conflict with this Act are repealed to the extent of the conflict, and the failure expressly to repeal or amend any law in conflict with this Act is not evidence of a legislative intent that the law not be repealed.
Id. § 6(b), at 2330.
The language just quoted makes it clear that the provisions of section
You do not describe the content of the weekly revenue reporting format and do not disclose whether it is intended primarily for the use of the county auditor or the commissioners court. Since the order of the commissioners court is predicated on the authority of sections
Section
In a county with a population of less than 190,000, the county auditor may adopt and enforce regulations, not inconsistent with law or with a rule adopted under Section 112.003,3 that the auditor considers necessary for the speedy and proper collecting, checking, and accounting of the revenues and other funds and fees that belong to the county.
Section 114.003(a) provides:
A county official or other person who is required under this subtitle [subtitle B of title 4 of Local Government Code chapters 111-119 and 130] to provide a report, statement, or other information to the county auditor and who intentionally refuses to comply with a reasonable request of the county auditor relating to the report, statement, or information, commits an offense. (Emphasis added.)
In order to fully appreciate the import of these provisions we must consult other sections of the Local Government Code relating to county finances and reporting.
Section
Each report required under this subtitle [title 4, subtitle B] must be made in writing and must be sworn to by the officer making the report before an officer authorized to administer oaths. (Emphasis added.)
The county auditor is required under section 114.002 to determine the time and manner for making reports to the auditor as required by subtitle B of title 4 of the Local Government Code. Section 114.001(a), however, applies to all reports required by subtitle B and not merely to those that must be submitted to the county auditor. See, e.g., Local Gov't Code §§
Sections 114.001 and 114.002 are to be contrasted with section
The auditor shall require each person who receives money that belongs to the county . . . to render statements to the auditor. (Emphasis added.)
Id. § 112.005(c).,4
The distinction between "reports" and "statements" is significant because reports which are required by subtitle B of title 4 of the Local Government Code must be sworn to by the officer presenting them. "Statements" that may be required by the auditor under section 112.005, on the other hand, apparently need not be delivered under oath.5 There are several reasons for this conclusion.
First, we note that the legislature has demonstrated that when it intends to require county officers to provide information under oath, it does so expressly. See, e.g., Local Gov't Code §
The relevance of this distinction is demonstrated by section
In a county with a population of 190,000 or more, the county auditor may require a district clerk, district attorney, county officer, or precinct officer to furnish monthly reports, annual reports, or other reports regarding any money, tax, or fee received, disbursed, or remaining on hand. In connection with those reports, the auditor may count the cash in the custody of the officer or verify the amount on deposit in the bank in which the officer has deposited the cash for safekeeping. (Emphasis added.)
Section 114.043 confirms that the legislature did not intend section 112.005 statements to be the equivalent of section 114.001 reports; otherwise, there would have been no need to enact section 114.043. Under this provision a county auditor could clearly require a county tax assessor-collector to file reports — which under section 114.001 would have to be sworn to by the assessor-collector — regarding the receipt of taxes by his office.
Section 114.043 is equally important because it reveals the legislature's understanding of the nature of the county auditor's general powers. That the legislature thought it necessary to expressly provide county auditors in counties with populations of 190,000 or greater the powers described in section 114.043 is significant because, like their counterparts in counties with fewer than 190,000 inhabitants, they have the power to adopt and enforce regulations necessary for the speedy and proper collecting, checking, and accounting of county funds. Local Gov't Code §
We have located no similar express grant of authority to county auditors in counties with populations of less than 190,000. If the legislature deemed the general powers of the county auditor as inadequate to confer the power described in section 114.043, then we do not believe the authority you inquire about may be implied from sections
Accordingly, we conclude that the county auditor in a county with a population of less than 190,000 may not require the county tax assessor-collector to submit notarized or sworn weekly revenue reports to the auditor pursuant to sections
Very truly yours,
Jim Mattox Attorney General of TexasMary 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
