ATTORNEY GENERAL OF TEXAS
GREG ABBOTT
February $2004
The Honorable Edwin E. Powell Jr. Opinion No. GA-O 145
Coryell County Attorney
P-0. Box 796 Re: Whether a justice of the peace may receive,
Gatesville, Texas 76528 in addition to a salary, fees for issuing certified
copies of birth and death certificates as provided
by section 154.005(a) of the Local Government
Code (RQ-0092-GA)
Dear Mr. Powell:
You ask two questions about section 154.005(a) of the Local Government Code, which
provides that a justice of the peace may receive, in addition to a salary, fees for acting as registrar
for the Bureau of Vital Statistics. See TEX. LOC. GOV’T CODEANN. 0 154.005(a) (Vernon 1999).’
I. LePal and Factual Backmound
Pursuant to chapter 191 of the Health and Safety Code, the Bureau of Vital Statistics (the
“Bureau”) within the Texas Department of Health administers the statewide system of vital statistics.
See TEX. HEALTH & SAFETY CODE ANN. 88 191.001-.004 (Vernon 2001). At the local level, the
state is divided into registration districts for registering births and deaths. See id. 5 191.02 l(a).
These districts consist of each justice of the peace district and each municipality with a population
of 2,500 or more, see id., which may be combined or divided by the Texas Board of Health, see id.
$ 19 1.02 1(b). The justice of the peace “is the local registrar of births and deaths in a justice of the
peace precinct.” Id. 8 191.022(a). This duty may be transferred to the county clerk if the justice of
the peace and the county clerk agree in writing and the agreement is ratified by the commissioners
court. See id. In a municipality with a population of 2,500 or more, the municipal clerk or secretary
is the local registrar. See id. 8 191.022(b).
The Health and Safety Code authorizes the Bureau to charge fees prescribed by rule for
various services including “preparing and issuing copies and certified copies of birth, death, fetal
death, marriage, divorce, annulment, and other records.” Id. 8 191.0045(a)-(b) (Vernon Supp. 2004).
‘See Letter from Honorable Edwin E. Powell Jr., Coryell County Attorney, to Opinion Division, Office of
Attorney General (Aug. 12,2003) (on file with Opinion Committee) [hereinafter Request Letter].
The Honorable Edwin E. Powell Jr. - Page 2 (GA-0145)
At the local level, “[a] local registrar who issues a certified copy of a birth or death certificate shall
charge the same fees as charged” by the Bureau. Id. 8 191 .0045(d).2 A Board of Health rule
establishes fees for issuing certified copies ofbirth and death certificates. See 25 TEX.ADMIN. CODE
0 18 1.22(a)-(b) (2003).3
You explain that a justice of the peace in your county has requested that the county auditor
pay him for “monies paid to the county for the issuance of death certificate copies.” Request Letter,
supra note 1, at 1. You indicate that the justice of the peace believes he is entitled to keep these fees
under section 154.005(a) of the Local Government Code, which provides that “[a] justice of the
peace may receive, in addition to a salary, all fees, commissions, or payments for performing
marriage ceremonies, for acting as registrar for the Bureau of Vital Statistics, and for acting as ex
officio notary public.” TEX. Lot. GOV’T CODE ANN. 8 154.005(a) (Vernon 1999). The justice of
the peace informs us that justices of the peace in your county have been depositing fees for issuing
birth and death certificates into the county treasury for many years.4 He states that this money was
mistakenly paid to the county and indicates that he believes he is entitled to fees for issuing both
birth and death records.’
II. An alvsis
In light of this situation, you ask whether section 154.005(a) of the Local Govemrnent Code
requires the county to pay the justice of the peace death certificate fees collected prior to the date of
his request. See Request Letter, supra note 1, at 1. You also ask if the county may retain a
2Section 191.0045(e) also requires the Bureau or a local registrar to collect an additional $2 fee for issuing a
certified copy of a certificate ofbirth; issuing a wallet-sized certification ofbirth; and conducting a search for a certificate
of birth. See TEX.HEALTH& SAFETYCODEANN. 9 191.0045(e) (Vernon Supp. 2004); see also id. 6 19 1.0045(f) (“The
fees collected under Subsection (e) shall be deposited in the state treasury to the credit of the work and family policies
fund. Money in the fund may be used only for the purposes prescribed by Section 8 1.006(a), Labor Code.“), (g) (“A
local registrar that on March 3 1, 1995, was charging a fee for the issuance of a certified copy of a birth certificate that
exceeded the fee charged by the bureau of vital statistics for the same type of certificate may continue to do so but shall
not raise this fee until the fee charged by the bureau exceeds the fee charged by the local registrar. A local registrar to
which this subsection applies shall charge the additional fee as required under Subsection (e).“). The Seventy-eighth
Legislature recently authorized a local registrar to collect a fee not to exceed $1 for the preservation of records when
issuing a vital statistics records. See id. § 191.0045(h).
