Court Opinion

ID: 2680022
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2014-06-23 17:09:56.799363+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T13:14:40.738312
License: Public Domain

MAINE SUPREME JUDICIAL COURT                                                       Reporter of Decisions
Decision: 2013 ME 27
Docket:   Aro-12-170
Argued:   January 15, 2013
Decided:  March 5, 2013

Panel:        SAUFLEY, C.J., and ALEXANDER, LEVY, SILVER, MEAD, GORMAN, and
              JABAR, JJ.

                                    JEFFREY STOOPS et al.

                                                   v.

                                   RICHARD NELSON et al.

JABAR, J.

         [¶1] Jeffrey and Jeanne Stoops appeal from a judgment entered in the

Superior Court (Aroostook County, Hunter J.), granting Richard and Betty

Nelson’s1 motion for summary judgment declaring that the Nelsons properly

acquired title through a municipal quitclaim deed to property located in

Madawaska that the Stoopses once owned. The Stoopses argue that the court erred

in granting the Nelsons’ motion for summary judgment because the Town of

   1
       The Stoopses’ initial complaint did not include Betty Nelson as a named defendant. On
October 9, 2009, the Stoopses filed an unopposed motion to amend the complaint to add Betty as a
necessary party pursuant to M.R. Civ. P. 19(a); that motion was never ruled upon by the court.
Nevertheless, it is apparent from the record that after the motion was filed, the parties and the court
proceeded as if Betty were a party to the action: counsel for Richard Nelson also acted as counsel for
Betty, signing court documents as “Attorney for Richard and Betty Nelson”; documents were captioned
with Betty listed as a party; and the Stoopses filed their notice of appeal against Richard and Betty
Nelson. Therefore, although the court did not rule on the motion to amend the complaint, “[i]n this
context, remand for joinder of additional parties is unnecessary.” Cf. Muther v. Broad Cove Shore Ass’n,
2009 ME 37, ¶ 9, 968 A.2d 539 (“Joinder is required in circumstances where the absence of unnamed
parties would prevent a judgment from fully adjudicating the underlying dispute, expose those who are
already parties to multiple or inconsistent obligations, or prejudice the interests of absent parties.”).
2

Madawaska, which foreclosed on the property and subsequently sold it to the

Nelsons, failed to give the Stoopses proper notice of the pending foreclosure in

violation of the Due Process Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment. Additionally,

the Stoopses argue that the Town failed to adhere strictly to the requirements of

36 M.R.S. §§ 942 and 943 (2012), which outline the steps a municipality must take

in order to foreclose on a municipal tax lien. Because the Town complied with the

requirements of the statutory scheme and gave the Stoopses sufficient notice, we

affirm the trial court’s judgment.

                                I. BACKGROUND

      [¶2] Rather than submitting separate statements of material facts pursuant to

M.R. Civ. P. 56, the parties submitted to the trial court an agreed statement of

facts, related exhibits, and cross-motions for summary judgment, aiding the court’s

review and allowing us to apply the law to the following undisputed facts.

A.    Municipal Tax Lien 2004-05

      [¶3]    In 2005, Jeffrey and Jeanne Stoops owned property located at

218 Main Street in Madawaska, and the Town of Madawaska assessed taxes on

that property for fiscal year 2004. The Stoopses failed to pay those taxes, and on

May 19, 2005, the Town sent a “30 Day Demand” notice (the “2004 section-942
                                                                                                          3

notice”) to the Stoopses, as required by 36 M.R.S. § 942.2 The Town sent the

notice in a single envelope by certified mail, return receipt requested, to the

residence at 218 Main Street. The notice informed the Stoopses of the amount of

municipal tax due, described the property on which the tax was assessed,

demanded payment within thirty days, and stated that a lien was placed on the

property to secure payment. The notice also warned: “IMPORTANT: DO NOT

DISREGARD THIS NOTICE. YOU WILL LOSE YOUR PROPERTY UNLESS

YOU PAY YOUR 05 PROPERTY TAXES, INTEREST AND COSTS.”3 Jeanne

   2
       Title 36 M.R.S. § 942 (2012) provides in pertinent part:

            The tax collector may, after the expiration of 8 months and within one year after the
         date of original commitment of a tax or, in the case of deferred taxes pursuant to chapter
         908-A, after the due and payable date established pursuant to section 6271, subsection 5,
         give to the person against whom the tax is assessed, or leave at the person’s last and usual
         place of abode, or send by certified mail, return receipt requested, to the person’s last
         known address, a notice in writing signed by the tax collector or bearing the tax
         collector’s facsimile signature, stating the amount of the tax, describing the real estate on
         which the tax is assessed, alleging that a lien is claimed on the real estate to secure the
         payment of the tax, and demanding the payment of the tax within 30 days after service or
         mailing of the notice with $3 for the tax collector for making the demand together with
         the certified mail, return receipt requested, fee. . . .

