Mike Morath, Commissioner of Education, in His Official Capacity, and Texas Education Agency v. Texas American Federation of Teachers and Texas State Teachers Association
COURT OF APPEALS
EIGHTH DISTRICT OF TEXAS
EL PASO, TEXAS
MIKE MORATH, COMMISSIONER §
OF EDUCATION, in his Official No. 08-20-00152-CV
Capacity, and TEXAS EDUCATION §
AGENCY, Appeal from the
Appellants, §
353rd District Court
v.
§ of Travis County, Texas
TEXAS AMERICAN FEDERATION
OF TEACHERS and TEXAS STATE § (TC# D-1-GN-18-005044)
TEACHERS ASSOCIATION,
Appellees. §
OPINION
The Texas Legislature amended the Texas Education Code in 2017 to incentivize local
school districts to address underperforming school campuses. See TEX.EDUC.CODE ANN. § 11.174
(a)-(n).1 The enactment authorized local school districts to run underperforming schools with a
charter school partner either previously approved by the Texas Education Agency (TEA), or
eligible to be so approved. If they did so, the local school districts could avoid sanctions, and
would be entitled for additional funding. The statute authorized the Commissioner for the TEA to
adopt rules to administer that section. The Commissioner then promulgated three rules at issue
here, which respectively address: (1) consulting with, and preserving the existing contract rights
1
Act of May 26, 2017, 85th Leg., R.S., ch. 953, §1, 2017 Tex.Gen.Laws 3814 (codified at TEX.EDUC.CODE
ANN. § 11.174).
1
of teachers and staff at the affected schools; (2) exempting the contracting partner from existing
local policies and rules; and (3) the appealability of the Commissioner’s approval (or disapproval)
of partnering agreements. Two teacher organizations challenged the validity of these
administrative rules in a declaratory judgment action, contending the Commissioner exceeded his
authority in promulgating the rules. The trial court agreed with the teacher groups and invalidated
the rules. We reverse as to the first two challenged rules but affirm as to the third.2
I. BACKGROUND
A. Charter Schools in Texas
The Texas Legislature declared the purpose of charter schools is to “(1) improve student
learning; (2) increase the choice of learning opportunities within the public school system; (3)
create professional opportunities that will attract new teachers to the public school system; (4)
establish a new form of accountability for public schools; and (5) encourage different and
innovative learning methods.” TEX.EDUC.CODE ANN. § 12.001. Charter schools are principally
governed by Chapter 12 of the Education Code. Id. § 12.001 et. seq. That chapter delineates three
types of charter schools: local school district approved campus or campus programs (under
Subchapter C), TEA approved open-enrollment charters (under Subchapter D), and home-rule
school districts. Id. § 12.002. Only the first two types of charter schools are at issue here.3
2
This case was transferred to this Court from the Third Court of Appeals pursuant to the Texas Supreme Court’s on-
going docket equalization efforts. We follow Third Court of Appeals precedent to the extent that they conflict with
our own. TEX.R.APP.P. 41.3
3
The third type--home rule school districts--describe a scenario the legislature authorized in 1995 legislation whereby
a local electorate could vote to take over an existing traditional school district, thereby implementing a new model of
school governance. TEX.EDUC.CODE ANN. §§ 12.011-12.030. But no home rule district has to our research ever been
established in Texas.
2
Under Subchapter C, a local district approved “campus or campus program charter”
describes a charter school created with the approval of the board of trustees of a local school
district. This kind of charter school can originate in several ways. The local district’s board of
trustees might approve a qualifying petition signed by a majority of an existing school campus’s
parents and classroom teachers. Id. § 12.052(a); see also § 12.053 (allowing two or more campuses
to similarly file a petition). Or the district itself might choose to organize a new campus as a
charter, or have a public or private entity run a program on an existing campus. Id. § 12.0521. Or
a district might convert its lowest performing campus to a charter school, subject to a cap on the
number of students that can be enrolled at such schools. Id. § 12.0522(b) and (c) (limiting charters
under this subsection to serving no more than 15% of the district’s student enrollment).
If granted a charter, the local school board must enter a performance contract with the
“principal or equivalent chief operating officer of the campus or program” that identifies the
academic goals and the authority granted to meet those goals. Id. § 12.0531. A Subchapter C
charter expires in ten years unless the specified goals are substantially met. Id.
By contrast, under Subchapter D, the charter for an “open-enrollment charter” school is
granted by the TEA through an approval process involving both the Commissioner and the State
Board of Education. Id. § 12.101(b). Open-enrollment charters are typically held, and the schools
run by, nonprofit corporations qualifying under § 501(c)(3) of the Internal Revenue Code, or less
commonly, by “institution[s] of higher education,”4 “private or independent institution[s] of higher
education,”5 or governmental entities. See id. § 12.101(a)(3); see also Honors Acad., Inc. v. Texas
4
Defined to mean “any public technical institute, public junior college, public senior college or university, medical or
dental unit, public state college, or other agency of higher education[.]” TEX.EDUC.CODE ANN. § 61.003(8).
5
Defined to include private or independent colleges or universities that are organized as non-profit corporations,
exempt from taxations, and accredited by one of three designated organizations. Id. § 61.003(15).
3
Educ. Agency, 555 S.W.3d 54, 57 (Tex. 2018). By statute, the Commissioner must thoroughly
investigate and evaluate the applicant’s ability to meet financial, governing, educational, and
operational standards set by the Commissioner. TEX.EDUC.CODE ANN. § 12.101(b). Subchapter
D also sets out a comprehensive set for standards that applicants must abide by. See id. §§ 12.103-
12.306. As discussed below, those legislatively designated standards exceed the legislatively
required standards for Subchapter C charters.