3The rule provides that the fee “for a certified or research copy of a birth record shall be $9.00.” 25 TEX.
ADMIN.CODE5 18 1.22(a) (2003). The fee “for a certified or research copy of a death certificate shall be $9.00 for the
first or only copy requested, and $3.00 for each additional copy of the same record requested in the same request.” Id.
9 18 1.22(b); see also id. 0 18 1.28 (requirements for certified copies of records). In addition, the-Health and Safety Code
requires a local registrar who collects a fee for a certified copy of a birth certificate to “deduct 20 cents of that fee to
apply to the registrar’s administrative costs and remit $1.80 of that fee to the comptroller for deposit in the work and
family policies fund.” TEX.HEALTH& SAFETYCODEANN. fj 191.022(f)(Vernon 2001).
4See Brief from Honorable F.W. Price, Justice of the Peace, Coryell County, Texas, to Opinion Division, Office
of Attorney General (Aug. 14,2003) (on file with Opinion Committee) [hereinafter Brief of F.W. Price].
*See id.
The Honorable Edwin E. Powell Jr. - Page 3 (GA-0145)
reasonable sum as reimbursement for the use of its paper, labor, facilities, and equipment to produce
death certificates. Id. at l-2. In the alternative, you ask if the county may require the justice of the
peace to “perform his registrar duties at a site other than the county provided Justice of the Peace
office.” Id. at 2. Given that the justice of the peace is interested in retaining birth and death record
fees,6 we address both fees. Before reaching your specific questions, however, we must examine the
constitutionality of section 154.005(a) of the Local Government Code under article XVI, section 61
of the Texas Constitution, which requires counties to pay certain district, county, and precinct
officials on a salary as opposed to a fee basis and controls officials use of fees they collect.
Article XVI, section 6 1 requires that all justices of the peace must be compensated on a salary
basis:
In all counties in this State, the Commissioners Courts shall
be authorized to determine whether precinct officers shall be
compensated on a fee basis or on a salary basis, with the exception
that it shall be mandatory upon the Commissioners Courts, to
compensate all justices of the peace, constables, deputy constables
and precinct law enforcement officers on a salary basis.
TEX. CONST. art. XVI, 5 61(b) (emphasis added). Moreover, “[a]11 fees earned by district, county
and precinct officers shall be paid into the county treasury where earned for the account of the proper
fund.” Id. 5 61(d). A fee may be retained by an officer only if he or she is paid on a fee basis and
if permitted to do so by the commissioners court: “[Wlhere any officer is compensated wholly on
a fee basis such fees may be retained by such officer or paid into the treasury of the county as the
Commissioners Court may direct.” Id.
“The purpose of [article XVI, section 6 13was to abolish the fee system of compensating the
officers named and to place them on a salary basis.” Wichita County v. Robinson, 276 S.W.2d 509,
5 13 (Tex. 1954). Further, article XVI, section 61 “‘indicates an intention that all fees of every
character collected by a county officer officially in counties [paying officers on a salary basis] shall
become fees of office, and that the officer is limited to his salary as compensation, and any fees
collected by him officially must be paid into the county depository as directed by the constitutional
provision.“’ State v. Glass, 167 S.W.2d 296,299 (Tex. Civ. App.-Galveston 1942) (quoting and
approving district court judgment), writ rerd w.o.m., 170 S.W.2d 470 (Tex. 1943) (per cur&n).
