Untitled Texas Attorney General Opinion

The Attorney General of Texas March la..1985 JIM MAlTOX Attorney General Supreme Court Bullding Mr. CharlesD. Travis Opinionlo. Jn-299 P. 0. Box US43 gxecutivcDirecto:c *uettn. TX. 7S711.2540 Texas Parhs 6 Ulld:llfe Be: Constltutlonalityof article 5t214752m Department 7467a. V.T.C.8.. which authorizes Telex 010187Cl3S7 Telecopier 512M75-02SS 4200 Smith School Iload specifiedmunicipalitiesto acquire Austin,Texas 7w44 state streambedsby annexation 714 Jackson, Suite 700 Dear Wr. Travis: D*llm. TX. 7S2024.506 214miaw You questionthe coustitutiouality of an uucodifiedstatutewhich authorlees certarluqualifying ~nlclpalltles to acquire, through 4824 Albrtl Ave.. Suite loo anuexatiousubicb are effected pursuant to other authority,the beds El PMO. TX. 7990527S3 of state-ownedv~.tercourses.Acts 1925, 39th Leg., ch. 155. at 366 OlB3454 (V.T.C.S.art. 7467a). In particular,you express wncern about a municipality'samnexetion of only the beds of watercourses for the 4W1 Texas, Salt. 7W sole purpose of assumingovuersbip of the,beds from the state. Your ,u*on. TX. 770024111 request results f'rouanticipationof conflictsbetveen the Parks and /1- WildlifeDepartmeatand municlpalltlesvith regard to the department's responsibilitytc uauage and protect the sand and gravel In state- ouned streau and riverbeds. SW Broadway, Suita 312 Lubbock, TX. 7mo1-3479 Sw7476231) Article 7467~ providesas follows: Section 1. The State of Texas hereby relin- 4303 N. Tenth. Wt. S MCAml. TX. 7SSol-lSS3 quishes,quit claims and grautsunto all incorpor- 512MS2.4547 ated cJ,tiesand towns that have a population of forty thousandinhabitants,or more, accordingto the 1923 census,all of the beds and channels,and 200 Main Plaza. suit* 400 alao al.1of the abandoned beds and channels. of Sen Antonlo, TX. 182052797 512’2254101 all rlvc:rs,streams aud other chauuels thet are nou or that my hereafterbe vithin the preseutor futurecorporate llmlta of such cities or touns, An Equal OppWtunltYl In so Tar as the beds and channels, and such Afflrmatlw Actlon Em~Ioyer abandoned channels, of such rivers, streams and other channels uay be owoed or claimad as the propertyof said State. Sec. 2. The fact that such incorporatedcities and tams through which rivers and streams may flow end channels may exist may be hindered in their civic iuprweuenta by reasou of the State's claim of property rights therein. creates an emergeucg, and an imperative public necessity p. 1344 Mr. CharlesD. Travis - Psge 2 (315299) exists that the constitutionalrule requiring bills to be read upou three separatedays In each Rouse be suspended and that this Act be placed upon its third reading and fiual passage aud take effect from aud after its passage. and it IS SO enacted. (Enphasisadded). In addition to a general cmstftutional challenge,you suggest that the first underscoredclauea, in section 1. as a grant in advance of state-ownedproperty,is cor.atitutiouallysuspect insofar as It sllows the specifiedmmlclpalitle~~,,rather then the state, to determinethe amount of state propertyth#)tthe uuniclpalitieewill "acqu1re.s As a preliminarymatter, we euphaslaethat article 7467a applies only to "incorporatedcltiecland tovns that have a populationof forty thousand inhabitsnte.or uore. according to the 1920 census. . . ." V.T.C.S. art. 7467a. Il. :?orexample, because of this requirement, the Texas Supreue Court ir.Waufrais v. State, 180 S.W.Zd 144, 146 (Tex. 1944). held that art!.c:le7467a does not extend to the city of Austin because the city lathed the requleitepopulationas of the 1920 ceueus. Consequently,the Imope of the act Is limited. Several courts have dlscueeedbriefly the general epplicablllty of article 7467a without questioning Its validity. See, e.g., Coastal IndustrialWater Auc‘horlt v. York, 532 S.W.Zd 949. 