Chapter 351
2018 -- H 7816 AS AMENDED
Enacted 07/10/2018

A N   A C T
RELATING TO TAXATION -- TAX SALES

Introduced By: Representative Robert E. Craven
Date Introduced: February 28, 2018

It is enacted by the General Assembly as follows:
     SECTION 1. Sections 44-9-1, 44-9-5, 44-9-12, 44-9-13, 44-9-21, 44-9-24, 44-9-28, 44-9-
29, 44-9-30, 44-9-31 and 44-9-43 of the General Laws in Chapter 44-9 entitled "Tax Sales" are
hereby amended to read as follows:
     44-9-1. Tax liens on real estate Tax titles on real estate.
     (a) Taxes assessed against any person in any city or town for either personal property or
real estate shall constitute a lien on the real estate. The lien shall arise and attach as of the date of
assessment of the taxes, as defined in § 44-5-1.
     (b) The lien shall terminate at the expiration of three (3) years thereafter after it first
arises if the estate has in the meantime been alienated and the instrument alienating the estate has
been recorded and no action for the enforcement of the lien has commenced; otherwise, it shall
continue until a recorded alienation of the estate. The lien shall be superior to any other lien,
encumbrance, or interest in the real estate whether by way of mortgage, attachment, receivership
order, or otherwise, except easements, and restrictions, and prior tax title(s) held by the Rhode
Island Housing and Mortgage Finance Corporation housing and mortgage finance corporation.
A final decree foreclosing all rights of redemption under this title shall constitute an alienation
within the meaning of this section. The tax sale shall constitute an enforcement of the lien, but
itself shall not constitute an alienation.
     44-9-5. Agreements between cities or towns and fire districts, water districts, sewer
districts, road districts, lighting districts, and lien priorities.
     (a) Cities and towns and fire districts, water districts, sewer districts, road districts, and
lighting districts are authorized to make agreements with respect to the parcel of property upon
which they respectively own tax liens titles in respect to the disposition of the liens, of the parcel
of property subject to the liens, and of the proceeds of a tax sale of the property.
     (b) If no agreement is in place, liens arising under § 44-9-1 shall be superior to any other
lien.
     44-9-12. Collector's deed -- Rights conveyed to purchaser -- Recording.
     (a) The collector shall execute and deliver to the purchaser a deed of the land stating the
cause of sale; the price for which the land was sold; the places where the notices were posted; the
name of the newspaper in which the advertisement of the sale was published; the names and
addresses of all parties who were sent notice in accordance with the provisions of §§ 44-9-10 and
44-9-11; the residence of the grantee; and if notice of the sale was given to the Rhode Island
housing and mortgage finance corporation and/or to the department division of elderly affairs
under the provisions of § 44-9-10. The deed shall convey the land to the purchaser, subject to the
right of redemption. The conveyed title shall, until redemption or until the right of redemption is
foreclosed, be held as security for the repayment of the purchase price with all intervening costs,
terms imposed for redemption, and charges, with interest; and the premises conveyed, both before
and after either redemption or foreclosure, shall also be subject to, and have the benefit of, all
easements and restrictions lawfully existing in, upon, or over the land or appurtenant to the land.
The deed is not valid against any intervening interests unless recorded within sixty (60) days after
the sale. If the deed is recorded, it is prima facie evidence of all facts essential to the validity of
the title conveyed by the deed. It shall be the duty of the collector to record the deed within sixty
(60) days of the sale and to forward said deed promptly to the tax sale purchaser. The applicable
recording fee shall be paid by the purchaser. The purchaser shall be reimbursed for said fee upon
redemption by the redeeming party, if any. Except as provided, no sale shall give to the purchaser
any right to either the possession, or the rents or profits of the land until the expiration of one year
after the date of the sale, nor shall any sale obviate or transfer any responsibility of an owner of
property to comply with any statute of this state or ordinance of any municipality governing the
use, occupancy, or maintenance or conveyance of property until the right of redemption is
foreclosed.
