Untitled Texas Attorney General Opinion ( 1986 )


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  •                                  The Attorrwy       General of Texas
    July 17, 1986
    JIM MATTOX
    Attorney General
    Supreme Court Building        Mr. Llas B. "Bubba" Siteen             Opinion No. JM-523
    P. 0. BOX 12546
    Austin, TX. 7671% 2546
    Executive Director
    512,4752501                   State Purchasing and General           Re: Whether the city of Austin
    Telex 9101674-1367               Services Commiss:.on                may assess a capital recovery
    Telecopier  512/475-0268      P. 0. Box 13047, Cal'itolStation       fee on state construction pro-
    Austin, Texas   787:.1.                jects
    714 Jackson, Suite 700
    Dallas. TX. 752024506         Dear Mr. Steen:
    214/74&3344
    You ask whethlnr a home rule city may legally assess capital
    recovery fees against state construction projects. The city requires
    4624 AlbeRa Ave., Suite 164
    El Paso. TX. 799052793
    that the owner of any new construction must pay a capital recovery fee
    9151533-3464                  at the time a water t:apis purchased. The amount of the fee is deter-
    mined by the size and type of water meter required for the project.
    The fees are intentledto include both the actual costs of providing
    pl     Texas. Suite 700        new service to a specific site and the estimated proportional cost of
    ston, TX. 77002~3111
    I ,Y223-5866
    building and maintaining the general water infrastructure to meet the
    collective demands o:Eall new development. You assert that the city
    may not assess these fees against state construction projects.
    604 Broadway, Suite 312
    Lubbock. TX. 79401.3479             The question ,p:cesentedis one raised but left unanswered in
    80617476236
    Maverick County Watlz:Control and Improvement District No. 1 v. State,
    
    456 S.W.2d 204
    (Tel:.Civ. App. - San Antonio 1970. writ ref'd) and
    4309 N. Tenth, Suite S        Attorney General Opinion l&-551 (1982). A central question in
    McAllen, TX. 76601-1665       Maverick involved the nature of the charges -- whether they constl-
    512,662-4547
    tuted a tax or a special assessment.   Special assessments differ from
    general taxes insof,sras special assessments are levied only on land,
    200 Main Plaza, Suite 400     the amount based on the benefits conferred to the land; a special
    San Antonio, TX. 762052797    assessment is uniqw as to time and locality. See generally 
    456 S.W.2d 512122
    5-4191                  204, note 4 (cases cited therein); Londerholm V. City of Topeka, 
    443 P.2d 240
    (Kan. 196,s). The Maverick court held that state statutes
    An Equal Opportunity/
    clearly exempt stat,e property from taxation by a water control and
    Affirmative Action Employer   improvement district so long as the state holds full legal title to
    the 
    property. 456 S.W.2d at 206
    (relying on article 7150, V.T.C.S.,
    now replaced by Tex. Prop. Code 111.11); see also Tex. Const. art. XI,
    59; City of Beaumo:z:v. Fertitta, 
    415 S.W.2d 902
    (Tex. 1967). The
    court acknowledged 1:hatthe legal ramifications of special assessments
    differ from those of a tax, noting Wichita County Water Improvement
    District No. 2 v. l:ity of Wichita Falls, 
    323 S.W.2d 298
    (Tex. Civ.
    APP
    __ . - Fort Worth r359. writ ref'd n.r.e.) in which the court held
    that a city was 1:table for special assessments levied by a water
    p. 2403
    Mr. Lias B. "Bubba" Steen - Page 2   (JM-523)
    district. The court in Wichita County reasoned that a special assess-
    ment is not a tax withinthe meaning of constitutional and statutory
    provisions exempting public property from 
    taxation. 323 S.W.2d at 300
    . The Maverick court found it unnecessary to determine whether a
    special assessment is a tax for those purposes because it adopted the
    common law rule that a polil:icalsubdivision of the state cannot levy
    a special assessment  against state property without express legisla-
    tive authority. 456 S.W.;:d at 206-07. Attorney General Opinion
    MW-551 applied this reasoning to a home rule city and decided that a
    home rule city may not legally levy a drainage fee against state-owned
    property.
    On the other hand, home rule cities have full authority to do
    anything the legislature could authorize them to do. Lower Colorado
    River Authority v. City of San Marcos, 
    523 S.W.2d 641
    , 643 (Tex.
    1975). Accordingly, as a &neral rule, it is necessary to look to
    legislative limitations on the power of home rule cities rather than
    to specific grants of pow=::.. 
    Id. The Maverick
    court dealt with a
    water control and improvement district, a political subdivision which
    holds only the powers granted to it expressly or by necessary implica-
    tion by the constitution or statutes of this state. A home rule
    city’s powers, however, are limited to the area of Its jurisdictfon.
