The Honorable Eddie Lucio, Jr. Chair, Committee on International Relations and Trade Texas State Senate Post Office Box 12068 Austin, Texas 78711
Re: Calculation of impact fees for a platted subdivision (RQ-0854-GA)
Dear Senator Lucio:
On behalf of the City of Brownsville's Public Utilities Board, you ask several questions about chapters 245 and 395 of the Local Government Code.1
Chapter 245 is commonly referred to as the "vested rights statutes" and grants a project "grandfathered" status. See TEX.LOC. GOV'T CODE ANN. §§ 245.001-.007 (West 2005); Milestone Potranco Dev., Ltd. v. City of SanAntonio,
Chapter 395 governs the imposition of impact fees by municipalities as well as other governmental entities. See TEX. LOC. GOV'T CODE ANN. §§ 395.001-.082 (West 2005 Supp. 2010). "An impact fee is generally described in one Texas case as a charge `on new development to pay for new public facilities that become necessary as the result of city growth in a particular area.'" Tex. Att'y Gen. Op. No.
I. First Series of Questions
As a preliminary matter, we clarify the context in which you ask your first series of questions. In relation to your first three questions, you ask that we assume "a developer initiates a development plan, pays the impact fees applicable at the time of initiation, and retains ownership of the property, but allows a development plan to lapse due to inactivity under local ordinances and regulations." Request Letter at 1. We understand the initiation of a development plan to mean that the developer in your scenario filed some type of preliminary plan or plat that triggered statutory vesting rights under chapter 245. See TEX.Loc. GOV'T CODE ANN. § 245.002(b) (West 2005) ("Preliminary plans and related subdivision plats, site plans, and all other development permits for land covered by the preliminary plans or subdivision plats are considered collectively to be one series of permits for a project."); City of SanAntonio v. EnSeguido, Ltd,A. Question 1(a)
Having clarified the context, we now consider your first series of questions. You want to know if, in this context, "the developer [is] entitled to a refund of the impact fees if the municipality and the municipal utility have spent the impact fees previously collected to construct regional capital improvements associated with anticipated new growth[.]" Request Letter at 2.
Chapter 395 provides for the refund of impact fees in specific circumstances. See TEX. LOC. Gov'T CODE ANN. § 395.025(a), (c) (West 2005) (providing for a refund where a municipality denies service, fails to commence construction within a certain time, fails to make service available *Page 3 within a certain time, or fails to spend fees as authorized by chapter 395 within a certain time). Section 395.025 addresses the refund of an impact fee and provides:
(a) On the request of an owner of the property on which an impact fee has been paid, the political subdivision shall refund the impact fee if existing facilities are available and service is denied or the political subdivision has, after collecting the fee when service is not available, failed to commence construction within two years or service is not available within a reasonable period considering the type of capital improvement or facility expansion to be constructed, but in no event later than five years from the date of payment under Section 395.019(1).
. . . .
(c) The political subdivision shall refund any impact fee or part of it that is not spent as authorized by this chapter within 10 years after the date of payment.
Id.
The municipality must refund the impact fees under chapter 395 only if your scenario fits within section 395.025. See id.; TEX. GOV'T CODE ANN. §
You next inquire whether "the developer who later attempts to reinstate the development plan after the municipality adopts additional or increased impact fees [is] entitled to grandfathered status or a vested right to be subject to the originally assessed impact fees[.]" Request Letter at 2. We understand the terms "grandfathered" or "vested" to refer to rights acquired under chapter 245. *Page 4 Milestone Potranco Dev., Ltd.,
Even assuming chapter 245 applies to impact fees, 5 your scenario involves a dormant project for which the permit has expired under section 245.005.6 See Request Letter at 1 (asking that we assume the development plan has lapsed due to inactivity). Thus, so long as the facts are as you describe and there is no contractual or extra-statutory basis for preserving the original application, the developer has no grandfathered status or vested rights in the project under chapter 245.See Tex. Att'y Gen. Op. No.
II. Second Series of Questions
In your second series of questions, you ask us to assume "a platted subdivision is assessed impact fees under SectionA. Question 2(a)
You ask whether "a distinction [should] be made between an `assessment' or determination of impact fees and an actual collection of impact fees under [subsections]
B. Question 2(b)
You next ask whether "the enactment of an impact fee ordinance by a municipality constitute [s] an `assessment' of an impact fee without any other specific act by the municipality [.]" Request Letter at 2.
