Office of the Attorney General — State of Texas John Cornyn The Honorable Rick Perry, Governor State of Texas Office of the Governor P.O. Box 12428 Austin, Texas 78711
Ms. Peggy D. Rudd Director and Librarian Texas State Library and Archives Commission P.O. Box 12927 Austin, Texas 78711
Re: Interpretation of Texas Government Code section
Dear Governor Perry and Ms. Rudd:
You have each asked this office several questions concerning the interpretation of section
Section
In consultation with the [State Library and Archives Commission,] a governor may designate an institution of higher education or alternate archival institution in the state, in lieu of the Texas State Library and Archives, as the repository for the records of the executive office of the governor created or received during that governor's term of office. Such alternative repository shall administer the records in accordance with normally accepted archival principles and practices and shall ensure that the records are available to the public. The terms of any such alternative repository arrangement shall be recorded by the commission through a memorandum of understanding, deposit agreement, or other appropriate documentation.
Tex. Gov't Code Ann. §
Pursuant to section 441.201, then-governor George W. Bush in December 2000 signed a Designation Agreement naming the George Bush Presidential Library, a federal facility under the authority of the National Archives, as the alternative repository for his gubernatorial records.See Rudd Letter, supra note 1, at 1; Perry Letter, supra note 1, at 1. A series of questions has arisen with respect to this designation. In particular, these questions concern ownership of the records, the applicability of the Texas Public Information Act to these records, and the role of the Texas State Library and Archives Commission (the "Commission") in the designation process. As we understand it, the Office of the Governor takes the view that the Commission need not be a party to the Designation Agreement and that the agreement need not "incorporat[e] all the specific requirements of the Texas Public Information Act." Perry Letter, supra note 1, at 2. It is also our understanding that the Commission believes that its participation in the agreement is necessary and that the Texas Public Information Act continues to apply to these records. We conclude that the records in question are the property of the State of Texas, that the records are subject to the provisions of the Texas Public Information Act and that the Commission is a necessary party to the "memorandum of understanding, deposit agreement, or other appropriate documentation." Tex. Gov't Code Ann. §§
The language of Government Code section
Chapter 441, subchapter L of the Government Code governs the custody and preservation of state records and establishes the role and duties of the Commission with regard to the preservation and management of such records. A state record is defined in subchapter L as:
any written, photographic, machine-readable, or other recorded information created or received by or on behalf of a state agency or an elected state official that documents activities in the conduct of state business or use of public resources.
Tex. Gov't Code Ann. §
Section 441.201, which is a part of subchapter L, provides that a governor "[i]n consultation with the [Texas State Library and Archives Commission]" may designate an alternative repository in the state for his gubernatorial records. Id. § 441.201. That repository is an alternative to the State Library and Archives itself. See id. The terms of the agreement with the alternative repository "shall be recorded by the commission through a memorandum of understanding, deposit agreement, or other appropriate documentation." Id.
We note at the outset that it is clear that these records, which were created or received by or on behalf of an elected state official and document activities in the conduct of state business or use of public resources, see id. § 441.180(11) (defining "state record"), are the property of the State of Texas. Nothing in the language of section 441.201 transfers title of the documents from the State of Texas to the alternative repository. See Fitzgerald v. Advanced Spine Fixation Sys.Inc.,
Based on our reading of the statute as a whole, as well as its legislative history, we conclude that no transfer of title was intended.See Jones v. Fowler,
There's no transfer of title involved. . . . There's a difference. It's important to distinguish between ownership and physical custody and assurances of control, disposition, and access. What we are interested in is considerably less physical custody and much more interested in assurances of access and disposition.
Hearings on Tex. S.B. 1702, supra note 3. Representative Bob Hunter, the author of House Bill 1812 and the sponsor of Senate Bill 1702, echoing Mr. Martin said:
[T]he custody is one thing, the ownership by the state of course is always there.
Id. (emphasis added). These records, therefore, remain the property of the State of Texas, and retain their characteristics as Texas state records.
In light of our conclusion that the records remain the property of Texas, we consider whether, given that the George Bush Presidential Library is a federal facility, the terms of availability for the records are determined by the Federal Freedom of Information Act or the Texas Public Information Act. In our view, these records of the State of Texas remain subject to the Texas Public Information Act.
