Untitled Texas Attorney General Opinion ( 2013 )


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  •                                ATTORNEY GENERAL OF TEXAS
    GREG         ABBOTT
    August 13, 2013
    The Honorable Rene 0. Oliveira                           Opinion No. GA-1016
    Chair, Committee on Business & Industry
    Texas House of Representatives                          Re:    Application of Government Code
    Post Office Box 2910                                    section 573.062, the nepotism continuous-
    Austin, Texas 78768-2910                                employment exception, to a school district
    board member's spouse (RQ-1117-GA)
    Dear Representative Oliveira:
    You ask three questions concerning the application of Government Code section 573.062,
    the nepotism continuous-employment exception, to a school district board member's spouse. 1
    Chapter 573 of the Government Code generally prohibits nepotism by public officials, including
    members of a school district board of trustees. TEX. Gov'T CODE ANN. §§ 573.001-.084 (West
    2012). Under section 573.041, a "public official may not appoint, confirm the appointment of, or
    vote" to appoint or confirm the appointment of an individual to a position that is "compensated
    from public funds" if "the individual is related to the public official within" the third degree by
    consanguinity or within the second degree by affinity. 2 !d. § 573.041(1); see 
    id. § 573.002
    1
    Letter from Honorable Rene 0. Oliveira, Chair, House Comm. on Bus. & Indus., to Honorable Greg
    Abbott, Tex. Att'y Gen. at 3--4 (Mar. 28, 2013), http://www.texasattomeygeneral.gov/opin ("Request Letter").
    2
    Individuals are related by consanguinity if "one is a descendent of the other" or "they share a common
    ancestor." TEX. Gov'T CODE ANN. § 573.022(a) (West 2012). An individual's relatives within the third degree by
    consanguinity are the individual's (1) parent or child; (2) brother, sister, grandparent, or grandchild; and (3) great-
    grandparent, great-grandchild, aunt or uncle, nephew or niece. !d. § 573.023(c). Individuals are related by affinity
    if "they are married to each other" or "the spouse of one of the individuals is related by consanguinity to the other
    individual." !d. § 573.024(a). "A husband and wife are related to each other in the first degree by affinity. For
    other relationships by affinity, the degree of relationship is the same as the degree of the underlying relationship by
    consanguinity." !d. § 573.025(a). For example, an individual's relatives within the second degree by affinity
    include, among others, the individual's (1) mother-in-Jaw, father-in-Jaw, son-in-law or daughter-in-law, and (2)
    brother-in-law or sister-in-Jaw. See 
    id. Representative Rene
    0. Oliveira - Page 2          (GA-1016)
    (establishing the degrees of relationship to which chapter 573 applies). Section 573.062
    establishes a continuous-employment exception to the general nepotism prohibition, providing:
    A nepotism prohibition prescribed by Section 573.041 ... does not
    apply to an appointment, confirmation of an appointment, or vote
    for an appointment or confirmation of an appointment of an
    individual to a position if:
    (1) the individual is employed in the pos1t10n immediately
    before the election or appointment of the public official to
    whom the individual is related in a prohibited degree; and
    (2) that prior employment of the individual is continuous for at
    least:
    (A) 30 days, if the public official is appointed;
    (B) six months, if the public official is elected at an election
    other than the general election for state and county
    officers;
    (C) one year, if the public official is elected at the general
    election for state and county officers.
    !d. § 573.062(a). Your questions ask about the application of this provlSlon m specific
    circumstances. Request Letter at 3.
    You first ask whether, under subsection 573.062(a)(2), the six-month or one-year time
    period applies when the public official is a trustee of a school district that "conducts joint
    elections with a county." !d. at 1, 3. You explain that many school districts hold their trustee
    elections jointly with the counties in which they are located. Request Letter at 2. You question
    whether the applicable period in the exception is the subsection (2)(C) one-year period because
    of the joint election. !d.
    Under subsection 573.062(a)(2)(C), in order for the one-year continuous-employment
    period to apply, the public official must be "elected at the general election for state and county
    officers." TEX. Gov'T CoDE ANN. § 573.062(a)(2)(C) (West 2012). Some school districts may
    choose to hold their elections on the same date as the general election for state and county
    officers. See TEX. EDuc. CODE ANN. § 11.0581(a)(2) (West 2012) (requiring a school district
    trustee election to be held on the same date as at least one other specified governmental body).
    However, doing so does not change the independent nature of the school district trustee election.
    Cf TEX. ELEC. CoDE ANN. § 271.0071 (West 2003) (explaining that restrictions on methods of
