Thomas v. Dallas County Levee Improvement Dist. No. 6

HODGES, J.

The Dallas county levee improvement district No. 6 was organized in ' January, 1919, under what is known as the Laney Act (Acts 35th Leg. 4th Called Sess., c.' 44). It included lands in the counties of Dallas, Rockwall, and Kaufman lying in the swamps of the East fork of Trinity river. The appellant owned a tract of 50 acres situated in the district, and was among those who signed the original petition asking for its creation. This appeal is from a judgment against him for district taxes due for the years 1921, 1922, 1923, and 1924. Two suits were filed against him; the first was for the taxes due for the years 1921 and 1922, and the second for the taxes due for 1923 and 1924. The two suits were consolidated and tried as one in the court below. At the conclusion of the evidence, the trial court directed a verdict in favor of the district for the amount of the taxes claimed.

Among other defenses, appellant pleaded the statute of limitation of two years. It is conceded in this appeal that the right to collect the district taxes for the years 1921 and 1922 is barred, unless the districts organized under the Laney .Act are excepted from the provisions of the general law of limitation. Ip Rutledge v. State, 292 S. W. 164, the Commission of Appeals held that suits filed by improvement districts organized under the Can-*641ales Act (Acts 34th Leg. c. 146) for the collection of delinquent taxes were subject to that general law. The ruling was based upon the conclusion that the statute authorizing the creation of such districts did not contain any exception. A motion for a rehearing in that case is still pending at this time. However, we are of the opinion that, if the holding in the Rutledge Case is adhered to, that decision would not apply to districts organized under the Laney Act. The two acts were passed at. different times, and one does not supplant the other. Dallas County Levee District No. 2 v. Looney, 109 Tex. 326, 207 S. W. 310.

The provision of the Canales Act relied on as excepting improvement districts from the general laws of limitation are as follows:

“Sec. 34. It shall be the duty of the tax collector to make a certified list of all delinquent property upon which the improvement taxes have not been paid, and return the same to the county commissioners’ court, and the said court shall proceed to have said taxes collected by sale by the collector, or by suit, in the same manner as now provided for the collection of delinquent state and county taxes. * * £ »
“Sec. 36.. All taxes levied or authorized to be levied by this act shall be payable and shall mature and become delinquent as is provided by the laws of this state, for state and county taxes, and upon the failure to pay such taxes when due, the same penalties shall accrue and be collected as are provided by the laws of the state of Texas for the nonpayment of state and county taxes. All taxes shall be a lien upon the property against which such taxes are assessed. In the assessment and collection of the taxes levied or authorized to be levied by this act, the assessor and collector of taxes shall, respectively, have the same powers and shall be governed by the same rules and regulations as are provided by the laws of the state of Texas for the assessment and collection of state and county taxes, unless herein otherwise provided.”

Article 7298 of the Revised Civil Statutes of 1925 contains the following provision:

“No delinquent taxpayer shall have the right to plead in any court or in any manner rely upon any statute of limitation by way of defense against the payment of any taxes due from him or her either to the state, or any county, city or town.”

That provision was enacted in 1895. It appears in the revision of 1911 as article 7662, and as a part of chapter 13 of the General Law (Rev. St. 1911, tit. 126) regulating the collection of delinquent taxes due the state and counties. Section 42 of the Laney Act is as follows:

“Tax collectors of levee improvement districts shall perform all duties and exercise all powers in respect to delinquent taxes due levee improvement districts as may be provided by law for the collection of delinquent state and county taxes, and the collection of such delinquent levee improvement district taxes and sales of property therefor shall be governed by the laws applying to the collection of delinquent state and county taxes. Taxes levied under this act shall be a lien upon the property against which they are assessed, and shall be payable and shall mature and become delinquent as may be provided by law for state and county taxes, and, upon failure to pay such taxes when due the same penalty shall accrue and be collected as may be provided by law in case of nonpayment of state and county taxes.”