            After the expiration of the 30 days and within 10 days thereafter, the tax collector
         shall record in the registry of deeds of the county or registry district where the real estate
         is situated a tax lien certificate signed by the tax collector or bearing his facsimile
         signature, setting forth the amount of the tax, a description of the real estate on which the
         tax is assessed and an allegation that a lien is claimed on the real estate to secure the
         payment of the tax, that a demand for payment of the tax has been made in accordance
         with this section, and that the tax remains unpaid. . . .
   3
      The parties agreed to a statement of facts in which the 2004 section-942 notice received by Jeanne
Stoops relates to the 2004 property taxes. The notice, however, indicates that it is the 2005 property taxes
at issue. This inconsistency can be attributed to the fact that the Town assessed taxes in August of 2004,
and, pursuant to 36 M.R.S. § 942, the property owner has eight months in which to pay those taxes.
Therefore, technically the taxes are for 2004-2005.
4

Stoops signed the certified mail receipt acknowledging that she received the notice.

On June 23, 2005, the Town recorded a tax lien certificate in the registry of deeds.

          [¶4] Although not required by statute, on October 26, 2006, the Town sent a

letter (the “2004 lien-foreclosure-warning letter”), via first class mail, addressed to

Jeffrey Stoops, informing him that the property taxes secured by the lien were still

due and that the Town would begin the process of acquiring the property if he did

not pay. That letter was not returned. On November 14, 2006, as required by

36 M.R.S. § 943,4 the Town sent the Stoopses, by certified mail, return receipt

    4
        Title 36 M.R.S. § 943 (2012) provides in pertinent part:

             The filing of the tax lien certificate in the registry of deeds shall create a tax lien
          mortgage on said real estate to the municipality in which the real estate is situated having
          priority over all other mortgages, liens, attachments and encumbrances of any nature, and
          shall give to said municipality all the rights usually incident to a mortgagee, except that
          the municipality shall not have any right of possession of said real estate until the right of
          redemption shall have expired.

             The filing of the tax lien certificate in the registry of deeds shall be sufficient notice of
          the existence of the tax lien mortgage.

              In the event that the tax, interest and costs underlying the tax lien are paid within the
          period of redemption, the municipal treasurer or assignee of record shall prepare and
          record a discharge of the tax lien mortgage in the same manner as is now provided for the
          discharge of real estate mortgages, except that a facsimile signature of the treasurer or
          treasurer’s assignee may be used.

             If the tax lien mortgage, together with interest and costs, shall not be paid within
          18 months after the date of the filing of the tax lien certificate in the registry of deeds, the
          said tax lien mortgage shall be deemed to have been foreclosed and the right of
          redemption to have expired.

             The municipal treasurer shall notify the party named on the tax lien mortgage and
          each record holder of a mortgage on the real estate not more than 45 days nor less than
          30 days before the foreclosing date of the tax lien mortgage, in a writing signed by the
                                                                                                          5

requested, a “Notice of Impending Automatic Foreclosure,” (the “2004 section-943

notice”) informing them that the tax lien mortgage would be foreclosed upon on

December 23, 2006. The notice was returned unclaimed.5

B.       Municipal Tax Lien 2005-06

         [¶5] On May 16, 2006, the Town sent by certified mail, return receipt

requested, a “30 Day Demand” notice (the “2005 section-942 notice”) to Jeffrey

and Jeanne Stoops for unpaid municipal taxes assessed in 2005. The notice was

returned unclaimed. On June 19, 2006, the Town recorded a tax lien certificate in

the registry of deeds. On October 16, 2007, the Town sent, by first class mail, a

letter (the “2005 lien-foreclosure-warning letter”) addressed to Jeffrey Stoops,

         treasurer or bearing the treasurer’s facsimile signature and left at the holder’s last and
         usual place of abode or sent by certified mail, return receipt requested, to the holder’s last
         known address of the impending automatic foreclosure and indicating the exact date of
         foreclosure. . . . If notice is not given in the time period specified in this section to the
         party named on the tax lien mortgage or to any record holder of a mortgage, the person
         not receiving timely notice may redeem the tax lien mortgage until 30 days after the
         treasurer does provide notice in the manner specified in this section.

