delivered the opinion of the Court, in which all JUSTICES join.
We consider the constitutional extent to which a Texas taxpayer may be impeded in challenging a tax. We hold that conditioning a taxpayer’s right to initiate judicial review on the payment of taxes or the posting of a bond equal to twice the alleged tax obligation violates the open courts mandate of the Texas Bill of Rights. Tex. Const, art. I, § 13. Taxes cannot be raised by means that make meaningless our constitutional guarantees.
R Communications sought relief from an assessment for additional sales taxes that resulted from an audit by the Comptroller of Public Accounts. After an administrative hearing, an Amended Proposed Comptroller’s Decision rejected the company’s arguments and found it liable for $127,574.46 in taxes, penalties and interest. R Communications sought judicial review. At the urging of the Comptroller, the trial court dismissed for want of jurisdiction because R Communications had not first paid the tax or posted a statutorily required bond. See TexTax Code §§ 112.051, 112.101. The court of appeals affirmed.
R Communications asserts that four Tax Code provisions violate its rights under both the Texas and United States Constitutions: section 112.108, which denies a taxpayer any form of declaratory relief; section 112.051, which conditions the right to file suit attack *315 ing the tax’s validity or its assessment or collection upon prior payment of the taxes; section 112.101, which precludes injunctive relief without prior tax payment or the posting of a bond, approved by both the court and the attorney general, equal to twice the amount of estimated tax liability; and section 111.022, which authorizes summary collection procedures without the State filing suit. R Communications essentially contends that, as a precondition to obtaining judicial review of a tax liability, it would be required to pay so much as to be forced out of business. It maintains that these provisions violate the equal protection, open courts, and due course of law provisions of the Texas Constitution, and the due process and equal protection provisions of the U.S. Constitution. See Tex. Const, art. I, §§ 3, 13, 19; U.S. Const. amend. XIV.
Where, as here, violations of both the state and federal constitutions are alleged, we look first to the Texas Constitution, “[biasing decisions on [it] whenever possible.”
Davenport v. Garcia,
Of the various state constitutional claims, we focus on the taxpayer’s assertion that the Tax Code violates the fundamental requirement that:
All courts shall be open, and every person for an injury done him, in his lands, goods, person, or reputation, shall have remedy by due course of law.
Tex. Const, art. I, § 13. In
Eustis v. City of Henrietta,
A law which practically takes away from either party to litigation the right to a fair and impartial trial in the courts ... denies a remedy by due course of law.... [A]n act of the legislature which makes the right of an individual or corporation to prosecute an appeal to depend on the giving of a supersedeas bond, without reference to the ability or inability of such corporation or individual to give such a bond, is violative of the Constitution.
Dillingham v. Putnam,
Invalidating an increased filing fee as an unconstitutional litigation tax in
LeCroy v. Hanlon,
It is not enough for the State to justify a prepayment requirement simply by asserting that the government needs quick access to the funds.
State v. Flag-Redfern Oil Co.,
Such generalized fear of financial collapse is hardly realistic given the history of the statute in question. Until recently, taxpayers have been able to seek the very type of declaratory judgment of no tax liability sought here without regard to whether they had satisfied the prepayment provisions of section 112.051.
See Hammerman & Gainer, Inc. v. Bullock,
In
Texas Ass’n of Business,
While the open courts section affords a strong safeguard against unreasonable financial barriers to judicial review, it provides less protection against the imposition of prepayment and bond requirements on those seeking to stay enforcement or the collection of a judgment.
See Texas Ass’n of Business,
At the same time, the State has not, however, shown that the complete prohibition of prepayment declaratory relief contained in section 112.108 reasonably serves any governmental interest, let alone one that would override R Communications’ right to open courts. Instead of establishing the essential government-interest element in the Open Courts balancing test, the State relies upon sections 111.010 and 111.013(b) in noting that even an insolvent taxpayer can contest liability when defending a collection suit. In view of other tax code provisions, however, such ability to defend represents significantly less than certain and complete access to the courts. 6 The combination of the prepayment *318 provisions contained in sections 112.051 and 112.101, the ban on declaratory judgments in section 112.108, and the inadequacy of the remedy of awaiting the filing of a collection suit by the Comptroller mean that a taxpayer is financially restricted in its ability to get to court.
To remedy the constitutional infirmity in the current Tax Code, it is not necessary, however, to invalidate the State’s .entire tax collection scheme. 7 Without the recent legislative elimination of a declaratory remedy, R Communications would appear to have available a means of obtaining timely access to the courts that would not impinge upon the State’s interest in securing timely collection of taxes. Accordingly, insofar as it would preclude a taxpayer from obtaining judicial review of its tax liability by means of a declaratory action, section 112.108 is unconstitutional and void. 8 Since the trial court does, therefore, have jurisdiction to hear such a claim for declaratory relief, we remand to that court to permit the issue of R *319 Communications’ tax liability to be finally resolved with a minimum of further delay. 9
Notes
. We have from an early time recognized the right of access to open courts for corporations as well as natural persons.
. The State also attempts to distinguish
Texas Ass'n of Business
on the grounds that the penalties involved there were discretionary whereas tax assessment is heavily regulated. Yet nothing in that opinion's discussion of the open courts provision indicated any reliance on, or even a mention of, the fact that the environmental penalties at issue were assessed at the government’s discretion.
