Judges: RICHARD P. IEYOUB
Filed Date: 12/4/2002
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 7/5/2016
Dear Ms. Jones:
In response to your recent inquiry, note that state law prohibits one from holding membership with the board of a parish planning commission while concurrently holding a position as assistant district attorney. R.S.
C. (1) All members of a commission, whether a parish or a municipal planning commission, shall serve without compensation, except as otherwise provided by this Paragraph or as otherwise provided by law, and shall hold no other public office, except they may also serve as members of any duly constituted regional commission of which their parish municipality forms a part. (Emphasis added).
An assistant district attorney holds public office as defined in R.S.
As used in this title, the term "public office" means any state, district, parish or municipal office, elective or appointive, or any position as member on the board or commission, elective or appointive, when the office or position is established by the constitution and laws of this state. "Public officer" is any person holding a public office in this state.
See Attorney General Opinions 97-84, 85-290 and 84-121 in support of our general conclusion; see also Attorney General Opinion 89- 210A, which elaborates on the status of assistant district attorney as public office.
Very truly yours,
RICHARD P. IEYOUB ATTORNEY GENERAL
BY: __________________________ KERRY L. KILPATRICK ASSISTANT ATTORNEY GENERAL
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Date Released: December 4, 2002
OPINION NUMBER 89-210A
September 8, 1989
22 — DISTRICT PROSECUTING ATTORNEYS 90-A — POLITICAL SUBDIVISIONS
La. Const. Art.
R.S.
Assistant district attorneys are public officers and employees of the parish or parishes constituting the judicial district in which they serve, and the parochial governing authority is fiscally responsible for indemnification of any attorney fees mandated under R.S.
Mr. B. Dexter Ryland First Assistant District Attorney Rapides Parish P. 0. Drawer 1472 Alexandria, LA 71309
Dear Mr. Ryland:
You have requested our reconsideration of Opinion of the Attorney General No. 89-210, wherein the Attorney General opined that an assistant district attorney is a law enforcement officer within the scope of LSA-R.S.
Your reconsideration request is limited to two issues: (1) whether an assistant district attorney is employed by any "governing authority" at all, and, if so, (2) whether the governing authority which actually employs him is not the state legislature, acting for the State of Louisiana.
Perhaps the most unsettled area of local government law in recent years has centered in the employment relationship between public officers authorized by constitutional provisions and their appointees and employees, who exercise as constitutional officers the sovereign powers of the State of Louisiana, and the State itself and its political subdivisions with which these constitutional officers are often closely associated in law and fact. One need only review L.S.U. Law Professor Kenneth Murchison's valiant efforts for the past decade in the annual faculty symposium issue of the Louisiana Law Review to find coherence in the often contradictory statutory and case law to appreciate how unsettled is the law on the employment status of assistant district attorneys, deputy sheriffs, deputy assessors, deputy coroners and deputy clerks of court. A review of that law is necessary for context.
Most of the case law has arisen from questions of tort and worker's compensation liability, in which the master-servant relationship is central. Professor Murchison traces the instability of the law to the impact of La. Const. Art.
Parallel to this body of law are LSA-R.S.
Foster v. Hampton,
Hryhorchuk v. Smith,
This line of jurisprudence began to be modified with 1978 La. Acts No.
R.S.
Martinez v. Reynolds,
The Louisiana Supreme Court decision in Jenkins v. Jefferson ParishSheriff's Office,
Diaz v. Allstate Ins. Co.,
An employee of the district attorney, Diaz held, is an employee of the State for the limited purpose of R.S.
The legislature overruled Diaz's ruling that district attorneys and their employees were state employees by 1984 La. Acts No.
A third area of law where the "parish officials" specified by La. Const. Art.
The fact that the state may grant to an employee of a political subdivision any additional or supplemental pay or otherwise provide funds for the payment of such employee's salary shall not make such employee, in whole or in part or in any way, an employee of the state.
In Parker v. Cappel,
The employment status of those constitutional officers whose jurisdiction is subject to parochial geographic limits has been transmuted by the developments in Louisiana law since the Foster
decision. Without an express definition of their employment status, the legislature has, in the enactment of public policy governing the rights, duties and immunities incidental and integral to the employment status of the public officials named in La. Const. Art.
R.S.
