NYS Appeals Court To Review County's Foreclosure Attempt Where Owner Failed To Include $25 Late Fee With Tendered Tax Payment; Faulty Notice An Issue
- A panel of nine judges with the state Appellate Division’s Fourth Department will hear arguments Monday in the case of a man battling Ontario County to keep his Monks Road property off the auction block.The eight-acre wooded parcel overlooking Canandaigua Lake was to be auctioned this past May 14 at Ontario County’s annual foreclosure auction for unpaid property taxes.
- But property owner Bruce Middlebrook took the county to court, claiming he had tried to pay the amount he was told he owed by the due date, however, the county refused to accept his payment because it lacked a $24.74 late fee.
- Middlebrook’s attorney, David Whitcomb, said he will argue two points. The first is the county failed by giving Middlebrook wrong information about the amount owed. Additionally, Whitcomb will argue, it failed to notify Middlebrook the foreclosure process had begun in January 2006, because Middlebrook did not receiving notice of the back taxes until October 2007, four months before the final date to pay his bill Jan. 18, 2008.
For more, see County, homeowner battle over auction.
For story update, see Canandaigua landowner wins county foreclosure case.
For another report on a lawsuit involving the issue of giving faulty notice to a property owner in an Ontario County, NY tax foreclosure action, see Court Denies Dismissal Of Suit Accusing County Of Screw Up In Giving Proper Notice To Owner In Tax Foreclosure Action. foreclosure faulty notice
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