            ....

             After the expiration of the 18-month period for redemption, the mortgagee of record
         of said real estate or his assignee and the owner of record if the said real estate has not
         been assessed to him or the person claiming under him shall, in the event the notice
         provided for said mortgagee and said owner has not been given as provided in section
         942, have the right to redeem the said real estate within 3 months after receiving actual
         knowledge of the recording of the tax lien certificate by payment or tender of the amount
         of the tax lien mortgage, together with interest and costs, and the tax lien mortgage shall
         then be discharged by the owner thereof in the manner provided.
     5
      When an item is sent by certified mail, either a person at the residence signs for the item or the
postman cites a reason for non-delivery. Jones v. Flowers, 547 U.S. 220, 234 (2006). Among other
reasons for not delivering a particular item, the postman could check a box for either “unclaimed” or
“refused.” The postman marked “unclaimed.”
6

indicating that the “2004-2005 tax liens” remained unpaid, and that the Town

would begin the process of automatic foreclosure if Stoops did not respond by

November 5, 2007.          On November 5, 2007, the Town sent the Stoopses, by

certified mail, return receipt requested, a “Notice of Impending Automatic

Foreclosure,” (the “2005 section-943 notice”) informing them that the tax lien

mortgage would be foreclosed upon on December 19, 2007. Jeanne Stoops signed

the certified mail receipt acknowledging that she received the notice.

C.       Municipal Tax Lien 2006-07

         [¶6] On May 15, 2007, the Town sent by certified mail, return receipt

requested, a “30 Day Demand” notice (the “2006 section-942 notice”) to Jeffrey

and Jeanne Stoops for unpaid municipal taxes assessed in 2006. The notice was

returned unclaimed.6 On June 19, 2007, the Town recorded a tax lien certificate in

the registry of deeds. On November 13, 2008, the Town sent, by first class mail, a

letter (the “2006 lien-foreclosure-warning letter”) to Jeffrey Stoops, indicating that

the Town had foreclosed on his property and informing him that the Town would

be selling the property if he did not negotiate a payment agreement. The letter also

informed      Stoops      that    in    the    aggregate,      he     owed      $9,277.05.          On

November 17, 2008, a “Notice of Impending Automatic Foreclosure” (the

     6
     A Town employee signed the certified mail receipt after the notice was returned to the post office.
The parties agree, however, that this notice was unclaimed.
                                                                                   7

“2006 section-943 notice”) was sent by certified mail, return receipt requested, to

Jeffrey Stoops, informing the Stoopses that the property would be foreclosed upon

on December 31, 2008. The Stoopses’ adult daughter signed the certified mail

receipt acknowledging that she received the notice. The Stoopses maintain that

they do not recall ever receiving any correspondence from the Town regarding

unpaid municipal taxes.

D.    Sale and Trial Court Proceedings

      [¶7] On February 3, 2009, the Town conveyed the property to the Nelsons

by municipal quitclaim deed. In August 2009, the Stoopses filed a complaint

against Richard Nelson and the Town of Madawaska seeking to quiet title to the

property and asking the court to declare the respective rights of the parties to the

property. The Nelsons counterclaimed, seeking to quiet title in their favor and for

similar declaratory relief. The Town’s subsequent motion to dismiss was granted.

With the consent of the court, the parties filed an “agreed statement of facts” along

with cross-motions for summary judgment. The Stoopses argued then, as they do

here, that the Town violated their due process rights by failing to provide adequate

notice of the pending foreclosure.

      [¶8]    The court found that because Jeanne Stoops signed for the

2004 section-942 notice, the Stoopses actually received the notice, and therefore,

that receipt was sufficient to satisfy due process. The court stated:
8

      In this case, the court does not face a situation where it has learned
      that the taxpayer has had no notice. To the contrary, in this case, it is
      clear that the taxpayer did receive notice. . . . The court concludes
      that the “30 Day Demand Letter” that the Town sent to both taxpayers
      regarding the 2004 municipal real estate taxes satisfied the threshold
      constitutional due process requirement of adequate notice and that
      nothing more was required. Accordingly, the court finds that the
      Town successfully foreclosed upon its 2004 municipal tax lien and
      acquired full ownership of the subject property at the expiration of
      that redemption period.