An open-enrollment charter is initially limited to five years. Id. § 12.101(b-5). The
Commissioner also is limited in the number of open-enrollment charters that may be granted in a
given year. Id. § 12.101(b-1).
B. The Texas Legislature Addresses Underperforming Schools
By statute, the Commissioner each year is charged with assessing the accreditation status
of each school district, deciding if it is “accredited,” “accredited-warned,” “accredited-probation,”
or whether it deserves revocation of its accreditation status and ordered closed. Id. §§ 39.051,
39.052(c)(1)(2). Performance criteria are outlined by statute and set by the Commissioner. E.g.
id. §§ 39.023, 39.034, 39.053; see also Honors Acad., 555 S.W.3d at 68-69 (summarizing
performance and financial accountability standards). A school district’s performance “may be
lowered based on the performance of one or more campuses in the district that is below a standard
required under this subchapter.” TEX.EDUC.CODE ANN. § 39.052(d). For instance, the
Commissioner also has adopted rules to evaluate and assign overall performance ratings of A, B,
C, D, or F to each school district and campus. Id. § 39.054 (a).6 A district may not receive a
6
Consistent with most grading systems, a rating of “A” reflects exemplary performance, “B” reflects recognized
performance, “C” reflects acceptable performance, “D” reflects performance that needs improvement and “F” reflects
unacceptable performance. Id. § 39.054 (a).
4
performance rating of “A” if the district includes any campus with a corresponding rating of “D”
or “F.” Id. § 39.054.
And with failure, comes consequences. The Commissioner is charged with the
responsibility to take actions in the face of a school district that does not satisfy accreditation,
academic performance, or financial accountability standards. See id. § 39A.001. The
Commissioner is similarly charged with addressing underperforming campuses. See id. § 39A.051
(general obligation to take authorized actions for campuses not meeting State standards);
§ 39A.101 (obligation to implement a turnaround plan for campus given “unacceptable” rating for
two consecutive school years); § 39A.107 (if the Commissioner does not approve a campus
turnaround plan, the Commissioner may appoint a board of managers to govern the school, or close
the campus); § 39A.111 (if an approved turnaround plan is unsuccessful, the Commissioner shall
order appointment of board of managers or closure of campus).
However, a school district can avoid accountability sanctions, and even receive additional
funding, by agreeing to partner with and operate an underperforming campus through a charter
school partner:
(a) A school district campus qualifies for an exemption from intervention as
provided by Subsection (f) and qualifies for funding as provided by Section 48.252
if the board of trustees of the district contracts to partner to operate the district
campus as provided by this section with:
(1) the governing body of an open-enrollment charter school; or
(2) on approval by the commissioner, an entity granted a charter by the district
under Subchapter C, Chapter 12, that is eligible to be awarded a charter under
section 12.101(a).
TEX.EDUC.CODE ANN. § 11.174(a). That is, a local school district can choose between a
Subchapter D open-enrollment charter school under subsection 11.174(a)(1), or a Subchapter C
campus or campus program charter under subsection 11.174(a)(2) as its partner. As a shorthand
reference, we refer to these as the “(a)(1)” and “(a)(2)” options.
5
But this partnering option under section 11.174 is only available for a district campus that
has received an overall “unacceptable” performance rating for the preceding year. Id. § 11.174(f).
Subsections (b) through (n) of section 11.174 contain other restrictions on the eligible campuses
and chartering entities, as well as conditions for the transitioning process. The several provisions
contemplate that the school district will enter a performance contract with the partnering entity.
See § 11.174(a), (c), (e), (f), (h)-(k). Additionally, subsection (m) provides that the Commissioner
may “adopt rules as necessary to administer this section, including requirements for an entity and
the contract with the entity, including the standards required for an entity to receive approval under
Subsection (a)(2).” Id. § 11.174(m).
C. The Texas Education Agency Enacts Rules Implementing Section 11.174
In implementing section 11.174, the Commissioner adopted Rule 97.1075 which contains
eleven subparts addressing the performance contract. 19 TEX.ADMIN.CODE § 97.1075(d)(1)-(11).
Two subparts of that rule are at issue in this appeal. The Commissioner also adopted Rule 97.1079
that addresses the application and approval process for an (a)(2) entity partner. Id. § 97.1079. One
subpart of that rule is at issue here. We give each subpart the short-hand name used by the parties
here.
1. The Consultation Rule
The “Consultation Rule” states that any performance contract between the school district
and its operating partner must include:
[A]n assurance that the district has consulted with campus personnel regarding the
provisions included in the performance contract and that the rights and protections
afforded by current employment contracts or agreements shall not be affected by
this contract as required by TEC, §11.174(c), unless the district is partnering with
an entity described in TEC, §11.174(a)(2).
6
19 TEX.ADMIN.CODE § 97.1075(d)(10). To be clear, while the parties refer to this as the
“Consultation Rule,” much of the dispute is focused on the preservation of employees’ existing
contract rights with an (a)(2) partnering entity.
2. The Local Policy Rule
The “Local Policy Rule” requires that the performance contract include:
[A] contract term stating that the campus is exempt from laws and rules to the fullest
extent allowed by TEC, Chapter 12, Subchapter C, and is exempt from all district
policies except for laws, rules, and policies that are specifically identified as
applicable to the campus in the performance contract.
19 TEX.ADMIN.CODE § 97.1075(d)(6). As explained below, the dispute over this rule hinges on
whether the Commissioner was authorized to require a contract term that exempts all laws, rules,
and policies unless they are identified in the performance contract, or instead, whether the contract
must expressly identify any exempted laws, rules, or policies.
