OPINION
Justice INDEGLIA,
for the Court.
This appeal obliges us to once again wade into the sometimes murky waters of Rhode Island’s tax-sale statute, and more specifically, its redemption foreclosure process. The issue presented is whether a Superior Court judgment can “re-vest” title to property back to a prior owner after that owner has been defaulted in a petition to foreclose his right of redemption.
This case came before the Supreme Court on December 1, 2011, pursuant to an order directing the parties to appear and show cause why the issues raised in this appeal should not be summarily decided. After hearing the arguments of counsel and reviewing the memoranda submitted on behalf of the parties, we are satisfied that cause has not been shown. Accordingly, we shall decide the appeal at this time without further briefing or argument. For the reasons set forth in this opinion, we affirm the judgment of the Superior Court.
I
Facts and Travel
It is necessary to begin by recounting the tangled facts and extensive proceedings that ultimately led to the present action before this Court. On May 17, 1996, the plaintiff William J. Medeiros (Medeiros) became the owner of a certain parcel of real estate at 360-362 Devil’s Foot Road in the Town of North Kingstown (the property). That same day, Me-deiros executed a mortgage to the property to secure a note in the amount of $68,750. The original mortgagee then assigned the mortgage to Bankers Trust Company (Bankers). Medeiros made monthly mortgage payments through Bankers’s service company, Select Portfolio Servicing, Inc. (Select), until he experienced financial difficulties. At around the same time, Medeiros also failed to pay the necessary real estate taxes to the Town of North Kingstown (the town).
The Tax Lien Case
On June 4,1999, the town held a tax sale of the property. Prior to the tax sale, the town provided notice pursuant to G.L.1956 §§ 44-9-10 and 44-9-11
to Medeiros and Fleet Bank.
Bankers, however, as mortgagee, did not receive notice of the tax sale. Fiduciary Trust Services (Fiduciary) purchased the property at the tax sale and received a tax deed executed by the town on June 16,1999.
On June 26, 2000, Fiduciary filed a petition to foreclose Medeiros’s right of redemption to the property in the Superior Court for Washington County (the tax lien case). The record indicates that Medeiros was properly notified of the petition pursuant to § 44-9-27,
but that he failed to file an answer. On July 28, 2000, a final de
cree was entered in the tax lien case, foreclosing and barring all rights of redemption, including those that Medeiros had in the property.
The Notice Case
Thereafter, on October 10, 2000, Bankers filed a complaint against Medeiros, Fiduciary, and the town,
seeking to invalidate the tax sale and the redemption foreclosure (the notice case). On November 24, 2000, Bankers filed an amended complaint, alleging that the tax sale of the property was void because the town failed to give it notice. As part of its requested relief, Bankers petitioned the Superior Court to order Fiduciary to issue a redemption deed in favor of Medeiros. Because Medeiros believed that his rights were adequately protected by Bankers, he did not respond or enter his appearance in the notice case, despite being named as a defendant. On December 17, 2001, the matter was presented before a justice of the Superior Court for Washington County, wherein “the [cjourt granted summary judgment for Bankers Trust, and default judgments against Medeiros, Stephen Goldman, and Fiduciary Trust entered.”
On January 15, 2002, a judgment was entered against Medeiros and Fiduciary in the notice case (the January 2002 judgment), declaring the prior tax sale void, vacating the final decree entered in the tax lien case, and “vest[ing the property] back into William Medeiros[,] subject to the mortgage to Bankers * * Medeiros received a copy of the January 2002 judgment; one was also recorded in the land evidence records of the town on March 14, 2002.
Fiduciary Moves to Vacate
On June 21, 2002, Fiduciary filed a motion to vacate the January 2002 judgment, asserting that it was not properly served with the complaint filed against it in the notice case, and, that it did not receive notice of Bankers’s motions for default judgment and summary judgment. Me-deiros here contends that he never received notice of this motion to vacate. Nevertheless, in an order entered on September 6, 2002, the Superior Court vacated the default judgment and summary judgment against only Fiduciary.
No copy of this order was sent to Medeiros, nor was the order recorded in the land evidence records of the town.
