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Sec.
41.01. Duties of Appraisal Review Board.
The
appraisal review board shall:
(1)
determine protests initiated by property owners;
(2)
determine challenges initiated by taxing units;
(3)
correct clerical errors in the appraisal records and
the appraisal rolls;
(4)
act on motions to correct appraisal rolls under Section
25.25;
(5)
determine whether an exemption or a partial exemption
is improperly granted and whether land is improperly
granted appraisal as provided by Subchapter C, D, or
E, Chapter 23; and
(6)
take any other action or make any other determination
that this title specifically authorizes or requires.
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Sec.
41.02. Action by Board.
After
making a determination or decision under Section 41.01,
the appraisal review board shall by written order direct
the chief appraiser to correct or change the appraisal
records or the appraisal roll to conform the appraisal
records or the appraisal roll to the board's determination
or decision.
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Sec.
41.03. Challenge by Taxing Unit.
A
taxing unit is entitled to challenge before the appraisal
review board:
(1)
the level of appraisals of any category of property
in the district or in any territory in the district,
but not the appraised value of a single taxpayer's
property;
(2)
an exclusion of property from the appraisal records;
(3)
a grant in whole or in part of a partial exemption;
(4)
a determination that land qualifies for appraisal as
provided by Subchapter C, D, or E, Chapter 23 of this
code; or
(5)
failure to identify the taxing unit as one in which
a particular property is taxable.
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Sec.
41.04. Challenge Petition.
The
appraisal review board is not required to hear or determine
a challenge unless the taxing unit initiating the challenge
files a petition with the board before June 1 or within
15 days after the date that the appraisal records are
submitted to the appraisal review board, whichever
is later. The petition must include an explanation
of the grounds for the challenge.
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Sec.
41.05. Hearing on Challenge.
(a)
On the filing of a challenge petition, the appraisal
review board shall schedule a hearing on the challenge.
(b)
The taxing unit initiating the challenge and each taxing
unit in which property involved in the challenge is
or may be taxable are entitled to an opportunity to
appear to offer evidence or argument.
(c)
The chief appraiser shall appear at each hearing to
represent the appraisal office.
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Sec.
41.06. Notice of Challenge Hearing.
(a)
The secretary of the appraisal review board shall deliver
to the presiding officer of the governing body of each
taxing unit entitled to appear at a challenge hearing
written notice of the date, time, and place fixed for
the hearing. The secretary shall deliver the notice
not later than the 10th day before the date of the
hearing.
(b)
The secretary shall give the chief appraiser advance
notice of the date, time, place, and subject matter
of each challenge hearing.
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Sec.
41.07. Determination of Challenge.
(a)
The appraisal review board shall determine each challenge
and make its decision by written order.
(b)
If on determining a challenge the board finds that
the appraisal records are incorrect in some respect
raised by the challenge, the board shall refer the
matter to the appraisal office and by its order shall
direct the chief appraiser to make the reappraisals
or corrections in the records that are necessary to
conform the records to the requirements of law.
(c)
The board shall determine all challenges before approval
of the appraisal records as provided by Section 41.12
of this code.
(d)
The board shall deliver by certified mail a notice
of the issuance of the order and a copy of the order
to the taxing unit.
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Sec.
41.08. Correction of Records on Order of Board.
The
chief appraiser shall make the reappraisals or other
corrections of the appraisal records ordered by the
appraisal review board as provided by this subchapter.
The chief appraiser shall submit a copy of the corrected
records to the board for its approval as promptly as
practicable.
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Sec.
41.09. Clerical Errors.
At
any time before approval of the appraisal records as
provided by Section 41.12 of this code, the appraisal
review board in writing may correct a clerical error
in the records without referring the matter to the
appraisal office if the correction will not affect
the tax liability of a property owner and if the chief
appraiser does not object in writing.
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Sec.
41.10. Correction of Records on Recommendation
of Chief Appraiser.
At
any time before approval of the appraisal records as
provided by Section 41.12 of this code, the chief appraiser
may submit written recommendations to the appraisal
review board for corrections in the records. If the
board approves a recommended correction and it will
not result in an increase in the tax liability of a
property owner, the board may make the correction by
written order.
