Marted, a Texas General Partnership v. Central Education Agency and Mission Consolidated Independent School District
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Opinion
Independent School District, Appellees
FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND
In March 1992 Marted acquired about forty acres of land from Dr. M. B. Smith in order to develop it into a subdivision called The Woods at Cimarron. The subdivision was to contain estate-sized lots and was to be a small part of a larger development. Soon after it had purchased the property, Marted learned that about half of the lots within the property were in Mission Consolidated Independent School District ("MCISD") and the other half were in Sharyland Independent School District ("SISD"). Pursuant to former Educ. Code § 19.0221, Marted sought to transfer to SISD the portion of the subdivision lying within the boundaries of MCISD. That statute required that a petition for detachment and annexation must be "signed by the surface owners of taxable property, according to the most recent certified appraisal roll, in the territory that is to be detached from one district and added to another." Former Educ. Code § 19.0221(c) (emphasis added). A petition for detachment and annexation, signed by representatives of Marted, was filed in both school districts in October 1992. Both districts denied the petition. Marted filed an appeal of the local decisions with the Commissioner. After a hearing on the merits, the Commissioner, acting on behalf of the Agency, decided that Marted failed to meet the requirements of former Educ. Code § 19.0221(c) because Marted was not, at the time it filed the petition, listed on the most recent certified appraisal roll as the surface owner of the property. Marted sought review of the Commissioner's decision in the Travis County district court. The district court affirmed the Commissioner's decision, and Marted now challenges that judgment.
DISCUSSION
In its first point of error, Marted challenges the Commissioner's interpretation of former Educ. Code § 19.0221(c), which provided the basis for the Commissioner's denial of Marted's petition for detachment and annexation. On the date of Marted's petition, the most recent certified appraisal roll still listed Dr. Smith as the owner even though Marted had been the actual surface owner of the property for more than six months. The Commissioner concluded that the plain language of the statute required the signature of the person listed on the appraisal roll, and that the petition should be denied because it did not contain Dr. Smith's signature.
The standard for reviewing an agency's legal determination is de novo. In re Humphrey's, 880 S.W.2d 402, 404 (Tex.), cert. denied, 115 S.Ct. 427 (1994); Fireman's Pension Comm'n v. Jones, 939 S.W.2d 730, 735 (Tex. App.--Austin 1997, no writ). An agency's construction of a statute deserves serious consideration as long as the construction is reasonable. See Tarrant Appraisal Dist. v. Moore, 845 S.W.2d 820, 823 (Tex. 1993). However, we should not construe a statute in a manner that will produce an absurd, unjust, or foolish result when it is reasonably susceptible of an alternative construction. City of San Antonio v. Fourth Court of Appeals, 820 S.W.2d 762, 768 (Tex. 1991); Anderson v. Penix, 161 S.W.2d 455, 458-59 (Tex. 1942).
In his decision, the Commissioner discussed why the Legislature invoked the use of appraisal rolls into the process of detachment and annexation: "[T]he purpose of tying these requirements to the certified appraisal rolls of the relevant taxing authorities is no doubt to insure ready administration of the law." We agree that the primary purpose appears to be to avoid a situation in which the Commissioner would be called on to resolve a dispute over property ownership. However, no such dispute is present in this case. Both sides acknowledge that Marted was the actual surface owner of the property in question at the time the petition for detachment and annexation was filed.
Appraisal rolls reflect ownership of property as of January 1 of a given tax year. See Tex. Tax Code Ann. § 32.07 (West 1992) ("Tax Code"). The yearly updating of the appraisal rolls often is not generated until the summer of the year in question. See Tax Code § 26.01. This process would, in the present case, yield two unreasonable results. First, although Marted purchased the property in March, it could not, under the Commissioner's construction, petition for detachment and annexation until the summer of the following year, after issuance of the new updated appraisal roll showing its ownership, even though all other rights of ownership were transferred to it at the time the property was purchased. An even more anomalous result would be that the right to petition for annexation and detachment would remain in Dr. Smith, the previous owner, for well over a year after he no longer had any right of ownership in the property. (1)
The Commissioner apparently believes he must, in all cases, use the appraisal roll as the conclusive determination of who owns property and thus has the statutory right to petition for detachment and annexation. Marted maintains that a more reasonable construction would consider appraisal rolls merely as prima facie evidence of ownership. It suggests that the use of appraisal rolls as evidence of ownership should be analogous to the way an appraisal roll is used in the Tax Code. In the Tax Code, appraisal rolls serve only as prima facie evidence of ownership. See Tax Code § 33.47(a); General Elec. Capital Corp. v.
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