Untitled Texas Attorney General Opinion

ATTORNEY GENERAL OF TEXAS GREG ABBOTT March 21,2003 The Honorable Florence Shapiro Opinion No. GA-0044 Chair, Senate Committee on Education Texas State Senate Re: Whether a home-rule municipality may P.O. Box 12068 operate a cemetery (RQ-06 14-JC) Austin, Texas 7871 l-2068 Dear Senator Shapiro: You ask whether a home-rule municipality may operate a cemetery. Chapter 711 of the Health and Safety Code sets forth various provisions relating to cemeteries. Section 711.02 1 thereof provides that “[a]n individual, corporation, partnership, firm, trust, or association may not engage in a business for cemetery purposes in this state unless the person is a corporation organized for those purposes,” and imposes certain requirements upon entities wishing to maintain and operate a cemetery. TEX. HEALTH & SAFETY CODE ANN. 5 711.021(a) (Vernon Supp. 2003). Subsection (g) of that statute, however, specifically declares that . 66[t]his section does not apply to,” inter alia, “a public cemetery belonging to this state or a county or municipality.” Id. 9 7 11.02 1(g). Section 7 13 .OO1 of the Health and Safety Code provides: The governing body of a municipality may: (1) purchase, establish, and regulate a cemetery; and (2) enclose and improve a cemetery owned by the municipality. Id. 8 713 .OOl . Because section 713.001 specifically fails to include the word “operate,” you ask whether the absence of “a specific grant of authority for the operation to be vested in a city” prohibits a home-rule municipality from operating a cemetery, thus requiring the city “to contract with a qualified corporation” under section 7 11.02 1. ’ ‘Letter from Honorable Florence Shapiro, Chair, Senate Committee on Education, to Honorable John Cornyn, Texas Attorney General at 2 (Sept. 30,2002) (on file with Opinion Committee). The Honorable Florence Shapiro - Page 2 (GA-0044) The authority to “purchase, establish, and regulate a cemetery” includes the authority to operate it. First, section 713.002(a) indicates that a municipality may operate a cemetery: “A municipality that owns or operates a cemetery or has control of cemetery property may act as a permanent trustee for the perpetual maintenance of the lots and graves in the cemetery.” Id. $ 713.002(a) (Vernon 1992) (emphasis added). Second, nothing in subchapter A of chapter 713, regarding municipal regulation of cemeteries, suggests that a municipality must contract with a private entity to operate a cemetery that the municipality itself owns. Finally, a home-rule city, unlike other types of municipality, by virtue of the home-rule amendment to the Texas Constitution, article XI, section 5, has broad authority to exercise all powers not prohibited by statute. See TEX. CONST.art. XI, 0 5; TEX. Lot. GOV’T CODEANN. 9 5 1.072(a) (Vernon 1999) (a home-rule “municipality has full power of local self-government”). A home-rule municipality need not look to the legislature for grants of power but only for limitations on its powers. Proctor v. Andrews, 972 S.W.2d 729, 733 (Tex. 1998). A legislative limitation on the authority of a home-rule municipality may be express or implied, but the intent of the legislature to impose such a limitation must appear with “unrnistakable clarity.” City of Sweetwater v. Geron, 380 S.W.2d 550, 552 (Tex. 1964). In the absence of any statutory limitation, either express or implied, on the power of a home- rule municipality to operate a cemetery, we conclude that a home-rule municipality is authorized to operate a cemetery. The Honorable Florence Shapiro - Page 3 (GA-0044) SUMMARY A home-rule municipality is authorized to operate a cemetery. Very tn.-$y yours, BOTT Attom neral of Texas BARRY R. MCBEE First Assistant Attorney General DON R. WILLETT Deputy Attorney General - General Counsel NANCY S. FULLER Chair, Opinion Committee Rick Gilpin Assistant Attorney General, Opinion Committee