The Honorable Alberto R. Gonzales Secretary of State Office of the Secretary of State P.O. Box 12697 Austin, Texas 78711-2697
Re: Whether a corporation that intends to operate as a cooperative may incorporate under the Texas Non-Profit Act or must the corporation incorporate under the Cooperative Association Act (RQ-966)
Dear Mr. Gonzales:
Your predecessor requested an opinion about the incorporation of a cooperative corpora-tion under the Texas Non-Profit Corporation Act, Texas Civil Statutes articles
on behalf of its patrons, to engage in the cooperative purchase, primarily by contract with third parties, of various utility and utility-related services which may include, but are not limited to, voice and data transmission communications, security and monitoring services, cable television and electric services, and for all lawful business for which cooperative non-profit corporations may be organized under Texas law.
Arts. of Inc. of Poka Lambro Communications Coop., Inc., art. IV (Purpose) (Mar. 11, 1997). Poka's patrons are its members. Id.
art. VII. The members do not vote. Id. Article III of the articles of incorporation states that Poka is organized as a nonprofit cooperative corporation pursuant to the nonprofit act, but article IX provides that Poka shall operate on a cooperative basis as that term is defined in the Texas Cooperative Act, Article
"Cooperative basis" is a term of art specifically defined in the Cooperative Association Act (the "cooperative act"). See V.T.C.S. art. 1396-50.01, § 2(5).
Your predecessor asked if "a corporation, which intends to operate as a cooperative [may] incorporate under the [non-profit act] when there is no specific statute providing for incorporation for that specific cooperative purpose, or must the corporation be incorporated under the [cooperative act]." In our opinion, such a corporation must incorporate under the cooperative act.1
Before we consider the relevant provisions of the nonprofit act and the cooperative act, we believe it would be helpful to provide a brief overview of a "cooperative" corporation or association and its distinctive features. A "cooperative" is a corporation or association organized for the purpose of providing economic services, without gain to itself, to shareholders or members who own and control it. United Grocers, Ltd. v. UnitedStates,
With the above overview of the nature of cooperatives, we consider now the relevant provisions of the nonprofit act adopted by the legislature in 1959.5 The statute provides that "[e]xcept as hereinafter in this Article expressly excluded herefrom, non-profit corporations may be organized under this Act for any lawful purpose or purposes . . . ."6 V.T.C.S. art. 1396-2.01(A). The phrase "nonprofit corporation" is defined as "the equivalent of `not for profit corporation' and means a corporation no part of the income of which is distributable to its members, directors, or officers." Id. art. 1396-1.02(3). Article 1396-2.24(A) additionally provides that "[n]o dividend shall be paid and no part of the income of a corporation shall be distributed to its members, directors, or officers." The statute does not define "income of a corporation," nor have we found any Texas cases construing this phrase.
Since 1959, the nonprofit act has expressly excluded from its application7 cooperatives organized for particular purposes,i.e., "Co-operative Credit Associations, Farmers' Co-operative Societies, Co-operative Marketing Act Corporations, Rural Electric Co-operative Corporations, [and] Telephone Co-operative Corporations . . . ." Id. art. 1396-2.01(B)(3). Each one of the excluded cooperatives is provided for and may be incorporated under a specific statute.8 Poka is not one of the excluded cooperatives.9 The act does not expressly prohibit incorporation of other nonprofit cooperatives, and in an opinion issued in 1960, before the legislature enacted the cooperative act, this office refused to construe the exclusionary language discussed above to exclude all cooperatives from the purview of the act. See Attorney General Opinion WW-849 (1960) at 2. In Attorney General Opinion WW-849, this office determined that the secretary of state was not prohibited from accepting and filing under the nonprofit act articles of incorporation of a nonprofit corporation merely because its stated corporate purpose was to acquire and operate an apartment building to be used by its members on a cooperative basis.10 Id. at 4.
