Appellant William Venison seeks reversal of a default judgment in favor of appel-lees Elbert and Verna Robinson, quieting title to a piece of real property that Venison had previously owned. The Robinsons filed the underlying complaint in 1997 to confirm a tax deed which they had acquired from the District of Columbia in 1993. Despite substantial evidence that he was personally served, Mr. Venison claims that the default judgment was the only legal document he ever received concerning the case, and that the court did not have jurisdiction over him because he had never been properly served. He also asserts that his present wife obtained a dower interest in the property before title was transferred to the Robinsons, and that the Robinsons’ failure to join her as an indispensable party warrants reversal. We decline to consider the latter argument because the judgment, as it now exists, has no effect on any possible dower interest which Mrs. Venison may (or may not) assert in the future. As to Mr. Venison, we conclude that he has not overcome the presumption that service was proper, and thus we affirm the judgment.
I
In 1950 William Venison and his first wife, Mary Venison, purchased a piece of real property located at 513 Tennessee Avenue, Northeast. Mary Venison transferred her interest in the property to her husband in 1963, making him its sole owner. Sometime prior to 1987, Mr. Venison stopped paying taxes on the proрerty. 1 *909 The District of Columbia taxing authorities sent him notices by certified mail advising him of the taxes due, but Mr. Venison never responded. Notices were also published in the Washington Times and the Washington Post on December 18 and 19, 1987, respectively. Consequently, in January 1988, the District sold the property to the Robinsons at a public tax sale, and shortly thereafter the Robinsons obtained a tax certificate for the property.
For two years following the tax sale, Mr. Venison had a right to redeem the property by paying all of the back taxes owing on it, plus interest. See D.C.Code § 47-1306(a) (1990). 2 On December 15, 1989, the District sent Mr. Venison a letter, by certified mail, notifying him of the imminent expiration of his redemption period and the prospective loss of his property if he did not redeem it by January 29, 1990. 3 According to Mr. Venison, he never received notice of either a tax delinquency or the impending expiration of his right of redemption.
On July 30,1993, the Robinsons received a tax deed to the property. They held it from that date until January 21, 1998, when they transferred the property to Cheryl Edwards. Before conveying the property tо Ms. Edwards, the Robinsons filed a “complaint to remove cloud on title.” On October 27, 1997, a special process server filed an affidavit of service stating that he had personally served Mr. Venison with the summons and complaint on October 25, 1997, at the address where Venison admitted he lived. 4 According to the affidavit, the person upon whom the complaint was served identified himself as William Venison. The complaint was never answered.
On December 11, 1997, the Robinsons filed and served an application for judgment, based on Mr. Venison’s failure to file an answer to the complaint. The court granted the application and issued a default judgment on January 8, 1998, granting to the Robinsons “absolute ownership and the right of disposition оf the property” at 513 Tennessee Avenue, N.E. The Robinsons thereafter conveyed the property to Ms. Edwards. 5
On January 26,1998, Mr. Venison filed a motion to vacate the default judgment, asserting (1) that the court did not have personal jurisdiction over him because he had not been properly served, 6 (2) that he did not have proper notice of the legal рroceedings against him, (3) that the Rob-insons failed to join a necessary party, (4) that he had an adequate defense, and (5) that he acted promptly and in good faith upon becoming aware of the legal proceedings. To the motion Mr. Venison attached his own affidavit, along with copies of bills and cashier’s checks showing that he had paid tаxes on the property in 1995, 1996, and 1997. Mr. Venison’s affidavit stated that “[t]he complaint ... was never served *910 upon [him]” and that “[t]he only legal document which [he] received in this case was the final Order and Judgment.” He also asserted that he had paid taxes on the property since he originally acquired it.
The court denied Mr. Venison’s motion, ruling that his affidavit was insufficient to overcome the presumption, established by the process server’s affidavit, that he had been personally served. Mr. Venison filed a motion for reconsideration and then filed a notice of appeal. Thereafter the trial court granted Mr. Venison’s motion for reconsideration for the limited purpose of holding an evidentiary hearing on the issuе of personal service; however, Mr. Venison withdrew his motion for reconsideration, and the hearing was never held.
