Untitled Texas Attorney General Opinion

Hon. Raymond W. Vowel1 Opinion No. ww-252 Acting Executive Director Board for Texas State Hospitals RE: Validity of Appro- and Special Schools prlatlons to pay the Box S, 'CapitolStation salaries of the Sj+er- Austin, Texas intendent and the BijsinessManager of the A.stin State Dear Mr. Vowell: School Farm Colony. You have requested an opinion as to the legality of the payment of salaries to the "Superintendent and to the "BusinessManager" of the Austin State School Farm Colony as is provided in the AppropriationAct passed by the 55th Legislature. In other words, you desire to know whether these salaries may be lawfully paid to the named "Superintendent" and "BusinessManager" of the Austin State School Farm Colony. Our answer to both questions is in the affirmative. We advise that the salary of a Superintendentand the salary of a Business Manager for the Austin State School Farm Colony may legally be paid from the funds appropria- ted for that purpose by the Texas Le islature,Regular Session of 1957, Chapter 385, pages %92, 893. The Acts of the Regular Session of the 51st Legis- lature, Chapter 157, pages 324, 325, and Chapter 316, pages 588, 589, 590, 591, made and constitutedthe Aus- tin State School Farm Colony (which already was the pro- perty of and belonged to the State of Texas) one of the Institutions which became a unit of the *Texas State Hos- pitals and Special Schools," created by said Acts. Said Acts provided for the general government of said "Texas State Hospitals and Special Schools" by a Board, and this Board was authorized by the Legislature to.employ an "ExecutiveDirector and such other personnel necessary to carry out the provisions of this Act." The provisions of the Act set out at lennth the duties. DOWCFS, and responsibilitiesof the Superintendent(see Artlcle 3174B; Section 10, and Articles 3175, 3176. _ ~. and 3178, Ver- 3 3177 non's Civil Statutes). Inasmuch as "the provisions of Hon. Raymond W. Vowell, Page 2 (WW-252) the Act," regarding "Superintendents"and their duties obviously could not be carried out without there being Superintendexits,the Act necessarily authorizedthe employ- ment of Superintendents. Article 3174B, Vernon’s Civil Statutes, specificallyprovides that "the Superintendent of any institutionnamed herein" (and Austin State School Farm Colony was one of the institutionsspecificallyso named) "with the approval of the Executive Director may appoint a Business Manager." From the foregoing it Is seen that the Texas State School Farm Colony is one of the units composing the Texas State Hospitals and Special Schools, so created and named by the legislativeact, and that It may, as such, have a Superintendentand a Business Manager. Such la our interpretationof the applicable statutes. The same 51st Legislaturewhich passed the Acts creating the Austin State School Farm Colony as an lnsti- tutlon which was a unit of the aggregationof institutions constitutingthe Texas State Hospitals and Special Schools, Itself construedthe mentioned laws as we have here con- strued such laws. The said 51s.tLegislature,in the General AppropriationAct of 1949, enacted at the same session of the Legislature which fixed the legal status of the Austin State School Farm Colony as above indicated, provided a total of $2883000 for the operation of said Austin State School Farm Colony as an Integral part of the Texas State Hospitals and Special Schools, for the year ending August 31, 1950. This AppropriationAct significantlyprovided $5,004.00 for the salary of a "Superintendent"and $3,600.00 for a "BusinessManager" (see Acts of 51st Legislature,Chapter 553, page 1073.) Inasmuch as the same Legislature which made the Austin State School Farm Colony a unit of the Texas State Hospitals and Special Schools enacted this appropriation bill for its support and in the Bill provided for the payment of a salary to the Superintendentand a salary to the Business Manager, this Is in substanceand effect a constructipnof the'leglslativeacts herein mentioned by the Legislaturewhich enacted them and said construc- tion is the same as the one made by us above. It has been held by the Texas courts that a con- struction of a legislativeact or acts, when made by the same LegislatureIn another act, has great welRht if not controllingeffect, because It plainly shows the legis- lative intent in the passage of the act under consldera- tion, First National Bank v. City of Port Arthur, ( Civil Appeals ) 35 S. W. 2d 258 (holding that a . Hon. Raymond W. Vowell, Page 3 (WW-252) contemporaneousand practical constructionby the Leglsla- ture Is presumptivelycorrect);Houston 011 Company v. Grlggs, (ClvliAppeais) 181 Siti. ___ . sion of Appeals) 213 S.W. 261. In the case of Stephens County v. Hefner, 16 S.W. 26 804,,lt was held by the Commission of Appeals of Texas as follows: "(3) Legislative lnterpretatlon of an Act is entitled to be given weight, and where It is an Interpretationmade by the very Leg- islature which passed the Act In question, it should be of controllingeffect. v. Yoakum County, 109 Tex. 42, 195 S.F=%= . 