In Re: The Carroll County 2013 Tax Sale: Twin Lakes Regional Sewer District v. Richard C. Ray and Patricia A. Alford

21 N.E.3d 832, 2014 Ind. LEXIS 936
CourtIndiana Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 4, 2014
Docket08S04-1402-MI-97
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 21 N.E.3d 832 (In Re: The Carroll County 2013 Tax Sale: Twin Lakes Regional Sewer District v. Richard C. Ray and Patricia A. Alford) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Indiana Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re: The Carroll County 2013 Tax Sale: Twin Lakes Regional Sewer District v. Richard C. Ray and Patricia A. Alford, 21 N.E.3d 832, 2014 Ind. LEXIS 936 (Ind. 2014).

Opinion

DICKSON, Justice.

After two landowners, delinquent in paying fees and penalties owed to a regional sewer district, successfully petitioned the Carroll County Circuit Court to remove their properties from the list of properties subject to a tax sale, the lienholder sewer district appealed, challenging the trial court’s interpretation of Indiana Code section 13-26-14-4. We hold that the statute does not apply to prohibit a tax sale of these properties.

Twin Lakes Regional Sewer District is one of roughly 100 non-municipal regional sewer districts in Indiana, and it serves areas in Carroll and White counties. Richard Ray and Patricia Alford each own property served by the District. Both the Ray property and the Alford property had outstanding sewer bills owed to the District, which had perfected liens against the properties and certified those liens to the Carroll County Auditor for collection with the upcoming property tax bill. On August 26, 2013, the Carroll County Treasurer and Auditor filed a joint affidavit and joint application for judgment against the listed properties ordering that the properties be sold at a tax sale to satisfy obligations for the unpaid sewer bills owed the District.

The trial court entered the requested judgment, but in advance of the tax sale the landowners each separately petitioned the trial court objecting to their respective properties being listed for tax sale and asserting that “[a]ll property taxes are paid on this property and the only amount due is an attached sewer lien.” Appel *834 lant’s App’x at 8-9. Further, the landowners each requested, in part, that the trial court find that their respective properties “[cannot] be sold at tax sale” pursuant to Indiana Code section 18-26-14-4. Id. The District intervened and requested a hearing to determine whether the Ray or the Alford property ought to be removed from the tax sale list. Following the hearing, the trial court found that the only outstanding lien on either property was owed exclusively to the District for unpaid sewer' bills and ordered that both properties be removed from the 2018 tax sale because “[the District] maintains the only lien” and as such “is precluded from foreclosing on the parcels pursuant to [Indiana Code section] 13-26-14-4.” Id. at 7. The District then initiated this appeal and petitioned this Court to accept jurisdiction pursuant to Appellate Rule 56(A), which we granted.

All parties agree that the central issue in this case is the interpretation of the last sentence, the lien foreclosure prohibition clause, in Indiana Code section 13-26-14-4. See Appellees’ Br. at 2; Appellant’s Br. at 1. Section 4 is the last of four brief sections comprising Chapter 14. Section 1 authorizes regional sewer districts to use lien foreclosure to collect rates, charges, and penalties. Ind.Code § 13-26-14-1. Section 2 permits such lien foreclosure actions to recover the rates, charges, penalties, and reasonable attorney’s fees and expressly directs a court-ordered sale “without relief from valuation or appraisement statutes.” Ind.Code § 13-26-14-2. Section 3 states that the lien foreclosures are subject to “the laws concerning municipal public improvement assessments” and the “rights, remedies, procedure, and relief granted the parties to the action.” Ind.Code § 13-26-14-3. Section 4, however, limits the availability of lien foreclosure in certain circumstances. In its entirety, Section 4 states:

Sec. 4. Rates, fees, or charges made, assessed, or established by the district are a lien, in the same manner established under IC 36-9-23 for municipal sewage works, on a lot, parcel of land, or building that is connected with or uses the works of the district. Liens under this chapter [chapter 14]:
(1) attach;
(2) are recorded;
(3) are subject to the same penalties, interest, and reasonable attorney’s fees on recovery, and
(4) shall be collected and enforced:
in substantially the same manner as provided in IC 36-9-23-31 through IC 36-9-23-34. ■ A lien under this chapter that is the only lien on a property may not be foreclosed.

Ind.Code § 13-26-14-4 (emphasis added). 1 Questions of statutory interpretation are questions of law and are reviewed de novo. Pinnacle Properties Dev. Grp., LLC v. City of Jeffersonville, 893 N.E.2d 726, 727 (Ind.2008).

The District contends that the lien foreclosure prohibition clause in Section 4 does not apply to tax sales, which are legally distinct from foreclosures under Indiana law. The District argues that a regional sewer district has three methods for collecting unpaid sewer bills and penalties 2 *835 and that lien foreclosure is one of those methods. It argues that a foreclosure is a legal proceeding that “terminates the owner’s interest in property” by selling the property itself and cutting off the owner’s right of redemption, Appellant’s Br. at 7, whereas a tax sale is a separate available method of collection. Id. at 8. A tax sale “does not terminate the rights of the owner” and is not a sale of the real estate itself but rather a sale of a tax lien that “is subject to a one year period of redemption” for the owner. Id. The District cites Indiana Code section 6-l.l-24-9(b), which provides that a tax sale purchaser has purchased “a lien against the real property” and not the property itself, which practically and legally distinguishes a tax sale from a foreclosure. Id. The District also urges that Indiana has a method for tax sale procedures that is found in Title 6 of the Indiana Code and a separate method for the foreclosure of real estate that is found in Title 32, and that the disputed language in this case, when read in context, mirrors the real estate foreclosure language of Title 32 and not the tax sale language of Title 6. Id. at 12. Thus, the District argues that any prohibitive language for how collection may be conducted by a regional sewer district under Indiana Code section 13-26-14-4 should only apply to the foreclosure method of collection— and not to the tax sale method of collection.

The landowners respond that the plain meaning of “foreclosed” in the last sentence applies broadly to encompass both a traditional real estate foreclosure as well as a tax sale, which they also refer to as a “tax foreclosure.” Appellees’ Br. at 3. Focusing on the definition given in Black’s Law Dictionary and also McCollum v. Uhl, 27 N.E. 152, 154, 128 Ind.

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Bluebook (online)
21 N.E.3d 832, 2014 Ind. LEXIS 936, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-the-carroll-county-2013-tax-sale-twin-lakes-regional-sewer-district-ind-2014.