Town of Bourne v. Coffey
Decision Date | 12 August 2022 |
Docket Number | 21-P-501 |
Citation | 101 Mass.App.Ct. 496,194 N.E.3d 228 |
Parties | TOWN OF BOURNE v. Francis J. COFFEY, individually and as personal representative. |
Court | Appeals Court of Massachusetts |
Nicholas P. Shapiro, Boston, for the defendant.
David J. Coppola, Marblehead, for the plaintiff.
Present: Green, C.J., Kinder, & Neyman, JJ.
Francis J. Coffey filed a petition in the Land Court, individually and on behalf of the estates of Leona M. Warsowick and Robert F. Regan, seeking to vacate a foreclosure decree under G. L. c. 60, §§ 69 - 69A. The Land Court recorder (recorder)2 denied the petition and subsequent motion for reconsideration. Coffey now appeals therefrom, claiming error and abuse of discretion.
We affirm.
Background. We recite the relevant facts as found by the recorder, supplemented by uncontroverted evidence that is not contrary to the recorder's findings and rulings. Warsowick owned a residential property in Bourne (property). Warsowick died in 1997 and was survived by her son, Regan, who began living at the property. Warsowick's will named Regan as her executor and sole designee, but Regan did not file any probate of her estate. For the next fourteen years, Regan lived at the property and the property taxes were paid to the town of Bourne (town) without incident.
In 2015, Regan failed to pay taxes on the property in full. In February 2016, through an instrument of taking, the property was taken by the town for nonpayment of taxes.3 In November 2016, the town commenced an action in the Land Court to foreclose the right of redemption on the property. Warsowick's unadjudicated estate was still the title holder of the property. Nonetheless, Regan was served with the complaint, by certified mail, due to his status as a putative heir of Warsowick.4 Neither Regan nor any other defendant appeared or answered in the foreclosure action, and a final judgment of foreclosure entered on June 28, 2018.5 Regan died in December 2018.
On June 28, 2019, exactly one year after the entry of judgment of foreclosure, Coffey -- Regan's cousin -- filed a petition to vacate the judgment on behalf of himself (as a party in interest) and the estates of Warsowick and Regan.6 In December 2019, the town requested from Coffey verification that he was a legal heir of Regan and was entitled to redeem the tax taking on behalf of Warsowick's and Regan's estates. The town allowed Coffey an opportunity to redeem if, within ninety days, he provided the requested verification and tendered "in-full" the delinquent taxes, interest, costs, and fees. After Coffey failed to provide verification or tender the delinquent payment, a hearing on the petition to vacate was held on March 5, 2020, following which the recorder denied Coffey's petition. Coffey filed a motion for reconsideration.7 In a comprehensive order, the recorder denied the motion for reconsideration and further delineated a "summary of the reasoning on which [she] relied in denying the [petition to vacate]." Coffey appeals from the denial of the petition to vacate and motion for reconsideration.8
Discussion. "[W]e review the denial of [a] petition [to vacate a foreclosure decree] for abuse of discretion and error of law" (citation omitted). Ithaca Fin., LLC v. Leger, 99 Mass. App. Ct. 368, 372, 167 N.E.3d 874 (2021). Coffey first argues that where, as here, a petition to vacate a foreclosure decree is filed within one year of the foreclosure decree, the petition should be allowed upon the movant's showing of excusable neglect. He asserts that the recorder's failure to apply this standard, on reconsideration, "was clear legal error." The argument is unavailing.
General Laws c. 60 allows municipalities to take tax title to a property following the nonpayment of property taxes as "security for the repayment of [the overdue] taxes." G. L. c. 60, § 54. Execution of an instrument of taking perfects the municipality's tax lien on the property, "effectively transfer[ring] control of the property from the delinquent taxpayer to the city or town." Tallage Lincoln, LLC v. Williams, 485 Mass. 449, 463, 151 N.E.3d 344 (2020). Following a tax title taking, the taxpayer retains a statutory right to redeem -- "an absolute right to regain title to the property upon payment of the full amount [owed], including taxes, fees, costs, and interest." Id. at 467, 151 N.E.3d 344, citing G. L. c. 60, § 62. If the right to redeem is not exercised within six months of the tax title taking, the municipality can begin proceedings to foreclose the right of redemption. G. L. c. 60, § 65. If the taxpayer does not respond or fails to redeem the property, the taxpayer risks judgment foreclosing the right of redemption.9 G. L. c. 60, § 69.
