Aluminum Company of America v. Mineral Holding Trust

299 S.W.2d 279, 299 S.W.2d 179, 157 Tex. 54, 1956 Tex. LEXIS 629
CourtTexas Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 5, 1956
DocketA-5854
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 299 S.W.2d 279 (Aluminum Company of America v. Mineral Holding Trust) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Texas Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Aluminum Company of America v. Mineral Holding Trust, 299 S.W.2d 279, 299 S.W.2d 179, 157 Tex. 54, 1956 Tex. LEXIS 629 (Tex. 1956).

Opinions

Mr. Justice Culver

delivered the opinion of the Court.

This action in the nature of a bill of review was brought by Mineral Holding Trust and its grantees and assignees, Green and Wherry, against Aluminum Company of America, Crown Central Petroleum Corporation, and Guy F. Stovall and F. E. Ap-pling, to set aside a sheriff’s deed and the subsequently executed oil and gas lease from Stovall and Appling to petitioners based upon a tax foreclosure suit filed on October 5, 1950 and judgment for delinquent taxes on an undivided one-half mineral interest in Section 35, Theo F. Koch Subdivision in Jackson County, Texas, which section comprises 640 acres of land.

Judgment denying the plaintiffs-respondents a recovery was on appeal reversed and rendered in their favor. (Mineral Holding Trust v. Stovall), 288 S.W. 2d 849. As noted in the Court of Civil Appeals opinion the respondents compromised and settled with Stovall and Appling so that the latter two no longer have any interest in the controversy. In our opinion the judgment of the trial court should be affirmed.

The Mineral Holding Trust of St. Paul, Minnesota, had owned the property described above continuously since May 20, 1922. The property was rendered for taxation for the years 1937 to 1939, inclusive, and these taxes were paid, together with those for 1940 by S. J. Cocklin, one of the trustees of the Trust. Redemption receipt issued on April 22, 1941 gave the address of Mineral Holding Trust “in care of S. J. Cocklin, 1973 St. Anthony Avenue, St. Paul, Minnesota.”

Cocklin, who owned ninety per cent of the outstanding shares in this concern, died in 1942. His widow continued to reside at the above address in St. Paul up until the filing of the tax suit. After Cocklin’s death the management of the Trust became inactive and no one seemed to be in charge of its affairs. It had no funds and the testimony cast considerable doubt upon its ability [56]*56or that of anyone on its behalf to have paid the taxes if personal notice of the tax suit had been served. No tax had been paid on this property since 1941, nor any other property in Texas or elsewhere owned by the company in a number of years. On more than one occasion Stovall, the owner of the surface of and the other one-half mineral interest in Section 35, had unsuccessfully endeavored to purchase the property in controversy. He had been in correspondence with the trustee, Cocklin, and knew his street address in St. Paul and a short time before the institution of the suit Stovall had talked to a lawyer in St. Paul who purportedly represented Mrs. Cocklin.

At the request of Stovall the Tax assessor figured up the amount of taxes due on the property for the years 1922 to 1949, inclusive, and Stovall induced the County Attorney to file the tax suit on the basis of that statement. The Mineral Holding Trust was cited by publication. The Court appointed an attorney to represent the defendant, a hearing was had and on January 17, 1951 judgment was rendered adjudging the amount of taxes due, foreclosing the tax lien and ordering the sale. Thereafter, the property was struck off to the defendant, Stovall, acting for himself and his co-defendant, Appling, for a consideration of $400.00. The tax judgment recited the value of the property to be $350.00. On the 1st day of February 1952, Stovall and Ap-pling gave an oil and gas lease to the petitioners on this property for a consideration of $20.00 per acre, retaining a one-sixth royalty and on the same day and for the same consideration executed a lease to the petitioners on the other one-half mineral interest in the section.

Shortly after the petitioners had drilled a producing oil well in the vicinity of Section 35, the respondents, Wherry and Green, in September of 1953, procured from Mineral Holding Trust a mineral deed to an undivided one-fourth interest and an as-. signment of an oil and gas lease covering the property in controversy.

The respondents assert many irregularities in the tax suit proceedings of such a nature, they say, as to render the judgment void entitling them to a cancellation of the sheriff’s deed as against all persons holding thereunder. They allege illegal assessment of the property for taxes, non-compliance with the rules of civil procedure governing citation by publication, payment of a part of the taxes before suit and inadequacy of the consideration for the sheriff’s deed. Respondents further charge that petitioners had actual and constructive notice of these ir[57]*57regularities so that they could not be innocent purchasers. Among other findings of the trial court which will be referred to later on, the Court found that at the time of the tax sale the property was worth the sum of $5,000.00.

The contention of the respondents is that the tax judgment is void on one or all of three grounds, namely, that the court did not have jurisdiction of the subject matter nor of the defendant, Mineral Holding Trust, nor was the court empowered to enter the judgment that it did enter.

Respondents argue that before suit can be maintained for taxes it must appear that the taxes have been regularly assssed by the proper authorities and have become delinquent. The trial court found that the property had never been placed upon the delinquent tax rolls for any of the years for which judgment was rendered. It was not listed on any current tax rolls and no attempt had been made to assess the property for taxes prior to the time that the attorney for Stovall requested the Tax Assessor to figure up the delinquent taxes, and this for the purpose of filing a suit. As to this matter the trial court found as follows:

"Thereupon the Tax Assessor and Collector prepared a statement, which formed the basis for the tax suit, setting out the details found in the original petition, and furnished the same to the County Attorney. He did not extend these calculations upon his regular rolls as such until after the tax suit and sale, but later did extend them on the supplemental rolls, and the same, as included in his monthly and final reports of moneys collected, were approved by the Commissioners’ Court, and the required copies thereof were furnished to the Comptroller of the State. The value placed on the minerals was the basis of the values fixed for the years 1936 to 1939, respectively.”

Therefore, they say that the court did not have jurisdiction of the subject matter in the total absence of prior and statutory levy and assessment of taxes and fixation of liens evidenced on delinquent tax rolls.

Taxes had not been paid on this property for ten years and though the proceedings were irregular, the trial court did have jurisdiction of the subject matter, the judgment was not void on that ground and the Court of Civil Appeals correctly so held. It did, however, uphold the contention of respondents that the trial court’s judgment was void for the reason that it was one that the court was not empowered to render as a matter of law.

[58]*58In the tax suit the trial court found that the amount of taxes due amounted to $187.86 and that there were “no penalties, interests and costs accruing or owing thereon.” Judgment was then rendered as follows:

“That the plaintiff, the State of Texas, do have and recover for itself and for the use and benefit of Jackson County, Texas, and the other political subdivisions, the taxes for which are collected by the tax collector of said county and state, particularly Road District No. 11, and Common School District No.

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299 S.W.2d 279, 299 S.W.2d 179, 157 Tex. 54, 1956 Tex. LEXIS 629, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/aluminum-company-of-america-v-mineral-holding-trust-tex-1956.