Untitled Texas Attorney General Opinion

OFmOE OF THE ATI’ORNEY GENERAL OP1MA6 AUSnN Hamrable Murphy tile County Auditor Liberty couflty Liberty, TePam Dar sir: Honorable Eurphy Cole, pege ,#2 The broad general purpose or House Bill JaSS is to essist the counties and derined rosa distriots 1s the retirement or obligations ore&ted for the aoastraatlosof roads, whiah function has been deolared to be.one resting upon the State, and became of whioh, there now rests upon the State both a legal and moral obligation to oompensate and rehfhurse au& countlee and uerfned road dietriot ror having performed such iunctions and to that extent the funds provided by this Aot shall ooastituts ralr, Just asa equitable coszpensatlon,repayment and reimbursementto sald counties and dellned road dlstriots, ana i'ullydlsaharges the legally implied obligations of the State to so compan- sate, repay and reimburse suoh agencies of'the State. Two methods hare been devised under this Aot by whloh said obllg5tlone are to be dlsoharged, the rlrst being a ab55t psrtloipatfoa in the one-oent gasoline tar 0r obll- gstlons the prooeeds or nchichhave aatually been expeadsd upon State deslgaatea highwsys and by inaired partlal~tlon in meld one-oent gasoline tax through the *Lateral Road Ao- oouIlt~, to whiah aaoount is oredlted any exoess funds ro- malning after all primary obligations hare been alscharge&. This moon& method la designed to distrlbate such exsoss was equitably and ratably to all or the aountles ana defined road distrlots or the Stats or Texas in aooordanoe with the ratio provided. It will be noted that the entire hat treats of the rstlrement of obligations already areated, the proseeds of whloh have been expended upon State deslgnsted highways. It cont~plates asaiatiug the counties and derinea ma aim- triets in retiring, paykg.off ana dimsbarging suah obliga- t%ons, and that the rurther oonstmetlon at highways, UeSlg- nated as State highways, rests exaluslrely upon the State Hi&hway Commlsslon, and the bounties are forbiUden by the prorlslon5 or seotlon 3 0r'Houme Bill #6SS to sake any rusther lmproremeute or said highway8 8x55pt by the aoqui- sltlon 0r rlgbt.5-or-my thereror. The racts which gtre rise .to your rest questfon are, briefly, as follows: In 1952 the DaptOn-Cleveland Road in Liberty county was 8 part of the State Righrar Systm and was designated as State Klghway #l46, and later 586 Honorable Eburphy Cole, page 1$'3 this designation was llf'teaor abandoned end said designa- tion applied to another road. Subsequently, that is, betreen Septeuber 27, 1932 and prior to January 2, 1939, Liberty County construoted the Deyton-Cleveland Roed v3th bond fun&. To mummmrlze, it must be noted that such designation ~55 abandoned and the State Rlghway number which had been applied to the Dayton-Cleveland Road was applied to another mad, namely, the Liberty-Livingston Road. Further, it 15 admitted that there was no debt existing at the time said mad was abandoned as e pert of the State Highway System, whioh, la our opinion, excludes from partiaipation in the one-oent -5 tax the obllgetlons subsequently created for the aonatmotion or,auoh roads, except in such proportion 55 the obligations laayparticipate in any run65 accruing to the county throngh the wLateral Road Acoount?. Cur construction of paragraph 3, Seotlon 2, fs that only muoh roadsas had tormerly oonstltutea a part or the State Highway SyatesIand whose status had been lost through change, relooatlon or abandonsent, that bed been aonatructed ulth bond tPnd8 and the obllgatlOn8 issued to secure swh funds sare out- standing at the time the road vas a part or the Syeta, aad whloh bonds or obligations hfidnot been dlseharged or retired at the time such road lost its designation either throwhF ahanus, relooatloa or abandonment, asn prtlolpate 55 aa mellgible issue* under the tez%s and pmvieions or House 'Bill #6-. We oannot aonceive that the Legislature intended tie pexwlt bonds, the pmcesds or which are to be expended oa a roaa formerly oonstitntlag a part of the State Highuar System, to pertloipate la the primary benerite of the one-oent gaso- line tax ii'snah bonds are issued aubsequsnt~to the abandon- seat or such road as a part of the State High-y SystSr. Further, there being no evident intention by the HleIhuayCom- m.l55lon or reaeeiguatlng suoh road as a part or the Hi systes, we think the exoeptloa provlasa in 'aabseotioaFa) % seotiOn 6, paragraph 