     (b) The rents to which the purchaser shall be entitled after the expiration of one year and
prior to redemption shall be those net rents actually collected by the former fee holder or a
mortgagee under an assignment of rents. Rents shall not include mere rental value of the land, nor
shall the purchaser be entitled to any rent for owner-occupied, single-unit residential property.
For purposes of redemption, net rents shall be computed by deducting from gross rents actually
collected any sums expended directly or on behalf of the tenant from whom the rent was
collected. Such expenditure shall include utilities furnished, repairs made to the tenanted unit, and
services provided for the benefit of the tenant. However, mortgagee payments, taxes, and sums
expended for general repair and renovation (i.e. capital improvements) shall not be deductible
expenses in the computation of the rent.
     (c) This tax title purchaser shall not be liable for any enforcement or penalties arising
from violations of environmental or minimum-housing standards prior to the expiration of one
year from the date of the tax sale, or five (5) years from the date of the tax sale if the Rhode
Island housing and mortgage finance corporation is the tax title purchaser pursuant to § 44-9-8.3,
except for violations that are the result of intentional acts by the tax sale purchaser or his or her
agents.
     (d) Upon the expiration of one year after the date of the sale, the tax title holder shall be
jointly and severally liable with the owner for all responsibility and liability for the property and
shall be responsible to comply with any statute of this state or ordinance of any municipality
governing the use, occupancy, or maintenance or conveyance of the property even prior to the
right of redemption being foreclosed; except, however, that if the Rhode Island housing and
mortgage finance corporation is the tax title holder pursuant to § 44-9-8.3, then joint and several
liability shall arise upon the expiration of five (5) years after the date of the sale. Nothing in this
section shall be construed to confer any liability upon a city or town that receives tax title as a
result of any bids being made for the land offered for sale at an amount equal to the tax and
charges.
     (e) In the event that the tax lien title is acquired by the Rhode Island housing and
mortgage finance corporation, and said the corporation has paid the taxes due, title shall remain
with the owner of the property, subject to the right of the corporation to take the property in its
own name, pursuant to applicable statutes and any regulations duly adopted by the corporation.
Upon such notice by the corporation, the collector shall execute and deliver a deed to the
corporation as herein provided.
     (f) The priority of any tax title with respect to other tax titles shall be determined by the
chronological order in which the underlying tax sales were conducted, with subsequent tax titles
being superior to earlier tax titles.
     (g) The holder of an earlier tax title shall be entitled to exercise the right of redemption
with respect to any subsequent tax title, in the manner provided in this chapter, unless and until
the right to redeem the subsequent tax title is foreclosed in accordance with this chapter. The
holder of an earlier tax title shall be entitled to notice of any proceedings to foreclose the right of
redemption with respect to a subsequent tax title.
     (h) The mere existence of a subsequent tax title shall have no effect upon:
     (1) The existence or validity of an earlier tax title; or
     (2) The validity of any proceedings to foreclose the right of redemption with respect to
the earlier tax title, so long as the right of redemption with respect to a subsequent tax title has not
been foreclosed.
     (i) Any proceeding to foreclose the right of redemption with respect to an earlier tax title
shall have no effect upon a subsequent tax title, and in any such proceeding, the holder of a
subsequent tax title is not a necessary party.
     44-9-13. Entry by collector not required -- Recording of tax sale list.
     (a) No entry upon the land by the collector shall be deemed necessary, but the collector in
all cases of sales of real estate shall deliver to the clerk's or recorder's office a list of those
properties sold at tax sale which that the clerk or recorder shall record or post in the land
evidence records for their city or town within five (5) business days after the sale of real estate.
The recorded or posted list shall include the assessed owner's name, the address of the property,
and the assessor's plat and lot, and the recorded or posted list shall be conclusive evidence of the
facts stated in the list.
     (b) No properties shall be sold at tax sale to any bidder who is delinquent in the paying of
taxes or is an officer, more than ten percent (10%) shareholder or owner of a partnership or
corporation or limited-liability company that is delinquent in the paying of taxes on any property
located within the city or town in which the tax sale is held, unless the bidder has agreed to a
written payment plan approved by the collector and is current on any and all payments required
by the plan; provided, however, that no bidder shall be deemed to be delinquent for the purposes
of this subsection if that bidder owes property taxes solely on properties wherein the right of
redemption under § 44-9-25 has not yet been foreclosed. The collector may require a bidder or an
authorized officer or partner of the bidder to execute an affidavit that the bidder is qualified under
this provision.
