Court Opinion

ID: 4177223
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2017-06-13 21:15:03.432295+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T14:55:04.084488
License: Public Domain

KEN PAXTON
                                           ATTORNEY GENERAL OF TEXAS

                                                   June 13, 2017

Mr. Chase Untermeyer, Chair                                  Opinion No.       KP-0151
Texas Ethics Commission
Post Office Box 12070                                        Re: Application of section 552.1175 of the
Austin, Texas 78711-2070                                     Government Code to reports filed with the
                                                             Texas Ethics Commission that by statute must
                                                             be made available to the public (RQ-0144-KP)

Dear Mr. Untermeyer:

        Public Information Act section 552.1175 makes certain personal information for specified
public employees confidential. TEX. Gov'T CODE § 552.1175. You ask multiple questions about
the application of section 552.1175 to reports filed with the Texas Ethics Commission (the
"Commission") and other information that the Commission must make available to the public
under various statutes. 1 As you explain, the Commission administers and enforces laws that
"require certain persons to file campaign finance reports, lobby reports, and financial statements."
Request Letter at 1. You identify several statutes that require the Commission to make such reports
and statements public, emphasizing section 254.0401 of the Election Code. Id. at 1, 9; see TEX.
ELEC. CODE§ 254.0401(a) (requiring the Commission to make reports filed under Chapter 254 of
the Election Code available to the public on the Internet within two days of filing).2 You tell us
that some state district judges recently asked the Commission to redact the judges' home addresses
from campaign finance reports under section 552.117 5 of the Government Code. Request Letter
at 1. You state that "section 552.1175 of the Government Code appears to be in conflict with the
[C]ommission's statutory requirements to make information in reports filed with the
[C]ommission available to the public, including on the Internet." Id. at 2.

         1
         Letter from Mr. Chase Untermeyer, Chair, Tex. Ethics Comm'n, to Honorable Ken Paxton, Tex. Att'y Gen.
at 7-9 (Dec. 15, 2016), https://www.texasattorneygeneral.gov/opinion/requests-for-opinion-rqs ("Request Letter").
         2
          In addition to section 254.040 I of the Election Code, you also identify other pro.visions as requiring the
Commission to make certain reports and statements public. See Request Letter at I; TEX. ELEC. CODE§ 254.0402(b)
(requiring the Commission to make information from reports available by electronic means); TEX. Gov'T CODE
§§ 302.016 (declaring certain statements by candidates for Speaker of the House of Representatives to be public),
303.005(e) (making reports filed by chairman of Governor for a Day or Speaker's Reunion Day ceremonies public),
305.009(a) (making reports filed under chapter 305 of the Government Code public records and requiring the
Commission to make such reports available for public inspection), 571.066(b)(2) (requiring the Commission to
"establish an electronic database composed of statements and reports filed with the [C]ommission" and "provide the
public with access to that data"), 572.032(a) (making personal financial statements filed under chapter 572, subchapter
B public records and requiring the Commission to maintain the records in an accessible manner).
Mr. Chase Untermeyer - Page 2                      (KP-0151)

       Section 552.1175 declares the following information concerning thirteen groups of
individuals, including certain state and federal judges, confidential:

                 (b) Information that relates to the home address, home telephone
                 number, emergency contact information, date of birth, or social
                 security number of an individual to whom this section applies, or
                 that reveals whether the individual has family members is
                 confidential and may not be disclosed to the public under this
                 chapter if the individual to whom the information relates:

                     (1) chooses to restrict public access to the information; and

                     (2) notifies the governmental body of the individual's choice on
                     a form provided by the governmental body, accompanied by
                     evidence of the individual's status.

TEX. Gov'T CODE § 552.1175(a)-(b). 3 The statute contains two exemptions for certain
information in tax appraisal records and all documents filed with a county or district clerk. Id.
§ 552.1175(d)-( e ); see also TEX. TAX CODE § 25.025 (prescribing confidentiality of certain tax
appraisal records).

        We adopt your nomenclature and refer to the information specified in section 552.1175 as
"covered information" and to the groups of individuals who may choose to restrict public access
to such information as "covered individuals." As you state, covered information might appear in
reports and statements filed with the Commission for many reasons. Request Letter at 2-7.
Numerous statutes require campaign finance reports, lobby reports, and financial statements to
include various addresses, telephone numbers, and other information concerning candidates,
officeholders, campaign treasurers, contributors, certain family members, and others. See, e.g.,
TEX. ELEC. CODE§§ 252.002(a)(2)-(3) (requiring a campaign treasurer appointment to include the
"campaign treasurer's residence or business street address [and] telephone number"),
254.03 l(a)(l) (requiring the "full name and address" of certain contributors); TEX. Gov'T CODE
§ 305.005(£)(1) (requiring a person registering as a lobbyist to provide "full name and address").
Depending on the covered individual's political role and activities, covered information about that
person could appear in a variety of reports or statements, whether filed by the covered person or
by someone else .. Section 254.0401 of the Election Code and similar statutes require the
Commission to make certain filed reports and statements public by posting them on an Internet
website or otherwise, without regard to content. See TEX. ELEC. CODE § 254.0401; see also supra,
note 2. Thus, when addresses, telephone numbers, and other covered information appear in a
report or a statement that the Commission must make available to the public, the duty of
nondisclosure under section 552.1175 is inconsistent with the duty of disclosure under section
254.0401 of the Election Code and similar statutes.

