Guyler v. Wallis Independent School Dist.

12 S.W.2d 1094
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedDecember 21, 1928
DocketNo. 9205.
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 12 S.W.2d 1094 (Guyler v. Wallis Independent School Dist.) 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
Guyler v. Wallis Independent School Dist., 12 S.W.2d 1094 (Tex. Ct. App. 1928).

Opinion

GRAVES, J.

This was a suit by the Wallis independent school district against R. W. Guyler for delinquent taxes claimed to be due for the year 1926 on property belonging to him, situated in the district, and for a foreclosure of the tax lien thereon.

Guyler answered by way of general demurrer, general denial, and specially alleged that the board of equalization and the assessor for the school district had willfully and arbitrarily refused to tax other property in the district, and had willfully and arbitrarily fixed the valuation of his property in excess of its real market value, as well as its true intrinsic worth, without having heard any evidence before the board of equalization; that the board, in fixing the value, had discriminated against him.

The school district, by sworn supplemental petition, after a general demurrer and general denial, further replied by averring that the values as fixed by the equalization board upon Gujder’s property represented the honest judgment, conclusion, and opinion of the board, based upon the evidence and testimony heard and submitted before it as to the market and assessable value of his property; that the board did hear evidence.for the purpose, and that the resulting values fixed upon Guyler’s property were not in excess of the market value thereof; that the values so fixed on Guyler’s property were fixed in the same manner and on the same basis of value that was applied and fixed by the board upon all of the property in the school district, that is, on the same percentage and pro rata valuation as .was used on all other property of all kinds in the school district; the district also denied that, in making up the tax rolls and assessing the property therein for that year, it had wilfully and unlawfully refused to include and assess any property situated in such school district, and specially disclaimed either that Guyler’s property, or any part of the same, was assessed at any proportionately greater market value, or true intrinsic worth, than any other property in the district, or that the assessment and values placed on any part of it had been arbitrarily made without reference to its real or market value.

A jury being waived, the court, after hearing the evidence, rendered judgment for the independent school district for the claimed amount of taxes, penalty, and interest, as well as for foreclosure of the tax lien.

From that adverse judgment this appeal proceeds.

Appellant in this court, through a number of assignments and propositions, contends that his constitutional and statutory rights were denied below, in that:

(1) The school district, the great bulk of which lay in Austin county, did not assess for taxes for the year involved about 1,250 acres of it — annexed in 1918 — that lay in Ft. Bend county, thereby unjustly and illegally entailing a greater levy upon his own property, all of which was in Austin county, than would otherwise have been made.
*1095 (2) Appellee’s board of equalization, Laving neither heard any evidence touching the value of his property nor known anything about it themselves, arbitrarily substituted their own idea as to its value for that placed upon it by him, and in so doing unfairly and improperly not only placed an excessive and illegal value thereon, but likewise disciminat-ed against him by putting a higher value upon his than on that of others.
(3) The board of equalization, although by law a quasi judicial body, having the duty to themselves fix the value they find to be fair upon the property, in fact abdicated their functions and left the district assessor to do this work.
(4) The equalization board attempted to raise the value of appellant’s property for assessment purposes to what they thought was 100 per cent, of its real value, without hearing any evidence by which its actual value could be properly determined, and thereby placed an excessive, illegal, and confiscatory value upon it.

After a careful examination of the record and statement of facts, we conclude that none of these presentments can be sustained. The judgment recites:

“And it further appearing to the Court that all things, acts, and conditions and requisites necessary to be done by law by plaintiff and plaintiff’s officers and its Equalization Board and officers, in levying, assessing, rendering, listing, equalizing, reporting, and compiling the delinquency of said taxes, penalties, interest and costs, have been duly and legally done; and that plaintiff is entitled to judgment for the amounts of her taxes, penalties, interest and all costs by virtue of the premises.”

These findings of the trial court are not impeached by the testimony cited by appellant ; it is true that the 1,250 acres of the school district’s lands that had in 1918 been added by extending its boundaries into Ft. Bend county were admittedly not assessed for the year 1926, but the omission was un-disputedly shown to have been the result, at most, of inadvertence upon the assessor’s part — not that “the school trustees willfully and unlawfully refused to include and assess as property belonging to said district the 1254 acres,” as appellant charged, the assessor’s uncontroverted testimony concerning it being:

“I did not assess for taxes any property for school purposes in this District, situated in Ft. Bend Oounty. I did not have any instructions from the Board of Trustees with reference to where to stop when I was assessing the property; X just understood the Oounty line was the School District that I should assess on.”

The mere omission in such circumstances of a relatively small portion of the land in the district from the 1926 assessment as made by the district’s trustees, and then equalized by its bdard of equalization, did not make it void, as, under R. S. 1925, art. 7207, the assessor might add it at any time on discovering that it had not been assessed.

Furthermore, the appellee denied under oath that it had, as charged, willfully, purposely, arbitrarily, and unlawfully refused or neglected to assess any property in the district for taxes; the burden was also upon appellant to establish that affirmative averment, which he wholly failed to do. Rowland v. City of Tyler (Tex. Com. App.) 5 S. W.(2d) 756; Druesdow v. Baker (Tex. Com. App.) 229 S. W. 493; Allen v. Emery Independent School Dist. (Tex. Civ. App.) 283 S. W. 674; Union Independent School Dist. v. Sawyer (Tex. Civ. App.) 259 S. W. 637; Brundrett v. Lucas (Tex. Civ. App.) 194 S. W. 618; Johnson v. Holland, 17 Tex. Civ. App. 210, 43 S. W. 71.

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12 S.W.2d 1094, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/guyler-v-wallis-independent-school-dist-texapp-1928.