Untitled Texas Attorney General Opinion

Honorable Earl Rudder Opinion NO. ~~-82 Commissioner General Land Office Re: Bonds issued under Austin, Texas Article 3, Section 49-b, Constitution of Texas, are gen- eral obligations of Dear Mr. Rudder: the State of Texas. You ask whether or not Veterans' Land Bonds issued under Article 3, Section 49-b of the Constitution of Texas, are general obligations backed by the full faith and credit of this State. Article 3, Section 49-b, Constitution of Texas, creates a Veterans' Land Board; preECribe6 its membership; endows it with the prerogative to issue installment bonds not to exceed Two Hundred Million Dollars; sets up a fund to receive the proceeds; provides for Its expenditure on land purchases for resale to veterans, and provides a revolving fund feature to absorb Income therefrom; and, dedicates a sufficient amount therefrom to pay interest on the bonds and declares that after December 1, 1965, "all monies received by the (Board) from the sale of the lands and Interest on pay- ments, or 60 much thereof as may be necessary, shall be set aside for the retlrement of said additional bonds and to pay interest thereon ~ m -" The question is whether these bonds are general ob- ligations of the State of Texas for the payment of which the full faith and credit of the State are pledged. Article 3, Section 49-b of the Constitution provides that all "such bonds shall be executed by said Board as an obligation of the State of Texas." The Issuing authority, the Veterans' Land Board, was created and exists pursuant to constitutional authority. It is a department of the State Government by virtue thereof and the bonds It legally issues are obligations of the State of Texas and not of the Board. But It does not follow ipso facto Honorable Earl Rudder, page 2 (W-82) that the S,tatehas pledged Its general power of taxation to the payment thereof, The prime factor that constitutes a general state obligation is whether or not the taxing power of the state may be called on to service and dischar e it. State v. FlorI- da State Improvement Comm., 34 so. 2, 4&3, 451 T1946). In the Instant case, we have a specific fund and the board Is directed to se'taside therein moneys for the pay- ment of Interest and bond retirement. If the bonded Indebted- ness Is to be paid exclusively from this fund, then they are not general obligations of the state. In 1948, Louisiana approved a constitutional amend- ment relative to veterans' bonuses, to be paid by a tax on beer. Under the Louisiana scheme, a state board was allowed to anticipate tax collections and issue bonds and to pledge and dedicate the avails and proceeds of the beer tax as security therefor. The resulting bonds came under attack when issued as a general.obligatIon of the state. In sustaining them as such, the Supreme Court of Louisiana in State v. Board of Liquidation of State Debt, 39 So. 2d 333, 334, said: "It is well established that a statute, author- izing the contracting of debt on behalf of a public'agency, which provides a special fund for the payment of the debt, contemplates the issuance of a general obligation to represent the debt so incurred unless It provides, ex- pressly or by necessary ImplIcatIon, that pay- ment of the debt shall be limited to the special fund." There is no declaration in Article 3, Section 49-b, that the established fund shall alone be applied to the pay- ment of the principal and interest of the bonds, nor is there any express provision that such bonds are payable exclusively out of the fund, nor is there any implication that payment of the bonds is Intended to be limited solely to the fund. On the contrary, Article 3, Section 49-b, provides: "* . . Ali bonds Issued hereunder . ~ ~ shall constitute obligations of the State under the Constitution of Texas." , Honorable Earl Rudder, page 3 (~~-82) We have previously ruled that Article 5421m, V.A.C.S., is applicable to Article 3, Section 49-b. Attorney General Opinion No. W-2 (Jan. 14, 1957). Section 9(c) of Article 5421m provides: "If said Board (Veterans' Land Board), at any time during the existence of said Veterans' Land Fund, shall determine that during the following biennium there will not be suffi- cient moneys In said Fund to pay principal of and/or interest on said bonds which will fall due during the said following biennium, the Legislature shall appropriate from the General Fund of the State sufficient moneys to meet such obligation . . ." (Emphasis ours) The Constitution and statutes in force and effect at the time bonds are issued will necessarily become a part of the contract. You are respectfully advised that the bonds issued under Article 3, Section 49-b, Constitution of Texas, after approval by the Attorney General of Texas, registration by the Comptroller, and delivery to the purchaser or purchasers, will constitute general obligations of this State, for the payment of which the full faith, credit and resources of the State of Texas are unconditionally and Irrevocably pledged. SUMMARY Bonds Issued by the Veterans' Land Board con- stitute, under the Constitution and Laws of this State, a general obligation backed by the full faith and credit of the State of Texas. Very truly yours, WILL WILSON APPROVED: OPINION COMMITTEE By: H. Grady~Chandler, Chairman