The Honorable Florence Shapiro Chair, Committee on Education Texas State Senate Post Office Box 12068 Austin, Texas 78711-2068
Re: Validity of collecting a Regional Transportation Authority's sales and use tax at different levels in separate subregions (RQ-0677-GA)
Dear Senator Shapiro:
You inquire about the imposition of a Regional Transportation Authority's ("RTA") "sales and use tax at different levels in separate Subregions within the authority."1 You specifically ask about the satisfaction of the constitution's equal and uniform taxation requirement if the sales and use tax "is collected at a uniform voter-approved rate within a Subregion of an RTA but at different rates in different Subregions, all of which receive different approved levels of service that take into account their disparate tax levels[.]" Request Letter,supra note 1, at 2; see also TEX. CONST. art.
Because of that assumption, it is helpful to have an understanding of the geography of RTAs before addressing your question. RTAs are governed by chapter 452, Transportation Code. See generally tex. transp. code ann. ch. 452 (Vernon 2007 Supp. 2007) (titled "Regional Transportation Authorities"). Chapter 452 authorizes an RTA to be initiated from "each subregion of a metropolitan area,"2 or from only one subregion.3Id. § 452.701(a) (Vernon 2007); see id. *Page 2 §§ 452.701(c) (providing that if "one subregion establishes an authority, the remaining subregion may establish a separate subregional authority"), 452.001 (1)(B) (defining "authority" to include "an authority . . . consisting of one subregion"). For its purposes, chapter 452 defines "subregion" as "a principal municipality, the county of the principal municipality, and any municipality or unit of election included in the boundaries of a subregion by the creating entity . . . and confirmed at an election."4 Id. § 452.001(12) (emphasis added). Separately, the territory of a proposed RTA includes all of the territory in the "county of the principal municipality" and "each unit of election that has the majority of its population in [that] county." Id. § 452.704(a)(1)-(2). Upon the results of the confirmation election, the RTA is authorized in the whole of the county territory and the units of election in which voters approve the RTA. See id. § 452.717(a); see alsoid. § 452.716(a) (requiring that the confirmation election be conducted "so that the votes are separately tabulated and canvassed in each participating unit of election"). Thus, the territory of an RTA will necessarily include and overlap with the territory of a county and participating municipalities. At the same time, the territory of the RTA itself could consist of one or more subregions. While chapter 452 authorizes a "contiguous municipality"5 to create its own RTA, it does not authorize any municipality to create its own subregion that may then participate in an RTA. Chapter 452 does not equate a municipality with a subregion.
RTAs are created to "provide public and complementary transportation services in the area." Id. § 452.701(a); see id § 452.056(a)(1) (authorizing authority to operate and maintain a public transportation system). Toward that purpose, an RTA is authorized to collect a transit sales and use tax. See id. § 452.401 (a) (authorizing executive committee to impose a sales and use tax for the authority at specified rates). The imposition of the sales and use tax must be approved at an election. *Page 3
See id. § 452.401 (b). The rate may not exceed a rate that "when combined with the rates of all sales and use taxes imposed by other political subdivisions . . . having territory in the [RTA] exceeds two percent in any location in the [RTA]." Id. § 452.403(a); see alsoid. § 452.401(a) (authorizing rate of between one-quarter of one percent to one percent); tex. tax code ann. §§
Article VIII, section 1(a) provides that "[t]axation shall be equal and uniform." TEX. CONST. art.
Taxes are said, within the meaning of the constitution, to be `equal and uniform,' when no person nor class of persons in the taxing district, whether a state, county, or other municipal corporation, is taxed at a different rate than are other persons in the same district upon the same value or the same thing, and where the objects of taxation are the same by whomsoever owned, or whatever they be.
Norris v. City of Waco,
Moreover, a court in considering whether a particular tax classification conforms to article VIII, section 1(a) would begin with a presumption of validity. See Smith,
Under article VIII, section 1(a), a tax imposed by a taxing entity within its territory that equally and uniformly operates on all property or persons in the taxing entity is not constitutionally infirm. SeeNorris,
The express question you present involves an RTA that consists of more than one subregion and that imposes a sales and use tax at different rates in the different subregions. See Request Letter, supra note 1, at 2. However, you do not provide information about a particular RTA nor are we aware of any existing RTA that consists of more than one subregion.See supra pp. 3-4 (describing origin of chapter 452 to accommodate the Dallas/Fort Worth metropolitan area); see also DART Brief, supra note 3, at 4 (stating that DART is a "regional transportation authority comprised of one subregion"). Thus, we can advise you only generally about such a hypothetical RTA.
As noted above, under article VIII, section 1(a), courts allow tax classifications that are reasonable and impose obligations that fall equally upon members of a class. See supra pp. 3-4. If, as you suggest, the tax rate within each subregion operates equally within the subregion, we believe a court could find the tax for each subregion falls equally upon the persons and property of that subregion. See Request Letter, supra note 1, at 2 (inquiring about a sales and use tax "collected at a uniform voter-approved rate within a Subregion"). Such a finding would leave a reviewing court with the remaining determination about the reasonableness of the classification — here the different tax treatment based on different subregions.
The difference need not be significant. See Fairmont Dallas Rests.,Inc. v. McBeath, 618 S.W.2d 931,933 (Tex.Civ.App.-Waco 1981, no writ) ("The difference between the subjects taxed need not be great, and if any reasonable distinction can be found, the duty of the court is to sustain the classification embodied in the law.") (citing Hurt v. Cooper, 110 S.W.2d 896,904 (Tex. 1937) (stating: "It would not be argued that the Legislature is without power to levy a tax upon dry goods merchants without at the same time levying a like tax upon grocery merchants. The fact that the merchants not taxed, or those exempted from the tax, sell a different kind of goods from those which are taxed, is an all-sufficient justification of the classification or exemption.")); Bullock v. ABCInterstate Theaters, Inc.,
Thus, under article XIII, section 1(a), upon a determination that the tax is uniform within each subregion and that the different tax rates in the subregions are based on reasonable and nonarbitrary distinctions, a court could well uphold a difference in tax rates between the subregions. *Page 6
Chapter 452 of the Transportation Code authorizes a Regional Transportation Authority ("RTA") consisting of more than one subregion to collect a sales and use tax at different rates in the different subregions. For any RTA organized under chapter 452 that has more than one subregion and that collects the sales and use tax at different rates from the different subregions, the difference in tax rates could be upheld under article VIII, section 1(a) if the tax falls equally on people and property within each subregion and the different tax treatment by each subregion is reasonable.
Very truly yours,
GREG ABBOTT Attorney General of Texas
KENT C. SULLIVAN First Assistant Attorney General
ANDREW WEBER Deputy Attorney General for Legal Counsel
NANCY S. FULLER Chair, Opinion Committee
Charlotte M. Harper Assistant Attorney General, Opinion Committee
