CITY OF ANCHORAGE and Greater Anchorage Area Borough, a/k/a Anchorage, A Municipal Corporation, Appellant, v. Justine THOMAS, Appellee.
No. 4621.
Supreme Court of Alaska.
Jan. 23, 1981.
624 P.2d 271
Ty R. Settles, Eckert, Kalamarides & Associates, Anchorage, for appellee.
Before RABINOWITZ, C. J., and CONNOR, BURKE and MATTHEWS, JJ.
OPINION
CONNOR, Justice.
This case presents the issue of whether a municipality may retain proceeds from a
Justine Thomas owned real property in Anchorage from which she received a modest income. The Greater Anchorage Area Borough1 received a judgment for delinquent taxes on the property in April of 1974. The property was sold at a tax foreclosure sale on November 1, 1975, for $15,000. The total amount which Mrs. Thomas owed the Borough, including interest, costs and attorney‘s fees was $3,815. Mrs. Thomas brought a claim in the superior court for the amount received by the Borough from the property sale, over and above the $3,815. The superior court awarded judgment in favоr of Mrs. Thomas, ruling that
Proceeds of tax sale. Upon sale of foreclosed real estate or personal property the borough or city shall divide the proceeds less cost of collection, between the borough and city having unpaid taxes against the property. The division is in propоrtion to the respective municipal taxes against the property at the time of foreclosure.
The municipality contends that the term “proceeds” refers to the entire amount received from a foreclosure sale, and that the stаtute does not require the refund of sale proceeds in excess of taxes, interest and costs to the former owner. Mrs. Thomas contends that the statute only provides for distribution of that amount due in taxes, interest and costs, and does not speak to thе question of who should receive any excess proceeds from a tax sale. In the absence of express statutory authority permitting the municipality to retain funds in excess of the lien amount, Mrs. Thomas urges that basic principles of equity and justice dеmand that surplus proceeds be returned to the original property owner.
Although not free from ambiguity, we think that former
In 1977, the legislature amended
It is also an axiom of statutory construction that an ambiguous statute should be construed in the most beneficial way the language will permit to avoid hardship, forfeiture or injustice. Blackard v. City National Bank, 142 F.Supp. 753, 757 (D.Alaska 1956); Helms v. American Security Co., 22 N.E.2d 822, 824 (Ind.1939). Thus it was stated years ago that
“The Court cannot be unmindful of the injustices which may occur from an improper interpretation of terms аnd must seek, in every instance where the legislature does not speak cogently, to discover that interpretation which best fits with the ordered concepts of justice and equity in the jurisdiction.”
Blackard v. City National Bank, 142 F.Supp. at 757.
We have recently recognized the basic injustice inherent in rеquiring delinquent taxpayers to forfeit the total value of their property far in excess of taxes due.
“What we are requiring is a fair adjustment or balance between the rights of the municipal government to collect its taxes on the one hand, and on the other, the right of the property owner not to be deprived of property except in a fair and just manner. The municipality should be interested merely in collecting its fair share of taxes. But here it is attempting to claim far more. The Wallaces’ рroperty, which is the subject of this action, is estimated to be worth approximately $250,000. In exchange for property of such worth, the municipality is willing to write off taxes that amount at the most to a few hundred dollars. The basic injustice of such a situation is obvious.” (еmphasis added).
Municipality of Anchorage v. Wallace, 597 P.2d 148, 154 (Alaska 1979). We are naturally reluctant to impute to the legislature an intent to impose a forfeiture unless expressly authorized or absolutely necessary to further a legitimate public interеst. The municipality‘s interest in collecting taxes due can be satisfied without requiring a forfeiture by allowing the delinquent taxpayer to recover the amount received from the foreclosure sale over and above delinquent taxes, interest and costs. In our view, this is what the legislature contemplated under
The municipality contends that absent express statutory authorization, there is no basis for recovery of excess proceeds from а foreclosure sale, since all interests of the former owner in the property are completely terminated upon foreclosure.3 This, however, is not the case. A delinquent taxpayer does retain a degree of interest in tax foreсlosed property until the time that it is sold to a third party. Although the municipality receives title to the property when it forecloses for failure to pay taxes,4 the record owner has a certain period in which to redeem title to the property by
Therefore, we hold that Mrs. Thomas has a recognizable interest in the foreclosed property аnd a right to recover any proceeds from the sale in excess of the amount she owed in taxes, interest and costs. In view of this holding, we do not address Mrs. Thomas’ contention that
The judgment of the superior court is AFFIRMED.
MATTHEWS, Justice, dissenting.
This case concerns the meaning of
Proceeds of tax sale. Upon sale of foreclosed real or personal property the borough or city shall divide the proceeds less cost of collection, between the borough and city having unpaid taxes against the prоperty. The division is in proportion to the respective municipal taxes against the property at the time of foreclosure.
The question in this case is whether the term “proceeds” as used in the foregoing section refers to all the money received at the tax sale, or only to that portion of the money received which does not exceed delinquent taxes, penalties, interest and costs.
It is a “fundamental principle of statutory interpretation . . . that a statute means what its language reasonably conveys to others. . . .” North Slope Borough v. Sohio Petroleum Corp., 585 P.2d 534, 540 (Alaska 1978). In my view, the only reasonable reading of the statute is that the word “proceeds” applies to the total sum received at the sale regardless of whеther it is more or less than the delinquent amount. This reading is consistent with the dictionary1 definition of the word “proceeds,”
That which results, proceeds, or accrues from some possession or transaction; esp., the amount realized from a sale of property; as, the proceeds of a sale, of a year‘s labor, etc.,
while the majority‘s construction is not. If the legislature had wished to direct the payment of a portion of the sale proceeds to the former owner, it would have used language indicating this intention.
Cases from other jurisdictions which have interpreted statutes having no specific provision for the distribution of tax sale proceeds support my interpretation. These cases hold, without exception so far as I know, that where a statute does not speak to the question of distribution of proceeds
For these reasons I would reverse the judgment of the superior court.
Notes
Issues; income; yield; receipts; produce; money or articles or other thing of value arising or obtained by the sale of property; the sum, amount, or value of property sold or converted to money or other property.
“Proceeds of tax sale.
(a) Upon sale of foreclosed real or personal property the borough or city shall divide the proceeds less cost оf collection, between the borough and city having unpaid taxes against the property. The division is in proportion to the respective municipal taxes against the property at the time of foreclosure.
(b) The former record owner оf tax-foreclosed real property which has been held by a municipality for less than 10 years after the close of the redemption period and never designated for a public purpose which is sold at a tax-foreclosure sale is entitlеd to the portion of the proceeds of the sale which exceeds the amount sufficient to satisfy unpaid taxes, delinquent taxes assessed and levied as if the property had continued in private ownership, penalty, interest and costs of prоperty sold, including costs incurred under § 350(a) of this chapter. If the proceeds of the sale of tax-foreclosed property exceed the total of unpaid and delinquent taxes, penalty, interest, and costs, the borough or city shall provide the former owner of the property written notice advising of the amount of the excess and the manner in which a claim for the balance of the proceeds may be submitted. Notice is sufficient under this subsection if mailed to the former owner at his last addrеss of record. Upon presentation of a proper claim, the municipality shall remit the excess for the former record owner. A claim for the excess filed after six months of the date of sale is forever barred.”
“In fact, under subdivision (a) of
