ATTORNEY GENERAL OF TEXAS
GREG ABBOTT
August 15,2006
Mr. O.C. “Chet” Robbins Opinion No. GA-0448
Executive Director
Texas Funeral Service Commission Re: Applicability of chapter 711, Health and
Post Office Box 122 17 Safety Code, to a family cemetery (RQ-0440-GA)
Austin, Texas 78711
Dear Mr. Robbins:
You ask “whether an unincorporated family attempting to establish and operate a cemetery
solely for the interment of family members on family-owned property is a ‘cemetery organization’
required to comply with the survey, filing and dedication requirements of Health and Safety Code,
tj 711.034.“l The Texas Funeral Service Commission (“Commission”) does not construe section
7 11.034 to apply to a family-owned cemetery. See Request Letter, supra note 1, at 3. You inform
us that the Commission’s interpretation is not accepted throughout Texas and that at least one county
“refuses to allow a family to inter a deceased family member on family-owned property.” Id.
You state the family is an “unincorporated family.” See id. at 1. We understand you to mean
that the family members have not taken formal steps to create a corporate entity. At the same time,
you do not state whether the family members have prepared or operate under articles of association.
See id. at l-3. We therefore believe that you inquire only about a family as that term is ordinarily
understood.
Section 711.034 of the Health and Safety Code imposes certain dedication requirements on
“cemetery organizations.” TEX.HEALTH & SAFETY CODE ANN. 5 711.034 (Vernon 2003). Section
7 11.034 requires a “cemetery organization” to survey and subdivide cemetery land into plots and to
make a map or plat of the property. See id. 5 7 ll.O34(a)( 1). The “cemetery organization” is required
to “file the map or plat with the county clerk of each county in which the property or any part of the
property is located.” Id. § 711.034(b). Along with the map or plat, a “cemetery organization” must
dedicate the property “exclusively to cemetery purposes.” Id. (j 711.034(c). You inquire only about
‘Letter from O.C. “Chet” Robbins, Executive Director, Texas Funeral Service Commission, to Honorable Greg
Abbott, Attorney General of Texas (Feb. 2, 2006) (on file with the Opinion Committee, also available at
http://www.oag.state.tx.us) [hereinafter Request Letter].
Mr. O.C. “Chet” Robbins - Page 2 (GA-0448)
the provisions of section 711 .034.2 see Request Letter, supra note 1, at 1. To answer your question,
we must determine whether a family interring remains on family-owned property is a “cemetery
organization.”
A “cemetery organization” is defined in chapter 711 as
an unincorporated association of plot owners not operated for
profit that is authorized by its articles of association to
conduct a business for cemetery purposes;3 or
(W a corporation, either for profit or not for profit, that is
authorized by its articles of incorporation to conduct a
business for cemetery purposes.
TEX. HEALTH & SAFETY CODE ANN. 5 711.001(3) (Vernon Supp. 2005). Because the family is
unincorporated, by definition it is not a corporation organized for profit or not for profit. We
therefore conclude that a family is not a “cemetery organization” under subsection 7 11 .OO1(3)(B).
Thus, the family is a “cemetery organization” only if it is an “unincorporated association of
plot owners.“4 Id. 5 7 11 .OO1(3)(A). Chapter 7 11 does not define an “unincorporated association of
plot owners,” but does provide that it is excluded from the section 711.021 requirement that entities
engaged in the business of cemetery purposes be organized as a corporation. See id. $7 11.02 1(g)(2)
(Vernon 2003). A “family, fraternal, or community cemetery that is not larger than 10 acres” is also
excluded from this corporate structure requirement. Id. 9 7 11.02 1(g)( 1). Because these exceptions
are listed in section 711.021 as two separate exceptions, they must be different from each other. If
they were identical, the inclusion of both exceptions would be redundant, a result which is to be
avoided. See Henry v. Kaufman County Dev. Dist. No. 1,150 S.W.3d 498,507 (Tex. App.Austin
2004, pet. granted) (“A statutory construction that creates a redundancy is to be avoided.“). Thus,
a “family . . . cemetery” is not an “unincorporated association of plot owners not operated for profit.”
TEX.HEALTH& SAFETYCODE ANN. 5 711.021(g)(l),(2)(V ernon 2003). We therefore conclude
2Because you inquire only about the applicability of section 7 11.034, we limit our opinion to that section of
chapter 7 11.
3”Cemetery purpose” is defined as “a purpose necessary or incidental to establishing, maintaining, managing,
operating, improving, or conducting a cemetery, interring remains, or caring for, preserving, and embellishing cemetery
property.” TEX. HEALTH& SAFETYCODE ANN.5 711.OOl(4) (Vernon Supp. 2005).
4A plot owner is a person “(A) in whose name a plot is listed in a cemetery organization’s office as the owner
of the exclusive right of sepulture; or (B) who holds, from a cemetery organization, a certificate of ownership or other
instrument of conveyance of the exclusive right of sepulture in a particular plot in the organization’s cemetery.” TEX.
HEALTH& SAFETYCODEANN. 5 7 11.OOl(26) (Vernon Supp. 2005). You do not provide us specific information on the
operation of the family-owned cemetery but we doubt that the members of the family fall within the defmition of “plot
owner.”
Mr. O.C. “Chet” Robbins - Page 3 (GA-0448)
that a family is not a “cemetery organization” under subsection 711 .001(3)(A). Because it is not a
“cemetery organization,” a family is not subject to the requirements of section 711.034?
‘We note that the Texas Funeral Service Commission agrees with our conclusion. See Request Letter, supra
note 1, at 3 (“In this agency’s interpretation, a family described in the second paragraph of this request is not a cemetery
organization within the [section] 7 11.OOl(3) definition of the term.“); see id at 1 (describing in the second paragraph
an “unincorporated family attempting to establish and operate a cemetery solely for the interment of family members on
family-owned property.“). The Commission’s reasonable interpretation is entitled to deference. See Flares v. Employees
Ret. Sys. of Tex., 74 S.W.3d 532,545 (Tex. App. -Austin 2002, pet. denied) (“An administrative agency’s construction
or interpretation of a statute, which the agency is charged with enforcing, is entitled to serious consideration by reviewing
courts, so long as that construction is reasonable and does not contradict the plain language of the statute.“); see TEX.
OCC. CODEANN.ch. 65 1 (Vernon 2004 & Supp. 2005) (entitled “Cemetery and Crematory Services, Funeral Directing,
and Embalming”).
Mr. O.C. “Chet” Robbins - Page 4 (GA-0448)
SUMMARY
A family is not a “cemetery organization” subject to section
711.034 of the Texas Health and Safety Code.
Very truly yours,
eneral of Texas
KENT C. SULLIVAN
First Assistant Attorney General
ELLEN L. WITT
Deputy Attorney General for Legal Counsel
NANCY S. FULLER
Chair, Opinion Committee
Charlotte M. Harper
Assistant Attorney General, Opinion Committee