The court recognized that the Town’s second attempt to notify the Stoopses that

their house was at risk went unclaimed but concluded that because the “Notice of

Impending Automatic Foreclosure” issued pursuant to 36 M.R.S. § 943 “is not of

constitutional import,” the unclaimed notice did not alter the court’s conclusion

that the Town issued sufficient notice. The court granted the Nelsons’ motion for

summary judgment, declaring that the Town successfully foreclosed on the

municipal tax liens for 2004, 2005, and 2006, and that the Nelsons acquired title to

the property through the municipal quitclaim deed. This timely appeal followed.

                                 II. DISCUSSION

      [¶9] The Stoopses argue that the Town failed to strictly adhere to the

requirements of 36 M.R.S. §§ 942 and 943, and therefore the Town did not

properly foreclose on the property.      Furthermore, they argue that all of the

foreclosure notices sent by the Town are flawed for at least one reason, and

therefore to satisfy the Due Process Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment of the
                                                                                  9

United States Constitution, the Town was required to take additional steps to notify

them before foreclosing on the property. “We review the grant of a motion for

summary judgment de novo,” Budge v. Town of Millinocket, 2012 ME 122, ¶ 12,

55 A.3d 484 (quotation marks omitted), and will affirm “if the record reflects that

there is no genuine issue of material fact and the movant is entitled to a judgment

as a matter of law,” Golder v. City of Saco, 2012 ME 76, ¶ 9, 45 A.3d 697

(quotation marks omitted).

A.    The Town’s Compliance with 36 M.R.S. §§ 942 and 943

      [¶10] With regard to the tax lien statutes, pursuant to which a municipality

can foreclose upon a taxpayer’s real property for failure to pay property taxes, we

have previously stated:

             This area of law requires careful attention to statutory
      requirements by both the Town and the taxpayer. Just as the taxpayer
      may lose her property if she fails to be vigilant in complying with the
      requirements, so must the Town strictly adhere to its requirements.
      Only if departure from the statutory requirements is explicitly allowed
      by statute will such departure be tolerated.

Town of Pownal v. Anderson, 1999 ME 70, ¶ 14, 728 A.2d 1254 (citations

omitted). Eight months after the tax is first due, 36 M.R.S. § 942 allows the

municipality to give the property owner notice

      signed by the tax collector or bearing the tax collector’s facsimile
      signature, stating the amount of the tax, describing the real estate on
      which the tax is assessed, alleging that a lien is claimed on the real
10

       estate to secure the payment of the tax, and demanding the payment of
       the tax within 30 days after service.

After the thirty-day period has expired, the municipality has ten days to file a tax

lien certificate in the registry of deeds. 36 M.R.S. § 942.

       [¶11] Section 943 provides that once the tax lien certificate is filed in the

registry of deeds, the municipality has a tax lien mortgage on the property.

36 M.R.S. § 943. If, eighteen months after filing the tax lien certificate, the tax

lien mortgage remains unpaid, the mortgage is deemed foreclosed “and the right of

redemption [is deemed] to have expired.” Id. The municipal treasurer is required

to

       notify the party named on the tax lien mortgage and each record
       holder of a mortgage on the real estate not more than 45 days nor less
       than 30 days before the foreclosing date of the tax lien mortgage, in a
       writing signed by the treasurer or bearing the treasurer’s facsimile
       signature and left at the holder’s last and usual place of abode or sent
       by certified mail, return receipt requested, to the holder’s last known
       address of the impending automatic foreclosure and indicating the
       exact date of foreclosure. . . . If notice is not given in the time period
       specified in this section to the party named on the tax lien mortgage or
       to any record holder of a mortgage, the person not receiving timely
       notice may redeem the tax lien mortgage until 30 days after the
       treasurer does provide notice in the manner specified in this section.

Id. Additionally, if the municipality fails to provide notice in accordance with

section 942, then section 943 provides the taxpayer with an additional three months

to redeem the property after receiving actual knowledge of the recording of the tax

lien certificate.
                                                                                     11

      [¶12] We have previously interpreted the notice provision of 36 M.R.S.

§ 943 to “afford[] a thirty day period of redemption from the time that the

municipal officials in fact sent the notice,” provided that they send the notice by

one of the methods that the statute provides. Cummings v. Town of Oakland,

430 A.2d 825, 831 (Me. 1981). Therefore, when a property owner has already

received notice pursuant to section 942, the Town complies with the statutory

scheme and a property is deemed foreclosed thirty days after the municipality

sends the section-943 notice, provided that the notice is “left at the holder’s last

and usual place of abode or sent by certified mail, return receipt requested, to the

holder’s last known address.” See 36 M.R.S. § 943; Cummings, 430 A.2d at 831.

