Monday, July 17, 2017

Non-Profit Law Firm's Supreme Court Petition Asserts 5th Amendment Takings Clause Challenge Against Michigan County's Right To Snatch Away Surplus Proceeds From Property Owners In Connection With Foreclosure Sales Due To Unpaid Real Estate Taxes

From a recent post on the Pacific Legal Foundation's(1) Liberty Blog:
  • When Wayside Church fell behind on its 2011 property taxes on a parcel that the church had used as a youth camp, Van Buren County[, Michigan] took the youth camp property and sold it for $206,000 to pay the church’s $16,750 in taxes, penalties, interest, and fees. The County kept the surplus proceeds—$189,250 more than the debt—as a windfall.

    Similarly, the County sold Myron Stahl’s property, where he was building his retirement home, for $68,750 to pay a $25,000 debt. It also sold Henderson Hodgens’s farm and home for $47,750 to pay a $5,900 debt.

    The County kept the surplus from these each of these sales.

    Today [July 13], PLF petitioned the United States Supreme Court on behalf of Wayside Church, Myron Stahl, and Henderson Hodgens, asking the Court to review their case and hold that local governments violate the Takings Clause of the Constitution when they keep the surplus proceeds from tax sales.

    Because there is no clear remedy under Michigan law, Wayside Church, Stahl, and Hodgens filed a lawsuit in federal court, alleging that the County violated the Takings Clause of the Fifth Amendment when it kept the surplus proceeds from the sales of their foreclosed properties. The district court dismissed the suit, holding the Takings Clause does not protect delinquent taxpayers’ right to the surplus proceeds from tax sales, because Michigan’s tax law does not recognize that right.

    On appeal, a divided panel in the Sixth Circuit Court of Appeals dismissed the case for lack of jurisdiction. It held that the requirement that takings plaintiffs first seek relief in state court, created in Williamson County Regional Planning Commission v. Hamilton Bank of Johnson City (1985) barred federal jurisdiction. Regular Liberty Blog readers know how much we at PLF hate Williamson County, because it so frequently robs property owners of any relief. It encourages gamesmanship by clever government attorneys and too long prolongs litigation until the property owner cannot afford to proceed.

    Judge Kethledge (who, incidentally, was on President Trump’s potential Supreme Court list) dissented from the Sixth Circuit opinion, explaining that “Congress has granted us jurisdiction over th[e takings] claim. We have a strict duty to exercise that jurisdiction. Meanwhile, the state jurisdictional statute . . . expresses an affirmative preference that we adjudicate the claim.” He also likened the County’s confiscation of tax sale profits to theft.

    In the petition filed today, we asked the Supreme Court to protect property owners’ rights by recognizing federal jurisdiction and holding that Van Buren County violated the Takings Clause. We also asked the Court to fix the problems caused by Williamson County‘s problematic and pointless state litigation rule.

    Last year, in a dissent to the Court denying a petition in a different PLF case, Justices Thomas and Kennedy said that the Supreme Court should reconsider that rule, because it too often leaves takings plaintiffs subject to gamesmanship, procedural tricks, and without any place to vindicate their property rights at all. The federal courthouse doors should be open to anyone who seeks to enforce the Fifth Amendment’s right to just compensation. We hope the Court takes this case and brings justice to our clients and the others like them.
Source: PLF asks Supreme Court to stop Michigan from stealing.
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(1) Pacific Legal Foundation (PLF) is a donor-supported national non-profit [(501(c)(3)] public interest law organization that fights for private property rights, individual liberty, free enterprise, limited government, and a balanced approach to environmental protection. PLF is based in Sacramento, California, and has regional offices that litigate cases throughout the United States.