At some point in 2004, unaware of any potential cloud on the property, Medeiros entered into negotiations with Select (Bankers’s service company) in an attempt to settle the amount owed based on the mortgage note. In a letter dated April 29, 2005, Select indicated to Medeiros that to effectively discharge the mortgage, a payoff amount of $69,893.53 was required on or before May 6, 2005. Medeiros’s sister, Margaret E. Cambra (Cambra),
agreed to provide the necessary funds to satisfy the outstanding mortgage, as well as $5,106.47 to satisfy all outstanding real estate taxes in exchange for title to the property. On May 2, 2005, Cambra wired the $69,893.53 to Select in satisfaction of the mortgage and also paid to the town the delinquent taxes. Thereafter, without knowledge of the order vacating the default judgment
and summary judgment against Fiduciary in the notice case, Medeiros executed a warranty deed conveying the property to Cambra on May 81, 2005.
The Stipulation Order in the Notice Case
Concurrently, on May 31, 2005, and pri- or to the recordation of the property transfer from Medeiros to Cambra in the land evidence records, a stipulation between Bankers, Fiduciary, and the town was entered as an order of the Superior Court (stipulation order) in the notice case and was recorded that day in the land evidence records of the town. The stipulation order vacated the December 17, 2001 summary judgment in favor of Bankers, and vested title to the property in Fiduciary dating to December 17, 2001, and no longer subject to the mortgage held by Bankers. Furthermore, the stipulation order dismissed with prejudice all claims, counterclaims, and cross-claims of the parties.
Medeiros did not receive any notice of the stipulation or subsequent order. Instead, Medeiros first learned of the stipulation order on June 3, 2005, when a final title search of the property was performed prior to the recording of the deed from Medeiros to Cambra. Despite the existence of the recorded stipulation order, plaintiffs went ahead and recorded the warranty deed to the property.
The Instant Action
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OPINION
Justice INDEGLIA,
for the Court.
This appeal obliges us to once again wade into the sometimes murky waters of Rhode Island’s tax-sale statute, and more specifically, its redemption foreclosure process. The issue presented is whether a Superior Court judgment can “re-vest” title to property back to a prior owner after that owner has been defaulted in a petition to foreclose his right of redemption.
This case came before the Supreme Court on December 1, 2011, pursuant to an order directing the parties to appear and show cause why the issues raised in this appeal should not be summarily decided. After hearing the arguments of counsel and reviewing the memoranda submitted on behalf of the parties, we are satisfied that cause has not been shown. Accordingly, we shall decide the appeal at this time without further briefing or argument. For the reasons set forth in this opinion, we affirm the judgment of the Superior Court.
I
Facts and Travel
It is necessary to begin by recounting the tangled facts and extensive proceedings that ultimately led to the present action before this Court. On May 17, 1996, the plaintiff William J. Medeiros (Medeiros) became the owner of a certain parcel of real estate at 360-362 Devil’s Foot Road in the Town of North Kingstown (the property). That same day, Me-deiros executed a mortgage to the property to secure a note in the amount of $68,750. The original mortgagee then assigned the mortgage to Bankers Trust Company (Bankers). Medeiros made monthly mortgage payments through Bankers’s service company, Select Portfolio Servicing, Inc. (Select), until he experienced financial difficulties. At around the same time, Medeiros also failed to pay the necessary real estate taxes to the Town of North Kingstown (the town).
The Tax Lien Case
On June 4,1999, the town held a tax sale of the property. Prior to the tax sale, the town provided notice pursuant to G.L.1956 §§ 44-9-10 and 44-9-11
to Medeiros and Fleet Bank.
Bankers, however, as mortgagee, did not receive notice of the tax sale. Fiduciary Trust Services (Fiduciary) purchased the property at the tax sale and received a tax deed executed by the town on June 16,1999.
On June 26, 2000, Fiduciary filed a petition to foreclose Medeiros’s right of redemption to the property in the Superior Court for Washington County (the tax lien case). The record indicates that Medeiros was properly notified of the petition pursuant to § 44-9-27,
but that he failed to file an answer. On July 28, 2000, a final de
cree was entered in the tax lien case, foreclosing and barring all rights of redemption, including those that Medeiros had in the property.