951 (Tex. 1976); Waufrais v. State, '--146; ,180S.W. State v. Bradford, 50 S.W.Zd 1065, 1078 (Tex. 1.932);Bogus v. Glover. 302 S.W.Zd 757, 761-762 (Tex. Civ. App. - Wsco 1957. writ ref'd n.r.e.). Wane of the reported cases, however, vaa called upon to directly address the couetitutionality of the act.. War have any reported cases discussed the nature and extent of tie interestrelinquishedby article 7467a. Consequently; analysis of your request requires consideration of uumeruuebasic principlesapplicableto submergedlaude. Texas holds its submecned lands as state property In trust for the public. Tar. Conet. art: XVI, 159(a); Carritherev. Ter-r Beach c-llity 1mPrw-nt ~)B"II--665 S.W.Zd 772 (Tex. 1983), cert. ii=:- denied, 104 8.Ct. 422; Hea.-.__ i& ---- af -- Refue, ~--- 103 S.W.Zd 728 7 Tex. m State v. Bradford.56B.W.2d . 1932). State ownership axtende- -navigableand to certain mm-navigable vater- courses. San Antonio River Authorityv. Lewis, 363 S.W.Zd 444, 447 (Tex. 1963);Beard v. Tovn Df Refuglo.103 S.W.Zd, et 730-3l;.seeTex. Water Code 121.001(3). Subject to conetitutional limlte, the wet to control the dieuositionof ;,tateproperty resides in the legislature. See Conlev v. Dauehters of the keuubli& 156 S.W. 197 (Tex. 1913). reh'g denied. 157 S.W. 937:-AttornevGentera1 Opinion WW-62 (1979);see alan c .__ Arcnmr -----..iy ~&&al 6&tht W-356 (1969) (certain reappropriation6 ofarouerty may require constitutionalauendment). The legislature may~reiinquisb~titleto the land beneath public waterways. State v. Bradford.50 S.W.Zd, at 107:B; Moore v. Asbbrook, 197 S.W.Zd 516, 518 p. 1345 3 Hr. CharlesD. Travis - Page!3 (JM-299) (Tex. Civ. App. - San Antonio 1946, writ ref’d); Attorney General OpinionIN-489 (1982). Because submergedlands are impressedwith a public trust. grants vhicb Include the beds of public watewaye must be express and are strictlyconstruedagainst grantees. State v. Bradford,50 S.W.Zd, at 1075; Beard v. Town of Refl$i&, 103 S.W.Zd. at 732; Attorney General OpinionsMW-489 (1982);H-E,81(1976). The languageof article 74678. however,deals expresslyend exclusivelywith the beds and channelsof watercoursesthat are owned or may be claimed as the~propertyof the state. Therefore, the pjvotal questions include (1) whether any constitutionalprovisionsllreventthis kind of relinquishmentat all or prevent the manner in which the state relinquishesthe submerged lands, and (2) the nature end extent of the interestrelinquished. Oue constitutionalprovisionin particularprovides that certain public lands are dedicatedto the public free school fund. Article VII, section 2 of the Tex;tsConstitutiondetermineswhich lands are part of this fund: All funds, lands and other property heretofore set apart and cl$lpropriated for the support of public schools;a,11the alternatesectionsof land reserved by the State out of grants heretofore made or that may b,ereafter be made to railroadsor other corporationsof any nature whatsoever; one half of the public domain of ,the State; and x sums of money thaii: may come to the State from the sale of any port& of the same, shall constitute a perpetualpubli;:school fund. (Emphasisadded). See also Tex. Coast. art. VII, 114, 5; State v. Bradford, 50 S.W.Zd. at 1073. The Texas SupremeCourt:In State v. Bradford,50 S.W.Zd, at 1075. examined section 2 of artj,cleVII and concludedthat the draftersof the Texas Constitutiondid not intend article VII, section 2. by its terms, to appropriatethe beds of navigablewatercoursesto the school fund. Thus. articleVII, Ilection 2. does not, independentof legiela- tlon, sutomaticallyplace one-halfof the beds of public watercourses in the public free school.fund. State v. Bradford, 50 S.W.Zd. at 1075; Attorney General 0p:LnioneE-881 (1976); M-356 (1969); C-90 (1963); V-987 (1950). Moreover, although the legislature has extensiveauthority to de~.ermine what shall initially constitutethe school fund’s one-half of the public domain, once appropriated,the leglslsture’saction is final. Hague v. Baker, 45 S.W. 1004, 1005-106 (Tex. 1898); AttorneyGene,calOpinionsE-881; M-356. The Bradford court alSo consideredwhether the “SettlementAct of Pebruaa 23, 1900” placed the beds of navigable streams in the permanentschool fund. Acta 1900. 