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Sec.
41.11. Notice to Property Owner of Change in Records.
(a)
Not later than the 15th day before the date the appraisal
review board approves the appraisal records as provided
by Section 41.12 of this code, the secretary of the
board shall deliver written notice to a property owner
of any change in the records that is ordered by the
board as provided by this subchapter and that will
result in an increase in the tax liability of the property
owner.
(b)
The secretary shall include in the notice a brief explanation
of the procedure for protesting the change.
(c)
Failure to deliver notice to a property owner as required
by this section nullifies the change in the records
to the extent the change is applicable to that property
owner.
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Sec.
41.12. Approval of Appraisal Records by Board.
(a)
By July 20, the appraisal review board shall:
(1)
hear and determine all or substantially all timely
filed protests;
(2)
determine all timely filed challenges;
(3)
submit a list of its approved changes in the records
to the chief appraiser; and
(4)
approve the records.
(b)
The appraisal review board must complete substantially
all timely filed protests before approving the appraisal
records and may not approve the records if the sum
of the appraised values, as determined by the chief
appraiser, of all properties on which a protest has
been filed but not determined is more than five percent
of the total appraised value of all other taxable properties.
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Sec.
41.41. Right of Protest.
A
property owner is entitled to protest before the appraisal
review board the following actions:
(1)
determination of the appraised value of the owner's
property or, in the case of land appraised as provided
by Subchapter C, D, or E, Chapter 23, determination
of its appraised or market value;
(2)
unequal appraisal of the owner's property;
(3)
inclusion of the owner's property on the appraisal
records;
(4)
denial to the property owner in whole or in part of
a partial exemption;
(5)
determination that the owner's land does not qualify
for appraisal as provided by Subchapter C, D, or E,
Chapter 23;
(6)
identification of the taxing units in which the owner's
property is taxable in the case of the appraisal district's
appraisal roll;
(7)
determination that the property owner is the owner
of property;
(8)
a determination that a change in use of land appraised
under Subchapter C, D, or E, Chapter 23, has occurred;
or
(9)
any other action of the chief appraiser, appraisal
district, or appraisal review board that applies to
and adversely affects the property owner.
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Sec.
41.411. Protest of Failure to Give Notice.
(a)
A property owner is entitled to protest before the
appraisal review board the failure of the chief appraiser
or the appraisal review board to provide or deliver
any notice to which the property owner is entitled.
(b)
If failure to provide or deliver the notice is established,
the appraisal review board shall determine a protest
made by the property owner on any other grounds of
protest authorized by this title relating to the property
to which the notice applies.
(c)
A property owner who protests as provided by this section
must comply with the payment requirements of Section
42.08 or he forfeits his right to a final determination
of his protest.
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Sec.
41.412. Person Acquiring Property After January
1.
(a)
A person who acquires property after January 1 and
before the deadline for filing notice of the protest
may pursue a protest under this subchapter in the same
manner as a property owner who owned the property on
January 1.
(b)
If during the pendency of a protest under this subchapter
the ownership of the property subject to the protest
changes, the new owner of the property on application
to the appraisal review board may proceed with the
protest in the same manner as the property owner who
initiated the protest.
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Sec.
41.413. Protest by Person Leasing Property.
(a)
A person leasing tangible personal property who is
contractually obligated to reimburse the property owner
for taxes imposed on the property is entitled to protest
before the appraisal review board a determination of
the appraised value of the property if the property
owner does not file a protest relating to the property.
(b)
A person leasing real property who is contractually
obligated to reimburse the property owner for taxes
imposed on the property is entitled to protest before
the appraisal review board a determination of the appraised
value of the property if the property owner does not
file a protest relating to the property. The protest
provided by this subsection is limited to a single
protest by either the property owner or the lessee.
(c)
A person bringing a protest under this section is considered
the owner of the property for purposes of the protest.