Fees set by the legislature were not abrogated by article XVI, section 61, but the purpose to which
they could be put was changed. See Bank-s v. State, 362 S.W.2d 154, 155 (Tex. Civ. App.-Austin
1962, writ ref d) (probate judge commissions, which had been personal to the official under former
article 3926, “constituted ‘fees of office’ . . . to which the official had no personal claim” as a result
of article XVI, section 61). A statute that permits a salaried officer to retain a fee as compensation
in addition to his or her salary violates article XVI, section 61. See Wichita County, 276 S.W.2d at
%ee id.
The Honorable Edwin E. Powell Jr. - Page 4 (GA-0145)
5 15 (holding that statute permitting county tax assessor-collector to retain portion of fee for issuing
title certificate as compensation in addition to county salary violated article XVI, section 61).
The legislature enacted section 154.005 of the Local Government Code in 1987 when it
repealed various statutes governing county officers’ compensation and codified them in the Local
Government Code. See Act of Apr. 30, 1987, 70th Leg., R.S., ch. 149, $5 1,49, 1987 Tex. Gen.
Laws 707,934,1307. A number of the repealed statutes authorized justices of the peace in counties
in various population brackets to retain local-registrar fees even if they received a county salary7
We have not located any judicial decision addressing whether a justice of the peace may receive fees
for issuing birth and death certificates in addition to his or her salary under the current statute or any
of its predecessors. And this office has not addressed section 154.005(a) of the Local Government
Code with respect to local-registrar fees. Significantly, however, several attorney general opinions
predating 1987 conclude that monies a justice of the peace receives for acting as a local registrar are
“fees of office” and suggest that such fees must be deposited in the county treasury pursuant to
article XVI, section 61.
In 1968, this office concluded that a fee a justice of the peace collects for issuing a birth or
death certificate is “a fee of office” because the justice of the peace certifies such records pursuant
to an official duty. See Tex. Att’y Gen. Op. No. M-25 1 (1968) at 7-8.’ As fees of office, the monies
must be paid into the county treasury and are not “a stipend that the Justice may retain.” Id. at 7.
Similarly, a 1979 opinion of this office addressed fees collected by a Dallas County justice of the
peace who served as local registrar for a registration district comprising both his precinct in Dallas
County and a portion of Tarrant County. That opinion concluded that all birth and death certificate
fees charged by the justice of the peace were “fees” within the meaning of article XVI, section 61
‘See Act of Nov. 14, 1935,44th Leg., 2d C-S., ch. 465, $ 19(c), 1935 Tex. Gen. Laws 1762, 1775 (enacting
former article 3912e, 9 19(c) applicable to justices of the peace who were paid on a salary basis in counties with a
population over 190,000); Act of Mar. 30, 1937, 45th Leg., R.S., ch. 171, 5 2a, 1937 Tex. Gen. Laws 351, 351-52
(enacting former article 3912e, 9 2a applicable to precinct offkers who were paid on a salary basis in counties with a
population less than 190,000); Act of Mar. 30, 1937, 45th Leg., R.S., ch. 81, 3 2(a), 1937 Tex. Gen. Laws 151, 152
(enacting former article 3912e-2(a) applicable to justices of the peace who were paid on a salary basis in counties with
a population over 355,000); Act ofMay 7, 1947,5Oth Leg., R.S., ch. 279, $2, 1947 Tex. Gen. Laws 482,482 (enacting
former article 3936e, 0 2 applicable to justices of the peace who were paid on a salary basis in certain counties with a
population between 23,000 and 27,000); Act of May 30,195 1,52d Leg., R.S., ch. 503, $2,195 1 Tex. Gen. Laws 1487,
1487 (enacting former article 39361, 9 2 applicable to justices of the peace who were paid a salary in certain counties
with a population not less than 30,000); Act of Apr. 11, 1957,55th Leg., R.S., ch. 110, $9 6, 10, 1957 Tex. Gen. Laws
23 1,23 l-32 (enacting former article 39 12i, $6 6, 10, which was not applicable to justices of the peace in counties with
a population over 600,000), all repealed by Act of Apr. 30, 1987,7Oth Leg., R.S., ch. 149, $49, 1987 Tex. Gen. Laws
707,1307.
*See aZso Tex. Att’y Gen. Op. No. S-70 (1953) at 2 (fees paid justices of the peace acting as local registrar are
accountable as fees of office and therefore cannot be retained by him).
