POWERS, Justice.
San Marcos Consolidated Independent School District, in a suit to recover delinquent
ad valorem
taxes for the year 1982, recovered summary judgment against Vale-ro Transmission Company in the principal amount of $46,436.05, together with penalties, interest, attorneys’ fees, and costs. Valero appeals. We will reverse the judgment and remand the cause to district court.
THE CONTROVERSY
The 1982
ad valorem
taxes in controversy result from appraised values assigned Valero’s properties by the Hays County Appraisal District. Valero protested the assigned values to the Hays County Appraisal Review Board, initiating thereby the administrative proceeding authorized and governed by Tex.Tax Code Ann. Chapter 41 (§§ 41.41-41.69) (1982 & Supp.1989). The Board sustained the assigned values in a written order. Valero sued thereafter in district court for judicial review of the Board’s order, exercising the statutory right of “appeal” provided and governed by Chapter 42 (§§ 42.01-42.43) of the Tax
Code. Valero’s Chapter 42 “appeal” remains undecided and pending in the district court.
San Marcos sued afterwards, in the same court, to recover the 1982
ad valorem
taxes. Suits of this kind, by a “taxing unit," may be brought at any time after
ad valo-rem
taxes become “delinquent” (ordinarily they become delinquent if not paid by February 1), the cause of action being governed by Chapter 33 (§§ 33.41-33.54) of the Tax Code. Section 33.47 provides that certified copies of the entries on the current-tax roll and delinquent-tax roll constitute
;prima facie
evidence sufficient for judgment in favor of the taxing unit, and San Marcos moved for summary judgment on that basis. The district court sustained the motion, rendering judgment accordingly. Tex.R.Civ.P.Ann. 166a (1976 & Supp.1989). This appeal ensued.
Valero’s appeal requires that we determine whether a district court may permissibly render final judgment in a taxing unit’s Chapter 33 action, for delinquent taxes, while the property owner’s Chapter 42 action, assailing the appraised value upon which those taxes were calculated, remains undecided and pending in district court.
WANT OF SUBJECT-MATTER JURISDICTION
Section 41.41 of the Code lists eight categories of protest that a property owner may bring before an appraisal review board in an administrative proceeding governed by Chapter 41. The first pertains to the appraised value assigned by the appraisal district (§ 41.41(1)). Section 41.-47(a) requires the board to determine the property owner’s protest in a written order. Section 41.47(d) provides “[t]he board shall deliver by certified mail a notice of issuance of the order and a copy of the order to the property owner and the chief appraiser.”
In opposition to San Marcos’s motion for summary judgment, Valero filed an affidavit stating that the Hays County Appraisal Review Board had not delivered, via certified mail, the notice and copy required by § 41.47(d). Valero contends on appeal that the Board’s omission in that regard deprived the district court of subject-matter jurisdiction in the
present
suit — San Marcos’s Chapter 33 suit to recover the delinquent 1982 taxes. We disagree.
In support of its contention, Valero urges the decision and opinion in
New v. Dallas Appraisal Review Board,
734 S.W. 2d 712 (Tex.App.1987, writ denied). In
New,
the court determined that the summary judgment record did not establish conclusively that the appraisal district had delivered to New, as required by § 25.19(a) of the Code, a notice of the increased appraisal value assigned his property. In consequence, the appraisal district acquired no “jurisdiction” to increase the appraised value of New’s property, the purported increase was “void,” and the exclusive-remedies provisions of the Code never became binding upon New. As a result, New was not precluded from bringing an
original
action in district court (a declaratory-judgment action) to “set aside” the increased appraised value assigned his property by the appraisal district.
New,
734 S.W.2d at 714-16.
Valero would apply this reason
ing by analogy to the alleged failure of the Board to furnish Valero the notice and copy required by § 41.47(d).
For purposes of discussion only, we will accept the
New
rationale and the use Vale-ro would make of it by analogy. Nevertheless, one may not logically conclude that the district court lacked the power to hear and determine San Marcos’s Chapter 33 suit for delinquent taxes. If it is true that the Hays County Appraisal Review Board failed to deliver the requisite notice and copy, in the manner specified in § 41.47(d), that omission would only deprive the district court of jurisdiction to determine Vale-ro’s “appeal” from the Board’s order deciding Valero’s protest — Valero’s statutory cause of action against the Hays County Appraisal Review Board, authorized and governed by Chapter 42 of the Code.
