Povlow Appeal
This text of 48 Pa. Commw. 435 (Povlow Appeal) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Commonwealth Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
In Re: Upset Sale, Tax Claim Bureau of Bucks County, Pennsylvania Etc. Irvin E. Povlow, Appellant.
Commonwealth Court of Pennsylvania.
*436 Submitted on briefs October 5, 1979, before Judges ROGERS, BLATT and CRAIG, sitting as a panel of three.
John D. Trainer, with him Power, Bowen & Valimont, for appellant.
Roger A. Johnsen, for appellee.
OPINION BY JUDGE CRAIG, January 10, 1980:
An unpaid 1974 Bensalem Township interim tax of $23.10 resulted in a tax sale by the Bucks County Tax Claims Bureau (bureau), on October 18, 1976, of property, having an agreed fair market value in excess of $30,000, to appellant for $1,025. The Real Estate Tax Sale Law[1] (Tax Sale Law) governed the sale.
The bureau mailed the notices of the delinquent tax claim and the impending tax sale, required respectively by Sections 308 and 602 of The Tax Sale Law,[2]*437 by certified mail to the address of the property with the addressee as Vincent and Lois Irving, who had purchased the property in August of 1974, but who had since moved away. The post office returned the Section 308 notice of the delinquent tax claim (mailed June 26, 1975) marked "unclaimed." The following year, the bureau addressed the Section 602 notice of the impending sale to the same persons at the same address, but, having again received no reply, adjourned the sale until October 18, 1976 for the stated purpose of effecting "informal notices to record owners." On September 30, 1976, the bureau then mailed a second notice of the sale to the Irvings to the same address. The post office again returned it marked "moved, left no address."
Meanwhile, Commonwealth Federal Savings and Loan Association (the Association), which held a mortgage on the property, had begun mortgage foreclosure proceedings in January of 1976. As the successful bidder at a sheriff's sale resulting from the mortgage foreclosure, the Association purchased the property on September 10, 1976 and recorded its deed on September 22, 1976, eight days before the bureau mailed its final Section 602 notice and nearly a month before the bureau conducted the tax sale.
Notice of the mortgage foreclosure proceedings had been duly posted in the Bucks County Sheriff's Office for some time.
After the tax sale, the Association filed exceptions to it. The lower court overturned the tax sale with directions to the Association to pay the purchase price to appellant within 30 days of its order or within 30 days of such time as its order might be affirmed on appeal.
Section 602 of the Tax Sale Law requires that notice of pending tax upset sales be sent to each "owner." Owner is defined by Section 102 of the Tax Sale *438 Law, 72 P.S. § 5860.102, as the registered owner or the person in open notorious possession as apparent or reputed owner.
During the relevant time period here, the property was vacant, albeit for part of the time posted for sale under the mortgage foreclosure. Because no deed registry system exists in Bucks County, and because there is no evidence here of an apparent or reputed owner, the Section 102 definition is of no help in deciding whether the bureau complied with the Section 602 directive that notice be sent to the "owner." We have only the fact that, on September 22, 1976, the Association became the record owner, but the definition section of the Tax Sale Law places no significance upon ownership of record.
The lower court, in its lengthy discussion of this case, recognized the dilemma in turning, as we do, to the seminal notice cases under the Tax Sale Law, Hess v. Westerwick, 366 Pa. 90, 76 A.2d 745 (1950), and Ross Appeal, 366 Pa. 100, 76 A.2d 749 (1950).
Hess v. Westerwick, Ross Appeal and our own cases following them have entrenched the axiom that the notice provisions of the Tax Sale Law are strictly construed to guard against deprivation of the property without due process of law. See Clawson Appeal, 39 Pa. Commonwealth Ct. 492, 395 A.2d 703 (1979); Teslovich v. Johnson, 37 Pa. Commonwealth Ct. 449, 391 A.2d 11 (1978), aff'd, 486 Pa. 622, 406 A.2d 1374 (1979); Sale of Properties by Indiana County Tax Claim Bureau, 22 Pa. Commonwealth Ct. 147, 348 A.2d 440 (1975).
With reference to a case where a tax claims bureau had not mailed a notice to the last known address, although addressed to the correct owner's name, Judge ROGERS, speaking for the court in Clawson Appeal, supra, held that the local tax collector's knowledge of *439 the owner's last known address could be imputed to the tax claims bureau, stating:
[Such a holding is] consistent with the tenor of Ross Appeal . . . where the Supreme Court in considering the notice requirements of the Real Estate Tax Sale Law expressed concern that the Tax Claim Bureau in question upon observing that the owner had paid taxes in years subsequent had made no inquiry of the local tax collector and observed that the statute was not meant to punish tax payers for an oversight or error but to protect local government against wilful, persistent, long-standing delinquents.
39 Pa. Commonwealth Ct. at 498, 395 A.2d at 706.
See also, Appeal of Marra, 40 Pa. Commonwealth Ct. 159, 397 A.2d 836 (1979) (bureau properly chargeable with knowledge of change of owner and new address in County Assessment Records).
In the Clawson Appeal Judge ROGERS also observed that the bureau in that case knew that the taxpayers had paid all local taxes for years later than the tax delinquency which resulted in the sale of the property because Section 605 of the Tax Sale Law, 72 P.S. § 5860.605, requires the bureau to include in the sale upset price other unpaid taxes for any period subsequent to the delinquency.
Here we have a similar case in which the evidence showed that the Association, as mortgagee, had paid taxes for the years 1975 and 1976 and had asked the local tax collector to send tax bills directly to them, not to their defaulting mortgagors. Moreover, in this case the documentary evidence included copies of checks drawn by the Association to the former and current local tax collector of Bensalem Township, covering the taxes owing in years after the interim tax deficiency was returned as delinquent. The Association here further showed that it made consistent efforts *440 with the local tax collector to insure that all taxes due on the property were paid.
This case is different from Clawson Appeal chiefly in that the Association had been in the status of mortgagee and did not acquire its title until just before the bureau mailed the last notice.
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