Untitled Texas Attorney General Opinion ( 2002 )


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  •    OFFICE     OF   THE   ATTORNEY   GENERAL   . STATE   OF TEXAS
    JOHN CORNYN
    August 14,2002
    The Honorable Kim Brimer                                           Opinion No. JC-0544
    Chair, Business and Industry Committee
    Texas House of Representatives                                     Re: Authority of a general-law municipality to
    P.O. Box 2910                                                      assign to a “city administrator” duties reserved by
    Austin, Texas 78768-2910                                           statute to the mayor or city manager, and related
    questions (RQ-05 15-JC)
    Dear Representative           Brimer:
    You ask whether a general-law city may appoint a “city administrator” by ordinance and
    assign to that officer the statutory duties of a mayor or duly appointed city manager.’ In particular,
    you inquire about the application of Local Government Code chapters 22,25, and 102 to specific
    issues raised by your inquiry. See TEX. LOC. GOV’T CODEANN. chs. 22,25, 102 (Vernon 1999 &
    Supp. 2002). Where the legislature has granted express statutory duties to the mayor or duly
    appointed city manager of a general-law city, the city council has no authority to assign those duties
    to a “city administrator” or other city officer or agent.
    The Local Government Code provides for three types of general-law city, identified as Type
    A, B, and C. See TEX. Lot. GOV’T CODE ANN. 5 1.005(l) (Vernon 1999). Your inquiry relates to
    the City of Haslet, a Type A general-law city.* A Type A general-law city has the “mayor-council”
    or “aldermanic” form of government upon incorporation.       See generaZZy 
    id. 5 22.03
    1 (election of
    mayor and aldermen in Type A general-law city). Its officers include “the secretary, treasurer,
    assessor and collector, municipal attorney, marshal, municipal engineer, and any other officers or
    agents authorized by the governing body.” 
    Id. 8 22.07
    1(a). The governing body may prescribe the
    powers and duties of a municipal officer appointed or elected under the Local Government Code
    whose duties are not specified by the code. See 
    id. fj 22.072;
    see also 
    id. fj§ 22.073,
    .075 (powers
    and duties of city secretary and treasurer).
    Unlike a home-rule city that possesses all powers not denied to it by statutes or the
    constitution, so long as the city has incorporated those powers in its home-rule charter, general-law
    cities are creatures of statute and have only those powers expressly granted by statute or necessarily
    ‘Letter from Honorable KimBrimer, Chair, Business and Industry Committee, Texas House of Representatives,
    to Susan Gusky, Chair, Opinion Committee, Office of the Texas Attorney General (Feb. 8,2002) (on file with Opinion
    Committee) [hereinafter Request Letter].
    *Telephone     call from Wade Adkins, Taylor and Olson, City Attorney    for City of Haslet (June 12,2002).
    The Honorable   Kim Brimer    - Page 2         (JC-0544)
    implied therefrom. See Massengale v. City of Copperas Cove, 
    520 S.W.2d 824
    , 828 (Tex. Civ.
    App.-Waco 1975, writ ref d n.r.e.); Ex parte Ernest, 
    136 S.W.2d 595
    , 597 (Tex. Crim. App.-
    1939, no writ); Tex. Att’y Gen. Op. Nos. JC-0145 (1999) at 1; JM-169 (1984) at 1-2; Tex. Att’y
    Gen. LO-go- 14, at 1. The governing body of a general-law city may adopt ordinances and rules that
    are “for the good government . . . of the municipality” and “necessary or proper for carrying out
    a power granted by law.” TEX. Lot. GOV’T CODEAN-N. 8 51.001 (Vernon 1999). See also 
    id. 8 5
    1.012 (Type A general-law city “may adopt an ordinance, act, law or regulation, not inconsistent
    with state law, that is necessary for the government, interest, welfare, or good order of the
    municipality.“).
    You ask three questions about the authority that a city council may delegate to an appointed
    city administrator, in contrast to the authority conferred by statute on a city manager. You first ask
    whether the governing body of a general-law municipality may assign the duties of budget officer
    to a city officer other than the mayor, citing Local Government Code chapter 102 in connection with
    your question. See Request Letter, supra note 1, at 2.
    Local Government Code chapter 102 sets out the process for preparing and adopting the
    budget of a general-law city. See TEX. LOC. GOV’T CODEANN. $5 101.041, 102.001-.OlO (Vernon
    1999 & Supp. 2002). Section 102.001 provides that “the mayor of a municipality serves as the
    budget officer for the governing body of the municipality” unless “the municipality has the city
    manager form of government.” 
