Cook v. Galveston, Harrisburg & San Antonio Railway Co.

24 S.W. 544, 5 Tex. Civ. App. 644, 1893 Tex. App. LEXIS 673
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedDecember 20, 1893
DocketNo. 152.
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 24 S.W. 544 (Cook v. Galveston, Harrisburg & San Antonio Railway Co.) 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
Cook v. Galveston, Harrisburg & San Antonio Railway Co., 24 S.W. 544, 5 Tex. Civ. App. 644, 1893 Tex. App. LEXIS 673 (Tex. Ct. App. 1893).

Opinion

NEILL, Associate Justice.

This suit was brought by appellee against appellant, as tax collector of Maverick County, to enjoin the sale of a tract of land which had been levied on and advertised for sale for certain taxes claimed to be due from appellee for the year 1890.

• The petition alleged, in substance, that appellee, plaintiff below, was the owner of 29.3 miles of railway in Maverick County, which it had rendered to the assessor of taxes of Maverick County at a valuation of $6500 per mile; that after the rendition of said railway for taxes, the Commissioners Court, sitting as a board of equalization, without written notice to plaintiff, raised the valuation of 29 miles of said railway to $8000 per mile, and deducted from the 29.3 miles of railway as rendered by appellee, plaintiff below, the three-tenths of a mile of railway and had it placed on the unrendered tax roll and assessed as “ bridge,” and fixed its value at $50,000; that said three-tenths of a mile so assessed as “ bridge” was a part of its said railway, and was included in the 29.3 miles of railway rendered for taxation; that by reason of said illegal acts of said Commissioners Court, the tax on said three-tenths of a mile of railway has been increased from the sum of $26.50 to the sum of $487.50. That plaintiff has paid to said W. N. Cooke, defendant, all State and county taxes due on all of its property in Maverick County for the year 1890, except as hereafter mentioned, and has also paid all the tax due the State and Maverick County on the 29.3 miles of its railway at said raised valuation of $8000 per mile, except the sum of $26.50, which last sum it has always been willing and offered to pay, but which said defendant has refused to accept, and has demanded said sum of $487.50 as the tax due on said three-tenths of a mile of its said railway. That it (plaintiff), by and through its proper agents, appeared before said Commissioners Court, while sitting as a board of equalization as aforesaid, and protested against the said three-tenths of a mile of its railway being placed on the unrendered tax roll and assessed as “ bridge,” and valued at $50,000, but said court, sitting as aforesaid, refused to correct said error. That defendant, with full knowledge of all the facts, has levied on the said tract of land for the payment of said sum of $487.50 claimed by defendant to be due for said State and county taxes as for the year 1890 on said three-tenths of a mile of said railway, and is advertising the same for sale on the 3rd *646 day of February, 1891; and plaintiff here now tenders said sum of $26.50 to pay all taxes due said county and State for the year 1890 on said three-tenths of a mile of railway, estimated at said raised valuation of $8000 per mile for 29.3 miles, as fixed by board of equalization. That if not prevented, defendant will sell such land for said sum of $487.50, which is illegal, except the said sum of $26.50; and if said sale is made, plaintiff will receive great and irreparable injury, etc.; praying for a writ of injunction restraining defendant from making said sale, etc., and on hearing that said injunction be made perpetual, etc. February 3, 1891, the temporary writ was granted.

Defendant’s answer consists of a general and four special demurrers, and general denial and special answer.

On June 22 cause was tried by court without a jury, and resulted in judgment overruling all of said demurrers, and perpetuating the injunction restraining defendant from selling the land, and also from collecting said tax.

There is no statement of facts in the record, and we adopt the conclusions of fact found by the District Court as our own. They are as follows, to-wit:

1. The plaintiff owns in Maverick County 29.3 miles of railway, which mileage includes all its railway in said county from the entry into said «county at its, the county’s, north line to the center of the Eio Grande River, and includes one-half of the railway bridge across said river between Eagle Pass, in said county, and Ciudad Porfirio Diaz, Mexico.

2. Plaintiff, at the time and in the manner required by law, rendered to the assessor of taxes of Maverick County for taxation for the year 1890, all the railway owned by it in said county at a valuation of $6500 per mile, which assessment included one-half of the bridge aforesaid, the bridge being assessed as so much railway and not separately as bridge, and the assessment as rendered covering all the railway and all the bridge in Maverick County.

3. After the rendition aforesaid, the County Commissioners Court, sitting as a board of equalization, changed plaintiff’s assessment from 29.3 miles of railway to 29 miles of railway, and in lieu of the three-tenths of a mile of railway deducted by them from plaintiff’s assessment, ordered the assessor to put on the unrendered roll against plaintiff an item as “bridge,” at a valuation of $50,000, and assessed against the same a State tax of $162.50 and a county tax of $325.50. They also raised the value of the 29 miles of railway from $6500 per mile to $8000 per mile, and adduced no proof as to the value of the item ordered by them to be assessed as “bridge;” which changed assessments were by order of said board entered on the respective rolls by the assessor.

4. At the proper time plaintiff tendered to the tax collector of Maverick County, the defendant herein, all the State and county taxes due by *647 it on 29.3 miles of railway at the raised valuation of $8000 per mile, which sum would have been in full of all the State and county taxes due by it had its assessment not been changed by the board of equalization from 29.3 miles of railway, and substituted in lieu of the other three-tenths of a mile of railway the item “ bridge,” valued at $50,000.

5. The collector accepted and plaintiff paid all taxes assessed against its 29 miles of railway, and plaintiff then and there tendered to the tax collector the sum which would have been due for State and county taxes on the remaining three-tenths of a mile of railway owned and rendered by it in its assessment at the rate of 18000 per mile, which would have been in full of all demand against it for taxes had its assessment not been changed by the board of equalization; which tender the collector refused to receive, and in lieu thereof demanded of the plaintiff the sum of $162 50 State tax and $325 county tax on the item assessed by order of the board of equalization against plaintiff on the unrendered roll as “ bridge.” This last sum plaintiff refusing to pay, the collector levied on certain real estate belonging to plaintiff, and advertised the same for sale to pay the taxes due.on the item assessed as bridge.” Thereupon plaintiff applied for and obtained the temporary writ of injunction, and prior to the trial paid into court the full amount due for State and county taxes on the three-tenths of a mile of railway assessed by it and deducted from its assessment by the board of equalization as aforesaid.

6. That the bridge in question spans the Rio Grande between Eagle Pass, in Maverick County, Texas, and Ciudad Porfirio Diaz, in the Republic of Mexico, and that part of said bridge situated in Maverick County, Texas, is three-tenths of a mile long.

7.

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Bluebook (online)
24 S.W. 544, 5 Tex. Civ. App. 644, 1893 Tex. App. LEXIS 673, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cook-v-galveston-harrisburg-san-antonio-railway-co-texapp-1893.