Wright v. State

80 S.W.2d 1015
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedFebruary 18, 1935
DocketNo. 4352.
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 80 S.W.2d 1015 (Wright v. State) 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
Wright v. State, 80 S.W.2d 1015 (Tex. Ct. App. 1935).

Opinion

HALL, Chief Justice.

' The state of Texas, as plaintiff, sued Mrs. Wright and her husband, alleging that defendants justly owed it the amount of taxes, interest, penalties, and costs for the year 1932 as set out in the schedule attached to ■said petition, on approximately 30,000 acres ■ of land fully described in the petition and situated in Cochran county. The prayer is for •judgment for- the amount of taxes, Interest, and penalties due, with foreclosure of the tax lien upon eight tracts of land against which the taxes set out in the schedule were assessed. No question is raised as to the sufficiency of the petition.

The Wrights answered by general demurrer, general denial, and further that no proper orders had been made by the commissioners’ court levying said taxes; that the claim for taxes was void, being in violation of section 1, art. 8, of the state Constitution, which requires taxes to be equal and uniform and in proportion to the value of the property; that neither the assessor nor the commissioners’ *1016 court assessed, or caused to ¡be assessed and equalized for taxation, minerals, oil and gas in and under the lands in said county where such minerals had been segregated from the fee by deeds on record in the county; that in equalizing the taxes the commissioners’ court did not, with reference to land, observe the requirements of article 7206 (Rev. St. 1925), which provides that both improved and unimproved lands shall be divided into three classes each, but instead said court and assessor adopted an arbitrary plan or scheme of valuing lands contrary to said section of the Constitution and said article 7206. Said scheme- or plan was that all lands which were by said court classed as agricultural were divided for taxation purposes into three classes without regard to location or proximity to or remoteness from the county seat, schools, churches, highways, or without regard to whether said lands were located in a thickly settled or sparsely settled portion of the county, thereby placing lands of plaintiffs in error at a higher value for taxation than lands of the same quality and classification belonging to other persons whose lands were located in and near schools, highways, the county seat, towns, and in thickly settled communities; that with respect to personal property, especially cattle and horses, a flat or uniform value of $20 per head was fixed, notwithstanding said animals were of different qualities, sizes, ages, breeding, etc.; that, while sitting as a board of equalization, the commissioners produced evidence that the members thereof in 1931 had inspected all lands in the county, classifying the agricultural lands into three classes, class No. 1 consisting of red or black agricultural land of a better quality, No. 2, being a mixed quality or secondary quality agricultural lands, and No. 3 being lands of poorer quality, and fixed a flat value on each class of said land at $12, $10, and $8 per acre respectively, without taking into consideration the-.location or proximity to the county seat or other towns, schools, churches, etc., or whether the lands were located in thickly or thinly populated parts of the county; that for the year 1932 they adopted the values and classifications fixed ¡by them in 1931 and that such manner of fixing the values was in violation of the Constitution and laws of this state. They alleged that much of their land was of poor quality, being sandy and shin-nery land, and on January 1, 1932, none of said land was of a greater value than $5 per acre; that they fixed the values of lands of other taxpayers of the same quality located more favorably in and near settled portions of the county and nearer the county seat, other towns, schoolhouses, etc., at much less-than the values fixed -upon plaintiffs’ lands; that at the proper time they appeared before the board of equalization, offered testimony as to the value of their property, but that the board refused to consider said evidence, and acted upon their own ideas and fixed opinions already arrived at by means of inspection pri- or to the time they acted as a board; that, in fixing the values of plaintiffs’ land, the board did not comply with the requirements of R. S. arts. 7211 and 7212; that in January, 1933, before the taxes for the year 1932 became delinquent, plaintiffs in error tendered to the tax collector of said county $3,870.08, which was the amount of taxes justly owing by them, and which the tax collector refused to accept' because the amount tendered was insufficient.

The case was tried to a jury, and in response to two special issues, the jury found: (1) That the Wright land in controversy had a reasonable cash market value on January 1, 1932; (2) that the valuation fixed on the Wright land for the year 1932-by the commissioners’ court of Cochran county, Tex., sitting as a board of equalization, was not in excess of the reasonable cash market value of said land.

Based upon the verdict, judgment was rendered against plaintiffs in error in the sum of $8,881.74, plus 10 per cent, penalty and 6 per cent, interest computed from the time the taxes became delinquent, with foreclosure- of the tax lien and order of sale.

The judgment describes each of the ten separate tracts of land belonging to the Wrights which were included in the inventory of property. It further states the amount due on each tract, and directs that, when execution is issued, each tract shall be sold by the sheriff for the taxes against it, unless the owner shall, in writing, under the provisions of the statute, direct a sale otherwise.

The case is before us upon nineteen propositions.

Article 8, § 1, of the Constitution, provides that taxation shall be equal and uniform, and all property in the state, other than that owned by municipalities, shall be taxed in proportion to its value, which shall be ascertained as may be provided by law.

R. S. art. 7174, provides that the assessor, in determining the true and full value of real and personal property, shall not adopt a lower or different standard of value because the same is to serve as a basis for taxation, nor shall he adopt as a criterion of value the price for which such property would sell at auction *1017 er a forced sale or in the aggregate with all the property in his county; but he shall value each tract or lot by itself, and at such sum and price as he believes the same to he fairly worth in money at the time such assessment is made. It further provides that personal property of every description shall ¡be valued at its true and full value in money.

Article 7206 provides that each commissioners’ court shall convene and sit as a board of equalization on the second Monday in May of each year to receive the assessment list and books of the assessor, which he is directed to bring before them at such meeting; that such board shall see that every person has rendered his property at a fair market value. Subdivision 3 of the article provides that the commissioners sitting as a board of equalization shall equalize improved lands in three classes, first class to embrace the better quality of land and improvements, the second class to embrace the second quality of lands and improvements, and the third class to embrace lands of but small value or inferior improvements. The unimproved lands shall embrace first, second, and third class, and all other property made as nearly uniform as possible.

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Bluebook (online)
80 S.W.2d 1015, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wright-v-state-texapp-1935.