¶ 1 The dispositive issue is whether the district court has jurisdiction to grant declaratory relief to a taxpayer who, without first invoking any judicial remedy provided in the Ad Valorem Tax Code, commences an action, challenging the county assessor’s refusal to recognize an exemption claimed under a self-executing provision of the Oklahoma Constitution. We answer in the negative and hold that the legislatively prescribed judicial remedies afforded to these taxpayers under the Code are adequate and exclusive, and that the district court therefore lacked subject matter jurisdiction to entertain their declaratory judgment action.
¶ 2 Owners of an allegedly nonprofit housing project, providing subsidized and minimally-priced housing for elderly and handicapped people, were notified in 1994 by the County Assessor of Muskogee County, Jackie Scott, that their property would no
¶3 In response to the assessor’s notice the owners lodged a complaint pursuant to 68 O.S.1991 § 2876(D),
¶4 The owners complied with neither § 2880.1 nor § 2886. Instead, in October 1994, several months after the board’s decision, they sought declaratory relief in the district court, aHeging that the county assessor, “through [the] Muskogee County Board of Equalization,” refuses to recognize the exempt status of their property, despite its
¶ 5 A hearing was eventually held in August 1995 to determine whether the property is exempt. Before evidence was introduced, however, counsel for the county assessor objected to the trial court’s exercise of jurisdiction and argued that the county assessor had never agreed to the terms of the compromise that had earlier been approved by the court. The trial judge rejected counsel’s assertions and allowed the owners to proceed.
¶6 At the hearing’s conclusion the trial court declared the property exempt, finding that it is “used exclusively for charitable purposes and that the facilities operated by Plaintiffs are open to any person regardless of ability to pay.” The court also found “no evidence that the owners received any remuneration.’.’ The county assessor appealed.
¶ 7 Only one issue was raised on appeal— whether the trial court had jurisdiction to resolve the exemption issue. The basis for asserting lack of jurisdiction was the owners’ failure to appeal to the district court under § 2880.1.
A. The proceedings before the county assessor, boards of equalization and appeals therefrom shall he the sole method by which assessments or equalizations shall he corrected or taxes abated. Equitable remedies shall be resorted to only where the aggrieved party has no taxable property within the tax district of which complaint is made. (Emphasis added.)
The owners responded by arguing that the pre-trial agreement was merely procedural (analogous to waiving jury trial) and that the county assessor is either bound by the agreement or estopped from denying its effectiveness.
¶ 8 The Court of Civil Appeals, in a 2-1 decision, agreed with the county assessor, holding that “[b]y express language, the Legislature has chosen to deny jurisdiction to the District Court to hear such matters in the absence of compliance with these procedures.” The appellate court also took note of an issue raised by the dissent — whether the self-executing constitutional provision upon which the claimed exemption is based frees
¶ 9 The owners sought certiorari, arguing that the statutory provisions to which the appellate court referred in its opinion, 68 O.S.1991 §§ 2876, 2877, and 2880.1, do not apply to assessments upon constitutionally exempt property. Those sections are said to address only valuations of real and personal property and the addition or assessment of personal property not listed by the taxpayer. Next, the owners argue that the terms of both § 2885(A) and § 2886 “provide a more appropriate alternative basis for jurisdiction in the District Court.” Their final contention is identical to the view expressed by the dissent.
¶ 10 The first issue raised by the owners is whether the statutorily prescribed avenues of complaint before the county assessor and the board of equalization (and appeals therefrom) are applicable to their claim. They are correct in their observation that the language of the statutory remedies to which they refer, in §§ 2876, 2877, and 2880.1 (quoted in part in notes 3, 4, and 5, respectively), indicates a primary concern with changes (or increases) in valuations of real property, as opposed to changes in taxable status. We note, however, that the owners themselves, in response to the county assessor’s notice, asserted their exemption and sought a hearing. The county assessor, who is charged with the duty of preparing the tax rolls and listing exempt property, 68 O.S.1991 § 2868(D), ruled against them. They then appealed to the county board of equalization, which is required to “cancel assessments of property not taxable.” 68 O.S.1991 § 2863(B)(3). No appeal was brought from the board’s adverse decision pursuant to § 2880.1.
¶ 11 Appealing from the board’s ruling, then, was an option for the owners. They could have also complained to the board of tax roll corrections under § 2871(C)(2), the terms of which explicitly authorize the board to determine whether “[pjroperty exempt from taxation has been assessed....” The right of the taxpayer and the county assessor to appeal from decisions of this board to the district court is authorized by § 2871(F).
