Texas Co. v. Daugherty

160 S.W. 129, 1913 Tex. App. LEXIS 411
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJuly 5, 1913
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 160 S.W. 129 (Texas Co. v. Daugherty) 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
Texas Co. v. Daugherty, 160 S.W. 129, 1913 Tex. App. LEXIS 411 (Tex. Ct. App. 1913).

Opinions

The Texas Company, a corporation, with its principal office in Houston, Harris county, owned what are termed oil and gas leases upon certain lands situated in Wichita county. The company instituted this suit to enjoin the tax collector, tax assessor, and the county commissioners of Wichita county from enforcing the collection of county and state taxes which had been assessed against the company upon those leases. The merits of the case were determined by the trial court upon an agreed statement of facts which is hereinafter shown, and, from a judgment denying plaintiff the relief sought, it has appealed.

The agreement of the parties referred to is as follows:

"We, the undersigned attorneys for the plaintiff and the defendants in the above-entitled cause, for the purpose of expediting the trial of the said cause, hereby make and enter into the following agreement, to wit:

"(1) It is hereby agreed: That on January 1, 1912, and at all times thereafter until this date, the plaintiff was the owner of whatever rights, titles, and privileges were granted to or conferred upon it by certain instruments in writing and commonly known as oil and gas leases, all of which instruments had been duly executed by the several owners of the several tracts of land situated in Wichita county, Texas, and described in the plaintiff's petition, and that the several instruments conferring said rights were all in the form as shown by Exhibit A attached to the plaintiff's petition; the blanks in said form being properly filled in each of said instruments so as to show the date, the name of the grantor and grantee, the consideration paid (which was a valuable one), the correct description of the land, and each of them providing for the payment to grantor *Page 130 of one-eighth of all oil produced and saved on the premises, and each of them also providing for the payment of a sum in cash annually or quarterly for each gas well, and providing for the beginning of a well within a certain time, or the payment of a certain sum in cash in lieu thereof, and that such payments might be made for a term of years, either three, five, or ten years, and containing all the other provisions as indicated in the form of lease attached to the plaintiff's petition and marked Exhibit A, all the blanks in said form being properly filled in each instance. That all of said instruments were duly acknowledged and filed for record in Wichita county, Texas, and each of said instruments, where the same covered a homestead or any part thereof, were properly signed and acknowledged by both the husband and the wife.

"(2) It is admitted and agreed that the plaintiff prior to January 1, 1912, had entered on certain tracts of said land, and had drilled for oil thereon, and had developed the same, and that Exhibit B shows the state of development on each of said tracts of land on the 1st day of January, 1912; that is, the several tracts upon which wells had been bored, and which were producing oil either by pumping or from flowing wells. And it is further agreed that on the 1st day of January, 1912, none of said leases had been by plaintiff abandoned or surrendered, but that all of them were in force.

"(3) It is admitted and agreed that the owners of the fee of all of said lands had rendered said lands for taxes for the year 1912, and that in valuing said lands for tax purposes they had been assessed and valued at the fair market value of the same, subject to all the rights and privileges of the grantee in said oil and gas leases, and that the value of the rights and privileges conferred by said oil and gas leases were not included in the assessed value of the land against the owner of the fee.

"(4) It is admitted that all the formalities of law requisite to the proper assessment of the taxes on said rights and privileges of the plaintiff were complied with; the taxes being duly and regularly entered on assessment blanks by the assessor as unrendered property, that is, said property was assessed against the plaintiff, although the plaintiff had refused to render the same. And it is also admitted that the valuations of said property were duly and legally equalized by the commissioners' court of Wichita county, sitting as a board of equalization, and that said property was, with the values assessed and fixed by said commissioners' court, sitting as a board of equalization, duly entered upon the tax rolls of Wichita county, Texas, for the year 1912, and now appear upon said tax rolls as a charge against the plaintiff.

"(5) It is agreed that the allegations of the first and second paragraphs of the plaintiff's petition are true. It is admitted that the allegations of the third paragraph of the plaintiff's petition are true to this extent: That the leases were not rendered by plaintiff for taxation, and it is admitted that the tax assessor did assess said rights and privileges, if any, held by virtue of said leases, against the plaintiff for the year 1912, and that the said commissioners' court did equalize and fix the value of the same, and ordered the same entered upon the rolls.

"(6) It is further admitted that the amount of taxes assessed against said property was as stated in the fifth paragraph of the plaintiff's petition, to wit, thirty-one hundred thirty and 10/100 ($3,130.10) dollars.

"(7) It is admitted that the sixth paragraph of the plaintiffs petition properly describes the lands covered by the leases referred to in plaintiff's petition, and shows the acreage and value placed upon said rights of the plaintiff by said commissioners' court.

"(8) It is admitted that the plaintiff never did own the fee in any of the lands described in its petition, but that its rights, if any, in and to such lands or to the use thereof or to any oil or gas that might be produced therefrom were all derived under oil and gas leases substantially in the form as shown by Exhibit A attached to said petition.

"(9) It is admitted that the plaintiff has paid to the tax collector of Wichita county, Texas, all taxes assessed against it upon all property rendered by it for taxes for the year 1912, in Wichita county, Texas.

"(10) It is admitted that the allegations of the ninth paragraph of the plaintiff's petition are true, in so far as it alleged the protest by plaintiff and disregard thereof by the commissioners' court.

"(11) It is further admitted that the plaintiff has paid taxes on all personal property owned by it for the year 1912 that was rendered by it, and upon all personal property owned by it for said year 1912, unless the rights and privileges conferred by said oil and gas leases were personal property; they not having paid any taxes upon any rights or privileges granted or conferred upon it by said oil or gas leases. It is also admitted that the plaintiff has paid taxes upon all oil which it had actually produced and had on hand on January 1, 1912, in Wichita county, Texas; that is, it paid taxes on all oil which it had stored in tanks in Wichita county, Texas, on said date.

"(12) It is admitted that the plaintiff is a private corporation, and that its general and principal office and place of business and domicile was at all times during the year 1912 at Houston, in Harris county, Texas, and that during all of said time it kept its, archives, records, documents, files, muniments of title, muniments of rights, licenses, and all of the oil and gas leases for lands in Wichita county, Texas, and including all the *Page 131 leases involved in this suit, at Houston, in Harris county, Texas. (This admission is intended to cover simply the paper evidence of the leases referred to.)

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Allison v. Ellis
248 S.W. 814 (Court of Appeals of Texas, 1923)
Basham v. Holcombe
240 S.W. 691 (Court of Appeals of Texas, 1922)
Brown v. First Nat. Bank of Corsicana
175 S.W. 1122 (Court of Appeals of Texas, 1915)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
160 S.W. 129, 1913 Tex. App. LEXIS 411, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/texas-co-v-daugherty-texapp-1913.