The Notice Case
Thereafter, on October 10, 2000, Bankers filed a complaint against Medeiros, Fiduciary, and the town,
seeking to invalidate the tax sale and the redemption foreclosure (the notice case). On November 24, 2000, Bankers filed an amended complaint, alleging that the tax sale of the property was void because the town failed to give it notice. As part of its requested relief, Bankers petitioned the Superior Court to order Fiduciary to issue a redemption deed in favor of Medeiros. Because Medeiros believed that his rights were adequately protected by Bankers, he did not respond or enter his appearance in the notice case, despite being named as a defendant. On December 17, 2001, the matter was presented before a justice of the Superior Court for Washington County, wherein “the [cjourt granted summary judgment for Bankers Trust, and default judgments against Medeiros, Stephen Goldman, and Fiduciary Trust entered.”
On January 15, 2002, a judgment was entered against Medeiros and Fiduciary in the notice case (the January 2002 judgment), declaring the prior tax sale void, vacating the final decree entered in the tax lien case, and “vest[ing the property] back into William Medeiros[,] subject to the mortgage to Bankers * * Medeiros received a copy of the January 2002 judgment; one was also recorded in the land evidence records of the town on March 14, 2002.
Fiduciary Moves to Vacate
On June 21, 2002, Fiduciary filed a motion to vacate the January 2002 judgment, asserting that it was not properly served with the complaint filed against it in the notice case, and, that it did not receive notice of Bankers’s motions for default judgment and summary judgment. Me-deiros here contends that he never received notice of this motion to vacate. Nevertheless, in an order entered on September 6, 2002, the Superior Court vacated the default judgment and summary judgment against only Fiduciary.
No copy of this order was sent to Medeiros, nor was the order recorded in the land evidence records of the town.
At some point in 2004, unaware of any potential cloud on the property, Medeiros entered into negotiations with Select (Bankers’s service company) in an attempt to settle the amount owed based on the mortgage note. In a letter dated April 29, 2005, Select indicated to Medeiros that to effectively discharge the mortgage, a payoff amount of $69,893.53 was required on or before May 6, 2005. Medeiros’s sister, Margaret E. Cambra (Cambra),
agreed to provide the necessary funds to satisfy the outstanding mortgage, as well as $5,106.47 to satisfy all outstanding real estate taxes in exchange for title to the property. On May 2, 2005, Cambra wired the $69,893.53 to Select in satisfaction of the mortgage and also paid to the town the delinquent taxes. Thereafter, without knowledge of the order vacating the default judgment
and summary judgment against Fiduciary in the notice case, Medeiros executed a warranty deed conveying the property to Cambra on May 81, 2005.
The Stipulation Order in the Notice Case
Concurrently, on May 31, 2005, and pri- or to the recordation of the property transfer from Medeiros to Cambra in the land evidence records, a stipulation between Bankers, Fiduciary, and the town was entered as an order of the Superior Court (stipulation order) in the notice case and was recorded that day in the land evidence records of the town. The stipulation order vacated the December 17, 2001 summary judgment in favor of Bankers, and vested title to the property in Fiduciary dating to December 17, 2001, and no longer subject to the mortgage held by Bankers. Furthermore, the stipulation order dismissed with prejudice all claims, counterclaims, and cross-claims of the parties.
Medeiros did not receive any notice of the stipulation or subsequent order. Instead, Medeiros first learned of the stipulation order on June 3, 2005, when a final title search of the property was performed prior to the recording of the deed from Medeiros to Cambra. Despite the existence of the recorded stipulation order, plaintiffs went ahead and recorded the warranty deed to the property.
The Instant Action
In an attempt to clear the title to the property, Medeiros and Cambra filed the instant action in the Superior Court for Washington County on June 17, 2005, seeking a declaratory judgment invalidating the May 31, 2005 stipulation order.
The complaint also requested that all clouds on the property be removed and that Cambra be adjudged the fee simple owner of the property by virtue of the warranty deed from Medeiros. The matter was tried on October 14, 2008, and November 18, 2008, before a justice of the Superior Court, sitting without a jury.
In a written decision issued on December 28, 2009, the Superior Court determined that as a result of the stipulation order, Fiduciary and its assigns were the proper record title holders of the property. In reaching this decision, the trial justice found that the stipulation order adequately adjudicated the issue of whether Bankers received notice of the tax sale in the notice case. Therefore, the trial justice found that Medeiros was barred from challenging the stipulation order based on Bankers’s lack of notice because “any claims regarding Bankers Trust’s lack of notice [was] precluded by the doctrine of
res judicata.”