See
§§ 42.01-42.05, 42.21, 42.24-42.27.
That
cause of action was
not
the cause of action decided by the district court in the present case, in which a taxing unit has sued Vale-ro to recover delinquent taxes in a cause of action governed by Chapter 33 of the Code.
We therefore overrule Valero’s point of error that the district court lacked subject-matter jurisdiction because the Hays County Appraisal Review Board failed to deliver the notice and copy required by § 41.47(d) of the Code.
WANT OF “RIPENESS”
Valero also contends on appeal that San Marcos’s Chapter 33 cause of action, for delinquent 1982 taxes, was “premature” and not “ripe” for adjudication because Valero’s own Chapter 42 action against the Hays County Appraisal Review Board, for judicial review of the Board’s order, was pending and undecided in district court.
We agree.
Chapters 33 and 42 of the Code refer to causes of action that are distinctly and inherently different. Chapter 33
regulates
causes of action brought by taxing units to recover delinquent taxes from property owners who have not paid them. Section 33.41 requires that the attendant lawsuit be brought against the property owner “in a court of competent jurisdiction for the county in which the tax was imposed.” When the court adjudicates that cause of action, it does so in an exercise of its
original jurisdiction.
Tex. Const.Ann. art. 8, § 15; art. 5, §§ 8, 16 (1955 & Supp.1989);
see Mexia Independent School Dist. v. City of Mexia,
134 Tex. 95, 133 S.W.2d 118, 123 (1939).
Chapter 42, on the other hand,
creates
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POWERS, Justice.
San Marcos Consolidated Independent School District, in a suit to recover delinquent
ad valorem
taxes for the year 1982, recovered summary judgment against Vale-ro Transmission Company in the principal amount of $46,436.05, together with penalties, interest, attorneys’ fees, and costs. Valero appeals. We will reverse the judgment and remand the cause to district court.
THE CONTROVERSY
The 1982
ad valorem
taxes in controversy result from appraised values assigned Valero’s properties by the Hays County Appraisal District. Valero protested the assigned values to the Hays County Appraisal Review Board, initiating thereby the administrative proceeding authorized and governed by Tex.Tax Code Ann. Chapter 41 (§§ 41.41-41.69) (1982 & Supp.1989). The Board sustained the assigned values in a written order. Valero sued thereafter in district court for judicial review of the Board’s order, exercising the statutory right of “appeal” provided and governed by Chapter 42 (§§ 42.01-42.43) of the Tax
Code. Valero’s Chapter 42 “appeal” remains undecided and pending in the district court.
San Marcos sued afterwards, in the same court, to recover the 1982
ad valorem
taxes. Suits of this kind, by a “taxing unit," may be brought at any time after
ad valo-rem
taxes become “delinquent” (ordinarily they become delinquent if not paid by February 1), the cause of action being governed by Chapter 33 (§§ 33.41-33.54) of the Tax Code. Section 33.47 provides that certified copies of the entries on the current-tax roll and delinquent-tax roll constitute
;prima facie
evidence sufficient for judgment in favor of the taxing unit, and San Marcos moved for summary judgment on that basis. The district court sustained the motion, rendering judgment accordingly. Tex.R.Civ.P.Ann. 166a (1976 & Supp.1989). This appeal ensued.
Valero’s appeal requires that we determine whether a district court may permissibly render final judgment in a taxing unit’s Chapter 33 action, for delinquent taxes, while the property owner’s Chapter 42 action, assailing the appraised value upon which those taxes were calculated, remains undecided and pending in district court.
WANT OF SUBJECT-MATTER JURISDICTION
Section 41.41 of the Code lists eight categories of protest that a property owner may bring before an appraisal review board in an administrative proceeding governed by Chapter 41. The first pertains to the appraised value assigned by the appraisal district (§ 41.41(1)). Section 41.-47(a) requires the board to determine the property owner’s protest in a written order. Section 41.47(d) provides “[t]he board shall deliver by certified mail a notice of issuance of the order and a copy of the order to the property owner and the chief appraiser.”
In opposition to San Marcos’s motion for summary judgment, Valero filed an affidavit stating that the Hays County Appraisal Review Board had not delivered, via certified mail, the notice and copy required by § 41.47(d). Valero contends on appeal that the Board’s omission in that regard deprived the district court of subject-matter jurisdiction in the
present
suit — San Marcos’s Chapter 33 suit to recover the delinquent 1982 taxes. We disagree.
