Untitled Texas Attorney General Opinion ( 2002 )


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  •    OFFICE   OF THE ATTORNEY   GENERAL   . STATE OF TEX,AS
    JOHN     CORNYN
    February 8,2002
    The Honorable Tony Goolsby                                  Opinion No. JC-0460
    Chair, Cornmittee on House Administration
    Texas House of Representatives                              Re: Authority of a home-rule city to create a
    P. 0. Box 2910                                              civil offense for the disregard of a traffic control
    Austin, Texas 78768-2910                                    signal and to use automated enforcement systems
    for traffic control (RQ-0426-JC)
    Dear Representative     Goolsby:
    On behalf of the City of Richardson you ask whether state law permits the city to adopt an
    ordinance making the disregard of a traffic-control signal within the city a civil violation, rather than
    a criminal one, and authorizing the use of automated enforcement equipment to identify red-light
    violations at roadway intersections. We conclude that because state law provides that the disregard
    of a traffic-control device is a criminal violation, and because cities are prohibited from enacting
    ordinances that conflict with state law, the City of Richardson may not adopt a valid ordinance
    making the disregard of a traffic-control signal a civil, rather than a criminal, offense. The city is
    not, however, prohibited from adopting an ordinance to use automated enforcement equipment at
    intersections.
    The City of Richardson is a home-rule city. A home-rule city derives its legislative authority
    directly from the Texas Constitution. See TEX. CONST. art. XI, 8 5; Lower Cola. River Auth. v. City
    of San Marcos, 
    523 S.W.2d 641
    , 643 (Tex. 1975). It has full powers of self-government                and
    authority to adopt charter provisions and ordinances not inconsistent with the constitution or general
    law. See TEX. CONST. art. XI, 0 5 (“The adoption or amendment of charters is subject to such
    limitations as may be prescribed by the Legislature, and no charter or any ordinance passed under
    said charter shall contain any provision inconsistent with the Constitution of the State, or of the
    general laws enacted by the Legislature of this State.“); Dallas Merch. ‘s & Concessionaire’s Ass ‘n
    v. City ofDallas, 852 S.W.2d 489,490 (Tex. 1993); City ofRichardson v. Responsible Dog Owners
    of Tex., 
    794 S.W.2d 17
    , 18 (Tex. 1990). Thus, a home-rule city looks to legislation for limits on its
    power, rather than for authorizations of power. See Lower Cola. River 
    Auth., 523 S.W.2d at 643
    .
    Because a home-rule city derives its powers directly from the constitution, its powers may be limited
    or preempted by statute only when the legislature’s intention to do so appears with unmistakable
    clarity. See Dallas Merch. ‘s & Concessionaire 
    ‘s, 852 S.W.2d at 490
    . The state’s entry into a field
    of legislation does not mean that the entire subject matter is completely preempted. See 
    id. at 491.
    A state law and a city ordinance will not be held to be repugnant to each other if any other reasonable
    construction leaving both in effect can be reached. See 
    id. (citing City
    of Beaumon t v. Fall, 29 1 S. W.
    The Honorable Tony Goolsby       - Page 2         (JC-0460)
    202 (1927)). Your questions require us to determine whether the City of Richardson’s          proposed
    ordinance is limited by or conflicts with state law.
    As a general rule, in the absence of constitutional or statutory limits, a home-rule city may
    use its police powers to adopt traffic-control ordinances. See Houston Chronicle Publ ‘g Co. v. City
    ofHouston, 620 S.W.2d 833,836 (Tex. Civ. App.-Houston [ 14th Dist.] 1981, no writ). The Texas
    Legislature, however, has acted in the area of traffic regulation. While not completely preempting
    city powers with respect to traffic regulation, the legislature has placed clear limitations on a city’s
    authority.
    Transportation Code title 7, subtitle C, sets out the “Rules of the Road” regulating traffic in
    this state. The code places limitations on a city’s power to enact laws with respect to roadways
    under the city’s jurisdiction. The general rule is this:
    This subtitle applies uniformly throughout this state. A local
    authority may not enact or enforce an ordinance or rule that conflicts
    with this subtitle unless expressly authorized by this subtitle.
    However, a local authority may regulate traffic in a manner that does
    not conflict with this subtitle.
