Power v. Andrews

253 S.W. 870, 1923 Tex. App. LEXIS 425
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJune 2, 1923
DocketNo. 10306.
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 253 S.W. 870 (Power v. Andrews) 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
Power v. Andrews, 253 S.W. 870, 1923 Tex. App. LEXIS 425 (Tex. Ct. App. 1923).

Opinion

BUCK, J.

F. M. Power filed suit for injunction against W. L. Andrews and six others, as trustees of the Archer City independent school district No. 1, alleging that petitioner was a ' taxpayer and citizen of Archer City, Archer county, Tex., and that on the 1st day of January, 1921, plaintiff was the owner of lot 1, in block 2, of the town of Archer City, and that he was -the owner of one automobile of the value of $500, and money and cash on deposit in the sum of $6,500, and jewelry of the value of $500. That he also owned at said time $10,-000 worth of United States Liberty bonds of various issues, which were exempt from state, county, and school taxation. That on August 31, 1921, the plaintiff rendered to the tax assessor of Archer City independent school district No. 1, to wit, L. P. Carring-ton, his personal property and real estate in said independent school district for taxation, rendering lot 1 at a valuation of $2,000, and the other property at the respective valuations set out above. That said rendition of said property was a fair valuation for said property and was equal in value of property of like character of other citizens of said independent school district. That thereafter the board of equalization of said independent school district fraudulently and arbitrarily raised his rendition on the real estate and on his personal property aforesaid from $9,500, as rendered by plaintiff, to $19,100. He alleged that said last-mentioned valuation was arbitrary, confiscatory, and fraudulent, and in excess of the' valuation placed upon the property of other citizens of like character and similarly situated in said school district. He further alleged that said board of equalization had' arbitrarily assessed his United States government Liberty bonds at the sum of $10,000, which bonds *871 were exempt by law from taxation, and the said assessment was fraudulent, arbitrary, excessive, and confiscatory, and in violation of the United States laws exempting such bonds from taxation. That the said school district, through its trustees and through its collector, L. P. Carrington, was seeking to collect taxes alleged to be due said independent school district upon 'said fraudulent assessment, as raised and made by said board of equalization, and that they were at that time seeking to collect taxes in the sum of 50 cents on the $100 valuation upon such excessive valuation and assessment, to plaintiff’s damage in the sum of $135. That said unlawful and arbitrary assessment created a fictitious lien upon the plaintiff’s property and thereby cast a cloud on his title to the same, and that said Archer City independent school district No. 1, through its tax collector, would, unless restrained, seize and sell the plaintiff’s personal property for the payment of said unlawful assessment. Wherefore he prayed for a temporary writ of injunction against the defendants to restrain them from the collection of said taxes.

The defendants answered by way of general demurrer, a general denial, and specially pleaded that the property of plaintiff was not arbitrarily and fraudulently assessed in excess, of the valuations placed upon property of like kind and location of other citizens of the said independent school district, but alleged that in fact and in truth plaintiff’s property was by him listed and valued entirely below its real value and the value placed upon like kind of property in said district, and that the value placed upon '■ plaintiff’s property by the board of equalization of said district was a fair value and on the same basis and values of the assessment of property of like kind and location belonging to other citizens of said school district, and specially denied that any government bonds were listed by plaintiff or that the same were listed and assessed by the defendant.

Upon a hearing on April 14,1922, the court denied the relief prayed for by plaintiff, and he has appealed to this court.

Luther Carrington, witness for plaintiff, testified that he was the assessor and collector for the Archer City schools and the city corporation; that the board of equalization, acting for the city, raised the assessment on plaintiff’s lot from $2,000 to $6,000, placing the valuation of the lot for tax purposes on behalf of the city at $4,400, and placing a valuation of $1,600 on the fixtures. The same board of equalization, acting for the school district, placed the valuation of the lot at $10,000 and the fixtures at $1,600. He further testified;

“The reason that the same board, acting for the city, placed a valuation of $6,000 on this property, and then the same board, acting for the school district, placed a valuation of $11,-600 on it, nearly twice as much, was that in our school district assessments our values were supposed to be thribbled on the state and county. This was the first time this building had been rendered. The state and county taxes put one basis of value on that property. I did not render that property for the state and county. You are supposed to give a full rendition to the state and county. The city does not double that rendition all the time. I did not say that the city doubled the state and county renditions. The city takes a value of their own, anything that the board thinks its value should be. We try to, in taking renditions to the city, place on the property what we think its fair value ought to be, and try to tax all property similarly situated in the same manner and at the same valuation.
“Q. What I am getting at is this: Why was it that double the value was placed on it by the same board acting for the independent school district as was placed on it for the city? A. Well, every one else in the school district' was about three times the state and county values. Ordinarily they put the value three times as much as it was for the state and county. There might have been a few exceptions where that wasn’t done. That was the general requirement in the rate of the independent school district. The object of that was to get more taxes. In taking this value of three times as much as it was assessed'for the state and county, the object of the independent school district was to collect more taxes, to get more money to run the schools. We had that kind of rule that we would collect on the basis of three times the value for school taxes that they rendered it for the state and county taxes, but I don’t know that it was an arbitrary rule.
“I don’t think the city doubled the values as assessed' by the state and county all the way through. As I tell you, this was the first time this building had been assessed for taxes. * * * I presume that the people in the country rendered their property for state and county purposes at about 50 or 60 per cent, of its value. Ordinarily that is the way they rendered property.”

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Bluebook (online)
253 S.W. 870, 1923 Tex. App. LEXIS 425, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/power-v-andrews-texapp-1923.