Opinion ID: 2447665
Heading Depth: 1
Heading Rank: 1

Heading: Chapter 62 of the Texas Natural Resources Code

Text: The provisions of this chapter [section 62.001 et seq.] apply to counties that are located or border on the Gulf of Mexico and have within their boundaries beaches that are suitable for park purposes. Tex.Nat. Res.Code § 62.001(a). A beach suitable for park purposes is defined as a beach located within its [County's] boundaries, but not located within the boundaries of an incorporated city.... Id. Sections 62.012 and 62.013(a) state that a county beach park board may be created after a favorable majority vote of the qualified voters of the county at an election ... which is called by the commissioners court. In addition, a county beach park board may be created for the purpose of improving, equipping, maintaining, financing, and operating a public park or parks, or any facilities owned by the county, or to be acquired by the county, or to be managed by the county under the terms of a written contract. Id. at § 62.011. The members of the county beach park board are appointed by the commissioners court and one member is required to be a member of the commissioners court. Id. at § 62.041. Any vacancy on the county beach park board is filled by the commissioners court. Id. at § 62.045. Section 62.043 requires members of the county beach park board to file a bond with the county clerk and the bond must be approved by the commissioners court and payable to the county. A county beach park board may call on the county attorney of the county for the legal services it requires; however, [i]n lieu of or in addition to the county attorney, the board may employ and compensate its own counsel and legal staff. Id. at § 62.048(a) & (b). A county beach park board may contract with the commissioners court of the county to have the county keep and maintain its records. Id. at § 62.051(b). Section 62.051(c) states that all of the records of a county beach park board are subject to inspection by the commissioners court at all reasonable times. The funds of a county beach park board are deposited and secured in the same manner prescribed by law for county funds. Id. at § 62.052. A county beach park board may employ stenographers, bookkeepers, accountants, technical experts, and other agents and employees it requires. Id. at § 62.049. In addition, [independent auditors selected by the board shall make an annual audit of all financial transactions and records of the board. Id. at § 62.053. Section 62.091(a) states that public beaches owned in fee by the county are under the jurisdiction of the board ... and section 62.091(b) states that [t]he commissioners court may designate the following land to be under the management and control of the board: (1) additional parks and facilities owned by the county; or (2) additional parks and facilities to be managed by the county under the terms of a written contract. Furthermore, the county beach park board may advertise the county's recreational advantages for the purpose of attracting tourists, residents, and other users of the public facilities operated by the board. Id. at § 62.-099. Galveston County Beach Park Board The Board's 1989 budget was funded approximately 82% by Galveston County from public funds, [2] 16% from miscellaneous revenues (including fees collected from other sources) and 1% from state grants. The County Judge of Galveston County testified that the Board is part of the budget adopted by the commissioners court, that the salary of each employee of the Board is approved by the commissioners court as part of the ordinary budget process, that the hiring of employees of the Board is approved by the commissioners court, that promotions for employees of the Board are approved by the commissioners court, and that employees of the Board were considered part of Galveston County for purposes of coverage by the Texas County and District Retirement System. In their county creation, composition, and concern solely with problems in individual counties, the county beach park boards (including the Galveston County Beach Park Board) have numerous characteristics of a county entity.
A unit of state government cannot, by definition, be independent. The court of appeals may have intended that county beach park boards are an entirely separate governmental entity, as evidenced in the comment that the Legislature endowed beach park boards with extensive independent powers characteristic of an autonomous body. 814 S.W.2d at 754. Alternatively, the court of appeals may have intended that county beach park boards are state agencies. These county beach park boards, however, lack any of the features characteristic of such agencies. They lack taxing authority, and we are aware of no cases in which an entity not so authorized was held to be an independent state subdivision, absent express statutory identification as such a political subdivision. See Guaranty Petroleum Corp. v. Armstrong, 609 S.W.2d 529, 531 (Tex. 1980). County beach park boards lack state-wide jurisdiction, a trait required of entities recognized as departments, boards, or agencies of the state. Id. Furthermore, county beach park boards are appointed by county, not state officials. If county beach park boards were to be considered agencies of the State, they would come under no oversight from the State Auditor, who cannot review what section 62.052 requires to be treated in the same manner as county funds. Tex.Gov. Code § 321.005. Compare Tex. Water Code § 50.381(b) (requiring water districts to file an annual audit with the State Auditor for review). Likewise, county beach park boards would not be mandated to make purchases through the State General Services Commission under the State Purchasing and General Services Act. See Tex.Rev.Civ.Stat. art. 601b (Vernon Supp. 1992). There is no indication that county beach park boards are encompassed by that statute's definition of a state agency as one in the executive branch of state government. Id. at § 1.02(2)(A).