II
The power of a trial court to vacate a prior judgment or order, other than merely for clerical mistakes, is circumscribed by Super. Ct. Civ. R. 60(b). Normally, we review the grant or denial of a motion under Rule 60(b) for abuse of discretion.
See Johnson v. Lustine Realty Co.,
A. Actual Notice
Mr. Venisоn asserts that he was never served with the complaint and never had notice of the proceedings against him. In direct conflict with that assertion are the two affidavits submitted by the process server, in which the server attested to serving Mr. Venison personally with the summons and complaint. In order to overcome “the presumption of truth attached to the statement in the process server’s return,” Mr. Venison was required to present “strong and convincing evidence” that he was not served.
Firemen’s Insurance Co. v. Belts,
Despite the strong evidence that he was personally served, Mr. Venison argues that the trial court’s failure to conduct a hearing to determine the validity of service was an abuse of discretion. He relies on
Hawkins v. Lynnhill Condominium Unit Owners Ass’n,
This case is easily distinguished from Hawkins. Unlike Ms. Hawkins, who controverted in detail the description of her in the process server’s affidavit, Mr. Venison merely denied receipt of the summons and complaint without otherwise contesting the substance of the affidavit. He did not deny that the process server came to his home or that he spoke to him. Nor did he claim that the physical description contained in the affidavit did not match his appearance. We therefore hold that Mr. Venison did not raise any genuine factual dispute regarding service of process that would warrant an evidentiary hearing. 7
B.Prompt Action
Mr. Venison asserts that he acted quickly after learning about the default judgment. In its order the trial court agreed, ruling that Mr. Venison “[had] come forward promptly after the entry of the court’s order and judgment....” It concluded, however, that Mr. Venison’s promptness was the only factor favoring vacatur. Our assessment of the record is not quite as generous. We recognize that the focus of this factor is on the promptness with which the party against whom the default judgment was entered took action to challenge it after learning about it. However, this presupposes that the party was unaware of the proceedings against him up to that point. As we have already pointеd out, Mr. Venison has presented no evidence' — other than his unsupported claim that the judgment was the first document he received in the case— contesting the process server’s affidavit that he was personally served. Since he failed to refute that affidavit, it must be presumed that Mr. Venison did receive personal service, and thus his promptness in cоming forward after the judgment was entered carries little or no weight.
C.Good Faith
Mr. Venison asserts that he acted in good faith, and appellees do not contend that he acted in bad faith. Nevertheless, there is evidence in the process server’s second affidavit (see note 4, supra) which suggests that Mr. Venison was not completely forthright. According to the process server, Mr. Venison stated that he did not want anything to do with the property, indicating that he knew what the complaint was about but did not want to deal with the matter. Because the trial court did not make any finding on the issue, we will not assume that Mr. Venison acted in bad faith. Here again, however, Mr. Venison’s failure to overcome the presumption that he was personally served prevents us from concluding that he acted in good faith.
D.Prima Facie Defense
Despite his present argument to the contrary, Mr. Venison did not offer a
prima facie
adequate defense. His first defense is a simple assertion, completely unsupported by any evidence, that the District did not follow proper procedures when it sold his property for delinquent taxes. He сites several cases that articulate the many steps the District must take before it may make such a sale.
E.g., Gore v. Newsome,
As his second defense, Mr. Venison claims that because he paid taxes on the property, the sale was improper. Attached to his motion to vacate the default judgment were copies of tax notices and cashier’s checks indicating that he had paid taxes on the property in 1995, 1996, and 1997. All of these payments, however, were made at least five years after his redemption period had expired and do not establish that the tax sale was invalid. Rather, they show at most that Mr. Venison paid taxes which he did not owе. Moreover, Mr. Venison’s bald allegation that he has paid taxes on the property since he acquired it in 1950, without some evidence to support that allegation, does not establish a
prima facie
defense.
