THE ATTORNEY GENERAL
OF TEXAS
September 15, 1988
W. 0. Shultz II opinion No. J&j-953
General Attorney and
Associate General Counsel Re: Circumstances under
The University of Texas System which a county or public
201 West 7th Street hospital or hospital dis-
Austin, Texas 78701 trict is responsible for
payment for medical services
rendered to patients at M.D.
Anderson Hospital (RQ-1392)
Dear Mr. Shultz:
You ask whether a county, a public hospital, or a
hospital district is responsible for payment for services
rendered at the University of Texas M.D. Anderson Hospital
and Tumor Institute at Houston (hereinafter "M.D.
Anderson").
M.D. Anderson is ,governed by chapter 73 of the
Education Code. It is devoted to the "diagnosis, teaching,
study, prevention, and treatment of neoplastic and allied
diseases." Educ. Code 5 73.102. Each application for
admission to M.D. Anderson must be accompanied by a written
physician's statement that the patient has, or is suspected
of having, a neoplasm or allied disease. Educ. Code
s 73.108. Article 3196a, V.T.C.S., which governs hospitals
under the management and control of the Texas Department of
Mental Health and Mental Retardation, is also applicable to
M.D. Anderson, except to the extent of any conflict with
section 73.101 of the Education Code. Educ. Code 5 73.106.
Article 3196a provides, in part:
Section 1. Patients admitted to State
hospitals under the management and control of
the Texas Department of Mental Health and
Mental Retardation shall be of two classes,
to wit:
Indigent patients:
J
p. 4821
W. 0. Shultz II - Page 2 (JM-953)
Won-indigent patients;
oent watients are those who oossess no
prowertv of anv kind nor have anyone leaallv
resvonsible for their suvvort. and who are
unab
le U
shall be suwworted at the exoense of th:
&&g.
Non-indiaent vatients are those who
possess some wrowertv out of which the State
mav be reimbursed. or who have someone
leaallv liable for their suvvort. This class
shall be kept and maintained at the expense
of the State, as in the first instance, but
in such cases the State shall have the right
to be reimbursed for the support, mainten-
ante , and treatment of such patients.
Sec. 2. Where the patient has
sufficient estate of his own, he shall b"z
maintained at the expense:
Of the husband or wife of such person, if
able to do so;
Of the father or mother of such person, if
able to do so, provided such person is less
than 18 years old.
Child support payments for the benefit of
a patient paid or owing by a parent pursuant
to a divorce decree or other court order
shall be considered to be the property and
estate of the patient, and charges may be
made against such child support obligations.
The parent who is obligated to pay child
support on behalf of the patient shall be
given a credit against charges for which he
or she would otherwise be liable based on
ability to pay for the amount of child
support the parent actually pays for the
benefit of the patient. The parent who
receives the child support payments is liable
for the charges based on the child support
obligation to the extent such payments are
actually received in addition to the liabil-
ity of such parent based on ability to pay.
The department may, upon the failure of a
parent to pay child support in accordance
p. 4822
W. 0. Shultz II - Page 3 (JM-953)
with the child support obligation or upon the
failure of a parent to pay charges based on
the child support obligation, file a motion
to modify the court order to require the
child support to be paid directly to the
State hospital or facility in which the
patient resides for the patient's support,
maintenance, and treatment. The court may,
in addition, order all past due child support
to be paid to the State hospital or facility
to the extent that charges have been made
against the child support obligation.
(Emphasis added.)
