Untitled Texas Attorney General Opinion

QBfficeof tfy Igttornep flheral %state of aexae August 6,199l Honorable Edmund Kuempel Opinion No. DM- 31 Committee on House Administration Texas House of Representatives Re: Whether a city may grant a home- P.O. Box 2910 stead exemption that would compro- Austin, Texas 78768-2910 miw its outstanding bond obligations (RQ-75) Dear Mr. Kuempel: We have been informed that in September 1990 the city of Camp Wood pledged all of its ad valorem tax revenues to the repayment of certain bonds. In January of 1991, the citizens of Camp Wood approved through a referendum election a proposition that the city grant a $50,000 homestead exemption from ad valorem taxes to resident taxpayers 65 years old or older or disabled. Our understanding is that an exemption of only $3,000 had been in place from the time the revenues were pledged until the adoption of the present exemption. There is grave concern that the application of the new exemption will impair the city’s debt obligations. You have requested an opinion from this office as to whether a city may grant a homestead exemption that would impair the city’s ability to pay debt service on its outstanding bonds. We have determined that such an exemption may not be applied under these circumstances. Section 11.13(d) of the Tax Code provides the following: In addition to [other exemptions] an individual who is disabled or. 65 or older is entitled to an exemption from taxation by a taxing unit of a portion (the amount of which is fixed as provided by Subsection (e) of this section) of the appraised value of his residence homestead if the exemption is adopted either: (1) by the governing body of the taxing unit; or Honorable Edmund Kuempel - Page 2 (DM-31) (2) by a favorable vote of a majority of the qualified voters of the taxing unit at an election called by the governing body of the taxing unit. . . . Subsection (e) provides that the amount of the exemption be $3,000 unless a larger amount is specified in the subsection (d) process of adopting the exemption. It is our understanding that the exemption at issue here was adopted in accordance with these statutory provisions. Section 11.13(i) addresses the propriety of granting an exemption that would cause an impairment of outstanding contract obligations: The assessor and collector -for a taxing unit may disregard the exemptions authorized by Subsection (b), (c), (d), or (n) of this section and assess and collect a tax pledged for payment of debt without deducting the amount of the exemption iE (1) prior to adoption of the exemption, the unit pledged the taxes for payment of a debt; and (2) granting the exemption would impair the obligation of the contract creating the debt.1 In the case of Camp Wood, the city pledged its ad valorem tax revenues to the repayment bonds in September 1990. As noted above, the exemption election took place the following January. Therefore, the facts of this case are within subsection (i)(l) of section 11.13.2 ‘section ll.U(d) of the Tax Code permits the adoption of the exemption at issue by a referendum election carried alit in accordance with that section’s requirements. There seems to be no question about the validity of the referendum vote in this case. *Set?also Tea. Const. art. 8,s l-b(b) (“Where any ad valorem tax has theretofore been pledged for the payment of any debt, the taxing officersof the political subdivision shall have authority to eontiaueto levyand CO&XI the tax againstthe homesteadpropertyat the same rate as the tax so pledged until the debt is discharged, if the cessation of the levy would impair the obligation of the contract by which the debt was created.“). Section ll.U(i) is a statutory restatement of the constilutional provision. 21 Howell, Property Taxes 0 208 (Texas Practice 1988,3d ed.). Accordingly, any inconsistency bchvecn the language of the constitutional and stahltory provisions should be resolved in favor of the former. Id We therefore construe the term “tax assessor and collector” in thr statute broadly to encompass the “taxing oficcrs” specified in the constitution. In some instances, as p. 143 Honorable Edmund Kuempel - Page 3 (DM-31) Both the U.S. Constitution and the Texas Constitution prohibit legislation impairing the obligation of contracts. U.S. Const. art. I, 8 10 cl. 1; Tex. Const. art. I, 5 16. This fact is critical to our determination of whether the city may grant the exemption at issue. It is well established that the constitutional prohibition applies to contracts made by states or municipalities, and that it applies to municipal by- laws and ordinances. Determonv. City of Irving,609 S.W.2d 565, 569 (Tex. Civ. App.-Dallas 1980, no writ), citing Von Hoffmanv. City of Quincy,71 U.S. 535 (1866), u&Atlantic Coast LineRR v. Cityof Goldrboro,232 U.S. 548, 555 (1914). The court in Detennanfound that an amendment to a city charter limiting the amount of yearly increases in ad valorem taxes was void as an impairment of the obligation of the contract between the city and holders of outstanding bonds to which the ad valorem taxes had been pledged. The court stressed that “the protection of the contract clause was activated by unquantified financial loss or the potentialfor financial loss resulting from a legislative act.” 609 S.W.2d at 570, citing UnitedStatesTrustCo. v. NewJersey,431 U.S. 1 (1977), and Cityof AransmPm v. Keeling,247 S.W. 818, 821 (1923) (emphasis added); see also Attorney General Opinion JM-453 (1986). Thus, if application of the homestead exemption in this case would impair the obligation of the pre-existing contract with the city’s bondholders, the exemption would be unconstitutional. Section 11.13(i) of the Tax Code is designed to deal with the circumstances that Camp Wood may be facing. Section 11.13(i) states that the assessor-collector of the taxing unit may disregard an exemption adopted pursuant to section 11.13(d)(2). Where granting an exemption would result in impairment of contractual obligations, the only constitutionally permissible course available to the tax assessor-collector is to deny the exemption.3 The homestead exemption at issue cannot validly be granted if doing so would impair the city’s ability to fulfill its pre-existing contractual obligations to bondholders. As this office cannot make factual determinations, we stress that this opinion does not constitute a finding that granting the exemption at issue would whenthctax assessor-collector is an employee of one of these entities, the taxiog officer may be a mayor, city manager, or lhe city coumil. 3 The word ‘may” in a statute is sometimes construed as mandatory when used to describe the duty of a public offkial to carry out functions that benefit private iudividuals. 1A Sutherland STATUTORYCONSTRUCTION 5 25.04 (4th ed. 1985); see also Supervisors v. Llnircd States, 4 Wall. 435, 438 (U.S. lJ366). p. 144 Honorable Edmund Kuempel - Page 4 (DM-31) impair the contract obligations here; rather, it instructs that a taxing unit’s ability to grant a duly adopted exemption is subject to constitutional limits. SUMMARY Under the Texas and the U.S. Constitutions, a city may not apply a homestead exemption approved by referendum in accordance with Texas Tax Code section 11.13(d) and (e) if doing so will impair the obligation of a contract creating a debt incurred by the taxing unit prior to adoption of the exemption. Texas Tax Code section 11.13(i) authorizes the taxing officers of the unit to disregard the duly adopted exemption when such circumstances exist. DAN MORALES Attorney General of Texas WILL PRYOR First Assistant Attorney General MARY KELLER Executive Assistant Attorney General JUDGE ZOLLKE STEAKLEY (Ret.) Special Assistant Attorney General RENEAHICKS Special Assistant Attorney General MADELEJNE B. JOHNSON Chair, Opinion Committee Prepared by Faith Steinberg Assistant Attorney General P- 145