West Texas Hotel Co. v. City of El Paso

83 S.W.2d 772, 1935 Tex. App. LEXIS 633
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMay 2, 1935
DocketNo. 3186.
StatusPublished
Cited by23 cases

This text of 83 S.W.2d 772 (West Texas Hotel Co. v. City of El Paso) 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
West Texas Hotel Co. v. City of El Paso, 83 S.W.2d 772, 1935 Tex. App. LEXIS 633 (Tex. Ct. App. 1935).

Opinion

WALTHALL, Justice.

This suit was brought by appellant against appellees to cancel the raise in appellant’s taxes on the property involved in the city of El Paso (Hotel Hussmann) *773 and to have the order of the city board of equalization raising the value of said property declared void, and to require the city of El Paso and its collector to accept the amount of taxes tendered in full of taxes due for the year 1933, and to enjoin appellees, the city of El Paso, and the collector of taxes, from collecting the increase in taxes complained of.

Appellees accept the statement of the nature and result of the suit as set out in appellant’s brief as substantially correct. We adopt the statement as our own. It is as follows:

The appellant, as plaintiff, filed this suit in the Forty-First district court of El Paso county, on February 22, 1934, against the city of El Paso and its mayor and four aldermen, constituting its city council and board of equalization, and against J. E. Anderson, its tax assessor and collector, seeking relief against 1933 taxes' alleged to have been illegally assessed against plaintiff’s property known as Hotel Huss-mann, in the city of El Paso, Tex., and the furnishings therein.

The plaintiff, by its amended petition, alleged in brief as follows: That said city is governed by a city council composed of the mayor and four aldermen, and has taxing power similar to that provided for in the General Statutes, and that the mayor and aldermen constitute the board of equalization, and that a quorum shall consist of three, the powers of said board being practically identical with the powers possessed by commissioners’ courts sitting as boards of equalization. That property owners are required to render property for taxation, and if any raise is made, notice shall be given and a hearing afforded.

That plaintiff was the owner on March 1, 1933, the date on which property is assessed, of the Hotel Hitssmann property in said city, and of the furnishings therein, and that the forms provided for rendition had three columns, one headed “100% Valuation,” the next, “Assessed Valuation,” and the third, “Assessed Valuation as Fixed by Board of Equalization.” That for some years prior to 1933 it had uniformly been the custom of said city to assess and charge taxes on 70 per cent, of the 100 per cent, valuation, and that such custom was in force when plaintiff, on June 12, 1933, made its rendition showing on said form in the column “100% Valuation,” $400,000; and under “Assessed Valuation” 70 per cent, thereof, or $280,-000, and as to furnishings showing on said form under the 100 per cent, valuation, $65,000, and under the Assessed Valuation heading, $45,500. And that said form so filled in was accepted by the city assessor and placed among the records, and that when the board of equalization met, notice was given to plaintiff to appear and show cause why the land and building should not be assessed at $544,130, instead of $280,000, but that no notice was given respecting any raise in the personal property. That plaintiff’s agents appeared before the board in response to said notice, at the time and place set, and that only two' members, to wit, 'Mr. Galbraith and Mr, Allen, were present, but were undertaking to act as • the board. That they refused a hearing and denied plaintiff any relief on account of a plan adopted at a prior meeting, at which plaintiff was not present nor represented, to the effect that it was necessary in order to enable the city to raise revenue .to meet its obligations that valuations for taxable properties be kept on the 1932 valuation basis, which was a basis arrived at on a theory or system set up by so-called tax experts, which was arbitrary and capricious, and wholly disregarded market values, and hence was illegal, and that no legal action of the board making a raise was had. And that plaintiff received notice in December, 1933, to the effect that plaintiff’s alleged taxes for 1933 on its said property were $13,592.92, being $2.25 per $100 of assessed valuation on $544,130 as to land and building, and $60,-000 as to furnishings.

That, calculated under plaintiff’s rendition, the taxes would be $6,300 as to the land and building, and $1,023.75 as to the furnishings, and plaintiff had tendered said sum before suing, but same was refused, and it still tenders same in full of its said taxes.

It was alleged that its property was rendered at its fair market value and for more than the property could have been sold for on March 1, 1933, and that said figures placed by the board are grossly excessive, and it would have sold at the figures stated in its rendition and that the raise was illegal and void because of the arbitrary and capricious attitude of the board, if two members can be a board, or if not this, because no legal action of the board was had in making the raise, and because the system or theory followed by *774 the city was illegal in that market value or intrinsic value was disregarded and valuations placed on the property were such as to raise revenue and defray the city’s expenses and obligations, and was void, further, because said, valuations were arbitrarily and illegally arrived at by said board because in 1925 the city employed Stoner & Pollack, alleged tax valuation experts, to set up a system or theory of valuations; and again in 1929 employed another alleged expert, George Ehrenborg, of Dallas, to make a similar set-up, and that both of said alleged experts followed a scheme of obtaining the hurried opinion of several real estate men as to unit value, and then, following out some arbitrary or unreasonable theory or system, assigned different values to different parts of the same lot, and disregarded rental history or anything but said scheme, and as to improvements, the scheme followed was to ascertain the number of square feet of floor space in the improvement and multiply that by the alleged cost of replacement and then fix the value at such figure without regard to anything else, and that they made card index reports to the city, and especially as to plaintiff’s property, and that the city has constantly since followed said scheme and did so in arriving at the $544,130 value placed on plaintiff’s property now in question, and regardless of its market or intrinsic value.

Tflat for a number of years prior to 1933 th.e city had uniformly considered 70 per cent, of the experts’ values as the assessed valuation on which taxes were ■ charged, and as to 1932 taxes a blanket 'reduction of 10 per cent, on the experts’ figures was granted’. That, under the scheme of the said experts, the 100 per cent, value of the ground was put at $288,720 and the building at $574,950, a total of $863,670. Seventy per cent, of that is $604,570, and taking the 10 per cent, .reduction, would make $544,113, or practically the figure to which the attempt was made to raise it.

It was alleged, further, that plaintiff’s said taxes were illegally assessed because the city followed such scheme or theory and without regard to the market value or intrinsic value, and, further, that the board acted on a misconception of its duty, and in that it conceived its duty to be merely to equalize taxes rather than to assess property at its fair market value or intrinsic value; and, further, because the principal consideration in actuating the board to maintain the system of values was to raise sufficient revenue to jneet the city’s obligations in disregard of the property values.

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Bluebook (online)
83 S.W.2d 772, 1935 Tex. App. LEXIS 633, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/west-texas-hotel-co-v-city-of-el-paso-texapp-1935.