Additionally, she found that Medeiros failed to protect his interest in the property — and his right to receive notice of the stipulation — by defaulting in both the tax lien case and the notice case. Because of his “willful failure to answer, or appear, in two separate proceedings,” the trial justice therefore found no violation of Medeiros’s due process rights.
Final judgment entered on January 20, 2010. Medeiros filed a timely notice of appeal on February 2, 2010. On appeal, Medeiros asserts that this Court’s analysis should begin with the Superior Court’s January 2002 judgment in the notice case, in which the lower court declared the tax sale void, vacated the final decree entered in the tax lien case, and vested the property back into Medeiros subject to Bankers’s mortgage. Medeiros argues that the Superior Court decision on December 28, 2009, in the instant action should be reversed because he received no notice of Fiduciary’s motion to vacate the January 2002 judgment, the order granting that motion, or the 2005 stipulation order, in violation of his due process rights.
Furthermore, in regard to his prior default in the notice case, Medeiros contends that the stipulation order was a “new or additional claim[ ] for relief’ in the notice case. Thus, in his view, Rule 5(a) of the Superior Court Rules of Civil Procedure also entitled him to receive notice of (1) Fiduciary’s motion to vacate the January 2002 judgment in the notice case, (2) the court’s order granting that motion, and (3) the subsequent stipulation order.
In response, Fiduciary argues that because Medeiros defaulted in the tax lien case, the issue presented in the notice case initiated by Bankers was limited to Fiduciary’s and Bankers’s interests only. To support this position, Fiduciary points to the language of the Superior Court’s order of September 6, 2002, that vacated the default judgment and summary judgment, which stated that “[t]he default judgment and summary judgement [sic ] are vacated as to Fiduciary Trust Services only.” Therefore, Fiduciary avers that the prior “re-vestment” of the property back to Me-deiros (subject to Bankers’s mortgage) by virtue of Bankers’s successful motion for summary judgment was “erroneously entered” by the Superior Court. Consequently, Fiduciary asserts that this “wrongful granting of title back to * * * Medeiros” failed to create a new claim and re-attach Medeiros’s due process right to notice. Rather, Fiduciary argues, Medei-ros’s due process rights were satisfied when Medeiros was given notice of the proceeding to foreclose on his right of redemption after the tax sale.
As to Medeiros’s Rule 5(a) argument, Fiduciary contends that because Medeiros defaulted in the tax lien case, the subsequent proceedings (and the stipulation order) only sought to clarify the status between Bankers and Fiduciary rather than raise any new claims against Medeiros. Accordingly, Fiduciary contends that Rule 5(a) did not entitle Medeiros to notice of the stipulation order.
In sum, Medeiros takes the following position — that the January 2002 judgment “re-vesting” the property back to him and Bankers nullified the tax sale and the foreclosure of the right of redemption, and effectively reverted Medeiros and Bankers to their former positions prior to the tax sale, as mortgagor and mortgagee of the property, respectively. Following this position to its logical end, Medeiros concludes that based on this “re-vesting,” he was entitled to notice prior to the stipulation order being entered. Unfortunately for Medeiros, however, our longstanding authority in this area does not comport with this line of reasoning. Hence, we
hold that the January 2002 judgment did not “re-vest” the property back to Medei-ros and that he was not entitled to subsequent notice.
II
Standard of Review
“This Court views deferentially the factual findings of a trial justice sitting in a nonjury case.”
Grady v. Narragansett Electric Co.,
962 A.2d 34, 41 (R.I.2009) (quoting
Manchester v. Pereira,
926 A.2d 1005, 1011 (R.I.2007)). We therefore “will not disturb the findings of a trial justice sitting without a jury unless such findings are clearly erroneous or unless the trial justice misconceived or overlooked material evidence or unless the decision fails to do substantial justice between the parties.”
Id.
(quoting
Macera v. Cerra,
789 A.2d 890, 892-93 (R.I.2002)). “[I]f, on review, the record indicates that competent evidence supports the trial justice’s findings, we shall not substitute our view of the evidence for his [or hers] even though a contrary conclusion could have been reached.”
