Untitled Texas Attorney General Opinion

October 17, 1951 ,', Hon. 3. W. Edgar, Opinion No; V-1324, Commissionerof Education Texas Education Agency Re:,AuthorltyofTexas Edu- Austin, Texas cation Agency to pay sal- aries from the '$20,000 appropriationin Art. XV of'the,currentgeneral appropriationAct com- parable to the posit&ens specified by groups XV,~~ XVI, or XVII In the Agen- cy's section of Art. III Dear Dr. Edgar: of'the same Act.' ,- We quote your letter 'as~follows: ," We desire:an opinlon,fromyour office regarding the salary limitationsthat apply in expending the $20 000 appropriatedto the Texas Central Education Agency in Article IV of the AppropriationAct of the Fifty-second Legislature. 'The appropriationto ,theTexas Central Education Agency under Article III of the, AppropriationAct limits the number of posi- tions that may be classifiedunder groups XVII; XVI and Xv with no limitationsas to number of positions that may be assigned to other groups In the classificationprogram. 'Do these limitationsregarding the number of positions included in the Depart- mental AppropriationAct, Article III, apply to the $20,000 appropriatedto the Agency under Article IV of the AppropriationAct?" Article III of House Bill 426, Acts 52nd Leg- Sslature, 1951, the current biennial appropriation bill, Includes appropriationsfor the current biennium for the Texas Central Education Agency. This section begins as follows (Acts 52nd Leg., R.S. 1951, ch. 499, p. 1228, at p. 1316): Hon. J. W. Edgar, Pee 2 ,:(v-1324) - "TEXA%C&TR&EDUCATION AGENCY ~%POUP XVII': l+Blone'to exceed $17,500 per year. "Descriptlk and duties: Serves as Ex- ecutive Officer 'ofthe State Board of Educa- tion performing thoa~efunctions required by the Board and by l&w. 'Qroup XVI:, k-llone,toexceed $11,000 per year. "Descriptlbn'and~dtitles: Under general direction,,ofthe Commissionerof Education, directs the activities of several divisions performingrelated iwotlons. "8ronp xv: Z--lone to exceed $8,400 per year. “Descrfpttonand duties: Under general direction oftAsbos,latCCommissioner,directs the activities of the ,Mvlslon of Adminlstra- tive Services, or the ~actlvltlesof the Dlvi- sion of Textbooks and InstruCtionalMaterials." Article rV of House Bill 426, au ra at page +-' o be allo- 1443, provides for biennial appropriations cated to the public junior colleges of Texas which meet the standards and eligibilityrequirementsthere- in detailed. Section 2 of Article Iv assigns to the State Board of Education the duty of formulatingrules and regulationsgovern1 ellglbllityof public junior colleges to share In a "& $ ,309,200.00biennial appropri- ation in accordancewith certain specified factors. It also empowers the CoMnistilonerOf Education to certify the eligibilityof public junior colleges to share in this appropriationupon meeting the requirementsof the law. Further, It assigns to the Central Education Agen- cy the function of determiningwhether each eligible junior college has complied with all the provisions of Section 2. Section 2 concludesWith this paragraph: "ffom the appropriationmade In Section 1 of this Article, there is hereby allocated the sum of Twenty Thousand Dollars ($20,000) for each of the fiscal years of the biennium P Hon. J. W. Edgar, Page 3 (V-1324) beginning September 1, 1951, to the Texas Central Education Agency for the expense of carrying out the functions and responsibll- ities asslgned~to that Agency by this Arti- cle." Groups XVII,~XVI, and'XV, quoted above, are the first of some eighteen like provisions found at the beginning of theTexas Central Education Agency's sec- tion of Article ITI, House Bill.426. These "groups" appear without prelate or introduction,preceded only by the title, "Texas~CentralEducation Agency.’ No explanation,summary, or ccncluslon follows these pro- visions. The following paragraph In the Act contains annual appropriationitems. The 'groups' create a per- sonnel classificationprogram, but they dO,not appro- priate funds. Provislbns in general sppropriatlonbills which do not add funds to or take funds away from those assigned by the Legislatureto the particularuse,5enu- merated are known as "non-appropriating" provisions; non-appropriatingprovisionsor riders In general appro- priation bills are valld~only when they detail, limit, or restrict the'use of funds therein appropriatedand when they are connectedwith and Incidental to the a - propriationsmade. Attorney General's~OplnlonV-125$ (1951). House Bill 426 represents a departure in form from the pattern of the general appropriationme~asures of recetitLegislatures. It had been the recent practice to enact separate appropriationbills for the Judiciary, the Executive and administrativedepartmentsand agen- cies, the eleemosynaryinstitutions,the inatltutionsof higher learning, and the public junior colleges;1 In 1951 the 52nd Legislatureput all of these general ap- propriationsinto one measure, House Bill 426. This Act la divided Into nine Articles, namely Article I, Judiciary;Article IT, State Hospitals, Special Schools l See'Acts, 5ist Leglslature,,RegularSessidn, 19?9-- House Bill 11 p. 612; House Bill 319,:p. 1133; House Bill 320,~ p. i160; House Bill 321,~~. 