In support of its contention, Valero urges the decision and opinion in
New v. Dallas Appraisal Review Board,
734 S.W. 2d 712 (Tex.App.1987, writ denied). In
New,
the court determined that the summary judgment record did not establish conclusively that the appraisal district had delivered to New, as required by § 25.19(a) of the Code, a notice of the increased appraisal value assigned his property. In consequence, the appraisal district acquired no “jurisdiction” to increase the appraised value of New’s property, the purported increase was “void,” and the exclusive-remedies provisions of the Code never became binding upon New. As a result, New was not precluded from bringing an
original
action in district court (a declaratory-judgment action) to “set aside” the increased appraised value assigned his property by the appraisal district.
New,
734 S.W.2d at 714-16.
Valero would apply this reason
ing by analogy to the alleged failure of the Board to furnish Valero the notice and copy required by § 41.47(d).
For purposes of discussion only, we will accept the
New
rationale and the use Vale-ro would make of it by analogy. Nevertheless, one may not logically conclude that the district court lacked the power to hear and determine San Marcos’s Chapter 33 suit for delinquent taxes. If it is true that the Hays County Appraisal Review Board failed to deliver the requisite notice and copy, in the manner specified in § 41.47(d), that omission would only deprive the district court of jurisdiction to determine Vale-ro’s “appeal” from the Board’s order deciding Valero’s protest — Valero’s statutory cause of action against the Hays County Appraisal Review Board, authorized and governed by Chapter 42 of the Code.
See
§§ 42.01-42.05, 42.21, 42.24-42.27.
That
cause of action was
not
the cause of action decided by the district court in the present case, in which a taxing unit has sued Vale-ro to recover delinquent taxes in a cause of action governed by Chapter 33 of the Code.
We therefore overrule Valero’s point of error that the district court lacked subject-matter jurisdiction because the Hays County Appraisal Review Board failed to deliver the notice and copy required by § 41.47(d) of the Code.
WANT OF “RIPENESS”
Valero also contends on appeal that San Marcos’s Chapter 33 cause of action, for delinquent 1982 taxes, was “premature” and not “ripe” for adjudication because Valero’s own Chapter 42 action against the Hays County Appraisal Review Board, for judicial review of the Board’s order, was pending and undecided in district court.
We agree.
Chapters 33 and 42 of the Code refer to causes of action that are distinctly and inherently different. Chapter 33
regulates
causes of action brought by taxing units to recover delinquent taxes from property owners who have not paid them. Section 33.41 requires that the attendant lawsuit be brought against the property owner “in a court of competent jurisdiction for the county in which the tax was imposed.” When the court adjudicates that cause of action, it does so in an exercise of its
original jurisdiction.
Tex. Const.Ann. art. 8, § 15; art. 5, §§ 8, 16 (1955 & Supp.1989);
see Mexia Independent School Dist. v. City of Mexia,
134 Tex. 95, 133 S.W.2d 118, 123 (1939).
Chapter 42, on the other hand,
creates
a new cause of action in favor of a party who wishes to “appeal” the decision of an appraisal review board, given in the board’s adjudication of a property owner's protest on any of the eight grounds set out in § 41.41, or a taxing unit’s challenge on any of the grounds listed in § 41.03. Notice of the “appeal” is required (§ 42.06), and the cause of action is initiated in district court by the filing of a petition against the board within a specified time (§ 42.21). Even though the “scope of review” allowed the district court is that implied by the familiar expression “trial de novo,” the court’s review depends upon an antecedent administrative proceeding culminating in a decision and order of the appraisal review board. The “appeal” is thus an integral part of the systematic administrative scheme that the Legislature
substituted
for the pre-Code system in which district courts exercised their original jurisdiction to prevent unconstitutional taxation, but wherein the taxpayer ordinarily lost owing to various legal doctrines, controlling presumptions, and burdens of proof that were judicially interposed to protect the regularity of public revenues.
Valero Transmission Co. v. Hays Consolidated Independent School Dist.,
704 S.W.2d 857, 861 (Tex.App.1985, writ ref’d n.r.e.);
Texas Architectural Aggregate v. Adams,
690 S.W.2d 640, 642 (Tex.App.1985, no writ). Consequently, when a district court adjudicates a Chapter 42 “appeal” it exercises a special
statutory jurisdiction
conferred upon it by the Legislature, and
not
the court’s
original
jurisdiction.
