Untitled Texas Attorney General Opinion ( 1984 )


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  •                                                 The Attorney        General of Texas
    JIM MATTOX                                                    August 13, 1984
    Attorney General
    Supreme   Court Building                    Honorable T. R. Ba"d:r              Opinion No. JM-189
    P. 0. BOX 12546                             Nueces County Attonwy
    Aus!in, TX. 76711. 2546                     Courthouse                          Re: Whether an area to be developed
    5121475-2501                                Corpus Christi, Texas 78401         for tourist purposes within its
    Telex    910/874-1367
    Telecopier      5121475.0266
    extraterritorial jurisdiction may
    be designated by a city as a"
    industrial district
    714 Jackson,  Suite 700
    Dallas, TX. 75202-4506
    Dear Mr. Bandy:
    214/742-8944
    You advise tha: certain areas along Mustang Island in Nueces
    4624 Alberta          Ave., Suite     160   County are being e:r:ensivelydeveloped for tourist-related purposes
    El Paso, TX.          79905.2793            (through the const,ruction of hotels, condominiums, vacation home
    9151533.3464                                subdivisions, and rw:reation facilities). You ask:
    PO1         Texas,    Suite 700
    May the governing body of a cj~tydesignate as a"
    Juston,    TX. 77002-3111                      industria:ldistrict under the Municipal Annexation
    7131223-5686                                     Act certain areas within its extraterritorial
    jurisdict:lrm which it determines are primarily
    utilized :iorthe tourist industry?
    606 Broadway,            Suite 312
    Lubbock,     TX.        79401-3479
    6061747-5236                                     The Municipal Iumexation Act, article 970a, V.T.C.S., was enacted
    in 1963. See Acts; 1963, 58th Leg., ch. 160, at 447. Section 5
    thereof states in pertinent part:
    4309 N. Tenth,     Suite B
    McA,,en,     TX. 76501~1665
    512/662-4547                                           Sec. 5. The governing body of any city shall
    have the right, power, and authority to designate
    w        par:   of    the   area  located    in  its
    200 Main Plaza, Suite 400                        extraterr:it:orialjurisdiction as a" industrial
    San Antonio,  TX. 76205.2797
    district, .XS the term is customarily used, and to
    51212254191
    treat    witi  such area  from time to time  as such
    governing body may deem to be in the best interest
    An Equal       Opportunity/                      of the city. Included in such rights and powers
    Affirmative      Action     Employer             of the governing body of any city is the
    permissive right and power to enter into contracts
    or agreemwts with the owner or owners of land in
    such      intcstrial district to      guarantee the
    continuat:1on of the extraterritorial status of
    such distr:.ct,and its immunity from annexation by
    the city for a period of time not to exceed seven
    (7) years, and upon such other terms and
    p. 825
    Honorable T. R. Bandy - Pagr,2     (JM-189)
    considerations iw       the   parties   might   deem
    appropriate . . . .    (Emphasis added).
    The term "industrial distri':,:"
    is not defined by article 970a, but is
    to be understood "as the telxlis customarily used."
    In Calvert v. Austin Liulndryand Dry Cleaning Co., 365 S.W.Zd 232
    (Tex. Civ. App. - Austin 19c3, writ ref'd n.r.e.), the meaning of the
    undefined term "industrial cperations," as used in a taxing statute,
    was at issue, Declaring th:.t the word "industrial" has a meaning of
    its own, and that the 1egis:l;lture
    is presumed to have used the word in
    the sense ordinarily underxood, the court held that the operations of
    laundrv and drv cleanine xlants were "industrial onerations." The
    court relied ;pon Nortlh 'Side Laundry Co. v. Board of Property
    Assessment, Appeals and RevTew, 
    79 A.2d 419
    (Pa. 1951), which held a
    commercial laundry to be an'sdustrial plant" within the meaning of a
    Pennsylvania taxing statute. Cf. State ex rel. Keystone Laundry and
    Dry Cleaners, Inc. v. McDomxll~26
    --*       S.W.Zd 11 (MO. 1968).
    The Pennsylvania SuprenleCourt in the North Side Laundry case,
    responding to an argument tlat the Pennsylvania statute as construed
    in a prior case unco"stit,lrionallydiscriminated against a laundry
    because other "service induj:ries" were not equally taxed, explained:
    [T]he fact that tte businesses to which plaintiff
    referred   are   rometimes   generically   called
