Alvetta L. Massenberg v. Clarendon County Treasurer

CourtSupreme Court of South Carolina
DecidedAugust 21, 2024
Docket2023-000098
StatusPublished

This text of Alvetta L. Massenberg v. Clarendon County Treasurer (Alvetta L. Massenberg v. Clarendon County Treasurer) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of South Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Alvetta L. Massenberg v. Clarendon County Treasurer, (S.C. 2024).

Opinion

THE STATE OF SOUTH CAROLINA In The Supreme Court

Alvetta L. Massenberg, Petitioner,

v.

Clarendon County Treasurer, Clarendon County Delinquent Tax Collector, Blacktop Ventures, LLC, Respondents.

Appellate Case No. 2023-000098

ON WRIT OF CERTIORARI TO THE COURT OF APPEALS

Appeal from Clarendon County Joseph K. Coffey, Master-in-Equity

Opinion No. 28234 Heard June 19, 2024 – Filed August 21, 2024

REVERSED

John M. Bleecker Jr., of Law Office of John M. Bleecker, Jr., and Albert Peter Shahid Jr., of Shahid Law Office, LLC, both of Charleston, for Petitioner.

Scott Franklin Talley, of Talley Law Firm, P.A., of Spartanburg, for Respondent Blacktop Ventures, LLC; William H. Johnson, of Johnson, DuRant & Nester, LLC, of Manning, for Respondents Clarendon County Delinquent Tax Collector and Clarendon County Treasurer.

JUSTICE FEW: Alvetta Massenberg appeals the master-in-equity's refusal to set aside a delinquent tax sale of her real property. She argues the sale was invalid because the statutory notice was not posted in a "conspicuous" place as required by subsection 12-51-40(c) of the South Carolina Code (Supp. 2023). The court of appeals affirmed. Massenberg v. Clarendon Cnty. Treasurer, Op. No. 2022-UP-410 (S.C. Ct. App. filed Nov. 16, 2022). We find the required notice was not posted in a conspicuous place and reverse.

I. Factual and Legal Background

In 1997, Alvetta Massenberg inherited a 2.54-acre tract of undeveloped land located near the rural community of Alcolu in Clarendon County. The densely forested property is shaped like a triangle, with each of the sides being of roughly equal length. The first side faces a two-lane paved secondary road (S-14-49) known as Plowden Mill Road. The lanes of Plowden Mill Road are marked by a double-yellow center line and solid white fog lines on each side. The shoulders are wide and clear of vegetation. The second side faces a one-lane dirt road known as Robert Rees Durant Road. The dirt road has very little shoulder area as the surrounding vegetation crowds the one lane of travel. The third side is not important to this case, except that we will use it to illustrate a point later in the opinion.

Massenberg paid all taxes related to the property through 2015, but she failed to pay the property taxes for 2016. As required by subsection 12-45-180(A) of the South Carolina Code (Supp. 2023), the Clarendon County Treasurer issued a "tax execution" to the Clarendon County Delinquent Tax Collector directing that official to collect $221.27 in delinquent taxes and nonpayment penalties.

The procedure a tax collector must follow to collect delinquent taxes is set forth in detail in section 12-51-40. The tax collector took the first two steps in compliance with the section by (1) sending a "notice of delinquent property taxes" by regular mail to Massenberg's permanent address in Charlotte, North Carolina, and (2) sending another notice by certified mail when the taxes remained unpaid thirty days after the first notice. §§ 12-51-40(a)-(b) (2014). The certified mail notice was returned undelivered, and the tax collector turned—as the statute requires—to subsection 12-51-40(c).

Subsection 12-51-40(c) requires the tax collector to "take exclusive physical possession of the property . . . by posting a notice at one or more conspicuous places on the premises." To fulfill this statutory responsibility, the tax collector hired a private contractor—Palmetto Posting, Inc. The tax collector gave Palmetto Posting no information, no instruction, and no guidance as to how to—or even whether to— post the notice in a "conspicuous" place. A representative of Palmetto Posting stapled a single "Notice of Levy" to a tree facing the one-lane dirt road. Palmetto Posting then submitted a one-page "Field Report" attached to a copy of the front of the Notice of Levy. There is no evidence in the record the tax collector reviewed the Field Report or otherwise made any effort to determine whether the Notice of Levy had been posted in a conspicuous place.

When the taxes still remained unpaid, the property was advertised for sale at public auction pursuant to subsection 12-51-40(d) (2014) and sold to Blacktop Ventures, LLC. Following the sale, Blacktop paid all outstanding taxes. The treasurer and the tax collector then signed and recorded a tax deed conveying the property to Blacktop.

After Massenberg learned her property had been sold, she filed an action to set aside the tax sale, alleging the tax collector failed to post the Notice of Levy in a conspicuous place as required by subsection 12-51-40(c). At a non-jury trial before the master-in-equity, Massenberg and Clarendon County presented evidence about the location of the Notice of Levy and the nature of the two roads on the two relevant sides of the property.

The testimony presented at the hearing indicates the Notice of Levy was printed on an 8.5 x 11-inch sheet of paper and posted to a tree near the property line facing the one-lane dirt road at about the halfway point of the property line along the dirt road. Aerial photographs of Massenberg's property in the record taken from Google Maps show the tree is indistinguishable from the surrounding woods and the dirt road is crowded by foliage on both sides leaving very little room outside the one lane of travel.

Frank Frierson—Massenberg's uncle who lived nearby—testified that fewer than ten cars would travel the dirt road each day and it is only wide enough for one vehicle to pass at a time. When asked to compare the traffic volume between the paved road and the dirt road, Frierson responded "it would be 100-to-1 . . . or more," and confirmed there are "no houses on the [dirt] road." Frierson testified, "I'm down there three, four times a day," and, "I didn't see a posting. There could have been a posting, [but] I didn't see it."

David Epperson—the Clarendon County Administrator—testified about a spreadsheet that contains Clarendon County's 2017 work orders for the dirt road. The spreadsheet contains ten entries entitled "Grading and Shaping." Epperson testified that a dirt road being graded and shaped ten times within one year "is roughly above average." He then testified that the frequency of the grading and shaping is "indicative that the road is used quite a bit," and he stated "without traffic on that road, very little maintenance would be necessary." Epperson further testified the dirt road was used as a shortcut to other residential areas.

Maps, overhead photographs of the property, and other testimony indicate that a residential road called Azalea Lane intersects with Plowden Mill Road a short distance from its intersection with the dirt road, directly across Plowden Mill Road from Massenberg's property. Travelers coming from their homes on Azalea Lane toward Plowden Mill Road—the only outlet for Azalea Lane—must stop at the stop sign, at which time they face Massenberg's property directly across Plowden Mill Road.

The master concluded the posting of the Notice of Levy "meets the requirements of South Carolina law for posting property." However, the master did not specifically analyze the question whether the Notice of Levy was posted in a conspicuous place, but merely stated, "[n]o evidence was presented by [Massenberg], who bears the burden in this matter, that the notice of levy . . . was not posted as indicated by Palmetto Posting, Inc." Accordingly, the master refused to set aside the tax sale and declared Blacktop the lawful owner of the property.

Massenberg appealed the master's order, and the court of appeals affirmed. Massenberg, 2022-UP-410. We granted Massenberg's petition for a writ of certiorari.

II. Analysis

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Alvetta L. Massenberg v. Clarendon County Treasurer, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/alvetta-l-massenberg-v-clarendon-county-treasurer-sc-2024.