Battisti v. Beaver County Tax Claim Bureau

105 A.3d 76, 2014 Pa. Commw. LEXIS 562
CourtCommonwealth Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedDecember 11, 2014
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 105 A.3d 76 (Battisti v. Beaver County Tax Claim Bureau) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Commonwealth Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Battisti v. Beaver County Tax Claim Bureau, 105 A.3d 76, 2014 Pa. Commw. LEXIS 562 (Pa. Ct. App. 2014).

Opinion

OPINION BY

Judge LEAVITT.

Eileen Battisti (Taxpayer) appeals an order of the Beaver County Court of Common Pleas (trial court) that refused to set aside the sale of her home, which had a market value of approximately $250,000, in order to satisfy a 2009 tax delinquency of $234.72. It is not disputed that in September of 2010 Taxpayer paid $3,990.03, which was the total amount set forth in the Beaver County Tax Claim Bureau’s notice of what she needed to pay to satisfy her 2009 real estate taxes. Likewise, it is not disputed that the Tax Claim Bureau did not advise her that it had applied some of the $3,990.03 payment to an outstanding 2008 shortfall, thereby creating a shortfall on the 2009 tax in the amount of $234.72. In this circumstance, Taxpayer contends that it was the Tax Claim Bureau’s duty under the Real Estate Tax Sale Law1 to offer Taxpayer an installment payment plan on the outstanding 2009 tax amount. We agree and reverse.

At issue is a family home located at 118 Rosewood Drive, Aliquippa, Pennsylvania (Property). Taxpayer and her husband, Anthony Battisti, purchased the house in 1999. Anthony Battisti was responsible for managing the family’s finances, including the payment of all bills and taxes. He died in 2004. Taxpayer used her husband’s life insurance policy to pay off the mortgage.

[78]*78Taxpayer, who was inexperienced in managing the household finances when her husband died, struggled with this new responsibility. She also struggled financially. Taxpayer did not pay the real estate taxes on the Property in a timely manner, which she attributed to her inexperience as well as several physical and emotional challenges.2 On September 12, 2011, the Tax Claim Bureau sold her Property to S.P. Lewis (Bidder) for $113,000 for the $234.72 delinquency on the 2009 taxes.3

On October 11, 2011, Taxpayer filed objections and a petition to set aside the September 12, 2011, upset tax sale of her home, asserting a lack of notice of the outstanding debt or the sale. Both the Tax Claim Bureau and Bidder answered, and on November 18, 2011, Bidder filed a motion for judgment on the pleadings. Thereafter, Taxpayer, with permission of the trial court, filed an amended petition, but Bidder did not renew his motion for judgment on the pleadings.4 Nevertheless, on May 18, 2012, the trial court granted the motion for judgment on the pleadings and dismissed Taxpayer’s petition without a hearing.

This Court reversed the trial court, holding the procedural device of judgment on the pleadings was not available in a tax sale proceeding brought under the Real Estate Tax Sale Law. Battisti v. Tax Claim Bureau of Beaver County, 76 A.3d 111 (Pa.Cmwlth.2013). Accordingly, this Court remanded the matter to the trial court with instructions to hold an eviden-tiary hearing, and it did so on March 28, 2014.

The essential facts on the 2008 and 2009 taxes follow. The Central Valley School District notified the Tax Claim Bureau that there was an unpaid 2008 school tax on the Property in the amount of $833.88 plus a $42.01 penalty. Trial ct. op. at 1-2. The Tax Claim Bureau added a $15.00 entry fee to that amount for a total of $890.89. On April 1, 2009, the Tax Claim Bureau added $6.30, for one month of interest, which brought the total claim for the Property’s 2008 school tax to $897.19. On May 7, 2009, the Tax Claim Bureau received a payment from Taxpayer in the amount of $897.19, the amount owing as of April 30, 2009. However, on May 1, 2009, the Tax Claim Bureau had added another $6.30 interest, which was not covered by Taxpayer’s payment. The Tax Claim Bureau did not reject Taxpayer’s payment of $897.19 as inadequate. Instead, it sent her [79]*79a document entitled “Receipt” that acknowledged its receipt of a “Total Remittance” of $897.19. Reproduced Record at 193a (R.R.-).

The Tax Claim Bureau did not send an invoice to Taxpayer for $6.30; advise her that this amount would continue to grow over time; or tell her that the outstanding $6.30 could cause the sale of her Property. The only reference to the outstanding $6.30 was a notation on the bottom of the Tax Claim Bureau’s “Receipt” that stated “Remaining Balance $6.30.” Id. It did not explain the basis of the “remaining balance,” let alone how it was to be paid or the deadline for doing so.

On June 3, 2009, the Tax Claim Bureau issued a “Notice of Return and Claim,” stating a “Total Now Due” of $28.35 on the Property. This represented the $6.30 in interest added to the 2008 tax payment, plus postage and costs for a total of $28.35. R.R. 218a. The notice warned that if the $28.35 were not paid by July 1, 2010, the Property could be listed for a tax sale. This document was returned to the Tax Claim Bureau as unclaimed. Accordingly, on July 24, 2009, the Tax Claim Bureau posted a notice on the Property. Section 308(a) of the Real Estate Tax Sale Law, 72 P.S. § 5860.308(a) (“[I]f a notice mailed to an owner at [the] last known post office address is not delivered by the postal authorities, then notice as herein provided shall-be posted on the property affected.”); R.R. 219a. A copy of the actual posting was not entered into evidence.

In April of 2010, two taxing authorities notified the Tax Claim Bureau that 2009 taxes were owing on the Property. On June 3, 2010, the Tax Claim Bureau issued a “Notice of Return and Claim” stating a “Total Now Due” of $3,832.72 on the 2009 County and school taxes for the Property. R.R. 216a. The notice warned that if payment were not received by July 1, 2011, the Property could be listed at a tax sale. The June 3, 2010, notice was returned as “unclaimed,” and in July the Tax Claim Bureau posted a notice on the Property regarding the 2009 taxes. R.R. 217a.

In the meantime, there remained a delinquency of $28.35, plus costs and interest, on the 2008 taxes. However, in June of 2010 when the Tax Claim Bureau notified Taxpayer that her 2009 taxes were late, it did not also notify her of the more pressing delinquency that could cause her house to be sold in September of 2010, ie., the outstanding $28.35, plus costs and interest that had accrued on the original $6.30 in interest charged for Taxpayer’s six-day late payment of the 2008 tax.

In July of 2010 the Tax Claim Bureau listed the Property for a tax upset sale to take place on September 13, 2010, because of the unpaid $6.30 in interest, plus the costs and interest that had accrued on the $6.30. The Tax Claim Bureau’s notice of the impending sale was returned “unclaimed.” R.R. 214a. The Tax Claim Bureau personally served Taxpayer on August 3, 2010, with a notice of the impending September sale. R.R. 215a.

This August notice stated that the upset sale price for Taxpayer’s property was $3,990.03. However, the actual amount of payment needed to stop the tax sale on September 13, 2010, was $234.72. The upset sale price of $3,990.03 covered both the 2009 and 2010 taxes.5 Notably, two months earlier, the Tax Claim Bureau had [80]*80notified Taxpayer that she had until July 1, 2011, to pay $3,832.72 for the 2009 taxes.

On September 11, 2010, the Tax Claim Bureau received a check from Taxpayer in the amount of $3,990.03, which was the total stated in the notice served upon Taxpayer in August 2010.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
105 A.3d 76, 2014 Pa. Commw. LEXIS 562, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/battisti-v-beaver-county-tax-claim-bureau-pacommwct-2014.