    TEX. TRANSP. CODE ANN. 8 542.201 (Vernon            1999); see also 
    id. 8 541.002(3)
    (defining “local
    authority” to include “a county, municipality, or other local entity authorized to enact traffic laws
    under the laws of this state”). Other, more specific limitations on cities’ powers are set out in
    various parts of subtitle C. See, e.g., 
    id. 4 542.203(a)
    (local authority may not erect traffic-control
    device on state highway without permission of Texas Department of Transportation).
    Subtitle C also recognizes the power of a local authority to regulate traffic within its
    boundaries in specific ways, such as by regulating parking, designating intersections as stop or yield
    intersections, designating school crossing zones and one-way streets, and altering a speed limit
    within statutory limitations. 
    Id. 6 542.202(a)(2),
    (S), (1 l), (12) (Vernon Supp. 2002); see also 
    id. $9 545.061,
    .065, .302, .356, .365 (Vernon 1999 & Supp. 2002). Construing the predecessor statute
    to title 7, subtitle C, of the Transportation Code, Attorney General Opinion JM- 1009 opined that the
    Transportation Code recognizes that a city need not rely solely on the code for authority to adopt
    traffic ordinances and confirms that the statute is a limitation on power. The opinion summarized
    a city’s powers under the code as follows:
    [A] city may adopt three kinds of traffic ordinances. First, a city may
    adopt ordinances that implement article 6701d and incorporate its
    provisions.    Second, a city may promulgate          ordinances that
    implement but are in conflict with article 6701d where the statute
    authorizes a departure from its standards. Third, a city may adopt
    ordinances that regulate forms of traffic not governed by article
    6701d.
    The Honorable      Tony Goolsby       - Page 3           (JC-0460)
    Tex. Att’y Gen. Op. No. JM-1009 (1989) at 4. Thus, we must examine the City of Richardson’s
    proposed ordinance in light of state law governing the same conduct.
    Transportation      Code section 544.007(d) requires a driver to stop at a red light and makes it
    a crime not to do so:
    (d) An operator of a vehicle facing only a steady red signal shall
    stop at a clearly marked stop line. In the absence of a stop line, the
    operator shall stop before entering the crosswalk on the near side of
    the intersection. A vehicle that is not turning shall remain standing
    until an indication to proceed is shown. After stopping, standing until
    the intersection may be entered safely, and yielding right-of-way to
    pedestrians lawfully in an adjacent crosswalk and other traffic
    lawfully using the intersection, the operator may:
    (1) turn right; or
    (2) turn left, if the intersecting streets are both one-way streets
    and a left turn is permissible.
    TEX. TRANSP. CODE ANN. 8 544.007(d)          (Vernon 1999). Under the Transportation Code, traffic
    violations are criminal offenses: “A person commits an offense if the person performs an act
    prohibited or fails to perform an act required by this subtitle.” 
    Id. 9 542.301.
    An offense under
    subtitle C is a misdemeanor, unless otherwise provided, 
    id., and is
    punishable by a fine of not less
    than $1 or more than $200, 
    id. 8 542.401.
    Subtitle C also contains provisions relating to the
    disposition of fines collected by a city or county, and the arrest and prosecution of violators. See 
    id. 85 543.001-.OlO
    (Vernon 1999 6%Supp. 2002).
    The City of Richardson proposes an ordinance that would create a civil offense for the
    disregard of a traffic control signal and allow the city to use photographic traffic signal enforcement
    systems at intersections within the city. A system would consist of “a camera system installed to
    work in conjunction with an electrically operated traffic-control signal” that “is capable ofproducing
    a recorded image that depicts the license plate attached to a motor vehicle that is not operated in
    compliance with the instructions of the traffic-control signal.“* In other words, if a vehicle ran a red
    light, a camera mounted atop a pole in the intersection would automatically snap a picture of the
    car’s license plate.
    ‘See Letter from the Honorable Tony Goolsby, Chair, Committee on House Administration,       Texas House of
    Representatives,   to Office of the Attorney General, State of Texas (Aug. 28,200l) (on file with Opinion Committee)
    (enclosure of City of Richardson, Tex. Proposed Ordinance, article VII, section 22-185(3)) [hereinafter City of
    Richardson, Tex. Proposed Ordinance].