     44-9-21. Redemption from purchaser other than city or town.
     Any person may redeem by paying or tendering to a purchaser, other than the city or
town, his or her legal representatives, or assigns, or to the person to whom an assignment of a tax
title has been made by the city or town, at any time prior to the filing of the petition for
foreclosure, in the case of a purchaser the original sum and any intervening taxes which that have
been paid to the municipality plus interest thereon at the rate of one percent (1%) per month and
costs paid by him or her, plus a penalty as provided in § 44-9-19, or in the case of an assignee of a
tax title from a city or town, the amount stated in the instrument of assignment, plus the above-
mentioned penalty. He or she may also redeem the land by paying or tendering to the treasurer the
sum which that he or she would be required to pay to the purchaser or to the assignee of a tax
title, in which case the city or town treasurer shall be constituted the agent of the purchaser or
assignee until the expiration of one year from the date of sale and not thereafter. The right of
redemption may be exercised only by those entitled to notice of the sale pursuant to §§ 44-9-10
and 44-9-11.
     44-9-24. Title absolute after foreclosure of redemption -- Jurisdiction of
proceedings.
     The title conveyed by a tax collector's deed shall be absolute after foreclosure of the right
of redemption by decree of the superior court as provided in this chapter. Notwithstanding the
rules of civil procedure or the provisions of chapter 21 of title 9, no decree shall be vacated
except in a separate action instituted within one year six (6) months following entry of the decree
and in no event for any reason, later than one year six (6) months following the entry of decree.
Furthermore, the action to vacate shall only be instituted for inadequacy of notice of the petition
amounting to a denial of due process or for the invalidity of the tax sale because the taxes for
which the property was sold had been paid or were not due and owing because the property was
exempt from the payment of such taxes. The superior court shall have exclusive jurisdiction of
the foreclosure of all rights of redemption from titles conveyed by a tax collector's deed, and the
foreclosure proceedings shall follow the course of equity in a proceeding provided for in §§ 44-9-
25 -- 44-9-33.
     44-9-28. Order as to parties in default.
     After the fixed return day, to be at least twenty (20) days after the time of the actual
issuance of notice, the court shall, if satisfied that the notice has been properly given, on motion
of the petitioner shall enter an order defaulting all persons failing to appear file a timely answer,
and decreeing that the petition as to them be taken as confessed (Form 8).
     44-9-29. Redemption by party to foreclosure proceedings.
     Any person claiming an interest, on or before the return day or within that further time as
may on motion be allowed by the court, providing said the motion is made prior to the fixed
return day, shall, if he or she desires to redeem, file an answer setting forth his or her right in the
land, and an offer to redeem upon the terms as may be fixed by the court. The Where an answer
has been timely filed, the court shall hear the parties, and may in its discretion make a finding
allowing the party to redeem, within a time fixed by the court, upon payment to the petitioner of
an amount sufficient to cover the original sum, costs, penalties, and all subsequent taxes, costs,
and interest to which the petitioner may be entitled, together with the costs of the proceeding and
counsel fee as the court deems reasonable. The court may impose other terms as justice and the
circumstances warrant.
     44-9-30. Decree barring redemption.
     If a default is entered under § 44-9-28, or if redemption is not made within the time and
upon the terms fixed by the court under § 44-9-29, or if at the time fixed for the hearing the
person claiming the right to redeem does not appear to urge his or her claim, after having filed a
timely answer, or if upon hearing the court determines that the facts shown do not entitle the
person to redeem, a decree shall be entered which shall forever bar all rights of redemption.
     44-9-31. Contest of validity of tax title.
