Skinner Corp. v. Calallen Independent School District

409 S.W.2d 929, 1966 Tex. App. LEXIS 2162
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedNovember 30, 1966
Docket283
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 409 S.W.2d 929 (Skinner Corp. v. Calallen Independent School 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
Skinner Corp. v. Calallen Independent School District, 409 S.W.2d 929, 1966 Tex. App. LEXIS 2162 (Tex. Ct. App. 1966).

Opinion

OPINION

GREEN, Chief Justice.

This appeal is from an order denying a temporary injunction in a suit brought by taxpayers to enjoin appellee school district and its officials from putting into effect an allegedly illegal, discriminatory and arbitrary tax program, and from taking steps to collect taxes from plaintiffs based on such program.

The Calallen Independent School District assesses and collects its own taxes. In the Fall of 1964, school district by written contract employed M. A. Cage to list, appraise and make an annual survey for the tax years 1965 and 1966 of all taxable properties within the district except oil, gas, utilities and industrial properties. The latter type were to be listed and appraised by Thos. Y. Pickett & Company, Inc. under the terms of a separate contract between such company and the school district. Appellants’ properties are of the type which were listed and appraised by Pickett.

In March, 1966, appellants, through their tax agents Ed Slavik and Carlton Meredith, submitted to the proper representatives of the district their sworn renditions of their properties within the district, containing valuations admittedly low so, as testified to by said agents, that they would be sure to receive notice to appear before the Equalization Board. At the May 16 meeting of said Board, Slavik and Meredith attended, and were able to reach an agreement with Pickett and the Board on the valuation of their taxable properties. However, they did not agree to the increase of the ratio of assessment from 60% to 70% that the school district had decided upon, and took exception to what they considered to be the omission from the assessment rolls of much personal property of the type which was to be listed and appraised by Cage. This latter type shall be referred to as “local personal properties”, the designation given it in the pleadings and evidence in the trial court.

*931 Appellants filed this class action in the district court for themselves and all others similarly situated before appellee school district’s Board of Equalization had adjourned and its tax program placed into effect. Their request for relief by way of injunction and mandamus was based on allegations of an illegal, arbitrary and discriminatory scheme of taxation whereby certain categories of the local personal properties were intentionally omitted from the assessment rolls. They stated that such omissions caused appellants and others in their situation, i. e., whose taxable properties came within the classification of oil, gas, utilities or industrial properties listed and appraised for taxation by Pickett, to pay more than their just share of taxes. Pending final judgment on their request for permanent injunction and mandamus, they prayed (1) for a restraining order, and (2) for a temporary injunction restraining and enjoining appellees from performing various functions prerequisite to the assessment and collection of taxes, and to prevent appellees from implementing the procedure for the collection of taxes from plaintiffs under the allegedly arbitrary and discriminatory tax scheme. The restraining order was granted, but after a hearing before the court it was dissolved and the prayer for a temporary injunction was denied. This appeal followed such denial.

Appellees’ motion to dismiss the appeal because their tax program was fully implemented and put into effect after the restraining order was dissolved by the trial court is overruled. Appellants’ prayer for temporary relief which was denied by the court included the enjoining of appellees from attempting to collect from appellants taxes based on the alleged illegal and discriminatory scheme. There remain justiciable issues before this Court on the appeal.

Appellants’ first two points of error are based on their contention that the school district adopted a fundamentally and constitutionally erroneous plan or scheme of taxation that potentially damaged appellants in that a dual standard of assessing was employed, and that appellees failed and refused to equally assess all categories of taxable property, causing potential damage to appellants. Their complaint under these points appears to be that although (1) the agents of Thos. Y. Pickett & Company, Inc. in listing and appraising plaintiffs’ properties for taxation purposes made a complete and thorough personal inspection of their properties, not relying on rendition slips mailed to appellants for completion by them, thus assuring that all of appellants’ properties were listed, appraised, and made subject to taxation, 1 (2) Cage, acting under his contract with school district, intentionally and with the knowledge and approval of the district adopted an illegal, arbitrary and discriminatory plan or scheme of listing and appraising the local personal property coming within his jurisdiction which permitted a large amount of such property, such as household furniture over the exemption value of $250.00, automobiles, boats and trailers, jewelry, cash and bank deposits, to be omitted from the assessment rolls, and thus to escape taxation; that as a result all categories of personal property were not assessed equally, causing discrimination against appellants; that if such omitted properties were properly assessed and taxed, it would not be necessary for district to increase the assessment rate from 60% to 70% of full value.

Appellants construe the testimony to establish as a matter of law the affirmative of both (1) and (2) above and contend that the trial court abused its discretion in denying the temporary injunction. As to (1), we agree that the evidence does not disclose any fault as to the methods used by *932 Pickett’s agents, and all parties appear to be satisfied with his work. We shall therefore confine ourselves to a discussion of contention (2).

It is appellants’ position that the evidence established as a matter of law that a large amount of local personal property of the type coming within Cage’s contract was omitted from the tax assessment rolls as a result of the failure of Cage, acting as agent for the school district, to comply with the requirements as set forth in Title 122, Vernon’s Ann.Tex.Civ.St., and particularly Arts. 7145, 7147, 7161, and 7189, and his failure to make diligent efforts to search out and locate all taxable local property, relying instead almost entirely on voluntary renditions made by taxpayers on the rendition slips mailed to them. They contend that, according to undisputed evidence, such failures were a part of an illegal plan or scheme intentionally to omit such property from the rolls and permit same to escape taxation; that as the result of the dual system of listing and appraising personal property as between the methods used by Pickett and those used by Cage, the school district’s plan of taxation is not equal and uniform as required by Art. VIII, Sec. 1, Texas Constitution, Vernon’s Ann. St., and that appellants are discriminated against and have to bear more of the tax burden than they should.

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Bluebook (online)
409 S.W.2d 929, 1966 Tex. App. LEXIS 2162, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/skinner-corp-v-calallen-independent-school-district-texapp-1966.