Untitled Texas Attorney General Opinion ( 1986 )


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    December 29, 1986
    Honorable Oscar H. Mauzy             Opinion No. JM-600
    Chairman
    Committee on Jurisprudence           Ret   Whether national forests
    Texas State Senate                   and federal wilderness areas are
    P. 0. Box 12068                      within the scope of chapter 152
    Austin, Texas   78711                of the Natural Resources Code
    Dear Senator Mauay:
    Some time ago, you asked several questions about the scope of
    chapter 152 of the Texas Natural Resources Code. Because some of the
    issues raised by your request were subject to litigation, we delayed
    this response during the pendency of the litigation. See Sierra Club
    v. Block, 
    614 F. Supp. 134
    (E.D. Tex. 1985). The Gult         of this
    litigation may be relevant to your request. This office is currently
    involved in additional litigation regarding the aftermath of past
    infestations. Accordingly, this opinion addresses only questions
    which do not relate directly to this litigation. It has long been the
    policy of this office to refrain from answering questions pending in
    the courts.
    Chapter 152 contains the Texas Natural Resources Code’s Forest
    Pest Control provisions. You ask whether chapter 152 applies to
    national forests and congressionally designated wilderness areas
    located in Texas in a manner which requires federal officials to
    control forest pests, such as Southern Pine Beetles, upon the demand
    of the Texas Forest Service. You also ask whether the state may
    constitutionally require landowners, including both private landowners
    and the federal government, to cut their trees to prevent the spread
    of forest pests or to pay the costs of the Texas Forest Service for
    doing so. Background information provided with your request reveals
    that experts disagree about whether extensive tree-cutting actually
    eradicates pine beetles or is an appropriate response to past
    large-scale infestations. Thus, your real concetn may focus on the
    methods employed by the Forest Service.
    Your first question is whether the Texas Forest Service may
    unilaterally require federal officials to comply with chapter 152.
    Section 152.012 provides:
    (a) The service shall make surveys and investi-
    P
    gations to determine the existence of infestations
    Honorable Oscar A. Mauzy - Page 2 (J&600)
    )
    7
    of forest pests and means practical for their
    control by landowners.
    (b) Duly delegated representatives of the
    service may enter private land and public land,
    including that held by the United States if
    permission is obtained, for the purpose of
    conducting surveys and investigations.
    (c) All the service's information shall be
    available to all interested landowners. (Emphasis
    added).
    Nat. Res. Code ~0152.012. Section 152.012(b) indicates that the
    service may only enter federal land to conduct surveys and investiga-
    tions with the permission of the federal government. It follows that
    state officials may not enter federal land to conduct forest pest
    eradication programs without federal permission. Accordingly, this
    opinion does not address your suggestion that the service cannot
    require the federal government to comply with chapter 152 without
    sunning afoul of the United States Constitution. See generally U.S.
    Const. art. IV, 53, cl. 2; Kleppe v. New Mexico, 
    426 U.S. 529
    (1976).
    Moreover, a letter from the United States Department of Agri-
    culture's Forest Service, submitted in response to your opinion
    request, indicates that federal and state officials are in fact
    working in concert on this matter and that continuing cooperation is
    deemed essential to the preservation of federal land located in Texas.
    Section 2104 of Title 16 of the United States Code provides expressly
    for the protection of National Forest System trees from insects and
    disease and authorizes federal cooperation with state officials. 16
    U.S.C. 02104(b) (1982). Similarly, section 152.026 of the Texas
    Natural Resources Code authorizes the Texas Forest Service to enter
    into cooperative agreements with the federal government "to accomplish
    the control of forest pests."
