In Re ExxonMobil Corp.
In Re ExxonMobil Corp.
Concurring Opinion
concurring.
The taxing units allege that the defendant companies engaged in a conspiracy and fraud to fix posted prices for oil. However, because they did not seek relief under sections 15.05(c) and (h) and 15.21 of the Texas Business and Commerce Code Annotated, and without expressing any opinion whether these provisions may provide them a remedy, I concur in the decision of the majority opinion.
Opinion of the Court
Amerada Hess Corporation, et al. and ChevronTexaco Corporation, et al., as rela-tors,
In cause 8198, Yoakum County and Denver City ISD sued some twenty-eight companies, including relators,
Concluding that the district court does not have jurisdiction over the suit brought by local taxing units
Taxing Units’ Pleadings
The taxing units’ pleadings state that appraisal districts, and the independent appraisers whose services they utilize, use historical sales prices for oil as a part of their calculation of the income projected to be received in the future from oil properties. That estimate of future income, in turn, is used in valuing the oil properties for ad valorem tax purposes. The historical price data used by appraisers includes, the taxing units allege, “posted” prices for oil and sales prices reported to the Texas Comptroller of Public Accounts. The taxing units allege that the defendant companies, knowing and intending that appraisers rely on this information, engaged in a conspiracy and fraud carried out by misrepresentations of the market price for oil through various transactions, including
The suit is not one to collect delinquent taxes. There is no allegation the defendants failed to pay the taxes assessed them with respect to the oil interests.
Relators contend the trial court's determination that it had jurisdiction was an abuse of its discretion because it was a misapplication of Tax Code provisions giving exclusive original jurisdiction over property appraisals to the appraisal district and the appraisal review board. The taxing units respond that their suit is one asserting common law tort causes of action and nothing in the Tax Code deprives them of their right to assert such claims against tortfeasors such as the defendant companies or deprives the district court of
Standards for Plea to Jurisdiction and Mandamus
In reviewing the trial court’s ruling on a plea to the jurisdiction, we review the pleadings and any evidence relevant to the jurisdictional issue. See Texas Dep’t of Transportation v. Ramirez, 74 S.W.3d 864, 867 (Tex. 2002). We will construe the pleadings liberally in the taxing units’ favor. Id. at 867. The pleadings must allege facts, however, that affirmatively demonstrate the court’s jurisdiction to hear the cause. See Texas Ass’n of Bus. v. Texas Air Control Board, 852 S.W.2d 440, 446 (Tex. 1993). Whether the trial court has subject matter jurisdiction is a legal question that is reviewed de novo. State ex rel. State Dept. of Highways and Public Transp. v. Gonzalez, 82 S.W.3d 322, 327 (Tex. 2002).
A writ of mandamus is an extraordinary remedy that will issue only to correct a clear abuse of discretion or the violation of a duty imposed by law, when there is no other adequate remedy by law. Canadian Helicopters, Ltd. v. Wittig, 876 S.W.2d 304, 305 (Tex. 1994). In regard to analyzing the law or application of the law to the facts, a trial court has no “discretion,” and must both properly analyze and apply the law to the facts. Therefore, a clear failure to correctly analyze or apply the law will constitute an abuse of discretion. Walker v. Packer, 827 S.W.2d 833, 840 (Tex. 1992). An erroneous legal conclusion, even in an unsettled area of the law, is an abuse of discretion. Perry v. Del Rio, 66 S.W.3d 239, 257 (Tex. 2001).
Tax Code Provisions
Article VIII, section 1 of our state constitution requires that all real property, which includes mineral interests, unless exempt, be taxed “in proportion to its value, which shall be ascertained as may be provided by law.” Tex. Const, art. VIII, § 1(b). The same section requires that taxation be “equal and uniform.” Tex. Const, art. VIII, § 1(a). The constitution further requires that “all lands and other property not rendered for taxation by the owner thereof shall be assessed at its fair value by the proper officer.” Tex. Const, art. VIII, § 11. By a 1980 amendment, article VIII, section 18 of the constitution requires that a “single appraisal” within each county of property subject to ad valo-rem taxation is to be provided by general law. The general law passed by the Legislature to codify the single appraisal concept was the Property Tax Code.
An appraisal district is governed by its board of directors, who are district residents selected by the taxing units in the district.
Among the duties of the chief appraiser is the preparation each year of appraisal records listing all property taxable in the district and stating the appraised value of each. § 25.01. The form of appraisal records is prescribed by the Comptroller.
