Untitled Texas Attorney General Opinion ( 2001 )


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  •     OFFICE OF THE ATTORNEY GENERAL . ST.~TE OF TEXAS
    JOHN     CORNYN
    June 19,200l
    The Honorable Cheryl1 Mabray                               Opinion No. JC-0392
    Llano County Attorney
    P.O. Box 821                                               Re:     Whether, under section 776.019 of the
    Llano, Texas 78643                                         Health and Safety Code, a commissioners court
    that orders an election to create an emergency
    services district that will overlap with a rural fire
    prevention district is limited to ordering an
    election to authorize the levy of a two percent ad
    valorem tax (RQ-0352-JC)
    Dear Ms. Mabray:
    Section 776.019 of the Health and Safety Code requires a commissioners             court, upon
    granting a petition for creation of an emergency services district, to order an election to confirm the
    creation of the district and to authorize the levy of an ad valorem tax. You ask, in essence, whether
    a commissioners court that orders an election to create an emergency services district that will
    overlap with a rural fire prevention district is limited to ordering an election authorizing the levy of
    a tax not to exceed “two cents on each $100 of the taxable value of property taxable by the district”
    under subsection (a)(2) of that provision or whether, at least in some parts of the county, it may order
    an election authorizing the levy of a tax not to exceed “10 cents on each $100 of the taxable value
    of property taxable by the district” under subsection (a)( 1). See TEX. HEALTH & SAFETY CODE ANN.
    8 776.019(a) (V emon 1992). We conclude that when a proposed emergency services district will
    overlap with a rural fire prevention district, the commissioners court is limited to ordering an
    election to authorize the levy of a tax as provided in subsection (a)(2). The election throughout the
    proposed emergency services district must be to authorize the levy of a tax not to exceed “two cents
    on each $100 of the taxable value of property taxable by the district.” 
    Id. 9 776.019(a)(2).’
    We understand that the Llano County Commissioners Court is considering a petition for the
    creation of a countywide emergency services district. There are currently two rural fire prevention
    districts located within the county. You state that they “encompass separate areas within the county,
    ‘Recently enacted legislation, House Bill 2744, amends Health and Safety Code, section 776.019(a). See Tex.
    H.B. 2744,77th Leg., R.S. (2001). The Governor signed the bill on June 15,200l.      Subsection (a)(2) will be repealed
    and subsection (a) will be significantly revised when this bill becomes effective on September 1,200 1.
    The Honorable     Cheryl1 Mabray     - Page 2         (JC-0392)
    but. . . do not cover the entire county. Each of these fire prevention districts currently has taxing
    authority up to three cents on each $100 of the taxable value of property” within the district2
    You inform us that these rural fire prevention districts were created pursuant to article III,
    section 48-d of the Texas Constitution and section 794.018 of the Health and Safety Code. Section
    48-d authorizes the legislature to provide for the creation of rural fire prevention districts and
    “to authorize a tax on the ad valorem property situated in said districts not to exceed Three (36)
    Cents on the One Hundred ($100.00) Dollars valuation for the support thereof.” TEX. CONST. art.
    III, 5 48-d(a). Under section 794.018 of the Health and Safety Code, the ad valorem tax supporting
    a rural fire prevention district is limited to “three cents on each $100 of the taxable value of property
    taxable by the district.” TEX. HEALTH& SAFETY CODEANN. 3 794.018(a)( 1) (Vernon Supp. 2001).
    In Harris County, the tax may not “exceed Five (5#) Cents on the One Hundred ($100.00) Dollars
    valuation for the support of the district.” TEX. CONST.art. III, § 48-d(b); see also TEX. HEALTH &
    SAFETYCODE ANN. 8 794.018(a)(2) (Vernon Supp. 2001).
    Your questions pertain to the creation of an emergency services district under section 48-e
    of article III, which provides as follows:
    Laws may be enacted to provide for the establishment and
    creation of special districts to provide emergency services and to
    authorize the commissioners courts of participating counties to levy
    a tax on the ad valorem property situated in said districts not to
    exceed Ten Cents (106) on the One Hundred Dollars ($100.00)
    valuation for the support thereof; provided that no tax shall be levied
    in support of said districts until approved by a vote of the qualified
    voters residing therein.     Such a district may provide emergency
    medical services, emergency ambulance services, rural fire prevention
    and control services, or other emergency services authorized by the
    Legislature.
    TEX. CONST. art. III, 8 48-e. The legislature  has enacted two statutory schemes for the creation of
    emergency services districts, chapters 775 and 776 of the Health and Safety Code. Your questions
    pertain to creation of a district under chapter 776, which applies to counties with a population of
    125,000 or less. See TEX. HEALTH & SAFETYCODEANN. 6 776.003 (Vernon 1992).
    You specifically    ask about section 776.019, which provides in pertinent part as follows:
    (a) On the granting of a petition [for the creation of an emergency
    services district], the commissioners court shall order an election to
    2Letter from Honorable Cheryl1 Mabray, Llano County Attorney, to Honorable John Comyn, Texas Attorney
    General at 1 (Feb. 21,200l) ( on fl1 e with Opinion Committee) [hereinafter Request Letter].
    The Honorable    Cheryl1 Mabray     - Page 3        (JC-0392)
    confirm the district’s creation and authorize the levy of a tax not to
    exceed:
    (1) 10 cents on each $100 of the taxable value of property
    taxable by the district; or
    (2) two cents on each $100 of the taxable value of property
    taxable by the district if any area in the district is also included in a
    rural fire prevention district.
    
