Refund Recov. Spec., LLC v. City of Norfolk, Va., a Mun. Corp. by & through its Treas., Duan Hester

CourtCourt of Appeals of Virginia
DecidedJune 16, 2026
Docket0104251
StatusPublished

This text of Refund Recov. Spec., LLC v. City of Norfolk, Va., a Mun. Corp. by & through its Treas., Duan Hester (Refund Recov. Spec., LLC v. City of Norfolk, Va., a Mun. Corp. by & through its Treas., Duan Hester) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Refund Recov. Spec., LLC v. City of Norfolk, Va., a Mun. Corp. by & through its Treas., Duan Hester, (Va. Ct. App. 2026).

Opinion

COURT OF APPEALS OF VIRGINIA

Record No. 0104-25-1

REFUND RECOVERY SPECIALIST, LLC v. CITY OF NORFOLK, VIRGINIA, A MUNICIPAL CORPORATION BY AND THROUGH ITS TREASURER, DUAN HESTER

Present: Judges Athey, Friedman and Callins Argued at Williamsburg, Virginia Opinion Issued June 16, 2026

FROM THE CIRCUIT COURT OF THE CITY OF NORFOLK Mary Jane Hall, Judge

A. Blake Gayle (Zwerdling, Oppleman, Adams & Gayle, on briefs), for appellant.

Christopher W. Palermo-Re, Assistant City Attorney, for appellee.

PUBLISHED OPINION BY JUDGE FRANK K. FRIEDMAN

This is a case where the property owner’s failure to pay a relatively small tax arrearage

resulted in the heirs to the land losing any claim to the parcel—a property appraised at over

$330,000. The appeal arises out of a civil action to sell tax-delinquent real estate. The main

issue involves the interpretation of Code § 58.1-3967: specifically, whether heirs of a former

homeowner are entitled to a lienholder’s unclaimed surplus funds after a tax sale, or whether the

surplus escheats to the City of Norfolk (City) by operation of the statute. The circuit court found

that under Code § 58.1-3967, the heirs would only be entitled to recover surplus funds, if any,

that exceeded a Citibank lien on the home and that those surplus funds would be submitted to the

clerk of the circuit court until the time for making claims had expired. The court then went further and dismissed the heirs’ petition, concluding that, by operation of Code § 58.1-3967, any

surplus funds must be awarded to the City if unclaimed after two years.

BACKGROUND

The Property’s History in the Smith Family

By a deed recorded in the clerk’s office of Princess Anne County, Ralph and Lessie

Smith bought a parcel of real property at 133 Hicks Avenue, Norfolk, Virginia (Property) on

April 7, 1957. Ralph died on February 2, 2002, and his interest in the Property passed to Lessie.

On March 12, 2007, Lessie executed a credit line deed of trust in favor of Citibank, National

Association (Citibank).1 There is no indication in the record of any debt existing on this line of

credit. Lessie died intestate on August 3, 2019.

The City Files a Complaint Resulting in a Tax Sale

In January 2023, the City filed a complaint in the circuit court requesting that the

Property be sold to satisfy delinquent real estate taxes totaling $6,984.15. The City filed an

amended complaint in February 2023 listing defendant Charles B. Thomas as “Trustee for a

certain Credit Line Deed of Trust from Lessie M. Smith, dated March 12, 2007, Recorded in

Instrument No. 070015008 on April 17, 2007, in the Circuit Court of the City of Norfolk, to

secure the principal sum of $200,000.00 for the benefit of the defendant, Citibank . . . .” As part

of the original tax delinquency case, a real estate appraiser assessed the Property’s fair market

value at $334,000.

1 “‘Credit line deed of trust’ means any deed of trust, mortgage, bond, or other instrument entered into after July 1, 1982, in which title to real property located in the Commonwealth is conveyed, transferred, encumbered, or pledged to secure payment of money, including advances or other extensions of credit to be made in the future.” Code § 55.1-318. -2- On October 23, 2023, the Property was sold at auction pursuant to Code § 58.1-3965 for

$220,200. This sum was well below the Property’s appraised value. The circuit court approved

the sale to satisfy the tax lien.