Following notice to the property owner of the appraised value, if required,
Section 41.01 of the Tax Code sets out the duties of the appraisal review board, which, as relevant here, include the duties to determine protests initiated by property owners, determine challenges initiated by taxing units and “take any other action or make any other determination that this title specifically authorizes or requires.” § 41.41. Taxing units are entitled to bring challenges of designated actions before the appraisal review board, among them, challenges to the level of appraisals of any category of property in the district and challenges to an exclusion of property from the appraisal records. § 41.03.
Pursuant to section 25.21, the chief appraiser is to enter in the appraisal records real property that was omitted from an appraisal roll in any of the five preceding years, appraising the property as of January 1 of the year it was omitted. Except as provided by section 25.25, providing for correction of errors, chapter 41, generally providing for the hearing of protests and challenges by the appraisal review board, and chapter 42, providing for judicial review, once approved by the appraisal review board, the appraisal roll may not be changed. § 25.25(a).
Chapter 42 of the Tax Code provides for trial de novo in the district court on appeal of orders of the appraisal review board determining, inter alia, protests of property owners and challenges by taxing units. §§ 42.01, 42.02, 42.031. Chapter 43 authorizes suits by taxing units against the appraisal district to compel the district’s compliance with Code provisions, rules of the Comptroller or other applicable law. § 43.01.
Threshold Conclusions
Two threshold conclusions guide our dispositions of these proceedings. The first concerns the nature of the underlying suit. Relators call the taxing units’ suit an ad valorem tax case. The taxing units call it a fraud and conspiracy case. They disclaim any intention to change the tax appraisals or tax rolls. They note their suit seeks common law damages for fraud and conspiracy, and point out the Tax Code nowhere prohibits counties or school districts from bringing suit to recover damages from those committing tortious acts. The taxing units do not deny, though, that the compensatory damages they seek necessarily would be measured by the reduction in tax revenue caused by the defendants’ tortious conduct. That determination, of course, cannot be made without finding the amount of ad valorem taxes that would have been received by the taxing units if the defendants’ minerals had been properly valued. The district court therefore cannot adjudicate the claims asserted in the taxing units’ pleading and award the relief they seek without determining the market value, for ad valorem tax purposes, of the mineral interests in question. See § 26.09.
The Texas Supreme Court considered an analogous circumstance in Ector County v. Stringer, 843 S.W.2d 477 (Tex. 1992). There, constables sued in district court for additional compensation for past services. The court of appeals held the district court had jurisdiction over the suits, despite the holding of Vondy v. Commissioners Court of Uvalde County, 620 S.W.2d 104, 109 (Tex. 1981), that the constitution entrusts the duty to set reasonable salaries for constables to the discretion of the commissioners court and a district court is without jurisdiction to perform that task. The
Likewise, a suit to recover damages measured by the ad valorem taxes not received by a taxing unit because of undervaluation of property necessarily involves substituting the district court’s determination of the proper value of the property for that determined by the appraisal district and approved by the appraisal review board. And, just as reclassifying the claim in Stringer as one for a debt did not remove it from the constitutional and statutory provisions vesting authority in the commissioners court, we cannot consider the trial court’s jurisdiction over the taxing units’ claims here outside the constitutional and statutory provisions governing appraisal of property for ad valorem tax purposes.
Secondly, we conclude the Tax Code provided a remedy for the taxing units. In Atascosa County, the Supreme Court held that the chief appraiser’s duty under section 25.21
The taxing units elsewhere point to deadlines in Tax Code procedures as indicating the Legislature cannot have intended the appraisal review board to provide a remedy for fraud and conspiracy claims such as those they seek to pursue here. They note section 41.04 requires challenge petitions to be filed with the review board within fifteen days after the chief appraiser submits completed appraisal records to the review board, and that sections 41.11 and 41.12 would permit only fifty days to complete the hearing at the review board, obtain the board’s order and allow the board to notify the mineral owners of a tax increase. For several reasons, the argument is not persuasive. First, the Tax Code expressly provides for challenges by taxing units, and it contains no indication that challenges based on the appraisal district’s failure to deal with tortious conduct by taxpayers are excluded. Secondly, the argument ignores the availability of judicial review, by which a weakness in the outcome of appraisal review board action, whether due to press of time or other causes, may be addressed, de novo. Under section 42.23, the district court is to “try all issues of fact and law raised by the pleadings in the manner applicable to civil suits generally.” Thirdly, the argument ignores the express provision in sections 5.08 and 41.65 for the Comptroller’s professional and technical assistance to appraisal review boards. Lastly, that the statutory procedures applicable to appraisal review boards might be strained by an adjudication of the magnitude presented by this case
Exclusive Jurisdiction
Our threshold conclusions lead to the question whether the Tax Code’s remedies are the exclusive means by which a taxing unit must address claims of fraud and conspiracy occurring in the appraisal process.
