City of Tyler v. Rowland

297 S.W. 923, 1927 Tex. App. LEXIS 686
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJuly 8, 1927
DocketNo. 2419. [fn*]
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 297 S.W. 923 (City of Tyler v. Rowland) 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 Tyler v. Rowland, 297 S.W. 923, 1927 Tex. App. LEXIS 686 (Tex. Ct. App. 1927).

Opinion

HODGES, J.

On January 1, 1926, the ap-pellee, Miss Meta Rowland, owned a lot on the north side of the public square in the city of Tyler. On the lot was a two-story building, which was occupied and used for business purposes. Appellee had owned the property for several years, and had rented it to tenants under a contract providing for a monthly rental of $300. In 1926 she rendered the property for taxation to the city at a valuation of $14,600. That valuation was considered too low by the city board of equalization, and, after a hearing, it was raised to $23,400. The tax rate levied and collected by the city that year was $2.50 upon $100 valuation of property. Under the valuation placed upon the property by Miss Rowland in her rendition to the assessor, her taxes amounted to $365.50. Under the valuation made by the board her taxes amounted to $585, a difference of $219.50. In October, 1926, the appellee filed in the district court of Smith county this suit to enjoin the city and its officials from collecting taxes in excess of $365.50, the amount due upon the basis of the original rendition. She alleged that the city had been and was then accepting property for taxation upon the basis of 65 per cent, of its market value, and that she had rendered her property to the assessor upon that basis; that the valuation placed by her in such rendition was equal to that of other property rendered for taxation in the city, and was 65 per cent, of its true and actual value at that time. She charged that the board of equalization had arbitrarily and capriciously increased the assessed value of her property to $23,400. She also alleged that the raise was made in pursuance of a definite plan of assessment according to which the board ascertained the gross rental returns and revenues from her property for the year 1926; that sum was treated as equal to 10 per cent, of the value of the property; that “thereupon such property was caused to be assessed on a valuation equaling 65 per cent, of the total value of such property as thereby determined; that, in accordance with such method, a valuation of plaintiff’s property was fixed by said board in the amount heretofore noted, and such was the sole basis and the only criterion considered by such body in determining such valuation — all of which was over the protest and objection of the plaintiff.” She tendered, as full payment of her taxes, the sum of $365.50. In her prayer _ for relief she asked for a writ of injunction restraining the city and its officials from instituting any suit to collect additional taxes or from making any levy, or foreclosing any apparent lien upon her property to enforce the payment of additional taxes, and from adding any penalties, interests, or costs to any taxes assessed, and for the removal of any cloud upon her title by reason of the excessive taxes claimed.

The case was submitted to the court, who, after hearing the evidence, rendered a judgment granting the relief prayed for. At the request of the appellant he filed findings of fact and conclusions of law, from which we quote such as may be material in considering the questions presented in this appeal. He found, in substance, that the valuation placed by the appellee upon her property in her rendition to the assessor was in the same proportion and amount as other property of similar character then being rendered for taxation by the owners, and upon the same basis which that and other property had been rendered and accepted for the preceding three years. Beginning with the year 1923, the city of Tyler adopted a fixed rule of requiring all taxable property within the city to be assessed at a valuation of 65 per cent, of its market value. In May, 1926, the board of equalization of the city determined to in *925 crease the valuation o-f the appellee’s property from $14,600 as rendered by her to the sum of $23,400. The court further found:

“That the said board of equalization determined upon a fixed plan or course of procedure for arriving at and fixing valuations for the purpose of taxation for the year 1926 upon all rental business property in the city of Tyler, Tex., in the following manner: The amount of monthly rental which such property was bringing in the month of January, 1926, was ascertained, and such amount was multiplied by 12 for the purpose of estimating the gross annual revenues of said property for the year 1926. Such sum was then estimated to represent 10 per cent, of the actual value of such property, which was thus calculated to be ten times the amount of the estimated annual revenues. Thereupon the valuation of such property for taxation purposes was fixed at 65 per cent, of such estimated total valuation.
“I find that the valuation placed upon plaintiff’s property for taxation by the city of Tyler for the year 1926 was arrived at and determined in accordance with the foregoing plan or scheme, and that such plan was the controlling factor which governed the action of the board of equalization in increasing the evaluation of plaintiff’s property from the sum of $14,600 to the sum of $23,400. * * *
“I find that the aforesaid scheme or method of valuing property for the purpose of taxation, which was adopted by the board of equalization of the city of Tyler for the year 1926, was applied, with one or two unimportant exceptions, to all property situated in the business district of said city which was leased or rented by the owners thereof to their tenants; but I further find that such method or system was not applied or resorted to by the board of equalization in fixing the valuation upon any other class or character of taxable property in the city of Tyler for the year 1926, all of which was assessed according to its value. * * *
“I find that the valuation placed upon plaintiff’s property by the board of equalization for the year 1926 was excessive and not in proportion to that which other property of similar kind and character and similarly situated in the city of Tyler was being valued by said board of equalization for taxes for the year 1926.
“I further find, however, that the members of the board of equalization were not prompted by any fraudulent purpose or intent to injure or to discriminate against plaintiff in increasing the valuation of plaintiff’s property, but that they were governed by their purpose to fix valuations in accordance with the gross rental-revenues derived from^ such property, pursuant to a definite fixecr scheme as above outlined.”

In response to a request by counsel for appellant, the court further found:

“That the cash market value of the property in question was on January 1, 1926, $27,500; that by the method adopted by the board of equalization the value was placed at $36,000 and then assessed by the board at $23,000, which is 65 per cent, of the value of $36,000; that the overvaluation of said property is not alone sufficient to show fraud on part of the board of equalization in its action.”

The correctness of the judgment is challenged upon the ground that it is unsupported by the evidence. The testimony, it is claimed, did not justify the conclusion that the board of equalization confined itself to the consideration of rental value in ascertaining the market value of appellee’s property.

The appellee introduced in evidence a city ordinance relating to the appointment of boards of equalization and prescribing their duties.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
297 S.W. 923, 1927 Tex. App. LEXIS 686, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/city-of-tyler-v-rowland-texapp-1927.