Defendants, a county collector and a purchaser of three parcels of real estate at a tax sale, appeal from the trial court’s entry of summary judgment quieting title in plaintiffs, the prior owners, in that real estate. The trial court found that defendants failed to give plaintiffs notice of the pending tax sale of their parcels that complied with
Jones v. Flowers,
On appeal, defendants assert that the trial court erred in applying
Jones
to pre-sale notice because (1) Missouri statutes provide for constitutionally-adequate post-sale notice of the right to redeem; (2) even if the county collector had a constitutional duty to provide prior notice of the tax sale, plaintiffs failed to present sufficient evidence of non-compliance; and (3) plaintiffs failed to adduce evidence that thеy are lawfully organized entities authorized to prosecute this action. We deny points one and three. The trial court did not err in concluding that the principles set out in
Jones
apply to a collector’s duty to give landowners pre-sale due process notice of a pending tax sale under
Schwartz v. Dey,
This case involves three parcels of land located in Washington County, Missouri. In June 2006, plaintiff, Investment Corp. of the Virginias, Inc., owned a 40-acre parcel of the land, and plaintiff, Woods & Streams Land Co., LLC, owned a 40-acre parcel and a 19.93-acre parcel.
In 2008, plaintiffs filed a Petition to Canсel Tax Deeds and Quiet Title with respect to the three parcels, naming as defendants, Vincenzo Aequaviva and Michael McGirl, Collector of Revenue of Washington County, Missouri (the Collector). In their petition, plaintiffs alleged their corporate status and their ownership of the three parcels. They further alleged that Mr. Aequaviva claimed an interest to the parcels through three collector’s deeds recorded in Washington County in October 2007 and January 2008, that plaintiffs did not receive notice of any kind of the proposed tax deed sale of the parcels, and that plaintiffs were ready, willing, and able to reimburse Mr. Aequaviva for the taxes paid. The petition sought a declaration that the tax deeds were null and void, and requested that title to the parcels be quieted in the plaintiffs according to eаch one’s interest.
Subsequently, plaintiffs filed a motion for summary judgment. The undisputed facts admitted in plaintiffs’ motion for summary judgment included the following: In June 2006, the Collector mailed tax sale notices to plaintiffs informing plaintiffs that they owed two years of delinquent taxes on their respective properties, and if unpaid, the properties would be sold at a tax sale on the fourth Monday in August. These tax notices were returned to the Collector undelivered. The Collector then filed the returned notices. Defendants filed a cross-motion for summary judgment. The trial court granted summary judgment in plaintiffs’ favor. It found that notice pursuant to Jones was not given or attempted regarding the pending tax sale. It declared the tax sale void and it quieted fee simple title to the property in plaintiffs. 1
DISCUSSION
We review the grant of summary judgment
de novo. ITT Commercial Finance v. Mid-Am. Marine,
I. Duty to Provide Pre-sale Notice
The essence of defendants’ first point is that the trial court erred in concluding that the Collector’s failure to provide or failure to attempt to provide additional notice other than by publication prior to the tax sale was a violation of due process under
Jones.
Defendants argue that Missouri statutes do not require a county collector to provide a delinquent taxpayer with notice that meets due process stan
We first consider the
Jones
decision. In
Jones,
Gary Jones owned a home that he no longer occupied, and the property taxes went unpaid after the mortgage was paid off. The Arkansas Commissioner of State Lands (the commissioner) sent a letter by certified mail to Mr. Jones at the home address to inform him of the tax delinquency, a pre-sale right to redeem, and the date of the tax sale if there was no pre-sale redemption. The letter was returned unclaimed. Two years later, the commissioner published a notice of the impending tax sale and subsequently received a purchase offer from Linda Flowers. The commissioner then sеnt a certified letter to Mr. Jones at the home to notify him the home would be sold if the taxes were not paid. This letter was also returned as unclaimed. The commissioner subsequently sold the home to Ms. Flowers, who had a notice of unlawful detainer delivered to the property. It was served on Jones’s daughter, who occupied the home. Mr. Jones filed a lawsuit against the commissioner asserting that the notice provided by the state in connection with the tax sale violated his due process rights. When the case reached the United States Supreme Court, the Court ruled in Jones’s favor. It held that “when mailed notice of a tax sale is returned unclaimed, the State must take additional reasonable steps to attempt to provide notice to the property owner before selling his property, if it is practical to do so.”
