R-646 Auarrr~ II. -AS PRICE DANDZI. )\-sxaa- **~~ssAL July 26, 1947 Hon. John Steele Opinion No. V-318 County Attorney Lubbock County Re: Applicability to homesteads Lubbock, Texas of the five cent state ad va- lootem tax provided by pro- posed Constitutional Amend- ment. Dew Sir: In your letter of July 7,1947, you requested a ruling from this Daprrtmont as to ‘whether or not the five cent tax provided in the St&e Conatitutioaal unoadment providing for l college build- ing plur, which will be rubmitted to the people in August, will be rpplicrble to homesteads.” Sections 17 and 10, will be added to Article VII of the Con- rtitutien of the State of Texas if the prepoaed amendment is adopt- ed. Section 17 levies a maximum state ad vrlorem tax of Two(Z$) Cents on the One Hundred ($100) Dollars valuation for the purpose of c r er tb g l special fuud fm the paymsnt of Confederhe and other pensions. This levy is in lieu of and for the aune purposes as the maximum rate of Sewen(7$) Cents presently levied by Section 51 of Article’ III, as amended. In addition Section 17 levies a state ad valorem tax of Five (SC) Cents on the One Hundred ($100) Dollars valuation and further provides for a reduction of the maximum state tax on property from the Thirty-five (35C) Cents on the One Hundred ($lQQ) Dollars valuation now permittad’by Article VIII, Section 9, to Thirty (3d#) Cents on the One Hundred ($100) Dol-, lar a valuation. The Five (SC) Cent levy is for the purpose of c’re- ating s special fund for the purpose of acquiring, constructing, and initially equipping buildings or other permanent improvements at designated state institutions of higher learning. Article XVI, Section 50 of the Constitution of the State of Texas reads, in part, as follows: “The homestead of a family shall be, and is here- The first clause of Article VIII, Section l-r of the Cmati- tution of the State of Texas reads as follows: Hon. John Steele - Page 2 Opinion No. V-318 98 “Three Thousand Dollars ($3,000) of the assessed taxable value of all residence homesteads as now de- fined by law shall be exempt from all taxation for all - State purposes; . . .I As a result of these provisions it is well settled in Texas that the homestead is exempt from all taxation for all state pur- poses in the amount of Three Thousand ($3,000) Dollars of its assessed taxable value and is subject to taxation for all state pur- poses only in so far as its assessed taxable value exceeds Three Thousand ($3,000) Dollars. The Five (5$) Cents tax levied by the proposed amend- ment is a state ad valorem tax levied for enumerated educational purposes. At every stage in our history the people of Texas have considered educational problems and provided for educational fa- cilities. In the early days of the Republic, President Lamar’s famous message urged the granting of lands ‘to provide for lit- erary institutions commensurate with our destinies” and in now familiar sentences annunciated the fundamental proposition that “a cultivated mind is the guardian genius of Democracy, and when guided and controlled by virtue, the noblest attribute of man. It is the only dictator that free men acknowledge, and the only se- curity free men desire.” Every State Constitution since 1845 has carried the provision that ‘*a general diffusion of knowledge /;s7 . . . essential to the preservation of the liberties and rights o-e people . . .” That the Five (5$) Cent ad valorem tax proposed to be levied by Section 17 is a tax levied for a state purpose is too clear to require discussion. Therefore, in effect, your question is reduced to wheth- er an adoption of Sections 17 and 18 could in any way affect or re- peal the constitutional exemption for homesteads which, by virtue of Article VIII, Section l-a, exists for Three Thousand ($3,000) Dollars of the homestead’s assessed taxable value. It is a fundamental rule that in arriving at the correct meaning of a constitutional provision, the whole instrument must be considered; and one part will not be allowed to defeat another if, by any reasonable construction, the two can be made to stand together. 1 Cooley, Constitutional Limitations, (8th Ed.) pp. 128, 129, and authorities cited therein; 9 Tex. Jur., pp. 436, 437, and authorities cited therein. Another phase of the same rule is that repeal of prior provisions may not be accomplished by implica- tion unless the later provision clearly conflicts with the prior provision. We are of the opinion that no such conflict exists between the provisions of the proposed amendment and the present provi- siona of the Constitution which relate to the homestead exemption Hon. John Steele - Page 3 Opinion No. V-316 from taxation. The various exemptions from taxation have long been car- ried in separate Articles of the Constitution. See for example, in addition to the homestead exemption, the exemption provided for household goods in Article VIII, Section 1; the exemption for public property granted by Article XI, Section 9; and the exemptions for farm products and supplies contained in Article VIII, Section 19. Likewise, by Article VIII, Section 2, the Legislature is empowered to exempt~from taxation by general laths certain enumerated- classes of property. These provisions of the Constitution are special provisions; and, so far as we have been able to ascertain, it has never been contended that a general provision operating to levy a general ad valorem tax en preperty in any way effecta pre- viously granted exemptions from taxation. Such a cantentien ir c~hrriy ai variaace with the general rule before stated b the effect that the pnvleimns lf the Coastitu- tion must be construed in relati ti a*cIa rlber and nnnld reealt in impeeing upon the framer4 of a constItutiona amendment the prodigious task of inoorporoting in the amendment all existing and related provisions of the Cumtitution or. in the alternative, risk their repeal. Yeu are therefore advised that the et&e ad valorem tax on property of Five (SC) Cents on the One Hundred ($100) Dollars valuation provided by Section 17 lf the proposed Constitutional amendment is a tax for state purpwes and that the first Three Thousand ($3,000) Dollars of the lsseesed taxable value lf l resi- dence homestead rfll IO exempt from nuch tax. SUMMARY The first Three Thousand ($3,WWO) Sbollrrs lf the rsaessed tartable value of a residence homestead is exam t from the State ad valorem tax on ropcrty lf Five P50 Cents en the One Hundred ($100~F Dollars valuation provided in the proposed arnendmegt to Arti- cle VII of the Conatitutian lfthe State d Tex8a. Art. VIII, & to I- . ar nd Ar t,XVI, Sec .SO, Constitution lf TeXU. YWWB very truly APPROVED: ATTORNEY GENERAL OF TEXAS 4” ~k+---~/). 1 ATTORNEYGENDRAL MC/lb/d