BELAIRE DEVELOPMENT & CONSTRUCTION, LLC VS. SUCCESSION OF THEODORE SHELTON SR., ET AL.
No. 2025-C-00151 c/w No. 2025-C-00156
Supreme Court of Louisiana
October 24, 2025
BY Guidry, J.:
NEWS RELEASE #048
FOR IMMEDIATE NEWS RELEASE
FROM: CLERK OF SUPREME COURT OF LOUISIANA
The Opinions handed down on the 24th day of October, 2025 are as follows:
BY Guidry, J.:
2025-C-00151 BELAIRE DEVELOPMENT & CONSTRUCTION, LLC VS. SUCCESSION OF THEODORE SHELTON SR., ET AL. (Parish of St. Martin)
AFFIRMED IN PART; REVERSED IN PART. SEE OPINION.
Crain, J., concurs.
McCallum, J., concurs in the result.
Griffin, J., dissents and assigns reasons.
GUIDRY, J.
We granted certiorari in this consolidated case to consider whether the failure to provide pre-tax sale notice still results in an absolute nullity following the 2008 revision of
FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY
By way of a tax sale certificate dated June 6, 2017, Belaire Development & Construction, LLC (Belaire) acquired a tax title to the interests of Theodore Shelton, Sr. and Patricia Brooks Shelton in certain immovable property located in St. Martin Parish, Louisiana due to the failure of the property owners to pay property taxes.1 After the redemptive period expired, Belaire mailed notice to the Independent Executrix of the Succession of Theodore Shelton, Sr., Dehlice Shelton, at the address listed in the succession proceeding in accordance with the provisions of
On October 26, 2021, Belaire filed a Petition to Quiet Title to its interest, naming as defendants the Succession of Theodore Shelton, Sr., through the Executrix, Dehlice Shelton, and Patricia Brooks Shelton. Dehlice Shelton was personally served with the Petition to Quiet Title on June 6, 2022,2 at the address listed in the succession proceeding. In response, she filed a Reconventional Demand, in proper person, on November 29, 2022, seeking to nullify the tax sale at issue because she had not received adequate pre-tax sale and post-tax
Belaire and the City thereafter filed exceptions raising the objection of prescription, arguing that Ms. Shelton‘s action to annul the tax sale was prescribed because the reconventional demand was not filed within six months of her being “duly notified” as required by
On appeal, the Third Circuit Court of Appeal reversed, finding Ms. Shelton‘s nullity action raised in her reconventional demand was not prescribed. The Third Circuit found
DISCUSSION
Belaire and the City assert that in reversing the trial court‘s judgment, the Third Circuit erroneously applied the law: (1) in finding that a tax sale that occurred in 2017, after the revision to Title 47 of the Louisiana Revised Statutes, could be absolutely null for failure to provide pre-tax sale notice and (2) in applying
In 2008, the Louisiana Legislature revised Louisiana Revised Statutes Title 47, Subtitle III, Chapter 5, to amend, restate, and organize the law pertaining to property tax payment and collection procedure, tax sales, and adjudicated property. 2008 La. Acts No. 819. The purpose of these revisions was to reorganize the prior law into a single comprehensive Chapter, encourage the payment and efficient collection of property taxes, satisfy the requirements of due process, provide a fair process for the redemption of tax sale property, and otherwise encourage the return of such properties to commerce.
It is well-settled that, under the
Under the 2008 revision, however, there are now three statutorily enumerated grounds for nullifying a tax sale certificate.
Additionally, several Courts of Appeal have examined
In Adair Asset Management, LLC, the Second Circuit found “[a]fter the 2008 revision, ... post-sale notice is now the important notice for due process, and due process is met as long as a person is duly notified,” citing
The First Circuit in Alpha Capital US Bank also found that since the 2008 revision to Title 47, the failure to give pre-tax sale notice to any tax notice party does not render the tax sale absolutely null, as any deficiency in pre-tax sale notice sent by the tax collector is cured by post-tax sale redemption notice sent by the tax sale purchaser pursuant to
Considering the plain language of
In the absence of actual notice of the sale to a tax sale party, including a transferee, or the demonstration of a reasonable effort to provide notice, where the name and address of the tax sale party were reasonably ascertainable or where the transfer was recorded after the tax collector completed his pre-sale tax sale party research, the tax collector shall cancel the sale of the property and refund the tax sale purchaser the tax sale purchase price.
However, we find Ms. Shelton‘s argument misplaced. Comment (d) of the 2008 Official Revision Comments to this article specifically provides “[s]ince under the revision to the Chapter the only causes for nullity are a redemption nullity (
Having found that the tax sale at issue may not be attacked as an absolute nullity, we must now determine whether Ms. Shelton‘s nullity action, raised as a reconventional demand to Belaire‘s Petition to Quiet Title, is prescribed.
