Untitled Texas Attorney General Opinion ( 1971 )


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  •                                March 19,   1971
    Hon. Robert S. Calvert                             Opinion      No. M-815
    Comptroller    of Public Accounts
    State Finance Building                             Re:    Legality   of payment of
    Austin,   Texas                                           compensation    of Special
    District   Judge.
    Dear Mr. Calvertr
    You ask whether you may pay the salary        of the Honorable
    Graham Bruce who was elected       and served as Special    Judge of the
    163rd Judicial   District    Court, Orange County, during the disability
    of the elected   judge,   from the time of his election       early in
    August, 1970, through October,       1970.   You question   whether he
    may be paid for his services       beginning  with the term of that
    Court on the first    Monday in September,     1970, because he was
    not reelected   to serve as Special      Judge at an election     during
    that term.
    Our opinion   is that he may be paid for these services       In
    the usual statutory    manner and at the statutory     rate of pay for
    the reason that he was at least    a de facto   judge;    we do not pass
    upon whether he was a de Jure judge.
    Your question     arises  because    of the provisions      of the
    following   two Articles     of Vernon's   Civil   Statutes:    Article    1887
    providing   for election     of Special   District   Judges and of Article
    199, relating      to the terms of the 163rd District        Court of Orange
    County.    Article    1887 reads as follows:
    "Should the judge of a district      court on the
    first    or any future day of a term, fall       or reruse
    to hold the court,     the practicing    lawyers of the
    court present may elect-from       among their number a
    special    judge who shall hold the court and proceed
    with the business     thereof."     (Emphasis added.)
    Article 199, in Its provisions          relevant     to   the    terms   of   the
    163rd Judicial District  Court         reads:
    II
    . .(C)  The terms of the 163rd District
    Court        shall begin on the first  Monday in January,
    -3951-
    Hon. Robert     Calvert,   page   2        (M-815)
    May and September of each year, respectively,     and
    each term of said Court  shall continue  until   the
    convening of the next succeeding   term.   . . .II
    (Emphasis added. )
    Inasmuch as your office    is concerned           with the legality
    of payment to this Special  District   Judge for           his services,   we
    address ourselves  only to that question.
    In Snow v. State,       114 s.w.2d     a98 (Tex.Crim.      1937),    it
    was held that a judge holding          office    under color    of title    by appolnt-
    ment and discharging      the duties      of the office,     although    ineligible
    to serve,   was a de facto      judge and his title       to the office       could
    not be successfully      challenged      except   in a direct    Droceedinn.
    This case is distinguishable         from the holding       in Bates v. State,
    
    248 S.W.2d 947
    (Tex.Crim.         1952),    and Davis V. State,      2515-6$26      891
    (Tex.Crim.   1952), wherein a direct          attackwassuccessfully’m~de
    upon the authority     of a special       judge to sit in the case by a
    party litigant    during the course of the proceeding.
    Under the facts   presented,     the special   judge who was
    elected   to serve continued    to serve as the special         judge under
    color   of authority    under such circumstances      of reputation      or
    acquiescence    as were calculated      to induce people,     without    Inquiry,
    to submit to or Invoke his action,         supposing   him to be the officer
    he assumed to be.       In the absence of the issue having been challenged
    by a party litigant,      the authorities     hold that he may be recognized
    as a de facto    judge.   46 Am.Jur.2d    263, Judges,    Section    243.
    We therefore   regard the special       judge in question    as at
    least a de facto     judge during the subsequent        term of court when
    he continued    to act for the regular     judge who remained incapacitated.
    The compensation     of de facto  officers    is discussed     in 47 Texas
    Jurisprudence    2d 324, Public Officers,       Section    263 which reads,
    in part,   as follows:
    11
    . . . in the absence of a de jure claimants,
    a de facto   officer Is, in a proper case,  entitled
    to compensation,,for  services rendered  by him and
    accepted;   . . .
    We thus   advise that     the request for payment tendered by
    the special     judge   in question     should be paid by the State for services
    rendered.
    -3952-
    Ron.   Robert   Calvert,     page   3          (M-815)
    SUMMARY
    A special    district     judge who Is elected
    during one term of court and who continues            to
    serve (without     objection     by any one) during the
    next term of court without being reelected            by
    the members of the Bar should be paid for all
    his ser~vices rendered       In accordance    with Article
    6021, Vernon's     Civil    Statutes,  provided   there Is
    no conflict    between the special       judge and a de
    jure claimant.
    Very    truly     yours,
    CRAWFORDC. MARTIN
    Attorney General of Texas
    BY
    First      Assistant
    Prepared    by Melvin      E. Corley
    Assistant    Attorney      General
    APPROVRD:
    OPINION COMMITTEE
    Kerns Taylor,   Chairman
    W. E. Allen,   Co-Chairman
    John Reeves
    Arthur Sandlln
    Roland Allen
    Bob Lattimore
    MEADEF. GRIFFIN
    Staff Legal Assistant
    ALFRED WALKER
    Executive Assistant
    -3953-
    

Document Info

Docket Number: M-815

Judges: Crawford Martin

Filed Date: 7/2/1971

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 2/18/2017