In this case, the parties stipulated that the notices were signed by the appropriate

officials, listed the appropriate taxes due, and correctly identified the real estate on

which those taxes were due. The only remaining question is whether the Town

complied with the respective timing provisions of 36 M.R.S. §§ 942 and 943.

Further, because “[t]he provisions of [sections] 942 and 943 delineate a mechanism

to achieve tax collections characterized by the concepts of a tax lien mortgage

deemed ‘strictly’ foreclosed by the mere expiration of a specified period of time

after the occurrence of a particular event and on the basis of which, without more

and automatically, a transfer of title to the municipality is achieved,” AVCO Delta

Fin. Corp. v. Town of Whitefield, 295 A.2d 921, 924 (Me. 1972), if the Town
12

demonstrates that it complied with the statutory scheme for a single tax year,

foreclosure of the municipal tax lien is proper.

      [¶13] For tax year 2004, taxes were assessed on August 17, 2004, and

Jeanne Stoops signed for the 2004 section-942 notice roughly nine months later, on

May 19, 2005. The Town recorded its tax lien on June 23, 2005, thirty-five days

after the Stoopses received the 2004 section-942 notice. Because the Town sent its

section-942 notice more than eight months after the tax was first assessed, and it

recorded its tax lien mortgage thirty-five days after sending the notice, the Town

complied with the timing requirements of 36 M.R.S. § 942 for tax year 2004.

      [¶14]    Similarly, section 943 dictates that eighteen months after the

recording of the tax lien, the tax-lien mortgage is deemed foreclosed if it has not

been paid. Section 943 requires the municipality to “notify the party named on the

tax lien mortgage and each record holder of a mortgage on the real estate not more

than 45 days nor less than 30 days before the foreclosing date of the tax lien

mortgage.”     Here, the tax lien was recorded on June 23, 2005, and the

eighteen-month redemption period expired on December 23, 2006. Because the

Town sent the 2004 section-943 notice on November 14, 2006, approximately

forty days before the expiration of the redemption period, and that notice indicated

that the mortgage would be foreclosed on December 23, the section-943 notice was

sent within the 30-to-45-day window dictated by section 943. Still, even though
                                                                                  13

the Town sent the 2004 section-943 notice within the time prescribed by the

statute, the notice was returned to the Town unclaimed. The Stoopses argue that

because the section-943 notice was returned unclaimed, the Town was required to

take additional steps to comply with the statute.

      [¶15] We previously had an occasion to determine whether 36 M.R.S. § 943

requires actual receipt of the section-943 notice.      In Cummings v. Town of

Oakland, the plaintiff-homeowners forwarded a similar argument, “that [section]

943 requires that the property owner be given ‘actual notice’ of the ‘impending

automatic foreclosure,’” meaning “that the property owner retains the right to [an]

additional 30 day period of redemption until receipt of notice of the impending

foreclosure.” 430 A.2d at 828, 829. In Cummings, we focused on the language,

applicable at the time, contained in 36 M.R.S. § 943 that stated that “the municipal

treasurer shall notify the party named . . . in a writing left at his last and usual

place of abode or sent by registered or certified mail, to his last known address.”

Cummings, 430 A.2d at 828-29 (emphasis added) (quotation marks omitted). We

reasoned:

             The words “shall notify” taken by themselves, may in some
      contexts import a requirement of actual notice or receipt of notice by
      the person to whom notice is to be given. Such import is negatived,
      however, where other language specifies the manner in which the
      notice is to be given. In such context, the clear intent of the language
      is that utilization of the notice mechanism provided for in the statute
      satisfies the statutory requirement of the giving of notice. In short, if
14

      the municipality sends the notice by one of the methods prescribed by
      the statute, it has given notice within the contemplation of the statute.

Id. at 829. Although the Stoopses argue that it is time for us to reconsider this

aspect of Cummings, we decline to do so.

