Honorable James S. McGrath Criminal District Attorney Jefferson County Courthouse Beaumont, Texas 77704
Re: Interpretation of legislation creating Jefferson County Drainage District No. 7
Dear Mr. McGrath:
You ask three questions regarding the provisions for choosing directors of the Jefferson County Drainage District No. 7.
In 1962, the Texas Legislature created the Jefferson County Drainage District No. 7, a special district established pursuant to article
. . . [T]he provisions of Sections
56.061 through56.063 , Water Code . . . shall apply to the Commissioners of the District. Section56.064 , Water Code, as amended, shall apply to this District, except that the Commissioners Court shall order the election on petition of at least 20 percent of the real property taxpayers of the district, and that five Commissioners shall be elected at large if an election is ordered under that section. . . . (Emphasis added).Acts 1977, 65th Leg., ch. 614, § 1, at 1520. Section
56.061 of the Water Code provides that the commissioners (or `directors') of the district be appointed by the county commissioners court. Section56.064 of the Water Code declares that `[o]n petition of a majority of the real property taxpayers of a district requesting an election of district directors, the commissioners court shall immediately order an election. . . .' (Emphasis added).
You request our opinion concerning the proper interpretation of the 1977 amendment. First, you ask whether the 1977 amendment, which authorizes 20 percent of the real property taxpayers of the district to require the election of district directors, constitutes an improper delegation of legislative authority to private citizens both to make and to suspend the law in violation of the Texas Constitution. We hold that the amendment does neither.
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Early on, the Texas Supreme Court recognized the distinction between a delegation of legislative power to make a law and the discretionary exercise of a power conferred by a law. In State v. Swisher,
The legislature may grant authority as well as give commands, and acts done under its authority are as valid as if done in obedience to its commands. Nor is a statute, whose complete execution and application to the subject matter is, by its provisions, made to depend on the assent of some other body, a delegation of legislative power. The discretion goes to the exercise of the power conferred by the law, but not to make the law itself.
The law, in such cases, may depend for its practical efficiency on the act of some other body or individual; still, it is not derived from such act, but from the legislative authority. Legislation of this character is of familiar use, and occurs whenever rights or privileges are conferred upon individuals or bodies, which may be exercised or not in their discretion. And if it may be left to the judgment of individuals or private corporations whether they will avail themselves of privileges conferred by the legislature, there is certainly no valid reason why the same may not be done with citizens of a town or district, who, as a class, are to be affected by the proposed act. (Emphasis added).
Thus, the Texas Court of Criminal Appeals and the Texas Supreme Court struck down as being an unconstitutional delegation of legislative authority a statute which authorized voters in each county to decide whether pool halls should be prohibited in their respective counties. Lyle v. State,
At the same time, Texas courts have recognized that statutes which confer powers to particular political subdivisions only upon an affirmative vote of those persons affected thereby are not impermissible exercises of legislative authority. A statute which authorized municipalities to take control of their schools upon an affirmative vote of the citizens therein was upheld in Werner v. City of Galveston,
It is a well-settled principle that the legislature cannot delegate its authority to make laws by submitting the question of their enactment to a popular vote; and in State v. Swisher,
17 Tex. 441 , this court held an act of the legislature which authorized the counties of the state to determine by popular vote whether liquor should be sold in their respective limits to be unconstitutional. But it does not follow from this that the legislature has no authority to confer a power upon a municipal corporation, and to authorize its acceptance or rejection by the municipality according to the will of its voters as expressed at the ballot box. (Emphasis added).
In Riley v. Town of Trenton,
In voting to adopt certain statutory provisions, the voters do not in reality adopt the law; they merely bring about a situation to which the law by its terms has been made applicable. The law is the finished product of the Legislature, and it only awaits the existence of the conditions to which by its terms it is made applicable in order to be enforced.
Admittedly, a petition is ordinarily used only to call an election to determine whether a proposition will effect some change, rather than to effect the change itself. Such a procedure, though, has received the imprimatur of the Texas Supreme Court. In Graham v. City of Greenville, supra, the supreme court held effective an annexation accomplished by means of a petition, in spite of the fact that the statute under which the annexation was authorized provided that `[w]henever a majority of the inhabitants qualified to vote . . . shall vote in favor of [annexation].'
The legislature, having power to provide by general law for the extension of the corporate limits of cities of 10,000 inhabitants or less, with the assent of a majority of the residents of the territory proposed to be annexed, has certainly the right to prescribe the manner in which their wishes shall be ascertained. The constitution says that in all elections by the people the vote shall be taken by ballot, but does not provide that the will of a limited number of people upon any subject in which they may be interested shall be ascertained in no other way except by a public election. We are pointed to no clause in that instrument which, either directly or by implication, compels the legislature, in case it proposes to ascertain whether the people living near a city wish to be annexed to it, to submit that question to them at a public election. With the unlimited power over municipal corporations possessed by the legislature, it may provide for an extension of their limits upon petition of a majority of persons residing within the territory proposed to be annexed, or upon their request ascertained in any other manner, as well as by votes given at a public election.