The Government Code states that a district court has the jurisdiction provided by article V, section 8 of the Texas Constitution, and further states that the district court “may hear and determine any cause that is cognizable by courts of law or equity and may grant any relief that could be granted by either courts of law or equity.” Tex. Gov’t Code Ann. §§ 24.007-08 (Vernon 2004). Article V,
Relators contend the Legislature has granted the appraisal district and appraisal review board exclusive jurisdiction to address, as an initial matter, the taxing units’ claims. Whether an administrative body has been given the sole authority, or exclusive jurisdiction, to make an initial determination in a dispute depends on statutory interpretation. See Subaru, 84 S.W.3d at 221. When interpreting a statute, we “consider the entire act, its nature and object, and the consequences that would follow from each construction.” Atascosa County, 990 S.W.2d at 258, quoting Sharp v. House of Lloyd, Inc., 815 S.W.2d 245, 249 (Tex. 1991). We must also “reject interpretations of a statute that defeat the purpose of the legislation so long as another reasonable interpretation exists.” Atascosa County, 990 S.W.2d at 258, quoting Nootsie, Ltd. v. Williamson County Appraisal Dist., 925 S.W.2d 659, 662 (Tex. 1996).
In support of their contention that the appraisal review board has no jurisdiction over the claims they assert against relators, the taxing units correctly note that in an analysis of a claim of exclusive administrative agency jurisdiction, the administrative body is limited to the powers clearly and expressly given it and courts will not imply additional agency authority. See, e.g., Subaru, 84 S.W.3d at 220. We have stated our conclusion that the Tax Code provided the taxing units a remedy for the infection of the appraisal process by fraud. We do not consider that conclusion requires us either to imply authority of the appraisal review board to ensure that mineral interests in Yoakum County are appraised based on market value, unreduced by fraud, or to imply authority of taxing units to bring a challenge if necessary to insist that the appraisal review board do so. We find, to the contrary, that the provisions of the Tax Code expressly provide the necessary authority. See, e.g., §§ 6.01, 6.03, 23.01, 25.21; see also Atascosa County, 990 S.W.2d at 257 (appraisal review board is “charged with ensuring that property is properly appraised”).
The taxing units effectively propose an interpretation of the Tax Code that denies the appraisal review board and taxing units the power to address and remedy, through Code procedures, fraudulent conduct that reduces the appraised value of mineral interests below the statu
Recent supreme court opinions considering exclusive jurisdiction issues look for the presence of a “pervasive regulatory scheme” indicating legislative intention that the regulatory process be the “exclusive means of remedying the problem to which the regulation is addressed.” Entergy, 142 S.W.3d at 322, 47 Tex. Sup.Ct. J. at 732; Subaru, 84 S.W.3d at 221.
The comprehensive nature of the Tax Code is consistent with the object it serves. As we have noted, through its enactment the Legislature carried out specific constitutional mandates. See, e.g., Tex. Const, art. VIII, § 18(b) (requiring provision by general law of a single appraisal in each county); Id., § 18(d) (requiring the Legislature to prescribe by general law “methods, timing and administrative process” to implement section’s requirements). The Tax Code does not reflect merely a legislative decision to regulate otherwise private business activity; it constitutes the exercise of the public function of taxation. See Atascosa County, 990 S.W.2d at 257, Wilson; 713 S.W.2d at 100; Tri-City Fresh Water Supply Dist. No. 2 v. Mann, 135 Tex. 280, 142 S.W.2d 945, 948 (1940) (power to tax belongs to sovereignty; can only be exercised by subordinate corporate body when so delegated by constitution or legislature).
