DATE: March 9, 2021
TO: Board of Supervisors
SUBMITTED BY: Oscar J. Garcia, CPA, Auditor-Controller/Treasurer-Tax Collector
SUBJECT: Approval of Claimants’ Rights to Excess Proceeds Resulting from 2018 Sale of Tax Defaulted Properties
RECOMMENDED ACTION(S):
TITLE
Approve one (1) resolution granting forty-six (46) claims for excess proceeds, and ordering distribution after the 90-day waiting period, where claimants submitted information and proof sufficient to establish a right to all or any portion of the excess proceeds; and denying twenty-two (22) claims for excess proceeds either because claimants failed to submit information and proof sufficient to establish a right to all or any portion of the excess proceeds, the claim was not timely submitted, there are not sufficient proceeds available, or the claims were satisfied by other means.
REPORT
The excess proceeds are the remaining proceeds available from the 2018 Tax Sale that your Board approved on December 5, 2017 and was conducted on March 9-12, 2018. The recommended resolution grants forty-six (46) claims for excess proceeds, based on documentation submitted to the Auditor-Controller/Treasurer-Tax Collector’s office (AC/TTC) establishing the claimant’s rights as parties of interest in the properties pursuant to California Revenue and Taxation Code section 4675. The recommended resolution denies 12 claims where the claimant provided insufficient evidence, 1 claim where the claimant did not timely submit their claim, and 9 claims where there are not sufficient excess proceeds available, or that were satisfied by other means. November 3, 2020, was the last recommended excess proceeds item brought by AC/TTC to your Board, for the 2018 and 2019 Tax Sale single claim items. This item is countywide.
ALTERNATIVE ACTION(S):
Revenue and Taxation Code section 4675, subdivision (e), requires the Board to distribute excess proceeds. For the claims related to any particular property, however, the Board may direct staff to return with additional information before approving a resolution to grant or deny those claims.
FISCAL IMPACT:
The 2018 Tax Sale Excess Proceeds are the remaining proceeds after all taxes, penalties, costs, and fees have been satisfied to the County of Fresno. Excess proceeds not claimed will be distributed to the County pursuant to Revenue and Taxation Code section 4674. Therefore, approval of the recommended action will fiscally impact the County’s General Fund as a one-time revenue increase of $68,610.67.
DISCUSSION:
The AC/TTC periodically conducts a sale of property that has become subject to the power of sale because of delinquent taxes. California Revenue and Taxation Code section 4675 provides that any party of interest in the property at the time of sale may file with the County a claim for excess proceeds within one year following the recordation of the Tax Collector’s deed to the purchaser at the tax sale. The March 9 through March 12, 2018, tax sale resulted in excess proceeds totaling $2,572,353.61 from 77 of the 108 sold parcels. Parcels for which there was only a single claim were brought before the board for approval on November 3, 2020. This item resolves the remaining 21 parcels with excess proceeds which all contain multiple claimants. There are 68 total claims filed for the remaining 21 parcels for which there were multiple claimants.
The AC/TTC receives excess proceeds claims through the mail or at the tax counter. AC/TTC staff reviews all claims and supporting documents to see whether they show that the claimant has a right to some or all the excess proceeds under Revenue and Taxation Code section 4675. Claimants that submit incomplete claims at the tax counter are informed whether any necessary documents are missing before the AC/TTC office accepts their claims. Claimants that mail incomplete claims receive a letter informing them that additional document(s) will be needed to complete their claim. When letters are mailed to claimants regarding additional documents, claimants are given 10 days or more to respond. All complete and timely submitted claims are then reviewed by AC/TTC staff in accordance with Revenue and Taxation Code section 4675, which describes how excess process from sales of tax-defaulted properties must be distributed. The staff recommendations are based on that review. A summary explaining the reasons for the staff recommendation on each claim are shown in “Attachment A Supporting Documentation for Recommended Resolution Approving 47 and Denying 21 Claims to Excess Proceeds Resulting from March 2018 Sale of Tax-Defaulted Properties (Multiple Claim Items Only)” and “Attachment A-1” which was added to revise item 432.
On February 24, 2021, the AC/TTC mailed letters to all of the claimants giving notice that their claims would come before the Board for decision on this date and informing them that they are welcome to attend the meeting and address the Board. The letters also informed claimants that the proposed distribution would be available for review online when the agenda for this meeting posted, about a week before the meeting, and that the final distribution would also be available for review online after the meeting.
Payments for claims granted under the recommended resolution total $1,403,878.91. The excess proceeds would be disbursed after a 90-day waiting period following the approval of the resolutions, which is the limitation period for lawsuits challenging this Board action, as provided in Revenue and Taxation Code Section 4675, subdivision (g). The recommended resolution also provides that the balance of excess proceeds not distributed from the 21 parcels for which there were multiple claims, in the total amount of $68,610.67, will be distributed to the County, as provided in Revenue and Taxation Code section 4674.
There are 22 claims for which staff is recommending denial for the following reasons: 12 claims should be denied because the claimants failed to submit information and proof sufficient to establish a right to all or any portion of the excess proceeds; 1 of the claims should be denied because it was not timely submitted; 7 of the claims should be denied because there are not sufficient excess proceeds to pay those claims; and 2 of the claims should be denied because the claim was satisfied by other means.
REFERENCE MATERIAL:
BAI #21, November 3, 2020
ATTACHMENTS INCLUDED AND/OR ON FILE:
On file with Clerk - Resolution
On file with Clerk - Attachment A
On file with Clerk - Attachment A-1
CAO ANALYST:
Yussel Zalapa