2, lnappllcable to this issue 0r bonds. Themrore, we conaluae that your rlrst questloa nnst be answered in the negative. The raata underlying your 5800na q~estlon are, briar- iy, that in 1929 bonds were voted ror the eon5truatloa 0r 5 Xonorable Murphy Cole. page #4 road then known as Liberty-Livingston F&ad, and that in 1932 said road was deslgoeted as State Highway #leg, b&, to date, the bonds have not been issued or the road eou- struotea. In order that suoh bonds may now be issued and be eligible for pertlolpatlon in the one-cent gesollne tax as Provided la House Bill #aSa, said raats must come within the apparent exception provided la paragraph 3, subseotlou (a), ;iectloa0, of said bill. This exception reeds, in pert: *In addition to and regardless or the other provi5lon5 or this Aot. all bonds voted by a county prior to January 2, 1939, insofar as amounts of saxe were ox siaybe issued end the prooeeas aotually expenaea 10 the constmotion or roads Welch are a part or the designated System or State highways, shall be allglbls in the dletrlbutionof the moneys coming into emid County sad~Road District Highway Fuud, the 5am5 as provided ror other bonds under this Aot, and 8~8 of the date of the aeslgsa- tlon of said made as a part of the State system **l“. When a statute expre55e5 5 general intent or purpo50 and afterwards an iacon5lsteat ~ertlcnler latent, the latter 15 to be regarded as an exception to the former an&~&Ah ars permitted to stand. Also, where one section of~an Aot prs; scribes a general rule which, without qualifloatlou, Would embraoe an entire class oi subjeote and another pressrlbes a different rule for lndlvldusl subjeots or the 5amo ela55 ~51atter will be ooustrued as an exodption to the ge5Srii See 39 Texas Jurlsptidence;i Section 101; also milker vs. &or, 266 S. OF.499, Cameron ~5. city or Waoo, 8 S. w. (26) 249. mrther, it has been held that a genercilprovi- sion or a statute nust yield to a speclal one so rar as 15 necessary to give errect to the partioular subjoot of the speolal provision. See'Clty or Austin vs.~Cehlll, 88 9. W- 342, rehearing asnled, 89 S. W. 552, also Csllaghaavs* H*m, 90 S.X. 319, error ratneed, In the case of Stevens vs. Stats, 159 s. w. 305, the court 0r Crlmlml A~pesls held that chess Honorable Murphy Cole, page #3 two previsions of the snmw law are in oonfliet, the last one controls. The weight or authority seem8 to be to the effect that In case of coniliet between the genwral and specie1 provisions 0r a stetute, th* apealal one shall prevnll. And even when e statute expresses a general in- tentlon end likewise 6 plrtlcular intention lnoompatlble \ath it, the particular fntentlon may be deemed an eroep- tion to the general one. See Hwlem vs. bells Fargo k Cora- paay ExpreQs# 177 s. u:.134. Section 3 OS Rouse Bill #688, atate8, In part: *All further improvementa of said State Blgh- way Systcn; shall be xsde under the exclusive and direct control of the StatW Highway Department, and tith np roprlotlons medw by the Legislature out or the 8 tnte Eighway Pund. lfofurther lri- proverrent or.sa,idsystem shall be made with the cid of or with any money furnished by the countlea except where the aoqulslt~on or rights-of-way which nay be rurnlshed by the oountles, their subdivisiona, or def~iaed road Uistrfots.” St is'obvious that paragraph 3 of wubeeotlon (a) of Se&ion 6 is in confliotwfth thw'provfsion above quoted, but by the very languagw~oi this paragraph, the Legislature ha8 attempted to mike this provision an exowptioa, suah lamgmage being - "In*a$dipon to endregardle?e or other provialonr or this Act wrhleh, in our opinion, brings t&da within the purview of the'holding in the oaae of Holrord va. Patter- SO~, a40 s. W. 341, whichwas atflrmwd in 257 S. w. 213, Mare- in the oourt stated that "when a statute firat expresaea a general intwnt.snU arterwards an fnoonsiatent partleular in- tent, the latter will be taken as an wroeption to the rormer and both will stand." In view of the autborltfsa quoted above, which, when read in connection with the language wmploywd in the Act, we reaeh the conolusion that your seoond question must be ana- ~tipd in the errirxatfve, that is, that euoh bonda when issued shall be elLgiblo for pertlolpstion in the primery Honorable Wrphy Cole, page #6 benerlte 0r the one-cent gasoline tar es provided in House Bill &88. Yours very truly ATTOPSIX CS?ZRAL OF TEXAS %&zs- ~.+------ Clarence 3%.Crone Assistant cm-e