The Honorable Edwin E. Powell Jr. - Page 5 (GA-0145)
and that they should be paid into the treasury of Dallas County. See Tex. Att’y Gen. Op. No. MW-8
(1979) at 2?
In addition, this office has concluded that the salary the commissioners court establishes for
a justice of the peace as required by article XVI, section 61 compensates a justice of the peace for
all his constitutional and statutory duties and that therefore a justice of the peace is not entitled to
additional compensation for performing any statutory duties as local registrar. See Tex. Att’y Gen.
Op. No. H-202 (1974) at 5. That conclusion is consistent with court decisions holding that the
legislature may impose additional duties on constitutional officers. See Harris County v. Hall, 172
S.W.2d 691,694 (Tex. 1943) (the legislature may impose on a public officer duties in addition to
those prescribed by the Texas Constitution, provided that those duties “are not inconsistent therewith
and are not prohibited by the Constitution”). Significantly, fees a county officer collects while
discharging such additional duties are fees of the county office under article XVI, section 61. See
Glass, 167 S.W.2d at 299 (county tax assessor-collector’s duties under Certificate of Title Act did
not pertain “to any separate agency or office” but were “merely duties added by statute to the office
of Assessor and Collector of Taxes” and fees collected by tax assessor-collector under the Act were
subject to article XVI, section 61).
This office has addressed section 154.005(a) of the Local Government Code to the extent it
permits a justice of the peace to retain fees for conducting marriage ceremonies. Section 154.005(a)
expressly permits a justice of the peace to receive fees for performing marriages in addition to a
salary, and section 154.005(b) provides that a county judge may do the same. See TEX. LOC. GOV’T
CODE ANN. 9 154.005(a)-(b) (V emon 1999). A number of attorney general opinions have concluded
that justices of the peace and county judges may charge a fee for conducting marriage ceremonies
and that the fee need not be deposited in the county treasury. See Tex. Att’y Gen. Op. Nos. DM-397
(1996), JM-22 (1983), S-70 (1953). Those opinions rely on the Texas Supreme Court’s holding in
Moore v. Sheppard, 192 S. W.2d 559 (Tex. 1946), that although public officials may not charge fees
for performing their official duties, they may charge and keep fees for services that they are not
legally obligated to perform. See id. at 560 (“The general principle prohibiting public officials from
charging fees for the performance of their official duties does not prohibit them from charging for
their services for acts that they are under no obligation, under the law, to perform.“). In that case,
the supreme court concluded that clerks of the courts of appeals were not required to account to the
state for money they collected for providing uncertified, unofficial copies of opinions because the
clerks had no statutory duty to furnish the copies, no statute fixed a fee for such services, and no
statute required the clerks to deposit money they received for the services in the state treasury. See
id. at 562.
9A 1941 opinion of this office concluded that justices of the peace may retain local-registrar fees in addition
to their annual salaries. See Tex. Att’y Gen. Op. No. O-4225 (1941) at 4. That opinion does not address article WI,
section 61, however, which did not apply to all justices of the peace until 1972. See Act of May 26,197 1,62d Leg., R.S.,
Tex. H.R.J. Res. 41, 6 1, 1971 Tex. Gen. Laws 4137,4137-38.
The Honorable Edwin E. Powell Jr. - Page 6 (GA-0145)
These attorney general opinions suggest that a fee for conducting a marriage ceremony is not
a “fee of office” for purposes of article XVI, section 61 of the Texas Constitution and that section
154.005 is constitutional with respect to the disposition of these fees because article XVI, section
61 does not mandate that a fee for performing a marriage must be deposited in the county treasury.
Although the Family Code authorizes justices of the peace and county judges, among others, to
conduct a marriage ceremony, see TEX.FAM. CODEANN. 9 2.202(a)(4) (Vernon 1998), they are not
required to exercise that authority, and no statute establishes a fee for this service. See Tex. Att’y
Gen. Op. Nos. DM-397 (1996) at 1, JM-22 (1983) at 1, S-70 (1953) at 1.l” Moreover, section
154.005(a)-(b) of the Local Government Code overcomes the general statutory requirement that all
fees collected by county officials must be deposited in the county treasury. See Tex. Att’y Gen. Op.