    You express concern about the methods used to eradicate forest
    pests. The appropriateness of the methods used by state and federal
    officials in controlling forest pests depends upon factual determina-
    tions which are beyond the scope of the article 4399, V.T.C.S.,
    opinion process. It should be noted, however, that section 152.001 of
    the Texas Natural Resources Code states that
    [i]t is the public policy of the State of Texas to
    control forest pests in or threatening forests in
    this state in order to protect forest resources,
    enhance the growth and maintenance of forests,
    promote stability of forest-using industries,
    rotect recreational wildlife uses, and conserve
    !ther values of the forest. (Emphasis added).
    p. 2683
    Honorable Oscar H. Mauzy - Page 3 ~(JM-600)
    Additionally, the federal agencies involved must comply with all
    _
    relevant federal statutes and regulations -- i.e., procedural and
    environmental regulations. See Sierra Club v. Block, 
    614 F. Supp. 134
    (E.D. Tex. 1985); see alsoTexas Committee on Natural Resources v.
    Bergland. 
    573 F.2d 201
    (5th Cir. 1978). cert. denied, 
    439 U.S. 966
    (1978).
    You also inquire whether the state may constitutionally require
    landowners, including both private landowners and the federal govern-
    ment , to cut their trees themselves or to pay the costs of the Texas
    Forest Service for performing this task. As indicated above with
    regard to lauds owned by the federal government, the state may not
    unilaterally "require" the federal government to comply with chapter
    152 of the code without obtaining federal permission. For the same
    reason. even if the federal government allows the Texas Forest Service
    to institute control measures against forest pests in national forests
    and wilderness areas in order to protect such lands, the state may not
    "require" the federal government to reimburse the state. The federal
    government may, however, agree to reimburse the state if such
    reimbursement is part of a cooperative agreement to preserve and
    protect the national forests and wilderness areas from destruction.
    See, e.g., 16 U.S.C. $2104(b) (1982); cf. 16 U.S.C. §2104(f) (1982)
    (limiting the use of appropriated federalfunds).
    With regard to the state requiring private landowners to cut
    their trees OK to pay the costs of the Texas Forest Service for doing
    SO. a fundamental constitutional question must be addressed. Under
    the Fifth and Fourteenth Amendments of the United States Constitution,
    private property may not be "taken" without "just compensation." See
    Penn Central Transportation Co. v. City of New York, 
    438 U.S. 104
    (1978). Article I, section 17, of the Texas Constitution prohibits a
    state and its uolitical subdivisions from "taking or damaaina" urivate
    property for public use without providing "adequate c~mp~ns~tion."
    City of College Station v. Turtle Rock Corporation. 
    680 S.W.2d 802
    (Tex. 1984). Trees growing in the ground are deemed property, a part
    of the realty. City of Tyler v. Arp Nursery Co., 451~S.W.2d~809.~812
    (Tex. Cl". App. - Tyler 1970. writ ref'd n.r.e.). A "taking" is an
    exercise of the government's eminent domain powers.
    Under certain circumstances, however, property may be appro-
    priated by government action without any compensation as an exercise
    of the state's police power -- the power to protect the public health,
    safety, and welfare.   See, e.g., Miller v. Schoene, 
    276 U.S. 272
    , 280
    (1928); Nunley v. Texas Animal Health Commission, 
    471 S.W.2d 144
    (Tex.
    Cl". App. - San Antonio 1971, writ ref'd n.r.e.); City of Waco v.
    Archenhold Automobile Supply Co., 
    386 S.W.2d 174
    (Tex. Civ. App. -
    Waco 1964), aff'd, 
    396 S.W.2d 111
    (Tex. 1965). Traditional analysis
    distinguishes police power from eminent domain power by focusing on
    whether the government is preventing a public harm as opposed to
    forcing a private party to give property for a public benefit.
    p. 2684
    Honorable Oscar H. Mauzy - Page 4   (~~-600)
    Defining the shadowy boundary where the police power ends and the
    exercise of eminent domain begins (and therefore where compensation
    must be made) has caused a generation of conflicting cases. See
    Cabaniss, Inverse Condemnation in Texas - Exploring the Serbonian Bog,
    
    44 Tex. L. Rev. 1584
    (1966).
