Untitled Texas Attorney General Opinion: KP-0515

CourtTexas Attorney General Reports
DecidedFebruary 5, 2026
DocketKP-0515
StatusPublished

This text of Untitled Texas Attorney General Opinion: KP-0515 (Untitled Texas Attorney General Opinion: KP-0515) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Texas Attorney General Reports primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

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Untitled Texas Attorney General Opinion: KP-0515, (Tex. 2026).

Opinion

February 5, 2026

The Honorable Matthew A. Mills Hood County Attorney 1200 West Pearl Street Granbury, Texas 76048

Opinion No. KP-0515

Re: Interpretation and application of certain provisions in Tax Code chapter 26 and Special District Local Laws Code chapter 1042 to a hospital district (RQ-0593-KP)

Dear Mr. Mills:

You ask about Hood County Hospital District’s statutory authority in relation to a Tax Code requirement. 1 You tell us that, under the Special District Local Laws Code, the District is charged with providing indigent care and is authorized to impose an ad valorem tax. Request Letter at 1. You say that “[o]n December 31, 1996, the” District entered into a lease that transferred control of certain District facilities to another entity “in exchange for an up-front payment to the District.” Id. “After that time, the District did not impose ad valorem taxes, and it used the lease money to provide indigent care.” Id. But “the [lease] money is nearly out” so, in 2024, the District set an ad valorem tax rate above zero and called an election to obtain voter approval on the new rate. 2 Id. at 1–2. You explain the District called the election because of a requirement in the Tax Code. Id. at 2. “However, the measure was defeated, leaving the District” with an ad valorem tax rate of zero and “limited options before running out of money in about a year.” Id.

Against that backdrop, you suggest “tension” exists between the Special District Laws Code and the Tax Code as to the imposition of ad valorem taxes. Id. at 1. You first ask which statute controls—the District’s authority to impose a tax under the Special District Laws Code or the Tax Code’s requirement to “secure voter approval before raising ad valorem taxes above a certain rate.” Id. at 2. If “the Tax Code controls,” you next ask whether the “responsibilities of the District” fall on Hood County. Id.

1 See Letter from Hon. Matthew A. Mills, Hood Cnty. Att’y, to Hon. Ken Paxton, Tex. Att’y Gen. at 2 (Apr. 3, 2025), https://www.texasattorneygeneral.gov/sites/default/files/request-files/request/2025/RQ0593KP.pdf (“Request Letter”). Information on its website indicates the District set the tax rate at $0.02 per $100 valuation. See 2

HOOD CNTY., HOOD COUNTY HOSPITAL DISTRICT BOARD PROPOSED TAX INCREASE INFORMATION PACKET (Sept. 25, 2024), https://hoodcountytx.documents-on-demand.com/document/cc471798-477b-ef11-a41f-000c29a59557/ Hood%20County%20Hospital%20District%20QA%2009.25.2024%20QA%20v5 (on file with the Op. Comm.). The Honorable Matthew A. Mills - Page 2

The District’s board of directors shall impose a tax on property in the District at a rate not to exceed seventy-five cents on each $100 valuation.

We begin with some general information about the District and its authority to impose a property tax. The Legislature created the District under its authority to “creat[e], establish[], maint[ain] and operat[e] . . . hospital districts” in article IX, section 9 of the Texas Constitution. TEX. CONST. art. IX, § 9; see TEX. SPEC. DIST. CODE § 1042.002. The District’s enabling legislation is codified at Chapter 1042 of the Special District Local Laws Code. See TEX. SPEC. DIST. CODE §§ 1042.001‒.253. Pursuant to Chapter 1042, a board of directors manages and controls the District, id. §§ 1042.001, .103, which is charged with the responsibility of providing medical and hospital care for the District’s needy inhabitants, id. § 1042.101. To help carry out this and its other functions, “[t]he board shall impose a tax on all property in the district subject to district taxation,” id. § 1042.251(a), “at a rate not to exceed [seventy-five] cents on each $100 valuation,” id. § 1042.252. Cf. Gilbert v. El Paso Cnty. Hosp. Dist., 38 S.W.3d 85, 87 (Tex. 2001) (stating that a different hospital district was authorized to assess a property tax to discharge its responsibility to furnish care for the indigent and needy and perform other functions).