      [¶16] As we stated in Cummings, “where the legislature speaks in terms

only of the giving of notice, it did not intend to require actual receipt of the notice

or actual communication of its contents as a precondition of the expiration of the

period of redemption.” Id. at 830. By designating the manner in which notice is to

be given for sections 942 and 943, then requiring actual receipt of notice if the

procedures dictated by section 942 are not followed, the Legislature demonstrated

that it “knows how to draft a statute so as to require the actual communication of

the content of a notice in the tax mortgage lien certificate situation.” Cummings,
430 A.2d at 829. Actual receipt of the 2004 section-943 notice was not necessary

because it was sent by certified mail, return receipt requested, as dictated by the

statute, and because the 2004 section-942 notice, which was also sent by certified

mail, return receipt requested, was actually received by the Stoopses.            Thus,

because the Town met the timing provisions of 36 M.R.S. § 943 and sent the

2004 section-943 notice by certified mail, return receipt requested, it complied

with the statute. See Cummings, 430 A.2d at 829-31.
                                                                                15

      [¶17] Although the court found that the Town complied with the statutory

scheme for tax years 2004, 2005, and 2006, we need only determine compliance

with respect to a single year to establish that the Town properly foreclosed on the

municipal tax lien.      Because the Town strictly adhered to the statutory

requirements for tax year 2004, it met its obligations pursuant to sections 942 and

943 to properly foreclose the municipal tax lien. See Cummings, 430 A.2d at

829-31.

B.    Due Process

      [¶18] The Stoopses also argue that the Town violated the Due Process

Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment by failing to provide adequate notice of the

impending automatic foreclosure.      Specifically, they advance three arguments:

(1) the United States Supreme Court’s decision in Jones v. Flowers, 547 U.S. 220

(2006), overrules our decision in Cummings; (2) the Town failed to comply with

the requirements of Jones; and (3) the section-942 notice is constitutionally

insufficient to notify the taxpayer of the pending automatic foreclosure, and thus,

the Town is required to provide actual communication of the content in the

section-943 notice to satisfy due process.

      [¶19] “Before a State may take property and sell it for unpaid taxes, the

Due Process Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment requires the government to

provide the owner notice and opportunity for hearing appropriate to the nature of
16

the case.” Jones, 547 U.S. at 223 (quotation marks omitted). “Due process does

not require that a property owner receive actual notice before the government may

take his property.” Id. at 226. Instead, “due process requires the government to

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. (quotation marks omitted); see Livonia v. Town of

Rome, 1998 ME 39, ¶ 6, 707 A.2d 83.

         1.      Whether Jones Overrules Cummings

         [¶20]     In Cummings, we held that a town’s compliance with the

requirements of 36 M.R.S. § 942 was sufficient to satisfy due process when the

landowners actually received the section-942 notice. See Cummings, 430 A.2d at

831-32. In that case, the landowners failed to pay their property taxes, prompting

the Town to send each of them notice pursuant to section 942.7 Id. at 827. The

landowners signed the certified mail receipts acknowledging that they received the

notices. Id. Later, the Town sent the section-943 notices, but those notices were

returned unclaimed.           Id.    After the redemption period expired, the Town,

“considering the [landowners’] home to have been tax-acquired . . . decided to sell

the home.” Id. The landowners discovered the Town’s plan and attempted to pay
     7
      In that case, the husband had title to the building and the wife had title to the land. Cummings v.
Town of Oakland, 430 A.2d 825, 827 (Me. 1981). Therefore, the Town sent a separate notice to each and
filed a separate lien on the property of each. Id.
                                                                                   17

the amount secured by the tax liens. Id. The Town refused to accept the payment,

prompting the landowners to file suit to compel the Town to accept the payment.

Id. In ruling that the Town did not violate the landowners’ due process rights in

foreclosing on the property, we stated:

             The due process notice requirement . . . is a threshold
      constitutional requirement to assure that the government does not
      appropriate private property interests without first taking reasonable
      steps to assure that the property owner is aware of both the danger of
      the loss of his interest and of the opportunity to avoid the forfeiture by
      performance of the acts necessary to that end. Once that threshold
      requirement has been met, the opportunity to avoid the forfeiture is
      available to the property owner and the burden reposes fully on him to
      do so by appropriate action. He is not entitled to receive, and the
      town is not obliged to give, any further notice of the impending
      danger to his interest in the property. The provision of that
      opportunity meets fully the constitutional requirement.

Id. at 832. Because the landowners received the section-942 notice—as evidenced

by the signed certified mail receipts—the Town satisfied its due process notice

obligations. Id. at 831-32. We held that the “second notice [as required by

36 M.R.S. § 943] is not itself of constitutional magnitude so long as it is given in a

nondiscriminatory manner to all persons similarly situated.” Id. at 832.