    'industries' is Lrrelevant to the issue here
    raised. The question is whether their establish-
    ments are industrisl plants.
    The answer to that question is self-evident.
    By no stretch oE the imagination could a bank
    building, a hate:.,a theater or any of the other
    business establir;l,mentsreferred to by plaintiff
    be considered ar industrial plant. It is true
    that we sometimelrspeak of 'the movie industry',
    'the hotel industry' or 'the banking industry',
    but that is merf,~lya loose use of language to
    convey that idea that the particular business is a
    sizeable one. Irispite of that colloquialism, we
    do not speak o!: the buildings housing such
    businesses as    '::"dustrial plants'.   Plaintiff
    attempts to gi~ve to that phrase a legal meaning
    that   goes   far   beyond   anything   that   was
    contemplated by the Courts when they pronounced
    this rule and by the legislature when it adopted
    it in the Act of 1933. The law can do no better
    than to define ar industrial plant as that type of
    establishment whj.(,h
    the ordinary man thinks of as
    p. 826
    :   .
    Honorable T. R. Bandy - Page 3   (JM-189)
    C
    such. Certainly a commercial laundry comes within
    that definition bdt the other businesses here
    mentioned do not.
    See also Union Mutual Life Irsurance Co. v. Emerson, 
    345 A.2d 504
    (Me.
    1975); State Police DepartmelG:v. Hargrave, 237 N.E.Zd 269 (Ind. App.
    1968); Attorney General Opinlcn MW-552 (1982).
    Similarly, the question here is not whether businesses catering
    to tourists might be regardcclas engaged in "the tourist industry."
    The question is whether an srea primarily utilized for the tourist
    industry can be properly regarded as an "industrial district" within
    the meaning of the statute.
    We do not think the leE;jslatureintended to allow the extension
    of a city's powers, in the mrner contemplated by section 5 of article
    970a. to embrace every extraxrritorial are+ occupied by a commercial
    venture that might be considt:.red
    part of some "industry" in the broad
    sense. As the Supreme Court: of Maine noted in Union Mutual Life
    Insurance 
    Co., supra
    , where 'Lndustrial plant" status was claimed for
    the home office of an in3llrance company because it was highly
    capitalized, had a large labcr force, and other indicia:
    If the argument ai.xancedwere to be adopted, it
    would seem that an:!general office building could
    in theory qualify 5,san industrial plant.
    345 S.W.Zd 507. The Maine Court relied upon and quoted from the
    Indiana case of State Police Department v. Hargrave, m,  to the
    effect:
    [Tlhe ordinary man rrouldunderstand an industrial
    plant to be any factory. business or concern which
    is engaged primarily in the manufacture or
    assembly of good!; or the processing of raw
    materials, or both.
    We believe an "industrial district," as the term is customarily
    used, is an area where indujrrial plants are located, as contrasted
    with areas that are merely commercial in character. If the term
    "industrial" were synonymous with the term "commercial" in ordinary
    usage, it would be idle for osr statutes to refer to them separately.
    See V.T.C.S. art. 1349 (":mxnercial or industrial" clubs); art.
    5190.6,     §2(10) ("manufacturing and industrial facilities," and
    "commercial development," in addition); art. 5186 ("business and
    industrial development").        Cf.   V.T.C.S.   art.  5190.1,   52(j)
    ("manufacturing or industrial enterprise"); art. 5190.2, §2(=)
    ("manufacturing or industrial enterprise"). Article lOlla, V.T.C.S..
    grants certain cities zonin;: power over land "for trade, industry,
    p. 827
    Honorable T. R. Bandy - Page 4   (JM-189)
    residence, or other purpose." Distinctions between cormnercialzones
    or districts and manufacturing or industrial districts have been
    readily applied. City of Corpus Christ1 v. Jones, 144 S.W.Zd 388
    (Tex. Civ. App. - San Antonio 1940, writ dism'd judgmt car.). -.See
    also City of Amarillo v. :;'&, 109 S.W.Zd 258 (Tex. Civ. App. -
    Amarillo 1937, writ dism'd). Cf. City of Amarillo v. Stapf. 101
    S.W.Zd 229 (Tex. Comm'n App. 1937,pinion adopted).
    In only two cases that we have found is there a suggestion that
    section 5 of article 970a might reach farther. See Mihailov v. City
    of Cedar Hill, 453 S.W.Zd 111:(Tex. Civ. App. - Dallas 1970. no writ)
    (mobile home site development); and Fox Development Co. v. City of San
    Antonio, 
    459 S.W.2d 670
    (Tex. Civ. App. - San Antonio 1970). affirmed,
    