    The issue at hand has state-wide implications. Attorney General
    Opinion MW-551 applied the 'zaverickcase to a home rule city but did
    not address the different le:velsof power held by home rule cities and
    special districts. The sources cited by the Maverick court, however,
    suggest that its holding was intended to be broad. 
    See 456 S.W.2d at 207
    . note 6 (cases cited therein). Levying special assessments
    against the state requires authorization from the state legislature.
    See &     Accordingly, we conclude that the Maverick rule applies to
    n   political subdivisions, including home rule cities.
    Nevertheless, the impact of Maverick is limited.      The court
    stated:
    Even if it be ,assumed that a county or munici-
    pality is subject to special assessments levied by
    another political subdivision of the State, it does
    not necessarily follow that a subordinate political
    subdivision can impose an involuntary monetary
    obligation on the sovereign. It is generally held
    that, in the absence of clear legislative authorisa-
    don. a political :subdivisionof the State has no
    power to levy a special assessment against State
    property. [Footnote omitted]. We adopt this view
    at least in a case where, as here, the sovereign is
    neither making no; contemplating any use of the
    allegedly benefittid land and has neither received
    p. 2404
    Mr. Lias B. "Bubba" Steen - 'Page3    (JM-523)
    nor requested the services rendered by the assessing
    agency. (Emphasis 
    added). 456 S.W.2d at 207
    .        Similarly, Attorney General Opinion MW-551
    emphasized that it did    not purport to address a situation where the
    state acted in a manner   that indicated a willingness to pay a fee. In
    the question presented,   the :stateis requesting water service from the
    city.
    Maverick stands for the proposition that the city cannot impose
    an involuntary monetary &ligation on the state without express
    legislative authorization. Accordingly, the city cannot treat state
    property in the same manner as private property with regard to special
    assessments for local improvements. It does not follow, however, that
    the city cannot charge the state for the actual cost of extending
    service which the state expressly requests. As indicated previously,
    the fees in question are intended to include both the actual costs of
    providing new water service to a specific site and the estimated
    proportional cost of build:_ng the general infrastructure. To the
    extent that the city can dc:terminethe actual costs, both general and
    specific, attributable to faxtendingservice to the state, we do not
    believe that Maverick prevarnts the city from requiring the state to
    pay those costs as a cond::tionof extending service. The city may
    not, however, assess the s1:atefor its pro-rata share of the cost of
    local improvements which provide benefits that are too general to
    specifically apportion to each user.
    Further, we emphasize that any "exemption" for state property
    from special assessments by political subdivisions is limited to
    property used exclusively for public purposes. It is well-settled in
    Texas that the constitutLona1 and statutory exemption of state
    property from taxes applies only when the nrouerty is used exclusivelv
    for public purposes,. See Satterlee V. -Gulf Coast Waste Disposal
    Authority, 
    576 S.W.2d 77nTex
    .    1978); State V. Houston Lighting and
    Power Co., 
    609 S.W.2d 263
    (Tex. Civ. App. - Corpus Christi 1980. writ
    ref'd7r.e.);     Attorney C,eneral Opinion MW-430 (1982); -- see also
    Central Appraisal District of Erath County V. Pecan Valley Facilities,
    Inc., 
    704 S.W.2d 86
    (Tex. App. - Eastland 1985. no writ). We belfeve
    that the courts of this state would apply similar restrictions to the
    common law "exemption" from special assessments announced in the
    Maverick case. This conclusion finds support in the sources relied
    upon in Maverick. For example, one such source states the general
    rule as follows:
    Apart from constitutional or statutory authori-
    zation public property . . . used for public
    purposes is not liable to special assessment for
    local improvement:;..
    . . . (Emphasis added).
    p. 2405
    Mr. Lias B. "Bubba" Steen - Page 4      (JM-523)
    14 McQuillin, Municipal Corporations (3d. ed., rev.         1970) §38.73
    (cited in Maverick 
    County, 456 S.W.2d at 207
    , note 6).
    SUMMARY
    Without express constitutional or legislative
    authorization, a 'home rule city may not levy
    special assessmen:s; against state property which
    is used solely fo,cpublic purposes. This general
    rule, however, i.oes not prevent a city from
    c        requiring the state to pay the actual costs
    attributable to extending service to the state
    when the state recuests
    JIM     MATTOX
    Attorney General of Texas
    JACK HIGHTOWER
    First Assistant Attorney General
    MARY KELLER
    Executive Assistant Attorney General
    RICK GILPIN
    Chairman. Opinion Committee
    Prepared by Jennifer Riggs
    Assistant Attorney General
    p. 2406