Judges: DAN MORALES, Attorney General of Texas
Filed Date: 9/3/1993
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 7/6/2016
Honorable Luis V. Saenz Cameron County District Attorney 974 East Harrison Street Brownsville, Texas 78520
Re: Whether the County Purchasing Act, sections 262.021-.035 of the Local Government Code, applies to purchases made with funds generated by forfeitures under chapter 59 of the Code of Criminal Procedure (RQ-378)
Dear Mr. Saenz:
You have requested our opinion regarding the following fact situation:
The Cameron County Attorney's Office regularly has proceeds awarded to it under Chapter 59 of the Texas Code of Criminal Procedure, which it uses in accordance with the restrictions of Article 59.06 of said Code, specifically for "official purposes" of th[e] office. Occasionally, the County Attorney will purchase items, for official purposes of the office, which exceed $10,000.00 in price. In the instant case, the County Attorney's Office desires to purchase a new phone system for the Office which will exceed $10,000.00 in price. The County Auditor has taken the position that any purchase by a County Department over $10,000.00 must comply with the provisions of the County Purchasing Act, Chapter 262 of the Texas Local Government Code. [Emphasis in original.]
You specifically ask whether the County Purchasing Act applies to purchases made with funds generated by forfeitures under chapter 59 of the Code of Criminal Procedure. We conclude that it does.1
The County Purchasing Act (the "act") was enacted in 1985, Acts 1985, 69th Leg., ch. 641, § 1, at 2377 (repealed by Acts 1987, 70th Leg., ch. 49, § 49(1)); V.T.C.S. art. 2368a.5 historical and statutory notes, and was codified in 1987 as subchapter C of chapter 262 of the Local Government Code, Acts 1987, 70th Leg., ch. 149, § 1. The act requires the commissioners court to comply with certain competitive bidding or competitive proposal requirements "before a county may purchase one or more items under a contract that will require an expenditure exceeding $10,000." Local Gov't Code §
Chapter 59 of the Code of Criminal Procedure was enacted in 1989. Acts 1989, 71st Leg., 1st C.S., ch. 12, § 1. That chapter provides for the seizure and forfeiture, Code Crim. Proc. art.
(a) All forfeited property shall be administered by the attorney representing the state, acting as the agent of the state, in accordance with accepted accounting practices and with the provisions of any local agreement entered into between the attorney representing the state and law enforcement agencies. If d a local agreement has not been executed, the property shall be sold on the 75th day after the date of the final judgment of forfeiture at public auction under the direction of the county sheriff, after notice of public auction as provided by law for other sheriff's sales. The proceeds of the sale shall be distributed as follows:
(1) to any interest holder to the extent of the interest holder's nonforfeitable interest; and
(2) the balance, if any, after deductions of all storage and disposal costs, to be deposited not later than the 30th day after the date of the sale in the state treasury to the credit of the general revenue fund.
(b) If a local agreement exists between the attorney representing the state and law enforcement agencies, the attorney representing the state may transfer the property to law enforcement agencies to maintain, repair, use, and operate the property for official purposes if the property is free of any interest of an interest holder. The agency receiving the forfeited property may purchase the interest of an interest holder so that the property can be released for use by the agency. . . .
(c) If a local agreement exists between the attorney representing the state and law enforcement agencies, all money, securities, negotiable instruments, stocks or bonds, or things of value, or proceeds from the sale of those items, shall be deposited according to the terms of the agreement into one or more of the following funds: (1) a special fund in the county treasury for the benefit of the office of the attorney representing the state, to be used by the attorney solely for the official purposes of this office;
(2) a special fund in the municipal treasury if distributed to a municipal law enforcement agency . . .;
(3) a special fund in the county treasury if distributed to a county law enforcement agency, to be used solely for law enforcement purposes; or
(4) a special fund in the state law enforcement agency if distributed to a state law enforcement agency . . . .
(d) Proceeds awarded under this chapter to a law enforcement agency or the attorney representing the state may be spent by the agency or the attorney after a budget for the expenditure of the proceeds has been submitted to the commissioners court or governing body of the municipality.
Id. art. 59.06; see id. art. 59.01(4) (defining law enforcement agency as agency of state or political subdivision authorized to employ peace officers).
We understand from your request that the funds in question have been deposited in a special fund in the county treasury pursuant to the above-quoted subsection (c)(1) of article 59.06. You do not assert that forfeiture funds in the county treasury are not county funds, nor do you assert that a purchase of a telephone system for the county attorney's office made by "the attorney representing the state" is not a purchase by the county. The only issue you raise is whether the act has been impliedly repealed with respect to purchases made with county treasury forfeiture funds generated under article 59.06.
