Untitled Texas Attorney General Opinion ( 1981 )


Menu:
  •                                                                                                                     .
    The Attorney General of Texas
    October     22.    1981
    MARK WHITE
    Attorney General
    Supreme Court Bullding         Fred Wendorf, Ph.D.,    Chairman                      Opinion     No. MW-378
    P. 0. Box 12546                Texas Antiquities   Committee
    Awtln. TX. 78711               P. 0. Box 12276, Capitol     Station                  Re:  Contract  for renovation
    51214752501                    Austin, Texas     78711                               of Sam Houston Woodland Home
    Telex 91OiB74-1357
    in Huntsville
    Telecopier  51214750296
    Dear Mr. Wendorf:
    1607 MaIn St., Suite   1400
    Dallas. TX. 75201                     The Sam Houston      Woodland     Home in Huntsville,       Texas,   is   the
    214l7428944
    subject    of your   opinion    request.     This    home is   situated   on land
    administered    by the Board of Regents        of the Texas State       University
    4524 Alberta Ave., Suite 160   System.     It is designated   as a National      Historic   Landmark, is listed
    El Paso, TX. 79905             in the National    Register   of Historic     Places,    and is a Recorded Texas
    9151533.3484                   Historic   Landmark.
    1220 Dallas Ave.. Suite 202
    On June 24. 1981, the Texas Antiquities           Committee designated      the
    Houston. TX. 77002             Woodland Home as a State Archeological          Landmark.    We will    assume that
    7131650-0965                   this designation       was effective   to confer    "landmark"   status    upon the
    home.     The Board of Regents       is concerned     about  the effect     of this
    designation      upon a contract     it entered    into   on May 23,      1980,   for
    608 Broadway, Suite 312
    Lubbock. TX. 79401             extensive     renovation   of the home.     Much of the renovation         work had
    SCW747.5239                    been completed      when the designation    was made. but more       remains to be
    done.     Your question    is whether    the Board of Regents       must obtain      a
    permit    from the Texas Antiquities        Committee before     this    renovation
    4309 N. Tenth, Suite   B
    work can be completed.
    McAllen. TX. 78501
    5lM2.4547
    Sections     191.001,    et   seq.,     of   the     Natural     Resources    Code
    constitute      the Antiquities      Code of Texas.           These    provisions    were
    200 Main Plaza. Suite 400      enacted    in 1977.     Acts 1977, 65th Leg..        ch. 871, at 2345.          Formerly,
    San Antonio, TX. 79205
    they were contained       in article   6145-9.    V.T.C.S.,     enacted   in 1969.
    51212254191
    Several Antiquities         Code provisions     are   relevant     to your        inquiry.
    An Equal OpportunityI          Section   191.092 provides         that:
    Attinnative Action EmPlOW
    Other sites,       objects,       buildings,      artifacts,
    implements,        and       locations          of     historical,
    archeological,           scientific,           or      educational
    interest,        including           those       pertaining         to
    prehistoric      and historical           American      Indians     or
    aboriginal      campsites,       dwellings,        and habitation
    sites,    their   artifacts      and implements        of culture,
    p.    1273
    .
    Mr. Fred Wendorf             - Page 2         (MW-378)
    as well as archeological           sites   of every character
    that are located        in, on, or under the surface         of
    any land belonging        to the State of Texas or to any
    county.     city,    or political        subdivision    of   the
    state   are state       archeological      landmarks and are
    the    sole      property     of     the   State     of  Texas.
    (Emphasis added).
    Prior    to the effective              date        of     Senate     Bill     No.   659,   section   191.093
    provided    that:
    Landmarks under Section      191.091 of this code
    are the sole property      of the State of Texas and
    may not be taken,      altered,     damaged,     destroyed,
    salvaged,  or excavated    without    a contract     with or
    permit from the committee.       (Emphasis added).
    Section    191.094          provides    in pertinent               part     that:
    (a) Any site located          on private      land which is
    determined by majority           vote of the committee to be
    of     sufficient         archeological,          scientific,         or
    historical         significance        to    scientific          study,
    interest,         or     public      representation           of     the
    aboriginal       or historical         past    of    Texas may be
    designated      a state      archeological        landmark by the
    committee.
    Section    191.095      provides        that:
    All    sites    or     items    of    archeological,
    scientific,      or historical      interest     located    on
    private     land    in the    State   of   Texas    in areas
    designated     as landmarks,      as provided     in Section
    191.094 of this code,        and landmarks under Section
    191.092 of this code,        may not be taken, altered,
    damaged, destroyed,      salvaged,   or excavated     without
    a permit from the committee or in violation             of the
    terms of the permit.        (Emphasis added).
