Judges: DAN MORALES, Attorney General of Texas
Filed Date: 12/6/1991
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 7/6/2016
Ms. Jeannene Fox Acting Administrator Texas Alcoholic Beverage Commission P.O. Box 13127 Capitol Station Austin, Texas 78711-3127
Re: Rate of interest on delinquent tax payments under section 32(b) of the Bingo Enabling Act, V.T.C.S. art. 179d (RQ-210)
Dear Ms. Fox:
You have requested our opinion on whether article 13 of House Bill 11, passed during the First Called Session of the 72d Legislature, raised the interest rate on tax payments due under section 32(b) of the Bingo Enabling Act (the act), article 179d, V.T.C.S., from ten percent a year to twelve percent a year, compounded monthly. If we conclude that House Bill 11 did change the interest rate under section 32(b) from ten percent a year to twelve percent a year, compounded monthly, you request our opinion as to when the interest begins to accrue.
The act imposes a five percent tax on all taxable gross receipts1
from the conduct of bingo games. V.T.C.S. art. 179d, section 2A(a), (b), amended by H.B. 11, Acts 1991, 72d Leg., 1st C.S., ch. 5, section 11.02, at 183. All licensees conducting bingo games must submit quarterly financial reports to the Texas Alcoholic Beverage Commission (the commission) and the comptroller of public accounts and must submit quarterly gross receipts tax payments to the commission. V.T.C.S. art. 179d sections 2A(c), 23(a); see also
The act also provides the commission with the power, should it believe that the collection of any or all of a licensee's tax payment will be jeopardized by delay, to determine the amount of tax the licensee will owe. Id. Section 32(a). This amount of tax becomes due and payable immediately upon the commission's determination of the amount due. Id. Upon being served with notice of the commission's jeopardy determination, the licensee has twenty days in which to file a petition for redetermination or pay the tax. Id. Section 32(b). If the licensee fails to pay the amount the commission has specified within twenty days and fails to petition for redetermination, the commission will impose a delinquency penalty of ten percent of the amount due. Id. In addition, interest begins to attach to the delinquent principal and the penalty due. Id.
Before the legislature enacted House Bill 11, both sections of the act prescribing interest on delinquent tax payments, sections 29(b)2 and 32(b),3 specified an interest rate of ten percent a year. In article 13 of House Bill 11, however, the legislature amended section 29(b) of the act to state that "[d]elinquent tax shall draw interest at the rate provided by Section
Article 13 of House Bill 11 does not expressly amend section 32(b) of the act.4 As a result, the interest rate on delinquent tax payments due under section 32(b) is lower than the interest rate on delinquent tax in all of these other provisions, most notably section 29(b) of the act. Prior drafts of final House Bill 11, committee reports, and bill analyses make no mention of section 32(b) of the act; thus, we cannot infer that the legislature intended to amend section 32(b), but simply overlooked it in the final bill. Consequently, only if we find some evidence of a legislative intent to raise the interest rate in section 32(b), through statutory construction of the pertinent sections of House Bill 11 can we read a twelve percent interest rate into section 32(b).
When attempting to discern legislative intent from the words of a statute, we must presume that at the time the legislature enacted the statute, it knew of the existence of previously enacted statutes. See Gamer v. Lumberton Indep. School Dist.,
In addition to the presumption that the legislature knew about section 32(b) of the act when it enacted House Bill 11, the legislature's express amendment of section 29(b) of the act to incorporate the higher interest rate, as well as other amendments to the act elsewhere in House Bill 11,5 indicates that the legislature indeed was aware of the act's provisions when it enacted House Bill 11. By explicitly amending section 29(b) while leaving section 32(b) of the same act untouched, we believe the legislature purposefully chose not to raise the interest rate in section 32(b). Furthermore, section 32(b) in its unamended state does not render any other statutory provision inoperable, nor is it rendered inoperable by any other provision. In sum, we find no evidence that the legislature intended to raise the interest rate section 32(b) attaches to delinquent tax, and we therefore conclude that the interest rate in section 32(b) should remain ten percent a year. Because we reach this conclusion, we need not answer your second question.
Very truly yours,
DAN MORALES Attorney General of Texas
WILL PRYOR First Assistant Attorney General
MARY KELLER Deputy Assistant Attorney General
JUDGE ZOLLIE STEAKLEY (Ret.) Special Assistant Attorney General
RENEA HICKS Special Assistant Attorney General
MADELEINE B. JOHNSON Chair, Opinion Committee
Prepared by Kym Oltrogge Assistant Attorney General
Section 33 of the act states:
Subtitle B, Title 2, Tax Code, applies to the administration, collection, and enforcement of the taxes authorized or imposed under this Act except as modified by this Act. (Footnotes omitted.)
It has been suggested that section 33 raises the interest rate in section 32(b) because the rate of interest set in