Jones,
The
Jones
decision added to the Supreme Court’s prior holding in
Mulleme v. Central Hanover Bank & Trust Co.,
In
Schlereth v. Hardy,
The circuit court correctly concluded that the notice of redemption rights, as prescribed in section 140.405, is insufficient. In the absence of a legislated corrective, those who use governmental authority to take property, even in tax delinquency situations, will have to take heed of the notice requirements of the Midlane through Jones line of constitutional cases.
Id. (footnote omitted).
Defendants first argue that Schlereth and Jones do not apply because they were directed towards notices of redemption, not notices of sale. We disagree. Jones was directed to two pre-sale notices. Although Schlereth addressed the adequacy of a pоst-sale redemption notice, it did not hold that a pre-sale notice was not subject to the due process requirements set out in Jones.
Defendants next argue that due process notice is not required before the sale because there is no taking until the collector’s deed is issued, so post-sale notice of redemption is all that is required. Again, we disagree.
The Jones-Munger Act (sections 140.010-855 RSMo (2000 & Cum.Supp. 2008)) requires a collector to providе notice of an upcoming tax sale by publication. Section 140.170. The act does not place any duty on a collector to provide an interested party with any other type of pre-sale notice. However, the Missouri Supreme Court has held that pre-sale notice by publication pursuant to section 140.170 RSMo (1969) does not satisfy due process if the names and addresses of persons with legally prоtected interests are known or easily ascertainable.
Lohr v. Cobur Corp.,
In
Schwartz v. Dey,
The facts of this case, however, require a determination of what efforts, if any, must be made by a collector when it is or should be apparent that notices mailed to that address are ineffective. Several authorities suggest that when the party-seeking to,affect a property interest is itself on notice of the failure of mailed notice to inform an interested party, the party must take further action to determine a more accurate address or otherwise ensure receipt of meaningful notice.
Id. Schwartz specifically applied due process requirements to pre-sale notices and, presaging Jones, held that if mailed notice is ineffective, the party giving notice must take further action to ensure the receipt of meaningful notice. Id.
Defendants argue that the later enactment of section 140.405, providing for post-sale notice of the right to redeem, relieved a collector of the duty to provide due process notice before sale. 3 The cases on which defendants rely аre primarily cases that deal with a purchaser’s obligation to give post-sale notice to lienholders and consider only whether section 140.405 provides a constitutionally adequate method of notice of a post-sale right to redeem in lienholders. 4 None of these cases intimate that the enactment of section 140.405 or its amendments relieves a collector’s duty to give constitutionally adequate pre-sale notice to the owners.
The trial court did not misapply the law. Schwartz constitutes the controlling Missouri Supreme Court opinion on a collector’s obligation to give an owner constitutionally adequate pre-sale notice. Schwartz is consistent with Jones, which requires a collector to take additional reasonable steps to provide notice of a tax sale prior to the sale when the original mailed notice was returned undelivered, if it is рracticable to do so. Point one is denied.
II. Sufficiency of Record
For their second point, defendants assert that the trial court erred in granting plaintiffs’ motion for summary judgment because, even if the Collector had a
In
Schwartz,
the trial court dismissed the purchasers’ lawsuit to set aside a collectors’ deed on the ground that the purchasers were not entitled to a pre-sale notice beyond the notices that were mailed but not delivered. As we have previously set out, the Missouri Supreme Court reversеd, holding that when the collector learned that mailed notice had failed, the collector was required to take some further action.