¶ 12 With respect to § 2885(A) the owners rely on its reference to “[ejquita-ble remedies ... where the aggrieved party has no taxable property within the tax district. ...” They maintain that they qualify for equitable relief because the trial court declared their property to be exempt and therefore nontaxable. We reject this argument for three reasons. The first is that the owners did not seek equitable relief from the trial judge, and none was granted. Secondly, the “equitable remedies” to which the owners refer under § 2885(A) are affordable when the aggrieved party has no taxable property situated within the tax district, and even then, equity will not, for example, reverse the effects of a voluntary payment of taxes under a mutual mistake of fact, where the taxpayer could have earlier discovered the error and sought its correction. Edwards v. Board of Com’rs,
¶ 13 The “constitutionality of § 2885(A),” as the appellate court phrased the issue, is not at stake. The prime question is one of subject matter jurisdiction, which can be raised sua sponte, and this Court is duty-bound to inquire into the jurisdiction of the court from whence the decision came. Lincoln Bank and Trust Co. v. Okla. Tax Com’n,
¶ 14 Although codified in § 2887 (see note 2, supra), the exemption claimed by the owners is mandated by the Oklahoma Constitution, Art. 10 § 6:
(a) Except as otherwise provided in subsection (b) of this section, all property used for free public libraries, free museums, public cemeteries, property used exclusively for nonprofit schools and colleges, and all property used exclusively for religious and charitable purposes ... shall be exempt from taxation_ (Emphasis added.)
This Court has long held this provision to be self-executing. See Cox v. Dillingham,
¶ 15 A tax upon property exempt from taxation by virtue of a self-executing constitutional provision is “illegal and void.” Cox, supra; City of Hartshorne, supra; Glass, supra. Application of this principle in Cox produced the following holding, which might appear at first glance to support the owners’ quest for declaratory relief: “If, by reason of the constitutional exemption, property is not taxable county officials have no jurisdiction or power to levy a tax against the same, and any levy so made is void. If the levy is void the statutory proceeding by appeal from the Board of Equalization is not exclusive.” (Emphasis added.)
¶ 16 In Cox the taxpayer, without appealing from the board of equalization’s ruling, sued the county treasurer to recover taxes paid under protest on property claimed to be exempt under Art. 10 § 6. From an order dismissing the action for want of jurisdiction the taxpayer appealed. This Court reversed, rejecting the treasurer’s contention that the taxpayer had an adequate remedy under 68 O.S.1941 §§ 15.41 and 15.49, whose provisions are now found, in substantial part, in §§ 2876 and 2885, respectively. The self-executing constitutional provision freed the taxpayer from the requirements of statutory procedures intended to be followed in asserting the exemption. This Court thus held that an assessment-invalid under Art. 10 § 6 — is not made valid by a taxpayer’s failure to appeal from a ruling of either the county assessor or the board of equalization. An aggrieved party claiming the constitutional exemption may, as the taxpayer did in Cox, timely pay the tax and sue for a refund.
¶ 17 The record in the instant cause is devoid of any indication, and the owners do not contend, that § 2886, for example, would not have provided them a clear and adequate remedy. Self-executing constitutional provisions generally do not preclude the legislature from prescribing judicial remedies. Indeed, Oklahoma’s statutory procedure for seeking judicial relief from an illegal tax has,
¶ 18 The instant controversy presents no occasion for this Court to create an alternative remedy. See R.R. Tway, Inc. v. Oklahoma Tax Commission,
¶ 19 Today’s pronouncement is consistent with our recent holdings in Stallings v. Oklahoma Tax Commission,
¶20 In Glass the taxpayer brought a complaint before the board of tax roll corrections and prevailed in his quest for a refund based on the self-executing constitutional exemption in Art. 10 § 6A (for “goods, wares and merchandise” used for manufacturing
¶ 21 For the foregoing reasons, the Court of Civil Appeals’ memorandum opinion is VACATED, the trial court’s judgment is REVERSED, and the cause is REMANDED WITH DIRECTIONS TO DISMISS FOR WANT OF SUBJECT MATTER JURISDICTION.
Notes
. The “owners” are Muskogee Fair Haven Man- or Phase I, Inc., Muskogee Fair Haven Manor Phase II, Inc., Muskogee Fair Haven Manor Phase III, Inc., and Muskogee Fair Haven Manor Phase IV, Inc. From their pleadings it appears that these entities together own a single facility on property claimed to be exempt under
. Section 2887(9), before it was amended in 1996, provided:
The following property shall be exempt from ad valorem taxation:
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9. All property used exclusively and directly for charitable purposes within this state, provided the charity using said property did not pay any rent or remuneration to the owner thereof, and its facilities are open to any person regardless of his ability to pay; * * *.
The amendment, Okla.Sess.L.1996, Ch. 187, § 1, which alters the proviso, has no effect on this opinion.