Nardone v. Ritacco,
936 A.2d 200, 204 (R.I.2007) (quoting
Imperial Casualty and Indemnity Co. v. Bellini,
888 A.2d 957, 961 (R.I.2005)).
“In contrast to our deferential [standard regarding] factual findings made by a trial justice,”
Grady,
962 A.2d at 41 (citing
Manchester,
926 A.2d at 1011), when “the issue is a pure question of law,” we review using a
de novo
standard.
Ashley v. Kehew,
992 A.2d 983, 987 (R.I.2010) (citing
Ondis v. City of Woonsocket ex rel. Treasurer Touzin,
934 A.2d 799, 802 (R.I.2007)).
III
Discussion
This Court’s analysis begins with Medeiros’s default in the tax lien case. As previously mentioned, a year after the property was sold by the town at the June 1999 tax sale,
Medeiros properly received notice of Fiduciary’s petition to foreclose his right of redemption in Superior Court. As was suitably noted in the trial justice’s written decision, “Medeiros failed to answer or appear to assert any claim to an interest in the property!,]” thus leading to the default judgment entered against him. This failure to answer the petition to foreclose his right of redemption is fatal to his current appeal.
A
Controlling Statutes
We are mindful that “[a] tax sale foreclosure proceeding ‘is a unique procedure created by statute for a limited purpose; to provide a forum for the exercise of the right to redeem the subject land.’ ”
ABAR Associates v. Luna,
870 A.2d 990, 994 (R.I.2005) (quoting
Pratt v. Woolley,
117 R.I. 154, 157, 365 A.2d 424, 426 (1976)). In the past, this Court has acknowledged that because of a property owner’s disproportionate loss, “[[legislatures and courts have acted to ameliorate the severity of tax forfeitures.”
Id.
(quoting
Albertson v. Leca,
447 A.2d 383, 388 (R.I.1982)). “We also have recognized, however, that the Rhode Island tax statute ‘strikes a fair balance between the interests of the government and private property rights — the state may move quickly to obtain by sale the taxes due, but the owner has ample
opportunity to redeem his real estate.’ ”
Id.
(quoting
Albertson,
447 A.2d at 388). Furthermore, we reiterate that “one of the goals of the tax sale statute is to ‘afford a measure of stability to tax titles.’ ”
Id.
(quoting
Picerne v. Sylvestre,
122 R.I. 85, 89, 404 A.2d 476, 478 (1979)). It is through this lens that we must view the present case.
Three specific statutory provisions pertaining to tax sales are paramount in this appeal. Section 44-9-24 provides in relevant part:
“The title conveyed by a tax collector’s deed
shall be absolute
after foreclosure of the right of redemption by decree of the [S]uperior [C]ourt * * *. * * * Furthermore, the action to vacate shall only be instituted for inadequacy of notice of the petition amounting to a denial of due process or for the invalidity of the tax sale because the taxes for which the property was sold had been paid or were not due and owing because the property was exempt from the payment of such taxes.” (Emphasis added.)
Section 44-9-80 provides that once a default has been entered, as it was in the case at bar, “a decree shall be entered which
shall forever bar
all rights of redemption.” (Emphasis added.) Moreover, § 44-9-31 provides in pertinent part:
“If a person claiming an interest desires to raise any question concerning the validity of a tax title, the person shall do so by answer filed in the proceeding on or before the return day, or within that further time as may on motion be allowed by the court,
or else be forever bamd from contesting or raising the question in any other proceeding.
He or she shall also file specifications setting forth the matters upon which he or she relies to defeat the title; and unless the specifications are filed, all questions of the validity or invalidity of the title, whether in the form of the deed or proceedings relating to the sale,
shall be deemed, to have been waived,.”
(Emphases added.)
In this case, the record indicates that after Medeiros was properly noticed of the tax sale and of the hearing to foreclose his right of redemption, he failed to file an answer or to assert any claim of interest in the property. Therefore, once Medeiros defaulted and a final decree entered against him on July 28, 2000, the tax deed was absolute as to Fiduciary, and Medei-ros was forever barred from any subsequent claim. All questions by Medeiros concerning the validity of the title were deemed waived — including the right to notice of both Fiduciary’s September 2002 motion to vacate and the May 31, 2005 stipulation order.