        3
          A recently enacted amendment to section 552.1175, among other things, adds a fourteenth category of
individuals, employees of the Texas Civil Commitment Commission, effective September I, 2017. See Act of May 4,
2017, 85th Leg., R.S., S.B. 1576, §§ 13-14 (to be codified at Tex. Gov't Code§ 552. l l 75(a)(l4)).
Mr. Chase Untermeyer - Page 3                         (KP-0151)

         Courts attempt to construe apparently inconsistent statutes in a manner that gives full effect
to both. TEX. Gov'T CODE § 311.026(a). Where, as here, statutes irreconcilably conflict, courts
determine which statute prevails according to several principles of statutory construction. Some
statutes expressly state how to resolve conflicts in statutes, in which case courts determine priority
according to the language of the statute without resorting to rules of construction. See Molinet v.
Kimbrell, 356 S.W.3d 407, 414 (Tex. 2011) (holding that a statute containing a "notwithstanding
any other law" provision evidenced legislative intent that it prevail over conflicting statutes).
Absent an express conflicting-law provision, however, when one of the conflicting statutes is
general and the other specific, the specific provision usually prevails as an exception to the general
statute. See TEX. Gov'T CODE§ 3l1.026(b); In re Mem 'l Hermann Hosp. Sys., 464 S.W.3d 686,
716 (Tex. 2015) (stating that "conflicts between general and specific provisions favor the specific,
and when the literal terms of the two provisions cannot both be true, the terms of the specific
provision ordinarily will prevail"). Another principle of statutory construction provides that "if
statutes are irreconcilable, the statute latest in date of enactment prevails." Jackson v. State Office
of Admin. Hearings, 351 S.W.3d 290, 297 (Tex. 2011) (quotation marks omitted); see also TEX.
Gov'T CODE § 3l1.025(a) (stating that when statutes irreconcilably conflict, the "statute latest in
date of enactment prevails"). However, the principle of general versus specific applies even to
successive statutes. "[T]he principle behind the general/specific canon [is] that the two provisions
are not in conflict, but can exist in harmony. The specific provision does not negate the general
one entirely, but only in its application to the situation that the specific provision covers."
ANTONIN SCALIA & BRYAN A. GARNER, READING LAW: THE INTERPRETATION OF LEGAL TEXTS,
185 (2012). Thus, a general statute may prevail over a specific statute only if the general rule is
the later enacted and it manifests the intent that it prevails-again a text-based inquiry. See TEX.
Gov'T CODE § 311.026(b).

        Neither section 552.1175 of the Government Code nor section 254.0401(a) of the Election
Code and the other statutes you identify address how to resolve conflicting statutory duties. Thus,
we must examine the statutes to determine which statutes are more specific. Section 552.1175 of
the Government Code concerns the duty of any state or local governmental body in Texas to refrain
from disclosing certain personal confidential information in its possession, without regard to where
the information appears. Id. § 552.1175. Section 254.0401 of the Election Code and similar
statutes, on the other hand, pertain only to the duties of the Commission to make specified reports
and statements filed with the Commission available to the public. See TEX. ELEC. CODE
§ 254.0401(a); see also supra, note 2. 4 A court would likely conclude that section 552.1175 of the
Government Code is a general statute while section 254.0401 and the other statutes you reference
are the more specific statutes.

        As the more specific statutes, section 254.0401 and the other statutes you reference will
prevail unless section 552.1175 "is the later enactment and the manifest intent is that the general
provision prevail." TEX. Gov'T CODE § 31 l .026(b). Regardless of whether section 552.1175 is
"the later enactment," it does not manifest legislative intent that it prevail over conflicting specific

         4
          When a contributor is identified in a report or statement, subsection 254.0401(e) requires the Commission
to remove a portion of the address of a contributor before posting the form or statement on its website, although the
information must remain available on the report maintained in the [C]ommission's office. TEX. ELEC. CODE
§ 254.0401(e).
Mr. Chase Untermeyer - Page 4                         (KP-0151)

statutes. Id. § 552.1175. Accordingly, a court would likely conclude that section 254.0401 and
the other statutes you reference require the Commission to disclose the covered information when
it makes filed reports and statements available to the public, even though the information remains
confidential in other contexts. See Peraza v. State, 467 S.W.3d 508, 520 n.29 (Tex. Crim. App.
2015) ("When one statute deals with a subject in comprehensive terms, and another deals with a
portion of the same subject in a more definite way, the specific rule prevails over the more general
provision, absent contrary legislative intent."), cert. denied, 136 S. Ct. 1188 (2016); Springer v.
Johnson, 280 S.W.3d 322, 329 (Tex. App.-Amarillo 2008, no pet.) (stating that "when the law
makes a general provision, apparently for all classes, and a special provision for a particular class,
the general must yield to the special insofar as the particular class is concerned").

