FERREN, Associate Judge:
This case presents one controlling question: whether a tax deed can be valid — despite a misaddressed notice of expiring redemption period to the record owner — when the post office, using standard address correcting procedures, attempts to deliver that notice to the proper address. We hold that in order to convey property for nonpayment of real estate taxes, the Department of Finance and Revenue must have mailed the notice of expiring redemption period to the record owner’s last known address in a manner that is accurate in all material respects. Post office procedures cannot cure materially defective notice. Because in this case the Department addressed the notice to the wrong quadrant (“S.W.” instead of “N.W.”), we reverse the judgment in favor of the tax purchasers.
I.
Before September 20,1966, Thelma Smith Ruskin and her sister, Vera S. Hart, jointly owned Lot 55, Square 3311 in the District of Columbia, known by the street address of 4219 4th Street, N.W. The Recorder of Deeds listed the property in both names. On September 30, 1966, Hart conveyed her interest in the property to Ruskin. District real estate tax assessment records thereafter reflected the record owner of the property as “Thelma Ruskin, 4219-4th Street, N.W.”
Ruskin died testate on December 31, 1973. Some of Ruskin’s relatives, as well as other unrelated persons who had been living with Ruskin before her death, continued to occupy the property.
Although someone paid the real estate taxes for 1974, no one paid for the years 1975-78. The Department of Finance and Revenue sent bills for those years by computer mailing to “Vera S Hart & T Ruskin, 4219 4th St NW, Washington DC.” On January 23, 1976, at a tax sale, appellee District of Columbia sold the property to appellees Robinson for payment of delinquent 1975 taxes.
On June 2,1976, Ruskin’s will was admitted to probate; appellants Milton Lee Bod-die and Fred Wade were named coexecu-tors. The executors did not notify the office of the tax assessor that the record owner of this property had died and did not ask the post office to forward Ruskin’s mail to them.
On December 6, 1977, the Department sent a notice of expiring redemption period by registered mail, return receipt requested, with the typewritten address: “Vera S. Hart & T. Ruskin, 4219 4th Street, S.W., Washington, D. C. 20011.” After attempting to deliver the letter to the correct N.W. address, the post office returned the letter to the Department as “Unclaimed.” On January 23, 1978, the statutory redemption period expired. Unaware that the probate court had jurisdiction over the property, appellees Robinson requested issuance of a tax deed and paid the sum due.
Meanwhile, on June 24, 1978, unaware of the tax sale, the executors filed a petition to ratify the sale of the property to satisfy debts and legacies of the estate. On August 22, the probate court ordered the sale of the property “free of all liens.” The
executors, however, could not complete the settlement scheduled for September 6,1978, because they discovered that the District had sold the property for taxes to appellees Robinson.
On April 6, 1979, the executors sued to set aside the tax certificate. The trial court granted a preliminary injunction but, after a bench trial, rendered judgment for appel-lees. Appellants timely noted their appeal. See D.C. Code 1973, § 11-721(a)(1); D.C.App.R. 4 II(a)(1).
II.
The owner of real property sold by the District for delinquent taxes may redeem the property “at any time within two years after the ... sale .... ” D.C.Code 1973, § 47-1005.
In furtherance of this right, the District of Columbia Council in 1975 adopted a regulation
making mandatory the prior administrative custom of notifying property owners of the upcoming expiration of this redemption period:
Not less than thirty (30) days prior to the expiration date of the two year redemption period, the record owner shall be notified, by certified or registered mail, of the final date by which he must redeem his property.
Reg. No. 74-35, § 126, 21 D.C. Reg. 1643, 1655 (Jan. 20, 1975);
see Watson v. Scheve,
D.C.App., 424 A.2d 1089, 1092 (1980).
The regulation also specifies that notice by mail is effective upon mailing:
Unless otherwise specified, any notice, bill or statement required by these regulations or other applicable provision of law to be served upon the property owner shall be deemed to be served when mailed by first class mail to the last known address of the property owner as recorded in the real estate assessment records of the District.
Reg. No. 74-35, supra § 112(c), at 1651.
“[I]n order to guard against the deprivation of property without due process of law,”
Potomac Building Corp. v. Karkenny,
D.C.App., 364 A.2d 809, 812 (1976) (per curiam), ce
rt. denied,
431 U.S. 921, 97 S.Ct. 2192, 53 L.Ed.2d 234 (1977), this court has held that the District may effect a valid conveyance of property for nonpayment of real estate taxes only by “strict compliance” with the tax sale statute and regulations.
Watson, supra
at 1092;
Shenandoah Corp. v. Pringle,
D.C.App., 385 A.2d 748, 749 (1978);
Potomac Building Corp., supra
at 812.
We have employed this standard both for notice by publication,
see Shenandoah Corp., supra
at 749-50;
Potomac Building Corp., supra
at 811,
and for notice by mail.