After foreclosure of the right of redemption, the taxpayer has a final opportunity to regain title to the property. The taxpayer may file a petition to vacate the foreclosure decree pursuant to G. L. c. 60, § 69. On such a petition, the "decree may be vacated in the discretion of the court." G. L. c. 60, § 69. Section 69A provides a limitations period, requiring that "[n]o petition to vacate a decree of foreclosure entered under section sixty-nine ... shall be commenced ... except within one year after the final entry of the decree." G. L. c. 60, § 69A. "After one year, the judgment is final and can be vacated only upon a showing of a denial of due process." Tallage Lincoln, LLC, 485 Mass. at 453, 151 N.E.3d 344. See Ithaca Fin., LLC v. Lopez, 95 Mass. App. Ct. 241, 243, 137 N.E.3d 398 (2019) ( ).
Coffey asserts that "[n]o binding authority to date has" articulated the showing necessary on a petition brought within one year of the foreclosure decree. He contends that "[i]n light of the remedial nature of the statutory scheme, the most apt analogy ... is the [excusable] neglect standard found in Mass. R. Civ. P. 60 (b) (1) [, 365 Mass. 828 (1974)]." Contrary to this assertion, there is authority on point. In Vincent Realty Corp. v. Boston, 375 Mass. 775, 778, 378 N.E.2d 73 (1978), the Supreme Judicial Court considered a petition to vacate brought within one year of the foreclosure decree. The court recognized that "[ G. L. c. 60, §] 69A does not give one the automatic right to redeem, but sets the time period within which petitions to vacate should be brought." Vincent Realty Corp., supra at 780 n.6, 378 N.E.2d 73. Vincent Realty instructs that, even when filed within the one-year limitations period, "a petition to vacate a prior decree foreclosing the right of redemption under a tax title is ‘extraordinary in nature and ought to be granted only after careful consideration and in instances where they are required to accomplish justice’ " (citation omitted). Id. The court went on to conclude that no such "extenuating circumstances" existed to warrant allowance of the petition to vacate.10
Id. at 779-780, 378 N.E.2d 73. Here, where the recorder cited to the standard set forth in Vincent Realty Corp., we discern no error of law.11
Coffey next argues that denial of his petition to vacate was an abuse of discretion where Regan suffered from serious illness at the time of the taking and foreclosure of the right of redemption. He avers that Regan was diagnosed with chronic obstructive pulmonary disease in 2011 and, in 2015, became unable to pay the taxes on the home "because of his declining health and corresponding financial pressures." Coffey contends, therefore, that "[p]lainly [excusable] neglect was shown here," such that the recorder's denial of the petition to vacate was an abuse of discretion.
The recorder found, as articulated in the denial of the motion for reconsideration, that Coffey "had himself become aware of the foreclosure process in approximately May of 2018, but that Regan would not allow him to contact the Town or otherwise become involved." Despite this awareness, and receipt of a summary of the amount owed, see note 5, supra, Regan "did not pay the taxes or appear in this action, and judgment subsequently entered."
Consequently, the recorder denied the petition "because there had not been a sufficient showing that Regan had been prevented from participating in the foreclosure action by mental illness, incapacity, or any other convincing reason." The recorder explained:
Based on the recorder's findings, which the record supports, we cannot say that the recorder abused her discretion in denying the petition to vacate.12 See Nissan Autos. of Marlborough, Inc. v. Glick, 62 Mass. App. Ct. 302, 307, 816 N.E.2d 161 (2004) ().
Coffey now insists that Regan's "incapacitating" illness caused financial hardship that impacted his abilities to pay the redemption amount and to participate in these proceedings. However, the recorder's findings, along with Coffey's representations to...
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