Lakeridge Development Corp. v. Travis County Water Control & Improvement District No. 18

677 S.W.2d 764, 20 Educ. L. Rep. 1034, 1984 Tex. App. LEXIS 6451
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedSeptember 12, 1984
Docket14098
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 677 S.W.2d 764 (Lakeridge Development Corp. v. Travis County Water Control & Improvement District No. 18) 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
Lakeridge Development Corp. v. Travis County Water Control & Improvement District No. 18, 677 S.W.2d 764, 20 Educ. L. Rep. 1034, 1984 Tex. App. LEXIS 6451 (Tex. Ct. App. 1984).

Opinion

POWERS, Justice.

Travis County Water Control and Improvement District No. 18 and Eanes Independent School District, appellees, recovered judgment against Lakeridge Development Company, Donald Dempsey, and Janice Dempsey, appellants, for delinquent ad valorem taxes for 1982 and preceding years, together with penalties, interest, attorney’s fees, and court costs. We will reform the trial court judgment in the particulars set out below. As reformed, we will affirm the judgment.

The trial court judgment, entered after a bench trial, awards the following sums to the taxing units:

Travis County Water Control and Improvement District No. 18:
Taxes, penalties, interest $9,125.41
Attorney’s fees (15%) 1,368.81
Eanes Independent School District:
Taxes, penalties, interest $19,009.92
Attorney’s fees (15%) 2,851.48
Abstractor’s costs 7,050.00

The trial court made findings of fact to the effect that the taxing units engaged an attorney to collect the delinquent taxes, penalties, and interest, agreeing to pay him therefor an attorney’s fee equal to 15% of the sums recovered. The trial court found the resulting attorney’s fees necessary and reasonable. The trial court also found that the attorney was authorized to engage an abstractor to examine titles to the properties upon which the taxes were claimed; that it was necessary to do so; that the attorney engaged an abstractor to do the work; and that the sum of $7,050.00 was “a reasonable fee for services necessarily performed by the abstractor” in the suit.

I.

In appellants’ first point of error they complain that the trial court erred in the amounts awarded the two taxing units as delinquent taxes because those sums include taxes on a lot, a mobile home, and certain personal property and fixtures, none of which were owned by appellants as found by the trial court. The taxing units agree that the component parts of the judgment, that is, the principal sums for taxes owing and the sums for penalty and interest, should be reduced in the amounts claimed by appellants. We therefore reduce the sums awarded by the trial court and reform that court’s judgment to reflect *766 that the taxing units recover the following sums as taxes, penalties, and interest:

Travis County Water Control and Improvement District No. 18 $ 8,413.48
EanesIndependent School District 17,712.77

II.

In their second point of error, appellants attack in various ways the sums awarded by the trial court as attorney’s fees for Travis County Water Control and Improvement District No. 18 ($1,368.81) and Eanes Independent School District ($2,851.48). Each sum was calculated on the basis of 15% of the principal sum awarded for delinquent taxes, penalties, and interest.

Appellants assert in the first instance that the attorney’s fees are excessive because the principal sum upon which they were calculated includes properties not owned by appellants, as discussed above. Appellees concede the point. We therefore order that the sums awarded in the trial court judgment as attorney’s fees be reduced, with respect to each appellee, in an amount equal to 15% of the taxes, penalties, and interest determined by the trial court on properties not owned by appellants.

Appellants next contend that the sums awarded by the trial court as attorney’s fees were excessive because a portion thereof results from application of the 15% attorney’s fees to sums awarded for delinquent taxes, penalties, and interest for the year 1982. In that connection, appellants point to the provisions of Tex.Tax Code Ann. § 33.07(a) & (c) (1982), effective January 1, 1982, which provide that a taxing unit may impose an additional 15% penalty upon taxes that remain delinquent on July 1, but if it does so, it “may not recover attorney’s fees in a suit to collect delinquent taxes subject to the” additional penalty. Id. § 33.07(c). Appellants assert that appellees imposed the additional 15% penalty against appellants and therefore relinquished any right to recover attorney’s fees, which right a taxing unit would otherwise have under the tax code.

Appellees rejoin that there is no evidence that they imposed the additional 15% penalty. Appellants contend the evidence is undisputed in that regard. The trial court made no finding of fact or conclusion of law concerning the matter. We find the evidence undisputed that appellees did impose the additional 15% penalty and that they consequently relinquished, as a matter of law, any right to attorney’s fees insofar as the judgment awards recovery of delinquent taxes, penalties, and interest for 1982.

The assistant tax assessor-collector for the two taxing units testified without dispute that both units voted to impose the additional penalty allowed by § 33.07(a) and that the tax statements for 1982 notified taxpayers of that additional assessment upon taxes for that year if they remained delinquent on July 1, 1982. Appellants’ tax statements for 1982 were admitted in evidence, and each contains the notice: “SEC. 33.07 PTC PROVIDES ADDITIONAL 15% PENALTY IF NOT PAID PRIOR TO JULY 1.” Each statement imposes a significant increase in the sums owed if taxes are paid in July instead of June. The magnitude of the increase is far greater than would be allowed if only the ordinary statutory penalties and interest were added for another month. Conversely, nothing in the evidence suggests that the additional penalty was not imposed. We hold, in consequence, that appellants imposed the additional penalty and thereby relinquished, as a matter of law, any right to attorney’s fees respecting delinquent taxes, penalties, and interest for 1982. We order that the attorney’s fees awarded by the trial court be reduced by $234.68 in the case of Travis County Water Control and Improvement District No. 18 (15% of $1,564.57) and by $584.39 in the case of Eanes Independent School District (15% of $3,895.95), the principal sum in parenthesis being, in each instance, the delinquent taxes, penalties, and interest for the year 1982.

*767 Next, appellants contend the attorney’s fees awarded by the trial court with respect to taxes, penalties, and interest preceding 1982 are excessive as well. Their argument is, in this respect, more complicated.

Before enactment of § 33.48 of the Texas Tax Code (1982), a taxing unit’s authority to recover attorney’s fees was governed by statutory provisions applicable to specific units or circumstances, and not to taxing authorities generally, as is the ease in § 33.48. In the present suit, the taxing units sued for delinquent taxes, penalties, and interest for years preceding the effective date of the Texas Tax Code (January 1, 1982), and for the year 1982, as discussed above.

As a water control and improvement district, Travis County Water Control and Improvement District No. 18 was required by the terms of Tex.Water Code Ann.

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677 S.W.2d 764, 20 Educ. L. Rep. 1034, 1984 Tex. App. LEXIS 6451, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lakeridge-development-corp-v-travis-county-water-control-improvement-texapp-1984.