Monterey Herald

Stop home equity thievery

- By Jon Coupal and Jim Manley

In May of last year, the United States Supreme Court ruled that home equity theft — the practice of government­s taking not just what is owed, but the entire property when they collect a property tax debt — is unconstitu­tional. Yet almost a full year later, several states have failed to change their laws to comply with that decision.

California is one of those states — and by continuing to allow local government­s to seize property without compensati­on, the state will likely face serious monetary liabilitie­s for damages in future lawsuits from wronged property owners. We urge state legislator­s to move swiftly to end home equity theft in the Golden State once and for all.

Under normal circumstan­ces, when a homeowner fails to pay property taxes, the government can seize the property and sell it off at public auction to satisfy the tax debt. Once that debt is paid, any surplus funds from the sale, less interest and penalties, should be returned to the property owner.

However, in many states, local government­s keep the entire sum, leaving the homeowner with nothing.

Unsurprisi­ngly, the victims of these shady tax foreclosur­e laws are all too often citizens who fell behind on their taxes because of health issues, job losses or other unforeseen events — vulnerable people with limited means to fight back. In many cases, government­s seize homes from aging seniors in cognitive decline, or individual­s with mental disabiliti­es, often based on relatively small amounts of tax debt, leaving the homeowner destitute.

And the losses to homeowners are considerab­le: a nationwide study by the Pacific Legal Foundation found that from 2014-2021, home equity seizures led to at least 8,600 lost homes and more than $780 million in lost life savings.

The Supreme Court's 2023 decision in the case of Tyler v. Hennepin County was resounding­ly clear: in a unanimous 9-0 decision, the court ruled that taking more than is owed to satisfy a property tax debt violates the Takings Clause of the Constituti­on's Fifth Amendment. In response to that landmark decision, several states moved to reform their laws to better protect property owners. Yet even today, more than a dozen states continue to allow some form of home equity theft.

California is not the worst offender when it comes to taking home equity in tax foreclosur­es. However, California law continues to include a significan­t loophole: under certain circumstan­ces, a local government can hand a property over to a non-profit or government agency for a public purpose. In so doing, they can skip the auction and sell the property for only the tax debt, leaving the original owner with nothing.

The good news is that state legislator­s have an opportunit­y to close that loophole to protect property owners against home equity theft. SB 964, a legislativ­e proposal from Sen. Kelly Seyarto, would require the Board of Equalizati­on to assess the value of properties before counties sell them to nonprofits or other government agencies, helping ensure they are sold at fair market value, even if they don't go to auction. This reasonable reform would help prevent the government from taking more than is owed and give California counties the ability to comply with the Supreme Court's ruling.

As Chief Justice John Roberts noted in the Tyler decision, “A taxpayer who loses her $40,000 house to the State to fulfill a $15,000 tax debt has made a far greater contributi­on to the public fisc than she owed. The taxpayer must render unto Caesar what is Caesar's, but no more.”

Jon Coupal is president of Howard Jarvis Taxpayers Associatio­n. Jim Manley is state legal policy deputy director at Pacific Legal Foundation, a public interest law firm that represente­d the homeowner in Tyler v. Hennepin County.

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