    The Honorable       Tony Goolsby        - Page 4             (JC-0460)
    The city’s ordinance would impose a civil penalty on the owner of a motor vehicle if the
    vehicle is operated in violation of section 544.007(d) of the Transportation Code:
    Sec. 22-l 86. Imposition of Civil Penalty for Red Light Violations.
    (a) Except as provided in (b) and (c) below the owner of a motor
    vehicle is liable for a civil penalty of seventy-five dollars ($75) if,
    while facing only a steady red signal displayed by an electrically
    operated traffic control signal located in the City, the vehicle is
    operated in violation of the instructions of that traffic control signal,
    contrary to Section 544.007(d) of the Texas Transportation Code.
    (b) For a third or subsequent violation committed by the same
    owner of a motor vehicle during any 12-month period, the amount of
    the civil penalty shall be one hundred dollars ($100).
    (c) A person who fails to timely pay the civil penalty shall be
    subject to a late payment penalty of fifty dollars ($50).
    See supra note 1, City of Richardson, Tex. Proposed Ordinance, art. VII, 8 22-186. The penalty
    would be imposed by mailing a summons to the owner of the vehicle. See 
    id. 9 22-l
    87. The owner
    of the vehicle could contest the penalty in an administrative hearing. See 
    id. fj 22-
    188. In any such
    hearing, it would be presumed that the registered owner of the vehicle is the person who operated
    the vehicle at the time and place of the violation. See 
    id. 8 22-190.
    No penalty would be assessed
    on the vehicle owner if the operator of the vehicle was issued a citation or arrested for the same
    violation. See 
    id. 5 22-
    19 1(b). According to the ordinance, the imposition of a civil penalty under
    the ordinance “is not a criminal conviction for any purpose.” 
    Id. 8 22-191(a).
    We see the proposed ordinance as differing from section 544.007(d) of the Transportation
    Code in three significant ways. First, it would impose a penalty upon the owner of the car for his
    or her presumed conduct, rather than upon the driver for the driver’s conduct. Second, an offense
    under the proposed ordinance would be a civil offense, adjudicated in an administrative procedure,
    rather than a criminal offense. And third, the penalty under the proposed ordinance would be $75,
    while under state law the penalty is not less than $1 or more than $200.
    Although the City of Richardson          in its initial letter described the ordinance as
    “decriminalizing” the offense of running a red light, the city has clarified that the proposed ordinance
    would not eliminate the state criminal offense in the city.2 Certainly, a city may not suspend the
    2See Letter from Peter G. Smith, Nichols, Jackson, Dillard, Hager & Smith, L.L.P., to Honorable Tony
    Goolsby, State Representative, at 1 (Aug. 24,200l) (asking for help in requesting opinion concerning “authority of the
    City [of Richardson] to enact local legislation to decriminalize the disregard of a traffic control signal”); Brief from Peter
    (continued...)
    The Honorable Tony Goolsby            - Page 5           (JC-0460)
    operation of a state law. See TEX. CONST. art. I, 8 28 (“No power of suspending laws in this State
    shall be exercised except by the Legislature.“); Brown Cracker & Candy Co. v. City ofDallas, 137
    SW. 342, 343 (Tex. 1911). Thus, the proposed ordinance would not prevent a law enforcement
    officer from stopping and ticketing a driver for a violation of section 544.007(d) of the
    Transportation Code. However, under the ordinance, an arrest or issuance of a criminal citation
    under section 544.007(d) would preclude the imposition of a civil penalty upon the vehicle’s owner.
    The City of Richardson therefore argues that the proposed ordinance does not conflict with the
    Transportation Code, but creates an entirely different, nonconflicting, civil offense.
    We believe that the ordinance proposed by the City of Richardson conflicts with state law.
    In our view, the legislature has clearly and unmistakably indicated its intent to regulate exclusively
    the conduct proscribed by the “Rules of the Road,” unless it expressly provides otherwise. Subtitle
    C “applies uniformly throughout this state” except where otherwise permitted by the legislature. See
    TEX. TRANSP. CODE ANN. 8 542.201 (Vernon 1999). The legislature has expressly listed areas where
    a local government authority may regulate, and has permitted traffic regulations in other areas not
    regulated by the Transportation Code. See Tex. Att’y Gen. Op. No. JM-1009 (1989) at 4. While the
    proposed ordinance creates a civil rather than a criminal red-light offense, it nevertheless seeks to
    regulate the same conduct regulated by state law - i.e., the running of a red light. And while it
    purports to fine the owner of the vehicle rather than the driver, it creates a presumption that the
    owner of the vehicle is the person who operated the vehicle at the time-and place of the violation,
    thereby intending, in our view, to penalize the operator. Only the nature of the punishment--civil
    versus criminal-and      the corresponding procedures and penalty amounts, are different.