In 1975, subsequent to the issuance of Attorney General Opinion WW-849, the legislature enacted the cooperative act.11 The cooperative act authorizes incorporation of any association12 "to engage in acquiring, producing, building, operating, manufacturing, furnishing, exchanging, or distributing any type of property, commodities, goods, or services for the primary and mutual benefit of the members of the association." V.T.C.S. art. 1396-50.01, § 5. The statute does not apply to associations or corporations organized to provide or related to health or medical care, or organized under the Cooperative Marketing Act, Agriculture Code chapter 52. Id. §§ 4, 45.
Only an association incorporated under the cooperative act, a group organized on a cooperative basis under any other state law, or a foreign corporation organized on a cooperative basis and authorized to do business in this state, may use the term "cooperative" as part of its name, or represent itself as conducting business on a cooperative basis. Id. § 39(a).13 "Cooperative basis" is defined as follows:
`Cooperative basis' means that the net savings after payment, if any, of investment dividends and after making provisions for separate funds required or specifically permitted by statute, articles, or by-laws is allocated or distributed to member patrons, or to all patrons, in proportion to their patronage or retained by the enterprise for the actual or potential expansion of its services, the reduction of its charges to the patrons, or for other purposes not inconsistent with its non-profit character.
V.T.C.S. art. 1396-50.01 § 2(5) (emphasis added). "Net savings" means "the total income of an association less the costs of operation." Id. § 2(3). The net savings must be apportioned in the order and distributed in the manner set forth in section 34. Groups operating on a cooperative basis on the effective date of the statute may elect to secure the benefits of and be governed by the statute. Id. § 42. The cooperative act does not expressly require that all eligible cooperatives incorporate thereunder.
No court has addressed the question of whether a cooperative not specifically provided for by a different statute must incorporate under the cooperative act rather than the nonprofit act. The following principles of statutory construction guide our resolution of this question of first impression:
Our ultimate purpose must be to effect the Legislature's intent. Union Bankers Ins. Co. v. Shelton,
889 S.W.2d 278 ,280 (Tex. 1994). We resort to rules of construction only when the statute in question is ambiguous. Ex parte Roloff,510 S.W.2d 913 ,915 (Tex. 1974). When the meaning of an existing law is uncertain, the Legislature's later interpretation of it is highly persuasive. Stanford v. Butler,142 Tex. 692 ,181 S.W.2d 269 ,274 (1944). In addition, the construction of a statute by an agency charged with its execution is entitled to serious consideration unless the agency's construction is clearly inconsistent with the Legislature's intent. Tarrant Appraisal Dist. v. Moore,845 S.W.2d 820 ,823 (Tex. 1993); see also Tex. Gov't Code §311.023 (6).
Texas Water Comm'n v. Brushy Creek Mun. Util. Dist.,
First, we apply these rules to reexamine the nonprofit act. Although the nonprofit act does not prohibit incorporation of cooperatives generally, it does not provide for such incorporation, nor does it otherwise provide for cooperatives. No provision is made for operation on a "cooperative basis," as described above, i.e., the equal or proportionate distribution of income or dividend to members after payment of actual operation expenses. In fact, on its face, the statute would appear to exclude corporations that intend or do operate on a cooperative basis, given its definition of a "nonprofit corporation" as a "a corporation no part of the income of which is distributable tothe members, directors, or officers." See V.T.C.S. art. 1396-1.02(3) (defining "non-profit corporation"); see also arts. 1396-2.24(A) (prohibiting dividends and distribution of corporation's income), 1396-50.01, § 2(5) (definition of "cooperative basis"). This is not fully dispositive, however, since the nonprofit act does not define "income of a corporation" and, arguably, income derived by a cooperative from its business operations does not constitute income to the cooperative.14
One court has speculated, in connection with resolving the separate question of what income is taxable to a cooperative, that "[i]t is quite probable that income of a cooperative, which is so organized as to be in the relation of agent or trustee to its members, would not be considered income to the cooperative but, rather, the income of the principals or beneficiaries the members." United Grocers,
That the legislature did not view the nonprofit act as providing for cooperatives is evidenced by the legislative history of the cooperative act. See Brushy Creek M.U.D.,
Under present statutes there are no provisions relating to the incorporation, regulation, and organization of cooperative associations. Due to the increasing number of cooperative associations being created, it is felt that legislation is needed to protect those people who might become members of such organizations.