The taxing units contend the Legislature’s 2003 addition of section 22.29 to the Tax Code supports their position that the Code is not a “pervasive regulatory scheme” providing administrative remedies that are exclusive with respect to taxing
The Tax Code does not contain language like that in the former Motor Vehicle Commission Code
Other courts have examined the legislative intention behind section 42.09. See Watson v. Robertson County Appraisal Review Board, 795 S.W.2d 307, 310 (Tex.-App.-Waco 1990, no writ); Valero Transmission Co. v. Hays Consol. Indep. Sch. Dist., 704 S.W.2d 857, 859 n. 1, 861-62 (Tex.App.-Austin 1985, writ ref'd n.r.e.). Those opinions describe the efforts of taxpayers under prior law to interpose common law claims and remedies in ad valo-rem tax cases. See Watson, 795 S.W.2d at 310; Valero Transmission, 704 S.W.2d at 859 n. 1, 861-62. See generally Yudof, The Property Tax in Texas Under State and Federal Law, 51 Tex. L.Rev., 885, 896 et seq. (1973). Given that history, it is not surprising the Legislature would specify that the Code remedies and procedures for taxpayers were being made exclusive. By contrast, there is no history under pre-Code law of local taxing bodies appraising property and assessing taxes through common law causes of action. The absence of a Code provision applicable to taxing units comparable to section 42.09 is not evidence of legislative intent to exempt the claims the taxing units assert in the underlying suit from adjudication through Code procedures.
Our review of the entire Tax Code leads us to conclude it is no less comprehensive with respect to the rights and duties of taxing units than those of property owners, at least with respect to the claims the
As the supreme court stated in Entergy, specific legislative expressions of intent may make a court’s exclusive jurisdiction inquiry uncomplicated. 142 S.W.3d at 321-23, 47 Tex. Sup.Ct. J. at 732. Despite the absence from the Tax Code of specific language so providing, the nature of the governmental function exercised through the Tax Code, the constitutional mandates it implements, its comprehensive and detailed provisions concerning appraisal of property, and its provision of remedies combine to require the conclusion that the Legislature intended the Code procedures to be the exclusive means through which the taxing units may seek a remedy for the injuries caused them by the tortious conduct alleged here.
When the Legislature has given exclusive jurisdiction to an administrative body, a litigant’s failure to exhaust all administrative remedies before seeking judicial review of the administrative body’s action deprives the court of subject matter jurisdiction over claims within the body’s exclusive jurisdiction, and the court must dismiss such claims without prejudice. Subaru, 84 S.W.3d at 221; Cash America, 35 S.W.3d at 15. At the hearing on rela-tors’ pleas to the jurisdiction, the Yoakum County Appraisal District chief appraiser testified she had held that position since its creation, and the taxing units had never submitted a challenge to the appraisal roll or filed a suit against the appraisal district. The taxing units have thus failed to exhaust remedies the Legislature has made exclusive under the Tax Code, depriving the trial court of jurisdiction. The trial court’s conclusion to the contrary and its denial of relators’ pleas to its jurisdiction were a clear error of law and failure to apply the law correctly, thus an abuse of its discretion. See Walker, 827 S.W.2d at 840.
Adequacy of Remedy by Appeal
Denial of a plea to the jurisdiction traditionally has been treated as an incidental trial court ruling, not reviewable by petition for writ of mandamus when there is an adequate remedy by appeal. Bell Helicopter Textron, Inc. v. Walker, 787 S.W.2d 954, 955 (Tex. 1990); Abor v. Black, 695 S.W.2d 564, 566-67 (Tex. 1985); see Canadian Helicopters, 876 S.W.2d at 306. The mere cost to the parties and delay involved in pursuing an appeal do not render an appellate remedy inadequate. Entergy, 142 S.W.3d at 321-22, 47 Tex. Sup.Ct. J. at 731; Canadian Helicopters, 876 S.W.2d at 306. Our supreme court has issued mandamus, though, when the exercise of jurisdiction by a trial court in the face of exclusive jurisdiction held by an administrative body would work “a clear disruption of the orderly processes of government.” Entergy, 142 S.W.3d at 321-22, 47 Tex. Sup.Ct. J. at 731, citing State v. Sewell, 487 S.W.2d 716, 719 (Tex.
There is present here another factor that argues in favor of mandamus relief. The record reflects that there are 36 similar cases pending in other district courts of our state, all brought by taxing units and many involving common defendants. Finding that the cases involve common material questions of fact and law, the presiding judges of the administrative judicial regions involved have assigned them to two pretrial judges pursuant to Rule 11 of the Rules of Judicial Administration. Early appellate resolution of the exclusive jurisdiction issue in this case may aid in the adjudication of those cases and thus help minimize the disruption of processes of government.