3. The Final Decision Rule
Under the statute, the Commissioner must approve an (a)(2) partner. TEX.EDUC.CODE
ANN. § 11.174(a)(2). Rule 97.1079 details how a school district might seek to qualify an (a)(2)
entity as a contracting partner with the Commissioner. Part of that rule makes the Commissioner’s
decision in that regard final:
Decision finality. The approval or denial of the eligibility approval request is a
final administrative decision by the commissioner and not subject to appeal under
TEC, §7.057.
19 TEX.ADMIN.CODE § 97.1079(f).7
7
The trial court’s order actually voids 97.1079(e). As a result of subsequent amendments, 97.1079(e) now appears as
subsection (f) in the current version of section 97.1079, and we cite to the current location of the rule. There was no
textual change in the rule itself.
7
D. The Proceedings Below
The Texas American Federation of Teachers and the Texas State Teachers Association
(collectively “Appellees”) filed suit against the TEA and its Commissioner in his official capacity.
See TEX.GOV’T CODE ANN. § 2001.038 (permitting a declaratory relief action to challenge the
validity of an agency rule). The suit alleges a facial challenge to the three rules set out above,
claiming that the TEA and its Commissioner exceeded their rule making authority in adopting the
three rules. Both sides filed competing motions for summary judgment. The trial court granted
Appellees’ motion and declared the rules invalid. This appeal follows.
II. STANDARD OF REVIEW
The TEA and its Commissioner raise three issues on appeal, each directed at the respective
challenged rules, contending the rules were a valid exercise of the Commissioner’s statutory rule-
making authority. To establish a rule’s facial invalidity, the challenger must show that the agency
rule: (1) contravenes specific statutory language; (2) is counter to the statute’s general objectives;
or (3) imposes additional burdens, conditions, or restrictions in excess of or inconsistent with the
relevant statutory provisions. See Harlingen Family Dentistry, P.C. v. Texas Health & Human
Servs. Comm’n, 452 S.W.3d 479, 482 (Tex.App.--Austin 2014, pet. dism’d); State of Texas Office
of Pub. Util. Counsel v. Public Util. Comm’n of Texas, 131 S.W.3d 314, 321 (Tex.App.--Austin
2004, pet. denied).
We presume that an agency rule is valid, and the party challenging the rule carries the
burden of demonstrating its invalidity. See Texas Ass’n of Psychological Assocs. v. Texas State
Bd. of Exam’rs of Psychologists, 439 S.W.3d 597, 603 (Tex.App.--Austin 2014, no pet.). Yet an
agency’s rules must comport with the agency’s authorizing statute. Harlingen Family Dentistry,
452 S.W.3d at 481. A state administrative agency has only the authority expressly provided by
8
statute or necessarily implied for it to carry out the express powers the legislature has given it. See
Public Util. Comm’n of Texas v. City Pub. Serv. Bd. of San Antonio, 53 S.W.3d 310, 315 (Tex.
2001); Public Util. Comm’n of Texas v. GTE-Southwest, Inc., 901 S.W.2d 401, 407 (Tex. 1995).
Nor may an agency exercise what is effectively a new power on the theory that such exercise is
expedient for the agency’s purposes. GTE-Southwest, 901 S.W.2d at 407.
The issues here call upon us to review the Education Code. Statutory construction presents
a question of law that we review de novo. State v. Shumake, 199 S.W.3d 279, 284 (Tex. 2006);
Texas Ass’n of Psychological Associates, 439 S.W.3d at 602-03. Our primary objective in
statutory construction is to give effect to the legislature’s intent. Shumake, 199 S.W.3d at 284.
The plain meaning of the text is the best expression of legislative intent unless a different meaning
is supplied by legislative definition or is apparent from the context, or unless the plain meaning
would lead to absurd or nonsensical results that the legislature could not have intended. City of
Rockwall v. Hughes, 246 S.W.3d 621, 625-26 (Tex. 2008); see TEX.GOV’T CODE § 311.011
(“Words and phrases shall be read in context and construed according to the rules of grammar and
common usage.”). We consider the statute as a whole, and not just its isolated provisions.
Harlingen Family Dentistry, 452 S.W.3d at 481-82. A court must also presume that the legislature
chose its language with care, and that it included (or omitted) each word purposefully. See id.
Finally, a statute is presumed to have been enacted by the legislature with complete knowledge of
the existing law and with reference to it. See Acker v. Texas Water Comm’n, 790 S.W.2d 299, 301
(Tex. 1990).
9
III. DISCUSSION
A. The Consultation Rule
The Consultation Rule requires a school district to consult with a school’s existing staff
and protect their contractual rights if the partnering entity is an (a)(1) partner, but not an (a)(2)
partner. 19 TEX.ADMIN.CODE § 97.1075(d)(10). The Commissioner contends this dichotomy in
its rule flows directly from the statute itself. Subsection 11.174(c) states:
Before entering into a contract as provided by this section, a school district must
consult with campus personnel regarding the provisions to be included in the
contract between the school district and the open-enrollment charter school. All
rights and protections afforded by current employment contracts or agreements may
not be affected by the contract entered into between a school district and an open-
enrollment charter school under this section.
TEX.EDUC.CODE ANN. § 11.174(c) (emphasis supplied). The text of the Commissioner’s rule thus
tracks the statutory language of subsection 11.174(c) if the legislature truly drew a distinction
between (a)(1) open-enrollment charter schools and (a)(2) district approved campus charter
partners.