A. Any action to annul a tax sale on the grounds of a redemption nullity shall be brought before the earlier of:
(1) Six months after a person is duly notified using a notice, other than the notice provided in
R.S. 47:2156 that is sent between the time that the redemptive period ends and five years after thedate of the recordation of the tax sale certificate. (2) If a person is duly notified more than five years after the date of the recordation of the tax sale certificate, sixty days after the person is duly notified.
B. An action to annul a tax sale on grounds of a payment nullity shall be brought before the later of:
(1) Five years after the recordation of the tax sale certificate.
(2) If the person bringing the action was not duly notified at least sixty days before the end of that five-year period, then within sixty days after the date that the person was duly notified.
C. When a nullity action is asserted as a reconventional demand in a quiet title action or as an intervention in a quiet title action or monition proceeding, the nullity shall be asserted within the time specified for a reconventional demand in the action or proceeding.
The 2008 Official Revision Comments, comment (d), provide: “In addition to Subsections A and B, actions for nullity brought as a reconventional demand ... must also be brought within time periods specified for such actions in the applicable proceedings.” Accordingly,
Reading
As such, we must now examine Ms. Shelton‘s reconventional demand to determine whether the redemption nullity12 action asserted therein is prescribed.
Belaire and the City assert that Ms. Shelton was previously duly notified pursuant to
A. (1) Upon the expiration of the applicable redemptive period, the tax sale purchaser may send a notice to a tax sale party whose interest the tax sale purchaser intends to terminate that the party has until the later of:
(a) Sixty days after the date of the notice provided in this Subsection, if five years have elapsed from the filing of the tax sale certificate to challenge, in a court of competent jurisdiction, the tax sale.
(b) Six months after the date of the notice if five years have not elapsed from the filing of the tax sale certificate, to challenge, in a court of competent jurisdiction, the tax sale.
(2) This notice shall constitute a notice of sale, and sending of this notice shall constitute the service of the notice of sale under
Article VII, Section 25 of the Louisiana Constitution . This notice shall be sufficient without regard to whether the notice of the tax sale or any other notice has been given. The notice shall be sufficient if it is in the following form:“This is an important legal notice. Please read it carefully. You will receive no further notice. [Date]
[Name]
[Address]
[City], [ST] [Zip]
RE: Property: [Property Address] [Description of Property Abbr]
Parish of __________, State of Louisiana Tax sale title to the above described property has been sold for failure to pay taxes. You have been identified as a person who may have an interest in this property.
Your interest in the property will be terminated if you do not file a lawsuit in accordance with law within [60 days] [6 months] of the date of this notice.”
The 2008 Official Revision Comments, comment (b), further provide “Nothing in Subsection A limits the method by which the notice is sent. It can be sent by ordinary mail, certified mail, return receipt requested, email or other electronic means, or by a combination of methods,” citing
The record demonstrates that Belaire sent notice to Ms. Shelton on August 11, 2020, via ordinary mail to the address listed in the succession proceeding. The notice contained Ms. Shelton‘s name and her address (in addition to the names of the two other heirs in the succession proceeding) and listed the property address, property description, and parish where the property is located. The notice informed Ms. Shelton that the described property had been sold for failure to pay taxes and that she had been identified as a party who may have an interest in the property. Finally, the notice informed Ms. Shelton that her interest in the property would be terminated if she did not file a lawsuit in accordance with law within 60 days of the date of the notice.
However, as five years had not elapsed since the filing of the tax sale certificate (the tax sale did not occur until 2017 and notice was sent in 2020), the notice incorrectly informed Ms. Shelton that she had 60 days, rather than six months to challenge the tax sale. See
CONCLUSION
For the foregoing reasons, we find that Belaire and the City failed to establish that Ms. Shelton‘s reconventional demand asserting a redemption nullity was prescribed. Accordingly, we affirm the ruling of the Third Circuit to the extent that it
AFFIRMED IN PART; REVERSED IN PART.
GRIFFIN, J., dissents and assigns reasons.
Because the majority opinion allows property to be sold at a tax sale without giving property owners or their representatives notice of tax delinquency or pending tax sale, I respectfully dissent.
Dehlice Shelton became Executrix of her father‘s estate after his death in 2009. The property in this case was sold at tax sale in 2017. There is no evidence that Ms. Shelton was ever given pre-sale notice of a pending tax sale or of any attempt to provide such notice. Notice to her deceased parents was returned as undeliverable. The only notice sent to Ms. Shelton was post-sale notice, nearly three years after the sale (which she did not receive) and the petition to quiet title some five years after the initial sale.
Parties having interests in property subject to tax sale are entitled to pre-sale notice or attempts at such reasonably calculated to achieve actual notice.
Ms. Shelton‘s claims are not prescribed as per statutory law.
Relying on Comment (d) to
“When a nullity is asserted as a reconventional demand in a quiet title action or as an intervention in a quiet title action or monition proceeding, the nullity shall be asserted within the time specified for a reconventional demand or intervention in the action or proceeding.”
Had the legislature intended to make Subsection (C) an additional burden, it could have done so by adding the word “also,” or similar language as it did with other property tax provisions. See e.g.,