    468 S.W.2d 338
    (Tex. 1971) (subdivision development). In the Mihailov
    
    case, supra
    , the court merelr  held that the city could not be denied
    an opportunity to litigate the question of extraterritorial rights
    under sections 4 and 5 of article 970a. In the Fox Development Co.
    case, a,       the Court o:i Civil Appeals said that because the
    appellant had not shown a co:.laterallyattacked ordinance to be void,
    the trial court did not err in holding that the land in dispute was
    "within the extraterritoria:.jurisdiction of the City of San Antonio
    under Article 970a, 55." But in affirming the result of the Fox
    Development Co. case, the fupreme Court held that section 7 (not
    section 5) of article 970a was the operative section.
    Three cases to which Houston Endowment, Inc. was a party
    concerned unimproved land, used for agricultural purposes, that was
    considered subject to inclusion in an industrial district. We do not
    believe that they represent a different view, however, because the
    land was acknowledged to ,e "far more valuable for industrial
    development than for any otter use." City of Pasadena v. Houston
    Endowment, Inc., 438 S.W.Zd -52, 155 (Tex. Civ. App. - Houston [14th
    Dist.] 1969, writ ref'd n.r.a.). [The land was within territory held
    by a city under articles llfi:#-1187,V.T.C.S., which authorize limited
    annexations for improving navigation along navigable streams and for
    establishing and maintainin,:wharves, docks, railway terminals, and
    other facilities for aidin]: navigation or wharves. Article 970a,
    V.T.C.S., does not apply to s,lchterritory, City of Houston v. Houston
    Endowment, Inc., 
    428 S.W.2d 706
    (Tex. Civ. App. - Houston [lst Dist.1
    1968, writ ref'd n.r.e.), but article 1187-l. V.T.C.S., allows the
    designation of industrial disrricts there in words almost~identical to
    those of article 970a. --Houston Endowment, Inc. v. City of Houston,
    468 S.W.Zd 540 (Tex. Civ. Ap:?.- Houston [14th Dist.] 1971, writ ref'd
    n.r.e.). Cf. City of Nassau Bay v. City of Webster, 600 S.W.Zd 905
    (Tex. Civ.App. - Houston [ist Dist.] 1980), writ ref'd n.r.e.. per
    curiam, 608 S.W.Zd 618 (Tex. ,.980).]
    We are of the opinion, c.fteran examination of the statutes and
    cases, that the governing bo+ of a city may not properly designate as
    p. 828
    Honorable T. R. Bandy - Page 5      (JM-189)
    an industrial district unde:r the Municipal Annexation Act an area
    within its extraterritorial jurisdiction which it determines is to be
    primarily utiljzed for the tourist industry.
    SUMMARY
    .-
    The governing bclc.yof a city may not properly
    designate as an j.r.dustrialdistrict under the
    Municipal   Annexation Act an area within its
    extraterritorial jurisdiction which it determines
    is to be primarily utilized for the tourist
    industry.
    JIM     MATTOX
    Attorney General of Texas
    TOM GREEN
    First Assistant Attorney General
    DAVID R. RICHARDS
    Executive Assistant Attorney :?neral
    Prepared by Bruce Youngblood
    Assistant Attorney General
    APPROVED:
    OPINION COMMITTEE
    Rick Gilpin, Chairman
    David Brooks
    Colin Carl
    Susan Garrison
    Jim Moellinger
    Nancy Sutton
    Bruce Youngblood
    p. 829
    

Document Info

Docket Number: JM-189

Judges: Jim Mattox

Filed Date: 7/2/1984

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 2/18/2017