Slater v. State

14 S.W.2d 874
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedFebruary 28, 1929
DocketNo. 2243.
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 14 S.W.2d 874 (Slater v. State) 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
Slater v. State, 14 S.W.2d 874 (Tex. Ct. App. 1929).

Opinion

WALTHALL, J.

This suit was brought by the state of Texas, by the Honorable W. C. Jackson, in his official capacity as county attorney of Pecos county, Tex., against Quinby Oil Company, a Texas corporation, Olney A. Slater, and all persons owning and claiming to own an interest in and to the lands described, and as to all parties not named and having an interest in the said lands they are described as unknown, and after due diligence and inquiry their names and places of residence could not be ascertained.

The suit was filed on July 10, 1928, for the collection of taxes delinquent in payment, for the year 1927, and for penalties, interest, and costs, and to foreclose the state’s lien on the said lands in payment thereof.

Quinby Oil Company did not answer, and judgment by default was rendered against it. Olney A. Slater appeared and filed answer. The attorneys for the state and Slater filed an agreed statement of facts proven on the trial. The agreed statement was signed by the parties, and by the court examined, found to be correct, approved, and ordered filed as a part of the record in the case. The case was submitted to ahd tried by the court on the agreed statement.

The agreed statement, so far as it is necessary to state it, in view of the issue presented, reads as follows:

“That all the lots and lands owned by the defendant Olney A. Slater are unimproved. The lands owned by the defendant, Olney A. Slater consist of tracts lying within the following surveys and additions to the town of Fort Stockton: James Lamb survey; Mrs. N. U. Reisenhoover; Survey No. 14, T. & St. L. Ry. Co.; Survey 318 S. A. & M. G. Ry. Co., which are original surveys; Survey 7, Block 1, Ft. St. Irr. L. Co., which survey 7 was divided into tracts of ten (10) acres each, each tract being surveyed and marked on the ground and plat filed of record in Pecos County, Texas; Rule Addition to the town of Fort Stockton; Old Fort Addition to the town of Fort Stockton; Orient Addition to the town of Fort Stockton; Second Orient Addition to the town of Fort Stockton, all of which Additions were subdivided into Blocks and Lots and each Block and Lot subdivided and marked on the ground and plat of same, filed and recorded in Pecos County, Texas.”

*875 The lands involved in the suit and delinquent, and not owned by Olney A. Slater are described in the agreed statement as follows:

“Part of lot 6, Block 20, Old Port Stockton Addition, in Fort Stockton, Pecos County, Texas; All lots described in the petition as being in the Government Fort Addition to the town of Fort Stockton, Texas; All lots being in the town site of Owego and Baldridge, "'Pecos County, Texas.”

The agreed statement, in addition to the above, contains a schedule of all the real estate involved in the suit, all delinquent for taxes, shown by an inventory of the lands as rendered for taxes by the then owner of the lands, Quinby Oil Company, describing the lands by the abstract, certificate, and survey numbers, number of acres, and the separate value of each, also giving the several tract numbers where the sections and blocks have been subdivided in the Irrigated Land Company’s land; and, where the lands are situated in the town of Ft. Stockton and in the above-stated several additions thereof, and in Owego and Baldridge, the several blocks and lots are each stated .severally, all of which additions were subdivided into blocks and lots and each marked on the ground, and a plat of same filed and recorded, and in the rendition the value of each, as rendered for taxation, the schedule or exhibit of such rendition covering several pages of the agreed statement. We think we need not copy the exhibit here.

It was agreed “that the total amount of State, County and Road and Special taxes, penalties and interest on the lands belonging to the defendant, Olney A. Slater, and covered by this suit, is the sum of Three Hundred Eighty-three and 98/100 ($383.98) Dollars, which sum has been tendered by the defendant to the tax collector, together with the sum of Forty-two ($42.00) Dollars additional as costs after suit was filed and court in session, which tender has been refused by the said tax collector.”

The case was tried without a jury. The court entered judgment that the state recover of defendant Quinby Oil Company the sum of $318.03, taxes, etc., on the property owned by it, and from the Quinby Oil Company and Olney A. Slater the sum of $895.49, the aggregate amount of delinquent taxes due by them with the penalty of 10 per cent, thereto added, costs, and interest thereon, at the rate of 6 per cent, per annum from date of the judgment until paid, and costs of suit. The judgment ordered a foreclosure of the state’s lien on the lands involved in the suit. The judgment gave directions as to the sale of the lands on foreclosure and as to the application of the proceeds, which we need not note.

Slater and the state each noted an exception to the judgment and gave notice of appeal. Slater prosecutes this appeal.

Opinion.

Appellant states that the facts are undisputed, and that the only issue between the parties is the amount of fees chargeable.

Appellant submits four propositions. They are substantially to the effect: That a county attorney in a suit for delinquent taxes is entitled to receive a fee of $5 for the first tract in any one suit and $1 for each additional tract involved in the same suit, and, where one suit is filed for the collection of delinquent taxes on parcels of land which are unimproved and wholly contained in five separate surveys and four additions to a town, the county attorney is entitled to collect fees on nine and only nine tracts of land. That the collector of taxes in such suit is entitled to $1 for each correct assessment of land to be sold for such delinquent taxes, and in this suit his fees would be for nine separate assessments. That the county clerk is entitled to a fee of $1 for making out and recording the data (date) of each delinquent assessment and for certifying same in the minutes of the commissioner’s court, and for all other services rendered in such suit, and $1 to be taxed as costs. The fourth proposition submits that the assessment for taxes is excessive and void because unconstitutional.

In brief, it is insisted that the fees of the county attorney, tax collector, and county clerk, depend solely upon the number of “tracts” involved in the suit, and that, in order to ascertain the compensation chargeable, it is necessary only to determine the meaning of the term “tract” as applied in delinquent tax suits, and to ascertain the number of tracts involved in the suit.

It is true, as insisted by appellant, that the fees of the county attorney and the collector of taxes are determined by the number of “tracts” of land involved in the suit for delinquent taxes, and that the - number of “tracts” in the suit depends upon the construction to be given the amendment of former article 7691 by chapter 21, General Laws, as passed by the Third Galled Session of the Thirty-Eighth Legislature, page 180, and carried into the last Revised Civil Statutes, as article 7334. That article, as amended, reads:

‘Tract.’ — The term ‘tract’ shall mean all lands or lots in any survey, addition or subdivision or part thereof owned by the party being sued for delinquent taxes.”

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Related

Slater v. State
14 S.W.2d 877 (Court of Appeals of Texas, 1929)

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Bluebook (online)
14 S.W.2d 874, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/slater-v-state-texapp-1929.