Dallas County Grand Prairie v. Sides

430 S.W.3d 649, 2014 WL 1847415, 2014 Tex. App. LEXIS 5042
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMay 8, 2014
Docket05-13-00067-CV
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 430 S.W.3d 649 (Dallas County Grand Prairie v. Sides) 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
Dallas County Grand Prairie v. Sides, 430 S.W.3d 649, 2014 WL 1847415, 2014 Tex. App. LEXIS 5042 (Tex. Ct. App. 2014).

Opinion

OPINION

Opinion by

Justice LEWIS.

The County of Dallas, the City of Grand Prairie, the Grand Prairie Independent School District, the Dallas County Community College District, the Parkland Hospital District, and the Dallas County School Equalization Fund (collectively, the “Taxing Authorities”) appeal the trial court’s Order Relating to Excess Proceeds. The order awarded appellees excess proceeds from the Taxing Authorities’ foreclosure of a tax lien and sale of property to satisfy that lien. The Taxing Authorities challenge (!)■ the trial court’s conclusion *651 they lacked standing to' present evidence on the issue of abandonment of the property, and (2) the actual exclusion of that evidence of abandonment. Appellees seek an award of attorney’s fees, claiming the Taxing Authorities’ appeal is frivolous. We affirm the trial court’s order, but we decline to award attorney’s fees in this case.

Background

The Taxing Authorities sued appellees for more than $900,000 in unpaid property taxes on a large piece of commercial property in Grand Prairie; the taxes had accrued between 1988 and 2010. The parties entered into an agreed judgment for the amount owed, and that judgment is not at issue on appeal.

After the judgment was signed, the Taxing Authorities sold the property. The delinquent taxes were paid in full from the proceeds, and excess proceeds of $1,068,186.69 were deposited in the trial court’s registry. Appellees sought to recover the excess funds. The Taxing Authorities responded, (1) seeking to have unpaid taxes from 2011 and 2012 paid from the proceeds, and (2) opposing any distribution of the proceeds to appellees on the ground that appellees had abandoned their right to claim those proceeds. Faced with competing claims for the proceeds, the trial court requested briefing from the parties. The court then issued a preliminary letter ruling, stating:

The court has received the briefs requested by the court and filed by the parties, and will hold that the “Taxing Authorities” do not have standing to assert abandonment as a reason to not allow Defendants recovery of excess proceeds. The Court will hear Defendants’ motion for Excess Proceeds on October 24, 2012 at 10:30 a.m. If the “Taxing Authorities” desire to offer proof on the abandonment issue for appellate purposes, affidavits for that purpose should be filed prior to October 10, 2012. And, if Defendants counter affidavits are filed [sic], they should be filed by October 17, 2012. The Court does not intend to hear any evidence on the issue of abandonment.

At the hearing, the court expanded on its ruling concerning the defense of abandonment:

Let me just state that in furtherance of the ruling announced in my September 18th letter, I’ll not hear nor consider any evidence or objections to evidence in furtherance or reply to the tax authorities’ theory of abandonment of tax excess proceeds. Under Tax Code Section 34.021 and those sections following, the only provision I find for losing the right to excess proceeds is not filing before the second anniversary of the date of the sale.
Our statutes being permissive and not exclusionary, the issue of abandonment cannot and will not be considered by this Court. A bill of review is not appropriate in this situation just to urge a claim never recognized by statute or prior case law.

The appellees offered evidence that Bobby Sides held legal title to the property at the time of the tax foreclosure and sale. The Taxing Authorities offered evidence of post-judgment unpaid taxes. Ultimately, the trial court ordered the post-judgment taxes to be paid from the excess proceeds and ordered the remaining balance to be released to appellees. The Taxing Authorities appeal.

Abandonment

The Taxing Authorities acknowledge that Texas law does not recognize abandonment of title to real property. See Rogers v. Ricane Enters., Inc., 772 S.W.2d *652 76, 80 (Tex.1989). They argue, however, that appellees abandoned or waived their “incorporeal rights” associated with the property, including the right to claim excess proceeds from the sale of the property. The Taxing Authorities contend appel-lees abandoned this right “by denying ownership by action and by legal documents.”

The Trial Court’s Ruling

In their first issue, the Taxing Authorities argue the trial court erred “by finding the Taxing Authorities did not have legal standing to present any evidence on a number of theories including abandonment of right to excess proceeds.” The Taxing Authorities focus on the word “standing,” in the letter the trial court wrote concerning its preliminary ruling on the Taxing Authorities’ claim that appellees had abandoned the property. We agree with the Taxing Authorities that the tax code gives them standing to make a claim for excess proceeds. See Tex. Tax Code Ann. § 84.04(a) (West 2008) (“A person, including a taxing unit ... may file a petition in the court that ordered the seizure or sale setting forth a claim to the excess proceeds”). Moreover, the Taxing Authorities’ claim for unpaid taxes holds statutory priority over the appellees’ claim as former owners of the property. See id. § 34.04(c)(2), (5). However, at the hearing on the competing claims to the excess proceeds, the trial court made clear its ruling was actually based on the substance of the Taxing Authorities’ claim, not on their standing to bring that claim or any other. 1 As the hearing began, the judge stated that he would not hear or consider any evidence of abandonment of excess proceeds — he would not allow the Taxing Authorities “to urge a claim never recognized by statute or prior case law.” Instead, the judge pointed out that he had reviewed the tax code sections at issue, and “the only provision [he found] for losing the right to excess proceeds is not filing before the second anniversary of the date of the sale.” Based on this record, we conclude the trial court’s decision not to consider the Taxing Authorities’ theory of abandonment was a substantive legal ruling concerning the legal viability of that claim, based on the court’s understanding of Texas law, not based on jurisdiction.

The Taxing Authorities’ Abandonment Argument

As we stated above, settled Texas law does not recognize the abandonment of title to real property. Rogers, 772 S.W.2d at 80. The Taxing Authorities attempt to distinguish their argument by casting the dispute as one of ownership. They claim that certain aspects of ownership — here the right to the excess proceeds — can somehow be abandoned while title is not abandoned.

Ownership is significant in at least two statutes at issue in this case. First, the Texas Tax Code states the basic premise of property tax liability: “property taxes are the personal obligation of the person who owns or acquires the property on January 1 of the year for which the tax is imposed.” Tex. Tax Code Ann. § 32.07(a) (emphasis added).

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430 S.W.3d 649, 2014 WL 1847415, 2014 Tex. App. LEXIS 5042, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dallas-county-grand-prairie-v-sides-texapp-2014.