Local Governments Are Seizing and Selling Homes Over Small Tax Debts
Home equity theft happens when governments auction off seized houses and keep the profits—even once the tax bill is paid.

In 2021, on April Fools' Day, Manistee County, Michigan, took the title on Chelsea Koetter's home because of a small debt she owed on her 2018 property taxes. Unfortunately, this wasn't a prank.
Four months after seizing her home, which she shared with her two sons, the government auctioned it off for $106,500. It kept the profit.
All told, Koetter owed the government $3,863.40, which included her initial tax debt as well as penalties, interest, and fees. She does not contest she was obligated to pay that. At issue is whether the county acted lawfully when it pocketed the remaining $102,636 after selling her house, a practice known as home equity theft.
The issue may sound familiar. In 2020, the Michigan Supreme Court ruled the practice unconstitutional after the government seized Uri Rafaeli's home, then sold it and kept all the proceeds in excess of what he owed. His initial tax debt was $8.41.
The U.S. Supreme Court weighed in on the issue last year in Tyler v. Hennepin County, ruling unanimously that Hennepin County, Minnesota, violated the Constitution when it seized an elderly woman's home over a debt, sold it, and kept the profit. "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," wrote Chief Justice John Roberts, referring to plaintiff Geraldine Tyler, who had fallen $2,300 behind on her property taxes. The total came to $15,000 after penalties, interest, and fees. After the sale, the government kept what was left over—$25,000. The Court said that was illegal.
Instead of complying with a straightforward interpretation of the law, Michigan has attempted to dance around it, passing a byzantine debt collection statute that sends homeowners on a wild goose chase should they want their equity back.
"Following foreclosure, and before any property is sold or the amount of surplus, if any, is known, owners must properly serve a notarized and completed claim form with the foreclosing government unit within 92 days," reads a lawsuit filed by the Pacific Legal Foundation on Koetter's behalf. "Approximately a year after foreclosure, and many months after the sale of their properties, owners must file a separate motion in the foreclosure action that took their homes, seeking distribution of any surplus proceeds." Erring during the process dooms a claim.
Koetter is intimately familiar with what one can lose at the hands of technicalities and oversights. After falling behind on her taxes, she was able to pay her 2019 and 2020 bills with help from family. Her 2018 taxes were not fully satisfied, she contends, because of a slip-up—by a government employee. At the local office, her father, who was helping her pay her debts, reportedly asked the person assisting him "to verify that all taxes were paid," according to Koetter's complaint, "and they looked up the records and confirmed that I was paying all taxes that were due." The employee allegedly missed something.
Koetter is not alone in suffering this injustice. After the Supreme Court's ruling in Tyler, a handful of states—Arizona, Alabama, New York, and New Jersey—created systems that technically abide by the letter of the law but not its spirit, devising complex systems that place the burden on the property owner to fight for their equity back after a seizure.
Meanwhile, a federal lawsuit outlines yet another creative way people are losing equity at the hands of government. In Baltimore, the Edmondson Community Organization (ECO)—a nonprofit dedicated to revitalizing the city's Midtown-Edmondson area—accrued a $2,543 property tax debt. So in 2018, the city auctioned off that lien for $5,115 to a California-based investor, who sold the ECO's building for $139,500. In return, the ECO got a check for the difference between its debt and the lien purchase price: $2,572. In other words, the organization essentially paid six figures to compensate for the $2,543 it owed.
Local governments and their citizens will continue to debate how high property taxes should be and what financial penalties an owner should bear for falling behind on them. What should be beyond debate at this point, however, is that the government cannot satisfy that bill and then concoct clever ways to pull off a legalized form of larceny.
This article originally appeared in print under the headline "Tax Debt Is No Excuse for Home Equity Theft."
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Government is legalized larceny.
Taxation is theft.
What do expect from organized criminals?
I expect history to repeat itself as it has since records began, e.g., all coercive government is corrupt, tyrannical, and the victims allow it.
The problem is the victims who sacrifice their sovereignty, their self respect, their rights, and then complain. The real victims are those who dissented, e.g., the anarchists who were forced to suffer with those who wanted to be ruled by force. Statists have a right to let others violate them, rule them, but they have no right to force that fate on their neighbors.
Eliminate public education funded by property taxes (and all other forms of taxation) and see those property taxes drop. Should be easier for folks to not fall behind.
Don’t have a relative ask the municipality whether an obligation has been paid - get a written record of that yourself.
Government, the enemy within.
With friends like government, who needs enemas.
Government needs an enema.
They really need that stuff.
Not to excuse the government criminality, but if you have a large amount of equity in your home and owe a relatively small tax debt, why not avail yourself of a HELOC and buy yourself some time to get on your financial feet or sell the house and pocket the difference?
Indeed, any excuse for government ineptitude, eh?
Perhaps after writing "not to excuse the government criminality", you should not blame the victims of government criminality for not taking advice from you in the future.
Please explain how you expect someone in a financial situation that leads to delinquent taxes to qualify for a loan in the current regulatory environment.
If you can't prove you don't need the money, the banks will not lend it to you.
They should commit their own larceny. Credit card fraud. Identity theft. Duh. Do unto others before government does unto you.
As Long said, if you're disorganized/confused/distracted enough to fall behind in your taxes, those same factors are likely to prevent you from finding financial alternatives - or maybe even figuring out that you need them.
All governments lie and all governments steal. Especially local governments, made up of grasping petty little politicians with delusions of self importance.
Where I live in a tiny village, the government decided to double our sewer and water bill using some phony ass excuse about something someone in D.C . said. We have a lot of low income and retirees in this town and these politicians don't care how much stress they put on those people.
Liars and crooks the entire lot of them.
Demonstrating once again the biggest enemies of America are not necessarily foreign governments but our very own.
Property taxes are wealth taxes. As such they are extremely regressive, since poor and middle class people who manage to purchase property and hold on to it, long after their wages stop (retirement), find themselves in a position where they are forced to sell their asset at a time not of their choosing, because of the appreciation in their home.
Just abolish property taxes as a legal tax collection scheme.
I disagree. Property taxes are about the only tax that can be paid anonymously, and self-assessment is easy to enforce without needing government appraisers.
The problem you complain about, having to sell property to pay its tax, exists regardless of the source of debt — can’t pay rent, can’t pay your credit card, any debt. Where it goes wrong is the government taking priority in the creditors’ queue, confiscating your property to collect the debt, and then not passing the surplus on to you. It’s no different from them confiscating your entire bank balance or paycheck to pay a trifling debt.
Government should be just another creditor. The evil is from government taking priority and behaving in ways no ordinary creditor could. It has nothing to do with being a property tax.
There are actually two problems with property taxes. The first is that the government taxes you on an imaginary number. The value of your property is unknown because you are not selling it. Ever try to use home equity to buy groceries? Property is non-fungible. And they tax you over and over on the same imaginary wealth, not the net new each subsequent year.
The second problem is that carving up the tax we pay to government is an insidious method to fool the people. Since most people have mortgages or pay rent, they do not experience property tax in the same way that they experience income tax. The same is true for sales and use taxes.
You look at your W-2 or tax return and you see that big number so you know exactly what you pay in income taxes. If we only paid income taxes or a combo if income and sales taxes, then we would know exactly what we are paying for government.
We would be far more rational about how much government we vote for, instead of voting with our feelings. Property taxes allows government to hide the true cost from us.
You’re right. How about the government just take possession of 3.5% of the property.
Assuming a more or less average of 2500sqft, that means that, to satisfy the debt, we let the government rent out one of the bedrooms or lay claim to some parking space – whatever they see as the more valuable.
Sounds fair, right?