      [¶21] In Jones v. Flowers, the Arkansas Commissioner of State Lands sent a

notice of possible foreclosure by certified mail to a property owner because the

owner failed to pay taxes on a piece of property. 547 U.S. at 223. The notice was

returned unclaimed. Id. at 223-24. The property owner lived at a different address
18

and never received actual notice that his property was in danger of foreclosure. Id.

“Two years later, and just a few weeks before the public sale,” the Commissioner

published notice in a local newspaper and later sold the home to the defendant,

Flowers. Id. at 224. The United States Supreme Court addressed “whether due

process entails further responsibility when the government becomes aware prior to

the taking [of property by foreclosure due to failure to pay taxes] that its attempt at

notice has failed.” Id. at 227. The Court concluded that “the State should have

taken additional reasonable steps to notify Jones, if practicable to do so. . . . [I]f

there were no reasonable additional steps the government could have taken upon

return of the unclaimed notice letter, it cannot be faulted for doing nothing.” Id. at

234. The Court suggested that the government could have resent the notice by

regular mail so that the notice would be left at the residence with no need for a

signature, or could have posted notice on the front door of the residence. Id. at

234-35. Still, according to the Court, the decision did not announce any new

principle regarding Fourteenth Amendment Due Process, but rather was in accord

with previous decisions.       Id. at 238 (citing Dusenbery v. United States,

534 U.S. 161, 171 (2002); Mullane v. Cent. Hanover Bank & Trust Co.,

339 U.S. 306, 315 (1950)). Accordingly, the Court reiterated “that when notice is

a person’s due,” the government must employ means of notifying that person that

are “desirous of actually informing” the person that his or her rights are at issue.
                                                                                 19

Id. at 229 (quotation marks omitted); see also Mullane, 339 U.S. at 315 (“[P]rocess

which is a mere gesture is not due process.”). The Court concluded that “at the end

of the day . . . someone who actually wanted to alert Jones that he was in danger of

losing his house would do more when the attempted notice letter was returned

unclaimed, and there was more that reasonably could be done.” Jones, 547 U.S. at

238.

       [¶22] Cummings is distinguishable from Jones in one important respect: in

Cummings, the persons to whom notice was due actually received notice informing

them that they would lose their property if they did not take action.           See

Cummings, 430 A.2d at 829-31. In Cummings, our decision hinged on the fact that

the homeowners received the section-942 notice, as evidenced by the certified mail

receipts they each signed. Id. at 827. Because Jones involved the government

foreclosing on property without providing notice actually desirous of informing the

property owner of the pending foreclosure and Cummings involved property

owners who received actual notice through the means employed by the Town,

contrary to the Stoopses’ contention, Jones does not overrule Cummings.

       2.    Whether the Town Complied with the Requirements of Jones

       [¶23] Much like in Cummings, in this case, Jeanne Stoops signed for the

2004 section-942 notice. The trial court ruled that because Jeanne Stoops actually

received the 2004 section-942 notice as evidenced by the certified mail receipt
20

with her signature, the Town satisfied its due process notice obligations.

Nevertheless, under the facts of this case, we need not decide whether the single

receipt of a section-942 notice is sufficient to satisfy due process when the Town

knows that some notices are returned unclaimed. Here, the Town took additional

reasonable steps to inform the Stoopses that they were in danger of losing their

home, and the Stoopses actually received additional warnings.

      [¶24] Unlike the procedures utilized by Arkansas in Jones, even after the

Stoopses actually received the 2004 section-942 notice, the Town took “additional

reasonable steps” by sending the 2004 lien-foreclosure-warning letter, the

2005 lien-foreclosure-warning letter, and the 2006 lien-foreclosure-warning letter,

all by regular mail.    See Jones, 547 U.S. at 234-35 (suggesting that after

discovering that an initial notice of foreclosure went unclaimed, the state could

satisfy its due process obligations by sending the notice by regular mail). Further,

although the 2004 section-943 notice, the 2005 section-942 notice, and the

2006 section-942 notice were returned unclaimed, the Stoopses actually received

the 2005 section-943 notice and the 2006 section-943 notice, in addition to the

2004 section-942 notice, as evidenced by the certified mail receipts signed by

Jeanne Stoops and the Stoopses’ adult daughter. Thus, even if we were to decide

that the receipt of a single 2004 section-942 notice was insufficient to satisfy due

process, in this case the Stoopses received additional warnings that their home was
                                                                                   21

in danger of automatic foreclosure.       As required by Jones, the Town took

additional reasonable steps to warn the Stoopses of the pending foreclosure by

sending the lien-foreclosure-warning letters and sending the section 943-notices.

