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F I S C A L   I M P A C T   R E P O R T

 

 

 

SPONSOR:

Payne

 

DATE TYPED:

02/09/02

 

HB

 

 

SHORT TITLE:

Legal Representation of State

 

SB

353

 

 

ANALYST:

Sandoval

 

APPROPRIATION

 

Appropriation Contained

Estimated Additional Impact

Recurring

or Non-Rec

Fund

Affected

FY02

FY03

FY02

FY03

 

 

 

 

NFI

 

 

 

(Parenthesis ( ) Indicate Expenditure Decreases)

 

SOURCES OF INFORMATION

 
LFC files

 

Responses Received

Office of the Attorney General

State Land Office (SLO)

Department of Finance and Administration (DFA)

 

No Response

Office of the Governor

 

SUMMARY

 

Senate Bill 353 amends current language and enacts new language that establishes a much more defined role that the Attorney General is to have part in, when representing a governmental entity or an employee of that entity acting within the scope of his employment.  This bill mandates stronger communication between the Attorney General, entities represented by the Attorney General and the Governor.  When it appears that the Attorney General’s interest in a matter conflicts with the interests of an officer or employee that is being represented by the Attorney General, the officer or employee may employ independent legal counsel.

 

This bill also amends section 36-1-22 NMSA 1978 by taking the Attorney General out of this statute that authorizes the State’s district attorneys to compromise or settle a suit or proceeding, or grant a release or enter satisfaction in whole or in part, of a claim or judgment in the name of the county or take other appropriate action.  

 

     Significant Issues

 

The governmental entities that this bill refers to are the Governor, Lieutenant Governor, Secretary of State, State Auditor, Commissioner of Public Lands and a governmental entity subject to the executive direction of one of the foregoing officers.  

 

ADMINISTRATIVE IMPLICATIONS

 

This bill does not define how independent legal counsel is to be paid for.

 

TECHNICAL ISSUES

 

It would be advisable for the term “matter” (as used, for example, in the provision requiring the attorney general to keep the client agency “reasonably informed about the status of a matter”) to be defined in section 1 of this bill. 

 

According to the State Land Office there appears to be a conflict between Section 1 (conferring ultimate case management and settlement authority on the client agency) and Section 2(A)(1) (conferring power on the attorney general “to take any action on behalf of the state”).  A court would harmonize the two sections, but inserting “subject to Section 1” at the beginning of Section 2(A)(1) would eliminate any apparent conflict or source of dispute.

 

OTHER SUBSTANTIVE ISSUES

 

According to the State Land Office this bill would, “…transform the sometimes adversarial relationship between the attorney general and client agencies into a normal attorney-client relationship, giving the client express statutory authority to manage and compromise their own lawsuits.  This would be consistent with the commissioner’s constitutional jurisdiction over state public lands, also known as state trust lands, and his responsibility to optimize revenues from these lands in accordance with the New Mexico enabling act and state constitution.”

 

JFS/ar


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