Slaughter v. Bledsoe Independent School Dist.

38 S.W.2d 888, 1931 Tex. App. LEXIS 477
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMay 13, 1931
DocketNo. 3608.
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 38 S.W.2d 888 (Slaughter v. Bledsoe Independent School Dist.) 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
Slaughter v. Bledsoe Independent School Dist., 38 S.W.2d 888, 1931 Tex. App. LEXIS 477 (Tex. Ct. App. 1931).

Opinion

HALL, C. J.

This is an action by the appellee school district against E. Dick Slaughter, W. A. Myrick, Sr., and South Plains & Santa Fé Railway Company to recover school taxes, interest, penalties, and costs for the years 1927, 1928, and 1929, and in which plaintiff seeks to foreclose tax liens against 71 tracts of land involved, and described in the petition. Plaintiff sought to also recover attorneys’ fees. That the taxes were delinquent, due, owing, and unpaid is alleged, and further that proper action had been taken by the authorities in the levying of taxes and the issuance of notices., The petition is verified by plaintiff’s attorney.

The defendant Slaughter moved to dismiss the action, first, because the petition shows that no effort had been made by plaintiff to have the suit instituted by the county attorney of Cochran county before employing private counsel; and, second, because at the time of the attempted incorporation of plaintiff the district had fewer than 150 scholas-tics, and further because the petition failed to allege that the taxes sued for were assessed by the county tax assessor or that the rate had been fixed by the commissioners’ court or that the tax rolls were compiled and approved under the direction of the commissioners’ court.

The court overruled the motion. Whereupon Slaughter filed his first amended original answer and cross-action, containing a general demurrer, eight special exceptions, a general denial, and by way of special answer set forth certain matters which were alleged-to be fatal defects in plaintiff’s attempt to establish an assessment of taxes against the property involved, alleging that such assessments were not included in the tax assessor’s regular tax roll, but under a separate and distinct assessment roll for plaintiff; that the same was never approved by plaintiff’s board of trustees and no order of approval ever entered; that no board of equalization was ever appointed to equalize the taxes; that the same were not equalized nor approved by the commissioners’ court of the county; that said tax rolls were not tabulated properly, in that the amount of the tax is not totalled and the amount of assessed value of each column is not carried forward as provided by law; that notices were not issued of a contemplated raise in tax values; that such assessments were arbitrarily made and without due process of law; that the assessment sheets had never been signed by the tax assessor nor accepted by him; that for the years 1927 and 192S no assessment of the property involved was ever made by the tax assessor; that, after the attempted creation of the district by the Legislature, the trustees arbitrarily divided the district between themselyes without authority; that the district now has twq separate boards of school trustees which has created a greater burden of taxation on defendant, in that it has taken away from this district a portion of the taxable property and largely increased the expense of the original district; that • no notices of alleged delinquencies had ever-been issued to the owners of .the land or to defendant.

By cross-action over against plaintiff, Slaughter sought to recover certain taxes paid by him.for the years 1926 and 1927 under mistake, and seeks to recover against his codefendant Myrick, who he alleges was the owner' of the lands in fee simple during that time.

Myrick answered,'setting up substantially the same defenses pleaded by Slaughter.

The railway company answered, alleging that it bad paid the taxes; but, since Slaughter alone has appealed, no further notice will be taken of the other two defendants.

By supplemental petition, plaintiff alleges that, at the time the board determined to file the suit in question, Cochran county had no legally qualified and. acting county attorney; that it called on the district attorney to institute the suit, who failed to do so, whereupon the board of trustees engaged the services of Daniel A. Blair to represent it as attorney.

The trial was had to the court without a jury. The court sustained a special exception urged by Slaughter against the claim for attorney fees.

The defendant filed a motion requesting the court to file findings of fact and conclusions of law. This request was never complied with.

The judgment of the court overruling Slaughter’s motion to dismiss recites that the court heard the evidence. The evidence introduced upon the motion has not- been brought to this court, either in a statement of facts, or by bill of exception. This being *890 the condition of the record, the presumption in favor of the correctness of the court’s ruling obtains. Reference to the motion seems to indicate that the grounds for dismissal, other than those numbered first and second in the motion, raise issues of law rather than of fact.

In the plaintiff’s first supplemental petition, it is alleged that, at the time plaintiff determined to file the tax suit in question, Cochran county had no qualified and acting county attorney. That plaintiff called upon the district attorney of the Seventy-Second district to institute this suit, and that the district attorney failed and refused to do so; that thereafter the board of trustees entered into a contract with Daniel A. Blair, an attorney at law, as its representative in filing the suit. We must presume that the evidence heard by the court sustains this allegation. We are therefore not required to decide whether the statute, articles 7337 and 7343, require plaintiff to have said suit instituted by the county attorney. We must also presume that the evidence showed that there were 150 scholas-tics in the district. We therefore overrule the first and second propositions urged by the appellant.

By the third proposition it is insisted that, plaintiff having merely alleged that the taxes had been assessed and rendered by the proper officials, and failing to allege that the taxes had been legally levied, assessed, valued, rendered, and reported by the tax assessor, the tax collector, and the commissioners’ court of the county; the petition was insufficient to entitle plaintiff to recover.

The record fails to show that any levy of taxes was made at any time and recqrded upon the minutes of the court. It does show that “tax rolls of R. O. Strickland approved,” and at a called meeting “motion by R. E. Al-sup and seconded by I-I. T. Passmore that Board accept tax rolls as presented by R. C. Strickland carried.” This meeting was held June 15, 1928. The same order was made June 12, 1927. P. L. Thacker, who became secretary of the board in April, 1930, testified as follows: “Relative to the system employed out there for the purpose of raising taxes year by year according to these records the different boards made the raise. The board would meet and pass a motion that the taxes would be raised a certain per cent. Erom the records there, I judge a motion of that kind was made and passed on each year from 1927-¡T928 and 1929, raising the taxes a certain per cent by the board and these tax rolls introduced in the record hqre carry that raise with them in that way.”

It will be seen that there is a failure to show that the board ever levied a tax for any amount for either of the years in question; that no order was ever entered upon the minutes of the board, showing the levy, nor was it shown that the required notices were issued to the record owners of the several tracts of land against which foreclosure of the tax liens is sought by the plaintiff. In Geffert v.

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51 S.W.2d 826 (Court of Appeals of Texas, 1932)

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Bluebook (online)
38 S.W.2d 888, 1931 Tex. App. LEXIS 477, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/slaughter-v-bledsoe-independent-school-dist-texapp-1931.