BROWN, Judge.
Floor-Essence, LLC, ("Floor-Essence") appeals the trial court's judgment
Floor-Essence failed to pay property taxes due with respect to three parcels of real property in Marion County, Indiana. The three parcels were adjacent to each other, and the street addresses associated with the parcels were 4503 Rockville Road (Parcel No. 9006128), 4501 Rockville Road (Parcel No. 9006131), and 14 South Vine Street (Parcel No. 9000667). The business address for Floor-Essence was 4503 Rockville Road, Indianapolis, Indiana (the "Business Address"), and the Business Address was on record with the Marion County Auditor and was the address Floor-Essence used to receive its business mail. Lisa Thomason was the principal of Floor-Essence and lived at a residence located on a parcel of real property with a street address of 20 South Vine Street, and this parcel was adjacent to the 14 South Vine Street parcel.
The Auditor sent a pre-tax sale notice dated August 5, 2011, with respect to each of Floor-Essence's three parcels to Floor-Essence at its Business Address, and the notices were sent by certified mail, return receipt requested.
On September 23, 2011, the three parcels were sold at a tax sale to S & C Financial Group, LLC ("S & C Financial"). The Auditor sent by certified mail a post-tax sale notice dated May 14, 2012, with respect to each of the three parcels to Floor-Essence at its Business Address.
Following the expiration of the redemption period, the Auditor sent by certified mail a Notice of Filing Petition for Tax Deed with respect to each of the three parcels to Floor-Essence at its Business Address, to Floor-Essence care of Attorney Glazier, and to Michael Smith.
On December 6, 2012, Floor-Essence filed an Amended Objection to Tax Sale Deed Transfer and Request for Hearing with respect to each of the three parcels.
On July 9, 2013, the court held a hearing at which Thomason testified that she never received any mail, whether sent certified
On July 17, 2013, the court resumed the hearing on the objections of Floor-Essence. An exhibit of a photograph showing the mailboxes on the building on the parcels was admitted into evidence. Thomason testified the photograph depicted the "the front entrance, like a courier door, to ... the office sections ... [of] the main building." Transcript at 133. She testified that the address of the main building was "for all legal purposes, 4503," and when asked what she meant, responded "[a]nything that has to do with, oh Lordy, when we purchased the property, to registering through the State, to any — anything like has to do — the main address is 4503." Id. at 134. Thomason testified that a main building "rests on 4501 [Rockville Road], 4503 [Rockville Road], and then the very end of the building, which is long and narrow, lands on 14 ... Vine Street." Id. at 134. She further testified that the building contained retail office space, which faced Rockville Road, and a warehouse section. She testified there were six subdivisions of the building, that "4501 was divided into three (3) suites," that Floor-Essence received its mail at 4503 Rockville Road, that there was a mailbox for 4503 Rockville Road, and that all of the mailboxes depicted in the exhibit were functioning in 2011. Id. at 135. When asked if "those mailboxes lock at all," Thomason answered "No." Id. at 137.
Thomason further testified that one end of her residence, located primarily on the parcel with a street address of 20 South Vine Street, physically encroaches "[p]robably four (4) to six (6) feet onto lot 14." Id. at 140. She indicated that she received business mail for Floor-Essence at 4503 Rockville Road, that the business still existed, that she had been at the address since 2005, and that she never refused to accept certified mail. Thomason testified that any of the tenants or anybody walking up and down Rockville Road has access to the mailboxes, that she was at the building daily, and that she went to the tenant at "4501 Suite A" and the tenant handed her "a business card stating that he was — he's the new owner, and he was awaiting deed." Id. at 144. Thomason also stated she did not receive any post-tax sale notices, and that she lived at the residence since October of 2005.
When asked on cross-examination, "[y]ou'll recall that you indicated that you knew through the receipt of tax bills, that the properties were delinquent," Thomason testified "[o]nly one (1) property was aware of — and that was only through my own records." Id. at 147. When questioned further, she indicated that she was aware that her tax obligation for the 4501 Rockville Road parcel was delinquent. When asked about the status of the other two properties, she testified: "I thought they were up and current. And I had taken into the office a partial payment, and... the lady at the desk had told me I could not submit a partial, cause that's — at
Id. at 154.
Melissa Tomlin, an employee of the Auditor, testified that "any mail that's returned, we scan it into a system we call file net, and so everything that's returned to us, all notices that weren't delivered, we scan in. So if we had anything returned, it would be in our file net system." Id. at 160. When asked, "in regards to these three (3) parcels today, [] were you able — had you checked your [] file net," and Tomlin testified "Yes. I checked all three (3) parcels and there were no first class returned mail." Id. Tomlin indicated on cross-examination that she did not know what happened to mail that a postman would deem non-deliverable for any reason and that she has known it to happen that an item of mail is lost.