        Consistent with this position, multiple Open Records Decisions of this office have
concluded that "exceptions to required public disclosure provided in the [Public Information Act]
are inapplicable to information that statutes other than the [Public Information Act] expressly make
public." Tex. Att'y Gen. ORD-623 (1994) at 3 (concluding that information made available to an
applicant to the bar pursuant to section 82.003(c) of the Government Code is not subject to
exceptions in the Public Information Act); see also Tex. Att'y Gen. ORD-525 (1989) at 3; ORD-
451 (1986) at 4. 5 Thus, section 552.1175 does not require the Commission to redact or otherwise
withhold covered information when a statute outside of the Public Information Act expressly
makes that information public.

        Your formal questions ask primarily whether section 552.1175 requires the Commission
to redact or otherwise withhold covered information under that statute in numerous circumstances.
Request Letter at 8-9. However, because section 552.1175 does not apply to specific reports and
documents in the Commission's possession that provisions outside of the Public Information Act
expressly make public, the Commission is not required to redact or otherwise withhold covered
information in the circumstances you present.

        Your last question is whether a different statute, subsection 572.032(a-l) of the
Government Code, requires the Commission to withhold the home address of a former judge or
justice or a former home address that appears in financial statements. Id. at 9. Subsection
572.032(a-l) requires the Commission to remove the home address of a "judge or justice" from

         5
          You queried whether section 552.1175 of the Government Code allows the Commission to disclose covered
information on the Internet because of an Open Records Decision that determined that the statute applied to covered
information appearing in the master file lists of registered voters that the Secretary of State must make public under
section 18.066(a) of the Election Code. See Request Letter at 7-8; Tex. Att'y Gen. ORD-678 (2003) at 5; see also
TEX. ELEC. CODE § 18.066(a)-(b). The decision concluded that the two statutes conflicted, and because section
552.1175 was the most recent enactment, the Secretary of State would be required to honor a request to withhold the
covered information from the public master voter list. Tex. Att'y Gen. ORD-678 (2003) at 5. Subsequent to the
issuance of that opinion, the Legislature amended subsection I 3.004(c)(5) of the Election Code, providing that certain
information furnished on a voter registration application by individuals to whom section 552.1175 of the Government
Code applies is confidential and does not constitute public information. TEX. ELEC. CODE § 13.004(c)(5); Act of
May 24, 2013, 83d Leg., R.S., ch. 937, § 1, 2013 Tex. Gen. Laws 2321, 2321 (codified at Tex. Elec. Code
§ 13.004(c)(5)). Thus, the result reached in ORD-678 is consistent with subsection 13.004(c)(5).
Mr. Chase Untermeyer - Page 5                             (KP-0151)

financial statements. TEX. Gov'T CODE § 572.032(a-l). As this office has observed, a former
address may be used to obtain a current address. Cf Tex. Att'y Gen. ORD-622 (1994) at 5-6
(determining that a former address or telephone may be withheld from disclosure under section
552.117 of the Government Code). Also, section 13.0021 of the Election Code defines federal
judges and state judges as including former judges. See TEX. ELEC. CODE § 13 .0021. Thus, a court
would likely conclude that the requirement in 572.032(a-1) includes former judges and former
addresses of judges. 6

         6
          Legislation effective September 1, 2017, specifically defines a "state judge" as including former judges for
purposes of chapter 572 of the Government Code. See Act of May 22, 2017, 85th Leg., R.S., S.S. 42, § 18 (to be
codified at Tex. Gov't Code § 572.002). Among other things, the bill would require the Commission to "remove or
redact from any financial statement, or information derived from a financial statement, that is available to the public
the residence address of a federal judge, a state judge, or the spouse of a federal or state judge." Id. § 19 (to be codified
at Tex. Gov't Code § 572.035).
Mr. Chase Untermeyer - Page 6              (KP-0151)

                                     SUMMARY

                     A court would likely conclude that section 254.0401 of the
              Election Code and other statutes specific to the Texas Ethics
              Commission that require the Commission to make reports and
              statements available to the public are more specific than section
              552.1175 of the Government Code.

                     As the more general statute of the two, section 552.1175
              would not apply to require the Commission to redact or otherwise
              withhold information covered by that section when prov1s10ns
              outside of the Public Information Act expressly make the
              information public.

                      Subsection 572.032(a-l) of the Government Code requires
              the Commission to withhold the home address of a former judge or
              justice or a former home address that appears in financial
              statements.

                                          Very truly yours,

                                          ~ fa4vv
                                          KEN PAXTON
                                          Attorney General of Texas

JEFFREY C. MATEER
First Assistant Attorney General

BRANTLEY STARR
Deputy First Assistant Attorney General

VIRGINIA K. HOELSCHER
Chair, Opinion Committee

WILLIAM A. HILL
Assistant Attorney General, Opinion Committee