throwthepearlaway t1_j8dsity wrote
Worked for a time in the revenue collections office. Mostly the problem is that the city doesn't have working addresses for these folks since the only mailing address on file is the property that was lost in the tax sale auction. I believe that they do (or used to) post a list on the website, but it's kinda buried and not easy to find.
icarlin412 t1_j8dsr8k wrote
Question is what happens after that, the city pockets the profits of the sale Im assuming?
throwthepearlaway t1_j8dwnbf wrote
the tax sale funds are first used to pay the existing liens on the property that caused the auction/sale. After that, the original owner is entitled to any remaining funds. They don't get pocketed by the city, at least not initially. The money just kind of...sit there in an account until claimed. According to the article, the combined balance is about $6 million sitting in the account at this time.
>If the funds are not collected by former owners within seven years, the city can seek a court order to access the money for other uses, officials said. But the city hasn’t done that in at least the last dozen years that Scrivener has been with the department, he said. “Money pretty much had been sitting in the account,” said Dorothy Reed, deputy chief of the Bureau of Revenue Collections.
Broad-Brush t1_j8dwo3i wrote
It should be going to the state's unclaimed property fund after 3 years.
ogforcebewithyou t1_j8dxtyp wrote
Sits in an account for decades
akgeekgrrl t1_j8ew09v wrote
Eventually unclaimed funds should wind up at MissingMoney. Some states run their own unclaimed property search sites, too.
My dad found a savings account that a family member created for him when he was born. Just sitting there 60 years later. I got an unemployment insurance overpayment back from my state.
Spaghetti-Bender t1_j8eyjs6 wrote
The city sold the back half of my former brother-in-law's lot (1/2 of his back yard and his entire garage) in a tax sale, since his property somehow had 2 addresses, or was two properties sold as one... I can't remember that exact detail. However, it was a rowhome, with a nice long back yard w/ a garage at the end, and the city had been sending the tax bills to 0000 Whatever St, because there was some data entry error when he bought the house. A scummy lawyer couple (were in the news and served jail time for some tax sale purchase shenanigans) from Timonium bought it up, and wanted to charge something like a $5000 fee, on top of whatever was owed to get it back.
throwthepearlaway t1_j8f23om wrote
Oh yeah, those attorneys are ruthless and there's about 4-5 firms in the City that buy almost all of the tax sales. They don't even want the properties, they're just trying to gain that temporary lien ownership so that they can charge the attorney fees on top of the liens+interest.
The attorney fees are legal, but there is a maximum amount they're allowed to charge which increases over time to a set limit. It's supposed to cover the cost of the attorney who helps the bidder, but these vultures have set themselves up as both 'the buyer' and 'the attorney', and they always charge residents exactly the maximum.
Viewing a single comment thread. View all comments