    Id. 8 102.001
    (Vernon 1999). In that case, the city manager serves
    as the budget officer. Each year the budget officer is required to prepare a budget showing the
    information required by section 102.003 of the Local Government Code. See 
    id. $5 102.002-.003
    (Vernon 1999). In preparing the budget, the budget officer may require any municipal officer or
    board to furnish information necessary to properly prepare the budget. See 
    id. 8 102.004
    (Vernon
    1999).
    The legislature has expressly designated the mayor as the budget officer of a municipality,
    unless the municipality has the city manager form of government, and has assigned specific duties
    by statute to the mayor. The city council must comply with the legislature’s will as expressed in
    Local Government section 102.001 and accordingly has no authority to reassign the mayor’s
    statutory duties to another officer. The mayor is expressly authorized to require other city officers
    to provide necessary information to him and may also delegate to city employees nondiscretionary
    ministerial and administrative tasks necessary to carry out his statutory duties as budget officer. See
    Newsom v. Adams, 45 
    1 S.W.2d 948
    (Tex. Civ. App.-Beaumont 1970, no writ); Moody v. Tex. Water
    Comm ‘n, 
    373 S.W.2d 793
    , 797 (Tex. Civ. App.-Austin 1963, writ ref d n.r.e.) (absent express
    legislative authority, a public office may delegate only ministerial tasks).
    The governing body of the municipality also has statutory duties with respect to the budget.
    It must hold a public hearing on the proposed budget before taking action on it and may make any
    changes in the budget that it considers warranted by the law or by the best interest of the taxpayers.
    See TEX. Lot. GOV’T CODEANN. $8 102.006 (Vernon 1999), -0065 (Vernon Supp. 2002), .007(b)
    (Vernon 1999). It may levy taxes only in accordance with the budget and may spend municipal
    The Honorable Kim Brimer      - Page 3         (JC-0544)
    funds only in compliance with the budget, except in an emergency, when the governmental body
    may authorize an emergency expenditure as an amendment. See also 
    id. 8 102.0
    10 (Vernon 1999)
    (governing body not prevented from making changes in the budget for municipal purposes). While
    the city council may employ personnel as necessary to assist it in carrying out its own statutory
    responsibilities under chapter 102, it may not thereby interfere with the mayor’s statutory authority
    as budget officer.
    You next ask the following questions about the requirements       for adopting a city manager
    form of government found in Local Government Code chapter 25:
    a. Is an election    required   to   adopt a city manager   form of
    government?
    b. Is an election required to operate an aldermanic         form of
    government as a city manager form of government?
    c. May a governing body call for an election on this issue on its
    own accord under section 25.02 1?
    d. May an election on this issue only be held upon the
    submission of a petition by qualified voters in accordance with
    section 25.022?
    Request Letter, supra note 1, at 2.
    A general-law city with a population of less than 5,000 may adopt the city manager form of
    government by holding an election on the question according to the procedures set out in Local
    Governrnent Code chapter25. See TEX.LOC.GOV’TCODEANN.$5 25.001-.002 (Vernon 1999). The
    population of the City of Haslet is approximately 1,100. See Texas Community Profiles, Haslet,
    available at httn://204.64.175.160/communities/commpages/986.htm          (last visited Aug. 9, 2002).
    “The residents of the municipality may file a petition with the clerk of the municipality requesting
    the mayor to call a special election to determine whether the municipality shall adopt the city
    manager form of government.” TEX.Lot. GOV’T CODEANN. 5 25.022(a) (Vernon 1999). “Within
    10 days after the date a petition is filed, the mayor of the municipality shall issue a proclamation
    ordering a special election” to determine “whether the municipality will adopt the city manager
    form of government.”       
    Id. 9 25.023.
    If the city manager form of government is adopted, the
    governing body shall appoint the city manager, who serves at the will of the governing body. See
    
    id. $5 25.026
    -.028. The city manager’s powers are set out in section 25.029, which provides in part:
    (a) The city manager shall administer the municipal business and
    the governing body of the municipality        shall ensure that the
    administration is efficient.
    The Honorable Kim Brimer      - Page 4         (JC-0544)
    (b) The governing body by ordinance may delegate to the city
    manager any additional powers or duties the governing body
    considers proper for the efficient administration of municipal affairs.
    
    Id. 9 25.029(a)-(b).
    The statutory predecessor of section 25.029(a) described the reach of the city
    manager’s authority as follows: “[Tlhe administration of the city’s business shall be in the hands
    of such manager” and the “governing body shall be responsible for the manager’s efficient
    administration of the city’s business.” Act of May 7, 1943, 48th Leg., R.S., ch. 356, 9 5, 1943
    Tex. Gen. Laws 615, 616, repealed and reenacted as Local Government Code ch. 25 by Act of
    May 1, 1987, 70th Leg., R.S., ch. 149, $0 1, 49, 1987 Tex. Gen. Laws 707, 736-38, 1306
    (nonsubstantive revision of statutes relating to local government). If the city wishes to abandon the
    city manager form of government, it may do so by holding an election pursuant to section 25.071
    of the Local Government Code. See TEX. LOC. GOV’T CODEANN. 0 25.071 (Vernon 1999).