The record before the Court, however, dоes not indicate the means at the Collector’s disposal by which he could conceivably have obtained the Schwartzes’ actual address; the trial court granted dismissal in favor of the Deys before such evidence could be adduced. Under Mullane and Mennonite, supra, the facts of this case raise justiciable constitutional questions concerning the duty to afford a non-resident owner meaningful notice. It can no longer be said that a property owner’s duty to supervise his property interest in all cases outweighs the duty of a taxing authority to provide him with constitutionally sufficient notice. See Comment, The Constitutionality of Notice by Publication in Tax Sale Proceedings, 84 Yale L.J. 1505, 1515-16 (1975). The posture of this case demonstrates that the parties should be afforded the opportunity to develop a record upon which a court could assess the means available to the Collector in balance with the duties imposed by due process.
Id.
In this case the parties have argued various steps the Collector could or could not have taken, but none of these have support in the summary judgment record. We cannot determine whether, under the circumstances, additional reasonable steps to ensure adequate notice were available to the Collector without such a record. Point two is granted. 5
III. Sufficiency of Evidence-Corporate Status
For their third point, defendants assert that the trial court erred in granting plaintiffs’ motion for summary judgment because plaintiffs did not prove that they are lawfully organized entities • authorized to prosecute this action. In their argument, defendants contend that plaintiffs failed to prove that plaintiff, Investment Corp. of the Virginias, Inc., is a Florida corporation in good standing or thаt plaintiff, Woods & Streams Land Co., LLC, is a Missouri limited liability company in good standing.
This argument has no merit. The applicable portion of Rule 55.13 provides: . - . .}. .; ...
When a person desires to raise an issue as to the legal existence of any party or the capacity of any party to sue or be sued or the authority of a party to sue or be sued in a representative capacity, the person shall do so by sрecific negative averment, which shall include suchsupporting particulars as are peculiarly within the pleader’s knowledge.
“A denial in general terms is insufficient to constitute a ‘specific negative averment’ as required by Rule 55.13.”
Gilmore v. Bi-State Development Agency,
Defendants waived this issue in all of the above respects and more. In their petition, plaintiffs alleged that “Plaintiff Investment Corp. is a Florida corporation in good standing,” and that “Plaintiff Woods & Streams is a Missouri limited liability company in good standing.” In their answers, both defendants stated that they were without sufficient knowledge to admit or deny plaintiffs’ allegations. Defendants did not raise this issue as a defense in their response to plaintiffs’ summary judgment. Moreover, defendants set out plaintiffs’ respectivе corporate status as an additional fact in their Reply to Plaintiffs Statements of Uncontroverted Facts and as an uncontested fact in their own motion for summary judgment.
Defendants’ challenge to plaintiffs capacity to sue cannot be raised for the first time on appeal.
See Cornejo,
Conclusion
The judgment of the trial court is reversed and remanded for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
Notes
. While plaintiff's motion for summary judgmеnt was pending, George and Laura Dillard, who had purchased 40 of the 100 acres of the property from plaintiffs, filed a Petition in Intervention to recover damages for breach of contract and negligence against plaintiffs and third-party defendant, Martin Price, plaintiffs' agent, alleging that the tax sale was a direct and proximate result of plaintiffs’ breach of contract and negligence. The trial cоurt’s grant of plaintiffs' summary judgment motion necessarily disposed of the claims brought by the intervenors.
See State ex rel. Nixon v. Hoester,
. All further references to chapter 140 will be to RSMo (Cum.Supp.2008) unless otherwise indicated.
'. Oritíéf Séctidn T40:405, once' thé' delinquent property is sold at a tax sale, it then becomes the purchaser's responsibility to provide all interested parties with notice of their right to redeem the property using certified mail.
See M & P Enterprises v. Transamerica Finan.,
. Defendants 'also rely on
Trapf v. Lohr,
. Since this case is being remanded, the record to be developed should also indicate if this is a first, second or third offering sale, in case any future issue turns on that distinction.