The TEA points out that section 11.174 draws that distinction at several places, most
notably in subsection 11.174(a) itself that expressly permits a partnering contract with either:
(1) the governing body of an open-enrollment charter school; or
(2) on approval by the commissioner, an entity granted a charter by the district
under Subchapter C, Chapter 12, that is eligible to be awarded a charter under
Section 12.101(a).
Id. § 11.174(a) (emphasis supplied). Additionally, subsection (b) defines disqualifying events for
potential charter partners. Subsection (b)(1) and (2) address disqualifications for certain “open-
enrollment charter” partners, while (b)(3) separately addresses disqualifications for “a district
authorized charter” that has previously run an open-enrollment charter that was revoked or
surrendered. Id. § 11.174(b)(1-3).
10
Further, subsection (h) requires the contract between the school district and “the governing
body of an open-enrollment charter school” include a provision addressing student eligibility for
enrollment; that provision does not mention (a)(2) district granted charters. Conversely,
subsection (j) applies to an “entity granted a district-authorized charter” and addresses eligibility
for the Teacher Retirement System of Texas, while not mentioning (a)(1) open-enrollment
charters. Subsection (l) requires that “[e]xcept as expressly provided by this section, the
commissioner may not impose additional requirements on an open-enrollment charter school to be
eligible for a contract under Subsection (a),” again without reference to (a)(2) district granted
charters. And subsection (m), when addressing Commissioner adopted rules, includes by example
“standards required for an entity to receive approval under Subsection (a)(2).” Each of these
subsections reflect the legislature drew distinctions between Chapter C district charters and
Chapter D open enrollment charter schools when it enacted section 11.174.
Moreover, there must be a distinction between (a)(1) and (a)(2) charters for subsections (l)
and (m) to make any sense. Subsection (m) allows the Commissioner to adopt rules, “including
requirements for an entity and the contract with the entity, including the standards required for an
entity to receive approval under Subsection (a)(2).” But subsection (l) states that the
Commissioner “may not impose additional requirements on an open-enrollment charter school to
be eligible for a contract under Subsection (a).” If all (a)(2) charters become “open enrollment”
charters, then the express authorization for the Commissioner to promulgate standards for (a)(2)
charters would conflict with the express prohibition from the Commissioner imposing additional
requirements on open enrollment charters.
We are not the first court to confront this issue. When the San Antonio Independent School
District was faced with an underperforming elementary school in 2018, it partnered with an (a)(2)
11
entity to operate the campus. Martinez v. San Antonio All. of Teachers and Support Personnel,
No. 04-18-00421-CV, 2019 WL 1548431, at *1 (Tex.App.--San Antonio Apr. 10, 2019, pet.
denied) (mem. op.). A teachers’ group filed suit against the school district’s board members,
claiming they acted ultra vires in failing to consult with them before entering the contract. Id. The
board members argued in part that they acted in conformity with the statute (and thus were not
acting ultra vires) because the consultation requirement only applied to (a)(1) open-enrollment
charter schools, and not (a)(2) campus charters, such as the one that had entered the partnering
contract.
Our sister court agreed with the school board members, noting that subsection 11.174(a)
allows partnering contracts with two different classes of charters, and the consultation provision
in “section 11.174(c) refers to only one of those classes[.]” The court concluded “the clear text of
the statute supports the position of [the defendants] that the legislature intended to require
consultation under subsection 11.174(c) only if the contract is between a school district and an
open-enrollment charter school.” Martinez, 2019 WL 1548431, at *3, citing Entergy Gulf States,
Inc., 282 S.W.3d at 437 (“Where text is clear, text is determinative of [legislative] intent.”). Based
on this holding, the court concluded that none of the defendants acted illegally in failing to consult
with the school staff on the partnership agreement with an (a)(2) charter partner. To be sure,
Martinez was not a challenge to the Commissioner’s rules, but it directly construed subsection
11.174(c) upon which the Commissioner’s rule is principally based. Appellees acknowledge the
relevance of the case’s holding but contend that Martinez was incorrectly decided. They ask us to
construe subsection 11.174(c) in a way that makes both (a)(1) and (a)(2) charter partners subject
to the consultation obligation, even though subsection 11.174(c) only refers to open-enrollment
12
charters. In support of that claim Appellees raise a series of arguments, some of which were
expressly addressed and rejected in Martinez.
First, Appellees contend that the distinction between Subchapter D open-enrollment
charter schools and Subchapter C district granted charter schools under section 11.174 is blurred
by section 12.0522. All charter schools must operate under a charter, LTTS Charter School, Inc.
v. C2 Construction, Inc., 342 S.W.3d 73, 81 (Tex. 2011), and subsection 11.174(d) provides that
any “district campus must be granted a charter under Subchapter C, Chapter 12.” Found within
Subchapter C is section 12.0522 that governs charters created to address underperforming
campuses. Subsection 12.0522(d) further states that “Subchapter D applies to a campus granted a
district charter under this section as though the campus were granted a charter under Subchapter
D, and the campus is considered an open-enrollment charter school.” Id. (emphasis supplied).
Appellees thus claim that all (a)(2) charter partners must pass through section 12.0522, which in
turn deems them open-enrollment charter schools. Ergo, (a)(2) charters must also be considered
(a)(1) open-enrollment charters.