11 9; State v. Houstcz-Oilm Comoanv {Tex; Clj7.ADD;) 194tianAtiantlc Insurance co., 20 Wall. 323, K-13462. Murdock v. Memphis, 20 Wall. 590, 22 L.Ed. 429. u S V. Claflin, 97 U.S. 546, 24.L.Ed. lo&." ,. Each regular session of the Legislature.whlch has convened since the passage of the Acts of 1949 and since the Interpretationof these Acts by the 5lst Leg- islature which enacted them, has made the same lnterpre- tatlon of these acts as was~made by the Legislature of 1941 and as is made by us In this opinion. The regular session of the 52nd Legislature, In 1951, made a total appropriationof $304,042.00for the operation of the Austin State School Farm Colony for the year ending August 31, 1952, and $280,000.00 for the year ending August 31, 1953. In this appropriationbill there was provided for the Superintendenta salary of $5,244.00 for each of the two years and there was also provided a salary of $3,840.00 for the Business Manager for the same period of time (Ch. 499, p.1259, Acts 52nd Reg. Ses.). The AppropriationAct of the 53rd Legislatureof 1953 appropriated for the Austin State School Farm Colony, for the year ending August 31, 1954, the sum of $296,512.00 and for the year ending August 31, 1955, the sum of $293,777.00. This appropriationcontained provisions for the salaries of both the "Superintendent"and the,"Business Manager" ($ee Acts, 53rd R.S., ch. 81, p. 142). Referring to the Acts of the 54th Re ular Session, we find that in ch. 519, pages 1368, 1369, fi'00,578.00 Hon. Raymond W. Vowell, Page 4 (WW:252) was provided for the Austin State School Farm Colony for the year ending August 31, 1956, and $873,578.00 waspro- vided for the year ending August 31, 1957. Items for the salaries of both "Superintendent"and "$uslncssManager" were Included. The last .Leglslature(55th, R.S., ch. 385, pp. 892, 893) appropriated for the Austin State School Farm Colony, for the year ending August 31, 1958, the sum of $1,215,298.00and for the year ending August 31, 1959, the sum of $1,213,287.00. This Act also provided for the salaries of both "Superintendent"and "Business Manager." It is thus apparent that each subsequentLegls- lature has construed the mentioned Acts of 51st Legls- laturt of 1949 as said Acts had been construedby the Legislature which enacted them. While It has been held that an Interpretationcontained In an Act passed at a subsequent Legislature is not controlling,floleman Gas and Oil v. Santa Anna Gas Co., (Comm. App.) b7 S.W..' 2d 241; Cherry v. Magnolia Petroleum Co., (Comm. App.) 45 S.W.2d 555) such interpretationmay be very signifi- cant and entitled to substantialweight. Texas-Louisiana Power Co. v. City of Farmersville, ) 2d 235; Tillery v. Town of McLean, I@?A,"ipj 46 S.W 2d 1028; Berry v. County Board of School Trustees (Cif. App.) 42 S.W.2d 129 In Neff v. Elgln, (Civ:App.) 270 S.W. 873, (error ref.) It was held that the construction of a law by successive Legislaturesfor many years should have preat weight. In Cannon's Administratorv. Vaughan, 12 Tex. 199. it was held that "If It can be nathered from a subsequent statute, in par1 materia,-whatmeaning the Legislature attached to the words of a former statute, this will amount to a'Legislatlvedeclarationof Its meaninn. and will zovern the constructionof the first statutf:,,~~~~ To like effect was the holding of the Civil Appeals Court in the case of Silurian Oil CO. v. White, 252 S.W. 569, error ref. From the foregoing it Is evident that the legis- lation which made ,theAustin State School Farm Colony an institution in that group of Institutionswhich com- prise the Texas State Hospitals and Special Schools, has been uniformly construed by the Legislaturewhich enacted it and by each Legislature which has convened since that time as authorizing the employmentand pay- ment of a superintendentand a business manager for said ~- . - - . - _ . Hon. Raymond W. Vowtll, Page 5 (W-252) Austin State School Farm Colony. We do not consider the foregoing mentioned act of 1949 as being ambiguous. We think It clearly constltu- ted the