In summary, non-indigent patients include persons who have
"someone legally liable for their support.11 The state is
entitled to seek reimbursement for care rendered to
non-indigents. You first ask whether the Indigent Health
Care and Treatment Act, article 4438f, V.T.C.S., makes
counties and public hospitals *'legally liable for We1
supportqlof certain individual so that those individuals can
be considered "non-indigents" for purposes of article
3196a.l
The Indigent Health Care and Treatment Act was enacted
in 1985 to clarify the obligations of counties and public
hospitals for indigent health care. Section 2.02 of the
Indigent Health Care and Treatment Act provides:
(a) Each county shall provide health care
assistance as prescribed by this title to
each eligible resident of that county who
does not reside within the area that a public
hospital or hospital district has a legal
obligation to serve:
(b) The county is the payor of last resort
and shall provide assistance only if other
-_1. The
_ Indigent
__ . . Health
_ .Care. and
_ _.Treatment
. Act does not
affect the ObligatiOnS Of nOSpitS diStrlCtS. see V.T.C.S.
443Sf, 55 11.02, 12.01(b). (Hospital.districts' obligations
in regard to indigent health care are governed by
constitutional and statutory provisions governing hospital
districts.) Therefore, we will consider your question about
hospital districts separately.
p. 4823
W. 0. Shultz II - Page 4 (JM-953)
adequate public or private sources of payment
are not available.
Se al Q f 2.03 (providing that eligibility depends on
inzomesand resources). Section 10.02(a) provides, in part:
Each public hospital shall provide health
care assistance as prescribed by this title
to each eligible resident of the area that
the hospital has a legal obligation to serve.
See also 9 10.02(b) (providing that eligibility depends on
income and resources). Section 12.01(e) provides:
A public hospital is the payor of last
resort under this title and is not liable for
payment or assistance to an eligible resident
of the area that the public hospital has a
legal obligation to serve if any other public
or private source of payment is available.
We conclude that those provisions do not make counties and
public hospitals "legally liable for [the] supportI'of any
individual.
In Attorney General Opinion JM-705 (1987), we addressed
an issue related to your question. The issue there was
whether an indigent's county of residence or the University
of Texas Health Center at Tyler (hereinafter the "Tyler
hospital") was liable for the indigent's treatment for a
heart disease at the Tyler hospital. The statutes governing
the Tyler hospital contain a provision that tracks section 1
of article 3196a:
Patients admitted to State chest hospitals
shall be two (2) classes:
(1) Indigent public patients and
(2) Non-indigent public patients.
(a) Indigent public patients are those who
possess no property of any kind nor have
anyone legally responsible for their support,
and who are unable to reimburse the State.
This class shall be supported at the expense
of the State.
V.T.C.S. art. 4477-11, 9 9 (Texas Tuberculosis Code). The
opinion concluded that the county was responsible for the
p. 4824
W. 0. Shultz II - Page 5 (JM-953)
indigent's treatment. The basis of the decision, however,
was that the provisions of article 4477-11 apply only to the
care and treatment of persons with tuberculosis. Therefore,
a person with a heart disease is not among the persons to be
supported at the expense of the state pursuant to section 9
of article 4477-11. Despite the conclusion that the county
was responsible for the health care of the individual in
question, however, the opinion indicated that the state
would be responsible if the indigent had been treated for
tuberculosis. Implicit in that is that the Indigent Health
Care and Treatment Act does not make the county someone
"legally responsible for [the] support" of its indigent
residents for purposes of article 4477-11, section 9.
We think that implication is correct and that it
applies to article 3196a as well as article 4477-11. The
Indigent Health Care and Treatment Act requires counties and
public hospitals to provide "health care assistance" under
specified circumstances. Ordinarily, "supports* includes
much more than "health care assistance." Parents are
responsible for the "supportl*of their children, and spouses
are responsible for the "support" of each other. Fam. Code
5 4.02. l%upportltin that context includes food, clothing,
shelter, as well as medical attention. Woodruff V.