Section
a board, commission, department, committee, institution, agency, or office that is within or is created by the executive or legislative branch of state government and that is directed by one or more elected or appointed members.
Id. § 552.003(1)(A)(i) (Vernon Supp. 2002). "Records received or created by the governor's office in carrying out its statutory duties are subject to the Open Records [now Public Information] Act and may be withheld from the public only if one of the act's specific exceptions protects them." Tex. Att'y Gen. Op. No.
Section 441.201 does not expressly remove a former governor's records from the ambit of the Texas Public Information Act. See Tex. Gov't Code Ann. §
As to the third major question with which you are both concerned, it has been suggested that the role of the Commission under section 441.201 is simply a ministerial one of recording an agreement between the governor and the alternative repository institution.4 We disagree. While the language of the section read in isolation might be susceptible of such an interpretation, when read in light of the other provisions in subchapter L, as well as its legislative history, section 441.201 clearly requires a more active role for the Commission as a party to the memorandum of understanding or other documentation. See Fowler,
We conclude that the Commission, which is the ordinary keeper of such state records, see Tex. Gov't Code Ann. §
A reading of section 441.201 in which the Commission does not participate in the memorandum of understanding creates an irreconcilable conflict between that section and section
Both sections
Moreover, the legislative history of section 441.201 presents clear evidence that the role of the Commission is not merely a passive one. In addressing the concerns expressed by certain witnesses with respect to the archiving and availability of these records before the House Committee on State, Federal and International Relations, Representative Hunter said:
But the important thing is that the State Library and Archives Commission will have the control and will have the administering of these agreements, and every agreement will be not only a memorandum of understanding, but there will be a deposit agreement and other appropriate documentation, and I have full confidence in the State Library and Archives system for accomplishing this.
Hearings on Tex. S.B. 1702, supra note 3 (emphasis added).
Based, therefore, both upon our reading of section 441.201 in the context of House Bill 1812 as a whole and the evidence of the sponsor's remarks in the legislative hearing, we conclude that the Commission is a necessary party to the memorandum of understanding or other appropriate documentation contemplated by the statute to ensure that the records at issue are properly archived and available to the public.
In short, we read section 441.201 as a limited exception to the general scheme of preservation of state records set out in subchapter L of chapter 441 of the Government Code, giving a governor the power to designate an alternative repository for his gubernatorial records, but according him no other authority to alter the manner in which such records are preserved or made available to the public. The statute conditions that authority on the ability of the alternative repository to meet the stated terms regarding normally accepted archival principles and practices and public accessibility, and it is the duty of the Commission, as the body ordinarily concerned with the archiving of state records, to determine that those conditions are met. The choice of repository, so long as the statutory conditions are met, belongs entirely to the governor whose records are at issue.
As to the other questions you have asked, we will respond briefly. Governor Perry has asked the extent of his responsibility with regard to information contained in the records that are at issue here. See Perry Letter, supra note 1, at 2. The responsibility of the current governor's office is to respond to requests for information in its possession or to which it has a right of access. See Tex. Gov't Code Ann. § 522.002 (Vernon 1994 Supp. 2002). If copies of any of the records at issue remain in the possession of the governor's office, it must treat them as it would any other requested public information. But the governor's office need not respond to requests for records of which it does not have possession or to which it does not have access. See id.
Ms. Rudd asks: "Does the term `executive office of the governor' used in the statute mean something other than all the records of the Governor's Office, including such offices as the Office of Budget and Planning, Office of Criminal Justice, Committee on People with Disabilities, etc.?" Rudd Letter, supra note 1, at 2. Section 441.201 applies to "the records of the executive office of the governor created or received during that governor's term of office." Tex. Gov't Code Ann. §
We take it, first, that the legislature is not referring to the Office of the Governor as an entity in the Executive Department, because such reference would be superfluous. See Tex. Const. art.
Finally, Ms. Rudd asks whether inspection of these records by either the National Archives or a representative of the former governor "waive any right to an exception from disclosure under the Texas Public Information Act." Rudd Letter, supra note 1, at 2. Given that Government Code section
Yours very truly,
JOHN CORNYN Attorney General of Texas
HOWARD G. BALDWIN, JR. First Assistant Attorney General
NANCY FULLER Deputy Attorney General — General Counsel
SUSAN DENMON GUSKY Chair, Opinion Committee
James E. Tourtelott Assistant Attorney General, Opinion Committee