In 1985 the legislature made an even more compelling statement of legislative intent and policy as to the shift in governmental responsibility for this class of public officials from the state to the local level. 1985 La. Acts No.
R.S. 14:1441.1 exempts the State from the liability of La.Civ. Code Art.
R.S. 14:1441.1 designates the public officials for whom master-servant vicarious liability is removed negatively, by stating the public officers for whom the State is not responsible to be those officials not specified by R.S.
Whereas these two sections establish an exemption from master-servant liability for the State, R.S.
Art.
R.S.
1. "The territorial jurisdiction and territorial extent of the governmental body politic comprising the electorate who usually elects such public officer, if he is elected, or who usually elects the public officer who appoints such public officer, if he is appointed as an assistant, deputy, or other representative or designee of an elected public officer. . . . The governing authority of Rapides Parish, the police jury, and the district attorney, who appoints assistant district attorneys, share the same territorial jurisdiction and share the same body politic, the electorate of Rapides Parish.
2. The source of funds used for the operating expenses of the office in which such public officer serves." The governing authority of Rapides Parish is mandated by law to provide operational expenses for the Rapides Parish District Attorney's office. R.S.
16:6 ; Reed v. Washington Parish Police Jury,518 So.2d 1044 (La. 1988). The Rapides Parish Police Jury further pays 40% or more of the salaries of its assistant district attorneys.
R.S.
As provided in R.S.
42:1 , the term "public officer" includes anyone who holds any elective or appointive office created by constitution or law. The term is not synonymous with "state officer," as "public officer" includes not only public officers of the state but also public officers of parishes, municipalities, special districts, and other political subdivisions. While all offices created by the constitution or law are "public offices," they are not all "state offices," as they include parish offices, municipal offices, district offices and offices of political subdivision. A public officer maybe the officer of a parish, municipality, district or other political subdivision without being appointed by or under the direct control of the particular body which exercises the legislative functions of such parish, municipality district or political subdivision, in much the same manner as the public officer of the state may hold an office in the executive branch or may hold the office of a state court judgeship without being appointed by or under the direct control of the legislature." (Emphasis added.)
Though assistant district attorneys are appointed by the district attorney, they are public officers of the parish and for the purpose of "other laws imposing master-servant liability" are considered in law to be the employee of the governing authority of the parish. The district attorney is granted the authority under La. Const. Art.
If Mr. Giordano was a "public officer," his statutory employer is the political subdivision of which he was a public officer. R.S.
The police jury is the governing authority for Rapides Parish. LSA-R.S.
Because Sec. 1442 is included in Chapter 23 with the other cited and discussed provisions defining the employer, employee relationship between government entities and public officers and employees, the principles of Chapter 23 governing the employment relationship have general application by analogy to Sec. 1442 as well, and to the determination required by that section of the governing authority who "employs' the law enforcement officer who seeks indemnification for attorney fees.
The original opinion herein is affirmed. Should Mr. Giordano establish the two elements of Sec. 1442 not clearly stipulated by your opinion request — his good faith and that the actions at issue were in the course and scope of his employment — then in our opinion the police jury as the governing authority employing him is responsible for reimbursing him for reasonable attorney fees for hours actually worked on compensable criminal cases. The Attorney General's fee schedule may serve as a guideline for determining reasonable attorney fees.
Opinions of the Attorney General are not legally binding but only persuasive. They are compelling to the extent they speak the law with honesty and skill. Either party enjoys the right to seek a binding declaratory judgment from the district court pursuant to La.C.C.P. Art.
A final option would be for both parties in good faith to attempt to find reasonable grounds and terms for settlement of the claim in dispute.
I merely advise you of these options without recommending any one of them on their merits.
Trusting this to be of sufficient information, I am
Sincerely,
WILLIAM J. GUSTE, JR. Attorney General
BY: __________________________ CHARLES J. YEAGER Assistant Attorney General
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OPINION NUMBER 84-121
May 17, 1984
78 — OFFICES DUAL OFFICEHOLDING
R.S.
Ms. Jacqueline Mae Goldberg Chairman Legal Committee Almonaster/Michoud Industrial District Commission 10555 Lake Forest Blvd., Suite 3E New Orleans, Louisiana 70127
Dear Ms. Goldberg:
Your inquiry of recent date originally directed to Attorney General William J. Guste, Jr. as well as the Commission on Ethics for Public Employees has been referred back to our office by the commission for a response to the dual officeholding question in your request.