26th Leg., 1st C.S., ch. 11. at 29. p. 1346 Mr. CharleaD. Travis - Page 4 (J&299) After citing numerous statuteswhich were enacted subsequentto the Act of February 23. 1900 and vhich dealt expresslywith the beds of uavigablawatercourses,the court concluded that this later legiala- tion was pateutly inconsistentwith the conteutionthat the legisla- ture iuteudedthe Act of Pehruery23, 1900 to set apart and grant such public landa to the permanent school fund. 50 S.W.2d. at 1073-75. Couaequently,aa of the time when article 7467a was enacted,March 30, 1925, the atate atill held the beda of uavigablewatercoursesin trust for the public; the river bed portion of the public domain had not been dedicatedto the permanentfree school fund or otherwisegranted to any other individual(a)or entity(s). During the same legislativesessionwhich spawned article 7467a. the Thirty-ninth Legislature emphasized that river beds were not dedicated to the permanent school fund by passing article 4026. V.T.C.S.,which provided thrt All of the public rivers . . . togetherwith their beda and bottoms, and all of the productsthereof, ahall continue sod remain the property of the State of Texas exkpt in so far as the State shall permit the uae o:rsaid waters and bottoms. . . . (Emphaaiaadded).- This act was repealedby the Sixty-fourthLegislature,Acts 1975, 64th Leg.. ch. 545, )2(a)(2),at.1804, and replacedwith substantiallythe same language.by aectiou l.Dll of the Parks and Wildlife Code. Thus. the prwiaiou. as originaLlyenacted in article 4026. is relevant to the validity of article 7467a in light of the provision dealing with the pexmanentschool fund because it shove that thia land was not part of the fund. It is also relevant to the nature and extent of the interestrelinquishedby article7467a. The previous diacussim.demonstratesthat the state's stream and river beds bad not been dedicatedto the permanent school fund prior to the enactment of atticlo 7467a. Because article 7467a operates to relinquish atate river beds at various times to qualifying muuiclpalitiesas those cities grow, dedications to the permanent school fuud mede subsequentto the enactmentof article 7467a are also relevant. Later dedicatio~na. however, do not invalidate article 7467s; rather, they affect the uature and exte.utof the interest relinquished. As will be men, they affect the extent of,the Interest relinquishedbecause at diatessubsequent to the passage of article 7467a. the legislaturedid dedicatedifferentportions of the estate in its river beds to the permanent school fund. Article 7467a purports only to relinquilll the interest in state stream and river beds vhich "may be owued ,,I:claimed as the property of said State." Thus, the act caunot and does not operate to relinquishan interestof which the state haa otherw:.sedisposed. p. 1347 nr. CharlesD. Travis - pagt 5 (a-299) In 1921. prior to the snactmantof article 7467a. the legislature enacted a provisionwhich t.1)transferredall unexpendedmoney in the state treasuryat that time to the credit of the Game. Fish and Oyster Fund which had been receivedas or from royalty on oil and gas leases issued upon river beds to the availablepublic free school fund, and (2) dedicated all sums of money received thereafteras royalty upon oil and gas leasesfrom leases issued upon river beds to the available public free school fund. Ac:ta1921, 37th Leg., ch. 55. The interest relinquishedby article 7467a is subject to and limited by this royaltylatereat. Similarly,subsequentto the passage of article 74678 and sub- sequent to the Texas Supreme Court's decision in Bradford, the legislaturededicatedall the income from the mineral developmentof the state'sriver beds to zbe permanentschool fund. Acts 1935, 44th Leg., ch. 140, 12, repealedby Acts 1969. 