    Chapter 25 thus requires a general law city to hold an election to adopt the city manager form
    of government, and absent such an election, the city council will not have authority to appoint a city
    manager to “administer the municipal business” or to exercise “additional powers or duties the
    governing body considers proper for the efficient administration of municipal affairs.” TEX. LOC.
    GOV’T CODE ANN. 5 25.029(a)-(b).         The opinion of the Texas Supreme Court in an analogous
    question of county law shows why the city must comply with Local Government Code chapter 25
    if it wishes to have a city manager with the powers set out by statute. In Canales v. Laughlin, a
    county commissioners court adopted a resolution creating the office of county road administrator
    and conferring broad powers on the office. See Canales v. Laughlin, 
    214 S.W.2d 451
    (Tex. 1948).
    The court noted that a commissioners court could exercise only those powers that the Constitution
    and the statutes have “specifically conferred upon them” and that the legal basis for any action by
    a commissioners    court must be found in the Constitution or statutes. See 
    id. at 453
    (citations
    omitted). Although the commissioners court had general authority to employ agents, several specific
    provisions authorized it to employ agents to perform duties in connection with county road and
    bridges, subject to certain conditions and restrictions.      Because “the legislature has expressly
    provided that the commissioners courts may employ persons to superintend or supervise the county
    road system and has placed certain conditions and restrictions on the exercise of this power, these
    conditions and restrictions must be observed if the authority is to be exercised.” 
    Id. at 457.
    A general-law city has only those powers expressly granted to it by statute or necessarily
    implied therefrom. The legislature has authorized the voters of a general-law city to adopt the city
    manager form of government by complying with the procedures of Local Government Code chapter
    25, and the governing body of the city may not circumvent those procedures.           Accordingly, an
    election pursuant to chapter 25 is required for a general-law city to adopt the city manager form of
    government.     An election on this issue may be held only upon the submission of a petition by
    qualified voters in accordance with section 25.022, and the governing body of the city may not call
    for an election on this issue on its own accord. See generally Anderson v. City of Seven Points, 806
    S. W .2d 79 1’793-94 (Tex. 199 1) (mayor had ministerial duty to order election under statute requiring
    him to do so when presented with petition of requisite number of voters).
    The Honorable      Kim Brimer       - Page 5          (JC-0544)
    You finally ask the following questions with respect to Local Government                 Code chapter 22,
    which applies to Type A general-law cities:
    a. Does the Attorney General                 distinguish   between     “City
    Administrator” and “City Manager”?
    b. May a governing body appoint by ordinance only a City
    Administrator or City Manager under Section 22.071, Subsections
    (a), (b)’ or (W
    c. May a governing body prescribe . . . to a municipal officer
    other than a mayor or duly appointed city manager the powers and
    duties prescribed to a mayor or duly appointed city manager under
    Section 22.072, Subsections (a) or (b)?
    Request Letter, supra note 1, at 2.
    Neither the legislature nor this office has defined the term “city administrator” or addressed
    distinctions between the city manager appointed under Local Government Code chapter 25 and a city
    administrator appointed by the city council under its general authority to appoint officers and agents.
    The legislature has referred to a “city administrator” in a few statutes applicable to the municipal
    courts of specific cities. For example, section 30.00495 of the Government Code, which applies
    to the City of Crowley, states that “[tlhe city manager or city administrator of the city shall appoint
    a clerk of the municipal court of record.” TEX. GOV’T CODE ANN. 85 30.00491, .00495 (Vernon
    Supp. 2002). See also 
    id. $5 30.00636,
    .01543, .01692. The legislature’s use of the term “city
    administrator” in these provisions may merely recognize that the particular city has delegated certain
    hiring decisions to an appointed city administrator.        See Tex. Att’y Gen. Op. No. DM-2 (1991)
    (members of city council of Type A general-law city did not avoid prohibitions of nepotism law by
    delegating hiring responsibility to city administrator).
    We understand that the city councils of some general-law cities have created the position of
    “city administrator” and delegated specific duties to that position under the authority of the Local
    Government Code without holding an election under chapter 25.3 Some general-law cities “call their
    city administrator a city manager, city superintendent, or some other title, so some confusion and
    misunderstanding    exists about the two offices.” Houston Brief, supra note 3, at 2.
