Tyler vs. Hennepin County
Tyler vs. Hennepin County
Tyler vs. Hennepin County
Syllabus
Syllabus
Syllabus
Syllabus
No. 22–166
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if at the end of three years the bill has not been paid, abso-
lute title vests in the State, and the tax debt is extin-
guished. §§281.18, 282.07. The State may keep the prop-
erty for public use or sell it to a private party. §282.01
subds. 1a, 3. If the property is sold, any proceeds in excess
of the tax debt and the costs of the sale remain with the
County, to be split between it, the town, and the school dis-
trict. §282.08. The former owner has no opportunity to re-
cover this surplus.
Geraldine Tyler is 94 years old. In 1999, she bought a
one-bedroom condominium in Minneapolis and lived alone
there for more than a decade. But as Tyler aged, she and
her family decided that she would be safer in a senior com-
munity, so they moved her to one in 2010. Nobody paid the
property taxes on the condo in Tyler’s absence and, by 2015,
it had accumulated about $2300 in unpaid taxes and
$13,000 in interest and penalties. Acting under Minne-
sota’s forfeiture procedures, Hennepin County seized the
condo and sold it for $40,000, extinguishing the $15,000
debt. App. 5. The County kept the remaining $25,000 for
its own use.
Tyler filed a putative class action against Hennepin
County and its officials, asserting that the County had un-
constitutionally retained the excess value of her home
above her tax debt. As relevant, she brought claims under
the Takings Clause of the Fifth Amendment and the Exces-
sive Fines Clause of the Eighth Amendment.
The District Court dismissed the suit for failure to state
a claim. 505 F. Supp. 3d 879, 883 (Minn. 2020). The Eighth
Circuit affirmed. 26 F. 4th 789, 790 (2022). It held that
“[w]here state law recognizes no property interest in sur-
plus proceeds from a tax-foreclosure sale conducted after
adequate notice to the owner, there is no unconstitutional
taking.” Id., at 793. The court also rejected Tyler’s claim
under the Excessive Fines Clause, adopting the District
Court’s reasoning that the forfeiture was not a fine because
Cite as: 598 U. S. ____ (2023) 3
1791 Ga. Laws p. 14; 1801 Ky. Acts pp. 78–79, §4; 1797 Md. Laws ch. 90,
§§4–5; 1786 Mass. Acts pp. 360–361; 1792 N. H. Laws p. 194; 1792 N. C.
Sess. Laws p. 23, §5; 1801 N. Y. Laws pp. 498–499, §17; 1787 Vt. Acts &
Resolves p. 126. Kentucky made an exception for unregistered land, or
land that the owner had “fail[ed] to list . . . for taxation,” with such land
forfeiting to the State. 1801 Ky. Acts p. 80, §5.
8 TYLER v. HENNEPIN COUNTY
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2 Many of these new States required that the land be sold to whichever
buyer would “pay [the tax debt] for the least number of acres” and pro-
vided that the land forfeited to the State only if it failed to sell “for want
of bidders” because the land was worth less than the taxes owed. 1821
Ohio pp. 27–28, §§7, 10; see also 1837 Ark. Acts pp. 14–17, §§83, 100;
1844 Ill. Laws pp. 13, 18, §§51, 77; 1859 Minn. Laws pp. 58, 61, §§23, 38;
1859 Wis. Laws Ch. 22, pp. 22–23, §§7, 9; cf. Iowa Code pp. 120–121,
§§766, 773 (1860) (requiring that property be offered for sale “until all
the taxes shall have been paid”); see also O’Brien v. Coulter, 2 Blackf.
421, 425 (Ind. 1831) (per curiam) (“[S]o much only of the defendant’s
property shall be sold at one time, as a sound judgment would dictate to
be sufficient to pay the debt.”).
3 North Carolina amended its laws in 1842 to permit the forfeiture of
Cite as: 598 U. S. ____ (2023) 9
“from the owner the right accorded him by the act of 1861,
of applying for and receiving from the treasury the surplus
proceeds of the sale of his lands.” Taylor, 104 U. S., at 218–
219.
We extended a taxpayer’s right to surplus even further in
United States v. Lawton, 110 U. S. 146 (1884). The property
owner had an unpaid tax bill under the 1862 Act for
$170.50. Id., at 148. The Federal Government seized the
taxpayer’s property and, instead of selling it to a private
buyer, kept the property for itself at a value of $1100. Ibid.