Woodruff, 487 S.W.2d 791, 793 (Tex. Civ. App. - Texarkana
1972, Do writ). Because article 3196a specifically
identifies spouses and parents of minors as persons from
whom reimbursement may be sought, we think it as clear that
the word N1supportll
in article 3196a means someone such as a
parent or spouse who has an obligation to provide the
necessities of life. The Indigent Health Care and Treatment
Act creates a much narrower obligation, not an obligation to
*lsupport.llTherefore, persons for whom counties and public
hospitals must provide health care under the Indigent Health
Care and Treatment Act are not "non-indigents" for purposes
of article 3196a.2
2. You do not ask about article 2351(6), V.T.C.S, which
provides that each commissioners court shall:
Provide for the support of paupers and such
idiots and lunatics as cannot be admitted
into the lunatic asylum, residents of their
county, who are unable to support themselves.
A county is obligated to provide health care
assistance to eligible residents only to the
(Footnote Continued)
p. 4825
W. 0. Shultz II - Page 6 (JM-953)
Sections 2.02 (b) and 12.01(e) of the Indigent Health
Care and Treatment Act bolster our conclusion. Those
provisions state that counties and public hospitals are
payors of the last resort and are not responsible if other
adequate public or private sources of payment are available.
Those provisions make clear that the Indigent Health Care
and Treatment Act was not intended to relieve other public
entities of any obligations to provide health care.
You also ask whether a hospital district is "legally
liable for the support" of its needy inhabitants. Article
IX, section 9, of the Texas Constitution provides in part:
The Legislature may by law provide for the
creation, establishment, maintenance and
operation of hospital districts
providing that any district so created' shali
.
assume full responsibility for providing
medical and hospital care for its needy
inhabitants . . . .
Again, a responsibility to provide medical and hospital care
is not the equivalent of an obligation to "supportt'someone.
Therefore, article IX, section 9, of the Texas Constitution
does not make needy inhabitants of hospital districts
%on-indigents" for purposes of article 3196a.3
(Footnote Continued)
extent prescribed by the Indigent Health Care
and Treatment Act.
See aenerally Attorney General Opinion JW-815 (1987). In
any case, we think that the specific provisions of article
3196a and chapter 73 of the Education Code would control
over the general provision of article 2351(6). See State v.
Jones, 570 S.W.2d 122, (Tex. Civ. App. - Austr1978, no
. Article 2351(6) also indicates that medical care z
l!lri&)
only one aspect of l%upport.VV
3. Although you do not raise the issue, it has been
suggested that article IX, section 9, prohibits the state
from spending money for medical care for needy inhabitants
of a hospital district. We point out, though, that article
IX, section 9, prohibits other municipalities and political
subdivisions, not the state, from taxing to provide medical
care.
p. 4826
,
W. 0. Shultz II - Page 7 (JM-953)
All hospital districts are subject to the provisions of
the statutes under which they are created. Although we have
not reviewed all the statutes that create or allow the
creation of hospital districts, we are aware of none that
make hospital districts liable for the l'support*lof its
needy inhabitants.
SUMMARY
The Indigent Health Care and Treatment
Act, article 443Sf, V.T.C.S., makes counties
and public hospitals responsible for health
care for certain indigents: it does not make
counties or public hospitals liable for the
llsupportl'
of indigents. Therefore, article
4438f does not make indigents for whom
counties or public hospitals are obligated to
provide health care "non-indigents" for
purposes of article 3196a, V.T.C.S.
Article IX, section 9, of the Texas
Constitution makes hospital districts
responsible for medical care for their ~needy
inhabitants: it does not make hospital dis-
tricts responsible for the llsupportl'
of their
needy inhabitants. Therefore, article IX,
section 9, does not make needy inhabitants of.
hospital districts "non-indigents" for
purposes of article 3196a, V.T.C.S.
JIM MATTOX
Attorney General of Texas
MARY KELLER
First Assistant Attorney General
LOU MCCREARY
Executive Assistant Attorney General
JUDGE ZOLLIE STEAKLEY
Special Assistant Attorney General
RICK GILPIN
Chairman, opinion Committee
Prepared by Sarah Woelk
Assistant Attorney General
p. 4829