The Honorable Royce West, Chair, Committee on Intergovernmental Relations, Texas State Senate, Post Office Box 12068.
Re: Whether, in light of section
Dear Senator West:
Health and Safety Code section
Section 694.002(a) requires a county commissioners court to "provide for the disposition of the body of a deceased pauper." TEX. HEALTH
SAFETY CODE ANN. §
Chapter 716 of the Health and Safety Code regulates the operation of crematory establishments.2 See TEX. HEALTH SAFETY CODE ANN. ch. 716 (Vernon Supp. 2006); see also *Page 2 id. § 716.001(10) (defining "crematory establishment" as "a business that operates a crematory for which a license is required under Subchapter N, Chapter 651, Occupations Code"). Under section 716.101, which you cite, "[a] crematory establishment may not accept for cremation unidentified human remains." Id.
You suggest that we should interpret section 716.101 to distinguish between unidentified remains brought to a crematory establishment by counties and those brought by other entities or individuals.3See Request Letter, supra note 1, at 2. But the Legislature has not, in section 716.101 or in any other statute of which we are aware, articulated such a distinction. Neither section 716.101 nor any other statute (such as Health and Safety Code section
Because a crematory establishment cannot accept unidentified remains for cremation, section 716.101 effectively abrogates a county's authority to dispose of an unidentified pauper's remains by cremation under section 694.002(a).4 See id. § 716.101. Of course, chapter 716 does not affect a county's authority under section 694.002 to have the remains of an identified pauper cremated. Cf. TEX. GOV'T CODE ANN. §§
Very truly yours,
GREG ABBOT, Attorney General of Texas
KENT C. SULLIVAN, First Assistant Attorney General.
ELLEN L. WITT, Deputy Attorney General for Legal Counsel.
NANCY S. FULLER Chair, Opinion Committee.
KYMBERLY K. OLTROGGE, Assistant Attorney General, Opinion Committee.