But section 12.0522 applies to only one class of Subchapter C charters. Id. There are four
distinct provisions that describe how a Subchapter C charter school can be formed: section 12.052
(by petition signed by majority of parents and teachers), section 12.053 (by petition signed by
majority of parents and teachers at two or more campuses); section 12.0521 (a new campus or a
program at an existing campus); and section 12.0522 (taking over the lowest performing school in
a district). Subsection 12.0522(d) itself states it applies to a district charter granted “under this
section[.]” Accordingly, subsection 12.0522(d) does not apply to all Subchapter C campus or
campus program charters, and cannot by itself destroy the distinctions made in section 11.174
between open-enrollment and campus or campus program charters. See Martinez, 2019 WL
13
1548431, at *3 (rejecting similar subsection 12.0522(d) argument because section 11.174, as the
more specific statutory provision, controls).8
Somewhat aligned with this argument, Appellees also contend that if section 12.0552 only
applies to a smaller subset of (a)(2) campus charters, then the Commissioner’s rule should have
said “unless the district is partnering with an entity described in TEC, §11.174(a)(2) that was not
granted a charter under Section 12.0552(d).” Appellees Brief at p. 25. Regardless of whether that
additional verbiage would make the rule more precise, in this facial challenge to the rule, we are
most concerned if the Commissioner’s rule “contravenes specific statutory language” or runs
“counter to the statute’s general objectives” or “imposes additional burdens, conditions, or
restrictions in excess of or inconsistent with the relevant statutory provisions.” Harlingen Family
Dentistry, 452 S.W.3d at 482. Viewed against that test, the more relevant inquiry would be why
the legislature in enacting subsection 11.174(a)(2) did not specifically reference section 12.0552
if it intended to convert all (a)(2) charters into open enrollment charters as Appellees contend.
There is another problem with the argument. If section 12.0552 treats Subchapter C
charters as Subchapter D open enrollment charters, which set of regulations govern the charter?
Subchapter C and D draw sharp contrasts between how TEA approved “open-enrollment charters”
and local school board approved “campus or campus program charters” are regulated. For
example, a Subchapter C charter by statute is subject to ten specified statutory provisions covering
matters such as special education, bilingual education, and extracurricular activities. Id.
8
There is some overlap between sections 11.174 and 12.0522, because both address a charter taking over an
underperforming school campus. But the overlap is not coterminous because under section 12.0522, a school district
is limited to using charter partners to reach no more than 15% of the total student population. By contrast, section
11.174 does not incorporate that pupil limit. In that way, section 11.174 can be broader than section 12.0522. But in
some ways, section 12.0522 can be broader, because section 11.174 applies only to a campus that has received an
overall unacceptable rating in “the school year before operation of the district campus under the contract began.” Id.
§ 11.174(f). By contrast, section 12.0522 has no date requirement on when the unacceptable rating is assessed. Id.
§ 12.0522.
14
§ 12.056(b)(2)(A)-(J). Open-enrollment charters under Subchapter D are subject to the same ten
provisions, plus ten additional provisions. Id. § 12.104(3)(A)-(S). Subchapter C charters by statute
must address seven specified topics, such as the program to be offered, the governing structure of
the campus, and annual audits. Id. § 12.059(1)-(7). By contrast, the charter for an open-enrollment
charter by statute must address the same seven topics, plus nine additional items (some with
subparts). Id. § 12.111(a)(1)-(16). Subchapter D also imposes a host of other specific
requirements on open-enrollment charters for which is no Subchapter C counterpart.9 And some
of the provisions governing Subchapter C charters and Subchapter D open enrollment charters
directly conflict. For instance, a Subchapter C charter is good for ten years, while a Subchapter D
open enrollment charter for five years. See Id. § 12.0531 (Subchapter C charter expiration);
§ 12.101(b-5) (open enrollment charter expiration). If section 12.0522 truly folds Subchapter C
charters into Subchapter D open enrollment charters, why would the legislature have crafted a
different regulatory scheme for each type of charter?
9
Subchapter D imposes these restrictions on open-enrollment charters that have no Subchapter C counterpart:
• treated as governmental body for purposes of open meetings laws (TEX.EDUC.CODE ANN. § 12.1051);
• restrictions on nepotism (Id. § 12.1055 (a));
• restrictions on tuition and fees (Id. § 12.108);
• requirements for transportation of students (Id. § 12.109);
• TEC authority to audit records of school, charter holder, and management company (Id. § 12.1163);
• requirements for filing financial reports for school, related parties, governing body and administrator of the
school (Id. § 12.1168);
• requirements for admission applications and practices (Id. § 12.117 and § 12.1173);
• requirements for filing of corporate documents with the Commissioner (Id. § 12.119);
• requirements for school’s internet website (Id. § 12.1211 and. § 12.136);
• training rules for officers and members of governing body (Id. § 12.123);
• restrictions on acceptance of loans (Id. § 12.124);
• requirement to segregate management company records (Id. § 12.125);
• liability of damages by management company (Id. § 12.127);
• amounts owed to State on winding up affairs of closed charter school (Id. § 12.1284);
• educational requirements for principal or teacher (Id. § 12.129);
• obligation to provide parents with written notice of the qualifications of each teacher employed by the school
(Id. § 12.130):
• code of conduct requirements (Id. § 12.131);
• minimum salary provisions (Id. §12.133)
15
Appellees also find ambiguity in several subsections of section of 11.174 because some
use the term “open-enrollment” charter schools or “district-authorized charter” while others
explicitly refer to (a)(2) charters. Cf. § 11.174(k) and (m)(using (a)(2) references) with § 11.174(j)
(using entity granted “district-authorized charter”). From the usage of the different terms,
Appellees argue that had the legislature meant to draw a sharp contrast between (a)(1) and (a)(2)
charters in subsection 11.174(c), it would have used those same terms throughout section 11.174.