The appraisal review board shall deliver a copy of
any notice relating to the protest and of the order
determining the protest to the owner of the property
and the person bringing the protest.
(d)
The property owner shall timely send to the person
leasing the property a copy of any notice of the property's
reappraisal received by the property owner. Failure
of the owner to send a copy of the notice to the person
leasing the property does not affect the time within
which the person leasing the property may protest the
appraised value.
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Sec.
41.42. Protest of Situs.
A
protest against the inclusion of property on the appraisal
records for an appraisal district on the ground that
the property does not have taxable situs in that district
shall be determined in favor of the protesting party
if he establishes that the property is subject to appraisal
by another district or that the property is not taxable
in this state. The chief appraiser of a district in
which the property owner prevails in a protest of situs
shall notify the appraisal office of the district in
which the property owner has established situs.
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Sec.
41.43. Protest of Inequality of Appraisal.
A
protest on the ground of unequal appraisal of property
shall be determined in favor of the protesting party
if the protesting party establishes that the appraisal
ratio of the property is greater than the median level
of appraisal of:
(1)
a reasonable and representative sample of other properties
in the appraisal district; or
(2)
a sample of properties in the appraisal district consisting
of a reasonable number of other properties similarly
situated to, or of the same general kind or character
as, the property subject to the protest.
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Sec.
41.44. Notice of Protest.
(a)
Except as provided by Subsections (b) and (c), to be
entitled to a hearing and determination of a protest,
the property owner initiating the protest must file
a written notice of the protest with the appraisal
review board having authority to hear the matter protested:
(1)
before June 1 or not later than the 30th day after
the date that notice was delivered to the property
owner as provided by Section 25.19, whichever is later;
(2)
in the case of a protest of a change in the appraisal
records ordered as provided by Subchapter A of this
chapter or by Chapter 25, not later than the 30th day
after the date notice of the change is delivered to
the property owner; or
(3)
in the case of a determination that a change in the
use of land appraised under Subchapter C, D, or E,
Chapter 23, has occurred, not later than the 30th day
after the date the notice of the determination is delivered
to the property owner.
(b)
A property owner who files his notice of protest after
the deadline prescribed by Subsection (a) of this section
but before the appraisal review board approves the
appraisal records is entitled to a hearing and determination
of the protest if he shows good cause as determined
by the board for failure to file the notice on time.
(c)
A property owner who files notice of a protest authorized
by Section 41.411 is entitled to a hearing and determination
of the protest if he files the notice prior to the
date the taxes on the property to which the notice
applies become delinquent. An owner of land who files
a notice of protest under Subsection (a)(3) is entitled
to a hearing and determination of the protest without
regard to whether the appraisal records are approved.
(d)
A notice of protest is sufficient if it identifies
the protesting property owner, including a person claiming
an ownership interest in the property even if that
person is not listed on the appraisal records as an
owner of the property, identifies the property that
is the subject of the protest, and indicates apparent
dissatisfaction with some determination of the appraisal
office. The notice need not be on an official form,
but the comptroller shall prescribe a form that provides
for more detail about the nature of the protest. The
form must permit a property owner to include each property
in the appraisal district that is the subject of a
protest. The comptroller, each appraisal office, and
each appraisal review board shall make the forms readily
available and deliver one to a property owner on request.
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Sec.
41.45. Hearing on Protest.
(a)
On the filing of a notice as required by Section 41.44,
the appraisal review board shall schedule a hearing
on the protest. If more than one protest is filed relating
to the same property, the appraisal review board shall
schedule a single hearing on all timely filed protests
relating to the property. A hearing for a property
that is owned in undivided or fractional interests,
including separate interests in a mineral in place,
shall be scheduled to provide for participation by
all owners who have timely filed a protest.
(b)
The property owner initiating the protest is entitled
to an opportunity to appear to offer evidence or argument.
The property owner may offer his evidence or argument
by affidavit without personally appearing if he attests
to the affidavit before an officer authorized to administer
oaths and submits the affidavit to the board hearing
the protest before it begins the hearing on the protest.
