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question everything

(48,846 posts)
Mon Jan 16, 2023, 10:41 PM Jan 2023

U.S. Supreme Court to weigh legality of Hennepin County keeping revenue from seized properties

The U.S. Supreme Court has agreed to take up the case of a Minneapolis woman in her 90s whose condo was seized by Hennepin County because she didn't pay her property taxes.

The 2015 seizure of Geraldine Tyler's condo isn't in question. Nor is the fact that she owed the county some $15,000 in back taxes, interest and fees.

What's in dispute is what happened to the extra money — $25,000 — after the county sold the condo for $40,000.

The government kept it. She says it belongs to her.

The case, which has been winding its way through the courts since 2019, could have ramifications for how Minnesota and a number of other states handle property seizures for unpaid taxes.

Under Minnesota law, any extra money from the sale of seized property can be kept by the government — divvied up among various government entities, including the local county, city and school district.

Tyler and her attorneys have argued that the government keeping all the revenue is tantamount to the theft of her home equity and violates constitutional protections against uncompensated takings and excessive fines.

More..

https://www.startribune.com/u-s-supreme-court-to-weigh-legality-of-hennepin-countys-pocketing-all-revenue-from-seized-properties/600243912/

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U.S. Supreme Court to weigh legality of Hennepin County keeping revenue from seized properties (Original Post) question everything Jan 2023 OP
Good luck. OldBaldy1701E Jan 2023 #1
Michigan does the same yaesu Jan 2023 #2

yaesu

(8,244 posts)
2. Michigan does the same
Tue Jan 17, 2023, 09:09 AM
Jan 2023

I read about an elderly women who lost her house because she was a few dollars short paying off her taxes. In some states you never really own your home, perpetual renting.

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