1070; and House ~111 322, p. 1208; Acts 50th Legislature,1947-- House Bill 52, p. 685; House Bill 244, p. 639; House Bill 246, p. 649; Senate Bill 374, p. 566; and, Senate Bill 391, p. 803. Hon. J. W. Edgar, Page 4 (V-1324) and Youth Development Institutions;Article III, Exec- utive and AdministrativeDepartmentsand Agencies; Ar- tlcle IV, Public Junior Colleges; Article V, Agencies of Higher Education; Article VI, General Provisions; Article VII, Saving Clause; Article VIII, Suspending clause; and Article IX, Emergency Clause. Had Articles III and IV of House Bill 426 been aeparate Acts, as was the prior practice, there could be no question but that a non-appropriatingrider in one Act could have no ap- plication to an appropriationin another Act. Here, however, all Is a single Act, and, having determined that these non-appropriatingprovisionshave validity to the extent that they govern expenditureof funds ap- propriated in House Bill 426, we must yet determine their appllcabllltyto an appropriationcontained in an Article other than that In which the non-approprlat- lng provisionsthemselves appears. Perusal of the contents of each "Article"re- veals that each of the first five Articles of House Bill 426 covers a distinct field of State government,while the last four Articles, and these alone, have general applicationto all of the appropriationsin the various other Articles of the entire Act. This is shown by the repeated words "this Act" found In Articles VI, VII, VIII, and IX. Like language is conspicuouslyabsent in the first five Articles. Evidence that the first five Articles are gen- erally Intended to be mutually exclusive,rather than generally controllingone another, is found in the Leg- islature'srecognition of a need to Incorporateidentical riders in more than one Article.2 There are also riders in different Articles which accord different treatment to Identical subjects.3 And the Legislaturehas expressly Incorporatedthe provisions of certain riders from one 2 See Sec. 8 of Art. I p. 1240, and Subset. (28), Sec. 2 of Art. 111, p. 1442, Acts 52nd Leg., R.S. 1951. 3 C!;;p;r-- Subset. (12)g, Sec. 2 of Art. III, p. 1437, 35 of Art. v, p. 1474, as respects the items for whidh receipts must be obtained. . . /h Hon. J. W. Edgar, Page 5 '(V-1324) Article into~,the Hdera of another Article.4'When the Legislaturehas'dane these three ~thlnga,using explicit worda to tike'approprlatfons~ln one~,ArtlclB,.subject to certain non-appropriatingpbovlstons i&a, different Article, using the sama"non+approprlating pr~vla;lons in more than one Artlcle~~andtreating the same general subject matter.ln-differentway&, in.other provisions of separate Atiticles;we are unzibleto alssunu.,that, a non-appropriatlng.protilaicn ln,one.Artiale.governs~the expenditureoFan, approprlatio.n.,m%de in ,a:,,diPferent Ar- ticle in the absence of~iipeclflc~language showing this result, to be'the'Legislature'a .int'entlon. .,. We Bre sustalne:dih.this.viewby the obvious Import of subsection (16)b of Section 2 of~Artlcle III (Acts 52nd Leg,, R.S. 1951i,,p.1439); which~provides in part: "The kpproprlaklonshereln,provided are,to be construed as'the maxlmuti,sumsto be ap@ropPlatedto and for‘the~s.+vetialpti- poses named hetiein;,.$nd the.a~outita.are~:$n~.. tended to cover, and shall,coverthe entire cost of the respective.,ltemsand the,sarne,~~ shall not be supplementedfrom atiy~other sources; . . .t) As the appropriationsin Article III are the maximum ones allocated'tothe purposes of that Article, the appropriation&in Article IV must be for other and different purposasr. If further evidence of the mutually exclusive character of Articles III and IVis needed, attention is ~invitedto the wording of~the last paragraph in Sec- tion 2 of Article .IV,'quotedabove, reading: '~ "From the~~appropriationmade in S~ec- tlon 1 of this Article, there Is hereby,al-; located . . . to the Texas Central Education Agency for the expense of carrying out the functions and resoonslbllltlesasaimed to that {Tency by this Article." (Emphasis added. 4 ,- See Sec. 5(a), Art. I, p. 1240; Sec. 16, Art. II, p. 1296; Sec. 17, Art. II, p. 1297; and Sets. 26 and 27, Art. V, p. 1471. . _. Hon. J. W. Edgar, Page 6 (v-1324) We can ,vlewthe language emphasized above only ae a clear-expressionby the Legislaturethat we need look only to the provisionsof Article IV in de- termining the purposes for which and the manner in which the funds there appropplatedmay be used. The Legislaturerecognizes that the duties required of the Texas Central Education Agency as incidentalto the disbursementof the $4,309,200.00appropriatedto the public junior colleges:nlll entail expenses on the, part of the Central Education Agency addltlonal.to those provided for in Article III, and the Legislature leaves to the sound discretion of that agency a deter- mination of the speciftc uses to which these funds ~111 be devoted In carrying out these duties. SUNNARY Funds appropriatedto the Texas Central Education Agency In Article IV of House Bill 426 Acta 52nd Leg., R,S. 1951, ch. 499, p. 1226, to defray expenses Incident to certlfy- lng the eligibilityof public juniorscolleges to receive State appropriations,are not sub- ject to the personnel alasslficatlonprovi- sions in this agency’s section of Article III of the same Act. Yours very truly, PRICE DANIEL Attorney General APPROVED: -I David B. Irons Charles D. Mathews AdministrativeAssistant First Assistant DBI:em