Krystalo Hetelekides, &c. v. County of Ontario

CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedFebruary 14, 2023
Docket3
StatusPublished

This text of Krystalo Hetelekides, &c. v. County of Ontario (Krystalo Hetelekides, &c. v. County of Ontario) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Krystalo Hetelekides, &c. v. County of Ontario, (N.Y. 2023).

Opinion

State of New York OPINION Court of Appeals This opinion is uncorrected and subject to revision before publication in the New York Reports.

No. 3 Krystalo Hetelekides, &c., Appellant, v. County of Ontario et al., Respondents.

Mary Jo S. Korona, for appellant. Jason S. DiPonzio, for respondents. Pacific Legal Foundation, amicus curiae

RIVERA, J.:

Two fundamental legal principles govern our decision in this appeal. First, a tax

foreclosure proceeding is in rem against the “res”—the taxable real property—and not an

action in personam commenced against an individual to establish personal liability. -1- -2- No. 3

Second, New York statutory law and state and federal constitutional guarantees of due

process require that the petitioner in a foreclosure proceeding must attempt notice that is

reasonably calculated to alert all parties with an interest in the property.

Here, defendants commenced an in rem tax foreclosure proceeding and mailed the

statutorily-required notice to the publicly-listed owners of the property, posted and filed

the notice, and publicized the notice in the press. Upon learning that a person listed as an

owner died before the notices were issued, defendant County Treasurer also personally

contacted the sole business located on the property in an effort to identify and personally

inform a manager, owner, or any person in charge of the pending foreclosure proceeding.

Under these circumstances, defendants provided legally adequate notice of a validly

commenced tax foreclosure action. We therefore affirm the Appellate Division’s order.

I.

Plaintiff Krystalo Hetelekides, individually as the owner of the property and as

executor of the estate of her husband, decedent Demetrios Hetelekides (also known as

James Hetelekides), commenced this action against defendants County of Ontario and

County Treasurer Gary G. Baxter for damages plaintiff allegedly incurred as a result of the

tax foreclosure sale of decedent’s property in the Town of Hopewell. At the time of suit,

plaintiff had obtained title to the property after a third party purchased the property at public

auction and assigned the bid to plaintiff, who paid the entire purchase price. Plaintiff

alleged that she was owed the difference between the unpaid tax arrears and the auction

purchase price and interest.

-2- -3- No. 3

According to the record of the bench trial, decedent owned the property and—with

plaintiff—operated a restaurant there. Until his death, decedent was responsible for paying

the real property taxes. He had not paid the annual tax by the January 1, 2005 deadline

when a tax lien was created by operation of law.

Defendants took action pursuant to RPTL article 11 to collect the overdue tax. First,

the Treasurer hired a private commercial abstract company to identify the interested

parties; the investigator reported that, as of August 31, 2005, and again on May 31, 2006,

decedent was the publicly-listed property owner.1 Thereafter, on November 14, 2005, the

Treasurer included the property on a list of delinquent taxes and executed and filed the list

with the Clerk of the County in accordance with RPTL 1122.2 The tax remained unpaid

when decedent died on August 1, 2006, a year and a half after the tax became due and

almost a year after the filing of the delinquent taxes list.

1 The abstract also listed Geo-Tas, Inc. as an owner of the property, but noted that it did not have title. Our resolution of this appeal does not require us to consider whether the separate notifications to Geo-Tas satisfied due process. 2 RPTL 1122 (1) provides, in relevant part, that at least “one month after the receipt of the return of unpaid taxes,” and at the first opportunity after 10 months from the lien date, “the enforcing officer of each tax district shall execute a list of all parcels of real property[ ] . . . affected by delinquent tax liens held and owned by such tax district.” The list of delinquent taxes must describe each parcel, list “[t]he name or names of the owner or owners of each such parcel as appearing on the tax roll,” and state the “amount of each tax lien upon such parcel” (RPTL 1122 [6]). -3- -4- No. 3

As provided by RPTL 1123, on October 1, 2006—21 months after the lien date—

the Treasurer filed an in rem foreclosure petition in Ontario County Court.3 The same day,

the Treasurer’s Office sent notices of foreclosure and copies of the petition by certified

mail, return receipt requested, and by ordinary first class mail to the property, each

addressed separately to “James Hetelekides”; “Hetelekides, James”; and “Geo-Tas, Inc.”

All told, six separate mailings were sent to the property. The notice listed January 12, 2007,

as the final day to redeem the property.4 On October 2, the Treasurer also posted a copy of

the notice and petition in the Ontario County Clerk’s Office, published the notice in two

local newspapers, and ran additional publications in the newspapers on October 16 and

November 1. The certified mailings arrived on October 3, and a long-time employee of the

restaurant signed the return receipts, which were then returned to the Treasurer’s Office.

During the bench trial, the Treasurer testified that he first became aware of

decedent’s death and that plaintiff was operating the restaurant in late December 2006 or

early January 2007. Thereafter, on three consecutive days during afternoon business hours,

the Treasurer personally contacted the restaurant to speak with someone regarding the

property. First, on Tuesday, January 9, 2007, the Treasurer called, identified himself, and

3 RPTL 1123 requires an enforcing officer to file a petition of foreclosure, in a specified form, “[t]wenty-one months after [the] lien date, or as soon thereafter as is practicable” (RPTL 1123 [1]; see [2]-[4]). 4 In New York, a taxpayer has a statutory right to “redeem” their property—that is, to pay the delinquent taxes plus any charges in full—before a foreclosure becomes final (see RPTL 1110). The concept of redemption developed as an equitable principle in the English courts of chancery (see generally BFP v Resolution Trust Corporation, 511 US 531, 541 [1994]; 5 Tiffany Real Property § 1379 [3d ed, Sept. 2022 update]) -4- -5- No. 3

asked to “speak to the owner, the manager, [or] someone that’s in charge of the business.”

When he was told that no one was available, he said that “[i]t’s very imperative or very

important that I talk to somebody that owns the business or manages it or has control over

it,” and asked to be called back. Nobody responded. The Treasurer then called again the

following day and asked to “talk to somebody, the owner, somebody who is in charge, a

manager, anyone that can -- that has any authority [over the] business, please, I need to talk

to somebody.” The person who answered the phone said that no one was available, and the

Treasurer responded that he had “called yesterday” and “[i]t’s very important that I talk to

somebody.” The Treasurer did not hear back and, the next day at roughly 1:30 p.m., he

personally visited the restaurant, identified himself, and repeated to an employee that he

needed to speak with a manager or anyone with authority. He was told a third time that no

one was available. The Treasurer left his business card, asked for a return call, and

reiterated that it was “very important” that he speak with someone. It is undisputed that, at

the time of the Treasurer’s phone calls and visit, plaintiff worked daily at the restaurant.

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