No. DM-397 (1996) at 2; TEX. Lot. GOV’T CODE ANN. $5 113.021(a) (Vernon 1999) (“fees . . .
belonging to a county shall be deposited with the county treasurer by the officer who collects the
money”), 154.003 (requiring district, county or precinct officer who is paid an annual salary to
deposit all fees as required by chapter 113, chapter B).
In contrast to justices of the peace who voluntarily conduct marriage ceremonies, a justice
of the peace who also serves as local registrar is required to provide certified copies of birth and
death certificates, and the fee for issuing these records is fixed by law. See TEX. HEALTH & SAFETY
CODE ANN. $8 191.0045(d) (Vernon Supp. 2004)’ 191.022 (Vernon 2001); 25 TEX. ADMIN. CODE
5 18 1.22 (2003). A fee for issuing a birth or death certificate is a justice of the peace “fee of office.”
See Tex. Att’y Gen. Op. No. S-70 (1953) at 2 (concluding that marriage fees are not accountable as
fees of office and a justice of the peace may retain them but that “[flees paid justices of the peace
acting as local registrar. . . are accountable as fees of office” and may not be retained); see also Tex.
Att’y Gen. Op. Nos. MW-8 (1979) at l-2, M-25 1 (1968) at 7-8. Accordingly, article XVI, section
61 requires that any fees a justice of the peace receives for issuing certified copies of birth and death
certificates must be deposited in the county treasury and may not be retained by the justice of the
peace as additional compensation. See Tex. Att’y Gen. Op. Nos. MW-8 (1979) at 8, M-25 1 (1968)
at 7-8. Therefore, section 154.005(a) of the Local Government Code is unconstitutional to the extent
it permits a justice of the peace to receive fees for issuing birth and death certificates in addition to
his or her annual salary established by the commissioners court. See Wichita County, 276 S.W.2d
at 5 15. Because a justice of the peace is not entitled to these fees in addition to a salary, we do not
reach your questions about how your county should respond to a request for such fees by a justice
of the peace.”
“Applying the same rationale, a 1942 opinion concluded that a justice of the peace acting as local registrar was
permitted to collect and retain fees for performing unofficial services not “enjoined or required by statute” for which no
fee was fixed by statute. See Tex. Att’y Gen. Op. No. O-4636 (1942) at 5.
“This opinion addresses section 154.005(a) of the Local Government Code to the extent it permits a justice of
the peace to receive fees for issuing certified copies of birth and death certificates in addition to his or her annual salary;
this opinion does not address any of the other fees governed by section 154.005. See TEX. GOV’T CODE ANN. $
311.032(c) (V emon 1998) (“In a statute that does not contain a provision for severability or nonseverability, if any
provision of the statute or its application to any person or circumstance is held invalid, the invalidity does not affect other
provisions or applications of the statute that can be given effect without the invalid provision or application, and to this
(continued...)
The Honorable Edwin E. Powell Jr. - Page 7 (GA-0145)
SUMMARY
Section 154.005(a) of the Local Government Code violates
article XVI, section 61 of the Texas Constitution to the extent it
permits a justice of the peace to receive fees for issuing certified
copies of birth and death certificates in addition to his or her annual
salary. A justice of the peace must deposit such fees in the county
treasury, and the fees may not be used to supplement the official’s
salary.
BARRY R. MCBEE
First Assistant Attorney General
DON R. WILLETT
Deputy Attorney General for Legal Counsel
NANCY S. FULLER
Chair, Opinion Committee
Mary R. Crouter
Assistant Attorney General, Opinion Conunittee
“(...continued)
end the provisions of the statute are severable.“). Moreover, other than concluding that a justice of the peace may not
retain fees for issuing certified copies of birth and death certificates as compensation, we do not address how the county
may use these fees after they are deposited in the county treasury. We do note, however, that section 19 1.022(f) of the
Health and Safety Code governs the use of a portion of a fee collected for issuing a certified copy of a birth certificate,
allocating “20 cents . . . to the registrar’s administrative costs” and “$1.80 . . . to the comptroller for deposit in the work
and family policies fund.” TEX. HEALTH & SAFETY CODE ANN. § 191.022(f) (Vernon 2001).