Untitled Texas Attorney General Opinion

Hr. Raymond W. Vowel1 Opinion No. ~~-468 Acting Executive Director Board for Texas State Hospitals Re: Authority of and proce- and Special Schools dure for the leasing of Austin, Texas lands of the Alabama- Couehatta Indian Reser- vation in Polk County, Texas for oil and gas Dear Mr. Vowellr development. You have requested the opinion of the Attorney Gen- eral regarding the authority of the Board for Texas State Hos- pitals and Special Schools, in co-operationwith the Alabama- Coushatta Indian Tribe, to lease the reservation lands~for 011 and gas purposes. In answering this and related questions It Is necessary to review certain legislativeand congressional enactments. For a more exhaustive historical summation, see our Opinion No. WW-43 dated March 5, 1957. By an Act dated February 3, 1854 (4 Qammel 68) the State of Texas provided funds and authority for the purchase of 1280 acres of land for the Alabama Indians to be used by that tribe as a home. The Commissionersappointed under this Act did arrange for the purchase and conveyance to the tribe of Alabama Indians of several tracts of land, and the deeds from the several grantors speclflcallymake reference to the Act of 1854. Thus to accurately determine the nature of the estate conveyed to the Indians, we must construe the deed and the Act together. Section 3 of the 1854 Act provides in part as follows: II and that said Indians shall not alien, lease,'&, let, give or otherwise dispose of said land or any part thereof to any person whatsoever. And should the State of Texas hereafter provide a home for said tribe of Indians, and settle them thereon, then the said twelve hundred and eighty acres of land, with Its im rovements, shall become the property of the State.R From the quoted section of the Act, it is Immediately apparent that the Indians received less than a fee simple estate In the lands. There are specific restrictionsupon the Indians I@.~Raymond W. Vowell, page 2.(W-468) which bar any conveyanceor lease by them of their estate or any part thereof,and further their possession and enjoyiaent of the lands are dependent upon the Legislatureas shown In the quoted language. It Is well settled In Texas that an 011 and gas lease is a conveyance of real property and operates to trans- fer the 011 and gas In place. 31A,Tex,Jur.188, Section 117 and authorities cited therein. By the restriction in Section 3 of the 1854 Act against any transfer by the Indians of their lands or any part thereof, an 011 and gas lease by the Indians would be prohibited.. ~~Ttie~~~re'veMVma~ estate is in the Stste of Texas and should the Legislature see fit to provde a law- ful procedure for leasing these lands, It could do so. In 1928 the Indian reservationwas enlarged when an adjacent tract of 3071 acres was purahased by the United States "In trust for the Alabama and Coushatta Indians of Texas". .In 1954, b Public Law 627 (68 Stat. 768, 25 U.S.C.A., Secs.'721 et seq.9 Congress terminated federal supervisionover the tribe and authorized the Seoretary of the Interior to convey the~3071 acres to the State of Texas "in trustyPotithe benefit of the Indians of the Alabama and Coushatta tribes of Texas, subject to such conditions regardingmanagement and use a8 the State of Texas may prescribe and the disposition of such lands shall be subject to approval of a majority of the adult members of then Alabama and Couehatta tribes of Texas’!. In antlhipatlon of the adoption of Public Law 627, the Legislatureadopted Senate Conourrent Resolution No. 31, (Acts 1953, R.S., page 1078) authorlilng the Qovernor to accept on behalf of the State the transfer of the trust, conditioned on consent of the tribe by appropriate resolution,and providing further: "That the Governor Is authorized to designate the State agency In which such.trustresponslblll- ties shall rest; and the agenoy 80 designated shall have authority to promulgate rules and regulations for the administrationof the trust and the protec- tion of the beneficial Interests of the In+lans in such lands and other assets." §y letter addressed to your Board, Governor Allan Shivers desig- nated said Board as the agency to administer the trust. Your first question Is as to whether your Board In co- operationwith the Indian tribe may offer an oil and gas lease on said lands. We do not construe the Concurrent Resolution aforesaid as granting any such power. Even If tiewere mistaken )Ir.Raymond W. Vowell, page 3 (~~-468) In this Interpretation,however, it Is well settled that sub- stantive rights of this character may be created only by stat- ute and not by resolution. In Caples v:.Cole, 129 Tex. 370, 102 S.W.2d 173; re- hearing den. 129 Tex. 370, 104 S.W.2d 3, the Court said: "The Constitutionhas clearly prescribed the method to be pursued In the enactment of laws and their amendments. . . . The Legislature prescribes the method by which a purchaser may acquire lands belonging to the State: All sales of public lands must be authorized.bylaw." It was held in such case that a resolution was insuf- ficient to grant such authority. For similar holdings, see Terre11 Wells Swimming Pool v. Rodriguez, 182 S.W.2d 824, error re .; Humble Oil & Refining Co. v. State, 104 S.W.2d 174, error ref.; Moshelm v. Rollins, 79 S.W.2d 672, error dism.; Clt of San Antonio v. Mlcklejohn, 8 Tex. 79, 33 S.W. 735. AZ-& . . . 