The Honorable Michael P. Fleming Harris County Attorney 1001 Preston, Suite 634 Houston, Texas 77002-1891
Re: Whether a county may amend a tax abatement agreement entered into pursuant to Tax Code chapter 312 by deleting land from an existing reinvestment zone and related questions (RQ-938)
Dear Mr. Fleming:
You ask about the authority of a county to amend a tax abatement agreement entered into by the county pursuant to Tax Code chapter 312. First, you ask whether a county is authorized to amend a tax abatement agreement by deleting land from an existing reinvestment zone. You also ask whether property within a county reinvestment zone must be contiguous and whether a county may designate only a portion of a building, such as a floor, as a reinvestment zone. Finally, you ask about the criteria for tax abatement agreements. We conclude that a county is not authorized to amend a tax abatement agreement by deleting land from an existing reinvestment zone. We also conclude that a county reinvestment zone must be contiguous and may not consist of only a portion of a building. Lastly, we conclude that the legislature intended to leave the substance of criteria for tax abatement agreements to the discretion of each county commissioners court, subject to very general constraints and certain specific limitations imposed by chapter 312.
In 1981, the voters ratified article
Subchapter C of chapter 312 authorizes a commissioners court of a county to enter into a tax abatement agreement with the owner of taxable real property located in a reinvestment zone only if the county commissioners court has designated the reinvestment zone according to certain statutory procedures. See Tax Code §
Once a county has designated a reinvestment zone, the commissioners court of the county is authorized to execute tax abatement agreements with owners of taxable real property within the zone. Id. §§ 312.401, .402(a). The execution, duration and other terms of a county tax abatement agreement are governed by sections 312.204, 312.205, and 312.211, which govern municipal tax abatement agreements. Id. Similarly, a county tax abatement agreement "may be modified or terminated in the same manner and subject to the same limitations as provided by [s]ection 312.208," id. § 312.402(e), the provision governing the modification and termination of municipal tax abatement agreements. A county tax abatement agreement may not exceed a period of ten years, id. § 312.204(a), and may not be modified to extend beyond that ten-year period, id. § 312.208(a). Again, the expiration of the designation of the reinvestment zone does not affect existing agreements within the zone. Id. § 312.401(c).
Your brief suggests that a reinvestment zone and a tax abatement agreement are legally one and the same. Based on our analysis of the statutory provisions discussed above, we view the relationship between a reinvestment zone and a tax abatement agreement differently. Although property subject to a tax abatement agreement may be coextensive with a reinvestment zone,2 a tax abatement agreement and a reinvestment zone are legally distinct. Designation of a reinvestment zone is a prerequisite to commissioners court authority to enter into a tax abatement agreement. A reinvestment zone is established by commissioners court order after the court has held public hearings and made the requisite findings. In addition, a reinvestment zone may (but need not)3 encompass holdings of many property owners and may be subject to more than one tax abatement agreement.4 Furthermore, a reinvestment zone's designation expires five years after the date of the designation and may be renewed for periods not to exceed five years.5 A tax abatement agreement, on the other hand, is a contractual agreement negotiated between the county and a specific property owner. A tax abatement agreement governs the taxation of specific property within a zone. A commissioners court is not required to hold hearings or make findings regarding a tax abatement agreement. Finally, a tax abatement agreement, which may not exceed a ten-year period, has a different life span than a reinvestment zone.6
With this overview of a county's authority to enter into a chapter 312 tax abatement agreement and the relationship between a reinvestment zone and a tax abatement agreement, we turn to your specific questions. First, you ask if a county is "authorized to amend a tax abatement agreement by deleting land from an existing reinvestment zone." For the following reasons, we conclude that a county is not authorized to do so.
First, we find no authority for a county to modify a reinvestment zone. A county has only those powers conferred by the Texas Constitution and statutes, either expressly or by necessary implication.7 Subchapter C contains no provision expressly authorizing a county to modify a reinvestment zone once the zone has been designated and we do not believe such authority can be implied. The authority to modify a reinvestment zone is not necessary to the implementation of subchapter C. Furthermore, the Tax Increment Financing Act, which was also enacted by the legislature in 1981 in anticipation of article
Second, Tax Code section
To summarize, chapter 312, subchapter C does not authorize a county to modify a reinvestment zone after it has been designated. The authority to modify a tax abatement agreement does not include the authority to modify the reinvestment zone in which the property subject to the agreement is located. Because we conclude that a county is not authorized to amend a tax abatement agreement by deleting land from an existing reinvestment zone, we do not address your related questions.8
Next you pose two questions about the physical characteristics of a reinvestment zone. You ask first whether property within a county reinvestment zone must be contiguous and second whether a county is authorized to designate a portion of a building, such as a floor, as a reinvestment zone. Because these questions are related, we address them together.
While subchapter C does not establish any express requirements for the physical characteristics of a reinvestment zone, the language of the subchapter provides guidance. We believe that the legislature's use of the term "zone" in chapter 312 is significant. In addition, we note that the legislature in subchapter C has specifically referred to a reinvestment zone as "an area."9 The Code Construction Act provides that "[w]ords and phrases shall be read in context and construed according to the rules of grammar and common usage." Gov't Code §
With these definitions in mind, we turn to your questions. First, we conclude that the term "zone" itself and the use of the phrase "an area" to describe a reinvestment zone indicate that the legislature intended a reinvestment zone to embrace a single, contiguous whole and that it did not intend a reinvestment zone to include noncontiguous territory. The requirement that a reinvestment zone be contiguous is consistent with other economic-development statutes, which expressly provide that analogous zones must be contiguous.13 With respect to your second question, because the terms "zone" and "area" refer to territory, a parcel of land, or a portion of the earth's surface, we conclude that no part of a building may be included in a reinvestment zone unless the zone includes the land on which the building is located. A reinvestment zone may not consist of only a floor of a multi-story building. The conclusion that a reinvestment zone must consist of a portion of land is also consistent with the express provisions in other economic-development statutes.14
The foregoing construction of chapter 312 should not limit the authority of a county to designate reinvestment zones and enter into tax abatement agreements. Nothing in chapter 312 precludes the county from designating a contiguous reinvestment zone and then entering into tax abatement agreements with owners of taxable real property affecting only some property within the zone, such as noncontiguous property owned by a single taxpayer or a floor of a multi-story building.15 We also note that chapter 312 does not limit a county to designating only one reinvestment zone in the county.
Finally, you ask, "What criteria should be used when considering the granting of a tax abatement in a reinvestment zone." Subchapter C requires the governing body of the county, the commissioners court, to establish "guidelines and criteria governing tax abatement agreements" prior to designating a reinvestment zone. Tax Code §§
Yours very truly,
DAN MORALES Attorney General of Texas
JORGE VEGA First Assistant Attorney General
SARAH J. SHIRLEY Chair, Opinion Committee
Prepared by Mary R. Crouter Assistant Attorney General