House Judiciary Comm., Bill Analysis, H.B. 643, 64th Leg., R.S. (1975). The House Study Group, the predecessor to the House Research Organization, makes the following comment with respect to cooperatives and the nonprofit act:
No current law offers a satisfactory vehicle through which consumer cooperatives may incorporate — (and thereby gain the tax benefits, limited liability, regulation by the State and other benefits [of] incorporation). The Texas Non-Profit Corporation Act does not provide for distribution of dividends to members; the Cooperative Marketing Act only applies to producers' cooperatives.
House Study Group, Judiciary Comm. Cooperative Association Act, H.B. 643, 64th Leg., R.S. (1975) (emphasis in original).
We next apply the rules of statutory construction set out above to analyze the cooperative act. The legislature, by adopting the cooperative act, intended to address the gap in the law regarding cooperatives, and to provide a comprehensive statutory framework for the incorporation, organization, and regulation of cooperative associations. See Act of May 24, 1975, 64th Leg., R.S., ch. 318, 1975 Tex. Gen. Laws 814, 814 (caption) ("An Act relating to the incorporation, organization, and regulation of cooperative associations; providing penalties; and declaring an emergency."); Judiciary Comm. Cooperative Association Act, H.B. 643, 64th Leg., R.S. (1975) ("The purpose of H.B. 643 is to provide statutes relating to incorporation, organization, and regulation of cooperative associations."); House Study Group, Judiciary Comm. Cooperative Association Act, H.B. 643, 64th Leg., R.S. (1975) ("This bill provides an entire statutory scheme for the incorporation, regulation, and organization of cooperative associations. . . . The bill permits cooperatives to incorporate to engage in practically any kind of enterprise for the `mutual benefit of the members of the association.'").
Moreover, as the House Judiciary Committee's statements indicate, the legislature intended by enacting the cooperative act to protect those persons who might become members of a cooperative. Thus, the cooperative act provides that each individual member has one vote unless the member is another association or cooperative group in which case the voting rights of the member association may be as prescribed in the articles of incorporation or bylaws. V.T.C.S. art. 1396-50.01, § 16(a). No voting agreement or other device to evade the one-member-one-vote rule is enforceable. Id. § 16(b). Furthermore, the association must be managed by a board of directors elected by and from members of the association. Id. § 21(a). With certain exceptions, net savings must be apportioned at least annually and in the order set forth in the statute. Id. § 34(a); see id. § 34(b) (exceptions) (section does not prevent association engaged in rendering services from disposing of net savings in manner calculated to lower service fees or further common benefit to members), id. § 34(c) (section does not prevent association from adopting system in which savings are deferred for fixed period). The net savings, remaining after payment of investment dividends and allocation to an educational fund or retained earnings funds, if any, must "be allocated at the same uniform rate to all patrons of the association in proportion to their individual patronage . . . ."Id. § 34(4).
Requiring cooperatives to incorporate under the cooperative act furthers the legislative purpose of the cooperative act to protect cooperative members. See Brushy Creek M.U.D.,
Our conclusion that cooperatives must incorporate under the cooperative act is also supported by the long-standing interpretation of the administrative agency charged with administration of the nonprofit act and the cooperative act. SeeBrushy Creek M.U.D.,
At most, this provision recognizes that some cooperatives have been organized under the nonprofit act prior to the adoption of the cooperative act. Cf. Attorney General Opinion WW-849 (1960).
Yours very truly,
DAN MORALES Attorney General of Texas
JORGE VEGA First Assistant Attorney General
SARAH J. SHIRLEY Chair, Opinion Committee
Prepared by Sheela Rai Assistant Attorney General
In this section, a nonprofit cooperative corporation means a cooperative corporation organized under Chapters 51 and 52, Agriculture Code, the Texas Non-Profit Corporation Act (Article 1396-1.01 et seq., Vernon's Texas Civil Statutes), the Cooperative Association Act (Article 1396-50.01, Vernon's Texas Civil Statutes), and the Electric Cooperative Corporation Act (Article
1528b , Vernon's Texas Civil Statutes).