Counsel for Floor-Essence argued that the Auditor did not attempt to find out "what type of property it was dealing with," that "[s]imple additional steps could have been taken, which were not," that the roll of attorneys could have been checked to "be sure [it had] the right address for the attorney listed, [which] would not be unduly cumbersome," that "posting a sign at the residence or in front of the business would have been a simple, cost effective measure the Auditor's Office could have taken," and that "I'm not entirely certain that due process wouldn't require an effort to get personal service under the circumstances on my client and her residence." Id. at 167-168. Counsel for the County argued that the Auditor sent the notices as required by statute, the notices were sent by certified mail and first class mail, they were sent to the Business Address of Floor-Essence, and none of the first class mailings were returned to the office of the Auditor. The County further argued that the Auditor "is not required to post and does not have to" and that "[a]fter not receiving any first class mailings back, it's safe to assume that the Auditor — Auditor would assume that, because those were not returned, that in fact the owner of record received these [] notices." Id. at 170. Counsel for S & C Financial argued that the Auditor "more than complied" with the notice statutes, that there was conflicting testimony regarding what the owner of Floor-Essence believed regarding the delinquency of taxes for the parcels, that he could not "imagine anything more that the county could have done to ... provide good and adequate notice constitutionally effective ... to handle this sort of tax sale situation," that Marion County is the largest county in Indiana, and that the Auditor is not required to "drive around town,
On October 15, 2013, the court issued Findings of Fact and Conclusions of Law Overruling Floor-Essence's Objection and Amended Objection to Tax Sale Deed Transfer. Under the heading "Findings of Fact," the court found in part that "Floor-Essence has occupied the warehouse portion of the large building sitting on parcels 9006131 and 9006128 at 4503 Rockville Rd. for many years preceding the tax sale, and continues to occupy the space today" and that attached to the large building "are functioning, unlocked mailboxes that are accessible to any of the tenants or anyone passing by." Appellant's Appendix at 5. The court found that the Auditor sent pre-sale notices pursuant to the statute, duplicate copies of the pre-sale notices were sent via first-class mail, the Auditor sent statutorily required post-sale notices via both certified and first-class mail, the Auditor sent the statutorily required notice that a motion had been filed requesting issuance of a deed to the tax sale purchaser, and that to date, none of the first-class notices sent by the Auditor had been returned to the Auditor. The court also found that "Thomason knew, based upon her own records, that taxes were delinquent on the properties owned by Floor-Essence," that "[s]ometime during 2012 she had paid property taxes on at least one of the other parcels that she or [Floor-Essence] owned, and she presented, in-person, partial payment amounts on the others in the form of certified checks," and that "[s]he was at that time advised that partial payments would not be accepted; however, she was not informed at that time that the Parcels were being, or had been, sold at tax sale." Id. at 6. Further, the court found that, "[s]ometime in December, 2012, a person physically visited the property and introduced himself to some of the tenants as either the new owner or as an agent for the new owner, and he left a business card with a tenant." Id. Under the heading "Conclusions of Law," the court concluded that "[t]he Auditor's pre-sale notice via certified mail, return receipt requested, in conjunction with the other pre-sale notices sent, complied with the relevant statutes and constitutional requirements," that "[t]he post-sale notices that the property could be redeemed complied with the relevant statutes and constitutional requirements," and that "[n]one of the notices statutorily required to be sent by the Auditor's Office apparently served to provide actual notice of the sale, but actual notice is not required either statutorily or constitutionally." Id. at 11. The court overruled Floor-Essence's objections and ordered that the tax sale deeds be issued from the sale.
The issue is whether the trial court erred in entering the October 15, 2013 order overruling the objections of Floor-Essence and ordering that tax sale deeds be issued from the tax sale. The trial court entered findings and conclusions. We first determine whether the evidence supports the findings and then
When an owner of real estate fails to pay property taxes, the property may be subject to sale in settlement of the delinquent taxes. Sawmill Creek, 964 N.E.2d at 217. Before the government may sell property due to unpaid property taxes, the Due Process Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment to the United States Constitution requires the government to provide the owner with "notice and opportunity for hearing appropriate to the nature of the case." Id. (quoting Jones v. Flowers, 547 U.S. 220, 223, 126 S.Ct. 1708, 1712, 164 L.Ed.2d 415 (2006)). Due process does not require that a property owner receive actual notice before the government may take his property. Prince v. Marion Cnty. Auditor, 992 N.E.2d 214, 219 (Ind.Ct.App.2013) (citing Jones, 547 U.S. at 226, 126 S.Ct. 1708), trans. denied. Rather, the government must provide notice reasonably calculated, under all the circumstances, to apprise interested parties of the pendency of the action and afford them an opportunity to present their objections. Id. "But if with due regard for the practicalities and peculiarities of the case these [notice] conditions are reasonably met, the constitutional requirements are satisfied." Sawmill Creek, 964 N.E.2d at 219 (citation omitted).
Prince, 992 N.E.2d at 219-220 (citations omitted).
In this case, the Auditor sent the required notices to Floor-Essence under Ind.Code §§ 6-1.1-24-4, -25-4.5, and -25-4.6, and Floor-Essence does not appear to argue on appeal that the notices were not in substantial compliance with the statutory requirements. While the notices under Ind.Code § 6-1.1-24-4 sent by certified mail were returned unclaimed, the Auditor sent duplicate notices to Floor-Essence by
Based on the evidence set forth above and in the record, we find the Auditor substantially complied with the statutes governing the notices and that the manner of service was reasonably calculated under all the circumstances to apprise Floor-Essence of the pendency of the action and afford it an opportunity to object. See Prince, 992 N.E.2d at 220 (concluding the auditor substantially complied with the notice statutes and the manner of service was reasonably calculated under all the circumstances to apprise the owner of the pendency of the action and afford him an opportunity to object where the auditor sent notice of the tax sale, notice of the right of redemption, and the notice of petition for tax deed to the building and a post office box address for the owner by certified and first class mail, the auditor obtained a title search on the parcels in an effort to locate additional addresses, and none of the notices sent by first class mail were returned to the auditor) (citing Sawmill Creek, 964 N.E.2d at 220 (determining that the county auditor's manner of service satisfied due process requirements, despite the property owner's failure to receive actual notice, because the auditor published notices in multiple ways, mailed notices to all addresses of which it was aware, and obtained a title search in an attempt to find additional addresses for the owner)). The trial court did not abuse its discretion in concluding the Auditor's notices regarding the tax sale process met the requirements of due process. See Id. at 221.
For the foregoing reasons, we affirm the court's October 15, 2013 judgment.
Affirmed.
BARNES, J., and BRADFORD, J., concur.