Matagorda County Appraisal District v. Coastal Liquids Partners

165 S.W.3d 329, 160 Oil & Gas Rep. 977, 48 Tex. Sup. Ct. J. 784, 2005 Tex. LEXIS 423, 2005 WL 1252299
CourtTexas Supreme Court
DecidedMay 27, 2005
Docket03-1200
StatusPublished
Cited by89 cases

This text of 165 S.W.3d 329 (Matagorda County Appraisal District v. Coastal Liquids Partners) 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
Matagorda County Appraisal District v. Coastal Liquids Partners, 165 S.W.3d 329, 160 Oil & Gas Rep. 977, 48 Tex. Sup. Ct. J. 784, 2005 Tex. LEXIS 423, 2005 WL 1252299 (Tex. 2005).

Opinion

Justice BRISTER

delivered the opinion of the Court.

We must decide whether salt dome caverns created to store liquid hydrocarbons may be appraised and taxed separately from the surface land above them. The question has been here before, but we did not reach it in Coastal Liquids Transportation, L.P. v. Harris County Appraisal District because the taxpayer lacked capacity. 1 Predictably, given the millions of tax dollars involved, 2 the question has surfaced again.

In this case, the taxpayer Coastal Liquids Partners, L.P. challenged the Mata- *331 gorda County Appraisal District’s valuation of the Hiltpold # 1 and Hudson # 3 caverns at almost $2 million in value for the tax years 1996 through 1999. The trial court granted judgment for the District, but the court of appeals reversed, finding the caverns could not be appraised separately from the surface above them. We reverse, and remand to the court of appeals.

I

We first must address the District’s jurisdictional challenge.

Since 1995, a person leasing property who is contractually obligated to reimburse the owner for ad valorem taxes can protest an appraisal in the owner’s place. 3 It is undisputed that Coastal’s lease of these caverns from Texas Brine Corporation contains just such an obligation.

But the statute allows only one protest; the owner and the lessor cannot both do so. 4 The District argues that the courts have no jurisdiction of Coastal’s claims because Texas Brine filed a protest concerning fourteen salt dome facilities, including the two it leased to Coastal. Texas Brine signed agreements with the District settling its protest.

First, we disagree that this is a jurisdictional question. It is true a taxpayer’s failure to pursue an appraisal review board proceeding deprives the courts of jurisdiction to decide most matters relating to ad valorem taxes. 5 But there is no question there was such a proceeding here; the only question is whether there was more than one.

In the first instance, it is up to a local appraisal board to decide whether there has been more than one protest relating to the same property. 6 While a board has no authority to change a settlement reached by a taxpayer and the chief appraiser, 7 it certainly has the authority to take note of what property was included. By entering an order assessing the appraised value of the two caverns here in Coastal’s proceeding, the board impliedly *332 rejected the District’s claim. 8

Appeal of an appraisal board ruling is by trial de novo. 9 When Coastal appealed the board’s appraisal to the trial court, the District filed a plea to the jurisdiction. In response, Coastal introduced a tape transcript from the board hearing and testimony from some of the participants. While the transcript is imperfect due to the informal nature mandated for such hearings, 10 it supports Coastal’s argument that Texas Brine orally limited its own protest and subsequent settlement to those for which it had to pay the taxes. A letter from Coastal’s counsel to Texas Brine also supports this conclusion.

Treating the District’s jurisdictional challenge as one attacking the legal sufficiency of the evidence to support the trial court’s judgment, 11 we hold that the District failed to prove as a matter of law that there were duplicate protests concerning the same property.

II

According to the transcript of the appraisal board hearing, Coastal initially took the position that storage caverns like those here are not subject to ad valorem taxes at all. In this appeal, it takes the more moderate position that the caverns may be taxed, but only as “land” and as a part of the surface realty to which they are attached. Otherwise, Coastal argues, the District can improperly tax aspects of property that are inseparable, and perhaps double tax them. We address each argument separately.

A

The Property Tax Code defines “real property” as: (A) land; (B) an improvement; (C) a mine or quarry; (D) a mineral in place; (E) standing timber; or (F) an estate or interest in one of the above. 12 In preparing its records, the Code requires appraisal districts to list separately (among other things) the appraised value of land, improvements, and separately taxable estates or interests. 13 Obviously, a single tract may include several of these aspects of realty, or perhaps even all.

It has long been the case that at least some of these aspects of real property can be taxed separately even though all are part of the same surface tract. Thus, for example, in 1923 we held that an oil and gas lease was not personalty but an interest in realty that was separately taxable from the surface estate. 14 This rule does not depend on whether each aspect is separately owned, as identical properties cannot be taxed differently depending on whether, for example, a mineral interest has been legally severed. 15

*333 But in Gifford-Hill & Co. v. Wise County Appraisal District, we held that in some circumstances subsurface limestone cannot be appraised separately from the land immediately above it. 16 Coastal urges us to make a similar ruling here. We agree that Gifford-Hill is dispositive, but not in the way Coastal suggests.

The Court’s concern in Gifford-Hill was that a blanket rule taxing limestone separately “would subject thousands of unsuspecting farmers and ranchers to increased tax liability and frustrate the Constitution’s intent ‘[t]o promote the preservation of open space land ... devoted to farm or ranch purposes.’ ” 17 But we did not hold that subterranean resources could never be appraised separately from the surface; to the contrary, we remanded for the trial court to determine which part of the limestone in that case could be separately appraised. 18

Instead, Gifford-Hill recognized a distinction between limestone currently under production as part of a quarry, and lands containing limestone where extraction was merely a future possibility:

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
165 S.W.3d 329, 160 Oil & Gas Rep. 977, 48 Tex. Sup. Ct. J. 784, 2005 Tex. LEXIS 423, 2005 WL 1252299, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/matagorda-county-appraisal-district-v-coastal-liquids-partners-tex-2005.