Using consistent terms to refer to an object, entity, or concept, of course greatly enhances the
clarity of a writing. But the legislature’s choice to use different, but well understood synonyms
for the same term does not create ambiguity where none otherwise exists. And even if there was
ambiguity in the usage of “(a)(1)/(a)(2)” versus “open-enrollment/district-authorized charter”
versus “Subchapter C/Subchapter D,” that ambiguity would only lead us back to another concept
of agency law:
If a statute is ambiguous—i.e., there is more than one reasonable interpretation—
we give “serious consideration” to the construction of the statute by the
administrative agency charged with its enforcement, “so long as the construction is
reasonable and does not conflict with the statute’s language.”
Texas Assn. of Acupuncture and Oriental Med. v. Texas Bd. of Chiropractic Examiners, 524
S.W.3d 734, 738-39 (Tex.App.--Austin 2017, no pet.), quoting Railroad Comm’n v. Texas Citizens
for a Safe Future & Clean Water, 336 S.W.3d 619, 628-30 (Tex. 2011); see also Davis v. Morath,
No. 19-1035, 2021 WL 2172533, at *4 (Tex. May 28, 2021) (stating same). That limited deference
is accorded an agency because the legislature “intends an agency created to centralize expertise in
a certain regulatory area be given a large degree of latitude in the methods it uses to accomplish
its regulation function.” City of Garland v. Public Utility Comm’n. of Texas, 165 S.W.3d 814, 819
(Tex.App.--Austin 2005, pet. denied).
16
The Appellees also point to indicia of legislative history, namely statements of
representatives, as subsection 11.174(c) wound its way through the legislative process. The same
arguments were raised in Martinez and rejected by the court because “[l]egislative history . . .
‘cannot be used to alter or disregard the express terms of a code provision when its meaning is
clear from the code when considered in its entirety.’” Martinez, 2019 WL 1548431, at *4, quoting
Fleming Foods of Texas, Inc. v. Rylander, 6 S.W.3d 278, 284 (Tex. 1999). Nor are statements of
individual legislators “evidence of the collective intent of the majorities of both legislative
chambers that enacted a statute.” Molinet v. Kimbrell, 356 S.W.3d 407, 414 (Tex. 2011); see also
Texas Health Presbyterian Hosp. of Denton v. D.A., 569 S.W.3d 126, 136-37 (Tex. 2018) (“An
individual legislator’s statements—even those of the bill’s author or sponsor—do not and cannot
describe the understandings, intentions, or motives of the many other legislators who vote in favor
of a bill.”).
Next, Appellees ask us to consider the policy implications of a dual system where (a)(1)
open-enrollment charter partners must protect existing employees contract rights, but (a)(2)
district authorized charters do not. Appellees contend this dichotomy portends an absurd result
that betrays the underlying purpose of the statute by treating the employees of the charters
differently. At the outset, we note that nothing in subsection 11.174(c) requires a district to not
consult with (a)(2) teachers or equally protect their rights. Local school districts might well treat
(a)(2) staff equally for no other reason than a locally elected school board is sensitive to the
teachers in their district.10 The only question is whether they are allowed to draw distinctions, and
10
And at least in this context, section 11.174 addresses schools that are already failing and have likely progressed into
the sphere of intervention plans, which may have already included teachers (and other educational professionals) on
the “campus intervention team” that is tasked with drawing up a “targeted improvement plan.” Id. §§ 39A.052,
39A.055.
17
the entire structure of Subchapter C and D already draws contrasts between TEA approved “open-
enrollment charters” and local school board approved “campus or campus program charters” in
how they treat administrators, staff, and students.
As we note above, there are significant regulatory differences between Subchapter C and
Subchapter D charters. Subchapter C itself provides no express protection for the existing staff’s
contract rights.11 Whether the legislature drew those distinctions because local school districts
would protect teachers in any event, or the legislature wanted local school districts to have more
flexibility, is not a judgment we need to make. We are more concerned with the intent of the
legislature as expressed in the words it used in crafting its statutes. And telling here, the legislature
requires the Commissioner to prepare an annual report that compares the performance of open-
enrollment charters, district granted charters, and matched traditional campuses. Id. § 12.1013. It
follows that the legislature allows for different models of charter schools with the goal of
determining which model yields the best results. That Subchapter C and Subchapter D define
different charter models with different rules is not surprising, nor prohibited.
Ultimately, we reject Appellees’ counterarguments and conclude the trial court erred by
invalidating the Consultation Rule. That rule is consistent with the plain text of subsection
11.174(c), and to ascribe a different meaning to the term “open-enrollment” charter school in one
part of the statute from another violates our tenets of statutory construction. See City of Rockwall,
246 S.W.3d at 634 (identical words used in different parts of the same act are intended to have the
same meaning). Appellees’ construction also renders meaningless the distinction between and
need for subparagraphs (a)(1) and (a)(2) in subsection 11.174(a). It therefore runs afoul of the
11
At most, subsection 12.057(b) guarantees a charter employee membership in the Teacher Retirement System of
Texas to the same extent that non-charter employees enjoy that right. Id. § 12.057(b).
18
tenet of statutory construction that every word of a statute is presumed to have been purposefully
used. Harlingen Family Dentistry, 452 S.W.3d at 481-82.
The TEC and Commissioner’s first issue is sustained.
B. The Local Policy Rule
Must a partnering contract distinctly identify all the local rules or policies that do not apply
to the school campus, or can the contract contain a term globally excluding their application unless
they are made applicable in the contract?12 That is the essential question for the “Local Policy
Rule” that requires a contract term excluding the application of local rules and policies unless they
are specifically enumerated in the performance contract. The issue is less a substantive dispute,
than a burden placed on the scriveners of these contracts to treat existing policy and rules as
automatically “opted-in” or “opted-out.”
