The Honorable David P. Weeks Walker County Criminal District Attorney 1036 11th Street Huntsville, Texas 77340
Re: Whether certain reservations and assignments in deeds executed by a member of a city council operate to exclude particular property from tax increment financing under Tax Code section
Dear Mr. Weeks:
You inform us that in 2004, the City of Huntsville (the "City") created a tax increment financing reinvestment zone pursuant to the Tax Increment Financing Act, chapter 311 of the Tax Code.1 You relate that an individual who was then and who is now a city council member owned approximately a seven percent undivided interest in certain real property located in the zone. See Brief at 1, 4. In 2008, you tell us, the council member "deeded" his interest to his children, but "reserved the net proceeds from any future sale of the property and transferred and assigned those proceeds to the City . . . to be used for the renovation, expansion and/or construction of the Public Library in memory" of a relative of the council member. Id. at 1. You first ask whether the reservation "operate[s] to exclude the property from tax increment financing under Tax Code section
The Tax Increment Financing Act, chapter 311 of the Tax Code, authorizes an eligible city to establish a qualifying area as a reinvestment zone and finance authorized projects in the zone to promote its development or redevelopment. See TEX. TAX CODE ANN. §§
Chapter 312 does not define the terms "own" and "owner" or indicate the Legislature's intent in enacting section 312.204(d). Texas courts have generally defined "owner" under the Tax Code as the person holding legal title to the property or holding an equitable right to obtain legal title to the property. See Childress County v. State,
Under the general law, execution and delivery of a deed conveys to the grantee title to the transferred property. See Stephens County Museum,Inc. v. Swenson,
Assuming the validity of a reservation of the sale proceeds of the property conveyed, the issue here is whether such a reservation retains to the grantor ownership of the property for the purposes of section 312.204(d).2 By definition, a reservation of the sale proceeds retains to the grantor only an ownership interest in the proceeds if and when the property is sold. Such a reservation does not by its terms retain to the grantor legal or equitable title to the properly itself.See The Peoples Gas, Light, Coke Co. v. Harrison Cent. AppraisalDist.,
We recognize that an ownership interest in the sale proceeds of the property conveyed is a valuable interest, and a reservation of such an interest by the grantor appears "inconsistent with the terms and ostensible object" of a conveyance. Baldwin v. Peet, Sims Co., 22 Tex. 708,718(1859) (discussing fraudulent conveyances to avoid payment to creditors and indicating that deed reservations are "sustained only when they are consistent with the objects of the deed"). Additionally, a grantor who retains such an interest retains a direct pecuniary interest in transactions relating to the property, including tax increment financing.3 However, Tax Code section
Accordingly, we think it unlikely that a member of a governing body who in a deed conveying property reserves to himself the sale proceeds of the property, if and when the property is sold, is the owner of the property under section 312.204(d) by virtue of the reservation. Thus, a reservation of the proceeds, by itself, does not appear to operate to exclude property from tax increment financing under section 312.204(d). Given this conclusion, it is unnecessary to address your second question as to whether the entire tract or only the council member's "portion of the tract" is excluded by operation of the reservation and assignment.5See Brief at 2. *Page 5
Very truly yours,
GREG ABBOTT Attorney General of Texas
ANDREW WEBER First Assistant Attorney General
JONATHAN K. FRELS Deputy Attorney General for Legal Counsel
NANCY S. FULLER Chair, Opinion Committee
Sheela Rai Assistant Attorney General, Opinion Committee
