City of Dover v. Hunter

880 A.2d 239, 2004 WL 396397, 2004 Del. Super. LEXIS 55
CourtSuperior Court of Delaware
DecidedFebruary 27, 2004
DocketC.A. No. 01T-01-003 JTV
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 880 A.2d 239 (City of Dover v. Hunter) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Superior Court of Delaware primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
City of Dover v. Hunter, 880 A.2d 239, 2004 WL 396397, 2004 Del. Super. LEXIS 55 (Del. Ct. App. 2004).

Opinion

ORDER AND OPINION

VAUGHN, Resident Judge.

Intervenor Cendant Mortgage Services (“Cendant”) has filed a motion for summary judgment in which it seeks an order setting aside a monition tax sale of premises at 5 Kensington Court, Dover, Delaware. The sale in question was held on March 27, 2001 and confirmed on April 6, 2001. The motion is opposed by the city of Dover (“the City”), which initiated the monition proceeding to collect city property taxes, and Intervenor Lucian SzezepansM, who purchased the property at the sale.

Facts

On April 27,1997, the defendants, James and Mary Hunter, obtained a first lien mortgage on a house and lot at 5 Kensing-ton Court, Dover, Delaware from PHH Mortgage Services Corp. The mortgage was in the original principal amount of $168,266. Through assignments, the mortgagee came to be Cendant Mortgage Services.

The property at 5 Kensington Court is part of The Meadows subdivision. The record is not entirely clear as to when The Meadows subdivision was laid out, but it is clear that it was at some point prior to 1997. When 5 Kensington Court was laid out as a separate lot, Kent County (“the County”) assigned the property the following tax parcel number: # ED-05-067.05-02-35.00/000 (underline added).

The City typically gives a property the same number on its tax records as the number assigned by the County. In the 1990’s, however, if for some reason there was delay on the County’s part in giving a new lot a tax parcel number, the City, at least on some occasions, gave the lot a number without waiting to see what number was given by the County. Because of this practice, there were some properties in the City (the number is not specified in the record) which had different County and City tax numbers. This happened to 5 Kensington Court. Its City tax parcel number was # ED-05-067.05-02-86.00/000. In other words, on the County’s records, the property was number 35, and on the City’s records, it was number 86.

Until 1999, payment of the annual property taxes on 5 Kensington Court was made by sending the payment to the City Tax Assessor’s Office. After the Hunters’ obtained their mortgage in 1997, the payments were made by the mortgage company through escrow. The practice of the employees in the Assessor’s Office was to post tax payments to the property based upon the property owner’s name and the property address or location. Accordingly, when the employees received the tax payment on 5 Kensington Court, they properly posted the payment to that lot.

Commencing with the tax year 1999, Cendant began using a commercial tax service, Fust American. First American sent the City a request for tax billing data on all of the properties for wMch its customers held taxes, including Cendant. It then made arrangements to transmit the taxes to the City in bulk. Apparently this was all done by computer. This system relied upon the tax parcel number, not the property owner or address, for property identification. In addition, when this system was used, employees in the Assessor’s Office were no longer involved in the manual posting of payments as they had been before.

[242]*242First American was aware of the fact that the City used a different tax parcel number for the property at 5 Kensington Court than the County. Nonetheless, when the taxes which Cendant held for 5 Kensington Court were transmitted to the City, they were designated for tax parcel number 35 and, accordingly, applied to 7 Kensington Court. This happened again in 2000. As a result, the City’s records reflected that the taxes on 5 Kensington Court, tax parcel number 36, were unpaid for 1999 and 2000.1

In November 2000, Cendant commenced mortgage foreclosure proceedings against 5 Kensington Court because the Hunters’ defaulted on the mortgage.

In approximately early 2001 the City revised its records to make the tax parcel numbers the same as the County’s for all properties. As a result, the tax parcel number for 5 Kensington Court was changed from 36 to 35. For the years 1999 and 2000, however, the City’s records continued to reflect the taxes for 5 Kens-ington Court as unpaid.

On January 16, 2001, the City commenced a monition tax sale proceeding against 5 Kensington Court for unpaid taxes for the years 1999 and 2000. The papers commencing the monition proceeding identified the property as tax parcel number 35. They showed the amount owed as $1,968.79. An execution writ was issued on February 13, 2001 which identified the property as tax parcel number 36. A Sheriffs tax sale was scheduled for March 27, 2001. A notice of the Sheriffs sale shows the tax parcel number was initially shown on the notice as 36 but was changed by hand to 35.

On March 13, 2001, the City sent Cen-dant due notice of the sale in compliance with Superior Court Civil Rule 69(g). The notice was sent both to Cendant and the attorney representing it in the then still pending mortgage foreclosure proceeding. What happened after that leading up to and following the tax sale is disputed, but for purposes of this motion I must view the facts in the light most favorable to the non-moving parties. They are that by March 23 a paralegal in the attorney’s office and Kelly Newman, a Cendant employee in its mortgage foreclosure office, were aware of the sale. At about 8:30 a.m. on the 27th, the paralegal at the attorney’s office spoke with Yvette Sanchez, another Cendant employee in its mortgage foreclosure department, who confirmed that Cen-dant was aware of the tax sale which at that point was scheduled to take place in an hour and a half, at 10:00 a.m. A Cen-dant note documenting the phone call indicates that Yvette informed the paralegal that “we are aware of same and we are handling the situation.” The record does not indicate that anything else occurred between then and 10:00 a.m., and at that time the sale was conducted. The purchaser was Mr. Szezepanski for a bid price of $2,450.

Another Cendant note indicates that at some point on the 27th after the sale had occurred, Lynda, of Cendant’s tax department, called the Cendant foreclosure department, and advised that “the property went to tax sale this morning, she is working on redeeming the sale since she has proof all of the taxes are pd. current.” Accepting the facts in the light most favorable to the non-moving parties, I do not take the reference to taxes being paid current as being factually correct, because [243]*243the City’s position is that Cendant paid the taxes on 7 Kensington Court in 1999 and 2000, not 5 Kensington Court, but as showing that the Cendant tax department was aware that the property had been sold shortly after the sale took place and that it thought that the taxes had been paid.

Shortly after the sale, either on the 27th or shortly thereafter, Linda Meyers, another representative from Cendant, spoke to the City Tax Assessor’s office and also to counsel for the city. Counsel for the city explained the procedure for redeeming the sale, including that redemption must occur within 60 days of the sale and must include payment of a premium of 15% of the purchase price to the successful bidder.

A Cendant note dated April 5, 2001, includes the notation, “still need to redeem.”

On April 6, 2001, no petition to set aside the sale having been filed, the sale was confirmed as a matter of course pursuant to Superior Court Civil Rule 69(d).

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
880 A.2d 239, 2004 WL 396397, 2004 Del. Super. LEXIS 55, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/city-of-dover-v-hunter-delsuperct-2004.