Nothing in section 11.174 addresses how the application of existing policies and rules must
be treated in partnering contracts. The Commissioner relies on subsection (m) that generally grants
him the authority to “adopt rules as necessary to administer this section, including requirements
for an entity and the contract with the entity.” TEX.EDUC.CODE ANN. § 11.174(m) (emphasis
supplied). Appellees, however, contend that because there is no provision in section 11.174
addressing the matter, the Commissioner has drafted a rule in excess of his authority. Appellees
also direct us to section 12.054 that provides that a Subchapter C charter school “is exempt from
the instructional and academic rules and policies of the board of trustees from which the campus
or program is specifically exempted in the charter[.]” Id. § 12.054(1) (emphasis supplied).
Appellees read this section to require a preference for explicit exemptions in the charter, while the
12
The rule also exempts local laws, but we are unsure how an administrative agency has the authority to exempt an
entity from a duly enacted law of the State of Texas, or one its subordinate entities, such as a City or County. That
issue is not raised or addressed in the briefs and we do not address it in this opinion.
19
Commissioner reads the provision as merely establishing a default rule that silence in the charter
precludes an exemption by implication.
Section 12.054, however, does not dictate how specific a charter must be in identifying
exempted rules and policies. That is, if a contract term could exclude the application of “all
overtime rules governing summer school” and “all overtime rules governing the Fall and Spring
Semester,” it could just as easily say “all overtime rules.” And for that matter, rather than list by
policy number (or however each school district might identify their policies and procedures) all
the policies regarding vacation, holiday, dress code, and scheduling, a provision might just as
easily aggregate those topics and exclude all “personnel related rules.” What then makes it
improper to simply say “all local district policies and procedures are excluded except . . .”? All
these examples in their own way “specifically” exclude local policies and procedures.
The rationale for the Commissioner’s rule is not hard to imagine. The Commissioner is
tasked with approval of the partnering contracts within a sixty-day window. TEX.EDUC.CODE
ANN. § 11.174(k). It is more efficient to review a contract that contains all its pertinent terms,
rather than one that is subject to undisclosed policies and procedures that might only be found at a
local school district’s office or buried in its meeting minutes. Because the legislature saw fit to
give the Commissioner the specific authority to set rules for the performance contract--a contract
that the Commissioner is tasked with reviewing--we conclude the Local Policy Rule neither
contravenes specific statutory language or otherwise imposes additional burdens, conditions, or
restrictions in excess of, or inconsistent with, the relevant statutory provisions. We therefore
sustain the TEC and Commissioner’s second issue.
20
C. The Judicial Review Rule
Subject to some exceptions not relevant here, a person aggrieved by “the school laws of
this state” or the action of a school district that violate the school laws of this state may file a
written appeal with the Commissioner. TEX.EDUC.CODE ANN. § 7.057(a). The Commissioner
here concedes that section 11.174 falls within the Titles constituting the “school laws of the state.”
The question under the Commissioner’s third issue is whether there is a right to appeal his decision
regarding “eligibility approval” of an (a)(2) application. The Commissioner says no, based on his
own rule which makes his decision final “and not subject to appeal under TEC, Section 7.057.”
19 TEX.ADMIN.CODE § 97.1079(f). Appellees say yes, based on a general statutory right to appeal
that was not abrogated by section 11.174.
“It is well recognized under Texas law that there is no right to judicial review of an
administrative order unless a statute provides a right or unless the order adversely affects a vested
property right or otherwise violates a constitutional right.” Cont’l. Cas. Ins. Co. v. Functional
Restoration Associates, 19 S.W.3d 393, 397 (Tex. 2000); see also In re Office of the Attorney Gen.
of Texas, 456 S.W.3d 153, 157 (Tex. 2015) (per curiam). Under the Education Code, however,
subsection 7.057(d) provides that “[a] person aggrieved by an action of the agency or decision of
the commissioner may appeal to a district court in Travis County.” TEX.EDUC.CODE ANN.
§ 7.057(d).
While subsection 7.057(d) read literally provides an expansive right to judicial review, both
parties here acknowledge that the right of appeal is cabined to matters that can be raised under
subsection 7.057(a). That provision reads:
(a) Except as provided by Subsection (e), a person may appeal in writing to the
commissioner if the person is aggrieved by:
(1) the school laws of this state; or
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(2) actions or decisions of any school district board of trustees that violate:
(A) the school laws of this state; or
(B) a provision of a written employment contract between the school district
and a school district employee, if a violation causes or would cause
monetary harm to the employee.
Id. § 7.057(a). The Commissioner contends his decision to approve a charter partner does not fall
within subsection 7.057(a), therefore subsection 7.057(d) cannot apply. But based on the plain
text of subsection 7.057(a)(1), we simply disagree. See Pruski v. Garcia, 594 S.W.3d 322, 325
(Tex. 2020) (“We must apply statutes as written and refrain from rewriting text that lawmakers
chose.”) (internal quotation marks omitted).
The unstated premise of the Commissioner’s argument is that if he makes a decision
affecting parties A and B, an affected person C could not appeal to him, asking for a
reconsideration of his decision. An example: suppose a school district decided to enlist a “for
profit” entity as its charter partner under section 11.174, and submitted an application to that effect
to the Commissioner who approved it. The arrangement would violate the “school laws of [the]
state” because a “for profit” entity is not eligible for charter status under section 11.174. Under
the Commissioner’s view, his decision would be final and unappealable. We could envision,
however, that a third party affected by that administrative decision might appeal to the
Commissioner to reconsider the decision, and if need be, appeal the Commissioner’s denial of the
reconsideration to a Travis County court. Or alternatively, the school district through its board
would have likely voted at some point to pursue the arrangement, and that vote might be challenged
under subsection 7.057(a)(2)(A). Either way, a plain reading of the text would allow for an appeal
to the Commissioner, and then if necessary, judicial review of the Commissioner’s decision.
