Eustis v. City of Henrietta

39 S.W. 567, 90 Tex. 468, 1897 Tex. LEXIS 325
CourtTexas Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 8, 1897
StatusPublished
Cited by45 cases

This text of 39 S.W. 567 (Eustis v. City of Henrietta) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Texas Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Eustis v. City of Henrietta, 39 S.W. 567, 90 Tex. 468, 1897 Tex. LEXIS 325 (Tex. 1897).

Opinion

BROWN, Associate Justice.

The Court of Civil Appeals for the-Second Supreme Judicial District has submitted to this court the following certificate of dissent:

“In this cause, it appearing to the court that the points of dissent heretofore ordered certified to the Supreme Court were not stated in a manner satisfactory to that court, that order will now be so amended as to state the material points of dissent, as follows:

“1. Was the rendition made by W. G-. Eustis of the property in controversy to the City of Henrietta, for taxes for the year 1885, and the consequent assessment of city taxes for that year, void for uncertainty of description, the description being set out in the opinion of the majority of this court?

“2. If not, then was the sale and deed void? And if void, could appellants dispute the validity thereof without paying or at least tendering all taxes due? And as included within this question, is the law requiring this to be done constitutional ?

“3. The full amount of taxes due, which exceeded $55, not having-been paid or tendered, unless the plea quoted in majority opinion should be given the effect of a tender of any sum that might be found due above ■ the $55, or an offer to do equity equivalent to a tender, did it amount to a tender, if indeed a tender be a substantial compliance with the statute in question? That is to say, could appellants demand that the court ascertain the amount due before they could be compelled to pay or tender-the same?'

“Which points will more fully appear from the majority and dissenting opinions.”

The facts necessary to an understanding of the answers we make to the foregoing questions are not stated by the Court of Civil Appeals in' the certificate presented, but from the opinion of the court we deduce ■ the following:

In the year 1885 the appellant W. G. Eustis was the owner of the property in controversy, and for the purpose of having it assessed for the taxes of the city of Henrietta, in which it was situated, made a list of his property, in which the property sued for was described as follows:

*471 REAL AND PERSONAL PROPERTY RENDERED EOR TAXATION EOR THE YEAR.

The original town of Henrietta was laid off on the McKinney & Wililams survey, and there was but one block number 31 on that survey in the city of Henrietta.

The amount of the tax due on the land at the time of the trial up to and including the year 1894, was $174.50. The appellees, among other things, plead as follows: “That in case the court shall find that said property is subject to 'any taxes due plaintiff, that defendants are ready and willing, and have always been ready and willing, to pay same, and will pay same as soon as the amount of legal tax, if any, is ascertained by the court; and they tender into court in payment of all taxes $55, which they believe is all the taxes due on said land, and ask that same be accepted in full payment of all taxes from 1884 to 1894, inclusive, and that the land be decreed to them, and this money to plaintiff.”

The appellees did not pay the taxes due, and made no offer to pay, except that contained in the plea set out above.

We answer the first question in the negative.

The opinion of the majority of the Court of Civil Appeals treats this question so satisfactorily that it is unnecessary fpr us to enter into any extended discussion of it. We will add, however, that the general rule which governs in determining the sufficiency of the description of property embraced in an assessment for taxes is that such description is sufficient when it furnishes the means by which the property can be identified from the description itself or by the use of extrinsic evidence to apply' that description to the property. (35 Am. & Eng. Encyc. of Law, p. 318 and notes; Morgan v. Smith, 70 Texas, 641; Law v. Miller, 80 Ill., 268; Fowler v.. McCrea, 93 Ill., 116; Woodside v. Wilson, 33 Pa. St., 53; Driggers v. Cassady, 71 Ala., 539; Judd v. Anderson, 51 Iowa, 345; Allen v. Town of Woodbridge, 43 N. J. Law, 401.)

In treating of a description given of property by the assessor for State and county taxes, this court, in the case of Morgan v. Smith, cited above, held that the assessment was void because it failed to embrace certain requisites of the statute, but used this language, which we think applicable to the present case: “It would doubtless be a sufficient description, when an entire survey is assessed, to give the owners’ names, if known, or, if unknown, say unknown, together with the abstract number, certificate number, etc.” The requirement to give the abstract, certificate and survey numbers does not apply to an assessment for city purposes. But the language used quoted is applicable to the question before us because the assessment under consideration was of an entire *472 "block, which is analogous to an assessment of an entire survey, and contains all required by the ease cited, except the numbers. If we test the sufficiency of the description given in the assessment made in the present case, we find that the entire block is assessed as the property of W. & Eustis; that it is situated in the city of Henrietta and is block 31 in that city on land granted to McKinney & Williams or in an Addition made by them to the city of Henrietta. By examination of the records we could learn that the city was located in whole or in part, as the case may be, upon the McKinney & Williams survey; that there was a block number 31 in the city of Henrietta upon that survey claimed by W. G. Eustis, and also that there is no Addition to the city of Henrietta known as the McKinney & Williams Addition. Thus by resorting to extraneous evidence, which is frequently necessary, we can apply the description given in the assessment to the block of land as found upon the ground and thus arrive at a satisfactory identification of the property.

The majority of the Court of Civil Appeals held correctly that art. 5076, which prescribes the requisites of an assessment for State and county taxes, did not apply to assessments for city taxes and that the failure to give the certificate number, abstract number, and survey number did not affect the validity of that assessment.

The second question propounded contains in fact two questions, the first being, “Were the sale and deed void?” meaning the sale of the land under the assessment and the deed conveying it to the purchaser. We have no jurisdiction to decide any question upon this certificate, except one upon which the judges of the Court of Civil Appeals have disagreed. Looking to the opinion of the majority of 'that court and of Justice Hunter, who dissented, we do not find that there was a disagreement as to whether the sale and deed are void. Justice Hunter contends that they are void, but the majority of the court do not assert that they were valid so far as we have been able to ascertain. We must therefore decline to answer that part of the~seeond question.

The second question also embraces the following: “And if void (that is, if the sale and deed or either of them be void) could appellants dispute the validity thereof without paying or at least tendering all the taxes due? And as included within this question, is the law requiring this to be done constitutional?”

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Bluebook (online)
39 S.W. 567, 90 Tex. 468, 1897 Tex. LEXIS 325, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/eustis-v-city-of-henrietta-tex-1897.