Roanoke County v. Torry

85 Va. Cir. 357, 2012 WL 9391672, 2012 Va. Cir. LEXIS 148
CourtRoanoke County Circuit Court
DecidedSeptember 13, 2012
DocketCase No. CL12-290
StatusPublished

This text of 85 Va. Cir. 357 (Roanoke County v. Torry) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Roanoke County Circuit Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Roanoke County v. Torry, 85 Va. Cir. 357, 2012 WL 9391672, 2012 Va. Cir. LEXIS 148 (Va. Super. Ct. 2012).

Opinion

By Judge Robert P. Doherty, Jr.

Roanoke County hired a private law firm to collect its delinquent real estate taxes for an agreed fee of 20% of the taxes and related assessments actually recovered. Lawsuits were filed on behalf of Roanoke County pursuant to § 58.1-3965, et seq., Code of Virginia (1950), as amended, to sell the lands of the recalcitrant landowners in order to collect their unpaid taxes. One of the landowners delinquent in its Roanoke County real estate taxes was a limited liability company that had been dissolved by the State Corporation Commission. That tax debt is the subject of this lawsuit. The assets of the dissolved limited liability company, to include its real estate, are held by a Trustee in Dissolution, who is the principal Defendant in this action. Additional named Defendants are the lien holders of several deeds of trust and their respective trustees. Among the liens against this Roanoke County real estate is a first deed of trust in the amount of $225,000.00 and a credit line deed of trust in an amount in excess of 1.9 million dollars. The first deed of trust has been subordinated to the credit line deed of trust.

[358]*358In order to protect its collateral, the Bank, who was the holder of the note secured by the credit line deed of trust, filed a motion to redeem the real estate prior to its sale pursuant to § 58.1-3974. The Bank objected to the attorney’s fees charged for redemption and requested leave of Court to pay all of the taxes and fees owed, less the attorney’s fees, in order to halt the majority of the ongoing interest charges, and thereafter to litigate the question of the attorney’s fees. The Court authorized that procedure. The sale of the land has simply been continued generally awaiting a resolution of this issue. The land has not yet been redeemed pursuant to statute, and the tax lien continues to exist. Redemption will occur when Court approved attorney’s fees and its resulting interest have been paid in full.

The evidence in this case from the Roanoke County Treasurer is that he, on behalf of Roanoke County, was aware that the attorney’s fee cost of collecting the delinquent real estate taxes this year would entail more than three hundred hours at a rate of $225.00 per hour. That would have been a fee that Roanoke County would have had to pay, whether the tax was collected or not. He also considered the fact that 50% to 60% of the delinquent tax properties were valued at less than $100,000.00, and 30% to 40% were valued between $100,000.00 to $300,000.00. There were also a number of very small parcels that he referred to as “dog lots,” that were valued between $1,000.00 and $3,500.00. He determined on behalf of Roanoke County that it made more business sense and was more economical for the county to enter into a contingent fee contract with the lawyer, paying him a commission on what he actually collected, rather than to pay him his time and hourly rate. The percentage used was the 20% maximum set forth in § 58.1-3916. That is the same rate of recoveiy they had used in their oral contracts with law firms for the past approximate twenty years.

Defendant Bank also filed an Answer and Counterclaim. The Counterclaim requested that the county’s lawsuit to enforce its tax lien against the real estate be converted to a general creditor’s suit. Its purpose would be to force a sale of the land so that the private rights of the creditors of the former landowner could be litigated and they be made whole. Roanoke County’s position in all of this is that its requested attorney’s fees are reasonable and that this lawsuit should not be converted into a general creditor’s suit.

Attorney’s Fees

The proceeding to subject land to the lien of its delinquent real estate taxes is statutory. The authorization and direction necessary to complete such a lawsuit is contained in § 58.1-3965 to § 58.1-3975. It is referred to by the legislature as a Bill in Equity for the Sale of Delinquent Tax Lands. In accordance with Rule 3:1 and Rule 3:2 of the Rules of the Supreme Court of Virginia, a bill in equity has been converted to a civil action, [359]*359commenced with the filing of a complaint. No other change has been made to a bill in equity. The same equitable principles that were used in chancery causes before the reformation of the Rules of Court still apply when a complaint is filed requesting equitable relief. “Such proceedings shall be held in accordance with the requirements, statutory or arising at common law, relative to effecting the sale of real estate by a creditor’s bill in equity to subject real estate to the lien of a judgment creditor. ...” § 58.1-3967. This type of civil action is very similar to a creditor’s bill in equity, but, because of its statutory requirements, it has some unique features not found in an ordinary creditor’s bill.

The purpose of a creditor’s bill is to subject the debtor’s property to an existing lien or judgment. By statute in Virginia, the taxing authority is not required to obtain a personal judgment against a landowner before filing a proceeding to enforce its tax lien. The delinquent tax becomes a lien on the landowner’s real estate at the moment of its delinquency. It is a priority lien and is superior to all liens earlier recorded. § 58.1-3340. A suit for the sale of delinquent tax lands is an in rem proceeding against the land, not a lawsuit for a personal judgment against the landowner.

As in any creditor’s suit, upon the sale of the real estate, the costs of the legal proceeding and the land sale would be paid first, and, thereafter, the claims of the creditors according to their priorities. In the case of the sale of delinquent tax lands, “the former owner, his heirs, or assigns of any real estate sold under this article shall be entitled to the surplus received from such sale in excess of the taxes, penalties, interest, reasonable attorneys’ fees, costs, and any lien chargeable thereon.” § 58.1-3967. Since this is an equitable remedy, the Court determines the reasonableness of the attorney’s fees. In making such a determination, the Court is mindful of the statutory dictates of § 58.1-3969 that states in part as follows:

In any case in which the attorney representing the locality and the governing body thereof have failed to reach an agreement as to a salary or commission or other basis as compensation for the services of such attorney, the court in which any proceedings are brought under this article may allow from the proceeds of the sale of any such real estate such fee as the court shall deem reasonable and proper to the attorney representing any such locality in such proceeding.

The issue raised by the Bank concerning,attorney’s fees does not require a sale of the land, but rather arose during the exercise of the owner’s right of redemption of real estate subject to a delinquent tax lien, in accordance with § 58.1-3965. In this instance, the statute directs that various costs of sale, to include a pro rata cost of the advertising and notice publication, as well as reasonable attorney’s fees set by the Court, shall become part of [360]*360the tax. It is the intent of the legislature by allowing redemption to put the taxing authority in exactly the same position as it would have been had it sold the delinquent tax lands and recovered all of its costs, delinquent taxes, interest, attorney’s fees, and any other assessments, while still allowing the taxpayer to retain his real estate without the burden of a tax lien.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
85 Va. Cir. 357, 2012 WL 9391672, 2012 Va. Cir. LEXIS 148, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/roanoke-county-v-torry-vaccroanokecty-2012.