The Commissioner raises other responsive arguments in support of his rule which we
reject. First, the Commissioner notes that some provisions of the Education Code grant a specific
22
right to appeal, while section 11.174 is silent on appeals. Cf. § 49.013(a) (“a decision of the
commissioner under this chapter is appealable under Section 7.057.”). The lack of a similar
provision in section 11.174, however, loses its significance because the converse is also true. In
several areas, the legislature has also specifically limited appeals of agency decisions
notwithstanding subsection 7.057(d). For instance, the Commissioner is tasked with hearing
challenges related to academic or financial accountability rating that affect districts or schools. Id.
§ 39.151(a). In authorizing that review process, the legislature specifically stated “[t]he
commissioner’s decision may not be appealed under Section 7.057 or other law.” Id. § 39.151(d);
see also Morath v. Progreso Indep. Sch. Dist., No. 03-16-00254-CV, 2017 WL 6273192, at *4
(Tex.App.--Austin Dec. 7, 2017, pet. denied) (mem. op.) (dismissing appeal challenging the
Commissioner’s accreditation decision and citing section 39.151).13 Appellees urge that the
legislature’s pattern of specifically restricting judicial review in some situations, read against its
silence on judicial review in section 11.174, actually evidences an intent that judicial review is
available under subsection 7.057(d). And to be sure, a legislative non-appealability directive does
not appear in section 11.174, which is silent as to legal challenges, judicial review, or appeals of
13
There are more examples. A school district or open enrollment charter school can challenge a decision of the
Commissioner to close a district or campus before the State Office of Administrative Hearings. Id. § 39A.301. The
SOAH’s decision, however, per the legislature specific directive and “notwithstanding other law” is “final and may
not be appealed.” Id. § 39A.301(c)(3). The Commissioner also is tasked with making charter revocation decisions,
which likewise by specific statutory language are final and “may not be appealed.” Id. § 12.116(c)(2); Honors Acad.,
Inc. v. Texas Educ. Agency, 555 S.W.3d 54, 59 (Tex. 2018). Similarly, the Commissioner is tasked with developing
procedures for the renewal, or denial of renewal, of open enrollment charters. TEX.EDUC.CODE ANN. § 12.1141(a)(d).
The legislature decided, however, that “[n]otwithstanding any other law, a determination by the commissioner under
Subsection (d) is final and may not be appealed.” Id. § 12.1141(e). The Commissioner is also required to make certain
determinations for Head Start programs germane to obtaining grants. Id. § 7.031. By statute, the Commissioner’s
determination “may not be appealed.” Id. § 7.031(c)(3); see also Morath v. Sterling City ISD, 499 S.W.3d 407, 412-
13 (Tex. 2016) (under prior version of Education Code, a statutory finality provision--stating that the Commissioner’s
determination was “final and may not be appealed”--precluded judicial review of the school district’s claim regarding
funding formulas); Texas Educ. Agency v. American Youthworks, Inc., 496 S.W.3d 244 (Tex.App.--Austin 2016),
aff’d sub nom. Honors Academy v. Texas Educ. Agemcy, 555 S.W.3d 54 (Tex. 2018) (Commissioner’s order revoking
a charter was final and unappealable under subsection 12.116(c)).
23
the Commissioner’s decisions. Accordingly, we cannot read the legislature’s silence on judicial
review as authority for the Commissioner to eliminate all judicial review.
Next, the Commissioner at oral argument suggests extreme departures from the law (such
as with our example above) could be addressed through ultra vires claims against the local school
district officials. But ultra vires claims come with their own set of hurdles, including that they are
focused on prospective, and not retrospective relief. See Progreso Indep. Sch. Dist., 2017 WL
6273192, at *4 (rejecting ultra vires claim against Commissioner regarding his decision to lower
a schools district’s accreditation rating and put a board of managers in charge in part because the
action had already been taken). We see no reason why a party must be limited to an ultra vires
remedy if subsection 7.057(d) already gives a person aggrieved by a decision of the Commissioner
a right to litigate that decision.
The Commissioner also finds authority for the rule pre-terminating any judicial review of
his decisions in the text of subsection 11.174 (m). That provision allows the Commissioner to
make “rules as necessary to administer this section.” But precluding judicial review is at best
incidental to administering the program. It aides in the administration of the program only in the
sense that the Commissioner would never have to defend an agency decision. However, an agency
cannot claim a new power it was never given on the theory that such exercise is expedient for the
agency’s purposes. See GTE Southwest, 901 S.W.2d at 407; see also Davis, 2021 WL 2172533,
at *4 (“The text of section 7.057(a) dictates the scope of the Commissioner’s jurisdiction, and the
agency is not at liberty to add to or subtract from the jurisdiction assigned to it.”).
We overrule the TEC and Commissioner’s Issue Three.
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IV. CONCLUSION
We sustain the TEC and Commissioner’s first two issues and reinstate the Consultation
Rule (19 TEX.ADMIN.CODE § 97.1075(d)(10) and the Local Policy Rule (19 TEX.ADMIN.CODE
§ 97.1075(d)(6)). We overrule the TEC and Commissioner’s third issue and affirm that portion of
the trial court’s judgment invalidating 19 TEX.ADMIN.CODE § 97.1079(f).
JEFF ALLEY, Justice
June 14, 2021
Before Rodriguez, C.J., Palafox, and Alley, JJ.
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