. Section 2876(D) provides:
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D. The taxpayer shall have twenty (20) calendar days from the date the notice was mailed or in the event that notice was delivered from the date of delivery in which to file a written complaint with the county assessor specifying objections to action taken by the county assessor. ...
. The owners’ presumably appealed within the 10-day period prescribed by § 2876(F). The board’s power to review an action by the county assessor is set forth in 68 O.S.1991 § 2877(A), which provides:
A.Upon receipt of an appeal from action by the county assessor the secretary of the county board of equalization shall fix a date of hearing, at which time said board shall be authorized and empowered to take evidence pertinent to said appeál; and for that purpose, is authorized to compel the attendance of witnesses and the production of books, records, and papers by subpoena, and to confirm, correct, or adjust the valuation of real or personal property or to cancel an assessment of personal property added by the assessor not listed by the taxpayer if the personal property is not subject to taxation or if the taxpayer is not responsible for payment of ad valorem taxes on such property. * * *
.Section 2880.1 provides in pertinent part:
A. Both the taxpayer and the county assessor shall have the right of appeal from any order of the county board of equalization to the district court of the same county, and right of appeal of either may be either upon questions of law or fact including value, or upon both questions of law and fact. In case of appeal the trial in the district court shall be de novo.
B. Notice of appeal shall be filed with the county clerk as secretary of the county board of equalization, which appeal shall be filed in the district court within ten (10) days after the final adjournment of the board. It shall be the duly of the county clerk to preserve all complaints and to make a record of all orders of the board and both the complaint and orders shall be a part of the record in any case appealed to the district court from the county board of equalization.
C. Either the taxpayer or the county assessor may appeal from the district court to the Supreme Court, as provided for in the Code of Civil Procedure, but no matter shall be reviewed on such appeal which was not presented to the district court.
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. The terms of the agreement, as related by the trial court, are:
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1. That Plaintiffs shall be and are hereby required to pay the 1994 ad valorem tax assessed by Defendant on the property which is the subject hereof. Payment by Plaintiff shall in no way constitute an admission that [the] tax was validly levied [ ]or assessed.
2. That Plaintiffs shall be deemed to have filed, in a timely manner, a complaint to the assessment of ad valorem taxes against the subject property for the year 1995 for the reason and on the grounds as stated in Plaintifffs’] Petition on file herein.
3. That Plaintifffs’] 'Complaint' as to assessment of 1995 taxes shall be deemed to have been denied by the county Assessor and appeal therefrom shall be deemed to have been denied by the County Board of Equalization. Filing of the initial action shall be considered a timely notice of appeal from the actions of the County Board of Equalization.
4. All parties and subject matter are properly before this Court and the Court may proceed to determination of the action on the merits.
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Without question subject matter jurisdiction may not be conferred on the trial court by agreement, whether judicially approved or not. Barrett v. Barrett,
. Section 2880.1 is quoted in part at note 5, supra.
. We have recognized the concept of overlapping jurisdiction in this context. See Oklahoma Industries Authority v. Barnes,
. See Simons v. Brashears Transfer & Storage,
. Accord Huston v. Curtis Cos.,
. See S.L.1915, p. 149, c. 107, sec. 7; Comp. Stat.1921 § 9971; 68 O.S.1941 § 15.50; 68 O.S.Supp.1965 § 2469; 68 O.S.Supp.1988 § 2886.
. In United Airlines we expressly recognized that where a taxpayer questions whether its property should be assessed at all, the issue "would more naturally fall under Section 2469 [now § 2886] because no statutory provision sets forth the procedure for appealing an assessment made beyond the jurisdiction of the boards.”
. Our resolution of the jurisdictional issue in this case requires us to disapprove an opinion by the Court of Civil Appeals, Staggs v. Porter,
In Walker the taxpayer, claiming the assessed property is not taxable under federal law, obtained an injunction preventing the property’s sale. This Court affirmed, holding that failure to appeal from the decision placing the property on the tax rolls did not deprive the district court of jurisdiction. Although the opinion emphasizes the lack of the taxing officials’ authority to levy the illegal tax, it should be noted that the taxpayer, before bringing suit, had obtained a favorable ruling by the county commissioners, who ordered the property removed from the tax rolls. The taxing officials appealed from this ruling but nevertheless immediately advertized the property for sale. This precipitated the taxpayer’s suit for an injunction. Clearly, the exigent circumstances there made the other statutory avenues of relief inadequate. Walker, therefore, does not support the notion that a taxpayer may do nothing after being faced with adverse administrative rulings and, at the last minute, seek an injunction restraining the collection of an allegedly illegal or void tax.
. The opinion in Presbyterian Hosp., Inc. v. Bd. of Tax-Roll Con.,
The Court affirmed the summary judgment, holding that the trial court had jurisdiction to grant full relief despite the taxpayers' failure to comply with statutory prerequisites.
