Andrews v. Aldine Independent School District

116 S.W.3d 407, 2003 Tex. App. LEXIS 7772, 2003 WL 22054315
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedSeptember 4, 2003
Docket14-02-01282-CV
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 116 S.W.3d 407 (Andrews v. Aldine Independent School District) 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
Andrews v. Aldine Independent School District, 116 S.W.3d 407, 2003 Tex. App. LEXIS 7772, 2003 WL 22054315 (Tex. Ct. App. 2003).

Opinion

OPINION ON REHEARING

SCOTT BRISTER, Chief Justice.

We withdraw our opinion of July 24, 2008, and issue this opinion on rehearing. Rawle Andrews died on July 12, 2001, leaving behind him substantial tax liabilities. Shortly thereafter, his son was appointed executor of his estate and a dependent administration was opened.

Aldine Independent School District filed a probate claim against the estate on November 16, 2001, asserting delinquent ad valorem taxes of $217,318. No action was taken on the claim. Six months later, Aldine notified the estate’s representative it had posted three of the properties for foreclosure sale. This suit ensued.

Both parties moved for summary judgment. The estate’s representative sought a declaration that Aldine’s claims were barred by limitations, as it failed to file suit within ninety days after its claims were rejected by operation of law. 1 Aldine sought the taxes and foreclosure. The Probate Court granted Aldine’s motion and denied the representative’s. We review both motions, determine all questions presented, and render the judgment the trial court should have rendered. 2

The Probate Code and Taxes

As a part of extensive revisions to the Tax Code in 1999, the Legislature added section 5C to the Texas Probate Code to govern jurisdiction of ad valorem taxes disputes involving a dependent administration of a decedent’s estate. 3 Under that *410 section’s provisions, jurisdiction depends on where the probate proceedings and the taxable property are located. If they are in different counties, courts in the county where the property is located have sole jurisdiction of the tax suit. 4 But if both probate and property are in the same county (as in this case), taxing units may opt for probate court jurisdiction by presenting a claim to the personal representative, or opt out of it by refraining from doing so. 5

Here, Aldine filed a claim with the estate’s representative, thus opting for probate jurisdiction. By opting for probate jurisdiction, Aldine subjected its claim to the rules governing enforcement of claims in probate proceedings. 6 Pursuant to those rules, when the estate’s representative took no action on the claim within 30 days, it was deemed rejected by operation of law. 7 Once a claim against an estate is rejected, the claimant must file suit within 90 days or the claim is forever barred. 8 Aldine did not. Assuming section 5C applies, Aldine’s claim appears to be barred.

Claims v. Claims for Money

Aldine concedes this case falls within the express applicability provision of section 5C. 9 But it argues section 5C does not apply here for three other reasons. First, Aldine argues the section only applies to “claims for money,” while its claims are “in rem.” For several reasons, we disagree.

First, section 50 mentions only “claims,” not “claims for money.” The Probate Code defines “claims” to include “liabilities of a decedent which survive, including taxes.” 10 Aldine’s claim for unpaid taxes clearly falls within the term “claims” actually used in the section. Aldine’s distinction between “in personam” and “in rem” proceedings is irrelevant, because the legislature used neither term in defining jurisdiction in section 5C. 11

Second, even if section 5C applied only to “claims for money,” Aldine’s claim qualifies. Aldine’s probate filing stated a claim “for the payment of delinquent ad valorem taxes,” not a claim for title or *411 possession of any real properties. The only attachments to its claim were delinquent tax statements, not the judgments ordering foreclosure. Aldine’s claim was clearly a claim for money.

Rejection of Unnecessary Claims

Next, Aldine argues it was not required to present a probate claim, and thus rejection of its claim did not invoke the 90-day limitations period. This Court and others have applied just such a rule to allow recovery of title against an estate even when no suit was filed within 90 days of rejection. 12 But in those cases, the creditor was asserting a vendor’s hen, and thus had a superior claim to title.

Aldine has only Hen claims; it has no claim to the properties beyond the amount it was owed for taxes. 13 The judgments it had obtained ordered foreclosure of its tax Hens on some of the properties, but did not transfer title to Aldine or extinguish the tax Hens. 14 As noted above, the claim Aldine actually filed was a claim for money secured by a Hen. Aldine is indistinguishable from other creditors holding Hens as security, and the Probate Code has specific methods for presenting and handling such claims. 15 And it grants them priority in payment. 16

AdditionaHy, dependent administration under the Probate Code is intended to ensure the orderly disposition of a decedent’s estate, 17 and Aldine’s argument would thwart this purpose. If taxing units may foreclose on and seU estate property at any time during an administration without court approval, it wiU be difficult for the court or creditors to know what assets the estate has. As taxing units have no interest in such properties beyond the taxes due on them, they may seH at prices below what others might obtain, thus decreasing the estate that remains for other creditors or heirs. Section 5C recognizes this interest in orderly administration, spe-cificaUy barring taxing units that file a probate claim from bringing suit in any other court until four years after the probate proceedings began. 18

It is true section 5C aHows taxing units to opt out of probate proceedings in the same county. But here Aldine opted in. Whatever the prior rule may have been, section 5C does not aUow Aldine to file a probate claim and then ignore probate procedures.

Constitutionality

Finally, Aldine argues section 5C does not govern this suit because it vio *412 lates the state constitutional restriction on legislative acts releasing citizens from the payment of county taxes. 19

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Bluebook (online)
116 S.W.3d 407, 2003 Tex. App. LEXIS 7772, 2003 WL 22054315, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/andrews-v-aldine-independent-school-district-texapp-2003.