You rely on a letter opinion that this office issued in 1988, Letter Opinion No. 88-112, withdrawn, Letter Opinion No. 88-114 (1988), reaff'd, Letter Opinion No. 89-30 (1989). Letter Opinion No. 88-112 involved the old forfeiture provisions in the Controlled Substances Act, V.T.C.S. art. 4476-15, §§ 5.03-.10 (repealed by Acts 1989, 71st Leg., ch. 678, § 13(1)).3 In that letter this office quoted dictum from Attorney General Opinion
You believe that because the forfeiture law commands that "[a]ll forfeited property shall be administered by the attorney representing the state," id. art. 59.06(a), the legislature intended to displace the act from purchases made with funds deposited in the county registry pursuant to subsection (c)(1) of article 59.06. We cannot find such an intent in the language you cite. Subsections (a) through (c) of article 59.06 regulate the administration of forfeited property only (1) until such property is sold and the proceeds are distributed to the state, id. art. 59.06(a), or (2) until such property or its proceeds are transferred to law enforcement agencies pursuant to a local agreement, id. art. 59.06(b)-(c).4 Subsections (a) through (c) do not deal with purchases made with forfeiture funds. See id. art. 59.08(a) (providing for the deposit of money seized as contraband until judgment in forfeiture action).
We believe the pertinent provision addressing the authority of the attorney representing the state or law enforcement agencies to make purchases with forfeiture funds is located, rather, in subsection (d):
Proceeds awarded under this chapter to a law enforcement agency or to the attorney representing the state may be spent by the agency or the attorney after a budget for the expenditure of the proceeds has been submitted to the commissioners court or governing body of the municipality. The budget must be detailed and clearly list and define the categories of expenditures, but may not list details that would endanger the security of an investigation or prosecution. Expenditures are subject to audit provisions established under this article. . . .5 The head of the agency or attorney representing the state may not use the existence of an award to increase a salary, expense, or allowance for an employee of the attorney or agency who is budgeted by the commissioners court or governing body unless the commissioners court or governing body first approves the expenditure.
Id. art. 59.06(d) (footnote and emphasis added). According to the legislative history of chapter 59,6 the language of subsection (d) is a compromise between the desire of law enforcement and prosecution agencies to have no "front-end review" of their purchases and the legislators' desire that there be oversight by the commissioner's court or municipal governing body.7 Subsection (d) requires only the categorical submission of a budget of proposed forfeiture-fund expenditures; it does not require the governing body's approval of the budgeted expenditures, except for increases in "salary, expense, or allowance for" certain employees. See Attorney General Opinion
Our review of the legislative history of chapter 59 did not reveal any reference to the act. We also reviewed the legislative history of the act in search of clues on the legislative intent regarding its scope. The immediate statutory predecessor of the current act, article 2368a.5, V.T.C.S. (repealed by Acts 1987, 70th Leg., ch. 149, § 49(1)), was part of the 69th Legislature's comprehensive reform of various, sundry, and often contradictory competitive bidding laws. See Acts 1985, 69th Leg., ch. 641 (enacting County Purchasing Act; amending, inter alia, former article 2368a, V.T.C.S., the Certificate of Obligation Act of 1971, and the County Road and Bridge Act; and repealing various laws); see also 35 D. BROOKS, COUNTY AND SPECIAL DISTRICT LAW § 18.3 (Texas Practice 1989) (summarizing various statutory requirements for competitive bidding). Former article 2368a.5 provided, in part:
Before a county may purchase one or more items under a contract that will require an expenditure exceeding $5,000, the commissioners court of the county must comply with the competitive bidding or competitive proposal procedures prescribed by this Act.
V.T.C.S. art. 2368a.5 (repealed by Acts 1987, 70th Leg., ch. 149, § 49(1)). The 70th Legislature codified the act into the Local Government Code. Acts 1987, 70th Leg., ch. 149, § 1. The act now contains the same language as quoted above, except that the "bid trigger" has been increased to $10,000. Local Gov't Code §
The language of the act is broad; by its terms it applies to all county purchases exceeding $10,000. It also is significant that the current act omits the language of the old, pre-reform law apparently limiting its application to purchases made by counties when acting through their commissioners courts. The former law read in part:
No county, acting through its Commissioners Court, . . . shall hereafter make any contract calling for or requiring an expenditure or payment in an amount exceeding five thousand dollars ($5,000.00) out of any fund or funds of any . . . county or subdivision of any county . . . without first submitting such proposed contract to competitive bids.
Acts 1981, 67th Leg., ch. 853, § 2, at 3242 (amended by Acts 1985, 69th Leg., ch. 505, § 2; repealed by Acts 1987, 70th Leg., ch. 149, § 49(1)) (emphasis added).
