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DON'T ALWAYS MAX THE TAX!

The sale is over; now, all you need to do is issue the Trustee's Deed, right? Yes, but. . .

Part of the Trustee's Deed information is the Documentary Transfer Tax. Sometimes, there is also a city transfer tax. Watch how you figure these types of taxes. You don't always want to max the tax!

The recent case of Brown v. County of Los Angeles, 72 Cal.App.4th 665, 85 Cal.Rptr. 2d 414 (2d Dist. 1999) held that a third-party purchaser at a foreclosure sale must pay transfer tax based on the purchase price and not on the amount of unpaid indebtedness which she assumes.

Minnie Brown came to town and entered into the business of purchasing properties at foreclosure sales. In 1994, she paid $255,859.42 for property at a nonjudicial foreclosure sale. The unpaid debt foreclosed upon was $480,691.18. She was not a beneficiary of the foreclosed Deed of Trust or otherwise affiliated with the property. When she recorded the Trustee's Deed with the County, she was assessed documentary transfer taxes of $529.10, based on the unpaid debt amount. The City of Los Angeles assessed her transfer taxes of $2,164.50, also based on the unpaid debt amount. She paid both taxes under protest and then filed claims for refunds. The amount of tax based on her purchase price would have been $281.60 for the County and $1,152 for the City. The trial court awarded her judgment for the difference in taxes, her attorneysí fees and costs. The County and City appealed.

The appellate court examined whether transfer taxes resulting from a foreclosure sale should be based on the purchase price or the unpaid debt.

The court found that, by an unwritten policy, the County of Los Angeles determines the value of the transfer and bases the tax upon either the actual purchase price or the amount of the unpaid debt, whichever is greater. The authorization for the tax is in Revenue and Taxation Code §11911(a). When the purchaser is not the beneficiary or the borrower, the reference in §11911 to "consideration" means the purchase price paid at the foreclosure sale. The "value" of the property has no basis here because the consideration is the purchase price paid at the foreclosure sale. If the County wishes the statute changed, it should go to the Legislature, said the Court. It notes that in a deed-in-lieu of foreclosure situation, there is no tax unless the value of the property exceeds the amount of unpaid debt. The Court granted a declaratory judgment because Brown "frequently purchases property at trusteeís sales" and the County could continue to tax her at the wrong rate in the future.

So be sure you know who bought the property and on which figure you are calculating the transfer taxes. If the buyer is not the beneficiary or the borrower, the tax is figured on the purchase price at the Trustee's sale (whether it is higher or lower than the indebtedness).


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