Nor does the fact that the 1977 amendment authorizes a minority of real property taxpayers in the district to require the election of directors render the amendment unconstitutional. You argue that the legislature is without power to authorize a minority of real property taxpayers to change the method of selection from one of appointment to one of election. We have found no authority in support of this claim; Washington ex rel. Seattle Title Trust Company v. Roberge,
The legislature is clearly empowered to determine that the requisite number of signatures on a petition to call an election be less than a majority. In discussing the number of petitioners necessary to call a local option election, the Texas Supreme Court stated as follows:
According to the varying views of legislative bodies, these numbers are sometimes few and sometimes many. . . . The number ought to be sufficient to give some assurance that there exists a desire on part of a large proportion of the voters for the change to be voted for, and that there is a probability that, in case the election be ordered, the proposition will carry.
Scarborough v. Eubank,
Moreover, state governments have great flexibility in determining whether `nonlegislative' offices be appointed or elected. See Sailors v. Board of Education,
Admittedly, a statute which provides that a petition is sufficient to effect a change or determine a question rather than merely to determine whether a proposition will effect a change is unusual. Article
We believe, therefore, that the 1977 amendment does not effect either an unconstitutional delegation of legislative authority nor a suspension of laws in contravention of the Texas Constitution, that the amendment is most accurately characterized as a law which is made effective as to a political subdivision only after action taken by the people affected thereby, that it merely authorizes the people to establish `instrumentalities or agencies upon which the law can operate' and relates to `matters of administration and municipal control,' Ex parte Francis,
Second, you ask whether the 1977 amendment to the special legislation creating the district should be construed to mean that the election be conducted at large or by place with each place reserved to a municipality within the district. Section 1 of the amendment amending section 4 of the original act creating the district sets forth the following:
. . . five Commissioners shall be elected at large if an election is ordered under that section [i.e., Water Code §
56.064 ]. . . . After the expiration of the terms of the present Commissioners, no more than one Commissioner shall be appointed and/or elected from any one municipality as long as five municipalities exist within the district. (Emphasis added).
1977 Acts, 65th Leg., ch. 614, § 1, at 1520. It appears from your brief that five municipalities do in fact presently exist within the district. You suggest that the two provisions are hopelessly in conflict.
It is a cardinal rule of statutory construction that, when new provisions are introduced into a statute by amendment the amended act and all its sections, new and old, must be construed as a harmonious whole, all sections mutually acting upon each other. Shipley v. Floydada Independent School District,
It is also a rule of statutory construction that the ordinary signification be applied to words, except words of art or words connected with a particular subject matter. V.T.C.S. art. 10. The phrase `at large' has been defined as `[n]ot limited to any particular place, district, person, matter, or question.' Black's Law Dictionary 114 (5th ed. 1979). The only reasonable interpretation which would give effect to both provisions is one which provides that the election be at large, i.e., that candidates run without regard to place, but that the top five vote-getters, no two of which are from the same municipality, would take office. In other words, if the two top vote-getters were both from Municipality A with the next four top voter-getters each from one other municipality within the district, then the second highest vote-getter from Municipality A would not take office. The first and third through sixth top vote-getters would take office. We concede that such interpretation could have the practical effect of creating places for each commissioner with a place reserved for each of the five municipalities within the district. It is reasonable to conclude that the legislature, in adopting such a proviso, intended that the smaller municipalities be adequately represented.
You suggest in your brief that, if both provisions of the amendment are given effect, the principle of `one man — one vote' may be violated. You indicate that the provision permitting no more than one commissioner to be elected from each municipality within the district would effectively create districts within the drainage district to which the `one man — one vote' principle would apply. While this proviso may have the practical effect of creating places, it would not, however, create districts within the drainage district. All of the qualified voters within the district are still entitled to vote for all of the offices; voters in, say, Municipality A will vote not just for a candidate from Municipality A, but rather they will vote for five candidates for the five offices. And, as stated earlier, the top five vote-getters with no two of which from the same municipality will take office.
And finally, you ask, if the 1977 amendment does not violate constitutional principles and an election were held, would the electorate be restricted to `property-owning taxpayers' of the district. We conclude that it would not.
The 1977 amendment provides that section
The qualifications of voters in district elections are as specified in the state and federal constitutions. . . .
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With respect to the provision restricting the class of persons who are authorized to sign a petition to `real property taxpayers' neither the United States Supreme Court nor the Texas Supreme Court has addressed the issue whether the restrictions imposed on those persons is constitutionally permissible. We note, however, that the United States Supreme Court has expressly approved a state voting scheme employed in the election of directors of a special limited-purpose district, a water reclamation district, whereby voting eligibility was limited to landowners and votes apportioned according to the amount of land each voter owned. Ball v. James, 49 U.S.L.W. 4459 (1981). See also Salyer Land Co. v. Tulare Lake Basin Water Storage District,
It is suggested that the phrase `real property taxpayer' is unconstitutionally vague in that it fails to precisely delimit the class of persons eligible to sign the petition. Specifically, it is suggested that it is unclear whether nonresidents or corporations are permitted to sign the petition, though they would clearly not be enfranchised to vote in the commissioners' election. In Salyer, the court explicitly approved a voting scheme facially limited to `landowners' which effectively enfranchised both nonresidents and corporations. `The franchise is extended to landowners, whether they reside in the district or out of it, and indeed whether or not they are natural persons who would be entitled to vote in a more traditional political election.'
Very truly yours,
Mark White Attorney General of Texas
John W. Fainter, Jr. First Assistant Attorney General
Richard E. Gray III Executive Assistant Attorney General
Prepared by Jim Moellinger Assistant Attorney General
