Fort Worth Independent School District v. City of Fort Worth

22 S.W.3d 831, 2000 WL 566880
CourtTexas Supreme Court
DecidedAugust 24, 2000
Docket98-1138
StatusPublished
Cited by458 cases

This text of 22 S.W.3d 831 (Fort Worth Independent School District v. City of Fort Worth) 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
Fort Worth Independent School District v. City of Fort Worth, 22 S.W.3d 831, 2000 WL 566880 (Tex. 2000).

Opinion

Justice HECHT

delivered the opinion of the Court.

From 1937 to 1992, a Fort Worth city ordinance required Southwestern Bell Telephone Co. to pay the City, “in lieu of’ all charges, fees, and taxes owed for its location of poles, wires, and other facilities on city property, a percentage of its gross receipts from the rendition of local service. A separate ordinance provided that the City would apportion Bell’s payments between itself and the Fort Worth Independent School District. The School District sued the City and Bell for breach of their obligations under these ordinances and for the City’s breach of a separate agreement to continue the same arrangement after 1992. The district court granted summary judgment for the City and Bell, and the court of appeals affirmed. 1 The principal issue before us is whether the city ordinances and the related, contemporaneously executed documents constituted a valid agreement enforceable by the School District against the City and Bell. We hold that the City and Bell have failed to establish conclusively:

• that no agreement existed whereby the City waived immunity from liability;
• that the City’s obligations to the School District lacked consideration; or
• that the parties’ arrangement violated:
• the prohibitions in the City’s charter against obligations for future expendí- *835 tures without adequate reserves, and franchises for more than 25 years;
• the prohibitions in article I, sections 17 and 26 of the Texas Constitution against irrevocable and perpetual grants;
• the provisions of article III, sections 51 and 52 of the Texas Constitution that prohibit a city from granting public money to any other entity;
• the requirements of article VIII, section 1(a) and (b) of the Texas Constitution that taxes be equal and uniform, and that property be taxed in proportion to its value; or
• the requirement of article VIII, section 18(b) of the Texas Constitution that after January 1, 1982, all property in a county have a single appraisal.

We also hold, however, that the City has established as a matter of law that it had no obligation to continue its arrangement with the School District after 1992. Accordingly, we affirm the court of appeals’ judgment in part, reverse it in part, and remand the case to the district court for further proceedings.

I

The City of Fort Worth and the Fort Worth Independent School District are each empowered to tax real property located within their respective borders. 2 The City may also impose fees and charges for its services. 3 When the School District was first created in 1925, its territorial limits were substantially the same as the City’s, 4 and its taxes were assessed and collected by the City’s tax assessor-collector, who paid them over to the board of education. 5

In 1927, the City claimed that the right it had previously given Southwestern Bell Telephone Co. to use public streets, alleys, and rights-of-way to place poles and run wires for its telephone system was an easement, and for the first time the City assessed an ad valorem tax on that right. The next year, Bell sued the City and the School District in federal court, claiming that the tax was unlawful. After eight years of bitterly contested litigation, the United States Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit held in 1936 that Bell’s right to use public property was a taxable property interest. 6

As hard as it had been for the City and School District to establish their legal right to tax Bell’s easement, the practical problems of appraising that unique property interest posed an even more difficult challenge. The Fifth Circuit had warned that Bell’s interest could not be “valued on any strained or artificial basis.” 7 After *836 the court’s decision issued, Bell’s lawyer wrote to the City Council that “it will be difficult to formulate a basis of valuation that will not give rise to recurring controversies each year” and that he hoped “some equitable basis might be found to settle the tax question between the city, the school district, and the telephone company amicably and thus terminate the litigation that has been in progress for several years.” Bell’s lawyer proposed:

We, therefore, have sought to find some other basis that will be fair to both parties, that will yield to the city and school district an equivalent of what might be reasonably expected on an ad valorem basis and avoid future controversies that might otherwise arise. It occurred to us that the gross exchange revenues of the Ft. Worth exchange could be used as a basis for such computation, applying thereto a percentage that will yield to the city and school district as much revenue as might otherwise be obtained. The gross revenue for 1935 was slightly in excess of a million five hundred thousand dollars. One and one-half percent of such gross revenue would be $22,500. If business improves and the revenue of the Ft. Worth office increases the payment to the city and school district will like wise be increased. Such a basis of calculation will automatically determine the payments to the city, and school district and will prevent future controversies as to property values, etc.
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Of course our final agreement to the outlined arrangement would depend on our ability with the legal department of the city, to work out agreements legal and valid in all particulars and an agreement that in all respects meets with the approval of the City Manager and the City Council.

By the end of the year, the parties had negotiated a settlement. On December 23, 1936, the City passed Ordinance No.1933, which provided in pertinent part:

That from and after the effective date of this ordinance the Telephone Company shall pay to the City of Fort Worth an annual inspection fee and service charge in an amount equal to two per cent (2%) of the gross receipts for the preceding year received by the Telephone Company from the rendition of local exchange telephone transmission service within the corporate limits of the City. Said amount of two per cent (2%) of the gross receipts shall constitute compensation to the City for the expense incurred and services rendered by the City in exercising its police power of regulation and supervision over the construction and location of the Telephone Company’s poles, wires, conduits, equipment and other facilities in the streets, alleys, highways and public grounds of the City....
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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
22 S.W.3d 831, 2000 WL 566880, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fort-worth-independent-school-district-v-city-of-fort-worth-tex-2000.