    Id. 9 776.019.
    Your questions are as follows:
    1. Does the statutory language of Section 776.019(a)(2) permit
    a county commissioners court to order an election limiting the taxing
    authority of an Emergency Service District to two cents on each $100
    of the taxable value of property taxable by the district, or does it
    require the commissioners court to do so?
    2. In either case, would the taxable property subject to the two
    cent limitation be only that lying within the rural fire prevention
    district, or would this limitation apply to all property within a
    proposed county-wide Emergency Service District?
    3. If the statutory language of Section 776.019 either permits or
    requires a county commissioners court to order an election limiting
    the taxing authority of an Emergency Service District to two cents on
    each $100 of the taxable value of any property taxable by the district,
    is the provision unconstitutional     in that it conflicts with Texas
    Constitution, Article III, Section 48-e, which appears to limit the
    Legislature’s authority only to authorizing affected commissioners
    courts to impose a tax “not to exceed Ten Cents (10 cents) on the One
    Hundred Dollars ($100.00) valuation”?
    Request Letter, supra note 2, at 2.
    We answer your first two questions together.        You ask, in essence, whether section
    776.019(a) limits the Llano County Commissioners Court to ordering an election to authorize the
    levy of a tax not to exceed two cents on each $100 of the taxable value of property taxable by the
    district or whether the Court may order an election to authorize the levy of a higher tax in some or
    all parts of the county. We conclude that section 776.019(a) limits the Llano County Commissioners
    Court to ordering an election to authorize the levy of a tax not to exceed two cents on each $100 of
    The Honorable    Cheryl1 Mabray    - Page 4        (JC-0392)
    the taxable value of property taxable by the district and that this limitation on the tax rate applies
    throughout the proposed district.
    In construing section 776.019(a), we are guided by the legal principle that “[tlhe power to
    tax belongs to the sovereignty.    It can only be exercised by a subordinate corporate body when
    delegated to it either by the Constitution or by the legislature . . . .” Tri-City Fresh Water Suppi’y
    Dist. No. 2 v. Mann, 142 S.W.2d 945,948 (Tex. 1940). As a result, “such power cannot exist by
    implication. A political subdivision of a state . . . has no inherent power to levy taxes, and if the
    power exists at all, it must be expressly granted.” Ripley v. Trinity River Canal & Conservancy
    Dist., 
    88 S.W.2d 752
    , 756 (Tex. Civ. App.-Dallas 1935, writ ref d) (cited with approval in 
    Mann, 142 S.W.2d at 948-49
    ). Given that the power to tax must be expressly granted, it follows that a
    statute conferring the power to tax “‘is to be strictly construed, and must be closely followed.“’
    Mann, I42 S.W.2d at 948 (citation omitted).
    Whereas subsection (a)( 1) of section 776.019 generally provides for an election to authorize
    the levy of a tax not to exceed ten cents on each $100 of the taxable value of property taxable by the
    district, subsection (a)(2) of that statute provides that a commissioners court shall order an election
    to confirm the district’s creation and authorize the levy of a tax not to exceed “two cents on each
    $100 of the taxable value of property taxable by the district ifany area in the district is also included
    in a rural fire prevention district.” TEX. HEALTH& SAFETYCODE ANN. 5 776.019(a)(2) (Vernon
    1992) (emphasis added). The subsection (a)(2) limitation on the tax rate is triggered if any area in
    the proposed emergency services district is also included in a rural fire prevention district. On its
    face, this limitation applies throughout the district. There is no provision in the statute or elsewhere
    in chapter 776 for ordering the election to approve a tax with varying rates in different areas of the
    district depending upon whether a particular area is also included within a rural fire prevention
    district. Nor does any provision in chapter 776 contemplate the levy and collection of such a tax.
    The power to order an election to confirm the levy of a variable tax may not be implied.
    Accordingly, we conclude that, when a proposed emergency services district will overlap with a rural
    fire prevention district, the commissioners court is limited to ordering an election to authorize the
    levy of a tax not to exceed two cents on each $100 of taxable property. The commissioners court
    may not order an election authorizing the levy of a tax with varying rates in different areas of the
    proposed district.
    You also ask about the constitutionality   of section 776.019. You suggest that section
    776.019 is unconstitutional    given that, in your words, article III, section 48-e “limit[s] the
