Office of the Attorney General — State of Texas John Cornyn The Honorable Susan D. Reed Bexar County Criminal District Attorney Bexar County Justice Center 300 Dolorosa, 5th Floor San Antonio, Texas 78711-2548
Re: Whether under section
Dear Ms. Reed:
The Property Redevelopment and Tax Abatement Act, chapter 312 of the Tax Code, allows the governing bodies of taxing units to enter into tax abatement agreements with respect to property located in a reinvestment zone, under certain circumstances, for the purpose of economic development of the property. You ask whether under section
The circumstances prompting your request are as follows: The Commissioners Court of Bexar County has entered into a tax abatement agreement with Boeing Aerospace Operations, Inc. ("Boeing") for a ten-year term conditioned on Boeing investing in tangible personal property to be located at its leased facility at Kelly Air Force Base in San Antonio. The federally owned base, which is being realigned and will close in the year 2001, is located in the San Antonio Defense Economic Readjustment Zone (the "Zone") established by the City of San Antonio (the "City") pursuant to chapter 2310 of the Government Code. Boeing leases its facility from the Greater Kelly Development Authority (the "GKDA"), the Zone's administrative authority, to which the property has been conditionally conveyed by the federal government. Pursuant to chapter 2310, designation of an area as a readjustment zone constitutes designation of the area as a reinvestment zone for tax abatement purposes under chapter 312 of the Tax Code. The City entered into a tax abatement agreement with Boeing; and because the county must enter into any tax agreement with Boeing under section
You first ask: "Is a tax phase-in agreement entered into by a county under authority of Tax Code §
Based on the information provided, we understand that the county seeks to exempt taxes on the tangible personal property that Boeing will acquire for its tax-exempt leased facility located in an area within the City of San Antonio and designated a readjustment zone pursuant to chapter 2310 of the Government Code. Section 2310.407 of that chapter provides that "[d]esignation of an area as a readjustment zone is also designation of the area as a reinvestment zone for: (1) tax increment financing under Chapter 311, Tax Code; and (2) tax abatement under Chapter 312, Tax Code." Tex. Gov't Code Ann. §
Section
The governing body of a municipality eligible to enter into tax abatement agreements . . . may agree in writing with the owner of taxable real property that is located in a reinvestment zone, but that is not in an improvement project financed by tax increment bonds, to exempt from taxation a portion of the value of the real property or of tangible personal property located on the real property, or both. . . .
Tex. Tax Code Ann. §
If property taxes on property located in the taxing jurisdiction of a municipality are abated under an agreement made under Section 312.204 or 312.211,2 the governing body of each other taxing unit eligible to enter into tax abatement agreements under Section 312.002 in which the property is located may execute a written tax abatement agreement with the owner of the property not later than the 90th day after the date the municipal agreement is executed. The agreement is not required to contain terms identical to those contained in the agreement with the municipality. Section 312.2053 applies to an agreement made by a taxing unit under this section in the same manner as it applies to an agreement made by a municipality under Section 312.204 or 312.211.
Id. § 312.206(a) (emphasis added) (footnotes added); see also id. § 312.206(c) (other taxing units authorized to execute tax abatement agreements with owner of property in reinvestment zone in city's extraterritorial jurisdiction subject to restrictions in section 312.204 or 312.211, even if municipality does not execute an agreement).