7 (Comment,1953 In Attorney GeneralI'sOpinon No. o-6827, written by Honorable William J. Fanning, now a Justice of the Texarkana Court of Civil Appeals, It was held that House Concurrent Reso- lution No. 41 of the 49th Legislature was "ineffectiveand does not authorize the Land Commissioner of Texas to sell the land .describedin the resolution. For the Commissionerto be so"au- thorized an act of the Legislature would be required and a mere resolution la wholly insufficient". And see Attorney General!s Opinions Nos. Q-5241, 0-3697, O-193 and R-1792. We are further of the.oplnlon that the general statutes giving your Board co& trol and management of the reservation do not give your Board authority to grant 011 and gas leases. The authority to lease the 3071 acres, however, itj not dependent on such concurrent resolution. Your Board suc- ceeded the Board of Control in the control and management of the State eleemosynary institutions,now designated as "Texas~ State Hospitals and Special Schools", within which category the ~statutespecificallyincludes "the Alabama and Coushatta Indian Reservation,Livingston, Texas". Article 317&b, V.C.S. The:3071 acres is a part of such reservation. Oil and gas leases on lands of eleemosynaryinstltu- tlons were specificallypermitted by Article 3183a. Subsequent .- to the enactment of such statute, Article 5382d, V.C.S., was adopted In 1951 setting up procedures for the leasing of State department lands. The act repealed all conflicting laws,and since Its adoption, it has been uniformly construed by the General Land Office, the Attorney General and the other State agencies I. or. Raymond W. Vowell, page 4 (W-468) Involved as repealing and supersedingArticle 3183a, except as to Sec. 17a which forbids the leasing of certain named State parks. That this was the lntentlon of the statute is made clear in the following language of the emergency clause of said statute (Acts 1951, ch. 325, page 556): "The fact that the ffeneralLand Office has a large list of prospective bidders on oil and gas leases, and the General Land Office is gen- erally known throughout the 011 and gas industry as the leasing agency for the State and that con- fusion exists In the oil and gas Industry because of the large number of Boards for Lease in exist- ence, all of which makes It desirable that the leasing of lande.ownedor controlled by the varl- ous departments,agencies and boards be done~under a uniform law and administeredby one agency . . . creates an emergency. . .n All "eleemosynary".tracts and State park tracts leased since the enactment of such statute in 1951 have been leased under the said A~rticle5382d, rather than under Article 3183a. We reaffirm the correctnetmofsuch departmental construction. Section 1 of Article 5382d provides In part as fol- lows: "The'rela hereby created Boards for lease of lands owned by any Department,Board or Agency of the State of Texas, which Boards for Lease shall consist of the Commissionerof the General Land Of? flee,'who shall be 'chairman,the Attorney (feneral and the particular President or Chairman of the Board or Agency, or Head of the,.Departmentcharged with the responsibilityof management or control of lands now owned by; or that may hereafter be owned by, or held In trust for, the.use and benefit of said Department;Agency or Board." The emergency clause quoted In the preceding paragraph makes it clear that the legislativeIntent was'that the act should apply to‘land "owned or controlled"by a State department. Title to the land, under Public Law 627, supra, Is In the State of Texas "Intrust for the benefit of the Indians of the Alabama and Couahatta tribes of Texas". In a strict sense, ownership of all State department lands is In the State of Texas. Deeds are.sometimestaken in the name of the department, veryoften in the name of the State for the use and benefit of a.named, department,and sometimes simply in the name of the State. The aaption of the 1951 act Includes the following: Mr. Raymond W. iowell, page 5 (~~-468) "Providingfor the leasing of lands now owned by. e'. or held In trust for the use and benefit of State departments,agencies or boards. . .It Clearly the land in question Is held in trust by the State for the use and benefit of the Alabama-CoushattaIndian Reservation, uhlch Is an agency,of your Board, and hence the land Is held In trust for the Board itself. Consideringthe act as a whole, we believe it was clearly Intended by t,heLegislature to co,ver State land under the management and control of a particular de- partment. It follows.from what.we have said that we are of the opinion that the 3071 acre tract may properly be leased for oil and Gaelunder the provisions of Article 5382d, subject, however, to,approval by the Indians as provided,in Public Law,627, supra. This answers your second question. Your third question Inquires as to the proper disposl- tion of the proceeds from the leasing of such lands. Your at- tention is respectfullydirected to Section 16 of Artlcle'33826, which provides in part as follows: "Any amountsreceived under and by virtue of this Act shall be deposited in the,State Treasury to the credit of special fundedto he known as the '(appropriateDepartment, Board or Agency) Special Mineral Fund'~,,whichfunds are hereby created, and shall be used exclusivelyfor the benefit of the appropriateDepartment, Board or Agency; provided,: however, no money shall ever'be expended from these funds except by leglslatlve~appropriationand then for the'purposesand in the'amounts stated In the Act appropriatingsame.",. AS stated In the statute, a specific legislative appropriation Is required before such proceeds may be spent. SUMMARY Because the Act of 1854 forbids the leasing or alienation of any part of the original 1280 acre tract In the Alabama-CoushattaIndian Reser- vation, such land may not be leased for 011 and gas. The remaining 3071 acres of said reservation which were conveyed by the United States to the State of Texas under a 1954 CongressionalAct may be so leased under the provisions of Article 5382d, Hr. Raymkd W. Voweil,,page6 (~~-4.68) V.C.S., with majority approval of the Tribe. SWh statute requires that~the proceeds from such a lease are placed In a special fund and may not be spent except by legislativeappropriatlim. Yours very truly, WILL WILSON Attorney Oeneral of Texas JAStdhs APPROVED: OPINION COMMJTTEE: Qeo. P. Blackburn, Chairman Richard B. Ston6 L. P. Lollar RRVIEWE3FORTKEA!tTORNEY ORNERAL BY: W. V. Geppert