On receipt of an affidavit, the board shall notify
the chief appraiser. The chief appraiser may inspect
the affidavit and is entitled to a copy on request.
(c)
The chief appraiser shall appear at each protest hearing
before the appraisal review board to represent the
appraisal office.
(d)
An appraisal review board consisting of more than three
members may sit in panels of not fewer than three members
to conduct protest hearings. However, the determination
of a protest heard by a panel must be made by the board.
If the recommendation of a panel is not accepted by
the board, the board may refer the matter for rehearing
to a panel composed of members who did not hear the
original hearing or, if there are not at least three
members who did not hear the original protest, the
board may determine the protest. Before determining
a protest or conducting a rehearing before a new panel
or the board, the board shall deliver notice of the
hearing or meeting to determine the protest in accordance
with the provisions of this subchapter.
(e)
The board shall postpone the hearing to a later date
if the property owner or the owner's agent shows good
cause for the postponement or if the chief appraiser
consents to the postponement. The hearing may not be
postponed to a date less than five or more than 15
days after the date scheduled for the original hearing
unless the date and time of the hearing as postponed
are agreed to by the appraisal review board, the property
owner, and the chief appraiser. Postponement under
this subsection does not require the delivery of additional
written notice to the property owner.
(f)
A property owner who has been denied a hearing to which
the property owner is entitled under this chapter may
bring suit against the appraisal review board by filing
a petition or application in district court to compel
the board to provide the hearing. If the property owner
is entitled to the hearing, the court shall order the
hearing to be held and may award court costs and reasonable
attorney fees to the property owner.
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Sec.
41.46. Notice of Protest Hearing.
(a)
The appraisal review board before which a protest hearing
is scheduled shall deliver written notice to the property
owner initiating a protest of the date, time, and place
fixed for the hearing on the protest. The board shall
deliver the notice not later than the 15th day before
the date of the hearing.
(b)
The board shall give the chief appraiser advance notice
of the date, time, place, and subject matter of each
protest hearing.
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Sec.
41.461. Notice of Certain Matters Before Hearing.
(a)
At least 14 days before a hearing on a protest, the
chief appraiser shall:
(1)
deliver a copy of the pamphlet prepared by the comptroller
under Section 5.06(a) to the property owner initiating
the protest if the owner is representing himself, or
to an agent representing the owner if requested by
the agent;
(2)
inform the property owner that the owner or the agent
of the owner may inspect and may obtain a copy of the
data, schedules, formulas, and all other information
the chief appraiser plans to introduce at the hearing
to establish any matter at issue; and
(3)
deliver a copy of the hearing procedures established
by the appraisal review board under Section 41.66 to
the property owner.
(b)
The charge for copies provided to an owner or agent
under this section may not exceed the charge for copies
of public information as provided under Subchapter
F, Chapter 552, Government Code, except:
(1)
the total charge for copies provided in connection
with a protest of the appraisal of residential property
may not exceed $15 for each residence; and
(2)
the total charge for copies provided in connection
with a protest of the appraisal of a single unit of
property subject to appraisal, other than residential
property, may not exceed $25.
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Sec.
41.47. Determination of Protest.
(a)
The appraisal review board hearing a protest shall
determine the protest and make its decision by written
order.
(b)
If on determining a protest the board finds that the
appraisal records are incorrect in some respect raised
by the protest, the board by its order shall correct
the appraisal records by changing the appraised value
placed on the protesting property owner's property
or by making the other changes in the appraisal records
that are necessary to conform the records to the requirements
of law. If the appraised value of a taxable property
interest, other than an interest owned by a public
utility or by a cooperative corporation organized to
provide utility service, is changed as the result of
a protest or challenge, the board shall change the
appraised value of all other interests, other than
an interest owned by a public utility or by a cooperative
corporation organized to provide utility service, in
the same property, including a mineral in place, in
proportion to the ownership interests.
(d)
The board shall deliver by certified mail a notice
of issuance of the order and a copy of the order to
the property owner and the chief appraiser.