It will be observed that in the Canales Act the general law relating to the collection ■of delinquent taxes is referred to as defining the powers and duties of assessors and collectors of improvement district taxes, while in the Laney Act those provisions are referred to as governing the proceedings in the collection of delinquent taxes. The distinction is important, when we consider the different methods of collecting delinquent taxes prescribed by law, and the distribution of the relevant duties. The general law of limitation applies to suits filed by the district or county attorneys, proceedings with which the assessors and collectors have nothing to do.

It is apparent from the emergency clause attached to the act of 1895, quoted above, that the exception in favor of counties, cities, and towns, when suing for delinquent taxes, was made to relieve them from the necessity of filing a multiplicity of suits for the collection of their revenues.

When we consider the character of the reclamation districts formed under the provisions of the Laney Act, and the important governmental functions which they may exercise, it would appear that the same reasons exist for exempting those governmental agencies from the limitation which embarrassed other municipal corporations in the collection of their revenues. . Under the Constitution as amended in 1917, reclamation districts become municipal corporations and governmental agencies. It is difficult to see why they should not be given an advantage equal to other municipal corporations in the collection of the taxes necessary for their continued existence and the proper exercise of their powers. In view of those conditions, we think the courts should be liberal in construing the reference to the general law regulating the proceedings for the collection of delinquent taxes. We therefore conclude that the general law of limitation is no defense to this suit.

The validity of the taxes here sued for is assailed upon the ground that they are based upon an irregular appraisement of the benefits assessed against the appellant’s land. The statute provides that after the organization of the district three district supervisors shall be appointed, who in turn shall appoint three commissioners of appraisement to assess the benefits that will accrue to each tract of land situated in thp district from the proposed improvements. The statute directs that this appraisement shall be made after the district engineer has made a survey of the *642proposed district, formulated and reported a plan of reclamation and the approval of that plan by the state reclamation engineer. It is insisted in this appeal that the evidence shows an appraisement made before the plan of reclamation was approved by the state reclamation engineer. We do not think the facts warrant that conclusion. The evidence shows that before the commissioners of appraisement were appointed a plan of reclamation had been reported by the district engineer and approved by the state reclamation engineer. That plan was accompanied by a map which indicated the approximate location of the levees to be constructed. It was upon that plan that the benefits were appraised by the commissioners. There is some evidence tending to show that, after that plan had been reported and approved, a change was made in the location of a portion of the, levee in the vicinity of the appellant’s land. But there is nothing in the evidence to indicate how that change affected appellant’s property. No injury had been shown by him, nor is there any evidence that he made any objection to the change when proposed. If the plan of reclamation had been legally adopted and approved at the time the benefits were assessed by the commissioners a subsequent modification of that plan by the engineers would not vitiate a previous valid appraisement. We do not think the appellant can complain of the change without showing a lessening of the benefits assessed against his property. If the change was unauthorized or irregular, he might have prevented its consummation by an appropriate legal proceeding instituted at the proper time.

The record shows that the cost of making the improvements was originally estimated at $220,000. The final report of the appraisers was filed on October .8, 1919, in which the total benefits were assessed at $369,930. Within a few days after that report was made, a petition asking for a bond election was presented by the appellant and twenty-three other property owners. The election was ordered and held, and resulted in authorizing a bond issue of $220,000. The proceeds of the sale of those bonds supplied the funds with which the proposed improvements were made. There is nothing in the evidence tending to show that the appellant made any objection to the regularity of any of the proceedings prior to the institution of these suits.

In January, 1921, a petition was presented by a number of property owners interested in the district improvements asking for a second bond issue of $70,000. The petition stated that more funds were needed to complete the plan of reclamation, make repairs, and construct additional ditches for the adequate drainage of the lands in the district. An election was ordered which resulted in authorizing the additional bond issue. Subsequently a tax sufficient to create an interest and sinking fund for the retirement of those bonds was levied. Appellant now contends that the last-mentioned tax was illegal and void because no reappr'aisement of the benefits to the lands in the district had been made as a basis for this additional tax.