61st Leg., ch. 51, at 3025. Section 15.01(a)(6)of the Texas EducationCode replacedthe provision and provides for the same dedicationof the income from the mineral developmentof submargedlrds. In 1939, the legialatwcesevered the surface and mineral estates in the state'sriver beds 2nd granted the entire mineral estate in the state's river beds to the permanent school fund. Acts 1939, 46th Leg., ch. 3, at 465 (V.T.C.,S.art. 5421c-3. 12. nou repealed). The provisionwas repealedin 1.5177.and replacedwith section 11.041(a)(l) of the Taxes Aatural ResourcesCode. Acts 1977, 65th Leg., ch. 871, at 2689. The state mav cause such a horizontal severance of the surface and mineral es&cs in its submerged lands. State v. AranaasDock and channelCo., 365 S.W.2d 220. APP. - San Antonio 1963,v&t ref'd). The interest relinquishedby article 7467a does not include the royaltyinterestdedicatedto the availablepublic free school fund in 1921. Similarly,any reljnqulshmentwhich became effectiveor which may become effectiveupon 1:beexpansionof the boundariesof qualified cities and touna, as envisionedby article 7467a. subsequentto the grant in 1935 of the minoral estate income from river beds to the permanentfund and to the 8rant in 1939 of the mineral estate itself in river beds to the permanentfund, does not include these interests. Once the legislaturehas dedicatedland to the permanent school fund, it cannot reeuurooriatethe:land without a constitutionalamendment. Hague v. Bake;, 4'5S.U. 1004; Eyl v. State, 84 S.W. 607, 611 (Tex. Civ. App. 1904.writ ref'd:,;; AttorneyGeneral GpinionaE-881;M-356. No other statutesgrcurta greater interest in the state's sub- merged river bed lauds to another entity or individual. But see Tex. Nat. Ites.Code 511.041(a)(3)(Texas-Gulfof Mexico tidelandsgrant to school fund not limitedto mineral estate and could include tidewater portions of river beds); see, e.g., Attorney General Opinions H-881 (1976); C-90 (1963). You sapeciallyexpress concern about sand and gravel. Sand and gravel ace not. however,mineralswithin the meaning p. 1348 l4r.Charles0. Travis - Page 6 (m-299) of the ststutea recodifiedin section 11.041 of the Natural Resource Code. See Moser v. United !jtatesSteel Corporation,676 S.W.2d 99, Eeinatev. Allen, 217 S.W.Zd 994, 997 these surface substances are excluded from dedicationof the mineral estate to the public free school fund. See Attornay General Opinion C-%1. Control of these substancesdepex upon other statutoryprovisitrr~s to be discussedlater. Two other constitutionalprovisions deserve mention at this point. Article III, section 51 of the Texas Constitutiondenies the legislature the power to stake any grant of public money to any Individualor entity. Secti,on59a of article XVI indicatesthat the conservation,development,and preservationof all natural resources related to rivers and atreasa in the state are declaredpublic rights and duties. As indicatedpreviously.Texas courtshave held that the legials- Cure mav relinaulsh title i:o the land beneath eublic watercourses. Stats v: l!radfo>d,50 S.W.2d, at 1078; Moore v. 