Judges: MARK WHITE, Attorney General of Texas
Filed Date: 2/7/1980
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 7/6/2016
Honorable Henry Wade District Attorney Sixth Floor, Records Building Dallas, Texas 75202
Re: Authority of county officials to act in an emergency, and related questions.
Dear Mr. Wade:
You pose several questions regarding the power of county officials to act in cases of natural disaster or other emergency, particularly with respect to the use of county equipment on private land. Our opinion is directed to the authority granted by the Disaster Act of 1975, article 6889-7, V.T.C.S., and we do not address any broad constitutional questions affecting the Act generally.
The Disaster Act of 1975, article 6889-7, V.T.C.S., is designed to enable the State of Texas and its political subdivisions to plan for, respond to, and recover from natural or man-made disasters and the emergencies such calamities create. To that end section 5 of the Act confers upon the governor of the state extremely broad powers to declare disaster emergencies and to deal with them. Among other things, it gives executive orders, proclamations, and regulations ``the force and effect of law' and directs the governor to delegate or assign command authority embodied in appropriate executive orders or plans ``to the greatest extent practicable.' In addition to other powers conferred by law upon the governor, section 5(g) of the Act empowers him to suspend the provisions of any regulatory statute that would hinder necessary action in coping with the emergency. See also V.T.C.S. arts. 689a-4c (emergency funds); 5890e (use of militia during state of emergency). It also authorizes him to commandeer or utilize any private property if he finds it necessary to cope with the disaster emergency, subject to any applicable requirements for compensation.
Executive Order No. WPC-11, issued August 15, 1979, superseded prior executive orders of the governor implementing the Disaster Act of 1975. In recognition of the fact that the Act authorizes a county commissioners court to declare a local disaster emergency but fails to expressly confer upon any local officer the extraordinary powers it confers upon the governor when he, rather than the local body, declares a disaster emergency, the current executive order follows precedents established by prior governors and designates the county judge of each county as the Disaster Director/Coordinator for the county.
We think it is the intent of Executive Order WPC-11 to delegate to the county judge in locally declared disaster emergencies the same powers, on an appropriate local scale, that it delegates and assigns to the Director of the Division of Disaster Emergency Service on a statewide basis. It intends that the county judge serve as the governor's designated agent in the administration and supervision of the Texas Disaster Act of 1975, and that he may exercise the powers granted the governor therein. The executive order expressly gives comparable authority to the statewide Director.
Under the Act and executive order, the county judge, by employing the delegated power in a disaster emergency that has been locally declared by the commissioners court, may commandeer or utilize any private property if he finds it necessary to do so in order to cope with the disaster emergency as long as his order is consistent with the applicable disaster emergency plan. When he acts reasonably and justly in response to an impending disaster or its spread, i.e., to meet an impending peril that threatens the public health and safety when the public need greatly outweighs the private loss, the constitutional requirement that property shall not be ``taken, damaged or destroyed for or applied to public use without adequate compensation' is not applicable, though compensation may be paid later if other law permits. Tex. Const. art.
When precipitate action is necessary in the response stage, neither article I, section 17 of the Constitution, nor article III, section 51, prevents the utilization of county equipment on private property — the first for the reasons already discussed, and the second because the action is taken to directly accomplish a legitimate public purpose, not to benefit the property owner. See Barrington v. Cokinos,
Absent authority similar to that delegated under the 1975 Act, county officials would be greatly hampered in responding to many emergencies, for counties do not possess the general police power available to home rule cities. Nevertheless, they have implied authority to exercise a broad discretion in accomplishing the particular objectives entrusted to them. Anderson v. Wood,
Under the 1975 Act as implemented by Executive Order No. WPC-11, the county judge may use county equipment on private land if he reasonably deems it necessary to meet or prevent a locally declared disaster emergency, assuming his action is consistent with the local disaster plan so activated. We have examined the Emergency Operations Plan of Dallas County approved by the commissioners court November 8, 1976, and find that its 9th section provides:
During the emergency only, all resources within the limits of Dallas County and its municipalities, both publicly and privately owned, will be used when deemed necessary by local government officials and upon orders of the County Judge/Mayor. Accurate records will be kept concerning the use of privately owned resources for purpose of possible reimbursement.
Very truly yours,
Mark White Attorney General of Texas
John W. Fainter, Jr. First Assistant Attorney General
Ted L. Hartley Executive Assistant Attorney General
Petty v. City of San Antonio ( 1915 )
Crossman v. City of Galveston ( 1923 )
Barrington v. Cokinos ( 1960 )
City of Austin v. Teague ( 1978 )
Commissioners' Court of Harris County v. Kaiser ( 1929 )
Brazos River Conservation & Reclamation District v. McCraw ( 1936 )