MAG-T, L.P. v. Travis Central Appraisal District

161 S.W.3d 617, 2005 WL 240603
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedApril 7, 2005
Docket03-04-00151-CV
StatusPublished
Cited by92 cases

This text of 161 S.W.3d 617 (MAG-T, L.P. v. Travis Central Appraisal District) 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
MAG-T, L.P. v. Travis Central Appraisal District, 161 S.W.3d 617, 2005 WL 240603 (Tex. Ct. App. 2005).

Opinion

OPINION

W. KENNETH LAW, Chief Justice.

Appellants (the Taxpayers) sued the ap-pellees, the Travis Central Appraisal District, the Travis County Appraisal Review Board, and the Tax Assessor-Collector (the Taxing Authorities), 1 alleging the Taxing Authorities had improperly increased the Taxpayers’ property taxes after the appraisal role had been certified. The Taxpayers asserted that they were excused from exhausting the administrative remedies provided in the tax code by at least one of five exceptions established in Texas jurisprudence. The district court found that the Taxpayers had not exhausted their administrative remedies and dismissed the suit for lack of jurisdiction. For the reasons stated below, we affirm the judgment of the district court.

BACKGROUND

The Taxpayers are various owners of commercial property located in Travis County. In May 2003, the Travis Central Appraisal District (the Appraisal District) sent Notices of Appraised Property Value to the Taxpayers for the 2003 tax year. The notices advised the Taxpayers of the appraised value the Appraisal District placed on each commercial property and the associated property tax due. The Taxpayers did not protest the appraisal values published in the May notices. On July 24, 2003, the Travis County Appraisal Review Board (ARB) approved and the Chief Appraiser certified the appraisal roll. In November 2003, the Tax Assessor-Collector issued tax statements and initiated the collection process pursuant to her statutory authority.

The tax code codifies the constitutional obligation of our state government to appraise and assess property for taxation purposes. 2 See Atascosa County v. Atascosa County Appraisal Dist. 990 S.W.2d 255, 257 (Tex.1999). It creates appraisal districts and requires each district to appraise property for the ad valorem taxing *622 units, within the district. Id. The tax code also establishes an appraisal review board for every appraisal district, which is governed by its board of directors and appoints the chief appraiser. See Tex. Tax Code Ann. §§ 6.031-.035, 6.05(c), 41.04 (West 2001), §§ 6.03, 6.41 (West Supp. 2004-05). The chief appraiser prepares the appraisal records, which list all taxable property in the district and associated appraised values. See Tex. Tax Code Ann. § 25.01 (West 2001). Generally, taxable property is appraised at its market value as of January 1. Following notice to the property owner of appraised value, if required, the chief appraiser submits the completed appraisal records to the ARB for review and determination of protests. See id. § 25.22. The appraisal roll may not be changed once approved by the ARB, except as provided by section 25.25 (correction of errors), sections 41.01-41.71 (hearing of protests and challenges by ARB) and sections 42.01-42.43 (judicial review). See id. § 25.25(a).

The tax code sets forth the administrative procedures for aggrieved property owners to protest their tax liabilities. See generally Tex. Tax Code Ann. §§ 41.01-.42, 42.01-22, 42.225-.25, 42.28, 42.29, 42.42 (West 2001), 41.43, 42.221, 42.26, 42.41 (West Supp.2004-05). The tax code allows a property owner to protest, among other action, the appraised value of the owner’s property, the inclusion of the property on the appraisal records, and any other action of the chief appraiser, appraisal district, or ARB that applies to and adversely affects the property owner. Tex. Tax Code Ann. §§ 41.41(a)(1), (3), (9) (West 2001). After the property owner receives notice of a change, the property owner has 30 days to file a protest. Id. § 41.44(a)(2). A property owner who files a protest after this deadline, but before the appraisal board approves the appraisal records, may still obtain a hearing and a determination of the protest upon a showing of good cause for its failure to file a timely protest. See id. § 41.44(b). The tax code contains provisions for review board hearing procedures including provisions for the issuance of subpoenas and taking of evidence. See id. §§ 41.61-71.

A property owner is also entitled to protest the failure of the Taxing Authorities to give the proper notice to which a property owner is entitled. See id. § 41.411(a). If the failure to deliver such notice is established, the ARB must then determine the property owner’s protest on its merits. Id. § 41.411(b). The Code provides that a property owner who files a notice of protest regarding the appraisal district’s failure to provide or to deliver any notice to which the property owner is entitled has a right to a hearing and a determination of the property owner’s protest if the owner (1) pays the amount of the taxes due on the portion of the taxable value of the property that is not in dispute before the delinquency date, and (2) files its notice of protest before the date the taxes on the property to which the notice applies becomes delinquent. . See id. §§ 41.411, 41.44(c), 42.08(b).

The legislature amended section 22.23(c) of the tax code to encourage property owners to submit tangible personal property for taxation that had been previously omitted from the appraisal rolls. See Tex. Tax Code Ann. § 22.23(c) (West Supp. 2004-05). Normally, the chief appraiser has the authority to assess back-taxes for personal property that had been omitted from the appraisal roll in either of the two preceding years. See id. § 25.21. However, under the section 22.23(c) amendment, if taxpayers rendered their property by the December 1, 2003 deadline, they were granted “amnesty,” which means that their previously omitted property would be exempt from retroactive taxation for the *623 2001 and 2002 tax years. See id. § 22.23(c).

The Taxpayers took advantage of the section 22.28(c) amnesty provision and timely filed amnesty renditions by the December 1, 2003 deadline after the Taxpayers’ property had already been assessed for taxes. Thus, the appraisal value upon which their original 2003 tax bill was based did not include the value of the personal property disclosed in the amnesty renditions filed later in 2003. Accordingly, the Appraisal District prepared supplemental appraisal records that were approved by the ARB, and issued new appraisal notices for the 2003 tax year that included increased property appraisals encompassing the previously omitted property.

The new Notices of Appraisal, dated January 6, 2004 (January 6 Notices), were received by the Taxpayers on or about January 14. The new notices were in every respect the same as the original notices received earlier in the 2003 tax year, save an upward adjustment in the appraised property value and an increased tax bill reflecting the addition of the omitted property that has been disclosed in the amnesty renditions.

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Bluebook (online)
161 S.W.3d 617, 2005 WL 240603, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mag-t-lp-v-travis-central-appraisal-district-texapp-2005.