The property owner sought to recover the excess value from
the Government, but the Government refused. Ibid. The
1861 Act explicitly provided that any surplus from tax sales
to private parties had to be returned to the owner, but it did
not mention paying the property owner the excess value
where the Government kept the property for its own use in-
stead of selling it. See 12 Stat. 304. We held that the tax-
payer was still entitled to the surplus under the statute,
just as if the Government had sold the property. Lawton,
110 U. S., at 149–150. Though the 1861 statute did not ex-
plicitly provide the right to the surplus under such circum-
stances, “[t]o withhold the surplus from the owner would be
to violate the Fifth Amendment to the Constitution and to
deprive him of his property without due process of law, or
to take his property for public use without just compensa-
tion.” Id., at 150.
The County argues that Taylor and Lawton were super-
seded by Nelson v. City of New York, 352 U. S. 103 (1956),
but that case is readily distinguished. There New York City
foreclosed on properties for unpaid water bills. Under the
governing ordinance, a property owner had almost two
months after the city filed for foreclosure to pay off the tax
debt, and an additional 20 days to ask for the surplus from
any tax sale. Id., at 104–105, n. 1. No property owner re-
quested his surplus within the required time. The owners
later sued the city, claiming that it had denied them due
Cite as: 598 U. S. ____ (2023) 11
D
Finally, Minnesota law itself recognizes that in other con-
texts a property owner is entitled to the surplus in excess of
her debt. Under state law, a private creditor may enforce a
judgment against a debtor by selling her real property, but
“[n]o more shall be sold than is sufficient to satisfy” the
debt, and the creditor may receive only “so much [of the pro-
ceeds] as will satisfy” the debt. Minn. Stat. §§550.20,
550.08 (2022). Likewise, if a bank forecloses on a home be-
cause the homeowner fails to pay the mortgage, the home-
owner is entitled to the surplus from the sale. §580.10.
In collecting all other taxes, Minnesota protects the tax-
payer’s right to surplus. If a taxpayer falls behind on her
income tax and the State seizes and sells her property,
“[a]ny surplus proceeds . . . shall . . . be credited or re-
funded” to the owner. §§270C.7101, 270C.7108, subd. 2. So
too if a taxpayer does not pay taxes on her personal prop-
erty, like a car. §277.21, subd. 13. Until 1935, Minnesota
followed the same rule for the sale of real property. The
State could sell only the “least quantity” of land sufficient
to satisfy the debt, 1859 Minn. Laws p. 58, §23, and “any
surplus realized from the sale must revert to the owner,”
Farnham, 32 Minn., at 11, 19 N. W., at 85.
The State now makes an exception only for itself, and
only for taxes on real property. But “property rights cannot
be so easily manipulated.” Cedar Point Nursery v. Hassid,
594 U. S. ___, ___ (2021) (slip op., at 13) (internal quotation
marks omitted). Minnesota may not extinguish a property
interest that it recognizes everywhere else to avoid paying
just compensation when it is the one doing the taking. Phil-
lips, 524 U. S., at 167.
IV
The County argues that Tyler has no interest in the sur-
plus because she constructively abandoned her home by
Cite as: 598 U. S. ____ (2023) 13
failing to pay her taxes. States and localities have long im-
posed “reasonable conditions” on property ownership. Tex-
aco, Inc. v. Short, 454 U. S. 516, 526 (1982). In Minnesota,
one of those conditions is paying property taxes. By neglect-
ing this reasonable condition, the County argues, the owner
can be considered to have abandoned her property and is
therefore not entitled to any compensation for its taking.
See Minn. Stat. §282.08.
The County portrays this as just another example in the
long tradition of States taking title to abandoned property.
We upheld one such statutory scheme in Texaco. There, In-
diana law dictated that a mineral interest automatically re-
verted to the owner of the land if not used for 20 years. 454
U. S., at 518. Use included excavating minerals, renting
out the right to excavate, paying taxes, or simply filing a
“statement of claim with the local recorder of deeds.” Id.,
at 519. Owners who lost their mineral interests challenged
the statute as unconstitutional. We held that the statute
did not violate the Takings Clause because the State “has
the power to condition the permanent retention of [a] prop-
erty right on the performance of reasonable conditions that
indicate a present intention to retain the interest.” Id., at
526 (emphasis added). Indiana reasonably “treat[ed] a min-
eral interest that ha[d] not been used for 20 years and for
which no statement of claim ha[d] been filed as abandoned.”
Id., at 530. There was thus no taking, for “after abandon-
ment, the former owner retain[ed] no interest for which he
may claim compensation.” Ibid.
The County suggests that here, too, Tyler constructively
abandoned her property by failing to comply with a reason-
able condition imposed by the State. But the County cites
no case suggesting that failing to pay property taxes is itself
sufficient for abandonment. Cf. Krueger v. Market, 124
Minn. 393, 397, 145 N. W. 30, 32 (1914) (owner did not
abandon property despite failing to pay taxes for 30 years).
Abandonment requires the “surrender or relinquishment or
14 TYLER v. HENNEPIN COUNTY
No. 22–166
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