    A city ordinance is invalid if it prescribes a greater, lesser, or different punishment than that
    fixed by state law for the same unlawful act. See Honeycutt v. State, 627 S.W.2d 417,420 (Tex.
    Crim. App. [Panel Op.] 1981); Young v. State, 267 S.W.2d 423,424-25 (1954); Ex Parte Watson,
    
    225 S.W.2d 850
    , 85 l-52 (1949); Tex. Att’y Gen. Op. No. JC-0048 (1999) at 2. “If the state
    denounces an offense and fixes the punishment for it, and the city or town undertakes to pass an
    ordinance punishing the same offense, then the ordinance must be the same as the state law both as
    to definition and as to punishment.” Ex Parte Farley, 144 SW. 530 (19 12). While the Texas courts
    cited above applied this rule in cases where a city proposed a criminal ordinance with a different
    penalty than the state criminal penalty, we believe that the same reasoning applies when a city
    proposes to impose a civil rather than a criminal penalty for the same conduct. An Ohio court
    applying the same test used by Texas courts took this view in considering whether a home-rule city’s
    criminal ordinance conflicted with a state civil statute prohibiting the same conduct:
    In enacting [the city ordinance], [the City of] Youngstown
    changed the classification of the offense of committing deceptive acts
    G. Smith, Nichols, Jackson, Dillard, Hager & Smith, L.L.P., to Office of the Attorney General, State of Texas, at 4-7
    (Aug. 24,200l) (clarifying that proposed ordinance would not eliminate state criminal offense) (documents on file with
    Opinion Committee).
    The Honorable   Tony Goolsby     - Page 6         (JC-0460)
    or practices in connection with consumer transactions from a civil
    violation to a criminal violation.     Comparatively, if changing a
    misdemeanor offense to a felony, or vice versa, is in conflict with
    general state law, changing the classification of an act from a civil to
    a criminal violation would also be in conflict.              Therefore,
    Youngstown has created an ordinance that is in conflict with a
    general law of the state, and, as a result, [the city ordinance] is
    unconstitutional.
    State v. Rosa, 716 N.E.2d 216,2 19 (Ohio Ct. App. 1998). In our view, section 544.007(d) of the
    Transportation Code regulates the same conduct sought to be regulated by the proposed ordinance,
    and the City of Richardson may not adopt an ordinance that departs from state law unless it is
    expressly authorized to do so. See Tex. Att’y Gen. Op. No. JM-1009 (1989) at 4.
    We believe this case is distinguishable from cases that have upheld city ordinances that are
    more broad or more narrow than the state law, or which regulate different conduct. For example,
    in City of Richardson v. Responsible Dog Owners of Tex., 
    794 S.W.2d 17
    (Tex. 1990), at issue were
    a city ordinance and a state law that regulated the keeping of vicious animals. The city ordinance
    applied to all animals, while the state law applied only to dogs. The city ordinance addressed
    broadly the control of animals, while the state law required only that an owner restrain a dog and
    carry insurance coverage. And the city ordinance applied to animals that “might” be dangerous,
    while the state law applied only to dogs that had already taken a “first bite.” The court found that
    because the scopes of the two laws were different, they were not inconsistent. See Responsible Dog
    
    Owners, 794 S.W.2d at 19
    . And in Ex Parte Dickson, 
    261 S.W.2d 709
    (1953), the court considered
    whether a city ordinance proscribing “reckless driving” was in conflict with a provision in the
    predecessor to the Transportation Code, also proscribing “reckless driving.” An essential element
    of the city ordinance offense was a collision between vehicles, while the state offense was complete
    without the occurrence of a collision. The court concluded that the two provisions did not conflict.
    See 
    Dickson, 261 S.W.2d at 710
    . By contrast, the ordinance proposed by the City of Richardson
    seeks to regulate the same conduct regulated by section 544.007(d) of the Transportation Code and
    penalize the presumed operator of the vehicle.       See Knott v. State, 
    648 S.W.2d 20
    , 21 (Tex.
