Judges: Robert L. Shevin, Attorney General Prepared by: Rebecca Bowles Hawkins, Assistant Attorney General, and Gerald L. Knight, Legal Research Assistant
Filed Date: 3/6/1974
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 7/5/2016
QUESTION:
May a deputy tax assessor serve as an elective member of a county school board?
SUMMARY:
As a deputy tax assessor is an employee rather than an "officer," he may serve simultaneously as an elected school board member without violating the dual office prohibition, Art. II, s. 5, State Const. Nor are the duties of the two positions in the public service in conflict within the purview of the Standards of Conduct Law, ss.
Your question is answered in the affirmative.
Article II, s. 5(a), State Const., prohibits dual office holding under state, county, or municipal governments. The position of elected member of a county school board is clearly an "office" within the purview of that constitutional provision. Attorney General Opinion 071-280. Therefore, the important consideration is whether the position of deputy tax assessor is also an office, or merely a position of employment to which the dual officeholding prohibition does not apply. Attorney General Opinion 073-332.
The State Constitution does not define office or offices, but, as interpreted by the Florida Supreme Court,
"The term "office" implies a delegation of a portion of sovereign power to, and the possession of it by, the person filling the office, while an employment does not comprehend a delegation of any part of the sovereign authority. The term office embraces the idea of tenure, duration, and duties in exercising some portion of the sovereign power, conferred or defined by law and not by contract." [State v. Sheats,
Attorney General Opinion 071-263 holds that an assistant state attorney is not an officer for the purposes of Art. II, s. 5(a), State Const. Likewise, in AGO 069-5, it was ruled that an assistant public defender did not have the status of a government officer. These previous opinions were based primarily on the statutory description of the respective positions involved and are in accord with the general rule that the constitutional prohibition against dual officeholding does not apply to those persons who are not invested with official powers in their own right, but merely exercise certain powers as the agents of government officers. Attorney General Opinion 069-2. Such appears to be the situation with regard to deputy tax assessors in your office. Although they are entitled "deputy tax assessors," I assume they perform largely the ministerial duties of assistants rather than the substitute functions of a true deputy. See Blackburn v. Brorein,
There still remains, however, the question of whether such service would violate provisions of the Standards of Conduct Law, ss.
The only other provision of the Standards of Conduct Law that might be applicable here is s.