In Attorney General Opinion
Even when former article 2368a, V.T.C.S., contained a phrase apparently restricting the competitive bidding law to actions taken by the commissioners court, we have been reluctant to construe that language strictly. See Attorney General Opinion
[The] purpose [of competitive bidding] is to stimulate competition, prevent favoritism and secure the best work and materials at the lowest practicable price, for the best interests and benefit of the taxpayers and property owners.
Sterrett v. Bell,
The act is readily harmonized with the purchasing authority granted to prosecuting attorneys and law enforcement agencies under article 59.06.15
The attorney or law enforcement agency generally has authority to decide what prosecutorial or law enforcement purposes to spend forfeiture funds for, but in so doing it must deal with the suppliers selected by the commissioners court through the bidding process provided in the act. Except for salary, expense, or allowance increases for certain employees, the commissioners court has no authority to reject expenditures out of forfeiture funds once those expenditures are submitted in a budget. Attorney General Opinion
We conclude that the act does apply to purchases made out of the special fund in the county treasury for the benefit of the attorney representing the state as provided by article
You have not advanced it, but we anticipate the argument that the act and chapter 59 could not operate together because the commissioners court would interfere with the prosecutor's or law enforcement agency's spending authority. Although the act applies to chapter 59, this does not mean that the commissioners court may second-guess the prosecutor's or law enforcement agency's decision to make a purchase. The commissioners court has a ministerial duty to initiate the competitive bidding process upon receipt of a purchase request from the prosecutor or law enforcement agency. Although the commissioners court has the right to reject all bids, Corbin v. Collin County Commissioners' Court,
Very truly yours,
DAN MORALES Attorney General of Texas
WILL PRYOR First Assistant Attorney General
MARY KELLER Deputy Attorney General for Litigation
RENEA HICKS State Solicitor
MADELEINE B. JOHNSON Chair, Opinion Committee
Prepared by James B. Pinson Assistant Attorney General
All law enforcement agencies and attorneys representing the state who receive proceeds or property under this chapter shall account for the receipt and disbursement of all such proceeds and property in an audit, which is to be performed annually by the commissioners court or governing body of a municipality, as appropriate. Certified copies of the audit shall be delivered to the attorney general and the governor no later than 30 days after the audit is completed.
No one objects to the auditing. . . . The disagreement seems to be . . . on the front-end review of what prosecution is doing versus making sure after the fact that it was done properly. . . . To lay out our projected law-enforcement activities — . . . I don't believe it's good, sound public policy, in advance.
. . . .
Let's take the smaller jurisdictions. They forfeit, let's say, $10,000. They have a need for an immediate buy-sell operation. They go to the DA now and they say, "I need this money for this thing"; he just turns it over to them. Once you put [the buy-sell operation] in this budgetary operation [(i.e. the budget submitted to the commissioners court)], they are bound into government and not being [sic] able to respond to the exigencies of law enforcement. They become just like any other situation.
Hearing on H.B. 65 Before the Senate Criminal Justice Comm., 71st Leg. (July 18, 1989) (tape recording available from Senate Staff Services). The sponsor of House Bill 65, Senator John Whitmire, made the following remarks at the same hearing:
[The district attorneys] don't write the bill, but I'm telling you that they do have access to the Governor's Office, and they will work to have the bill vetoed if it has any supervision by a legislative body — being the commissioners court, the city council, or another entity — over the spending and the application of the seized property and the proceeds gained from the sale thereof. . . . So, I know the will of the Senate and this committee, because we spent long hours over it. . . . The discussion among the committee during the regular session was just as strong a feeling that it be an oversight [by the] legislative body. . . . They don't want, after the sale of a . . . seized and forfeited house, or car, or funds, whatsoever — they want, as they currently do under [the] Controlled Substance [Act] — they have total discretion of what they do to fight crime with that money.
Id.
Debate on H.B. 65 on the Floor of the House of Representatives, 71st Leg. (July 18, 1989) (tape recording available from House Committee Coordinator).
In all counties having a population of eight hundred thousand . . . or more, . . . supplies of every kind, road and bridge material, or any other material, for the use of said county, or any of its officers, departments, or institutions must be purchased on competitive bids, the contract to be awarded to the party who, in the judgment of the Commissioners Court, has submitted the lowest and best bid.
Id.
(e) Fees collected under this article shall be deposited in the county treasury in a special fund to be administered by the county attorney, district attorney, or criminal district attorney. Expenditures from this fund shall be at the sole discretion of the attorney, and may be used only to defray the salaries and expenses of the prosecutor's office.
We emphasize that [Attorney General O]pinion [MW-439 ] does not indicate that expenditures by a county officer never fall within the scope of statutes which contain express references to actions taken by the commissioners court. Because county funds have been traditionally administered and expended by the commissioners court, the legislature's reference to actions taken by the commissioners court may, in some instances, be intended to cover generally the expenditure and handling of "county funds."
Id. at 3 (emphasis added).