Taken together, the burden of expense and delay that would result from trial and appeal of the case, the interference with appraisal district and appraisal review board functions and the presence of a number of other cases involving common questions justify the conclusion that appeal is not an adequate remedy for the trial court’s error of failing to grant relators’ pleas to the jurisdiction.
Conclusion
We conditionally grant the petition for writ of mandamus, directing the trial court to vacate its order of May 3, 2004, and to dismiss the underlying suit. Confident the trial court will comply with this opinion, only in the event the trial court does not do so will we direct this court’s Clerk to issue the writ.
REAVTS, J., concurring.
. Relators in'cause number 07-04-0285-CV are Amerada Hess Corporation; Amerada
Relators in cause number 07-04-0286-CV are ChevronTexaco Corporation; Chevron U.S.A., Inc. a/k/a Chevron Products Company; Texaco Inc.; Texaco Exploration & Production, Inc.; Four Star Oil & Gas Company; Texaco Trading and Transportation, Inc; Texaco Refining and Marketing, Inc. a/k/a Texaco U.S.A.; ExxonMobil Corporation 1/k/a Exxon Corporation a/k/a Exxon Company, USA; Mobil Producing Texas & New Mexico, Inc.; ExxonMobil Oil Corporation a/k/a Exxon f/k/a Mobil Oil Corporation; Shell Oil Company; Shell Exploration & Production Company; Shell Western E & P, Inc; Shell Oil Products Company; Equilon Enterprises, LLC; Ash-land Inc.; and Plains Marketing L.P.
The two petitions for mandamus are not identical, but they are not inconsistent. We do not consider it necessary to distinguish between them in our discussion of the issues presented.
. All the defendants in trial court cause number 8198 except one, Shell Frontier Oil & Gas, Inc., are included among the relators in one or the other of the two mandamus proceedings.
. Mineral interests may be listed in appraisal records in the name of the operator designated with the Railroad Commission of Texas. Tex. Tax Code Ann. § 25.12(b) (Vernon 2001).
. In their pleadings, the taxing units use the term "fixed oil interests” for the oil-producing mineral interests owned or operated by rela-tors.
. We will use the term “taxing units” for the real parties in interest, following nomenclature used by the parties and by the Tax Code. Section 1.04(12) defines "taxing unit” to include counties and school districts, as well as other political units authorized to impose ad valorem taxes on property.
. The petition alleges that "Posted prices are the prices that purchasing oil companies publish by bulletin to express the amount that the company is willing to pay for crude oil at the lease. Defendants fraudulently misrepresented that transactions based on posted prices reflected the market value of oil, when in fact these transactions understated market value.”
. The petition alleges: "Buy/sell or swap sales occur when two parties to a transaction swap a certain volume of commodity in one geographic area in exchange for the agreement to do the same in another geographic area, accounting for transportation costs by cash payment. The parties record these transactions as actual sales of oil and provide a reported price for these transactions that understates the market value of oil. Often, Defendants reported revenues based on posted price as the price at which buy/sell or swap sales occurred ...”
.The Yoakum County Appraisal District is not a party to the suit.
. The Property Tax Code is the short title of Title I, consisting of Chapters 1 through 43, of the Tax Code. Tex. Tax Code Ann. § 1.01 (Vernon 2001). All references to the Tax Code in this opinion are to sections of Title I; for simplicity, we will refer to it as the Tax Code. Unless otherwise indicated, all section references refer to the Texas Tax Code Annotated (Vernon 2001).
. The county tax assessor-collector may serve as a director under some circumstances. See § 6.03(a).
. The Tax Code provides for substantial involvement of the Comptroller, both direct and indirect, in the work of appraisal districts. It requires the Comptroller, inter alia, to adopt rules establishing minimum standards for administration and operation of a district, to provide for training for appraisal review board members and appraisers, to prescribe the contents of forms and a uniform record system, to issue appraisal manuals and other publications, to publish an annual report of the operations of appraisal districts, and to conduct an annual study of appraisal levels in each district. §§ 5.03-5.101. It further requires the Comptroller to review the standards, procedures and methodology used by certain districts to determine compliance with generally accepted appraisal standards and practices and, if a district is not in compliance, to initiate corrective action. § 5.102. It mandates performance audits of appraisal districts by the Comptroller under certain conditions. § 5.12. Section 5.10, requiring the annual study of appraisal levels in each district within each major category of property, authorizes the Comptroller’s representatives to inspect property used for the production of income to determine its existence and market value. § 5.10(c). An appraisal review board may request the Comptroller to assist in determining the accuracy of the district's appraisals, and the Comptroller may provide other professional and technical assistance. §§ 5.08, 41.65.
