Judges: JIM MATTOX, Attorney General of Texas
Filed Date: 12/27/1990
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 7/6/2016
Honorable Terry D. McEachern District Attorney Hale County Courthouse Plainview, Texas 79072
Re: Authority of a county auditor to prescribe a computerized accounting system for elected county officials (RQ-2058)
Dear Mr. McEachern:
You ask whether a county auditor is authorized to prescribe a particular computerized accounting system, including hardware and software, for the accounts of all elected county officials. You suggest that a county auditor serving a county with a population of less than 190,000 may impose such a requirement pursuant to section
The facts presented to us by your office and the office of the county tax assessor-collector are as follows. The county has begun installation of a central computer mainframe to handle all computer operations of the district, county and commissioners courts, and the offices of the district attorney, county auditor, county clerk, district clerk, juvenile probation department, and adult probation department. The office of the county tax assessor-collector has a separate system. You ask whether a county auditor can impose a computer accounting system upon the accounts of elected offices of county government, especially with regard to a county tax assessor.
Section
In a county with a population of less than 190,000, the county auditor may adopt and enforce regulations, not inconsistent with law or with a rule adopted [by the Comptroller of Public Accounts] under Section 112.003, that the auditor considers necessary for the speedy and proper collecting, checking, and accounting of the revenues and other funds and fees that belong to the county.
You note that this provision allows the implementation of the various duties of the county auditor to audit and oversee county finances, particularly the duties imposed by sections
112.006 ,115.001 , and115.002 of the Local Government Code.
Section 112.001 must be contrasted, however, with section
In Attorney General Opinion
If the auditor has determined that information regarding county finances can best be transmitted and processed through the use of particular computer programming, we believe other county offices that have compatible computer equipment are under a duty to comply with that determination by installing compatible programming in their departments. Accordingly, we believe a county auditor serving a county with a population of less than 190,000 may adopt and enforce regulations pursuant to section 112.001 that incidentally require the use of specified computer programming, so long as such rules are not inconsistent with law or a rule or form adopted by the comptroller under section 112.003.
However, the auditor may not, as you contend, dictate which equipment county officers shall use. Such a determination is appropriately reserved for the commissioners court in the exercise of its discretion in approving budgets and making contracts for the purchase of equipment and supplies for the county.
In support of your contention, you cite Commissioners Court of Harris County v. Fullerton,
Two other issues concerning your request have been brought to our attention by a county tax assessor-collector and the Secretary of State's office. The first is whether the auditor may, through specific programming of the county computer system, obtain immediate, unobstructed, and unsupervised access to the records of elected county officers that are stored in the computer system. We conclude that the auditor may not acquire such access. The second concerns the maintenance of voter registration information on computer by the tax assessor-collector in her capacity as registrar of voters.
We are informed that the computer system is supervised by the district clerk's office. As you describe it, the system is programmed to allow each office to conduct its own business, but it also permits the county auditor to "collect, check, and account for revenues and other funds received by county or district officers." We assume this means that the computer is programmed to allow the county auditor to obtain immediate, unobstructed, and unsupervised access to information collected and maintained by other offices that is transmitted to the central computer. The county tax assessor-collector has expressed misgivings about this feature of the computer system.
Section
Sections 112.006 and 115.001 date back to 1905, when the substance of these provisions was included in the enactment first creating the office of county auditor. See Acts 1905, 29th Leg., ch. 161, at 381. Obviously, the legislature could not then have foreseen the development of technology that would allow the county auditor to take literally the grant of continual access to the records of county officers. This office has previously declined to pass on the manner in which the auditor exercises his or her duties under section 115.001. See Attorney General Opinions O-6260 (1944); O-2734-A (1940). However, this office has previously determined that these provisions do not grant the county auditor immediate or unlimited access to the records of county officers and do not divest county officers of reasonable control over the information maintained in the pursuit of their official duties.
Attorney General Opinion WW-154 (1957) concluded that "continual access" means that the auditor may be present in office of the county officer whose records are to be examined at all times when that office is in operation. It also determined that in the absence of statutory authorization or the permission of the county officer, the auditor could not remove the records from the office for inspection. The county officer could therefore prevent the auditor from physically removing the records.
Similar reasoning should apply here. We have identified no statute that authorizes the county auditor to obtain immediate, unlimited access to the computerized records of county officers. The Open Records Act and the Local Government Records Act, moreover, specifically charge elected county, district, and precinct officers with the control, management, and preservation of information created or received by their offices pursuant to law or in the transaction of public business, including information stored in a computer that serves all county offices. Attorney General Opinion
Accordingly, we do not believe the county auditor may, through computer programming or equipment applications, obtain unlimited access to the records of elected county, district, or precinct officers without the prior authorization of the officers. Because county officers are equally bound by sections 112.006 and 115.001, their authorization may not be arbitrarily or unreasonably withheld.
The final issue raised by this opinion request concerns the storage of voter registration information on computer by the county tax assessor-collector in her capacity as registrar of voters.
We have also learned that the commissioners court recently ordered the cancellation of the contract for the lease of computer hardware and software used by the county tax assessor-collector's office. The cancellation is effective at the close of business on December 31, 1990. We are advised that the tax assessor-collector serves as voter registrar for the county, and that voter registration information is maintained with the assistance of the computer hardware and software supplied by a private company. See Elec. Code §
Section
If it appears that the commissioners court will require the tax assessor-collector to maintain voter registration information in the county computer system, this action ordinarily would not be subject to section 18.012. However, if the county intends to contract with a private business entity for any service relating to computerized lists of registered voters, including programming of the county computer to accommodate such information, the contract is subject to section 18.012 and cannot be entered into without the prior approval of the secretary of state.3
If voter registration information is maintained on a computer system that serves all county offices, and if the commissioners court intends to contract with a private business entity for any service relating to such computerized information, the contract may not be executed without the prior approval of the Secretary of State pursuant to section
Very truly yours,
Jim Mattox Attorney General of Texas
Mary Keller First Assistant Attorney General
Lou McCreary Executive Assistant Attorney General
Judge Zollie Steakley Special Assistant Attorney General
Renea Hicks Special Assistant Attorney General
Rick Gilpin Chairman, Opinion Committee
Prepared by Steve Aragon Assistant Attorney General