Keatts v. Robinson

589 A.2d 430, 1991 D.C. App. LEXIS 82, 1991 WL 58289
CourtDistrict of Columbia Court of Appeals
DecidedApril 18, 1991
DocketNo. 90-688
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 589 A.2d 430 (Keatts v. Robinson) 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
Keatts v. Robinson, 589 A.2d 430, 1991 D.C. App. LEXIS 82, 1991 WL 58289 (D.C. 1991).

Opinion

SCHWELB, Associate Judge:

This case concerns a tax sale of real property in 1979. It arises out of unpaid 1978 real estate taxes. On September 19, 1985, the trial judge remarked to counsel that “I dreamed last night that this case had been settled.” Unfortunately, that is still a dream.

I

The factual background of this controversy was described in some detail in Keatts v. Robinson, 544 A.2d 716 (D.C.1988) (Keatts I). From 1973 to 1976, appellant Keatts, who owned real estate in the District, lived in Chevy Chase, Maryland. In November 1976 he moved to Crof-ton, Maryland. At the time of his move, he filed a change of address form with the post office. A tax bill for his 1976 taxes which was mailed to his Chevy Chase address was therefore duly forwarded to him in Crofton. Keatts testified that when he paid this bill in March 1977, he enclosed with his check a written notice of the change in his address.

Thereafter, Keatts never received another tax bill, and he failed to pay his real estate tax for the second half of 1978. As a result, in January 1979, the property was sold to the Robinsons at a public tax sale for $478.

Although tax bills were apparently mailed to Keatts at his former Chevy Chase address even after he had moved to Crofton, there was some evidence that the Department of Finance and Revenue (DFR) was aware of his new address. Less than one month after the tax sale, the DFR sent an “Income-Expense Form” to Keatts in Crofton. The computer-printed address on the form was the outdated one in Chevy Chase, but the Crofton address was handwritten on the side. The envelope bore Keatts’ Crofton address. At trial, Keatts also introduced into evidence a DFR mailing list on which his former Chevy Chase address was printed out, but on which his Crofton address was handwritten in red ink underneath with the notation “New Address.”

In Keatts I, we described the ensuing events as follows:

After the tax sale, Keatts and his co-owners had two years to redeem the property by paying all back taxes, penalties, and other costs. D.C.Code § 47-1005 (1973). Shortly before the expiration of the two-year period, the DFR mailed Keatts a notice that his right of redemption would soon terminate. Unfortunately, this notice was also mailed to Chevy Chase, and the post office returned it to the DFR because Keatts’ forwarding notice had expired. Mr. [Alfred] Richards, the DFR assessment chief, testified that when mail such as this is returned, personnel in his division customarily look in the District of Columbia, suburban Maryland, and suburban Virginia telephone directories to locate the owner’s address. In this instance, however, no such address was found, and the notice was simply remailed — to [432]*432Chevy Chase. The redemption period then expired, and the District issued a tax deed to the Robinsons.

544 A.2d at 717-18 (footnote omitted).1

Keatts filed suit in the Superior Court to set aside the tax sale. His principal claim was that the DFR had failed to send tax notices to his last known address as recorded in the real estate assessment records. See Regulation 74-35, § 112(c), 21 D.C. Reg. 1651 (1975). The trial judge upheld the validity of the tax deed. He found that Keatts had failed to prove that he had notified the DFR of his change of address, and that a change made to the mailing list for Income-Expense Forms “does not constitute a change in record address of the property owner.”

Keatts then filed his first appeal to this court. After discussing the evidence and the relevant precedents, we remanded the case to the trial judge to determine whether the DFR knew or should have known of Keatts’ move, and whether the agency should have sent notices of Keatts’ right to redeem the property to the Crofton address. Specifically, the judge was directed to decide whether the DFR

has a duty to check its own records for evidence of a taxpayer’s correct address. To resolve this question, the trial court must balance the burden that such a procedure would place on the District against the reasonableness of a taxpayer’s expectation, unless otherwise informed, that the Department has the correct address for all purposes if the Department mails some notices to the proper address.

Keatts I, supra, 544 A.2d at 720 (quoting Robinson v. Kerwin, 454 A.2d 1302, 1307 (D.C.1983)). On remand, without conducting an evidentiary hearing or considering the affidavit proffered by appellant Keatts, see n. 1, supra, the trial judge again sustained the validity of the challenged tax deed. Keatts has again appealed and, unfortunately, we must remand once again.

II

Following our decision in Keatts I, the trial judge failed fully to perform or explicate the balancing ordered by this court. Rather, he issued additional Findings of Fact, based on the original record, which principally included the following:

1. the judge did not credit Keatts’ testimony to the effect that he gave the DFR a written notice of change of address along with his property tax payment in 1977;
2. the judge found that “of all the mailings by the [DFR] to plaintiff, only one was returned undelivered,” and that the DFR “did not know, nor should it have known, that plaintiff moved to a new address;”2 and
3. the judge concluded that Keatts’ insistence that he received no tax bills in 1978, 1979 and 1980 “made any expectation that the DFR had his new address not only unreasonable but incomprehensible.”

In making the finding that the DFR’s mailings to Keatts’ former address in Chevy Chase were not returned as undeliverable, the judge evidently misapprehended the record. There was no evidence presented to that effect, nor was it claimed by the DFR representative, Alfred Richards, that any record of such returned mailings is made or retained. Indeed, Mr. Richards testified that by the time of trial in 1985, the DFR had disposed of its copies of the tax bills that had been mailed to taxpayers. With commendable candor, counsel for the District conceded at argument that the judge’s finding that mail to Chevy Chase was not returned by the post office [433]*433had “serious weaknesses.”3 The unsupported finding about non-return of mail was repeated several times in the judge’s order, and was evidently central to his disposition of the case.

Since the judge did not conduct the balancing specified in Keatts I, and since the case must therefore be remanded once more, we submit a few additional observations regarding the weighing process. With respect to the reasonableness of Keatts’ expectation, we agree with the trial judge that Keatts’ non-receipt at his Crofton address of tax bills for three separate years is a significant factor in the equation. That a taxpayer overlooked his responsibility to pay taxes or to obtain tax returns, however, does not automatically validate the forfeiture of his property. Lesser sanctions, such as a requirement that he pay interest and penalties on the amounts owed, may often be sufficient.

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Related

Malone v. Robinson
614 A.2d 33 (District of Columbia Court of Appeals, 1992)

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Bluebook (online)
589 A.2d 430, 1991 D.C. App. LEXIS 82, 1991 WL 58289, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/keatts-v-robinson-dc-1991.