Central to the court of appeals' opinion is its interpretation of the legislative history behind the applicable enabling statute. The court focused on an interim legislative committee report stating that county governments have virtually no powers which they can exercise to improve the beach[es]. 814 S.W.2d at 753. Concluding that county beach park boards were created [t]o fill the void of local regulation of beaches, id., the court of appeals failed to consider other legislation enacted together with chapter 62 of the Texas Natural Resources Code which clarifies that: It is the duty and responsibility of the commissioners court of any county located or bordering on the Gulf of Mexico to clean and maintain the condition of all public beaches located inside the county but located outside the boundaries of any incorporated city located or bordering on the Gulf of Mexico and all public beaches owned by the county and located inside the boundaries of an incorporated city, town, or village. Tex.Nat.Res.Code § 61.066 (emphasis added). In addition, [t]he commissioners court of a county bordering on the Gulf of Mexico ... by order, may regulate motor vehicle traffic on any beach within the boundaries of the county and may prohibit the littering of the beach.... Id. at § 61.122 (emphasis added). Thus, it is the commissioners court, not the county beach park boards, that were empowered to fill the void. The court of appeals also relied on statutory language that county beach park boards may contract with the commissioners court to maintain records which are already subject to inspection by the commissioners court. Id. at § 62.051(b), (c). See 814 S.W.2d at 752. The mention of contractual agreement in this subsection suggests only that county beach park boards may want to arrange record-keeping with the commissioners court. Similarly, section 62.098 states: the board may enter into contracts with: (1) adjacent counties; (2) boards in adjacent counties; and (3) boards in cities of the same county in which the board has jurisdiction. This is taken to suggest that, if a county beach park board is part of the county in which it has jurisdiction, there is a redundancy in allowing a contract with both an adjacent county and a board in that county. 814 S.W.2d at 753. However, the county beach park board's home county is excluded from the list of governmental agencies with which it may contract. If the court of appeals' interpretation were correct, that county should also be listed. Further evidence of de facto unity between the County and county beach park board is found in the provision that [t]he board may call on the county attorney of the county for legal services it requires. Tex.Nat.Res.Code § 62.048(a). It is difficult to imagine that an entirely separate entity could be empowered to use the county's legal staff without contract or payment.
If any ambiguity remains, this court should favor more accountability of government rather than less. Public policy strongly favors protecting taxpayers with strict oversight of governmental financial transactions. In this instance, the county beach park boards handle millions of dollars in public funds for which, under the dissent's interpretation, they would be almost entirely unaccountable. It would be contrary to public policy to allow these boards to operate with total autonomy and to avoid the public posting, bidding, purchasing and auditing procedures imposed on counties unless explicitly excluded, as in the case of city-county hospital[s] or other joint undertakingfs] of the city and county.... Tex.Loc.Gov't Code § 262.011(h). Here, no such exemption exists, and inferring one would leave a commissioners court with no corrective, supervisory or oversight power other than periodically replacing county beach park board trustees as their appointed terms expired. See Tex.Nat.Res. Code § 62.041. Nor do provisions for selection of an independent auditor and for access to records included in sections 62.051 and 62.053 provide a substitute for review by the county auditor, who is removed as far as possible from direct political influence by appointment at the hands of the district judges of the county. Commissioners Court of Harris County v. Fullerton, 596 S.W.2d 572, 576 (Tex.Civ.App.Houston [1st Dist] 1980, writ ref'd n.r.e.) (quoting Southern Surety Co. v. Hidalgo County, 125 Tex. 390, 83 S.W.2d 313 (1935)). The unacceptable alternative would be a board of trustees not elected by voters who could hand-pick the only party reasonably able to detect their financial misdeeds. Even if such an audit revealed an impropriety, it would be unclear to whom the county beach park board is accountable. Finally, internal audits provide no check whatsoever over a county beach park board's potentially unlimited authority to issue revenue bonds, the proceeds of which could be spent without any outside approval. See Tex.Nat.Res.Code § 62.131.
In their county creation, composition, and concern solely with problems in individual counties, the county beach park boards (including the Galveston County Beach Park Board) have numerous characteristics of a county entity. Although county beach park boards are not necessarily subdivisions and departments of the county, we conclude that they are entities subject to county supervision, that they were meant to function under county supervision and that they were not intended to be independent and autonomous entities which are exempt from any meaningful oversight. As an entity subject to county supervision, the Board's purchases must be approved by the county auditor, who has general oversight of the books and records of a county, and shall see to the strict enforcement of the law governing county finances. Tex.Loc.Gov't Code § U2.006. [3] We reverse the judgment of the court of appeals and render judgment enjoining the Board from making purchases or paying claims except through the county's purchasing agent and subject to review by the county auditor, and ordering the Board to pay attorneys' fees incurred by Lohec. [4]