Ms. Valeri Stiers Malone, Presiding Officer Manufactured Housing Board Texas Department of Housing and Community Affairs Post Office Box 12489 Austin, Texas 78711-2489
Re: Whether a taxing unit has a tax lien on a manufactured home physically located in the unit's jurisdiction on January 1 of the tax year, regardless of how ownership is reflected on the records of the Manufactured Housing Division of the Texas Department of Housing and Community Affairs; whether a tax lien must be filed with the Manufactured Housing Division to be enforceable against a manufactured home that has been properly designated as real property (RQ-0431-GA)
Dear Ms. Malone:
You ask whether a taxing unit has a tax lien on a manufactured home physically located in the unit's jurisdiction on January 1 of the tax year, regardless of how ownership is reflected on the records of the Manufactured Housing Division of the Texas Department of Housing and Community Affairs (the "MHD").1 You also ask whether a tax lien must be filed with the MHD to be enforceable against a manufactured home that has been properly designated as real property. See Request Letter, supra note 1, at 2.
The MHD maintains centralized records about a manufactured home known as a Statement of Ownership and Location (the "Statement"). The Statement provides, among other things:
(5) the county of this state in which the home is installed for occupancy;
(6) in chronological order of recordation, the date of each lien on the home and the name and address of each lienholder, or, if a lien is not recorded, a statement of that fact;
. . . .
(9) the location of the home; [and]
(10) a statement of whether the owner has elected to treat the home as real property or personal property[.]
Tex. Occ. Code Ann. §
On written request, the MHD must provide information in its records about the current ownership and location of a manufactured home and the existence of all tax lien notices on file. See id. § 1201.221(a)(1)-(2). Also, the MHD must provide a monthly report to each county tax assessor-collector and the chief appraiser for each county's appraisal district concerning each installation or transfer of ownership of a manufactured home that occurred in the county during the prior month. Id. § 1201.220(a)-(b) (Vernon 2004). The report includes the owner's name, the address or location where the home was installed, and the date of installation. See id.
Under chapter 32 of the Tax Code, a tax lien attaches to property on January 1 in favor of a taxing unit with the power to tax the property. Tex. Tax Code Ann. §
You first seek advice about whether the MHD may accept a tax lien for filing only when the owner listed on the tax lien notice is the same person shown in the MHD's records as the current owner of the home. Request Letter, supra note 1, at 1. You ask generally whether a lien to secure the ad valorem taxes on a manufactured home attaches to the specific home or to the owner's property, summarizing the question as: "Does the lien follow the home or the taxpayer?" Id.
A tax lien attaches to property, not to the person, and is enforceable in an "in rem" proceeding. Phifer v. NacogdochesCounty Cent. Appraisal Dist.,
We must look further, however, to determine whether the owner's name reflected in a tax lien notice must match the name that MHD records show as the current owner. In the usual case a tax lien will attach before the property is assessed and the tax bill is mailed, which bill is then due for payment on January 1 of the following year. See Shaw v. Phillips Crane Rigging,
Section
You ask second whether a tax lien for a manufactured home designated as real property must be recorded in the MHD's records to be enforceable and, if not, must the MHD record such tax liens that are tendered. See Request Letter, supra note 1, at 2. Section 1201.216 provides that when an owner has elected to treat a manufactured home as real property, the MHD must indicate that fact on the Statement as well as the fact that "the department no longer considers the home to be a manufactured home for purposes of regulation under this chapter." Tex. Occ. Code Ann. §
The provision for perfecting a tax lien on a manufactured home by filing it in the MHD's records specifically concerns a home that is personal property. See id. § 32.03(a-1). Neither chapter 1201 of the Occupations Code nor the Tax Code contains a comparable filing requirement for a manufactured home that is real property. As the manufactured home designated as real property is "considered to be real property for all purposes," Tex. Occ. Code Ann. §
Very truly yours,
GREG ABBOTT Attorney General of Texas
KENT C. SULLIVAN First Assistant Attorney General
ELLEN L. WITT Deputy Attorney General for Legal Counsel
NANCY S. FULLER Chair, Opinion Committee
William A. Hill Assistant Attorney General, Opinion Committee
