Montgomery County Tax Claims Bureau Appeal

205 A.2d 104, 204 Pa. Super. 409, 1964 Pa. Super. LEXIS 604
CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedDecember 8, 1964
DocketAppeal, No. 243
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 205 A.2d 104 (Montgomery County Tax Claims Bureau Appeal) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Superior Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Montgomery County Tax Claims Bureau Appeal, 205 A.2d 104, 204 Pa. Super. 409, 1964 Pa. Super. LEXIS 604 (Pa. Ct. App. 1964).

Opinions

Opinion by

Flood, J.,

The Tax Claims Bureau of Montgomery County conducted an upset sale of certain property of which the appellees are record owners. A consolidated return was filed with the office of the Prothonotary of Montgomery County and the court below signed a decree nisi in accordance with the Real Estate Tax Sale Law, Act of July 7, 1947, P. L. 1368, art. VI, §607, as amended (72 PS §5860.607). The appellees filed objections and exceptions to the consolidated return. After a hearing the court sustained objections and exceptions to certain costs charged by the bureau and ordered it to refund these to the appellees.

On this appeal the bureau attacks this result on both procedural and substantive grounds. It contends that (1) the court had no authority to pass upon these objections because they were filed too late and (2) the costs disallowed by the court were properly charged.

1. The Real Estate Tax Sale Law, Act of July 7, 1947, P. L. 1368 et seq., as amended (72 PS §5860.101 et seq.), is a self-contained statute. It provides that [412]*412the officials of the various taxing districts of a county in which the act is in force shall on or before the first Monday in May in each year, return to the bureau a list of all properties as to which the preceding year’s taxes are unpaid (§306). Not later than July 31st of the same year, the director of the bureau must give notice to each delinquent taxpayer that the return has been filed and a tax claim entered against him (§308). If the claim is not paid or exceptions to it are not filed by the property owner prior to January 1st of the following year, it then becomes absolute (§311). If the exceptions are filed, the bureau “shall hold a hearing thereon”, after giving due notice, and dispose of them in accordance with the evidence and its prescribed powers (§314(b)). The bureau may set aside or reduce the claim if it is found invalid in whole or in part either because the taxes had been paid or “for any other reason not involving a question which could have been raised by an appeal provided for by law” (§314 (a)). The property owner may appeal to the court of common pleas within fifteen days after notice of the bureau’s decision (§314(b)). Upon final disposition of the exceptions, the claim becomes absolute (§314(f)).

The appellees filed exceptions to certain items in the claims on the ground that they were not chargeable to them under the act. The bureau notified them that since they did not aver payment of the taxes, they were not entitled to a hearing under §314. No appeal was taken at this time and an upset sale of the properties was held on October 10, 1960. After the sale, the properly owners filed objections and exceptions with the court, raising the same questions they had raised in their exceptions to the claims.

The act provides that the bureau shall sell the property after the tax claim has become absolute and the period of redemption has been allowed to expire [413]*413(§601 (a)). Not later than sixty days after the sale the bureau is required to make a consolidated return of the sale (§607(a)), of which notice shall be given by publication stating that objections or exceptions to the return may be filed within sixty days (§607(b)). These objections or exceptions may question the proceedings in respect to the sale but not the validity of the tax claims (§607(d)). If the objections or exceptions are sustained and the court deems the defect not amendable, it must invalidate the sale and order another to take place (§607(e)).

Despite the fact that the objections to the sale went to the correctness of the tax claims rather than the proceedings relating to the sales, contrary to the provisions of §607(d), they were sustained by the court. In so doing, the court held that failure to grant the appellees a hearing on their exceptions to the claims made any purported disposition of those exceptions a nullity. Hence the claims never became absolute and the sales were unauthorized under §601 (a). It then decided that some of the charges on which the exceptions to the tax claims were based were invalid. However, in accordance with the request of the bureau, it did not set aside the sales but merely ordered the items which it held invalid to be refunded to the taxpayers since, in its view, the defect was amendable by a refund of the costs.

The bureau contends that (1) the appellees’ request for a hearing, after they had filed exceptions contesting the validity of the tax claim, was not in accordance with §314 of the act because they did not aver payment of the taxes to a taxing district but raised a question of law, (2) even if they were entitled to a hearing, the refusal of the bureau to grant their request was a decision within the scope of §314 (b) and their failure to appeal to the court of common pleas within fifteen days after notice of the decision by the [414]*414bureau was a bar to any further proceedings to protest the tax claims, and (3) in any event, the alternative procedure of bringing an action of mandamus to compel the bureau to hold a hearing was a proper remedy and, therefore, the nine months’ delay by the appellees before filing their appeal with the court of common pleas constituted laches.

While the appellees did not aver payment in their exceptions to the claims, they did present other reasons against the validity of the claims. Not all questions relating to the claims are withdrawn from the provisions of §314, but only those “which could have been raised by an appeal provided for by law”. This does not bar the appellees because the bureau does not set forth nor do we find any procedure by appeal or otherwise, other than filing exceptions to the claim, under which they could have raised these questions. An example of an “appeal provided for by law” is found in the assessment procedure. A collateral attack on the assessment by means of a proceeding before the Tax Claims Bureau, when the taxpayer has failed to avail himself of the appeal procedure laid down by the statutes with respect to assessments, is, therefore, precluded by §314. Since there is no provision in the statutes for appeal with regard to the questions raised here by the appellees’ exceptions to the claims, they were properly filed under §314 and they were entitled to a hearing before the bureau.

As to the appellees’ failure to appeal to the court within fifteen days after the bureau’s refusal of a hearing, the court below correctly held that any disposition by the bureau on exceptions filed under §314 must be made on the basis of a hearing. Refusal of the bureau to hold a hearing is not a decision on the exceptions and consequently the fifteen day limitation on appeal to the court of common pleas is not applicable. Moreover, a decision without opportunity for a hearing is [415]*415a violation of the statutory due process provided by §314 and, therefore, void. To decide otherwise would be to penalize the petitioners for the bureau’s violation of its statutory duty to hold a hearing. Consequently the court below correctly held that there was no decision on the exceptions and, as a result, the claims never became absolute. Since a sale cannot validly be held under §601 (a) until the claims become absolute, the sales here are invalid and the court had the right to so hold in ruling on exceptions to the sales. The claimants are accordingly not guilty of laches.

2. The remaining question is whether the court correctly determined that the charges to which the appellees object were improperly charged to them.

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Related

In re Rausch Creek Land, L.P.
59 A.3d 1 (Commonwealth Court of Pennsylvania, 2012)
In Re Tax Sale Pursuant to the Real Estate Tax Sale Law of 1947
8 A.3d 358 (Commonwealth Court of Pennsylvania, 2010)
PPL Holtwood LLC v. Tax Claim Bureau
56 Pa. D. & C.4th 366 (Pike County Court of Common Pleas, 2002)
Hargreaves v. Mid-Valley School District
396 A.2d 894 (Commonwealth Court of Pennsylvania, 1979)

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Bluebook (online)
205 A.2d 104, 204 Pa. Super. 409, 1964 Pa. Super. LEXIS 604, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/montgomery-county-tax-claims-bureau-appeal-pasuperct-1964.