    Senate   Bill   No. 659 became                         effective    on August 31.   1981.            It
    amended section    191.093 by adding                       the following    underlined language:
    Landmarks under    Section   191.091   or Section
    191.092 of this code are the sole property        of the
    State   of Texas and may not be taken,         altered,
    damaged, destroyed,   salvaged,   or excavated  without
    a contract   with   or permit    from the committee.
    (Emphasis added).
    Before      reaching        your question,                  we will   address two threshold
    questions:         (1) Prior        to August 31.                  1981, was the Texas Antiquities
    p.        1274
    Mr. Fred Wendorf         - Page 3            (MW-378)
    a
    Committee    authorized      to         require   that    a permit   be obtained            before
    section   191.092 landmarks             are altered?      (2) May the committee            require
    that a permit be obtained                 if it  has not formally     designated           an item
    listed  in section     191.092          as a “state    archeological   landmark”?
    Texas Antiquities         Committee v. Dallas             County Community College
    District.      
    554 S.W.2d 924
    (Tex.           1977).     is pertinent        to this      inquiry.
    There,     the   college     district      sought     to    set    aside    an    order     of the
    Antiquities      Committee denying it a permit to demolish three buildings.
    The      committee      had     never      designated         the     buildings        as     state
    archeological        landmarks.       Nevertheless,         it argued       that    the college
    district      had to obtain         a permit      before       demolishing       the buildings
    because     they were listed         in the National          Register     of Historic        Sites
    and Buildings         and were       therefore     of     “historical        interest”       within
    section     6, article      6145-9,     V.T.C.S.       That section          then provided         as
    follows:
    All...     buildings...         of historical...        interest...
    located...       on...     lands belonging       to the State of
    Texas      or.. .      any    county,     city,     or     political
    subdivision            of      the     state       are.. .       State
    Archeological         Landmarks and are the sole property
    of the State of Texas and all such sites                    or items
    located     on private       lands withjn the State of Texas
    in areas       that have been designated              as a ‘State
    Archeological          Landmark’ as hereinafter            provided,
    may not be taken,             altered,    damaged...      withcut     a
    permit from.. . the Antiquities              Committee.
    -See     §§191.092-191.095.
    Speaking     for   four      members of     the    court,    Justice     Pope held
    section    6 unconstitutional         on its   face and as applied          in that case.
    With    respect     to   the    latter    conclusion,       he found     no substantial
    evidence     to support       the committee’s        refusal     to grant     the permit.
    Justice     Greenhill     concurred,      agreeing      with   the plurality       on the
    substantial     evidence     point,    but declining     to reach the constitutional
    questions.      Justice    Denton dissented.
    The portion     of   Justice        Pope’s   plurality   opinion     that   concerns     us
    is     as follows:
    The Antiquities        Committee has not designated             any
    of    the    three     buildings       at    issue     as    State
    Archeolol 3ical      Landmarks,      but   the Connnittee       has
    denied the Collene        District’s      request    to demolish
    the buildings       based upon the buildings’           expedited
    inclusion      in the National         Register     of Historic
    Sites    and Buildings.         The Antiquities        Code does
    not give the Antiquities           Committee authority        .over
    buildings     in the National         Register;    instead,     the
    Code    only     gives   the     Committee      authority      over
    p.    1275
    Mr. Fred Wendorf - Page 4               (MW-378)
    .
    buildings    which the Committee has designated          as a
    State Archeological      Landmark.    Since the Committee
    has    not    designated      the   buildings     as    State
    Archeological     Landmarks. the College      District    does
    not    need    the     Conrmittee’s    permission      before
    demolishing    the buildings.
    554 S.W.Zd      at 926.     (Emphasis     added).
    The meaning          of     this     statement    is    clear:      the     Antiquities
    Committee       has no jurisdiction              over   buildings      which     it    has    not
    designated       as state       archeological       landmarks,     and its     permission      is
    therefore      not needed before          such a building      is altered.       The question
    concerns     the legal       significance       of this   statement.       Although     neither
    Justice    Greenhill      nor Justice        Denton challenged      it in their      opinions,
    it technically        reflects       the views of only four members of the court.
