Mulkey v. City of Kaufman

286 S.W. 620, 1926 Tex. App. LEXIS 714
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMay 29, 1926
DocketNo. 9763. [fn*]
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 286 S.W. 620 (Mulkey v. City of Kaufman) 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
Mulkey v. City of Kaufman, 286 S.W. 620, 1926 Tex. App. LEXIS 714 (Tex. Ct. App. 1926).

Opinion

VAUGHAN, J.

Appellants Nestor Morrow, C. P. Slaughter, W. S. Sudduth, F. C. Krauss, T. T. Long, E. F. Rand, J. F. Mulkey, J. M. Blakley, H. Goolsby, Joe Keith, Marion Fox, M. E. Mitchell, J. T. Knight, T. J. Brough-ton, Joe Sprinkle, W. N. Feagin, R. J. Stan- , field, M. H. Foster, J. A. Carlisle, and J. A. Boggs, filed this suit September 4, 1925, in the court below against the appellee the city of Kaufman, a municipal corporation, and its officers John Hill, mayor, W. D. Davenport, Frank Ellis, E. E. Roberson, G. O. Smith, and Bowen Turney, its board of aider-men, and J. E. Garter, assessor and tax collector and secretary, alleging that the city was duly incorporated under the Revised Statutes of Texas and had been operating under its franchise as a city controlling 5,-000 people or less, with full charge of its public schools, for the last 20 years, collecting through its duly and legally authorized collector $1,50 on each $100 worth of property, which is the full amount allowed by the Constitution of Texas. Appellants itemized the manner in which the tax was apportioned and then set out in full an ordinance levying 25 cents on the $100 for the purpose of constructing and the purchase of public buildings, waterworks, sewerage, and making public improvements. This ordinance appellants alleged to be void as levying a tax in excess of 1 y2 per cent, of the taxable property of said city, and that this tax was levied in direct violation of section 4, article 11, of the Constitution of Texas. Appellants then complained of a sewerage charge, which they allege is a tax, and that such tax is unreasonable, unjust, and inequitable, not uniform, but oppressive and amounting to double taxation, because some people have two bathtubs, two commodes, and two sinks, while others have only one, and that, the city owning and controlling its own waterworks and sewer system, and the inhabitants being required to connect therewith, the sewerage connection charge amounted to a tax over and above the $1.50 which appellant claimed the city is limited to.

Appellants sought to enjoin the city of Kaufman and the city officials, declaring the ordinance levying the tax of 25 cents null and void, and, further, that the sewerage charge be declared null and void, and that the city be enjoined from collecting through its tax officer or collector either said tax of 25 cents or the sewerage charge.

Appellee city answered, admitting that the city of Kaufman was incorporated under the general laws; that it had a population of less than 5,000 inhabitants, but that, in addition to being a municipal corporation, it was an independent school district under section 10, art. 11, Constitution of Texas, and under article 2871, Revised Civil Statutes of Texas 1911 (now article 2771, R. C. S. 1925); that it was acting in a dual capacity. It admitted that the taxes as set-out in appellant’s petition were levied, part of which was levied as a town or city and part by a vote of the people of the independent school district for the maintenance of its public schools, but it denied that it had levied m.ore than allowed under the Constitution, or that it had levied any tax in violation of section 4, art. 11, of the Constitution of Texas; that appellee had levied for general municipal purposes, 874 cents; that it levied for school maintenance, 50 cents; for sehoolhouse refunding bonds, 3.5 cents; that it levied for sehoolhouse building bonds 34.1 cents; that no other tax had been levied for any purpose; and that no illegal tax or assessment had been levied by said city.

It further denied that it had levied any other tax, but admitted that it had passed an ordinance to make a sewerage charge for the use of its sewer; that the sewer system was owned by appellee, and that same had been furnished free to all inhabitants desiring to make use thereof, but that, soon after the system had been constructed, the bond issue was found insufficient t'o complete the payment for the plant or make repairs thereon; that, after due deliberation and a judicial ascertainment, it was found that, in order to protect the city’s property and comply with the regulations of the state health authorities, it was necessary for appellee city to make, and it did make, a charge for furnishing sewerage to those using it; that this was not a tax at all, but'purely a charge for the use of city sewerage; that this charge was collected in like manner as water rents, and no person was required to pay for the sewerage, except those who used it; that the sewerage charge was as low as it possibly could be made in order to properly protect and care for the city’s property; and that such charge was never a tax at all, and never intended as a tax, but was a reasonable sew *622 erage charge for the benefit received by those who use the sewer.

To this answer appellants filed a supplemental petition, in which they denied that appellee city was an independent school district, but admitted that about the year 1887 appellee city assumed control of its public free schools, and pleaded that the city waterworks made enough money to take care of all sewerage expenses, and, further, that the taxes were levied to carry on the city’s business, and that, as each of the appellants paid an ad valorem tax on their bathtubs, lavatories, etc., this additional sewerage charge was a tax and constituted a double taxation, as they were required to pay an ad valorem tax upon the property they owned and then pay for the use of same.

The trial court found the law and the facts were with appellee and entered judgment denying appellants the relief sought, from which judgment this appeal was duly prosecuted and is now before us for review.

We find all the allegations contained in the answer of appellee city to have been duly established, and are therefore found as facts. Appellee city, having been duly chartered under the' general laws of Texas, and having assumed control of its public schools under the law as same existed prior to the year 1905, and within the same boundaries operated as a city and as an independent school district, had the authority to levy taxes for general city purposes, including schoolhouse building bonds in the sum of $1.50, or 1% per cent, on the $100 taxable value within such city, and, in addition thereto, such tax as was voted by the people residing within such independent school district for the maintenance and operation of its public free schools.

It cannot be questioned but that, under article 11, § 10, Constitution of Texas, empowering the Legislature to constitute any town .or city an independent school district, and Revised Civil Statutes 1911, art. 2871, now article • 2771, Revised Civil Statutes 1925, creating a city taking over its schools such a district, there was conferred on appellee city, having complied with the provisions of said article 2871 (now 2771), a dual character, and, with such character, a dual power (2) as strictly a municipality, and (b) as a duly constituted independent school district, with full power and authority to exercise all of the powers and authority under the law as a municipality and all of the powers and authority conferred by law upon an independent school district. The Constitution, article 7, § .3, exempts from limitation on account of school district taxes, incorporated cities or towns constituting an independent school district, and articles 2798-2802.

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373 S.W.2d 525 (Court of Appeals of Texas, 1963)
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Bluebook (online)
286 S.W. 620, 1926 Tex. App. LEXIS 714, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mulkey-v-city-of-kaufman-texapp-1926.