B
Prior Precedent
On multiple occasions, this Court has held that “upon notice of a petition for foreclosure of the right of redemption, the failure by one who owns an interest in real estate to file an answer or specifications on or before the return day forever bars that party from later contesting the validity of the tax title.”
ABAR Associates, 870 A.2d
at 995 (quoting
Kildeer Realty v. Brewster Realty Corp.,
826 A.2d 961, 967 (R.I.2003)).
In
Kildeer Realty,
826 A.2d at 963, a parcel of real estate was sold at a tax sale. The defendant property owner, Brewster Realty, was not properly notified of the impending tax sale.
Id.
A year after the tax sale, the purchaser of the real estate, Kildeer Realty, filed a petition in Superior Court to foreclose all rights of redemption to the property.
Id.
Brewster Realty did receive notice of the petition, but failed to appear or object.
Id.
A final decree was entered, foreclosing all rights of redemp
tion to the real estate.
Id.
Subsequently, Brewster Realty filed a motion to vacate the judgment, asserting the original tax sale was void for want of notice and that it was deprived of its property without due process.
Id.
This Court in
Kildeer Realty,
826 A.2d at 966, held that despite Brewster Realty not receiving notice of the impending tax sale, § 44-9-31 explicitly barred the defendant from contesting the validity of the tax title in any future proceeding because it was defaulted in the redemption foreclosure action. We reasoned that once a default was entered according to § 44-9-30, “a decree shall be entered which shall forever bar all rights of redemption[,]” and “any subsequent claims by Brewster Realty were forever barred.”
Kildeer Realty,
826 A.2d at 966;
see also ABAR Associates,
870 A.2d at 996-97 (holding that it was improper to allow a party with a property interest to intervene after a final decree had been entered foreclosing all rights of redemption, despite that party not receiving any notice of the prior tax sale);
Norwest Mortgage, Inc. v. Masse,
799 A.2d 259, 263 (R.I.2002) (holding that a creditor’s noncompliance with § 44-9-31 prohibited the creditor from setting aside a tax sale, despite the fact that the tax sale occurred in violation of the automatic stay provisions of the bankruptcy code);
Picerne v. Sylvestre,
113 R.I. 598, 602, 324 A.2d 617, 619 (1974) (recognizing the all-encompassing terms of “forever barred” and “in any other proceeding” in § 44-9-31),
overruled, on other grounds,
122 R.I. 85, 404 A.2d 476 (1979). Thus, in the instant case, because Medeiros defaulted in the tax lien case, he is precluded from intervening in any subsequent claim to the property.
Accordingly, we agree with the trial justice’s decision that because of the preceding authority, the January 2002 judgment failed to “re-vest” Medeiros with the property. The trial justice properly noted that because Medeiros “failed to answer or appear to assert any claim” in the tax lien case, “[t]he default judgment entered against Medeiros in [that] case terminated any interest he might have in the property.” The trial justice was correct in finding that “[s]imply because the [January 2002 judgment] was sent to Medeiros as a courtesy” and erroneously “revested” title in Medeiros, the judgment was in error and “d[id] not change his status as [a] party in default.” As a result, this Court considers the January 2002 judgment to be null and void. Furthermore, because the default against Medeiros in the tax lien case could not have been removed or set aside, Medeiros is unable to avail himself of the notice exception found in Rule 5(a).
Concerning Medeiros’s due process argument, we also agree with the trial justice’s finding that “Medeiros’[s] rights to due process were satisfied * * * when he was [given notice], and elected not to protect any interest he might have in the property.”
As a policy matter, to allow a property to “re-vest” in a defaulted party after the final decree has been entered would result in “the purpose of achieving stabilization of tax titles [being] completely frustrated.”
ABAR Associates,
870 A.2d at 996. To so hold would only invite an unnecessary cascade of legal proceedings following a redemption foreclosure — as this case illustrates.
IV
Conclusion
For the reasons set forth in this opinion, we affirm the judgment of the Superior Court. The record of the case shall be remanded to the Superior Court.
Justice ROBINSON did not participate.