See Watson, supra
at 1092.
We turn to its application here.
III.
In this case the parties stipulated that “[t]he ‘S.W.’ in the notice [of expiring redemption period] was a typographical error by the Office of Assessment Services in the Department of Finance and Revenue and S.W. should have been N.W.” The Department therefore did not mail the notice “to the last known address of the property owner as recorded in the real estate assessment records of the District,” as required by Reg. No. 74-35,
supra
§§ 112(c), 126.
Appellants contend that the Department did not comply strictly with the legal requirements and that the tax sale is therefore void. Appellees maintain, and the trial court agreed, that this acknowledged error should not vitiate the sale because post office procedures corrected the District’s mistake.
In accordance with the testimony of a postal service employee, the trial court
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FERREN, Associate Judge:
This case presents one controlling question: whether a tax deed can be valid — despite a misaddressed notice of expiring redemption period to the record owner — when the post office, using standard address correcting procedures, attempts to deliver that notice to the proper address. We hold that in order to convey property for nonpayment of real estate taxes, the Department of Finance and Revenue must have mailed the notice of expiring redemption period to the record owner’s last known address in a manner that is accurate in all material respects. Post office procedures cannot cure materially defective notice. Because in this case the Department addressed the notice to the wrong quadrant (“S.W.” instead of “N.W.”), we reverse the judgment in favor of the tax purchasers.
I.
Before September 20,1966, Thelma Smith Ruskin and her sister, Vera S. Hart, jointly owned Lot 55, Square 3311 in the District of Columbia, known by the street address of 4219 4th Street, N.W. The Recorder of Deeds listed the property in both names. On September 30, 1966, Hart conveyed her interest in the property to Ruskin. District real estate tax assessment records thereafter reflected the record owner of the property as “Thelma Ruskin, 4219-4th Street, N.W.”
Ruskin died testate on December 31, 1973. Some of Ruskin’s relatives, as well as other unrelated persons who had been living with Ruskin before her death, continued to occupy the property.
Although someone paid the real estate taxes for 1974, no one paid for the years 1975-78. The Department of Finance and Revenue sent bills for those years by computer mailing to “Vera S Hart & T Ruskin, 4219 4th St NW, Washington DC.” On January 23, 1976, at a tax sale, appellee District of Columbia sold the property to appellees Robinson for payment of delinquent 1975 taxes.
On June 2,1976, Ruskin’s will was admitted to probate; appellants Milton Lee Bod-die and Fred Wade were named coexecu-tors. The executors did not notify the office of the tax assessor that the record owner of this property had died and did not ask the post office to forward Ruskin’s mail to them.
On December 6, 1977, the Department sent a notice of expiring redemption period by registered mail, return receipt requested, with the typewritten address: “Vera S. Hart & T. Ruskin, 4219 4th Street, S.W., Washington, D. C. 20011.” After attempting to deliver the letter to the correct N.W. address, the post office returned the letter to the Department as “Unclaimed.” On January 23, 1978, the statutory redemption period expired. Unaware that the probate court had jurisdiction over the property, appellees Robinson requested issuance of a tax deed and paid the sum due.
Meanwhile, on June 24, 1978, unaware of the tax sale, the executors filed a petition to ratify the sale of the property to satisfy debts and legacies of the estate. On August 22, the probate court ordered the sale of the property “free of all liens.” The
executors, however, could not complete the settlement scheduled for September 6,1978, because they discovered that the District had sold the property for taxes to appellees Robinson.
On April 6, 1979, the executors sued to set aside the tax certificate. The trial court granted a preliminary injunction but, after a bench trial, rendered judgment for appel-lees. Appellants timely noted their appeal. See D.C. Code 1973, § 11-721(a)(1); D.C.App.R. 4 II(a)(1).
II.
The owner of real property sold by the District for delinquent taxes may redeem the property “at any time within two years after the ... sale .... ” D.C.Code 1973, § 47-1005.
In furtherance of this right, the District of Columbia Council in 1975 adopted a regulation
making mandatory the prior administrative custom of notifying property owners of the upcoming expiration of this redemption period:
Not less than thirty (30) days prior to the expiration date of the two year redemption period, the record owner shall be notified, by certified or registered mail, of the final date by which he must redeem his property.
Reg. No. 74-35, § 126, 21 D.C. Reg. 1643, 1655 (Jan. 20, 1975);
see Watson v. Scheve,
D.C.App., 424 A.2d 1089, 1092 (1980).
The regulation also specifies that notice by mail is effective upon mailing:
Unless otherwise specified, any notice, bill or statement required by these regulations or other applicable provision of law to be served upon the property owner shall be deemed to be served when mailed by first class mail to the last known address of the property owner as recorded in the real estate assessment records of the District.
Reg. No. 74-35, supra § 112(c), at 1651.
