Judges: DAN MORALES, Attorney General of Texas
Filed Date: 1/28/1992
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 7/6/2016
Honorable Burton B. LeTulle Chairman, Board of Directors Lower Colorado River Authority P. O. Box 220 Austin, Texas 78767
Re: Whether "working interests" owned by the Lower Colorado River Authority in oil and gas wells in Fayette County are subject to ad valorem taxation (RQ-2163)
Dear Mr. LeTulle:
You have requested our opinion as to whether "working interests" owned by the Lower Colorado River Authority (hereinafter LCRA) in oil and gas wells in Fayette County are subject to ad valorem taxation. You explain that a "working interest" is "generally synonymous with the term leasehold interest. The working interest (or leasehold) owner has the exclusive right to exploit the minerals on the land." You indicate that LCRA purchased these leasehold interests in 1989, and currently owns interests varying between 24 and 100 percent in several oil and gas wells in Fayette County. You contend that this property is exempt from ad valorem taxation, a position which is challenged both by the Fayette County Appraisal District and the LaGrange Independent School District.
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In 1945, the Texas Supreme Court ruled directly on the status of LCRA for purposes of exemption from taxation under the constitution. In Lower Colorado River Auth.v. Chemical Bank
Trust Co.,
It thus appears . . . that LCRA is a governmental agency serving a public purpose in controlling and storing the flood waters of the Colorado River and that all benefits derived from its efforts are public benefits. Hence, its property is public property devoted exclusively to public use and is exempt from taxation under Art. X1, Sec. 9, of the Constitution.
This case does not end our inquiry, however. The LCRA case did not consider the type of facts at issue here. See State v. University of Houston,
Finally, in recent years the courts have emphasized the significance of the"used for public purposes" portion of the test.2 For example, two courts have declared that a medical office building owned by a political subdivision but leased to private physicians was not tax-exempt, even though the income from the property was used exclusively for public purposes. In Grand Prairie Hosp. Auth. v. Tarrant Appraisal Dist.,
In the situation you present, LCRA uses a relatively small portion of the gas it extracts for use in its power plants, and sells the remainder of the gas, and all of the oil, on the open market. LCRA uses the revenue obtained from these sales to purchase fuel for its power plants "and to off-set expenses incurred by LCRA in the generation and distribution of electricity." Because these circumstances are sufficiently similar to those at issue in the two cases involving Grand Prairie Hospital Authority, supra, the taxing entities have challenged LCRA's claim to an exemption. Such challenge fails to consider the crucial difference between land, on the one hand, and an oil and gas leasehold interest, on the other.3
An oil and gas lease, despite its name, is a sale or conveyance of real property, and it operates to transfer the oil and gas in place to the lessee. Lockhart v. Williams,
The second Grand Prairie case instructs that the test for determining whether public property is exempt from taxation is "whether the property in question is held only for public purposes and is devoted exclusively to the use and benefit of the public."
The determination as to whether the LCRA holds its mineral interests only for public purposes and devotes those interests exclusively to the use and benefit of the public involves questions of fact that cannot be resolved in the opinion process. To make such a determination, a finder of fact would likely consider such factors as the extent to which private entities are involved in the various stages of operation of the wells at issue, how and by whom the oil and gas is sold on the open market, and how the revenues from the sale of oil and gas are used. As we cannot inquire into these issues in the opinion process, we are unable to ultimately determine whether the LCRA's mineral interests are tax exempt.
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 Rick Gilpin Assistant Attorney General
(d) Property owned by the state that is not used for public purposes is taxable. Property owned by a state agency or institution is not used for public purposes if the property is rented or leased for compensation to a private business enterprise to be used by it for a purpose not related to the performance of the duties and functions of the state agency.
Apparently, this particular test is applicable only to state agencies and institutions rather than to all public bodies. However, the principle of section 11.11(d) is recognized as applicable, in the Grand Prairie cases, to other kinds of public entities.
Lockhart v. Williams , 144 Tex. 553 ( 1946 )
Grand Prairie Hospital Authority v. Tarrant Appraisal ... , 1986 Tex. App. LEXIS 12646 ( 1986 )
Satterlee v. Gulf Coast Waste Disposal Authority , 22 Tex. Sup. Ct. J. 66 ( 1978 )
Getty Oil Company v. Jones , 14 Tex. Sup. Ct. J. 372 ( 1971 )