    Legislature’s authority only to authorizing affected commissioners courts to impose a tax ‘not to
    exceed Ten Cents (10 cents) on the One Hundred Dollars ($100.00) valuation.“’ Request Letter,
    supra note 2, at 2. You appear to believe that under section 48-e the legislature is limited to enacting
    legislation authorizing a ten cent tax. We disagree.
    Counties and special districts’ authority must be express or necessarily implied from their
    express powers. The legislature, however, is not subject to the same constraints. Unlike counties
    and special districts, which must look to statutes and the constitution for grants of authority, the
    The Honorable    Cheryl1 Mabray    - Page 5        (JC-0392)
    legislature need only look to the constitution for express and implied limitations on its authority.
    That is because our state legislature is vested with the lawmaking power of the people by virtue of
    article III, section 1 of the Texas Constitution. See TEX. CONST.art. III, 4 1 (“The Legislative power
    of this State shall be vested in a Senate and House of Representatives, which together shall be styled
    ‘The Legislature of the State of Texas”‘). As this is the source of the legislature’s power, its
    authority is said to be plenary, its extent “limited only by the express or implied restrictions thereon
    contained in or necessarily arising from the Constitution itself.”            Government Sews. Ins.
    Underwriters v. Jones, 
    368 S.W.2d 560
    , 563 (Tex. 1963) (citing State v. Brownson, 
    61 S.W. 114
    (Tex. 1901)).
    Article III, section 48-e provides that “[l]aws may be enacted to provide for the establishment
    and creation of special districts to provide emergency services and to authorize the cornmissioners
    courts of participating counties to levy a tax on the ad valorem property situated in said districts not
    to exceed Ten Cents (106) on the One Hundred Dollars ($100.00) valuation for the support thereof.”
    TEX. CONST. art. III, 5 48-e (emphasis added). This provision, in using the words “not to exceed,”
    sets an upper limit on the ad valorem tax. It neither expressly nor impliedly limits the legislature to
    enacting laws authorizing only a ten cent tax, nor does any other constitutional provision.
    Accordingly, we conclude that section 48-e permits the legislature to enact laws authorizing the levy
    of a lesser tax. Section 776.019(a)(2), limiting the tax in an emergency services district that includes
    territory within a rural fire prevention district to two cents on each $100 of the taxable value of
    property taxable by the district, is constitutional.
    We note that you cite Attorney General Opinion JM-1010, which construed the statutory
    predecessor to chapter 775 of the Health and Safety Code, in support of your constitutional
    argument. In that opinion, this office addressed whether a commissioners court had the option of
    asking the voters to approve a lesser tax. The opinion concluded that a commissioners court lacked
    such authority under the statutory scheme. The opinion is equivocal about whether article III,
    section 48-e permits the legislature to authorize or require the levy of a tax of less than ten cents on
    each $100 of taxable property. See Tex. Att’y Gen. Op. No. JM-1010 (1989) at 3 n.2. Attorney
    General Opinion JM- 10 10 fails to recognize the difference between the limited authority of a county
    or special district to tax and the plenary authority of the legislature to enact laws. To the extent that
    JM-1010 suggests that article III, section 48-e limits the authority of the legislature to provide for
    the levy of a tax of less than ten cents, it is overruled.
    The Honorable   Cheryl1 Mabray     - Page 6           (JC-0392)
    SUMMARY
    In a county with a population of 125,000 or less, see TEX.
    HEALTH & SAFETY CODE ANN. 0 776.003 (Vernon 1992), when a
    proposed emergency services district will overlap with a rural fire
    prevention district, the commissioners court is limited to ordering an
    election to authorize the levy of a tax not to exceed “two cents on
    each $100 of the taxable value of property taxable by the district,” 
    id. 5 776.019(a)(2).
    This limitation does not violate article III, section
    48-e of the Texas Constitution.
    To the extent that Attorney General Opinion JM- 10 10 (1989)
    suggests that article III, section 48-e limits the authority of the
    legislature to provide for the levy of a tax of less than ten cents, it is
    overruled.
    Yo    s ve   truly,
    4J+-f-
    JOHN     CORNYN
    Attorney General of Texas
    ANDY TAYLOR
    First Assistant Attorney General
    SUSAN D. GUSKY
    Chair, Opinion Committee
    Mary R. Crouter
    Assistant Attorney General - Opinion Committee
    

Document Info

Docket Number: JC-392

Judges: John Cornyn

Filed Date: 7/2/2001

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 2/18/2017