'Ashbrook.197 S.W.2d at 518; Attorney General Opia~lon MW-489. Occasionally,the public use and enjoymentof propertyurder navigablewaters "may be promoted and increased.bv allowinn vortioua of it to become orivata orooertv." Coastal Industrial W%r v. York, 532 S.W.26, at 953 rhrlthority (quotingfrom City of Calvesionv. Menard, 23 Tex. 349, 393 (1859). The Texas Supreme Court.in State v. Bradford, consideredboth article III. section 51 and .articleXVI, section 59a. in the context of the "Small Bill." article 5414a. V.T.C.S.,50 S.W.2d. at 1076-77. Analysis of the court's trwtment of these provisionsis helpful to the case at hand. The "Seal1 Bill" is a retrospectiveact which "validated" the titles to lands whose surveys had been made across streams subsequentlyclaimed to be aavlgable. With regard to article III, section 51, the court held that the "Small Bill" was valid because the state had received and retained cousiderationfor the patents and awards validate&by the act. 50 S.W.Zd.at 1077. Similarly,the act was expresslyheld not to contravenesection 59a of articleXVI because the act reserves to the state. and the public generally, and excepts from the operatiou of the act, the natural resources located in the river beds sffectedand, by :Lmplicatiou. the uecessaryaccom- panying rights of ingress and egress to those resources,and al:Lother rightsnecessaryto their proper use and dewrlopment. 50 S.W.2d.at 1076. The cow:t indicated.generally,that the state has authority to validate the titles of the land lying in the beds of navigable streams p. 1349 Hr. CharlesD. Travis - Pagl?7 (m-299) issued in good fa:Lth. reservingunto the state for the use of the p~d~lica11 rights reserved by the statutoryand coa~:itutionslprovisionspertaining to navigableatre.uns. -- . . . (Emphasisadded). 50 S.W.2d.at 1077. Applicationof these principlesto the validlry of article 7467a under article III, section 51 and articleXVI, section 59a is roughly analogous. We concludethat the public interestprotectedby both of these provisions is prescwed by the fact that the legislature intendedthat the submerged'landsrelinquishedby article 7467a remain impressedwith a public trust when held by qualifyingmunicipalities. The legislature vi11 not be presumed to have intended an uncouariturional result. The language employedby the legislaturein article 7467a mani- fests the legislativeintent that the interest in state stream and river beds which is relinqwlahedby article 7467a does not amount to an unrestrictedgrant of fee simple title. Section 1 of the act contains the operative wclrds "relinquish" and "quitclaim." By analogy,under Texas' law on deeds, a quitclaimis baaed on the theory that the grantor has either no title or imperfecttitle but that the grantorneverthelesspossessessome present interest in the property, undefined in its nature. that is released by the quitclaim. See Richardsonv. Levi, 3 S.W. 444 (Tex. 1887); Green v. West Texas Coal Hining 6 DevelopingCo., 2'215 S.W. 548 (Tex. Civ. App. - Austin 1920, writ ref'd); Breen v. Morehead, 126 S.W. 650 (Tex. Civ. App.,l910), e. 136 S.W. 1047. MorEzr. section 2 of the act indicatesthat the purpose of the act is l:barqualifiedcities will not "be hindered in their civic improvamanta'byreason of the State's claim of property rights therein. . . ." The languageused in both sections of article 7467a. Interpretedin light of the rules of constructionfor grants of submerged land, that grants of public land be strictly COtI6tNe.d against grantees, avidencc!sthe legislative intent to relinquish state- owned stream and riwr beds which lie within the boundariesof qualifyingmunicipalities!!orpublic purposes only. Thus. the title relinquishedremains impressedwith a public CNSC despite the lack of an express reservation. SET Attorney General Opinion 1121-489 (1982); Tex. Water Code S5.021 @6lic has continuing rights in waters of navigable watercourses); Carrithers v. Terramer Besch Coswnity ImprovemaneAsa'n., 645 S.U,2d,at 772; see also Parks and Wild. Code. Il.Oll(c)(discussedinfra). You suggest that article 7467a is also constitutionally suspect because it allows the specifiedmunicipalities.rather than the state, to determinethe amount of state propertythat the municipalitieswill acquire. The Texas Constitution,in