Considered as a whole, chapter 395 contemplates that the act of adopting an impact fee and the act of assessing an impact fee are separate activities. See Helena Chem. Co. v. Wilkins, Al S.W.3d 486, 493 (Tex. 2001) (stating that in determining legislative intent, a court "must always consider the statute as a whole rather than its isolated provisions"). First, the act of assessing an impact fee appears to relate to a specific new development whereas the act of adopting an impact fee generally relates to a larger area. As previously set out, section 395.016(f) defines the term assessment to mean "a determination of the amount of the impact fee in effect on the date or occurrence provided in this section and is the maximum amount that can be charged per service unit of such development:' TEX. LOC. GOV'T CODE ANN. § 395.016(f) (West 2005) (emphasis added); see also id. § 395.001(10) (defining the term "service unit"). This indicates that the assessment of an impact fee is a calculation related to a specific new development. Similarly, section 395.016(d), upon which your scenario is based, indicates that an assessment is made against a particular subdivision plat. Id. § 395.016(d) ("The political subdivision shall assess the impact fees before or at the time of recordation of a subdivision plat or other plat under Subchapter A, Chapter 212. . . ."); see also Request Letter at 2 (asking that we assume "a platted subdivision is assessed impact fees under Section
Second, chapter 395 requires an entity to take specific action when adopting an impact fee but not when assessing an impact fee. The act of adopting an impact fee must be reflected in an ordinance, order, or resolution, whereas, section 3 95.016(f) provides that, in regard to an assessment, "[n]o specific act by the political subdivision is required."Id, §§ 395.051, .016(f).
Third, chapter 395 does not use the term "assessment" when referring to the adoption of an impact fee. See Laidlaw Waste Sys. (Dallas), Inc., v.City of Wilmer,
However, we Find nothing in chapter 395 that would prohibit a single ordinance from serving as both the means by which a municipality imposes and assesses an impact fee. Whether any particular ordinance both imposes and assesses an impact fee is an issue this office cannot resolve. See
Tex. Att'y Gen. Op. No.
C. Question 2(c)
Finally, you ask whether the developer7 in your scenario pays "the originally assessed impact fees or the additional or increased impact fees" "when subdivision activity begins, assuming that no increased subdivision use density requires any consumption of additional utility service units." Request Letter at 2. Section 395.017 expressly provides that "[a]fter assessment of the impact fees attributable to the new development or execution of an agreement for payment of impact fees,.additional impact fees or increases in fees may not be assessed against the tract for any reason unless the number of service units to be developed on the tract increases." TEX. LOC. GOV'T CODE ANN. § 395.017 (West 2005) (emphasis added). Under the express language of the statute, no additional impact fees or increases may be assessed against a tract after the original assessment and thus, the developer in your scenario would pay the originally assessed impact fees.8 See Galbraith Eng'gConsultants, Inc. v. Pochucha,
Local Government Code chapter 245 recognizes a developer's vested rights and requires a regulatory agency to consider approval or disapproval of an application for a permit based on regulations and ordinances in effect at the time an original application is filed. A developer has no vested rights in a project under chapter 245 if the project is dormant under section 245.005.Local Government Code chapter 395 governs the imposition of impact fees by municipalities. Impact fees are, as a general matter, charges on new development to pay for public facilities that become necessary as the result of growth in a particular area. A municipality must refund impact fees as provided in section 395.025. There is, as reflected in the express language of chapter 395 and in prior attorney general opinions, a distinction between the assessment of an impact fee and the collection of an impact fee. Chapter 395 indicates that the act of adopting an impact fee and the act of assessing an impact fee are distinct activities. However, we cannot say as a matter of law that a single ordinance could not serve as both the means by which a municipality imposes and assesses an impact fee. By its express terms, section 395.017 prohibits the imposition of additional or increased impact fees against a tract after the fees have been assessed unless the number of service units to be developed on the tract increases.
Very truly yours,
GREG ABBOTT Attorney/General of Texas
DANIEL T. HODGE First Assistant Attorney General
DAVID J. SCHENCK Deputy Attorney General for Legal Counsel
NANCY S. FULLER Chair, Opinion Committee
Christy Drake-Adams Assistant Attorney General, Opinion Committee