See Jones, 547 U.S. at 234-35.

      3.     Whether the Section-943 Notice is Constitutionally Required

      [¶25] The Stoopses also argue that this Court was incorrect in Cummings

when it stated that “[w]here the state gratuitously provides by statute for an

additional warning by notice of ‘impending automatic foreclosure’ [as required by

36 M.R.S. § 943] . . . that second notice is not itself of constitutional magnitude so

long as it is given in a nondiscriminatory manner to all persons similarly situated.”

Cummings, 430 A.2d at 832. The Stoopses assert that because the section-942

notice “does not threaten foreclosure, and does not mention any 18[-]month period

within which to pay the taxes or else forfeit the property,” the section-943 notice,

which specifically threatens automatic foreclosure, is the notice of constitutional

import, not the section-942 notice. We disagree.

      [¶26] With regard to the substance of notice required by the Due Process

Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment, the United States Supreme Court has stated:

             An elementary and fundamental requirement of due process in
      any proceeding which is to be accorded finality is 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. The notice must be of such nature as reasonably to
22

      convey the required information, and it must afford a reasonable time
      for those interested to make their appearance.

Mullane, 339 U.S. at 314 (citations omitted).

      [¶27] Contrary to the Stoopses’ assertions, the section-942 notice actually

informs the taxpayer that he or she could lose the property at issue if action is not

taken. Further, although the section-942 notice does not specifically mention the

eighteen-month redemption period, the notice does demand that the property owner

remit payment within thirty days and also informs the property owner that a lien is

being claimed on the property to secure that payment. As provided in this case, the

section-942 notice also stated that the property owner “MAY APPLY TO THE

MUNICIPAL OFFICERS FOR AN ABATEMENT OF TAXES IF, BECAUSE

OF POVERTY OR INFIRMITY, YOU CANNOT PAY THE TAXES THAT

HAVE BEEN ASSESSED.” Under the requirements of Mullane, 339 U.S. at 314,

the information provided by the section-942 notice is sufficient to apprise property

owners that they will lose their property if they do not take action.            The

section-942 notice also allows the taxpayer to take action within thirty days to

avoid property loss, and the statutory redemption period provides the taxpayer

eighteen additional months to take action. Therefore, the notice provided by a

section-942 notice is constitutionally sufficient. See Mullane, 339 U.S. at 314;

Cummings, 430 A.2d at 832.
                                                                               23

                                III. CONCLUSION

      [¶28] The Town complied with 36 M.R.S. §§ 942 and 943 by sending

notices by certified mail, return receipt requested, to the residence owned and

occupied by the Stoopses.      The statutory scheme laid out by the Legislature

provides a safeguard against situations like that described in Jones, where the

government automatically forecloses on a property without adequately notifying

the property owners of the pending action. The Stoopses actually received notice

of the pending automatic foreclosure, as evidenced by the certified mail receipts

for the 2004 section-942 notice signed by Jeanne Stoops, the 2005 section-943

notice also signed by Jeanne Stoops, and the 2006 section-943 notice signed by the

Stoopses’ adult daughter. Further, the Town took additional reasonable steps to

notify the Stoopses of the pending automatic foreclosure by sending

lien-foreclosure-warning letters by regular mail. Therefore, the Town did not

violate the Stoopses’ rights under the Due Process Clause of the Fourteenth

Amendment by foreclosing on the municipal tax lien placed on the property. We

affirm the trial court’s judgment in favor of the Nelsons.

      The entry is:

                          Judgment affirmed.
24

On the briefs:

        Jefferson T. Ashby, Esq., Pine Tree Legal Assistance, Inc., Presque Isle, for
        appellants Jeffrey Stoops and Jeanne Stoops

        Richard D. Solman, Esq., Solman & Hunter, P.A., Caribou, for appellee
        Richard Nelson

        Susanne F. Pilgrim, Esq., Maine Municipal Association, for amicus curiae
        Maine Municipal Association

At oral argument:

        Jefferson T. Ashby, Esq., for appellants Jeffrey Stoops and Jeanne Stoops

        Richard D. Solman, Esq., for appellee Richard Nelson

Aroostook County (Caribou) Superior Court docket number RE-2009-31
FOR CLERK REFERENCE ONLY