(e)
The notice of the issuance of the order must contain
a prominently printed statement in upper-case bold
lettering informing the property owner in clear and
concise language of the property owner's right to appeal
the board's decision to district court. The statement
must describe the deadline prescribed by Section 42.06(a)
of this code for filing a written notice of appeal,
and the deadline prescribed by Section 42.21(a) of
this code for filing the petition for review with the
district court.
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Sec.
41.61. Issuance of Subpoena.
(a)
If reasonably necessary in the course of a protest
provided by this chapter, the appraisal review board
on its own motion or at the written request of a party
to the protest, may subpoena witnesses or books, records,
or other documents of the property owner or appraisal
district that relate to the protest.
(b)
On the written request of a party to a protest provided
by this chapter, the appraisal review board shall issue
a subpoena if the requesting party:
(1)
shows good cause for issuing the subpoena; and
(2)
deposits with the board a sum the board determines
is reasonably sufficient to insure payment of the costs
estimated to accrue for issuance and service of the
subpoena and for compensation of the individual to
whom it is directed.
(c)
An appraisal review board may not issue a subpoena
under this section unless the board holds a hearing
at which the board determines that good cause exists
for the issuance of the subpoena. The appraisal review
board before which a good cause hearing is scheduled
shall deliver written notice to the party being subpoenaed
and parties to the protest of the date, time, and place
of the hearing. The board shall deliver the notice
not later than the 5th day before the date of the good
cause hearing. The party being subpoenaed must have
an opportunity to be heard at the good cause hearing.
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Sec.
41.62. Service and Enforcement of Subpoena.
(a)
A sheriff or constable shall serve a subpoena issued
as provided by this subchapter.
(b)
If the person to whom a subpoena is directed fails
to comply, the issuing board or the party requesting
the subpoena may bring suit in the district court to
enforce the subpoena. If the district court determines
that good cause exists for issuance of the subpoena,
the court shall order compliance. The district court
may modify the requirements of a subpoena that the
court determines are unreasonable. Failure to obey
the order of the district court is punishable as contempt.
(c)
The county attorney or, if there is no county attorney,
the district attorney shall represent the board in
a suit to enforce a subpoena.
Sec.
41.63. Compensation for Subpoenaed Witness.
(a)
An individual who is not a party to the proceeding
and who complies with a subpoena issued as provided
by this subchapter is entitled to:
(1)
the reasonable costs of producing the documents;
(2)
mileage of 15 cents a mile for going to and returning
from the place of the proceeding; and
(3)
a fee of $10 a day for each whole or partial day that
the individual is necessarily present at the proceedings.
(b)
The appraisal review board by rule may prescribe greater
mileage or fee, but an increase is not effective unless
uniformly applicable to all individuals who are entitled
to mileage or fee as provided by Subsection (a) of
this section.
(c)
Compensation authorized as provided by this section
is paid by the appraisal office if the subpoena is
issued on the motion of the appraisal review board
or by the party requesting the subpoena.
(d)
Compensation is not payable unless the amount claimed
is approved by the appraisal review board that issued
the subpoena.
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Sec.
41.64. Inspection of Tax Records.
The
appraisal review board may inspect the records or other
materials of the appraisal office that are not made
confidential under this code. On demand of the board,
the chief appraiser shall produce the materials as
soon as practicable.
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Sec.
41.65. Request for State Assistance.
The
appraisal review board may request the comptroller
to assist in determining the accuracy of appraisals
by the appraisal office or to provide other professional
assistance. The appraisal office shall reimburse the
costs of providing assistance if the comptroller requests
reimbursement.
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Sec.
41.66. Hearing Procedures.
(a)
The appraisal review board shall establish by rule
the procedures for hearings it conducts as provided
by Subchapters A and C of this chapter. On request
made by a property owner in the owner's notice of protest
or in a separate writing delivered to the appraisal
review board on or before the date the notice of protest
is filed, the property owner is entitled to a copy
of the hearing procedures. The copy of the hearing
procedures shall be delivered to the property owner
not later than the 10th day before the date the hearing
on the protest begins and may be delivered with the
notice of the protest hearing required under Section
41.46(a). The notice of protest form prescribed by
the State Property Tax Board under Section 41.44(d)
or any other notice of protest form made available
to a property owner by the appraisal review board or
the appraisal office shall provide the property owner
an opportunity to make or decline to make a request
under this subsection. The appraisal review board shall
post a copy of the hearing procedures in a prominent
place in the room in which the hearing is held.