     If a person claiming an interest desires to raise any question concerning the validity of a
tax title, the person shall do so by answer filed in the proceeding on or before the return day, or
within that further time as may on motion be allowed by the court, providing said the motion is
made prior to the fixed return date, or else be forever barred from contesting or raising the
question in any other proceeding. He or she shall also file specifications setting forth the matters
upon which he or she relies to defeat the title; and unless the specifications are filed, all questions
of the validity or invalidity of the title, whether in the form of the deed or proceedings relating to
the sale, shall be deemed to have been waived. Upon the filing of the specifications, the court
shall hear the parties and shall enter a decree in conformity with the law on the facts found.
     44-9-43. Refund of purchase price when title based on collector's sale, treasurer's
assignment, or sale without foreclosure adjudged invalid.
     (a) If, as the result of a petition, the petitioner's title based on a collector's sale, treasurer's
assignment, or sale without foreclosure is determined to be invalid by the superior court because
of errors or irregularities in the tax proceedings upon which it was based, the clerk, upon request,
shall issue a certificate to that effect. The treasurer of the city or town where the land affected by
the title is situated, upon receipt of a deed from the petitioner conveying all of the interest which
that he or she may have under it, together with the certificate, shall refund to the holder the
amount paid, therefore therefor plus statutory interest at the rate of one percent (1%) per month
from the date of payment until the date of refund, notwithstanding the provisions of § 45-15-5.
The taxing authority may recover any interest paid to a tax sale purchaser under this section from
the delinquent assessed owner of the property as if the tax sale of the property had not been held.
     (b) If, prior to the filing of a petition, the title based on a collector's sale, treasurer's
assignment, or sale without foreclosure is determined to be invalid by mutual agreement of the
municipality and tax title holder, because of errors or irregularities in the tax proceedings upon
which it was based, the treasurer of the city or town where the land affected by the title is
situated, upon receipt of a deed from the tax title holder conveying all of the interest which that
they may have under it, shall refund to the holder the amount paid therefore therefor plus
statutory interest at the rate of one percent (1%) per month from the date of payment until the date
of refund, notwithstanding the provisions of § 45-15-5. The taxing authority may recover any
interest paid to a tax sale purchaser under this section from the delinquent assessed owner of the
property as if the tax sale of the property had not been held. Nothing in this subsection shall
abrogate the authority of a municipality’s tax collector to redeem from a tax sale purchaser, in
accordance with § 44-9-21, before an action to foreclose the right of redemption under § 44-9-25
section 25 of this chapter has been filed, any property sold at tax sale where the collector
determines administrative error has occurred.
     SECTION 2. Chapter 44-9 of the General Laws entitled "Tax Sales" is hereby amended
by adding thereto the following section:
     44-9-25.3. Expedited foreclosure of the rights of redemption on account of vacancy.
     (a) Notwithstanding the provisions of §§ 44-9-25 and 44-9-25.1 following a sale of
property for taxes or fees, whomever then holds the title thereby acquired may bring a petition to
the superior court for the foreclosure of all rights of redemption after the passage of sixty (60)
days from the date of recording of the tax sale deed upon a finding by the superior court that the
structure(s) thereon are vacant and either vandalized and/or in a non-code compliant condition. A
certificate from the local building official attesting to the vacant and vandalized and/or non-code
compliant condition of such the structure(s) shall be prima facie evidence of such the condition,
but additional evidence may be presented to the court to affirm the conditions alleged in the
petition. A municipality, by and through its building official, may choose to issue a certificate as
referenced in this section, however, neither a municipality nor its building official are obligated
under this section to issue said certificate. The issuance of said certificate is discretionary and not
mandatory.
     (b) In the event that a petition to foreclose the right of redemption is filed under the
provisions of this section, notice of the filing of said the petition shall be given to the taxing
authority that conducted the sale by in person service, upon the taxing authority's collector,
thereby ending the period during which the taxpayer may redeem through the taxing authority.
     (c) A petitioner who has utilized this expedited foreclosure process shall commence, or
cause to be commenced, substantial rehabilitation of the structure(s) on such the parcel within six
(6) months following the entry of the final foreclosure decree or be immediately subject to the
non-utilization penalty set forth in chapter 5.1 of title 44.
     SECTION 3. This act shall take effect upon passage.
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