FINAL BILL REPORT

 

 

                                   SHB 1297

 

 

                                  C 134 L 88

 

 

BYHouse Committee on Agriculture & Rural Development (originally sponsored by Representatives Rayburn, Nealey, Kremen and McLean)

 

 

Establishing procedures to foreclose on properties with delinquent payments of assessments.

 

 

House Committe on Agriculture & Rural Development

 

 

Senate Committee on Agriculture

 

 

                              SYNOPSIS AS ENACTED

 

BACKGROUND:

 

The statutory procedure for foreclosing on delinquent assessments owed to an irrigation district is prescribed under obsolete statute law originally enacted in 1890.  In Wenatchee Reclamation District v. Mustell, 102 Wn.2d 721 (1984), the Washington state supreme court invalidated this procedure on the ground that it violated "due process" requirements, particularly requirements pertaining to notification of parties with financial interests in the property to be foreclosed.  As a result of this decision irrigation districts are effectively precluded from using foreclosure as a remedy for collecting delinquent irrigation assessments and costs and interests resulting from delinquency.

 

SUMMARY:

 

The irrigation district foreclosure law is repealed and a new more modern foreclosure procedure, designed to satisfy "due process" requirements, is established.  This procedure, similar to the property tax foreclosure procedure, contains the following key requirements:

 

      (1) After irrigation district assessments are delinquent for three years, the district will prepare a certificate of delinquency containing, among other things, the lien amount of the assessments, costs, and interest due.

 

      (2) The district will then institute foreclosure proceedings and serve a "notice and summons" on each "party in interest."  "Party in interest" is defined to include an occupant of the property, the owner of record, mortgage holder, or other person having a financial interest of record in the property.  The notice and summons must include, among other things, the lien amount due, a description of the property, a direction that the party should appear and defend the foreclosure action or pay the lien amount due, and a notice that failure to appear or pay the amount due will result in a foreclosure sale of the property at a specified date, time and place.

 

      (3) If the court finds for the district and renders a judgment of foreclosure, then, at least 10 days before the foreclosure sale, the district must publish a notice of sale specifying, among other things, the property to be sold, the lien amount due, the place, date and time of the sale, and that the sale will not take place if the amount due is paid at least one day before the date of the sale.

 

      (4) At the foreclosure sale, the property will be sold to the "highest and best bidder," so long as the bid is for a minimum amount specified by the court in its foreclosure judgment. Amounts in excess of the lien amount due will be remitted to the owner of the property, if requested by the owner.  The purchaser will be granted a treasurer's deed conveying the property clear of all incumbrances, except for the following taxes and assessments not due at the time of the foreclosure sale:  property taxes, certain drainage or diking assessments, and irrigation assessments.  In addition, before receiving title, the purchaser will have to pay any of the above taxes or assessments that are due at the time of sale. If the property is not sold, then title to the property will vest automatically in the irrigation district.

 

Irrigation districts and county treasurers are authorized to use the interlocal cooperation act as a means of providing for the combined foreclosure of delinquent property taxes and irrigation district assessments.

 

 

VOTES ON FINAL PASSAGE:

 

      House 95   0

      Senate    42     0 (Senate amended)

      House 94   0 (House concurred)

 

EFFECTIVE:June 9, 1988