(b)
Hearing procedures to the greatest extent practicable
shall be informal. Each party to a hearing is entitled
to offer evidence, examine or cross-examine witnesses
or other parties, and present argument on the matters
subject to the hearing.
(c)
A property owner who is entitled as provided by this
chapter to appear at a hearing may appear by himself
or by his agent. A taxing unit may appear by a designated
agent.
(d)
Hearings conducted as provided by this chapter are
open to the public.
(e)
The appraisal review board may not consider any appraisal
district information on a protest that was not presented
to the appraisal review board during the protest hearing.
(f)
A member of the appraisal review board may not communicate
with another person concerning:
(1)
the evidence, argument, facts, merits, or any other
matters related to an owner's protest, except during
the hearing on the protest; or
(2)
a property that is the subject of the protest, except
during a hearing on another protest or other proceeding
before the board at which the property is compared
to other property or used in a sample of properties.
(g)
At the beginning of a hearing on a protest, each member
of the appraisal review board hearing the protest must
sign an affidavit stating that the board member has
not communicated with another person in violation of
Subsection (f). If a board member has communicated
with another person in violation of Subsection (f),
the member must be recused from the proceeding and
may not hear, deliberate on, or vote on the determination
of the protest. The board of directors of the appraisal
district shall adopt and implement a policy concerning
the temporary replacement of an appraisal review board
member who has communicated with another person in
violation of Subsection (f).
(h)
The appraisal review board shall postpone a hearing
on a protest if the property owner requests additional
time to prepare for the hearing and establishes to
the board that the chief appraiser failed to comply
with Section 41.461. The board is not required to postpone
a hearing more than one time under this subsection.
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Sec.
41.67. Evidence.
(a)
A member of the appraisal review board may swear witnesses
who testify in proceedings under this chapter. All
testimony must be given under oath.
(b)
Documentary evidence may be admitted in the form of
a copy if the appraisal review board conducting the
proceeding determines that the original document is
not readily available. A party is entitled to an opportunity
to compare a copy with the original document on request.
(c)
Official notice may be taken of any fact judicially
cognizable. A party is entitled to an opportunity to
contest facts officially noticed.
(d)
Information that was previously requested under Section
41.461 by the protesting party or the chief appraiser
that was not made available to the protesting party
or the chief appraiser at least 14 days before the
scheduled or postponed hearing may not be used as evidence
in the hearing.
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Sec.
41.68. Record of Proceeding.
The
appraisal review board shall keep a record of its proceedings
in the form and manner prescribed by the comptroller.
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Sec.
41.69. Conflict of Interest.
A
member of the appraisal review board may not participate
in the determination of a taxpayer protest in which
he is interested or in which he is related to a party
by affinity within the second degree or by consanguinity
within the third degree, as determined under Chapter
573, Government Code. Acts 1979, 66th Leg., p. 2309,
ch. 841, Sec. 1, eff. Jan. 1, 1982.
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Sec.
41.70. Public Notice of Protest and Appeal Procedures.
(a)
On or after May 1 but not later than May 15, the chief
appraiser shall publish notice of the manner in which
a protest under this chapter may be brought by a property
owner. The notice must describe how to initiate a protest
and must describe the deadlines for filing a protest.
The notice must also describe the manner in which an
order of the appraisal review board may be appealed.
The comptroller by rule shall adopt minimum standards
for the form and content of the notice required by
this section.
(b)
The chief appraiser shall publish the notice in a newspaper
having general circulation in the county for which
the appraisal district is established. The notice may
not be smaller than one-quarter page of a standard-size
or tabloid-size newspaper, and may not be published
in the part of the paper in which legal notices and
classified advertisements appear.
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