srticle III, section 1, and in articleI, section28 prohibitsthe delegationof legislativepower to make or suspend law. Nevertheless.Texas law conaiatentlyrecognizes a distinctionbetween a del.agationof legislativepower to make a law p. 1350 Mr. Charles D. Travis - Pags.8 ml-299) and the discretionaryexercise of a power conferredby a law. -See AttorneyGeneralOpinionsM-383 (1981);MW-11 (1979). Both article 74670 and the annexation statutes. see, e.g., V.T.C.S. art. 970a and art. 1.183et seq., provide sufficientauthority and standardsto guide any power given to qualifyingmunicipalitiesto "acquire" state property by state relinquishment upon municipal annexation. We emphasizethat article 7467a does not itself authorize annexation;it merely relir.q,uishea state-ownedstream and river beds when a city's boundariesarc expandedby annexationseffectedpursusnt to other authority. See, e.&, art. 970a and art. 1183 et seq. Aunexation powers are limited in several ways. For example, with regard to home rule cities,article 1175 requiresthat annexed land be adjaceut to the city and nof:within another city. city of Longview V. State ex rel. Spring RI11 Utility District, 657 S.W.2d 430 (Tex. 1983). Similarly, sectior:7 of article 970a. applies the sama adjacency test to all cities. Pox DevelopmentCompanyv. City of San Antonio, 468 S.W.2d 338. 33!)(Tex. 1971). You also express concern about a particular municipality's annexationof only the bed),of watercourses for the sole purpose of assuming ownershipof the blzdafrom the state. Article 7467s was not. however, intended to authorize annexations of only river beds. As indicated, article 7467a does not itself authorize annexation; its purpose was to preventhindranceof qualifyingcities' civic improve- manta caused by the state'lzownership of river beds within municipal boundaries. V.T.C.S.art. 7467a, 02. Nevertheless.the long-standing rule in Texas is that, oths:rthan limits imposedby the Voting Rights Act, the only limit on the power of a city to annex additional territory is that it be ,sdjacentto the city and pot within the boundaries of another munic:!;pality.Fox DevelopmentCompany v. City of San Antonio, 468 S.W.2d, at 339. Article 970a. in section 7 B-l, also imposes a width limit, prohibitingtoo-narrowstrip annexations. Further, certain unusual s~:ripannexatiouahave been held invalid on the basis of a lack of adj,sceky. See, e.g., City of West Orange v. State ex rel. the City of Grange. 613 S.W.2d 236 (Tex. 1981). The adjacency of a particular annexation depends upon facts which we cannot determinein the optzionprocess. Moreover, articles 11133-87.V.T.C.S.. specifically authorize limited purpose annexationsof only navigable streams for a specified distance outside of a city's boundaries. See City of Port Arthur v. Jefferson County Fresh Watss:c Supply DistrictNo. 1, 596 S.W.2d 553, 555 (Tex. Civ. ADS. - Iz.aumont1980. writ ref'd n.r.e.). The Municipal Aonexatidn Act, article 9708, did not repeal articles 1183-89. Id. at 556. Arl::;cles 1183-87 were expressly intended as limited puise annexation statutes which do not confer general regulatorypowers over subject land. City of Nassau Bay v. Winograd, 582 S.W.2d 505. 508 (Tex. Xv. App. - Rouston (1st Diet.] 1979, writ ref'd n.r.6.). p. 1351 i . Mr. Charles D. Travis - Page 9 (JH-299) Tour request regardinS the conaritutionalityof article 7467a stems from concern over ,)otentialconflicts between the Parka and WildlifeDepaCCmeBt and municipalitiesvith regard to the department's reaponaibilityunder chapter 86 of the Texas Parka and Wildlife Code to mauage and protect t'ke sand and gravel found in state-owned atresmbeds. Because the submerged lands relinquishedto qualifying cities by article 7467a are impressedwith a public fist, the cities do uot have unrestrictedpower in the first place over the river