Your Home; Tax Liens Can Enrich Investors
By Jay Romano The New York Times Published: August 15,
1999
ANYONE who has seriously contemplated making money in
real estate has probably encountered the arcane but
potentially profitable practice of investing in tax
liens at public sales -- the legal process through which
municipalities obtain payment of delinquent property
taxes.
Real estate experts say it is possible to make a secure
investment with a high rate of return in property tax
liens, even for unsophisticated investors. And savvier,
more careful and more knowledgeable investors can even
obtain title to real estate for a small fraction of its
market value by buying property at a tax foreclosure
sale, the experts say.
"Tax liens can be a great investment," said Saul M.
Simon, a certified financial planner for Allmerica
Investments in Edison, N.J., "as long as you know what
you're doing."
Mr. Simon said that investors must normally seek out
these sales independently. Tax lien investments are
generally not marketed like securities by brokerage
houses. The investors must be aware that states have
different procedures for handling properties on which
the owner has failed to pay property taxes. In New
Jersey, for example, municipalities are allowed to
"sell" their tax liens -- or their right to foreclose on
a property when the owner has failed to pay taxes -- at
public auction. Mr. Simon said he has realized a 16
percent rate of return on tax lien certificates he has
purchased in these sales.
So what is a municipal tax lien certificate?
"It's a memorialization of a town's lien for unpaid
taxes on a property," said Hugh McGuire, a Jersey City
real estate lawyer. When a property owner in New Jersey
fails to pay local property taxes, he said, the
municipality acquires an automatic lien against the
property. That lien gives the municipality the right to
force the sale of the property to raise the money
necessary to pay the overdue taxes.
Usually, however, instead of foreclosing, most
municipalities take advantage of a provision in state
law that allows the tax collector to sell the
municipality's lien in exchange for the payment of
overdue taxes, Mr. McGuire said. To make it worthwhile
for investors to buy those liens, the law also allows
the buyer to collect interest on the amount he paid when
he redeems the lien.
Mr. McGuire said that the interest rate that applies to
a particular lien is determined at the time the lien is
sold by the municipality. The maximum interest rate
permitted by New Jersey law -- and the rate offered at
the time of sale -- is 18 percent. Accordingly, when a
tax collector holds a tax lien sale, investors will
"bid" for liens on particular properties, Mr. McGuire
said. Since the municipality is interested in obtaining
payment of all of the unpaid taxes, however, all bidders
must bid the entire amount of unpaid taxes. The
successful bidder is the one who is willing to accept
the lowest interest rate.
So, for example, if only one bidder is present, he will
obtain the highest interest rate permitted by state law
-- 18 percent. If a rival bidder is present, however, he
may "bid down" to 17 percent, meaning that he is willing
to pay the overdue taxes in exchange for a 17 percent
rate of return.
"Most people purchase tax lien certificates with the
hope that at some point in time, someone will come
forward" and reimburse the investor for his outlay,
paying any interest charges that have accrued, Mr.
McGuire said. That is what happens in most cases, he
added.
For example, if the original owner tries to sell the
property, the buyer will require that all back taxes and
tax liens -- as well as interest due any lienholders --
be paid in full. And when it appears that the lien might
not be satisfied, either because the owner cannot be
located or cannot or will not sell the property, the law
gives the lienholder the right to foreclose after
holding the lien for at least two years, Mr. McGuire
explained.
"If your ultimate intention is to foreclose," Mr.
McGuire said, "it is usually wise to continue paying
taxes for the two-year period to prevent someone else
from picking up a subsequent year's lien." Generally
speaking, he said, it makes sense for investors to pay
taxes that accrue during the waiting period because when
they redeem a lien, they are allowed to collect interest
on any additional taxes paid at the same rate
established at the tax sale.
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