Fort Bend Central Appraisal District v. McGee Chapel Baptist Church

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedOctober 15, 2020
Docket14-19-00334-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Fort Bend Central Appraisal District v. McGee Chapel Baptist Church (Fort Bend Central Appraisal District v. McGee Chapel Baptist Church) 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
Fort Bend Central Appraisal District v. McGee Chapel Baptist Church, (Tex. Ct. App. 2020).

Opinion

Affirmed in Part, Reversed in Part, Remanded, and Majority and Concurring Opinions filed October 15, 2020.

In The

Fourteenth Court of Appeals

NO. 14-19-00334-CV

FORT BEND CENTRAL APPRAISAL DISTRICT, Appellant V. MCGEE CHAPEL BAPTIST CHURCH, Appellee

On Appeal from the 240th District Court Fort Bend County, Texas Trial Court Cause No. 17-DCV-241463

MAJORITY OPINION

In this interlocutory appeal in a tax-exemption dispute, appellant Fort Bend Central Appraisal District (the “District”) appeals from the denial of its plea to the jurisdiction. The District raises three issues. First, the District contends that the trial court erred because appellee McGee Chapel Baptist Church did not exhaust its administrative remedies regarding one of two protests at issue. We sustain this issue because McGee Chapel did not obtain an appraisal review board (“ARB”) order regarding that protest before seeking judicial review. Second, the District argues that jurisdiction is lacking because the ARB is the only proper defendant in this lawsuit, but McGee Chapel non-suited its claims against the ARB. We reject this argument as it applies to McGee Chapel’s second protest because McGee Chapel obtained a final ARB order on that protest, a trial court has subject-matter jurisdiction to review such an order, and the applicable statute requires the District be named as the defendant. Therefore, the trial court could have determined that jurisdiction exists to review the ARB’s order on McGee Chapel’s second protest. Third, the District says that the trial court may have relied on an inapplicable statute to deny the plea. We likewise overrule this issue because, assuming the District is correct that the statute in question does not apply, subject-matter jurisdiction exists for alternative reasons, as explained.

As more fully detailed below, we affirm the trial court’s order denying the District’s jurisdictional plea on McGee Chapel’s suit for judicial review of one protest, we reverse the trial court’s order as to the other protest, and we remand to the trial court for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.

Background

In November 2016, the District notified McGee Chapel that its religious exemption for certain real property located in Fort Bend County (the “Property”),1 had been removed for tax years 2012, 2013, 2014, 2015, and 2016. McGee Chapel timely protested the District’s decision to remove the Property’s tax exemption. We refer to this protest as the “Exemption Protest.” The Fort Bend ARB scheduled a hearing on the Exemption Protest for February 23, 2017 (the “Exemption Protest

1 The property is described more specifically in the record as Fort Bend Central Appraisal District “Property ID 0158-00-000-2900-907,” “0158 D A CONNER, ACRES 9.5760 OUT OF 11.76 ACRE TRACT.”

2 Hearing”). The record contains five documents purporting to be written notices of the Exemption Protest Hearing (one notice for each tax year), all of which are addressed to McGee Chapel’s counsel and dated February 1, 2017. All five notices identify the date of the Exemption Protest Hearing as February 23, 2017. McGee Chapel’s counsel disputes receiving any of the notices.

The Exemption Protest Hearing occurred on February 23, 2017, but neither McGee Chapel nor its counsel appeared.

McGee Chapel alleges (and the District does not dispute) that it filed another protest with the ARB to establish that it did not receive notice of the Exemption Protest Hearing. See Tex. Tax Code § 41.411(a) (property owner may protest failure of ARB “to provide or deliver any notice to which the property owner is entitled”). We refer to this protest as McGee Chapel’s “Section 41.411 Protest.” The ARB scheduled a hearing on the Section 41.411 Protest for March 30, 2017, (the “Section 41.411 Protest Hearing”) and notified both McGee Chapel and its counsel of the March 30 hearing date. In advance of the hearing, as permitted, McGee Chapel’s counsel filed an affidavit, which stated that counsel did not receive notice of the Exemption Protest Hearing by mail or otherwise, that McGee Chapel did not receive notice of the Exemption Protest Hearing by mail,2 and that counsel did not learn of the Exemption Protest Hearing until after the hearing date passed and then only informally from a church member. Additionally, McGee Chapel’s counsel filed affidavits from numerous church members, a church deacon, and a church pastor, all of whom averred that the Property was used for religious activities by the elderly and youth of McGee Chapel.

2 The record does not contain any notices addressed to McGee Chapel.

3 McGee Chapel’s counsel appeared at the Section 41.411 Protest Hearing. Three weeks later, the ARB notified McGee Chapel and its counsel that, after reviewing the protest, the ARB had determined that, according to its records, notice of the Exemption Protest Hearing was “mailed to you and properly delivered” pursuant to Tax Code section 1.07(c).3 Thus, the ARB denied McGee Chapel’s Section 41.411 Protest and therefore did not determine McGee Chapel’s Exemption Protest. See id. § 41.411(b) (ARB “shall determine a protest made by the property owner” only if failure to provide or deliver notice is established).

McGee Chapel filed suit against the District and the ARB. In its petition, McGee Chapel sought judicial review of both its Exemption Protest and its Section 41.411 Protest. McGee Chapel requested the court to reinstate its tax exemption on the Property because, McGee Chapel alleged, the ARB wrongly denied its Section 41.411 Protest that it failed to receive notice of the Exemption Protest Hearing, and McGee Chapel presented substantial evidence to prove its entitlement to the tax exemption.

The ARB filed an answer and asserted a plea to the jurisdiction based on Tax Code section 42.21(b), which provides that “a petition for review may not be brought against the appraisal review board.” Tex. Tax Code § 42.21(b). McGee Chapel later non-suited its claims against the ARB, and the ARB is not a party to this appeal.

The District filed a general denial and a plea to the jurisdiction. In the jurisdictional plea, the District asserted that McGee Chapel did not exhaust administrative remedies regarding the Exemption Protest because it did not obtain a final ARB order from which to appeal the exemption issue.

3 See Tex. Tax Code § 1.07(c) (“A notice permitted to be delivered by first-class mail by this section is presumed delivered when it is deposited in the mail. This presumption is rebuttable when evidence of failure to receive notice is provided.”).

4 McGee Chapel filed a response, in which it argued, among other things, that subject-matter jurisdiction existed at least over the ARB’s order denying the Section 41.411 Protest because that protest was timely, and McGee Chapel obtained an ARB order determining the protest.

The trial court heard the District’s plea to the jurisdiction on October 30, 2018, and January 22, 2019. After the second hearing, both the District and McGee Chapel filed supplemental briefs. In the District’s supplemental brief, the District expanded its argument that McGee Chapel had failed to exhaust administrative remedies as to the Exemption Protest. Separately, the District asserted that the court lacked jurisdiction over all claims because McGee Chapel had non-suited its claims against the ARB, which, according to the District, was the only necessary party authorized to grant the relief requested.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
Fort Bend Central Appraisal District v. McGee Chapel Baptist Church, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fort-bend-central-appraisal-district-v-mcgee-chapel-baptist-church-texapp-2020.