34 F. 678 | N.D. Tex. | 1888
The constitution of this state, art. 18, § 1, provides that “taxation shall be equal and uniform. All property in this state, whether owned by natural persons, or corporations, other than municipal, shall be taxed in proportion to its value: * * * provided, that two hundred and fifty dollars worth of household and kitchen furniture, belonging to each family in this state, shall be exempt from taxation. Sec. 2. * * * The legislature may, by general laws, exempt from taxation public property used for public purposes; actual places of religious worship; places of burial not held for private or corporate profit; all buildings used exclusively and owned by persons or associations of persons for school purposes, (and the necessary furniture of all schools;) and institutions of purely public charity. And all laws exempting property from taxation other than the property above mentioned shall be void.” Article 4691, Rev. St. Tex., provides: “Property held under a lease for a term of three years or more, or held under a contract for the
“It is expresly agreed and understood by and between the parlies hereto that the lease of even date herewith, executed by the state of Texas, through its proper officers, and giving to the capitol contractor the absolute right of possession to the capitol lands, upon the conditions contained therein, is hereby made a part of this contract, as fully and expressly as if the same had been at length herein set forth, reference being thereto made for further particulars.”
The other part contains these provisions:
“Said Taylor [complainant] is to pay six cents per acre per annum for said land, and is to execute a good and sufficient bond payable to the governor of the state of Texas, or to his successors in office, for the payment of said rental. If said Taylor or his assigns completes the building of said capitol according to contract, then no rent whatever is to be paid for said lands, said lands being then the property of said Taylor or his'assigns, froe from any claim on the part of the state for rent, as though this agreement had not been made. If said Taylor abandon his contract, or the same bo terminated before the completion of said building, tlien he is to pay rent at the rate above mentioned for all lands which may not then have Been earned by him.”
So much of said capitol lands as are situated in Oldham county, and as had not been patented to complainant on the 1st day of January, 1886 and 1887, respectively, have been assessed for taxes as the property of complainant for those years; said assessment amounting in the aggregate to the sum of $9,464.69, which the defendant, as the bill alleges, is about to collect or threaten big to collect by seizure and sale of complainant’s