The Honorable D. Matt Bingham Smith County Criminal District Attorney Smith County Courthouse 100 North Broadway, 4th Floor Tyler, Texas 75702
Re: Whether a county may constitutionally contract under Local Government Code section 351.061 to provide a nongovernmental association with a constable office's law-enforcement services provided the contract (1) allows the constable to retain control and supervision of the constable's officers and (2) does not obligate the constable to assign officers to devote any portion of their working time to the nongovernmental association (RQ-0559-GA)
Dear Mr. Bingham:
You ask whether, under Local Government Code section 351.061, a county may constitutionally contract to provide a nongovernmental association with a constable office's law-enforcement services if the contract (1) allows the constable to retain control and supervision of the constable's officers and (2) does not oblige the constable to assign officers to devote any portion of their working time to the nongovernmental association.1
I. Background
You relate that a Smith County constable proposed a contract to the commissioners court whereby the county would provide constable law-enforcement services to a private entity, an apartment complex, for a fee. See Request Letter, supra note 1, at 2.2 You state that the proposed contract is based on "the ostensible authority of sectionAfter you advised the commissioners court against the proposed contract, you learned that it was "basically identical" to contracts used in other Texas counties. See Request Letter, supra note I, at 2. Of particular interest, the proposed contract provides:
The Constable shall retain control and supervision of the officers performing services under this agreement to the same extent as he does other officers[; the nongovernmental entity] understands and agrees that this Agreement is not intended, nor shall it be construed, to obligate the Constable to assign officers to devote any portion of their working time to the area. If the [nongovernmental entity] is dissatisfied in any way with the performance of the County, the Constable or their officers under this Agreement, [the nongovernmental entity's] sole remedy is termination. . . .
Id. at 2-3; see also Exhibit A, supra note 2, at 2 (section 2.3). You ask whether such a provision would obviate the constitutional concerns identified in
II. Chapter 351, Subchapter D of the Local Government Code
To address the constitutionality of section 351.061, we must first examine the terms of the Legislature's grant of authority in that section and related provisions in chapter 351, subchapter D of the Local Government Code. Section 351.061 provides: "To protect the public interest, the commissioners court of a county may contract with a nongovernmental association for the provision of law enforcement services by the county on a fee basis in the geographical area represented by the association." TEX. LOC. GOV'T CODE ANN. § 351.061 (Vernon 2005).4 The fee must be paid to the county generally rather than to any particular office or officer. See id. § 351.062(b). The *Page 3 commissioners court may request the sheriff, a constable, or another county law-enforcement official to provide the services, limited to "the geographical area for which the official was elected or appointed."Id. § 351.063. If the official agrees to provide the services by using deputies, the official "retains authority to supervise the deputies who provide the services and, in an emergency, may reassign the deputies to duties other than those to be performed under the contract."Id. § 351.064(a). Such a deputy remains a county employee, and must "perform duties under the contract in the same manner as if the deputy were performing the duties in the absence of the contract." Id. § 351.064(b)-(c).III. Article III , Section 52 of the Texas Constitution
Attorney General Opinion Article III, section 52(a) prohibits the Legislature from authorizing a county or other political subdivision "to lend its credit or to grant public money or thing of value." See TEX. CONST, art. Ill, § 52(a);see also Grimes v. Bosque County,
Moreover, article III, section 52(a)'s purpose is "to prevent the application of public [property] to private purposes." Byrd v. City ofDallas,
State law independent of any contract establishes a county's authority to provide law-enforcement services anywhere in the jurisdiction of its officers. See, e.g., TEX. CODE CRIM. PROC. ANN. arts.
Nevertheless, we stress that to comply with article III, section 52(a), a commissioners court authorizing a contract under section 351.061 must determine, subject to judicial review, issues of the contract's purpose, governmental controls, and governmental benefit.See TEX. LOC. GOV'T CODE ANN. § 351.061 (Vernon 2005) (granting commissioners courts authority to contractually provide county law-enforcement services "[t]o protect the public interest"); seealso Tex. Att'y Gen. Op. Nos.
IV. Article III , Section 1 of the Texas Constitution
In Attorney General Opinion But before it is necessary to examine a statute under Boll Weevil
standards, it first must be determined whether the statute in fact delegates power to a private entity. See Tex. Workers' Comp. Comm'n v.Patient Advocates of Tex.,
Under a contract authorized by article 158lb-2 . . . a nongovernmental body could insist that deputies assigned to patrol its property remain there, even if the public interest would be better served by their deployment elsewhere. The statute is not a legislative limit on the sheriffs discretion, but a legislative attempt to authorize a private entity to control the sheriffs discretion. . . . No statutory controls are included to insure that contracts for law enforcement services will carry out the stated purpose of protecting the public interest.
Id. at 4. If chapter 351, subchapter D of the Local Government Code is necessarily construed as delegating unbridled authority to a private entity to control the law-enforcement official's discretion to deploy deputies, then undoubtedly the statute would not satisfy the constitutional standards of Boll Weevil. See Boll Weevil,
We conclude that chapter 351, subchapter D of the Local Government Code does not on its face violate either article III, section 52(a) or article
Under chapter 351, subchapter D of the Local Government Code, a county may contract to provide law-enforcement services to a nongovernmental association on a fee basis, provided the contract does not violate article III, section 52(a) or articleIII , section1 of the Texas Constitution. Under article III, section 52(a) the commissioners court must determine, in the first instance, that (1) the contract has as its predominant purpose the accomplishment of a public, rather than a private, purpose; (2) the public entity retains sufficient control to ensure accomplishment of the public purpose; and (3) the public receives a return benefit.To comply with article III, section 1 of the constitution, a contract must not cede county law-enforcement discretion to the nongovernmental association.
Attorney General Opinions
JM-57 (1983) andJM-509 (1986) are overruled to the extent that they are inconsistent with this opinion.
Very truly yours,
GREG ABBOTT Attorney General of Texas
KENT C. SULLIVAN First Assistant Attorney General
NANCY S. FULLER Chair, Opinion Committee
William A. Hill Assistant Attorney General, Opinion Committee
