St. Joseph Orthodox Christian Church and American Bank v. Spring Branch Independent School District, Harris County, Harris County Education Department, Port of Houston of Harris County Authority, Harris County Flood Control District, Harris County Hospital District and City of Houston
This text of St. Joseph Orthodox Christian Church and American Bank v. Spring Branch Independent School District, Harris County, Harris County Education Department, Port of Houston of Harris County Authority, Harris County Flood Control District, Harris County Hospital District and City of Houston (St. Joseph Orthodox Christian Church and American Bank v. Spring Branch Independent School District, Harris County, Harris County Education Department, Port of Houston of Harris County Authority, Harris County Flood Control District, Harris County Hospital District and City of Houston) 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.
Opinion
Affirmed and Opinion filed April 24, 2003.
In The
Fourteenth Court of Appeals
_______________
NO. 14-01-00911-CV
ST. JOSEPH ORTHODOX CHRISTIAN CHURCH and
AMERICAN BANK, Appellants
V.
SPRING BRANCH INDEPENDENT SCHOOL DISTRICT, HARRIS
COUNTY, HARRIS COUNTY EDUCATION DEPARTMENT,
PORT OF HOUSTON OF HARRIS COUNTY AUTHORITY,
HARRIS COUNTY FLOOD CONTROL DISTRICT, HARRIS
COUNTY HOSPITAL DISTRICT, and CITY OF HOUSTON, Appellees
______________________________________________________________________
On Appeal from the 334th District Court
Harris County, Texas
Trial Court Cause No. 00-15899
______________________________________________________________________
O P I N I O N
In this ad valorem property tax case, St. Joseph Orthodox Christian Church and American Bank (collectively, the “church”) appeals a summary judgment entered in favor of Spring Branch Independent School District, Harris County, Harris County Education Department, Port of Houston of Harris County Authority, Harris County Flood Control District, Harris County Hospital District, and the City of Houston (collectively, the “taxing units”) on the grounds that the church was entitled to an exemption from the tax and the trial court erred in granting the summary judgment despite the church’s counterclaim. We affirm.
Background
The church purchased a parcel of land (the “property”) in March of 1997, and the taxing units later sued the church for property tax[1] on the property for the portion of 1997 that the church owned it. After the church filed a general denial (only), the taxing units filed a motion for summary judgment on their claim for unpaid taxes. The church’s response asserted that it was exempt from paying tax on the property[2] and had attached a copy of the church’s pending application for an exemption on the property. Thereafter, the church filed a “counterclaim” against Harris County Appraisal District (“HCAD”), which was not then a party to the case, (1) asserting a due process violation in the alleged manner that the Harris County Appraisal Review Board (the “ARB”) had denied the church’s request for exemption; (2) reiterating its entitlement to the exemption; and (3) requesting that the taxing units’ claim against it for unpaid taxes be denied. The trial court granted the taxing units a summary judgment (the “summary judgment”) against the church for the unpaid taxes without mention of the “counterclaim.”
Exemption Claim
The church’s three issues on appeal contend that the trial court erred by: (1) determining that the availability of the church’s exemption for 1997 was controlled by whether the property was owned on January 1 of that year, rather than the church’s exempt status on that date; (2) not giving credence to the church’s late application for exemption; and (3) granting summary judgment against the church despite its then recently filed counterclaim. Our resolution turns on the statutory separation of actions to collect taxes and seek an exemption.
With exceptions not applicable here,[3] a property owner may not raise, in defense of a suit (by a taxing unit) to enforce collection of delinquent taxes,[4] any grounds of protest for which the Property Tax Code[5] (the “code”) provides procedures for adjudication. Tex. Tax Code Ann. § 42.09 (Vernon 2001). Rather, those procedures are exclusive. Id. § 42.09(a).
One such ground of protest applies to the denial of an application for exemption from property tax. See id. § 41.41(a)(4).[6] In this regard, the code prescribes procedures by which a taxpayer asserts such a protest, appeals the determination of a protest, and receives any resulting correction and refund.[7] To this extent, a taxpayer’s claim of entitlement to an exemption may not be raised in defense of an action for collection of delinquent taxes.
In this case, as against the taxing unit’s claim for unpaid taxes, the church had no right to assert, and the trial court had no jurisdiction to consider, the church’s claim of entitlement to an exemption.[8] Therefore, any such claim of entitlement could not preclude, and is not a ground to reverse, the summary judgment for unpaid taxes in favor of the taxing units. Accordingly, the church’s three issues are overruled to the extent they assert that claim.
Counterclaim
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St. Joseph Orthodox Christian Church and American Bank v. Spring Branch Independent School District, Harris County, Harris County Education Department, Port of Houston of Harris County Authority, Harris County Flood Control District, Harris County Hospital District and City of Houston, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/st-joseph-orthodox-christian-church-and-american-bank-v-spring-branch-texapp-2003.