    Moreover,      if   the fact        that the buildings        were never designated            as
    landmarks      was dispositive          of the question        of whether       a permit      was
    needed     to     demolish       them,     the   court   need     not   have     reached      the
    constitutional       questions.         It could have disposed        of the case on that
    ground alone.
    In our opinion,       however,      this statement         resolves    the question      of
    when the Antiquities           Committee acquires            jurisdiction       of buildings,
    sites,     and other items.         First.     the court of civil           anneals
    ..        relied   on
    this     statement      in Board of          Regents     v.    Walker      County    Historical
    Commission,       
    608 S.W.2d 252
    (Tex.             Civ.   App. - Houston          114th Dist.1
    1980, no writ),        which involved        the Woodland Home.            Second,    it is the
    only reasonable        construction      of the Antiquities           Code provisions.        One
    can hardly be expected to know that a particular                      item is a “landmark,”
    and    is    therefore     subject      to     the    permit      requirement,       until     the
    Antiquities      Committee formally         designates      it as such.
    The Woodland Home is a “building”    located    on land “belonging      to
    the State of Texas or to any county,     city,    or political    subdivision”
    within   section  191.092. For the foregoing      reasons,   we conclude     that
    it became a “landmark” within the Antiquities       Code on June 24, 1981.
    We now consider          whether,   prior   to   August    31,     1981,     the
    Antiquities       Committee’s   permission  was needed before     section     191.092
    landmarks could be altered.          Put another way. does Senate Bill No. 659
    effect    any change in the law in this area?         Before August 31. section
    191.093     referred   only to “landmarks     under Section    191.091.”      Section
    191.095 provided,       however, that:
    All     sites     or     items      of    archeological,
    scientific,       or   historical       interest     located      on
    private      land    in the      State    of   Texas     in areas
    designated      as landmarks,        as provided      in Section
    191.094 of this code,          and landmarks under Section
    191.092     of this     code,     may not be...        altered...
    P.   1276
    Mr. Fred Wendorf         - Page 5        (MW-378)
    without     a permit     from the committee....              (Emphasis
    added).
    This section     was derived    from section    6. article      6145-9.    supril.
    Section    6 was discussed       in Attorney      General   Opinion      H-250   (1974),
    which observed       that although     the “peculiar      wording”    of the section
    might suggest     that the “taken,     altered,    damaged,” etc..      clause   applied
    only to landmarks        on private     lands,   the legislature       certainly     must
    have intended       to protect     landmarks    on public     land “with       the same
    vigor. ” Attorney      General Opinion H-250 concluded         as follows:
    In our opinion,     then.    56 of the Antiquities     Code
    requires    that the permission      of the Antiquities
    Committee be obtained         in the form of a permit
    before   any site    of historical      or archeological
    interest   located   on public    lands can be altered,
    damaged, destroyed,     etc.    (Emphasis added).
    In our opinion,        the legislature       merely ratified      this   conclusion
    when it       enacted     section     191.095    in     1977.      The wording     of    that
    section--particularly            its   reference       to     section   191.092--clearly
    indicates      that   all    section    191.092     landmarks were intended           to be
    subject    to the pzit         requirement.      Senate Bill No. 659 does not enact
    new law, therefore,        but only clarifies        existing      law.
    The Antiquities   Committee,   therefore,   was obliged   to require     that
    a permit   be obtained    prior   to the alteration      of a section      191.092
    landmark   even before     Senate   Bill     No. 659 became effective.          The
    remaining  question   is whether the committee may now require          the Board
    of Regents    to obtain    a permit      before  further   renovation     work is
    performed   on the Woodland Home pursuant        to the contract      of May 23,
    1980.
    Section     191.093 now provides             that section        191.092 landmarks         “may
    not be . ..altered      . ..without      a . ..permit     from the committee.”            The law is
    settled      that    unambiguous         statutory        language       will   he construed          as
    written.        Ex parte         Roloff,       510 S.W.Zd         913 (Tex.       1974).       In our
    opinion,      a straightforward             reading     and application          of this       statute
    compels the conclusion             that once a building               is designated      as a “state
    archeological        landmark.”        it may not be altered              without   a permit       from
    the     committee.          We perceive           no basis          for   concluding        that     the
    legislature       did not intend for the permit requirement                       to apply where,
    as here,        alterations         were       contracted        for    before     a building         is
    designated      a landmark.          On the contrary.           given the state’s         legitimate
    interest      in preserving          the integrity           of landmarks,        we believe         the
    legislature       fully      intended      the permit         requirement      to apply       in such
    instances.
