Commissioners Court of Anderson County v. Calhoon

575 S.W.2d 72, 1978 Tex. App. LEXIS 3984
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedNovember 22, 1978
Docket1228
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 575 S.W.2d 72 (Commissioners Court of Anderson County v. Calhoon) 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
Commissioners Court of Anderson County v. Calhoon, 575 S.W.2d 72, 1978 Tex. App. LEXIS 3984 (Tex. Ct. App. 1978).

Opinion

MOORE, Justice.

Plaintiff, Jerry L. Calhoon, filed suit against defendant, N. R. Link, County Judge of Anderson County, Texas, as well as the Commissioners Court and the Tax Assessor of Anderson County, for a permanent injunction seeking to enjoin the defendants from putting into effect an allegedly unlawful scheme or plan of taxation and from the collection of ad valorem taxes based thereon. Plaintiff alleged that the defendants were about to adopt a tax plan by which all rural unimproved land would be valued at $48.00 per acre, irrespective of market value, whereas all improved property situated in the county was to be valued on the basis of fair market value. Plaintiff alleged that under the proposed plan, he and other taxpayers, whose property consisted primarily of improved property in the nature of a residence, would be required to bear a greater share of the tax burden than those taxpayers who owned unimproved property valued at the arbitrary figure of $48.00 per acre or one-sixth of its market value. Plaintiff further alleged that the proposed illegal plan was arbitrary and discriminatory and if allowed to be adopted would result in substantial injury to him and other homeowners similarly situated because it would result in their paying more than their fair share of the ad valorem tax burden of Anderson County. His prayer *74 was for a permanent injunction enjoining defendants from putting the plan into effect and from collecting any taxes on his property based on such illegal plan. After a trial before the court, sitting without a jury, the trial court entered judgment permanently enjoining defendants from “making or certifying or approving any of the present tax rolls.” Whereupon defendants perfected this appeal.

We reverse and dismiss.

The record reveals that plaintiff’s suit was instituted on July 28, 1978. Judgment was thereafter rendered on August 17, 1978, prior to the time the Commissioners Court of Anderson County, Texas, sitting as a Board of Equalization, had adjourned or certified the 1978 tax rolls. The judgment recites that the court was of the opinion that a permanent injunction should be granted for the following reasons:

(1) The tax rolls have been prepared, but not certified nor approved.
(2) The rural acreage in the County has been included upon the tax rolls thus prepared at an assessed evaluation of $12.00 an acre, which is arrived at by utilizing twenty-five percent (25%) of $48.00 per acre.
(3) Rural acreage in Anderson County has a minimum fair market value of $300.00 to $325.00 per acre.
(4) The $12.00 an acre valuation has been used with no consideration given to the market value of said land.
(5) Residential property, including the Plaintiff’s, has been systematically included on the tax rolls by using a formula that gives consideration to market value, and values said property at one-fourth (¾) of fifty percent (50%) to sixty percent (60%) of its fair market value.
(6) The result of the utilization of $12.00 an acre valuation for the rural acreage has been to include on the tax rolls prepared such property at no more than twenty-five percent (25%) of one-sixth (⅛) of its fair market value.
(7) Residential properties, including the Plaintiff’s, will carry approximately three (3) times the tax burden as will rural acreage of equal value if the present tax rolls are certified.
(8) The Tax Assessor Collector has not prepared the existing tax rolls; rather, they have been prepared by an employee, Wilson Buckley, hired by and working under supervision of the Commissioners Court.
(9) The Commissioners Court consists of N. R. Link, County Judge, H. C. Wilson, Lavoy Lassiter, B. J. Beard, and W. E. Henry; these individuals also make up the Board of Equalization for Anderson County, Texas.
(10) The rural acreage has been carried upon the tax rolls in the foregoing manner for at least fifteen (15) years during which same period the residential properties have been carried upon the tax rolls at a percentage of its fair market value, which substantially exceeds the percentage the rural acreage has been valued at.
(11) Anderson County, Texas is primarily rural in nature.
(12) An appearance by the Plaintiff before the Board of Equalization to present his complaint would have been futile.
(13) If the present tax rolls are certified and approved, the Plaintiff will pay substantially more taxes than he would were his property rural acreage.
(14) The Defendants, in their official capacities, have perpetuated a scheme which favors taxpayers with rural acreage over taxpayers with residential real property for several years prior to and including the present year.
(15) The manner in which the tax rolls have been prepared results in arbitrary and unconscionable discrimination against taxpayers, including the Plaintiff, whose property consists of real residential properties.

Under the first point of error defendants urge that the trial court erred in granting a permanent injunction because there is no evidence that the proposed plan of taxation would result in substantial injury to the plaintiff. We sustain this point.

*75 The material facts do not appear to be in dispute. The uncontroverted testimony offered at the trial shows that all unimproved land situated in Anderson County had a minimum market value of between $250.00 and $325.00 per acre. The evidence shows that commencing in 1963 the county adopted a plan whereby all unimproved rural land was arbitrarily valued at $48.00 per acre, irrespective of market value. Such unimproved land was then assessed at 25% of the arbitrary value, or $12.00 per acre, and taxes were collected on that basis. Residential or improved property, on the other hand, had been for many years assessed on the basis of its market value. The county then attempted to appraise the residential or improved land at approximately 50% to 60% of its market value and then assess such land at 25% of the appraised value. Thus, the evidence conclusively shows that all of the unimproved rural land was assessed on an arbitrary basis which was substantially below the market value while the improved lands were assessed and taxed on the basis of market value. The record shows that the tax assessor had again assessed all property on that basis for the present year and that the Board of Equalization intended to again adopt such a plan for the ensuing year.

In State v. Whittenburg, 153 Tex. 205, 265 S.W.2d 569, 572 (1954), Justice Calvert said:

“Article VIII, sec. 1 of the Vernon’s Ann.St.

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Bluebook (online)
575 S.W.2d 72, 1978 Tex. App. LEXIS 3984, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/commissioners-court-of-anderson-county-v-calhoon-texapp-1978.