On November 21, 2023, the court entered an order of confirmation of scheme of

disbursement. The court ordered payment of $10,473.50 in taxes, $14,900 in attorney fees, and

$25,494.36 in costs of action, leaving a surplus of $169,332.14 from the $220,200 sales price.

The court ordered that the surplus proceeds be paid into the registry of the City of Norfolk

Circuit Court and be held pursuant to Code § 58.1-3967.2 Additionally, the court ordered “that if

no claim to such surplus funds be made within two years of the date of the confirmation of the

sale of the subject property by the decree of this Court dated October 23, 2023, then said Clerk

shall pay said sum to the Treasurer for the City of Norfolk.”

The Heirs of Lessie Smith File a Claim and Move for Default Judgment

On June 3, 2024, Refund Recovery Specialist, LLC (Refund Recovery) filed a Petition to

Claim Surplus Funds on behalf of the heirs of Lessie Smith. The “Petition to Claim Surplus

Funds” provided that:

• The Surplus funds “are being held for the benefit of the heirs . . . of the former owners.” • Lessie Smith died intestate, leaving the identified heirs as her sole heirs-at-law pursuant to Va. Code § 64.2-200.

2 Code § 58.1-3967 reads in pertinent part:

If no claim for payment of the indebtedness secured by any lien chargeable thereon is made by an unknown beneficiary such as a lien, or if no claim for such surplus is made by such former owner, his heirs . . . or assigns, within two years after the date of confirmation of such sale, then such amount secured by the lien of the unknown beneficiary, surplus, or both, as applicable, shall be paid by the clerk of the court in which such suit was instituted to the county, city or town that received proceeds from the sale of the real estate. -3- • Refund Recovery contracted with the heirs and was entitled to collect the surplus funds on their behalf.3 • Citibank has a lien, but Refund Recovery “disputes that any sums are due and owing on the credit line secured by the” deed of trust. • The heirs request “disbursement of the Surplus Funds” to them.

In the petition, Refund Recovery acknowledged that “the Surplus Funds may be subject to the

lien of [Citibank] . . . pursuant to a Credit Line Deed of Trust from Lessie Smith dated March 12,

2007.” A copy of the petition was sent to Citibank, but Citibank did not respond to the filing.

On October 10, 2024, Refund Recovery moved for entry of default judgment, claiming

that Citibank’s failure to file pleadings in response to its petition rendered the lien holders “in

default pursuant to Virginia Supreme Court Rule 3:19.”4

The Court’s Rejection of Refund Recovery’s Default Judgment Claim and the Court’s Dismissal of the Petition

A hearing on the default judgment motion was scheduled for December 11, 2024, but

counsel for Refund Recovery failed to appear.5 That same day, after missing the hearing,

counsel for Refund Recovery sent a letter of apology to the court and requested that the matter be

rescheduled. On December 13, 2024, however, the circuit court issued an order denying both

3 Refund Recovery’s contracts with the heirs (attached as Exhibit B to its petition) were the putative basis for Refund Recovery’s standing to file the petition on the heirs’ behalf. See Green v. Portfolio Recovery Assocs., LLC, 83 Va. App. 28, 88 (2024) (“Our contract law standing doctrine governs standing in debt collection cases.”). No challenge has been raised regarding Refund Recovery’s standing here. See Gray v. Va. Sec’y of Transp., 276 Va. 93, 102 n.5 (2008) (“The Plaintiffs’ standing to bring this action was not challenged in the circuit court and thus is not a question before this Court.”); Martin v. Ziherl, 269 Va. 35, 39 (2005) (holding that the failure to challenge standing at the trial level precludes this Court from considering the issue on appeal). 4 There is an affidavit of service in the record indicating service of the petition alone to Citibank, with no mention of a summons.

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Refund Recov. Spec., LLC v. City of Norfolk, Va., a Mun. Corp. by & through its Treas., Duan Hester, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/refund-recov-spec-llc-v-city-of-norfolk-va-a-mun-corp-by-through-vactapp-2026.