    It is suggested  in an accompanying     brief   that to conclude      that
    the Board of Regents must obtain      a permit before     this renovation    work
    is completed    is to raise  constitutional     questions     under article     I,
    section   10 of the Federal  Constitution     and article     I, section    16 of
    p.   1277
    Mr. Fred Wendorf          - Page 6        (NW-378)
    the Texas Constitution,              which prohibit         laws impairing            the obligation
    of contracts.          However. we are not here confronted                        with lenislatlon
    which      has that       effect.         See,   e.g..      Texas       State      Board of         Barber
    Examiners      v.    Beaumont Barber College.                 Inc.,       454 S.W.Zd        729 (Tex.
    1970);    Biddle     v. Board of Adjustment,               Village        of Spring Valley,           
    316 S.W.2d 437
    (Tex.          Clv. App. - Houston 1958. writ ref’d                          n.r.e.l:      see
    also     review     of cases        in- Attorney       General- Letter            Advisory        No; 136
    (1977).       As we have observed,           even though section              191.093 has now been
    amended to include            section       191.092     landmarks.           section     191.095      has
    existed     in its present         form since 1977,           Accordingly,          when the parties
    entered      into    the May 23. 1980, contract,                 the law then provided                that
    section     191.092 landmarks may not be altered                     without a permit from the
    committee.         The parties         must be presumed               to have known that               the
    Woodland Home could             at any time he designated                    as a landmark,           thus
    triggering       the permit         requirement.          See.      e.g.,       Reid v.       Gulf Oil
    Corporation,         
    323 S.W.2d 107
    (Tex.        Civ.       App.      -    Beaumont        1959),
    affirmed,      
    337 S.W.2d 267
    (Tex. 1960); Lange v. Schulte,                           
    276 S.W.2d 889
     (Tex. Civ. App. - Amarillo               1954, writ ref’d           n.r.e.);        13 Tex. Jur. 2d
    Contracts       $165 (parties         to contract       presumed to have known existing
    law and to have contracted                 with reference           to it).         Our courts        have
    held that the enforcement               of legislation         in effect         when a contract         is
    made does not Impair the obligations                   created       by the contract.             McKenna
    v. City of Galveston,             
    113 S.W.2d 606
    (Tex. Civ. App. - Galveston                         1938,
    writ dism’d) ; see also Romeike v. Houston Ind. School                                  District,      
    368 S.W.2d 895
    (Tex. Civ. App. - Waco 1963, no writ).
    We therefore  conclude  that the Board of Regents    must obtain  a
    permit from the Texas Antiquities    Committee before renovation work on
    the Woodland Home is completed,     even though the work was contracted
    for before  the home was designated   a “landmark.”
    It must be emphasized,             however,      that     the committee       may not
    arbitrarily      refuse     to grant      a permit        or impose       any requirements
    whatsoever     as conditions     precedent       to the issuance       of a permit.      Texas
    Antiquities      Committee v. Dallas            County Community College           
    District, supra
    ,    demonstrates     that the committee’s         decision     will   be tested under
    the substantial       evidence    rule.       In making its decision,           for example,
    the committee certainly         could not overlook          the fact that, based upon a
    restoration      study    made by an architectural                firm,    the legislature
    appropriated     funds for repairs        and rehabilitation         of the Woodland Home
    in 1979.      General    Appropriations        Act, Acts 1979, 66th Leg.,            ch. 843,
    art.    IV,   01,    at   2844.      In other        words,     the Woodland        Home was
    designated     a landmark after         the legislature        had placed      its   stamp of
    approval    on the restoration        project     currently    in progress.
    SUMMARY
    The Board    of   Regents  of    the    Texas   State
    University   System must obtain     a permit      from the
    Texas Antiquities     Committee before     completing   the
    renovation  work on the Sam Houston Woodland Home
    p.   1278
    Mr. Fred Wendorf     - Page 7       (Mb'-378)
    in Huntsville       which      it    contracted    for   in   May,
    1980.
    MARK        WHITE
    Attorney   General of    Texas
    JOHN W. FAINTER, JR.
    First Assistant Attorney         General
    RICHARD E. GRAY III
    Executive Assistant     Attorney        General
    Prepared    by Jon Bible
    Assistant    Attorney  General
    APPROVED:
    OPINION COMMITTEE
    Susan L. Garrison,     Chairman
    Jon Bible
    Rick Gilpin
    Eva Loutzenhiser
    Jim Moellinger
    p.    1279