“[I]n order to guard against the deprivation of property without due process of law,”
Potomac Building Corp. v. Karkenny,
D.C.App., 364 A.2d 809, 812 (1976) (per curiam), ce
rt. denied,
431 U.S. 921, 97 S.Ct. 2192, 53 L.Ed.2d 234 (1977), this court has held that the District may effect a valid conveyance of property for nonpayment of real estate taxes only by “strict compliance” with the tax sale statute and regulations.
Watson, supra
at 1092;
Shenandoah Corp. v. Pringle,
D.C.App., 385 A.2d 748, 749 (1978);
Potomac Building Corp., supra
at 812.
We have employed this standard both for notice by publication,
see Shenandoah Corp., supra
at 749-50;
Potomac Building Corp., supra
at 811,
and for notice by mail.
See Watson, supra
at 1092.
We turn to its application here.
III.
In this case the parties stipulated that “[t]he ‘S.W.’ in the notice [of expiring redemption period] was a typographical error by the Office of Assessment Services in the Department of Finance and Revenue and S.W. should have been N.W.” The Department therefore did not mail the notice “to the last known address of the property owner as recorded in the real estate assessment records of the District,” as required by Reg. No. 74-35,
supra
§§ 112(c), 126.
Appellants contend that the Department did not comply strictly with the legal requirements and that the tax sale is therefore void. Appellees maintain, and the trial court agreed, that this acknowledged error should not vitiate the sale because post office procedures corrected the District’s mistake.
In accordance with the testimony of a postal service employee, the trial court
found that the street address typed on the notice of expiring redemption period, “4219 4th Street, S.W.,” does not exist. The address on the notice, however, did include the correct zip code, “20011.” According to post office procedures, if, as here, a specified zip code and quadrant do not coincide, mail clerks determine whether the street address exists in the specified quadrant; if not, as here, the clerks route the letter for delivery by zip code.
The trial court further found that post office records showed the Department had mailed the notice of expiring redemption period by registered mail, return receipt requested; that a mail carrier had attempted to deliver the letter to the correct address, 4219 4th Street, N.W., on December 8, 1977, and had returned the letter to the post office marked “N[o] R[esponse,] Notice] L[eft]”; that the carrier had left a final notice of attempt to deliver the letter at the N.W. address on December 13, 1977; and that the post office then had returned the letter to the Department marked “unclaimed.” The trial court concluded that because the error in addressing had not affected delivery, the test of “strict compliance” was met.
Although the trial court’s findings of fact are not “plainly wrong or without evidence to support [them],” D.C.Code 1973, § 17-305(a), we disagree with the court’s conclusion of law that the Department strictly complied with its duty to mail the notice of expiring redemption period to the record owner’s “last known address.” Reg. No. 74-35,
supra
§§ 112(c), 126. At least as applied to notice by mail, the Department’s duty of strict compliance does not require such literal exactitude that this court must carry mailing regulations to their illogical extreme and invalidate tax sales for any and every error in addressing. We interpret that standard, however, as demanding accuracy of address in all material respects.
In the District of Columbia the quadrant designation is a principal component of an address, for the same street address may exist in more than one quadrant. An error in specifying the quadrant creates a substantial risk of non- or misdelivery, notwithstanding post office procedures that could result in correction of such mistakes. We cannot consider a notice bearing an inaccuracy of this nature to be in strict compliance with the regulation.
Cf. Rivard v. Ross,
99 N.H. 299, 303, 109 A.2d 857, 860-61 (1954) (mailing of tax bill to property owner without post office address invalidates tax sale; to comply with statute, taxing authorities must give notice “in a manner that will make it reasonably probable that the taxpayer will receive them”).
See generally
Annot., 155 A.L.R. 1279 (1945).
The post office is fallible, and its delivery procedures are subject to change. If, as we have stated, the District is not “charged with the Postal Service’s failure to deliver [tax notices],”
Coleman, supra
at 137 n.1,
the District may not, on the other hand, depend on the post office to correct its errors in addressing the mail. In an area with as harsh a penalty for noncompliance as real estate tax assessment, we decline to let the government rely on the post office— or not — at its choice and to its advantage.
We hold that the Department of Finance and Revenue is responsible for ensuring that the notice of expiring redemption period leaves its office addressed to the record owner’s “last known address,” Reg.No.74-35,
supra
§§ 112(c), 126, in a manner accurate in all material respects. Because the Department made a material error in the quadrant designation on this notice of expiring redemption period, the Department failed to comply strictly with the legal requirement. Accordingly, we reverse the judgment in favor of the appellees and remand with directions to enter judgment for appellants upon a showing of ability to comply with D.C.Code 1973, § 47-1007.
Ac
cord, Potomac Building Corp., supra
at 812-13;
see Robinson v. District of Columbia,
D.C.App., 372 A.2d 1005, 1008-09 & n.2 (1977).
Reversed and remanded.