Birdwell v. City of Boyd, Wise County

233 S.W.2d 603, 1950 Tex. App. LEXIS 1645
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedOctober 13, 1950
Docket15183
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 233 S.W.2d 603 (Birdwell v. City of Boyd, Wise County) 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
Birdwell v. City of Boyd, Wise County, 233 S.W.2d 603, 1950 Tex. App. LEXIS 1645 (Tex. Ct. App. 1950).

Opinion

SPEER, Justice.

Appellee City of Boyd, Wise County, Texas, incorporated under the General’ Laws of Texas, sued and recovered judgment for $42.66 taxes for the year 1948, with interest from the date of judgment, with foreclosure of a tax lien on described real estate against appellant Abe Birdwell, from which he has appealed.

Appellant defended upon sixteen grounds, in which he attacked the validity of ap-pellee’s claim for taxes. Among the defenses were included: No rendition of property by him; none lawfully rendered' for him; no legal board of equalization; failure of any such board to make a report of its acts; no tax rolls made up and filed ; no levy of taxes by ordinance; and arbitrary action of the city to exempt and omit assessing for taxes much personal property, resulting in a failure to make all taxes equal and uniform; and setting up yet other reasons why he should not pay the tax sued for. Appellant also sought certain injunctive relief against clouding his titles with tax liens for 1947, 1948 'and 1949.

Trial was to the court without a jury and no finding of facts was filed.

Appellant relies upon seven points of error. Under these points he presents arguments and refers to the record of matters which, he claims, support the defenses plead by him as above pointed out.

Article 977, R.C.S., Vernon’s Ann.Civ. St. art. 977, provides, in substance, that the government of cities like appellee shall consist of a city council composed of a mayor and two aldermen from each ward, and among other officers named is an assessor and collector of taxes. The office of assessor and collector may be dispensed with by ordinance to that effect and those duties may be conferred by the council upon other officers.

By Article 988, R.C.S., it is provided that no member of the city council shall hold any other city office while a member *605 of the council, unless otherwise provided by the act.

Article 1048 provides that the city council of cities like appellee may act as a board of equalization or in its discretion may appoint such board. By Article 1049 the board of equalization meets and “receive[s] all the assessment lists or books of the assessor * * * for examination, correction, equalization, appraisement, and approval.” Under Article 1050 the board “shall cause the assessor to bring before them, * * * the assessment lists or books of the assessor * * * for their examination.” Under conditions set out in Article 1053, the board shall give notice to owners of property to appear at a stated time to show cause why the value of property should not be raised; and by Article 1054, after such notice, “the action of said board * * * shall be final, and shall not be subject to revision ¡by said board or by any other tribunal.” After the board’s duties as above pointed out have been performed, Article 1055 provides that the “property on the assessor’s lists or books” shall be approved and the lists or books shall -be returned to the assessor so that he may make up his “general rolls as required by law.”

The foregoing articles apply here and are not dependent upon Title 122, R.C.S., Vernon’s Ann.Civ.St. art. 7041 et seq.

Article 1060a provides, substantially, that all the provisions of Title 122 (which embraces eleven chapters and Articles 7041 to 7359, many of which articles are subdivided into numerous sections) are made available in so far as applicable to municipalities like appellee. Articles 7188 and 7189, included in Title 122, supra, provide for the time and manner of making tax assessments, and Article 7190 provides in effect that if the previously mentioned articles be not strictly complied with, yet the assessment as made shall be as binding for all intents and purposes as if made in strict pursuance of the law. Under Article 7193, if the assessor fails to obtain a statement and list of a taxpayer’s property “from any cause,” the assessor shall ascertain the nature of the property and assess the same as he believes to be the true and full value thereof, and such assessment shall be as valid and binding as if the property had been rendered by the owner. These provisions in law are made available to such municipalities as appellee when other statutes, such as those above enumerated, do not cover a given situation.

The pertinent testimony as revealed by the record is far from what one might hope to find in such cases but such as we have indicates that appellee proceeded in a rather unorthodox manner in the levy and assessment of the taxes involved. The statement of facts indicates that many entries in the minutes of both the council and equalization board, as well also tax assessment sheets or lists, including that of appellant, were introduced in evidence, marked “exhibits” and are not in the record, but the reporter parenthetically said they were “read.” We know from this that the trial court heard them and We must presume he construed them in such way as-to support the judgment entered.

There is nothing in the record to indicate that the board of equalization acted in bad faith, that it was capricious or pursued any arbitrary method uncommon to all taxpayers in arriving at valuations. But it affirmatively appears that the -council knew that a comparatively small amount of revenue would be required to enable the city to function as such; that both the council- and board, with this in mind, were endeavoring to keep operating expenses to a minimum figure -and thus reduce the-amount of taxes required from each taxpayer. Bearing this in mind, the appellee-did not have some of the officials provided for by law. This is especially true with-reference to a tax assessor, and no doubt to save the expense of routine preparing-assessment sheets and a general tax roll for inspection of the board of equalization, the council furnished to the board the assessment sheets or lists made out in part, by the council as herein pointed out, in lieu of a “tax roll” as provided by Articles 1049 and 1050, supra.

If the City ever had an official tax assessor, the record is silent as to how and. *606 when his functions were “dispensed with ■and his duties conferred upon other officers” of the 'City, as provided in Article 977, supra. However, it is the settled rule of law that in the absence of testimony to the contrary, it will be presumed that public officials have properly performed their duties.

The record shows without dispute that appellee had, by ordinance, levied the tax for 1948; appellant’s tax on real estate in the city for 1948 was due and unpaid; appellee had no official tax assessor for that year when the taxes in dispute accrued; the council procured from the county tax rolls a list of the real estate situated inside the corporate limits and the names of owners; from this data the council made up separate rendition or assessment sheets on real estate with its own estimate of values and applied the rate set by the ordinance to approximately one-third of the estimated market value of the property for tax purposes. No personal property of any taxpayer was put on such assessment sheets by the council. The council appointed a board of equalization and set the time for its meeting's.

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Bluebook (online)
233 S.W.2d 603, 1950 Tex. App. LEXIS 1645, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/birdwell-v-city-of-boyd-wise-county-texapp-1950.