Judges: JIM MATTOX, Attorney General of Texas
Filed Date: 8/8/1989
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 7/6/2016
Honorable Galen Ray Sumrow Criminal District Attorney Rockwall County Courthouse Rockwall, Texas 75087
Re: Whether an individual may be employed as a chief deputy for a county tax assessor-collector and as an official court reporter for a county court (RQ-1690)
Dear Mr. Sumrow:
You state that the person employed by Rockwall County as the county tax assessor-collector's chief deputy was formerly the official court reporter for the Rockwall County Court. She would like to know whether it would be legally possible for her to hold both positions.
We will first consider whether article
No person shall hold or exercise at the same time, more than one civil office of emolument. . . .
Tex. Const. art.
The following statute provides for the employment of a court reporter:
Each judge of a court of record shall appoint an official court reporter. An official court reporter is a sworn officer of the court and holds office at the pleasure of the court.
Gov't Code §
A court reporter is not an officer within article
Other Texas courts have concluded that an official court reporter is not an officer within various other provisions. See Lightfoot v. Lane,
A deputy appointed by a county tax assessor-collector to assist him in his duties is an employee, and not a civil officer of emolument. See Green v. Stewart,
The common law doctrine of incompatibility does not bar one person from holding two public employments. See generallyAttorney General Opinion
You argue, based on Attorney General Opinion O-5070 (1943), that the position of an official court reporter is a full-time position, and that the judge may not appoint a part-time court reporter. Attorney General Opinion O-5070 determined that a district judge could not appoint the official court reporter to work part-time and be paid on a per diem basis. The official court reporter's yearly salary was set by statute and no statute authorized him to work part-time and receive a lesser amount.
Attorney General Opinion O-5070 is not dispositive of this matter. It relied on statutes that have since been amended or repealed. See V.T.C.S. art. 2327a (1929, repealed 1947) (setting salary of court reporter). Moreover, it dealt only with the court reporter of a district court and not the court reporter of a county court.
Section
(a) On request, an official court reporter shall:
(1) attend all sessions of the court;
(2) take full shorthand notes of oral testimony offered before the court . . .;
(3) take full shorthand notes of closing arguments if requested to do so by the attorney of a party to the case . . .;
(4) preserve the notes for future reference for three years . . .;
(5) furnish a transcript of the reported evidence or other proceedings. . . .
(d) A judge of a county court or county court at law shall appoint a certified shorthand reporter to report the oral testimony given in any contested probate matter in that judge's court. (Emphasis added.)
Gov't Code §
The position of court reporter is described in terms of the duties to be performed, not of the number of hours of service required each week. The number of hours required to perform the job will depend upon the number of sessions the court reporter is requested to attend, record, and reduce to a written transcript and is likely to reflect the workload of the court with which the reporter is associated. No provision fixes a salary for a county court reporter that must be paid without regard to the amount of time required to perform the duties of the position. Instead, the commissioners court sets the salary of the court reporter in accordance with chapter 152, subchapter B of the Local Government Code, formerly article 3912k, V.T.C.S. Attorney General Opinion
We find no provision that expressly or impliedly requires the court reporter for the county court to serve as and be paid as a full-time employee, no matter how little work the job actually requires. See generally Attorney General Opinions
You ask whether your county personnel policy will be violated if one person holds both positions. Since this question is premised on a conclusion that a county court reporter must serve as a full-time employee, we need not address it. But see Attorney General Opinions
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
Rick Gilpin Chairman, Opinion Committee
Prepared by Susan L. Garrison Assistant Attorney General