City of Amarillo v. Ray Berney Enterprises, Inc.

764 S.W.2d 861, 1989 Tex. App. LEXIS 107, 1989 WL 4294
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJanuary 24, 1989
Docket07-87-0231-CV
StatusPublished

This text of 764 S.W.2d 861 (City of Amarillo v. Ray Berney Enterprises, 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
City of Amarillo v. Ray Berney Enterprises, Inc., 764 S.W.2d 861, 1989 Tex. App. LEXIS 107, 1989 WL 4294 (Tex. Ct. App. 1989).

Opinion

REYNOLDS, Chief Justice.

The City of Amarillo has appealed from a summary judgment decreeing that the 1984 foreclosure of a 1977 deed of trust lien by Ray Berney Enterprises, Inc. and C.R. Peters extinguished the City’s hotel occupancy tax liens, which were imposed after the deed of trust lien attached and before it was foreclosed. Concluding that the Ber-ney corporation and Peters did not establish their entitlement to summary judgment as a matter of law on the ground presented to the trial court, we reverse and remand.

Ray Berney Enterprises, Inc., a California corporation, and C.R. Peters, a resident of the State of Washington, owned real property, improved with a motel thereon, in the City of Amarillo. In 1977, they sold and conveyed the property, retaining a deed of trust lien on the property to secure the payment of the balance of the sale price. Prior to April of 1983 and until February 7, 1984, the property was owned by Northern Hospitality, Inc., subject to the deed of trust lien.

The City of Amarillo is a home-rule city, operating under the provisions of the Home Rule Amendment — Article XI, Section 5 — to the Texas Constitution. By virtue thereof, the City is empowered to adopt, and amend, its charter in any manner that is not inconsistent with the constitution or the general laws enacted by the Legislature.

One of the powers constitutionally granted the City is to “levy, assess and collect such taxes as may be authorized by law or by [its] charter [].” Tex. Const, art. XI, § 5. In 1913, Article III, Section 1 of the City’s charter was enacted to provide, inter alia, that all municipal taxes of whatever character are a lien upon the property taxed, and that the lien shall be prior to all *862 other claims, sales, assignments, transfers, gifts, and judicial writs.

In its continuing effort to directly enhance and promote tourism and the convention and hotel industry, the Legislature enacted and amended Article 1269j-4.1, Texas Revised Civil Statutes Annotated, to finally authorize any home-rule and incorporated city “to levy by ordinance a tax upon the cost of occupancy of any sleeping room furnished by any hotel,” 1 provided “[s]uch tax may not exceed seven percent of the consideration paid by the occupant of the sleeping room to the hotel.” 2 The statute was repealed and its provisions were reenacted as a part of the state’s continuing statutory revision program, and they now appear as sections of the Texas Tax Code. As reenacted, the authorization for the hotel occupancy tax is in this language:

A municipality by ordinance may impose a tax on a person who, under a lease, concession, permit, right of access, license, contract, or agreement, pays for the use or possession or for the right to the use or possession of a room that is in a hotel, costs $2 or more each day, and is ordinarily used for sleeping.

Tex.Tax Code, § 351.002(a) (Vernon Supp. 1989). The maximum tax authorized for a home-rule city remains at seven percent of the price paid for the room. Tex.Tax Code, § 351.003(a) (Vernon Supp.1989). Additionally, the Code provides that collection of the tax may be enforced by suit, brought against the person required to collect and pay the tax to the municipality, to enjoin that person from operating the hotel until the tax is paid, which “is in addition to other available remedies.” Tex.Tax Code, § 351.004 (Vernon Supp.1989).

On December 8, 1981, the City, to secure revenues to further promote its tourism, convention, and hotel business, passed an ordinance, then designated as Sections 22-21 through 22-27 of its municipal code, to impose “upon the cost of occupancy of any room or space furnished by any hotel” a “tax to be equal to seven (7) percent of the consideration paid by the occupant for such room to such hotel.” Amarillo, Tex., Code § 22-22 (1981). Section 22-26 prescribes the penalties for failure to collect the taxes, file the required monthly reports, and pay the taxes, or for filing a false report. The section provides further that upon the hotel operator’s failure to file the reports and pay the tax for any period, the City tax assessor-collector is authorized to make an assessment of the tax for such period, and that “[t]he tax assessed, together with any penalties provided by statute, shall be a prior and superior lien on all property of the motel.” Amarillo, Tex., Code § 22-26 (1981).

Afterwards, when Northern Hospitality, Inc. had not paid occupancy taxes from April, 1983 through January, 1984, the City tax assessor-collector assessed the taxes against that corporation and, to enforce payment, filed several affidavits before and after February 7, 1984, to fix tax liens upon the property then owned by Northern Hospitality, Inc. and subject to the 1977 deed of trust lien. In the interim, on February 7, 1984, because the balance of the 1977 sale price had not been paid, the 1977 deed of trust lien was foreclosed by a substitute trustee, who conveyed the property to the purchasers, Ray Berney Enterprises, Inc. and C.R. Peters.

Thereafter, the Berney corporation and Peters filed the action underlying this appeal to obtain a declaratory judgment. The declarations sought were that their 1977 deed of trust lien was prior to the City’s hotel occupancy tax liens; that their 1984 foreclosure of the lien on the property extinguished the tax liens; that the tax liens be removed as clouds upon their title to the property; and that the hotel occupancy ordinance is unconstitutional as attempting to impose a priority of liens by an ex post facto application.

*863 After the City answered and replied to interrogatories, the Berney corporation and Peters moved for summary judgment. The sole ground of their motion was that their 1977 deed of trust lien, being first in time, was superior to the City’s tax liens, because the ordinance’s provision that the occupancy tax assessed “shall be a prior and superior lien on all property of the motel” is in violation of Article 1, § 16 of the Bill of Rights of the Texas Constitution, which provides: “No bill of attainder, ex post facto law, retroactive law, or any law impairing the obligation of contracts, shall be made.” Tex. Const, art. I, § 16.

The motion for summary judgment was accompanied by an affidavit executed by counsel for the Berney corporation and Peters, and by copies of the 1977 deed of trust, appointment of substitute trustee, and the substitute trustee’s deed. In the affidavit, counsel acknowledged that at the time he, as substitute trustee, foreclosed the deed of trust lien, he knew of the existence of the City’s tax liens, but that "[i]n my opinion and the opinion of other attorneys specializing in land titles, the foreclosure of the pre-existing and recorded Deed of Trust lien effectually discharged the Hotel Occupancy Tax liens.”

The City answered the motion for summary judgment by submitting certified copies of the pertinent portions of its charter and municipal code, sworn copies of the affidavits filed to attach the tax liens referred to earlier, and counsel’s affidavit.

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