    voting do not "apply to a joint election as if the joint election were a single election but rather
    apply independently to the election of each participating political subdivision"). School district
    trustees are neither state nor county officers, and they are therefore elected "at an election other
    than the general election for state and county officers." TEX. Gov'T CODE ANN. §
    Representative Rene 0. Oliveira - Page 3          (GA-1016)
    573.062(a)(2)(B) (West 2012). To conclude otherwise would result in some school districts
    using a six-month period and others using a one-year period to calculate continuous employment,
    depending solely upon when the school districts choose to hold their elections. Nothing in the
    language of the statute suggests that the Legislature intended to distinguish between school
    districts in this regard. See Entergy Gulf States, Inc. v. Summers, 
    282 S.W.3d 433
    , 437 (Tex.
    2009) (explaining that the purpose of statutory construction is to "ascertain and give effect to the
    Legislature's intent"). Thus, the six-month continuous-employment period under subsection
    (2)(B) applies to an employee of a school district that conducts a joint election with a county.
    Your second question asks, "What is the starting date for calculating the continuous-
    employment nepotism exception?" Request Letter at 4. You explain that an employee may sign
    a contract with a school district weeks or months before the employee "reports for duty," and
    you question "which of the two events would be the controlling date for purposes of analyzing"
    whether the continuous-employment exception applies. !d. at 2. Subsection 573.062 requires
    that the individual seeking the continuous-employment exception be "employed" for the
    requisite period in order for the exception to apply. TEX. Gov'T CoDE ANN. § 573.062(a)(1)
    (West 2012). The day an employment contract is signed or approved may not necessarily equate
    to the first day of employment. See Tex. Att'y Gen. Op. No. M-862 (1971) at 2 (concluding that
    a person who had been "contracted for two or more years" but had "continuously performed
    services for a period of less than two years" was not exempt from the nepotism provisions).
    When employment officially begins for an individual will depend on the specific circumstances
    of a school district, the employee, and the terms of the underlying employment contract. That is
    a determination best made by the school district in the first instance. We can, however, advise
    that the starting date for calculating the continuous-employment exception is the first day the
    employee "is employed" by the school district. !d.
    Your third question asks, "What is the date for calculating the end of the period for the
    continuous employment nepotism exception?" Request Letter at 4. You suggest that it could be
    the "qualification of the elected official, presumably by taking the qualifying oath of office," or,
    alternatively, "the date upon which the [elected official] would be first called upon to consider an
    extension" of the individual's employment contract. !d. at 2. In Bean v. State, a Texas court
    addressed this question as applied to a judge who had appointed his uncle to represent indigent
    defendants. 
    691 S.W.2d 773
    , 775 (Tex. App.-El Paso 1985, pet. refd). The court concluded
    that the judge was erroneously utilizing the date ofhis uncle's employment as an end date for the
    continuous-employment period and held that the critical date was instead the date the district
    judge "assumed his office." !d.; see also Tex. Att'y Gen. Op. No. M-857 (1971) at 2-5 (opining
    . that a teacher may enter into a renewal contract with a school district after a relative trustee's
    election but before his qualification and taking the oath of office). Applying this precedent to
    your question, the date for calculating the end of the period for the continuous-employment
    nepotism exception is the date the elected public official assumes office.
    Representative Rene 0. Oliveira - Page 4        (GA-1016)
    SUMMARY
    Government Code subsection 573.062(a)(2)(B) requires
    that an individual be continuously employed for six months prior
    to the election of a school district trustee to whom the individual is
    related in a prohibited degree in order for the nepotism continuous-
    employment exception to apply. Under the terms of the statute, the
    continuous-employment period begins the first day the employee is
    employed by the school district. The continuous-employment
    period ends the date the public official to whom the employee is
    related in a prohibited degree assumes office.
    Very truly yours,
    BOTT
    DANIEL T. HODGE
    First Assistant Attorney General
    JAMES D. BLACKLOCK
    Deputy Attorney General for Legal Counsel
    VIRGINIA K. HOELSCHER
    Chair, Opinion Committee
    Virginia K. Hoelscher
    Assistant Attorney General, Opinion Committee
    

Document Info

Docket Number: GA-1016

Judges: Greg Abbott

Filed Date: 7/2/2013

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 2/18/2017