Texas Department of Banking v. Restland Funeral Home, Inc.

847 S.W.2d 680, 1993 Tex. App. LEXIS 475, 1993 WL 37998
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedFebruary 17, 1993
Docket3-92-293-CV
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 847 S.W.2d 680 (Texas Department of Banking v. Restland Funeral Home, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Texas Department of Banking v. Restland Funeral Home, Inc., 847 S.W.2d 680, 1993 Tex. App. LEXIS 475, 1993 WL 37998 (Tex. Ct. App. 1993).

Opinion

POWERS, Justice.

Restland Funeral Home, Inc. and others sued the Texas Department of Banking to determine the validity and applicability of a rule issued by the Department. 1 See Texas Administrative Procedure and Texas Register Act (APTRA), Tex.Rev.Civ.Stat.Ann. art. 6252-13a, § 12 (West.Supp.1993). The district court rendered its declaratory judgment that the rule was invalid in its entirety. The Department appeals. We will affirm the judgment.

THE REGULATORY STATUTE

The Department is a component of the Finance Commission of Texas, and the Banking Commissioner of Texas is charged to enforce, through the Department, the provisions of Tex.Rev.Civ.Stat.Ann. art. 548b (West 1973 & Supp.1993). 2 Article 548b gives the Department regulatory powers over the business of selling prepaid funeral services and merchandise, a business in which Restland and the other appel-lees, save one, engage. The primary purpose of article 548b is to protect purchasers who have contracted and paid in advance (ordinarily by installment payments) for funeral services and merchandise to be supplied upon the death of individuals specified in the contracts. 3

The present dispute arises under section 5 of article 548b. That section authorizes a seller to retain ten percent from sums paid by the purchaser; any sums received over this percentage must be deposited in a trust account maintained by the seller to secure his obligation to provide the funeral services and merchandise when required. § 5(2). The seller may withdraw some amounts, from time to time, for specified purposes. § 5(4). He may, for example, withdraw “excess earnings” from the trust account, a term which means “funds in the trust deposit that exceed 107 percent of the seller’s obligations on each contract for which deposits have been made.” Id. Withdrawals of excess earnings may be made only on the Commissioner’s authorization, given on the seller’s application and after notice and hearing under APTRA, when the evidence shows and the Commissioner concludes that the seller’s ability to perform the contract “is not diminished by the withdrawal.” Id. Section 5 authorizes the Commissioner to promulgate rules setting out factors that may be considered in evaluating each application to withdraw ex *682 cess earnings. Curiously, however, the Commissioner’s “decision on whether to grant the withdrawal is not limited to those factors.” Id.

THE CONTROVERSY

With the stated purpose of protecting consumers, facilitating the fair processing of applications to withdraw excess earnings, and establishing factors to be considered in that regard, the Department adopted" its present Rule 25.14. Among other things, the new rule defined the crucial term “seller’s obligation,” the base amount from which is calculated the 107 percent ceiling imposed by article 548b, section 5(4). Section (c)(4) of Rule 25.14 declares as follows:

Seller’s obligation — The seller’s obligation under the prepaid funeral contracts is, at minimum, the greater of:
A. the actual cost of delivering of funerals identified in the contracts that are represented in the application;
B. the contract price and/or amount paid in by the purchaser on each contract; or
C. the current retail price of providing the contracted services and merchandise represented by the contracts that make up the application for withdrawal. The retail price is to be computed as follows:
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(emphasis added).

The appellees sued under APTRA § 12 to obtain a declaratory judgment that the rule was invalid on several grounds, among them a complaint that inclusion of the “current retail price” provision in the foregoing definition exceeded the authority given the Department in article 548b, section 5(4). The district court agreed and, in addition, held that the entirety of Rule 25.14 was invalid because the remainder of the rule was not severable from the invalid part.

In its appeal, the Department agrees that the “current retail price” provision of Rule 25.14 is invalid. The Department contends, however, that the district court erred in striking down the entirety of Rule 25.14 because there was “no evidence” to support three “findings of fact” from which that court assertedly inferred its conclusion that the remainder of the rule was not severable from the defective part. In this contention, the Department refers to “findings of fact” 14, 15, and 26. These declare as follows:

14. The Texas Department of Banking and the Commissioner of Banking made no attempt to balance the different legislative purposes of art. 548b and its amendments, and improperly ignored the legislative mandate to allow the withdrawal of excess earnings.
15. The Rule imposes burdens not in the statute, art. 548b.
* * * *
26. All of the provisions of Rule 25.14 are so inseparably connected in substance and are so intertwined and dependent on each other that severability of one provision is not possible.

The Department therefore requests that we affirm the part of the district-court judgment declaring invalid the “current retail price” provision, reverse that part of the judgment striking down the entirety of Rule 25.14, and modify accordingly the judgment below.

We believe findings 15 and 26 are patently conclusions of law and that finding of fact 14 is unnecessary to the district-court judgment. In our view we must sustain the judgment, as a matter of law, on the legal basis discussed below.

DISCUSSION AND HOLDINGS

The measure of the validity of a statute is whether it is constitutional. If a part only is unconstitutional, the question of severance depends upon whether the unconstitutional part is so clearly independent of the remaining parts that the reviewing court is able to conclude that the legislature would have enacted the statute even without the part that is held unconstitutional. Association of Tex. Professional Educators v. Kirby, 788 S.W.2d 827, 830-31 (Tex.1990); Texas & P. Ry. Co. v. Mahaffey, 98 Tex. 392, 84 S.W. 646, 648 (1905). *683 This, however, is not precisely the test for severance in the case of an agency rule.

The measure of the validity of an agency rule is whether it is constitutional and whether it conforms to the procedural and substantive statutes applicable to its adoption.

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Bluebook (online)
847 S.W.2d 680, 1993 Tex. App. LEXIS 475, 1993 WL 37998, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/texas-department-of-banking-v-restland-funeral-home-inc-texapp-1993.