    Section 152.002 of the Natural Resources Code declares that
    "[florest pests are . . . a public nuisance." The legislature may
    declare certain things to be nuisances and may remit to administrative
    officers the authority to determine whether certain acts OK things
    constitute public nuisances. See Stockwell v. State, 
    221 S.W. 932
    (Tex. 1920); cf. Air Curtain Destructor Corp. v. City of Austin, 
    675 S.W.2d 615
    (TX   App. - Tyler 1984, writ ref'd n.r.e.); Hart v. City
    of Dallas, 565 S.W.Zd 373 (Tex. Civ. App. - Tyler 1978, no writ). The
    declaration in section 152.002 that forest pests are a public nuisance
    authorizes an exercise of police power. Nevertheless, this does not
    prevent a finding that a "taking" has occurred.
    The Texas Supreme Court holds that property may not be taken
    without compensation under certain circumstances, even in the exercise
    of the police power.. City of College 
    Station, 680 S.W.2d at 804
    ; City
    of Austin v. Teague, 
    570 S.W.2d 389
    (Tex. 1978); Attorney General
    Opinion JM-294 (1984). The Texas Supreme Court in City of Austin v.
    Teague, rejected an arbitrary application of the "police power" -
    'eminent domain" distinction in favor of a balancing test of whether
    the public need outweighs the private 
    loss. 570 S.W.2d at 393
    .
    Consequently, the Texas Forest Service may require private landowners
    to cut their trees without constituting a taking for which compensa-
    tion must be made only if the public need to protect forests by
    cutting infected or infested trees outweighs the loss to the landowner
    of the value of the trees. A determination of whether public need
    outweighs private loss depends upon the facts in any given case.
    The means used by the Forest Service in eradicating OK con-
    trolling forest pests OK in dealing with past infestations is also
    relevant in balancing the damages suffered by the landowner with the
    need to control forest pests. A method of control which causes great
    private damage without actually effecting any legitimate public
    purpose could be deemed arbitrary and capricious. See City of
    Brookside Village v. Comeau, 
    633 S.W.2d 790
    (Tex. 1982), cz. denied,
    
    459 U.S. 1087
    (1982).
    With regard to requiring a landowner to bear the cost of cutting
    trees which are infested with forest pests, the constitutionality of
    the requirement would be dependent upon and implicit in a finding that
    no taking has occurred. The basic statutory framework for requiring
    certain landowners to bear the cost of abating forest pests already
    exists. See Nat. Res. Code 59152.022, 152.024. If the public need to
    protect fzsts    outweighs the loss to the landowner of the value of
    his trees, he may be required to destroy the trees. Accordingly. if
    p. 2685
    Eonorable Oscar 8. Mauzy - Page 5    (JM-600)
    the state expends state funds to destroy the trees, the state may
    recover this cost from the landowner. The Natural Resources Code,
    however, currently sets a fixed amount which constitutes a legal claim
    against a landowner for the cost of pest control undertaken by the
    Forest Service. -See Nat. Res. Code 6152.023.
    SUMMARY
    The national forests and federally designated
    wilderness areas located within Texas are covered
    by the pest control psovisions of chapter 152 of
    the Texas Natural Resources Code only to the
    extent that the authorized agency of the federal
    government expressly agrees to allow enforcement
    of Texas' forest pest control laws.
    The state may constitutionally require private
    landowners to cut their trees OK to pay the costs
    of the Texas Forest Service for doing so if the
    public need to control pests or deal with past
    infestations outweighs the loss to the landowner
    and if the means used by the service are not
    arbitrary and capricious. A determination of
    whether public need outweighs private loss depends
    upon the facts in each given case.
    J-/h>
    Very truly your ,,
    .
    JIM     MATTOX
    Attorney General of Texas
    JACK HIGHTOWER
    First Assistant Attorney General
    MARY KELLER
    Executive Assistant Attorney General
    RICK GILPIN
    Chairman, Opinion Committee
    Prepared by Jennifer Riggs
    Assistant Attorney General
    p. 2686