Untitled Texas Attorney General Opinion

-. Honorable 0. P. Lookhkrt, Chairman Board of Insurance &nmnlssioners Austin, Texas Dear Sir: Opinion No. q-4149 Re: Local mutual aid associations ._ . and'burial asaodiatlons organ- lied.under and governed by ArtXolea 5068-l azid 487Sa may lawfully investtheir mortuary funds in then aecuritles des- cr%bbed,in Article 4725. Suoh association should release or convey such securities in the manner preaorlbed by law for other corporations generally. Your letter dated March 20, 1942, submits for sn opinion of this department the following questions: May looal mutual aid assoolatlona and burial aseooiatrons, z?ianieed under and'governed by Articles 5068-l and 487.5a lawfully Invest their mortuary funds infthe seourltles described in Artlole 48757 (Sic., Artiole &72.$was apprently intended.) “2. May such associations upon the payment or sale of euoh - securktles release or convey them in the manner prescribed by law for other oorporations generally by Title 32, Ch. 3, *hen authorized by their Board of Directors and through their Rresldent with corporate seal attested by their Seoretary, or la It necessary ifor suoh releases or oonveyanoes-to be taken from each member of such associations?" You apparently intended In question (lj to refer to the securities described in Article 472S-instead of Article k87S9 Article 4875 having been repealed. Your letter refers us to Article 5068-1, Sections 23 and 24, Vernon's Annotated Civil Statutes, which article and the sections thereof mentioned.authorize the organization of burial associations according to the conditions and under the regulations contained in the various provisions of Article 2875a. Honorable 0; P. Lockhart, Page 2, O-4149 One of the provisions of said Article 4875a to which you specifically refer in your letter is Article 4875a-24, which provides as follows: 'Any association organized under the provisions hereof or accepting the provisions hereof shall for the purposes of openation be and become a body corporate with authority to sue and be sued in its own name and to exercise the other powers and functions specifically herein provided, such association shall be governed by this law and shall be exempted from all provisions of the insnrance laws of this State. No law hereafter enacted shall apply to them unless they be expressly designated therein. It is your poeition, as stated in your letter, that the above quoted article authorizes such association to become a body corporate, and that Article 487Sa-18 described by reference the securities in which such corporate bodies may invest their surplus funds, giving rise to the necessary implication that such article carries with it the power to release and convey in the same manner as corporations generally. With this contention we must agree. Article l+875a-18 is as follows: "Any surplus funds on hand belonging to any such association must be invested if at all, in such securities as the funds of life insurance companies maybe invested inJ." One of the fundamental rules of statutory construction is that when a statute gives a right or imposes a duty,, it also. confers by implication the power necessary to make the right available or to discharge the duty; and where a power is granted and the mode of its exercise is not prescribed, it will be implied that it is nevertheless to be exercised. Lewis Sutherland Statutory Construction,Volume 2, page 947, section 510; People v. Eddy, 5'7Barb. 593. Article 5'068-1, Sections 23 and 24, adopts by reference the provisions of Articles 487Sa-1 to Article 487sa-31 and makes these statutes applicable to organization and regulation of burial associations; Article 487Sa-24 provides that associations organized under the provisions of,that act become a body corporate with the authority to sue and be sued Sn its own name and to exercise the other powers and functions specifically herein granted, but not otherwise; Article I+87Sa-18 provides in substance that the funds of such association or body corporate must be invested .in such securities as the funds of life insurance companies may be invested. It is obviously wholly Honorable 0. P. Lockhart, Page 3, O-4149 impracticable, if not entirely impossible, for such assoCiatiOn to obtain the consent, the signatures and the acknowledgement of each and evary member of such association whenever a lien must be released or a deed executed; Yet in order to be able to invest in,the securities authorized it is necessary that they also be able to execute releases and other instruments incident to the business of making such investments, so that as to the grant of this much power the words quoted from Article l+875a-24: "to exercise the other powers and functions speoifically herein granted, but not otherwise" were not intended to apply in any restrictive sense. You are therefore advised that in the opinion of this department your questions should be answered as follows: 1. Local mutual aid associations and burial associ~ations, organized under and governed by Articles 5868-l and 4875a may lawfully invest their mortuary funds in the securities described in Article 4725 provided such mortuary funds con- stitute surplus funds on hand,as described in Article 4875a-18. 2. Such assooiations may upon the payment or sale of such SeCuritieS release or convey them in the manner prescribed'by law for other corporations generally. (Article 1322) It is not necessary for such releases or oonveyanc8s to be-taken from each member cf such aSSOOfatfOns. We trust that the above satisfactorily ansyers your inquiry. YOU'S V8i-y tl'Llly ATTCRNEY GENERAL OF TEXAS ii'Rdbert .~., .dherry I BY- -'-. Robert %. Cherry RP!C:GO/cg Assistant APPROVED MAY 23, 1942 s/ Grover Sellers FIRST ASSISTANT ATTORNEY GENERAL Approved Opinion Committee By BWB, Chairman