beds " Within their boundaries. See Attorney General Opinion WW-489. Moreover, the legislaturehaExpressly placed control of sand and gravelwithin the jurisdic,::lon of the Parks and WildlifeDepartment. As indicated pravloualy, during the sama legislative session which resulted in article 7467a. the Thirty-ninthLegislaturepassed article 4026, which reserved ~to the state the beds of all public rivers and placed regulat:tonof such beds in what is nov the Texas Parks and Wildlife Departsent. The provisionwas repealed in 1975, and replacedby sectionl.OLl(c)of the Parks and WildlifeCode. Acts 1975, 64th Leg., ch. 51,5. 82(a)(2). at 1804. Section 1.011(c) provides.in part: fall the beds and bottoms and the products of the beds and bottoms of the public rivers . . . are the property of this state. m state may permit the use of the waters and bottoms and the taking of the pli'ductsof the bottoms and waters. (Emphasisadded). Section 1.011(d)provides: The Parks and Wildlife Department shall regu- late the taking snd conservationof fish, oysters, shrimp, crabs, turtles, terrapins, mussels. lobsters.and all,other kinds and forms of marine life, or-sand, gravel, marl, uud shell,~and all other kinds of shell in accordance with the authorityveatei~in it by this code. (Emphasis added). See also Parka and Wild. Code 886.001et seq. Where the legislatureintends a particularpatent or grant, to authorize a political aubdivlsion CO exercise control over the productsof submergedlands or flats, the legislaturebaa expresslyso provided. See Parks and Wild. Code 086.012;Texas Parks and Wildlife Department~Champlin Petroleum Company, 616 S.W.Zd 668 (Tex. Civ. APP. - Corpus Christ1 1981, writ ref'd n.r.e.); see also Amdel Pipeline Inc. v. State, 541 S.W.2d 821 (Tex. 1976); Attorney Gas Opinion MW-367 (1981). 'Cne legialaturehas provided counties and cities with a proceduref3.rusing the products of river beds without p. 1352 Mr. Charlea D. Travis - Page LO (JX-299) wment. sac Parks and Wild. Code 1586.013.86.014, but has not given them jurixction over such pmducts. Consequently,we couclud,s that article 7467a was not intendedto coufer upon'qualifylngcities the power to control the productsof the river beds relinquishedby the act. The act was necessaryto prevent property law hindrance in c:l.vic improvements caused by the state holding title to river beds which are located within municipal boundaries. Although such c:ltjeshold the authority to wake certain public improvements In. over, and around the river beds within their boundaries, their power is uot unlimited. Just as they cannot alienate land impressed with a public trust without express legislative authority, see Attorney General Opinion MW-489. they cannot alienate the products,of land impressedwith a public trust without express legislativeauthority. Subject to the interest of the public free school fund in tht!mineral estate la river beds and channelswhich are held by the state in trust for the public, article7467a. V.T.C.S.,constitu- tionally relinquis'nes title to the portions of river beds and chmnels which certain qualified cities may acquit'sthrough annexation effected Pursuant to other authority. Such submergedlands remain impressed with a public trust, and products, including gravel, may not be removed therefrom except for civil improvementprojects and cannot be exploited couuerciallyby a city without furtherexpress legislativeauthority. JzJ@ Attoruey General of Texas TOM GRRRN Plrst AssistantAttorneyGenc:ral DAVID R. RICRARDS Executive Assistant AttorneyGieneral RICR GILPIN Chairman.Opinion Cosmlttee Preparedby JenniferRiggs AssistantAttorney General p. 1353 llr.Charles D. Travis - Pagn 11 ml-299) APPROVED: OPINION COBNITTEE Rick Gilpln, Chairman Jon Bible Colin Carl Susan Garrison Tony Guillory Jim Iloellinger JenniferRiggs Nancy Sutton p. 1354