Austin State School Farm Colony an Integral, individual unit of the newly created State Hospitals and Special Schools. But if the language of said act should be esteemed to be ambiguous,then we examine the facts of the operation of.the Austin State School Farm Colony since the enactment~of1949. On,such examination,we find that ever since the effective date of said Act the constructionof same by those officers charged with Its administrationhas been that the status of the Austin State School Farm Colony haspbeen the same as stated by us In this .opinion. The Board for Texas State Hospitals and Special Schools, the Rxtcutlve Director of said Board, the Comptroller,the State Treasurer, in their official acts pertaining to said Austin State School Farm Colony.have all recognized that it is one of the units comprising the Texas State Hospital and Special Schools, being an Individualentity thereof. Uniformly a superintendenthas been duly employed and also a busi- ness manager has been duly employed. Contractsof employment have been entered into by and between said entity and various employees. The statutory duties imposed upon the Superintendentand upon the Business Manager, respectively,have been duly dischargedby them. The Superintendentand the Business Manager have been paid salaries out of the appropriationsmade by successive Legislaturesfor that specific purpose. It has been held by the Texas courts that sound public policy requires the resolving of all doubts In favor of a contemporaneousor practical constructionthat has been followed with substantialuniformity. (Moorman v. Terrell, 109 Tex. 173, 202 S.W. 727; Tolleson -Rogan, gb Tex. 424, 432, 73 S.W. 520,. 24; Manhattan Life Insu- rance Co. v. Wilson MotorCo.. 2 Civ. AppJ 75 S.W.2d 721, err. ref.; City of Dallas v. Texas IQnployers' Insurance Association /Civ. AppJ 265 S W 1113; State v. Houston and T. C. Railroad Co. Blv. Appg 209 S.W. 820). The Texas courts have also held that they will adopt and uphold the constructionbased upon a statute by a department of the State government or by an executive officer of that office charged with its administration, if the statute is ambiguous. (Koy v. SchneSder, 110 Tex. 369, 221 S.W. 880, denying rehearing 218 S.W. 479; State Hon. Raymond W. Vowell, Page 6 (w-252) v. Houston Oil Co. Div. Brown v. City of Amarillo This rule is held to administrativeconstruction rights have been acquired." 109 Tex. 42, 195 S.W..1129; AppJ 194 S.W. 422, err. ref made where contractshave been entered Into under such constructionof the ambiguous statute. (State v. Texas Mutual Life.InsuranceCo. reversed on other points Fisher (Clv. App. 1953)~259 S.W.2d 9 rehearingdenied, it held that a longstanding departmentalconstruc- tion of the statute Is entitled to great weight in the courts and In the case of Associated IndependentCorpo- rat1on.v. Oil Well Drilling Co. (Civ. App. 1953) 258 S.W 2d 523, rehearingdenied, affirmed 1954 in 264 S.W.2d 6gj, rehearing denied, it was held that courts are Inclined to accept an administrativeagency Interpretationof a statute which has been accepted without challengeover a long period of time. It was also held in the case of Union Terminal Co. v. Muldrow (Clv. App. 1955) 279 S.W.2d lb4 rehearing denied, that a departmentalcon- struction hf a statute extending over a long period of time -is entitled-to great weight. Hence, It follows that if the mentioned legisla- tive act of 1949 should be ambiguous (and we do not esteem It so), we would, by reason of these departmental constructionsof It, which are reasonable, and by virtue of which constructionrights have accrued and contracts have been made, reach the same conclusion as to the validity of the payments~of the salaries of the mentioned superintendentand business manager that we have hereto- fore stated herein. Any Attorney General's Opinions which may have held contrary to the holdings of this opinion, are hereby over- ruled and withdrawn. SUMMARY The salary of a superintendentand the salary,of a business manager for the -- : . .‘m ,: *. Hon. Raymond W. Vowtll, Page 7 (m-252) Austin State School Farm Colony may legally be paid from the funds appro- priated for that purpose by the regular session of the Texas Legislature of 1957, in Ch. 385, pp. 892, 893. Any Attorney General's Opinions which may have held contrary to the holdings of this opinion, are overruled and withdrawn. Very truly yours, WILL WILSON Attorney General of Texas GPB:dmp APPROVED: OPINION COMMITTEE: J. C. Davis, Jr. E. M. DeGeurin Byron Fullerton REVIEWEDFOR THE ATTORNEYGENERAL BY: James N. Lti@lm