    App.-Dallas 1983, no pet.). We find the city ordinance to be in conflict with state law.
    We recognize that both a criminal penalty and a civil fine may be imposed for the same
    conduct, provided the civil fine does not create a “punishment” that would preclude prosecution for
    both offenses pursuant to the double jeopardy provisions of the United States and Texas
    Constitutions. SeeU.S. CONST.art. V; TEX. CONST.art. I, 5 4; Tharp v. State, 935 S.W.2d 157,160-
    61) (Tex. Crim. App. 1996) (en bane) (double jeopardy prohibits multiple punishments for the same
    offense). In fact, the legislature has expressly authorized certain cities to impose civil penalties for
    parking and stopping violations that otherwise would be misdemeanors under state law. See TEX.
    TFUNSP.CODEANN. 5 682.002(a) (Vernon Supp. 2002) (“A municipality may declare the violation
    of a municipal ordinance relating to parking or stopping a vehicle to be a civil offense.“). But our
    opinion in this case is not based upon double jeopardy grounds. Rather, we believe that such an
    The Honorable   Tony Goolsby         - Page 7         (JC-0460)
    ordinance could be adopted by the city if the legislature amended state law so as to expressly permit
    it or otherwise eliminate the conflict.
    While we conclude that a city ordinance creating a civil red-light violation is impermissible,
    we do not find any constitutional or statutory impediment to the adoption by the City of Richardson
    of an ordinance authorizing the use of automated enforcement equipment to identify criminal red-
    light violations at roadway intersections. The Transportation Code does not prescribe the method
    of traffic-law enforcement for local authorities, and cities may use their police powers to choose the
    method of enforcement.
    In answering this question, we considered the question of whether the proposed automated
    enforcement equipment is a “traffic-control device” that must meet certain requirements under the
    Transportation Code. Any traffic-control device placed or maintained by a city must conform to the
    manual adopted by the Texas Transportation Commission. See TEX.TRANSP.CODEANN. $5 544.001,
    .002(b) (Vernon 1999). A “traffic-control device” is defined as a device that is used to regulate,
    warn, or guide traffic:
    In this subtitle:
    (1) ‘Official traffic-control      device’ means    a sign, signal,
    marking, or device that is:
    (A) consistent with this subtitle;
    (B) placed or erected by a public body or officer having
    jurisdiction;     and
    (C) used to regulate, warn, or guide traffic.
    TEX. TFUNSP.CODEANN. 6 541.304 (Vernon 1999).
    In the context of this provision, we believe that the word “regulate” refers to controlling the
    flow of traffic, not enforcing traffic regulations. See Tex. Att’y Gen. LO-97-01 8, at 4 (concluding
    that fatality marker does not regulate flow of traffic and is therefore not traffic-control device for
    purposes of chapter 544). Thus, we do not believe that the automated enforcement equipment
    described in the City of Richardson’s proposed ordinance is subject to the requirements of section
    541 .OOl of the Transportation Code.
    We recognize the practical difficulties that a city might have in successfully prosecuting red-
    light runners based upon evidence obtained by an intersection camera. However, we believe that
    because the legislature has already defined a red-light violation and prescribed the penalty therefore,
    it is within the purview of the legislature to amend the law to allow cities to act in this area if it
    wishes to do so. We note that in the most recent legislative session, the Texas Legislature
    The Honorable   Tony Goolsby    - Page 8        (JC-0460)
    considered a bill that would have expressly permitted cities to adopt exactly the kind of ordinance
    proposed by the City of Richardson. See Tex. H.B. 1115,77th Leg., R.S. (2001). That legislation
    failed to pass.
    The Honorable Tony Goolsby     - Page 9        (JC-0460)
    SUMMARY
    Absent specific legislative     authorization,  a home-rule
    municipality   such as the City of Richardson may not adopt an
    ordinance that imposes a civil penalty for violation of section
    544.007(d) of the Transportation Code, which makes the running of
    red light a crime. The city is not prohibited from adopting an
    ordinance authorizing the use of automated enforcement equipment
    to identify criminal red-light violations at roadway intersections.
    Y urs very truly,
    eiQ%T
    JO&N     CbRNYN
    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
    Barbara Griffin
    Assistant Attorney General