See Texas Ass’n of Business,
. The potential impact of this particular provision on taxpayers such as R Communications appears to have received no floor consideration in either legislative chamber. See Debate on S.B. 1573 on the Floor of the Senate, 71st Leg., R.S. (April 20, 1989) (tape available from Senate Staff Services office); Hearings on S.B. 1573 Before the Senate Finance Comm., 71st Leg., R.S. (April 26, 1989) (tape available from Senate Staff Services Office); Debate on H.B. 2779 on the Floor of the House, 71st Leg., R.S., tape 72A (May 2, 1989) (available from House Staff Services Office); Hearings on H.B. 2779 Before the House Ways & Means Comm., 71st Leg., R.S. (April 26, 1989) (tape available from House Staff Services Office). The only relevant committee discussion suggests that any adverse consequence for small businesses was either incidental or unintentional. Apparently the sole attention focused on the general type of problem presented today is the following exchange:
Senator Cyndi Krier:
It concerns me that we could string out a small taxpayer.... I know you're writing this looking at the big insurance companies that made you mad, that try to thumb their nose in our face, that probably did some things they shouldn’t have done. But I’m looking at it from the perspective of a mom and pop grocery store or someone that could ... lose their right to challenge the collection of taxes that they might indeed not owe.
Joe Thrash (staff of Lt. Gov. William P. Hobby):
The provision is to protect the interests of the State. It doesn’t really address that situation, where the taxpayer might not be able to continue making the payments.
Hearings on S.B. 1573 Before the Senate Finance Comm., 71st Leg., R.S. (April 26, 1989) (tape available from Senate Staff Services Committee Office).
.
See State v. Federal Land Bank of Houston,
. The State can make a jeopardy determination from which taxes can forcibly be collected without filing a collection suit. See § 111.022. The State may perfect a lien on all of the delinquent taxpayer’s non-exempt property, real and personal, merely by filing a tax lien notice with the appropriate county clerk. See TexTax Code § 113.001-.002. Attaching to all after-acquired property until the taxes are paid, see TexTax Code § 113.105, such liens render the taxpayer's property virtually unsalable. See Selected Current Developments in Texas Administrative Practice: Pre-Decision Tax Liens, Newsl. of the Sec. of Tax’n (State Bar of Texas, Austin), Nov. 1986, at 6. Moreover, the Comptroller can also garnish the taxpayer’s bank accounts and freeze its property held by third parties. See TexTax Code §§ 111.-021, 113.103. The Comptroller can seize and auction the taxpayer’s property or, after affording a hearing, revoke the taxpayer’s sales tax permit. See TexTax Code §§ 111.0047, 111.017-.019. The latter is apparently routine practice in cases where the taxpayer does not remit payment but chooses to await a collection suit. See Tex Tax Serv. (Matthew Bender) pt. 3, § 3.141 £5] (June 1992). After revoking the sales tax permit, the State can effectively close a business by enjoining further sales of goods or services. See TexTax Code § 151.262(a). Finally, by holding a purchaser of the taxpayer’s business personally liable for the taxes if they are not withheld from the purchase price, section 111.020 imposes re *318 strictions on the ability to sell it. See 34 Tex.Admin.Code § 3.7 (West 1993); see also TexTax Rep. (CCH) ¶¶ 89-307, 61-470 (Mar.-Apr. 1993) ("A purchaser may not challenge the validity of the underlying liability of the seller.”). All of these remedies are cumulative. See TexTax Code § 111.015; TexTax Rep. (CCH) ¶ 61-510 (Mar. 1993).
Even when the State chooses not to resort to these procedures and the taxpayer is given an opportunity to defend against a collection suit, the insolvent taxpayer faces severe presumptive burdens not encountered by the solvent taxpayer who files a section 112.051 protest suit.
Compare
§ 111.013(a) (in collection suit, Comptroller's certificate is prima facie evidence of the amount and the delinquency of the taxes and of the Comptroller’s compliance with the Code)
with
§ 112.054 (protest suit is "Trial De Novo”). Taxpayers who, rather than challenging the constitutionality of an entire taxing scheme by injunction or request for declaratory relief, wait to question the constitutionality in defense to a collection suit have been penalized with the "very heavy and onerous burden” of proving not only that the taxation was arbitrary and illegal but also that it caused substantial individualized injury.
Federal Land Bank of Houston,
. Because one Tax Code provision questioned by R Communications quite clearly cannot satisfy the constitutional command of open courts, it is unnecessary to review the remaining sections or alternative constitutional arguments.
Compare Edgewood I.S.D.
v.
Kirby,
. A state constitutional guarantee has been recognized as providing a taxpayer's right to prepayment judicial review in a number of our sister states.
See, e.g., Johnson v. Diefendorf,
.
See generally Brazosport Sav. & Loan Ass’n v. American Sav. & Loan Ass’n,
Our holding today should not be construed to imply that the guarantee of open courts protects declaratory judgment actions per se. The constitutional defect in the current prohibition against such relief arises from its impact on taxpayers in combination with other provisions of the existing Code. We do not mandate an unconditional right to declaratory relief, but only direct that some constitutionally adequate means of judicial review not dependent on prior payment be provided.