Sections 55 and 56 of the Laney Act are as follows:

“Sec. 55. If it should develop that the works and improvements set out in any plan of reclamation adopted by or on behalf of a levee improvement district are found insufficient to reclaim in whole or in part any or all of the lands and other property within the district, or if extensive repairs or additions to such works are deemed necessary, then in respect thereto the board of supervisors of the district, upon petition of the owners of a majority of the acreage of the district, may proceed in all respects to provide additional funds for such additional works, in accordance with the provisions of this act, in respect to the original plan of reclamation, and may, under like limitations, create additional indebtedness or issue additional bonds, but always subject to every limitation in respect to such original proceedings, as well as the .approval of the new or amended plan of reclamation by the state reclamation engineer.
“Sec. 56. Whenever' at any time after three years from the completion of any plan of reclamation the owners of twenty-five per cent, or more, of the acreage of the lands within any levee improvement district shall file a petition with the board of supervisors of such district, alleging that previous assessments of benefits are inequitable and praying for a readjustment of the assessment of benefits for the purpose of making a more equitable basis for the levy of taxes, the board of supervisors shall set a day for a hearing of said petition and cause notice of such hearing to be issued by the secretary of the board and to be posted in all respects as in the ease of an original hearing, and at the time and place set for the hearing the board of supervisors shall proceed to hear such petition and proof for or against the same, and if it finds that there has been a material change in values of property in the district, or that for other reasons the last previous assessment of benefits is inequitable, it shall order that there be made a readjustment of the assessment of benefits for the purpose of providing a more equitable basis of taxation for all purposes within such district, and, thereupon, it shall proceed to appoint commissioners of appraisement as in the first instance which commissioners shall proceed in all respects as in the first instance, and with all the powers, rights, privileges and duties, both to the commissioners and persons interested, and such commissioners shall finally make their findings and enter their judgment and decree in the matter, which thereafter shall be the basis'of the assessment of taxes within and for the district.”

We do not construe section 55 as requiring a reappraisement of benefits to authorize the creation of the additional indebtedness there provided for. According to the application for the second bond election, and the various official orders that followed, the additional indebtedness was to raise funds for com*643pleting the original plan of reclamation, for making repairs, and for some additional drainage ditches essential to the reclamation of the lands situated in the district. How much of that second bond issue was to be used in completing the original plan, or in repairs, or in constructing additional ditches, is not shown. The record before us does not contain sufficient evidence to warrant the conclusion that appellant’s land will be burdened by this additional tax beyond its fair proportion of the benefits which may result from the improvements contemplated. It is true a map was introduced in evidence showing that the ditches proposed were not located in the immediate vicinity of his land. But that fact alone does not authorize the inference that his land will not be benefited to some extent by the additional drainage. It is not to be expected that every property owner will be specially benefited by every part of the reclamation plan adopted. -His benefits and burdens are adjusted according to the scheme as an entirety. Certainly it cannot be contended that a re-appraisement is required in order to raise funds sufficient to complete the original plan of reclamation, or to repair defects which were necessary to maintain that plan. The evidence shows that the aggregate benefits originally assessed are in excess of the aggregate amount of both bond issues. Section 56 of the statute above quoted provides for a re-appraisement of the benefits when inequalities arise in the future by reason of changing conditions. Appellant cannot now complain of the inadequacy of that remedy, since he voluntarily invoked the benefits of the statute which contained that provision for adjusting inequalities as they arise.

It is also contended that no annual tax was levied, as required by law, subsequent to the year 1920, and for that reason the taxes claimed in this suit were illegal. We think it is a sufficient answer to that proposition to say that the evidence does not sustain that complaint.

There is no merit in the contention that the appellant’s land was not sufficiently described in the assessment. Under the statute, the delinquent tax record, when introduced in evidence, constitutes prima facie proof of the regularity of all pre-existing proceedings essential to the levy of a tax against the appellant’s property. When that was done, it developed upon the appellant to show that no valid levy had been made. In this he failed. He also failed to prove that the benefits to accrue to his property by the construction of the levee in the manner finally completed, together with the ¿dditional drainage, did not correspondingly benefit his property. So far as the record shows, no proof was offered by him to show absence of those benefits.

The judgment will be affirmed.