. Defined to include minerals in place. § 1.04(2).
. See §25.19.
. Compare Tex. Gov’t Code Ann. § 403.302 (Vernon 1998) (requiring Comptroller to conduct annual study to determine total taxable value of all property in each school district).
. The current version of section 25.21, which was effective January 1, 1992, reads as follows:
(a) If the chief appraiser discovers that real property was omitted from an appraisal roll in any one of the five preceding years or that personal property was omitted from an appraisal roll in one of the two preceding years, he shall appraise the property as of January 1 of each year that it was omitted and enter the property and its appraised value in the appraisal records.
. In so holding, Beck & Masten is consistent with the long-cited precept that fraud will negate an otherwise final assessment. See, e.g., Tex. & Pac. Ry. Co. v. City of El Paso, 126 Tex. 86, 85 S.W.2d 245, 250 (1935); Yamini v. Gentle, 488 S.W.2d 839, 842 (Tex.Civ.App.-Dallas 1972, writ ref'd n.r.e.).
.Granted, the "back-appraisal” of property under section 25.21 is limited to the five years preceding the chief appraiser’s action. See Harris County Appraisal Dist. v. Reynolds/Texas, J.V., 884 S.W.2d 526, 529 (Tex.App.-El Paso 1994, no writ). Legislative attention to that section leaves no doubt, though, that the five-year limitation is intentional. By a 1991 amendment to section 25.21, the back-appraisal period was shortened from ten years to five. See Act of June 7, 1991, H.B. 507, § 1, 72nd Leg., R.S. 1991 Tex. Gen. Laws 1417.
. As an alternative, section 43.01 authorizes a taxing unit to bring suit directly against the appraisal district to compel its compliance with Code provisions, rules of the Comptroller or other applicable law.
. The taxing units’ allegations here involve, from the statements in one paragraph of their pleadings, hundreds of thousands of transactions occurring over a ten- to fifteen-year period.
. Thus, as Entergy makes clear, 142 S.W.3d at 321-23, 47 Tex. Sup.Ct. J. at 731-32, the exclusive jurisdiction doctrine is grounded in article V, section 8 of the constitution as well as in traditional administrative law concepts. See Cash America Int’l Inc. v. Bennett, 35 S.W.3d 12, 15 (Tex. 2000).
. Both opinions quote Humphrey, Comment, Antitrust Jurisdiction and Remedies in an Electric Utility Price Squeeze, 52 U. Chi. L.Rev. 1090, 1107 n. 3 (1985).
. Tax Code provisions governing appraisal of oil and gas interests are especially detailed. Section 23.175, added in 1993, prescribes the manner in which the average price of oil or gas is to be calculated for use in an appraisal of oil or gas in place by a method that takes into account the future income anticipated from the sale of oil or gas to be produced. (The taxing units' pleadings indicate that oil and gas interests in Yoakum County are appraised by such a method.) That Code section also requires the Comptroller to develop methods and procedures to be used when appraisers discount future income from the sale of oil or gas to present value, and requires appraisal offices to use the methods and procedures specified by the Comptroller. The Comptroller’s manual for that purpose appears at 34 Tex. Admin. Code § 9.4031.
. See, e.g., §§ 6.01, 41.01.
. See, e.g., §§ 23.01, 41.07, 41.47.
. See, e.g., §§ 25.01, et seq., 41.01, et seq.
. Now codified in Chapter 2301 of the Occupations Code. See Tex. Occ.Code Ann. § 2301.151 (Vernon 2004) (providing board with exclusive original jurisdiction).
. Now codified in the Utilities Code. See Tex. Util.Code Ann. § 32.001 (Vernon 1998) (granting commission exclusive original jurisdiction).
. ChevronTexaco Corporation, et at. state in a brief filed in this court that the taxing units’ suit asserts claims only through the late 1990’s. The taxing units’ petition in the trial court alleges at one point that the transactions through which relators conducted their fraudulent scheme took place from the mid-to late-1980’s through the mid- to late-1990’s, but we do not read their pleadings to limit their claims to those arising by that time. Nor do we perceive that the taxing units have in this court characterized their claims as being so limited.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- In Re EXXONMOBIL CORPORATION, Et Al., Relators. in Re ChevronTexaco Corporation, Et Al., Relators
- Cited By
- 29 cases
- Status
- Published