RUPSHA 2007, LLC v. Kellum

32 A.3d 402, 2011 D.C. App. LEXIS 625, 2011 WL 5572638
CourtDistrict of Columbia Court of Appeals
DecidedNovember 17, 2011
Docket09-CV-1330
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 32 A.3d 402 (RUPSHA 2007, LLC v. Kellum) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District of Columbia Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
RUPSHA 2007, LLC v. Kellum, 32 A.3d 402, 2011 D.C. App. LEXIS 625, 2011 WL 5572638 (D.C. 2011).

Opinion

BLACKBURNE-RIGSBY, Associate Judge:

This appeal arises because the District of Columbia (“District”) made an adminis *404 trative error that resulted in a tax sale purchaser paying for a property that should not have been offered for sale. There is no dispute that the purchaser, appellant Rupsha 2007, LLC (“Rupsha”), should be reimbursed, rather we are asked to determine who should reimburse Rup-sha and the amount for which Rupsha is entitled to reimbursement. The amount for which Rupsha is entitled to be reimbursed is dictated by statute, 1 and depends on how the erroneous tax sale is retracted — whether Rupsha’s Certificate of Sale for Taxes (“Tax Certificate”) should be declared void ab initio, or whether the tax sale should be cancelled. If, as the District argues, the Tax Certificate is declared void ab initio, under the statute, Rupsha forfeits all payments it made to the District. 2 See D.C.Code §§ 47-1355(b)(2), - 1377(b) (2001). If the sale is cancelled, Rupsha is entitled to the purchase price, as well as statutory interest, a refund of paid taxes that accrued after the sale, legal expenses, and attorney’s fees. See id. §§ 47-1366, -1348(c), -1361 and -1377(a).

When this matter was brought before the Superior Court, the trial court found that the District should not have sold the property at the tax sale because the owner paid the final payoff amount as directed in her Notice of Delinquency (“Notice”). Thus, the Superior Court determined that the owner was not obligated to redeem her property. We agree and affirm this ruling. However, the Superior Court also found that Rupsha’s Tax Certificate was void ab initio. With this we cannot agree. We hold that the District should have can-celled the tax sale and thereby paid to Rupsha the purchase price, statutory interest, taxes paid on the property, legal expenses, and attorney’s fees Rupsha incurred in excess of the purchase price. We further hold that because the District did not cancel the sale, the Superior Court should have set aside the sale as cancelled, rather than setting aside the sale as void ab initio. Therefore, we affirm in part, reverse in part, and remand for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.

I. Factual Background

In May 2007, appellee Theresa Banks (“Ms. Banks” or “owner”) 3 received a Notice from the District’s Office of Tax and Revenue (“OTR”) indicating that a total of $929.78 in taxes, penalties, and interest was due and owing for her property at 5400 Drake Place, in Southeast Washington, D.C. (“Property”). Ms. Banks brought the Notice to an OTR satellite office, where an OTR representative advised her that the actual amount she owed, including penalties and interest, had risen to $1,100.47. Ms. Banks paid this amount within a few days, but was unaware that this amount only reflected a portion of the outstanding taxes she owed on the property because the OTR representative quoted her the incorrect amount. 4 Because the date of the District’s annual tax sale was quickly approaching, the OTR representative advised Ms. Banks to contact the main OTR office to request that the Property be *405 removed from the list of those to be sold, which Ms. Banks did.

However, the Property remained on the list of properties to be sold at the District’s annual tax sale on July 13, 2007. The purchaser, Mohammad Sikder, paid $1,100.47, plus a surplus 5 of $6,000, for the Tax Certificate for the Property. Sikder subsequently timely filed his complaint to foreclose Ms. Banks’s right to redeem the Property. 6 On December 10, 2008, appellant Rupsha replaced Sikder as plaintiff in the action to foreclose Ms. Banks’s right to redeem the Property. Ms. Banks first became aware that the Property was sold and that her final payoff amount did not include all outstanding taxes when she was served with Rupsha’s complaint to foreclose her right of redemption. She promptly paid all outstanding taxes, penalties, and interest due to the OTR, and the Property was not transferred to Rupsha because the court did not enter a final order foreclosing Ms. Banks’s right of redemption. However, Ms. Banks did not reimburse Rupsha for its legal expenses and attorney’s fees related to the action to foreclose her right of redemption, nor did the she pay any statutory interest to Rup-sha, as would be required in the normal course of a redemption. 7

On January 2, 2009, Rupsha received a letter from the OTR stating that because the Property “was not eligible to be sold pursuant to applicable provisions of the D.C. Code, the ... [t]ax [s]ale ... was void ab initio.” 8 The OTR refunded only the purchase price of the property to Rup-sha on February 20, 2009. The parties then appeared at a hearing before Judge Alfred Irving to determine the validity of Rupsha’s Tax Certificate. Judge Irving found that “the tax sale should not have occurred” and thus the Tax Certificate was “void ab initio” Rupsha subsequently filed a motion to alter the trial court’s ruling pursuant to Super. Ct. Civ. R. 59(e), which the trial court denied. The court relied upon D.C.Code § 47-1341, 9 which *406 outlines the requirements that the District must follow with respect to providing notice of a property tax delinquency. Judge Irving concluded that D.C.Code § 47-1341(b) had to be read in conjunction with D.C.Code § 4T — 1341(c), which states: “Payment of the total amount stated in the notice of delinquency and as directed in the notice shall preclude the real property from being offered at the tax sale to which the notice corresponds.” The language on the Notice states: “Notice is given to you that unless all taxes in arrears and appearing on this Notice are paid within 30 days from the date of this notice, the Mayor will proceed to sell the above real property.” Judge Irving found that “[t]he conjunction ‘and’ indicates that the amount contained in the notice, which too is an amount in arrears, is the amount the taxpayer must remit in order to avoid sale of the property at the tax sale.” Judge Irving therefore concluded that the language of the notice was “clear and unambiguous: [t]he statute requires that property not be sold if the tax amount set forth within the notice [is] paid. Accordingly, the [c]ourt must set aside the tax sale because it is void ab initio.” Rupsha timely filed its notice of appeal.

II. Discussion

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Bluebook (online)
32 A.3d 402, 2011 D.C. App. LEXIS 625, 2011 WL 5572638, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rupsha-2007-llc-v-kellum-dc-2011.