The Honorable Joel D. Littlefield Hunt County Attorney Post Office Box 1097 Greenville, Texas 75403-1097
Re: Whether the Department of Housing and Community Affairs must revoke the statement of ownership and location, issued under Occupations Code section
Dear Mr. Littlefield:
You ask whether the Department of Housing and Community Affairs (the "Department") must revoke the statement of ownership and location (the "Statement"), issued under Occupations Code section
Your question follows from what you describe as the Hunt County Tax Office's loss of "extensive tax revenues as a result of [manufactured] homes being removed from the County with delinquent taxes remaining unpaid." Request Letter, supra note 1, at 1. You continue:
It has been alleged that finance companies who loan monies for the purchase of manufactured homes are circumventing the provisions of the Texas Property Tax Code requiring taxes to be paid prior to the acquisition of a permit to move the manufactured home by submitting false or fraudulent documentation to the . . . Department . . . indicating that no taxes are due. Based on the false or fraudulent information, the . . . Department . . . transfers titles to the mobile homes. Once ownership is transferred on the title, the Tax Office's lien effective January 1 is extinguished and the debt becomes uncollectible.
Id. at 1-2.
Your request implicates several statutes: chapter 1201 of the Occupations Code, the Texas Manufactured Housing Standards Act (the "Act"), see Tex. Occ. Code Ann. §
Within 30 days after the date of a manufactured home's first retail sale, the purchaser must complete an application for the issuance of a Statement and the retailer must submit it to the Department. See id. § 1201.206(a)-(c). If the manufactured home is subsequently sold or transferred, "the [new] purchaser or transferee shall apply for" a new Statement. Id. § 1201.206(d). Indeed, ownership "does not pass or vest at a sale or transfer . . . until a completed application for the issuance of a statement of ownership and location is filed with" the Department. Id. § 1201.206(e). An owner who relocates the home must apply for a new Statement "not later than the 30th day after the date the home is relocated." Id. § 1201.206(f). A relocating owner also must submit to the Department evidence that the home was relocated consistently with Texas Department of Transportation ("TxDOT") requirements, set forth in chapter 623, subchapter E of the Transportation Code. See id.; Tex. Transp. Code Ann. ch. 623, subch. E (Vernon 1999 Supp. 2004-05);infra at 3 (discussing TxDOT requirements under Transportation Code chapter 623, subchapter E).
Section 1201.209 lists several reasons for which the Department director may refuse to issue or may suspend or revoke a Statement, including that the Department director "has reason to believe" that "a local tax lien was filed before September 1, 2001, and recorded . . ., and the lien has not been extinguished."2 Tex. Occ. Code Ann. §
(a) If a manufactured home is listed together with the land on which the manufactured home is located under Section 25.08,4 the tax lien attaches to the land on which the manufactured home is located.5
(b) If a manufactured home is listed separately from the land on which the manufactured home is located, the tax lien on the manufactured home does not attach to the land on which the home is located.
(c) In this section, "manufactured home" has the meaning assigned by Section
1201.003 , Occupations Code.6(d) If a manufactured home is listed together with the land on which the manufactured home is located, a taxing unit with jurisdiction to impose taxes on the land may place a lien on the manufactured home to secure payment of those taxes to the same extent that it can place a lien on the land. If a home is moved from its location and a new [Statement] is not issued under Section
1201.207 , Occupations Code, a taxing unit with jurisdiction to impose taxes on the land on which the manufactured home was located retains the right to record and enforce liens on that home to secure the payment of taxes, regardless of where the home is currently located.(e) This section prevails over Chapter 1201, Occupations Code, to the extent of any conflict.
Id. § 32.014 (Vernon Supp. 2004-05) (emphasis and footnotes added); see also id. § 32.015 (providing for cancelling tax liens filed before September 1, 2001, on which payment of the taxes, penalties, and interest has been recorded).
As we understand the problem underlying your question, once a manufactured home is relocated and the Department issues a new Statement under Tax Code section
An applicant's failure to provide accurate information about an existing tax lien constitutes sufficient grounds for refusing to issue or for suspending or revoking a Statement. See Tex. Occ. Code Ann. §
The term "lien", as generally used, is a charge or encumbrance upon property to secure the payment or performance of a debt, duty, or other obligation. . . . A "tax lien" is merely a security established by statute of which the taxing authority may avail itself in the event of a default in payment.
United States v. Phillips,
In the alternative, the Department may refuse to issue or may suspend or revoke a Statement if the home was not "relocated in accordance with" TxDOT's requirements. Tex. Occ. Code Ann. §
A tax lien that has attached to a manufactured home under section32.01 (a) of the Tax Code must be listed on a statement of ownership and location (a "Statement") issued by the Texas Department of Housing and Community Affairs under Occupations Code section1201.205 (6). The Department may refuse to issue or may suspend or revoke a Statement that is based on false or fraudulent information regarding an existing tax lien. In addition, the Department may refuse to issue or may suspend or revoke a Statement for a manufactured home that was relocated without a relocation permit from the Department of Transportation or with a relocation permit obtained without truthful information regarding taxes due on the home.
Very truly yours,
GREG ABBOTT Attorney General of Texas
BARRY McBEE First Assistant Attorney General
DON R. WILLETT Deputy Attorney General for Legal Counsel
NANCY S. FULLER Chair, Opinion Committee
Kymberly K. Oltrogge Assistant Attorney General, Opinion Committee
(1) real property that is owned by the owner of the home; or
(2) land leased to the owner of the home under a long-term lease, as defined by department rule.
Id.
(a) Except as provided by Subsection (a-1), a [A] tax lien may not be enforced against personal property transferred to a buyer in ordinary course of business . . . who does not have actual notice of the existence of the lien [or, if the personal property is a manufactured home, who does not have constructive notice of the existence of the lien].
(a-1) A tax lien against a manufactured home may not be enforced unless it has been recorded with the Texas Department of Housing and Community Affairs as provided by Section
1201.219 , Occupations Code:
(1) before October 1, 2005; or
(2) not later than six months after the end of the year for which the tax was owed.
(a-2) A person may not transfer title of a manufactured home until all tax liens perfected on the home have been extinguished or satisfied and released. This subsection does not apply to the sale of a manufactured home in inventory.
Act of May 29, 2005, 79th Leg., R.S., H.B. 2438, § 33 (to be codified at Tex. Tax Code Ann. §