The Code contains no provision that expressly precludes the filing of, or recovery of judgment in, a taxing unit’s Chapter 33 suit against a property owner whose Chapter 42 “appeal” is pending and undecided in district court, where the tax claimed in the former suit results from an appraised value attacked as invalid in the latter. We believe, however, that the Code implies that a judgment may not be recovered in the Chapter 33 suit until the Chapter 42 “appeal” has been finally determined, notwithstanding the different natures of the two causes of action.
Before enactment of the Code, district courts exercised their equity powers to defer the adjudication of a taxing unit’s collection suit when the property owner paid or tendered the undisputed amount of his taxes, before they became delinquent, and pursued in a proper proceeding his right to have his taxes calculated correctly.
State v. Hoffman,
109 Tex. 133, 201 S.W. 653, 654 (1918);
Blanc v. Meyer,
59 Tex. 89, 92 (1883);
Republic Ins. Co. v. Highland Park Independent School Dist.,
57 S.W.2d 627, 631 (Tex.Civ.App.1933, writ ref’d). The Legislature inserted in the Code a provision for the “conditional” payment of taxes by a property owner who pursues his administrative remedy before the appraisal review board — he
may
pay the greater of two sums: the amount of tax owed on the undisputed portion of his appraisal value, or the amount of tax he paid the previous year. (§ 31.071(b)). More to the point, for present purposes, the Legislature provided that the taxpayer
forfeits
his right to an adjudication, on “appeal” to district court,
unless
he pays the greater of the two
sums. (§ 42.08).
Because the Legislature thus secured to taxing units, for all practical purposes, their requirement for an uninterrupted revenue, it is unreasonable to suppose that the Legislature intended that a taxing unit’s Chapter 33 suit should go forward to judgment before the district court adjudicates the property owner’s Chapter 42 “appeal.” That course of proceeding is not only unnecessary under § 42.08, it contradicts the orderly and systematic scheme provided in the Code which purports carefully to correlate, adjust, and protect the interests of taxing units
and
of those property owners who protest the actions of appraisal districts and make the payment required by § 42.08 or that permitted by § 31.071(b). We hold the Code provisions
necessarily imply
that judgment may not be recovered in a Chapter 33 suit until the property owner’s pending Chapter 42 “appeal” has been finally determined.
Irrespective of the Code provisions, and their implications, we reach the same conclusion. on other grounds when we look to “the inherent interrelation of the subject matter of the two suits,” and the practical results of allowing a Chapter 33 suit to proceed to judgment before the Chapter 42 “appeal” has been finally determined.
Timon v. Dolan,
244 S.W.2d 985, 987 (Tex.Civ.App.1951, no writ),
cited with approval in Dolenz v. Continental National Bank of Fort Worth,
620 S.W.2d 572, 575 (Tex.1981).
Dolan
held that a trial court did not abuse its discretion in abating a plaintiff’s suit, as next friend for her husband, until the husband’s want of mental capacity had been determined in another suit. The same principle was applied in
North Texas Coach Co. v. Morten,
92 S.W.2d 263 (Tex.Civ.App.1935, no writ) to defer judgment in an original action in district court pending final determination of an “appeal” taken to district court from an administrative order of the Texas Railroad Commission. The similarity of
Morten
to the present case is obvious. In the present suit, San Marcos’s legal right to the taxes claimed in its Chapter 33 suit depends upon the validity of the appraised value assigned Yalero’s property, but under § 42.09 of the Code, Valero may not defend in San Marcos’s suit on the ground that the appraised value is invalid. Valero may have that matter determined
only
in its own Chapter 42 suit (§ 42.09). Orderly procedure requires, therefore, that the two suits be consolidated under Tex.R. Civ.P.Ann. 174(a) (1976), or that judgment in the Chapter 33 suit be deferred until Valero’s Chapter 42 “appeal” has been finally determined.
Cf. Morten,
92 S.W.2d at 266.
We should mention in conclusion that San Marcos contends on appeal that we must sustain the summary judgment below because Valero failed to comply with the tax-payment requirement of § 42.08(b), forfeiting thereby its statutory right to judicial review of the appraisal-board order. That may or may not be the case, but the issue is one determinable only in Valero’s Chapter 42 suit for judicial review, or in a consolidated proceeding, followed by the proper judgment therein if Valero did in fact fail to comply with the statute.
We hold San Marcos was not entitled to summary judgment because the judgment was premature for the reasons given above. We therefore reverse the judgment below, and remand the cause to the district court for proceedings not inconsistent with our opinion.