The Tax Code gives voters a method to limit a tax rate increase to the extent it exceeds the voter-approval tax rate.

We next consider the Tax Code requirement at issue. You tell us the Tax Code requires “taxing entities to secure voter approval before raising ad valorem taxes above a certain rate.” Request Letter at 2. We understand you to refer to section 26.07 of the Tax Code, a truth-in- taxation provision. See id.; Tex. Att’y Gen. Op. No. KP-0444 (2023) at 8. See generally TEX. TAX CODE § 26.07.

Section 26.07 provides that “[i]f the governing body of a special taxing unit . . . adopts a tax rate that exceeds the taxing unit’s voter-approval tax rate, . . . the registered voters of the taxing unit at an election held for that purpose must determine whether to approve the adopted tax rate.” TEX. TAX CODE § 26.07(b). A “special taxing unit” includes a hospital district. Id. § 26.012(19)(C). If the voters do not approve the proposition, the “tax rate for the current tax year is the taxing unit’s voter-approval tax rate.” Id. § 26.07(e); see also id. § 26.04(c) (prescribing how to calculate the “voter-approval tax rate”).

This means that raising a previously approved tax rate from zero requires a voter approval election, and rejection of that proposed increase leaves the “rate for the current tax year [at] the taxing unit’s voter-approval tax rate,” id. § 26.07(b), (e); see also Tex. Att’y Gen. Op. No. GA- 1070 (2014) at 2 (referencing what was previously called the rollback rate)—i.e., the original zero. We understand this is the situation the District faces. 3 See Request Letter at 1.

3 Information on the District’s website indicates that, in 2024, the District calculated its voter-approval tax rate to be zero. See HOOD CNTY., HOOD COUNTY HOSPITAL DISTRICT NOTICE OF PUBLIC HEARING ON TAX INCREASE, https://hoodcad.net/wp-content/uploads/2024/08/Hospital-District-Notice-of-tax-rate.pdf (last visited Sept. 5, 2025) (on file with the Op. Comm.). The Honorable Matthew A. Mills - Page 3

The District’s authority to impose a tax does not conflict with the voters’ ability to limit a tax-rate increase.

Your first question asks whether the Special District Local Laws Code or the Tax Code controls—suggesting the two codes are in conflict. See id. at 1–2. “When construing a statute, our chief objective is effectuating the Legislature’s intent, and ordinarily, the truest manifestation of what lawmakers intended is what they enacted.” Combs v. Roark Amusement & Vending, L.P., 422 S.W.3d 632, 635 (Tex. 2013). “Two statutes irreconcilably conflict when only one of them can apply to a particular situation.” Love v. State, 706 S.W.3d 584, 609 (Tex. App.—Austin 2024, pet. ref’d) (quoting Lomax v. State, 233 S.W.3d 302, 312 (Tex. Crim. App. 2007)). In situations where a conflict exists, one statute may prevail over another. See, e.g., TEX. GOV’T CODE §§ 311.025(a), .026(b). But we “read statutes to avoid conflict and superfluities if possible.” Bd. of Adjustment of City of San Antonio v. Wende, 92 S.W.3d 424, 432 (Tex. 2002). We determine if a conflict exists by focusing first on the enacted language. See Combs, 422 S.W.3d at 635.

You correctly observe that both the District’s enabling legislation and Tax Code section 26.07 concern the District’s tax rate. See Request Letter at 1–2. The provisions differ, however, in purpose and application.

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Related

Board of Adjustment of the City of San Antonio v. Wende
92 S.W.3d 424 (Texas Supreme Court, 2002)
Lomax v. State
233 S.W.3d 302 (Court of Criminal Appeals of Texas, 2007)
Gilbert v. El Paso County Hospital District
38 S.W.3d 85 (Texas Supreme Court, 2001)
Vinson v. Burgess
773 S.W.2d 263 (Texas Supreme Court, 1989)
Combs v. Roark Amusement & Vending, L.P.
422 S.W.3d 632 (Texas Supreme Court, 2013)
In re Hardeman County Hospital District
540 B.R. 229 (N.D. Texas, 2015)

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Untitled Texas Attorney General Opinion: KP-0515, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/untitled-texas-attorney-general-opinion-kp-0515-texag-2026.