163 S.W.2d 631 | Tex. | 1942
This is an appeal from a judgment recovered by respondent, Saratoga Independent School District, against petitioner, Sam F. Bashara, for taxes alleged to be due on 136.66 acres of land in Hardin County, Texas, for the years 1934, 1935, 1936, 1937, and 1938, with interest, penalties and costs, and for foreclosure and order of sale. Upon appeal by Bashara to the Court of Civil Appeals, at Beaumont, the judgment of the trial court was affirmed.
Bashara's appeal is before us on two points of error, but it is necessary to consider only the first, which is that the Court of Civil Appeals erred in holding him personally liable for all taxes due respondent on the land, including a portion which he had never owned. *534
In its petition respondent described the land, in part, by reference to "a deed from Annie M. Baker, Exr. to Sam F. Bashara, dated July 24, 1930, and recorded in Volume 117, page 410 deed records Hardin County, Texas." In that deed Mrs. Baker, individually and as independent executrix of the estate of J.W. Baker, deceased, conveyed 100 acres of the 136.66 acres against which taxes are claimed to be due, but expressly reserved and excepted from the effect of the conveyance "2/3 of a 1/8 royalty interest in all oil, gas, or other minerals" which might thereafter be produced from the land conveyed. In his answer Bashara specially pleaded this royalty reservation by Mrs. Baker and asserted that he was not chargeable with any taxes due thereon because, to that extent, he was not the owner of the property taxed.
The delinquent tax records of respondent showed that the entire estate in the 136.66 acres was assessed on the unrendered rolls as the property of Bashara for $68.35 on a total valuation of $6835. for each of the five years in suit, while for the year 1939 Mrs. Baker's royalty interest was deducted from the valuation at a figure of $230.00 leaving the valuation of Bashara's interest at $5920. Mrs. Baker paid taxes on her reserved royalty for the year 1939 but not for the years in suit.
1, 2, 3 The deed from Mrs. Baker to Bashara created two interests in the 100 acres of land covered thereby, one in Mrs. Baker, the other in Bashara. Mrs. Baker's interest was as much subject to taxation as was Bashara's. Sheffield v. Hogg,
We think Justice Greenwood decided the question when he said, in Hager et al v. Stakes, Tax Collector et al,
Since they are void the district court has neither jurisdiction nor power to revalue and reassess the property so as to render *536
judgment for the taxes, the power of the assessor and board of equalization in that regard being excluive. Therefore, the judgments of the courts below are reversed and here rendered for petitioner, but without prejudice to the rights of respondent to reassess the interest of petitioner in the lands in question and to collect the taxes due thereon in accordance with Chapter 11, Title 122, R.S. 1925, and other applicable statutes. State v. Richardson,
Reversed and rendered.
Opinion adopted by the Supreme Court June 24, 1942.
Rehearing overruled July 22, 1942.