Your question requires us to construe section 312.206(a). When construing a statute, "our primary objective is to give effect to the legislature's intent." Mitchell Energy Corp. v. Ashworth,
By its terms, section 312.206(a) authorizes a tax abatement agreement only with the owner of taxable real property. See Tex. Tax Code Ann. §
This construction is consistent with the tax abatement provisions of chapter 312. See Jones v. Fowler,
We do not believe that section 312.204(a) is permissive. See BaptistMem'ls Geriatric Ctr.,
You also ask: "May a county, pursuant to Tax Code §
If a section 312.206(a) county tax abatement agreement must be with the owner of taxable real property, you next ask: "[M]ay Boeing be considered an `owner of taxable real property' under Tax Code §
First, construing Boeing's tax-exempt leasehold interest to qualify for tax abatement under section 312.206(a) would require reading out of the statute the term "taxable" contrary to established principles of statutory construction. We must give effect to each word in a statute when possible because it is a well-established rule of statutory construction that every word in a statute is presumed to have been used for a purpose and that the legislature did not intend to do a useless act by putting in a meaningless provision. See Laidlaw Waste Sys., Inc. v.City of Wilmer,
Moreover, we do not believe a lessee of real property is an "owner of real property" within the meaning of section 312.204(a). First, a lessee, by definition, is not the "owner" of the real property. See,e.g., Black's Law Dictionary 898 (7th ed. 1999) (defining "lease" as "[a] contract by which a rightful possessor of real property conveys the right to use and occupy that property in exchange for consideration, usu. rent."); id. at 914 (defining "lessee" as [o]ne who has a possessory interest in real or personal property under a lease; Tenant."). Second, and more important, the legislature clearly does not believe or intend "owner of real property" to encompass a lessee of that property because when the legislature wishes to provide tax abatement to a lessee of real property, it has done so expressly. Subsection (e) of section 312.204 expressly authorizes an eligible city to execute tax abatement agreements with the owner or lessee of real property: "The governing body of a municipality . . . may agree in writing with the owner or lessee of realproperty that is located in a reinvestment zone to exempt from taxation . . . a portion of the value of the real property or of personal property, or both, located within the zone and owned or leased by a certificated air carrier. . . ." Tex. Tax Code Ann. §
We do not believe that Letter Opinion 98-001, construing section 312.402(d) which prohibits a commissioners court from entering into a tax abatement agreement regarding property "owned or leased by a member of the commissioners court," supports a contrary interpretation. Tex. Tax Code Ann. §
the terms "owned" and "owner" in chapter 312 refer to property interest that includes at least some degree of control over the property and do not embrace a mere beneficial or equitable interest in property completely lacking such control. A person who holds legal title to property and owns the property in fee simple is clearly an owner for purposes of chapter 312. We also believe that the sole shareholder of a corporation who has the authority to dispose of corporate assets may be an owner of corporate property for purposes of the chapter. We do not believe, however, that the owner of a very small percentage of a publicly-held corporation's shares can be said to own corporate property for purposes of chapter 312.
Tex. Att'y Gen. LO-98-001, at 3 (footnote omitted) (emphasis added). Although Letter Opinion 98-001 indicates that an "owner" for the purpose of chapter 312 may include the holder of property interest including some degree of control short of legal title in fee simple, it cannot reasonably be read to include a leasehold interest when such an interest is specifically and separately provided for under chapter 312.
Although you ask us only about section
First, section 311.0125's application, in our opinion, is limited to tax increment financing reinvestment zones. Unlike chapter 312 of the Tax Code dealing specifically and comprehensively with tax abatement, chapter 311, the Tax Increment Financing Act, deals with the financing of projects in a reinvestment zone, which must be done in accordance with a project and financing plan for the reinvestment zone adopted by the zone's board of directors with "tax increments"8 remitted by participating taxing units or proceeds of tax increment bonds or notes. See id. §§ 311.001, .002, .003, .004, .008, .010, .011, .013, .014, .015 (Vernon 1992 Supp. 2000). As described by the Texas Supreme Court, the statute is "designed to aid . . . in financing public improvements in blighted or underdeveloped areas[,]" and "[a]ny increase in ad valorem tax revenues from land within the zone is then committed to the purchase of property, improvement of approved property, or retirement of revenue bonds issued to provide funding for the approved projects." City of ElPaso v. El Paso Community College Dist.,
Second, because section
Yours very truly,
JOHN CORNYN Attorney General of Texas
ANDY TAYLOR First Assistant Attorney General
CLARK KENT ERVIN Deputy Attorney General — General Counsel
SUSAN D. GUSKY Chair, Opinion Committee
Sheela Rai Assistant Attorney General — Opinion Committee
