Untitled Texas Attorney General Opinion

THEA~TORNEYGENERAL OF TEXAS AUSTIN. Texas 78711 Honorable L. B. Davis, Jr. Opinion No. H-1065 President State Board of Morticians Re: Continued service on 1513 S. Interstate 35~ State Board of Morticians Austin, Texas 78741 by member who has changed employment. Dear Mr. Davis: You advise that two members of your board were appointed by the Governor on the same date and that both were confirmed by the Senate. One was employed at the time by a corporation owning and controlling more than three funeral establishments in Texas, and the other was the proprietor of a single funeral establishment. Both appointees qualified and began their Board service. Later, the sole proprietor sold his business and became an employee of the same corporation for which the other board member works. You ask if either of them is now disquali- fied to serve on the board. The State Board, of Morticians is created by section 2A of article 4582b, V.,T.C.S. In part it reads: There is hereby created the State Board of Morticians . . . consisting of six (6) members who shall be citizens of the United States and residents of the State of Texas, and shall be licensed embalmers and funeral directors in the State of Texas. . . . The members of said Board shall be appointed by the Governor, by and with the consent of the Senate for a period of six (6) years. . . . No member shall be appointed to the Board who is an officer or employee of a corporation or other business entity controlling or oper- ating directly or indirectly, more than three funeral establishments, if another member of the Board is also an officer or employee of the same corporation or other business entity. p. 4566 Honorable L. B. Davis, Jr. - Page 2 (H-1065) It has been suggested to us that neither man is dis- qualified by article 458233 from continued service because the statute speaks of particular qualifications only for appointment, not for service. In Attorney General Opinion H-578 (1975) we were asked whether a member of the Board of Private Investigators and Private Security Agencies who was statutorily required at the time of his appointment to represent a certain profession could continue to serve on the board after he left that profession. We characterized the question as "whether or not a person meeting the qualifications for a particular office at the time of his appointment but later giving up those qualifications neverthe- less may continue in office." We think the present question is essentially the same. Citinq Phaqan v. State, 510 S.W.2d 655 (Tex. Civ. App. -- Ft. Worth i974, writ rmn.r.e.1, Whitemarsh v. Buckley, 324 S.W.2d 298 (Tex. Civ. ADD. -- Hous ton 1959, no writ), and Attorney General Opinion-WW-1387 (1962), we said in H-578: Surely, the Legislature, in specifically calling for varying qualifications for members of [the] Board, intended for those qualifications to be represented on the Board. And, following the dictates of the Phagan case, when a person no longer meets the qualifications for a position of the Board, it must be held that he loses his right to serve and the position is vacated. We reaffirm that conclusion here. The Legislature is empowered to enact provisions as to eligibility for statutory offices. Oser v. Cullen, 435 S.W.2d 896 (Tex. Civ. App. -- Houston~ [lst Dist.1 1969, writ ref'd w.0.j.). It is plain that the Legislature wished to prevent Mortician Board domi- nation by representatives of any single chain of establishments. If the H-578 rationale did not apply, there would be nothing to prevent all members of the Board from becoming employees of a single corporation owning or controlling multiple funeral es- tablishments. Cf. Attorney General Opinion H-4 (1973). - You have also asked which member is to be considered dis- qualified, and whether the Board has any jurisdiction or control of its own membership as to the disqualification of the members. In our opinion, the board member who changed his status suffers the consequences of the change. At the time he became p. 4567 Honorable L. H. Davis, Jr. - Page 3 (H&1065) an empioyee of the corporation there was another employee of that corporation already sitting on the Board. The member whose status bhanged so as to become such an additional rep- resentative of that corporation thereby Vacated his office. Attorney General Opinion H-578 (1975). See 47 Tex. Jur.~ 2d Public ,Officers S 44. You also ask whether the State Hoard of Morticians has any jurisdiotion or control over the qualifidations of its own memebrs L Section 2A of article 4582b authorizes the Governor to remove any Board member "for neglect of duty, incompetence, or fraudulent or dishonest conduct." It require;u;;;aovffnor to remove any member "whose license to practice recting and/or embalming has been voided, revoked or suspended." No portion of article 458213, or any other statute, grants to the Hoard itself any jurisdiction over the qualifications of its members. It is well established that an administrative agency . . . has only such powers as are expressly granted to it by statute together with those neces- sarily implied from the authority con- ferred or duties imposed. Staufferv. City of San Antonio, 344 S.W.2d 158, 160 (Tex. 1961). It is therefare our opinion that the State Board of Morticians has no jurisdiction or control over the qualifications of its own members. -See Attorney General Opinion H-226 (1976). SUMMARY A member of the State Board of Morticians who changes employment so as to become an employee of a corporation that owns and operates more than three funeral establish- ments and that already employs another mem- ber of the Board, vacates his Board member- ship by becoming so employed. Qualifications for membership on the State Board of Morti- cians have been set by the Legislature and are not within the control of the Board it- self. p. 4568 Honorable L. B. Davis, Jr. - Page 4 (H-1065) APPROVED: DAVID M. KENDALL, First Assistant Opinion Committee jst p. 4569