Jones v. Grieg

829 A.2d 195, 2003 D.C. App. LEXIS 473, 2003 WL 21706636
CourtDistrict of Columbia Court of Appeals
DecidedJuly 24, 2003
Docket98-CV-1141, 98-CV-1391
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 829 A.2d 195 (Jones v. Grieg) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District of Columbia Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Jones v. Grieg, 829 A.2d 195, 2003 D.C. App. LEXIS 473, 2003 WL 21706636 (D.C. 2003).

Opinion

TERRY, Associate Judge.

These consolidated appeals involve the validity of a tax sale of a piece of real property. Appellant Michael Jones is the personal representative of the Estate of Hugh E. Jones, the record owner. In response to a motion for summary judg *197 ment filed by appellee Grieg, 1 Mr. Jones claimed that the tax sale was invalid because the record owner (his father) had not been properly notified of the expiration of his right of redemption. Although neither appellee presented any evidence to refute this assertion, the trial court granted their respective motions for summary judgment. We hold that the evidence that the post office returned the District’s notice as “unclaimed” raised a genuine issue of material fact, and that summary judgment therefore should not have been granted in either case. We therefore reverse the judgment in both cases and remand for further proceedings.

I

These two appeals arise from two separate cases, one between Thomas Grieg, the tax sale purchaser, as plaintiff, and appellant Jones as defendant, and the other between Jones as plaintiff and the District of Columbia and its Mayor (collectively “the District”), along with Mr. Grieg and his wife, as defendants. The cases were consolidated in the trial court, and we consolidated the appeals as well on appellant’s motion.

Hugh Jones died intestate on March 18, 1995. At the time of his death, he owned two pieces of real property, one located at 1347 Somerset Place, N.W., and the other at 828 Delafield Place, N.W. The house on Somerset Place is the property at issue in this case. Mr. Jones and his wife, Mildred Jones, purchased the house on Somerset Place in July 1962. Before that date the Joneses had resided at 828 Delafield Place, but when they bought the house on Somerset Place, they moved into it and lived there for the rest of their lives. 2 The purchase of the Somerset Place property was financed by a deed of trust, which conveyed the Joneses’ interest in the property to two trustees. Under the terms of the deed of trust, property taxes were paid in installments to the mortgage company along with the monthly payments, and the mortgage company in turn paid the taxes when they became due. By release dated August 3, 1987, and recorded October 19, 1987, the trust and note were released, and from then on Mr. and Mrs. Jones owned the house free and clear.

For twenty-five years, beginning in July 1962, Mr. and Mrs. Jones paid their property taxes on the Somerset Place property by including the necessary sums in their monthly payments to the mortgage company. From the time the purchase loan was paid off in 1987, however, it appears that they paid no taxes on the property, so that when Mr. Jones died in 1995, the taxes were several years in arrears. The tax bills for the Somerset Place property were mailed to Mr. and Mrs. Jones at 828 Dela-field Place. Neither Hugh Jones, Mildred Jones, nor Michael Jones ever requested to have the mailing address for the tax bills changed to Somerset Place.

At a tax sale on January 26,1989, appel-lee Grieg made a successful bid for the Somerset Place property, and a “certificate of sale for taxes” was issued to Mr. and Mrs. Grieg. Pursuant to the tax sale statutes, a notice of the imminent expiration of the redemption period was sent by certified mail on December 14, 1990, to Hugh and Mildred Jones, 3 but it was returned by *198 the post office as “unclaimed.” The notice was mailed to 828 Delafield Place, the address to which all previous correspondence regarding taxes on the Somerset Place property had been sent. No further attempt was made at that time to notify the Joneses of the expiration of the redemption period, and it expired in January 1991.

More than three years later, on March 8, 1994, the District of Columbia Department of Finance and Revenue (“DFR”) sent to the Joneses — again at the Delafield Place address — a letter informing them that their property had been sold in January 1991 and that a tax deed would be issued to the purchaser if they did not pay $8,660.59 in back taxes before April 8, 1994. 4 On October 26, 1994, Mr. Grieg paid $23,707.41 for the Somerset Place property. A memorandum dated December 9, 1994, from the Chief of the Assessment Services Division to the Director of DFR, seeking her approval of the sale, stated: “A thorough search of our records has been made to ensure that all provisions of the law regarding tax sales have been followed.” The sale was approved by the Director, and on March 29, 1995, Mr. Grieg received a tax deed for the property.

In 1997 Mr. Grieg filed a complaint in the Superior Court against Michael Jones, asking the court to remove a cloud on the title, and on the same day Mr. Jones filed a complaint against the District of Columbia, the Mayor, and Mr. and Mrs. Grieg, asking the court to declare the tax deed null and void and to enjoin the Griegs from conveying the property. After the two cases were consolidated, Mr. Grieg filed a motion for summary judgment. Mr. Jones filed an opposition to the motion on March 13,1998, and the District filed a “Notice of Adoption of Motion for Summary Judgment” on June 12,1998.

The trial court granted Grieg’s motion for summary judgment on July 15, 1998. It ruled that “notwithstanding the status of defendant Jones’ remaining claims against the District of Columbia ... it appears clear that plaintiff [Grieg] is entitled to judgment as a matter of law against the estate of the record owners.” The court remarked that the District had not filed a motion for summary judgment, but it failed to note that the District had in fact filed a “Notice of Adoption of Motion for Summary Judgment” on June 12. The confusion resulted from the fact that the court had issued an earlier order on April 6 granting Mr. Grieg’s motion, which the parties did not know about because it had never been docketed. 5 In the intervening period the District had filed its “notice of adoption” of Grieg’s motion.

In response to the trial court’s July 15 ruling, the District filed its own motion for summary judgment on July 21. 6 That motion was granted on August 25 “for the *199 reasons set forth in this court’s order of July 15, 1998.” 7 Mr. Jones now appeals from the granting of the two motions for summary judgment.

II

In order to establish lack of notice, appellant Jones relied on the envelope containing the notice which had been returned by the post office as “unclaimed.” Appellees did not sufficiently rebut this evidence; in fact, they did not rebut it at all. We hold that this envelope raised a genuine issue of material fact, precluding summary judgment.

A tax deed is “prima facie evidence of a good and perfect title in fee simple” to any property bought at a tax sale. D.C.Code § 47-1303.03(b) (2001).

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829 A.2d 195, 2003 D.C. App. LEXIS 473, 2003 WL 21706636, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jones-v-grieg-dc-2003.