Union Independent School Dist. v. Sawyer

259 S.W. 637, 1924 Tex. App. LEXIS 180
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMarch 5, 1924
DocketNo. 2249.
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 259 S.W. 637 (Union Independent School Dist. v. Sawyer) 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
Union Independent School Dist. v. Sawyer, 259 S.W. 637, 1924 Tex. App. LEXIS 180 (Tex. Ct. App. 1924).

Opinion

RANDOLPH, J.

Appellant filed suit against appellee in the district court of Terry county, Tex., to recover the sum of $974.40, alleged to be due and owing by him to appellant for the year 1921, as taxes for that year, upon certain lands of appellee, lying within the bounds of said district, and for the sum of $1,376, likewise due for taxes upon said land for the year 1922, together with 6 per cent, interest and 10 per cent, penalty on each of said sums, and for a foreclosure of its tax lien securing same upon said described land.

Appellee filed his answer and set up: (1) That plaintiff (appellant) was not entitled to recover the amount sued for because said sum is based upon a valuation greater than the reasonable cash market value of the land at the time of the rendition and is an ex *638 cessive valuation and was assessed by plaintiff at a sum in excess of that provided by law in such cases and is not an equal and uniform valuation with other property in said district; (2) that said valuation as fixed by plaintiff’s board was not fixed in accordance with and as provided by law, but was so fixed arbitrarily and fraudulently, in that it was not fixed according to the evidence produced before said board; (3) defendant tenders into court the taxes on all his property at the rate fixed by the board, but at the ' reasonable cash market value of said land at time of rendition, as alleged to have been shown by the evidence produced before the board; (4) defendant also alleges fraud and deceit in the manner of the taking of his land into the boundaries of the district, in that plaintiff agreed with and promised defendant that if he would add said land to the district the trustees would erect a schoolhouse on or near said land, which they have entirely failed to do.

The case was tried before the court without the intervention of a jury, and the court rendered a general judgment that the plaintiff take nothing by its suit. There are no findings of fact or conclusions of law filed by the trial court, but the case is before us on a statement of facts.

The trial court having filed no conclusions of law, we can only determine the grounds upon which he rendered his judgment by considering the whole case upon the facts and the law applicable thereto. ”

Appellant’s main contention in the case is that the trial court should not have rendered judgment in favor of appellee upon his plea that the taxes were levied upon his land at a valuation greater than the reasonable cash value of the land at the time of the rendition, and that such question could not be raised in the absence of a plea of discrimination.

Excessive valuation may exist to such extent as to raise a presumption of fraud and would thus be a violation of the constitutional requirement that all taxation shall be equal and uniform. Johnson v. Holland, 17 Tex. Civ. App. 210, 43 S. W. 72. But it does not necessarily follow that a slight excess in valuation, in the absence of fraud or discrimination, will be permitted to defeat a tax levy. In this case the evidence, in the first place, fails to show an excessive assessment. It is true that appellee, in his testimony, attempts to show that his land was excessively valued; but his testimony, as a whole, shows that the value placed upon such land was not greater than the value he placed on it for sale, or was not greater than the value he actually reeéived in the sale of some of it.

The question is also presented that the value of some of the land was greater than that of the other of appellee’s land, but the ■ evidence nowhere discloses between what sections of land this difference existed. We are not informed by the evidence which particular sections were good land and entitled to the high valuation, and which were not so •good and entitled to a lower valuation. There is no such proof as to enable the trial court or this court to determine upon what tracts of land there was an excessive valuation, ora discrimination between tracts. Again, if the taxes upon all of the land belonging to appellee within a certain zone were uniformly "and equally taxed, the fact that some of it was of greater value than other land of his so taxed would not authorize the court to hold such valuation and assessment illegal, where it does ,no't appear that the land of less value was taxed beyond its reasonable cash market value. If the taxes were levied upon the whole body of land, without reference to whether it was good, bad, or indifferent, appellee would benefit by the lower valuation placed upon his land having the greatest value, and this would, as to his taxes, equalize them; the valuation of the bad land being placed at or below its actual market value. The evidence does not disclose that any of appellee’s land was valued for taxation purposes at more than its actual cash value.

Appellee complains that the trustees first estimated the amount of money that would be needed for 'the support and operation of the school, and then arbitrarily placed the valuation of all the land in the district at such a sum as would bring in the necessary money to meet same, and therefore their acts in levying and assessing such taxes were void.

We cannot agree that such conduct in this ease was reprehensible. It was the duty of the trustees to make their estimate, to establish a budget, and to count the cost before incurring the expenses in the operation of the school. It was their duty to levy such taxes at a valuation of the property in , the district as -would bring in only the necessary money to meet the expenses. We have authority for this proposition that the cost must be counted in advance. Verses 28, 29,' 30, 14th chapter of St. Luke.

If in estimating the amount of money necessary to run the school business the trustees had found they would only need a sum that would justify a valuation way below the reasonable cash market value and should have placed a very low valuation on the property, certainly no reasonable man could or would protest.

The cases cited by appellee do not controvert what we have said, but we do think that they establish that there must be an element of fraud in arriving at the valuation, and that an excessive valuation is only evidence of fraud to that extent, and that a slight excess in valuation will not cause the *639 courts to impute fraud in the action of the trustees.

In Johnson v. Holland, 17 Tex. Civ. App. 212, 43 S. W. 72, the Court of Civil Appeals lays down the rule:

“That where the board of equalization, in raising or fixing the value of property, acts from corrupt or fraudulent motives, and in violation of the laws of the state, whether constitutional or statutory, their acts are voidable at the suit of the party aggrieved, and that the courts of the state having jurisdiction over the amount involved and the subject matter may, in a proper case, declare such acts to be void. * » *

And further that court said:

“To arbitrarily value one person’s property for taxation at largely more than it is worth, while another’s, subject to the same rate of taxation, is placed at greatly less than its value, is a clear violation of our constitution, because the tax in such a ease is not equal and uniform, and the property of the county is not taxed in proportion to its value.”

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Bluebook (online)
259 S.W. 637, 1924 Tex. App. LEXIS 180, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/union-independent-school-dist-v-sawyer-texapp-1924.