Appellants Don T. Mulligan, Patsy L. Ruip and Virginia Ann Mulligan appeal the trial court’s decision ordering that county ad valorem taxes be paid from surplus proceeds obtained from a foreclosure sale. We affirm.
“When a question of law is at issue, as here, we owe no deference to the trial court’s ruling and apply the ‘plain legal error’ standard of review.” (Citation omitted.)
Suarez v. Halbert,
Following execution of the security deed, appellants and Spires defaulted on the loan, and the lender initiated foreclosure proceedings. In October 2004, the subject property was sold for the sum of $196,000 to appellee Ken Smith, as the highest bidder at the public foreclosure sale. After the secured debt to the lender and all expenses of the sale were paid in full from the sale proceeds, a surplus in the amount of $118,629.23 remained. The lender then filed an inter-pleader action for determination of disputed claims to the surplus proceeds and deposited the funds into the registry of the trial court.
The Bibb County Tax Commissioner made a claim to the surplus proceeds for payment of delinquent ad valorem taxes on the subject property for the years 2001 to 2004. The total taxes due, $30,244.82, encompassed $22,090.52 for real estate taxes and $8,154.30 for personal property taxes. Appellants opposed the tax commissioner’s claim to the surplus proceeds, arguing that taxes should
1. Appellants do not dispute that the tax commissioner has a valid tax lien on the subject property arising from appellants’ failure to pay the 2001 to 2004 tax assessments. Rather, they contend that the trial court erred by determining that the tax commissioner could collect the delinquent ad valorem taxes from the surplus proceeds. They claim that the buyer Smith incurred the tax liability as part of his purchase of the property based on the published Notice of Foreclosure, which stated that the sale was “subject to all unpaid ad valorem taxes, liens and assessments, if any.” We disagree.
Under Georgia law, ad valorem taxes are chargeable either as a personal debt of the taxpayer or as a lien “which extends not only to the property giving rise to the tax obligation, but also to all other property owned by the taxpayer.”
Nat. Tax Funding, L.P. v. Harpagon
Co.,
Appellants’ argument predicated on the language of the Notice of Foreclosure is misplaced. The notice prescribed the terms of sale between the lender and the purchaser; it did not limit the tax commissioner’s discretionary authority over how to seek payment of the outstanding taxes. 1 Nevertheless, under the circumstances here, the language of the notice does not support appellants’ contention that the buyer Smith incurred the tax liability. Under the terms of the notice relied upon by appellants, if the sale had produced insufficient funds to pay the taxes in full, the purchaser who bought the property subject to the taxes could be held responsible for satisfying any remaining tax debt. Significantly, however, the notice also provided that “[t]he proceeds of said sale [would] be applied as provided in said deed.” The security deed in turn provided that upon a foreclosure sale of the property, the lender bank would apply any surplus proceeds “to the person or persons legally entitled to it,” which in this case included the tax commissioner. Therefore, nothing in the language of the notice could be construed as precluding collection of the taxes from the surplus sale proceeds.
2. Appellants further claim that the trial court erred in ordering payment of the personal property tax lien assessed against Spires Electric Company from the surplus funds. They assert that they should not have been held responsible for the tax lien against Spires Electric Company, which was an entirely separate and distinct corporation from the appellants. This argument was not presented to
the trial court, and we will not consider it for the first time on appeal.
Community Bank v. Handy Auto Parts,
Judgment affirmed.
Notes
Pan-American Life Ins. Co. v. Orr,