Your question is as follows:
May a commissioner of the Almonaster/Michoud Industrial District Commission concurrently serve as a member of the City Planning Commission of the City of New Orleans.
Among the legal authorities cited you referred to R.S.
If you have any further questions regarding this matter please contact our office.
Sincerely yours,
WILLIAM J. GUSTE, JR. ATTORNEY GENERALHARRY H. HOWARD ASSISTANT ATTORNEY GENERAL
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OPINION NUMBER 97-84
APRIL 2, 1997
78 DUAL OFFICEHOLDING LSA-R.S.
No prohibition under statutory law exists denying an individual from holding the elective office of alderman while simultaneously serving as member of the town's board of adjustment; however, separate statutory provisions applicable to the zoning commission prohibiting such an arrangement are controlling as the latest expression of legislative will.
Honorable Sam Pigno Mayor P.O. Box 249 Tickfaw, LA 70466
Dear Mayor Pigno:
A prohibition under statutory law exists denying an individual from holding the elective office of alderman while simultaneously serving as member of the town zoning commission. LSA-R.S.
Sec. 103. Planning commission; Membership; appointment
C. (1) All members of a commission, whether a parish or a municipal planning commission, shall serve without compensation and shall hold no other public office, except they may also serve as members of any duly constituted regional commission of which their parish or municipality forms a part. (Emphasis added).
A planning commission is statutorily defined as the following:
Sec. 101. Definitions
For the purpose of this Subpart, the following terms are defined as follows:(1) "Planning commission" means an official planning commission appointed in accordance with the provisions of this Subpart. It shall denote either a parish planning commission, or a municipal planning commission, as the case may be. The term "parish or municipality as the case may be", when appropriate to the context, relates to the respective jurisdictions or functions of a parish planning commission with regard to the parish for which it is established and of a municipal planning commission with regard to the municipality for which it is established; or, when appropriate to the context, relates to the rights and remedies which the respective parish or municipality may exercise to enforce the provisions of this Subpart.
In contrast, the law specifically allows an alderman to hold membership on the board of adjustment per the language of LSA-R.S.
(1) The incumbent of one of the offices, whether or not in conjunction with fellow officers, or employment has the power to appoint or remove the incumbent of the other, except that local governmental subdivisions may appoint members of the governing body to boards and commissions created by them and over which they exercise general powers as provided by constitutional authority in ArticleVI , Section15 of the Constitution of Louisiana. A board or commission so created may elect officers from its own membership, and if a joint commission of two parishes, except a joint commission that has as its function the operation and maintenance of a causeway, and its related roadways, may also appoint a member of one of such parish's governing body to be its general superintendent. (Emphasis added).
Despite the fact that LSA-R.S.
Very truly yours,
RICHARD P. IEYOUB ATTORNEY GENERALBY: __________________________ KERRY L. KILPATRICK ASSISTANT ATTORNEY GENERAL
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OPINION NUMBER 85-290
April 22, 1985
78 — OFFICERS DUAL OFFICEHOLDING
Member parish planning commission may not serve on Louisiana State Mineral Board R.S.
R.S.
Hon. Terry J. Manuel Assistant District Attorney Fourteenth Judicial District 1020 Ryan Street Lake Charles, Louisiana 70602
Dear Mr. Manuel:
Your inquiry of recent date addressed to Attorney General William J. Guste, Jr. has been directed to me for attention and reply.
Your question is as follows:
May a member of parish planning commission also serve at the same time as a member of the Louisiana State Mineral Board
Pretermitting any consideration of the Louisiana Dual Officeholding and Dual Employment Law the answer to your question is found in R.S.
R.S.
* * *
C. All members of a commission, whether a parish or a municipal planning commission, shall serve without compensation and shall hold no other public office. . . .
The Louisiana State Mineral Board is a state agency and as such, membership on the board constitutes a public office.
Therefore, it is the opinion of our office that because of the provisions of R.S.
If you have any further questions regarding this matter please contact our office.
Sincerely yours,
WILLIAM J. GUSTE, JR. Attorney GeneralHARRY H. HOWARD Assistant Attorney General
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