See Clark v. Moler,
E. Prejudice to the Nonr-Moving Party
Relying on
Jones v. Hunt,
Mr. Venison also claims that Ms. Edwards was not a
bona fide
purchaser because she was on constructive notice that there was defect in the title, simply because the Robinsons held a tax deed. In some situations a tax deed might put the purchaser of real property on inquiry notice.
8
See generally Clay Properties, Inc. v. Washington Post Co.,
*913 III
Finally, Mr. Venison complains that the Rоbinsons failed to join an indispensable party under Super. Ct. Civ. R. 19, and that the trial court therefore abused its discretion when it refused to set aside the default judgment. He claims that since the Robinsons did not obtain a tax deed to the property until 1993, he still had title to the property until that time. By Mr. Venison’s reasoning, his present wife, Bessie Venison, acquired dower rights in the property when he married her on October 7, 1988,
see
D.C.Code § 19-102 (1997), and was thus an indispensable party because her rights were impaired by the default judgment. Bessie Venison herself, however, has not made any claim of a dower interest in the property, and William Venison has not asserted that he was prejudiced by her not being a party to the underlying action. Nevertheless, evеn though the indispensable party issue was not raised until after final judgment was entered, Mr. Venison contends that further proceedings are required concerning Mrs. Venison’s status as a possibly indispensable party.
See Raskauskas v. Temple Realty Co.,
We decline to consider this issue. As appellees point out in their brief, the judgment has no effect on Mrs. Venison’s rights; indeed, she has the same rights now, whatever they may be, that she has always had. More importantly, she has never asserted a claim in relation to the Tennessee Avenue property, and she may never do so. In these circumstances, we see no reason to remand the case and require the trial court to conduct an inquiry which does not affect the rights of the actual parties to this litigation and which may never have any practical consequences for anyone else. We therefore affirm the judgment, without prejudice to any rights that Bessie Venison, on her own behalf, may choose to assert in the future.
Affirmed.
Notes
. According to an affidavit which he submitted in support of his motion to vacate the default judgment, Mr. Venison has not lived in the Tennessee Avenue house "since the 1960s.”
. The statute has since been amended to shorten the redemption period from two years to six months. See D.C.Code § 47-1306 (1997).
. The receipt for the certified letter was signed by John Mathis. Mr. Venison asserts that Mr. Mathis was his neighbor, but that Mathis did not live at the address shown on the letter and was not authorizеd to accept or receive mail on Venison’s behalf.
. The special process server later executed a second affidavit, which appellees attached to their opposition to Venison’s motion to vacate the default judgment. In both affidavits, the process server described Mr. Venison in significant detail. In the second affidavit, the process server also said that Mr. Venison told him, "I don’t want anything to do with that property, and I do not want these papers.” The process server responded, "I am just going to leave them with you; I am just doing my job,” and handed the papers to Mr. Venison.
. The trial court in February 1998 granted Ms. Edwards leave to intervene “as a party plaintiff for all purposes.”
. In his motion to vacate the judgment, Mr. Venison stated that he was "never properly served” with the complaint, but he did not identify any "impropriety” in the service. Read in context, this statement appears to be simply an assertion that he was never served at all, and we shall regard it as such.
. Although it was under no obligation to do so, the trial court agreed to hоld an evidentia-ry hearing on the validity of the service of process when it granted Mr. Venison's motion to reconsider. Mr. Venison correctly states that his notice of appeal divested the trial court of its jurisdiction in all matters related to the case.
See In re S.C.M.,
. But see D.C.Code § 47-1303.3(b) (1997) (a tax deed "shall be prima facie evidence of a good and perfect title in fee simple to the bid off property”).
. There is absolutely no merit in Mr. Venison's argument that Ms. Edwards is not a bona fide purchaser because she purchased the property without waiting until the period