    The duties that the city council attempts to delegate to the appointee are more relevant than
    the title to the legality of the delegation. If a general-law city appoints someone called a “city
    manager” without first adopting the city manager form of government under Local Government
    Code chapter 25, that person will not have the powers and duties that chapter 25 grants to a city
    3Brief from Scott N. Houston, Assistant General Counsel, Texas Municipal League, to Honorable John Cornyn,
    Texas Attorney General (Mar. 13,2002) (on file with Opinion Committee) [hereinafter Houston Briefl.
    The Honorable Kim Brimer       - Page 6        (JC-0544)
    manager properly appointed according to its terms. See 
    Canales, 214 S.W.2d at 457
    . Absent
    express legislative authority to delegate its discretionary authority, the city council may delegate
    only nondiscretionary   ministerial and administrative tasks to city employees. See 
    Newsom, 451 S.W.2d at 953
    ; 
    Moody, 373 S.W.2d at 797
    ; Booth v. City ofDallas, 179 S. W. 301,305 (Tex. Civ.
    App.-Dallas 1915, writ ref d).
    We next consider whether Local Government Code section 22.071 authorizes a city council
    to appoint a city administrator or city manager by ordinance only. This provision, like all of Local
    Government Code chapter 22, “applies to a Type A general-law municipality.”          Subsection (a)
    provides as follows:
    (a) In addition to the members of the governing body of the
    municipality, the other officers of the municipality are the secretary,
    treasurer, assessor and collector, municipal attorney, marshal,
    municipal engineer, and any other officers or agents authorized by the
    governing body.
    TEX. Lot. GOV’T CODEANN. 9 22.07 1(a) (Vernon 1999). The governing body is required to provide
    by ordinance for the election or appointment of the officers provided by section 22.071, and it may
    “confer on other municipal officers the powers and duties of an officer provided for by this section.”
    
    Id. § 22.071
    (b)-(c).
    Pursuant to section 22.071(a), the governing body of a Type A general-law city may
    authorize and appoint other officers and agents in addition to those expressly identified in that
    provision. However, if the voters have not approved the city manager form of government in an
    election held under Local Government Code chapter 25, the governing body will not have authority
    to appoint an officer or agent to exercise the powers and duties that chapter 25 grants to a city
    manager, regardless of the title given the appointee. See Canales, 
    2 14 S.W.2d at 457
    .
    You finally ask whether Local Government Code section 22.072 authorizes the governing
    body to grant to a municipal officer other than a mayor or duly appointed city manager the powers
    and duties conferred by statute upon a mayor ‘or duly appointed city manager. See Request Letter,
    supra note 1, at 2. Sections 22.072(a) and (b) of the Local Government Code, applicable to Type
    A general-law cities, authorize the governing body to “require a municipal officer whose duties are
    prescribed by this code to perform additional duties” and to “prescribe the powers and duties of a
    municipal officer appointed or elected to an office under this code whose duties are not specified by
    this code.” TEX. Lot. GOV’T CODEANN. 8 22.072(a)-(b) (V emon 1999). We answer this question
    in the context of Local Government Code chapter 102, which provides *that the mayor of a
    municipality serves as the budget officer for the governing body, unless the municipality has the city
    manager form of government.      See 
    id. 8 102.0
    01. As we have already concluded, the governing
    body may not delegate to another person the power and duties statutorily assigned to the mayor or
    to the city manager appointed pursuant to chapter 25.
    The Honorable Kim Brimer      - Page 7         (JC-0544)
    SUMMARY
    General-law cities are creatures of statute and have only those
    powers expressly granted by statute or necessarily implied therefrom.
    The legislature has expressly designated the mayor of a general-law
    city as the budget officer of a municipality, unless the municipality
    has adopted the city manager form of government, and has assigned
    specific duties by statute to the mayor. The city council has no
    authority to reassign the mayor’s statutory duties to another officer.
    A general-law city must hold an election pursuant to Local
    Government Code chapter 25 if it wishes to adopt the city manager
    form of government.     Absent compliance with the procedures of
    chapter 25, the city council of a general-law city will not have
    authority to appoint a city manager to administer the municipal
    business and exercise other authority conferred upon a city manager
    by Local Government Code chapter 25.
    The governing body may not delegate to another person the
    authority as budget officer that Local Government Code chapter 102
    confers upon the mayor or the city manager appointed in compliance
    with Local Government Code chapter 25. The mayor is expressly
    authorized to require other city officers to provide necessary
    information    to him and may also delegate to city employees
    nondiscretionary    ministerial and administrative tasks necessary to
    carry out his statutory duties as budget officer.
    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
    Susan L. Garrison
    Assistant Attorney General, Opinion Committee