mrswdk wrote:What does purchased for unresolved tax debt mean?
In the US if one doesn't pay the required taxes, the State, Town, County or even Federal government can seize and auction off the asset in order to recoup the back taxes. The new owner would then be responsible for paying the taxes going forward.
In this case the back taxes were about $1,000 or so, and the property (the Street itself and the sidewalks basically) were auctioned for $90K. Not bad for the city of San Fran. The actual tax sale happened two years ago. The people of the wealthy neighborhood hadn't paid taxes on their private road for decades. The tax bill for that private road was $14 a year (har!) and they never paid them. It looks like a comedy of errors and fuckups that led to them not paying these taxes, but whatever.
The new owners finally approached the homeowners association of the neighborhood and offered to sell the street back to them, for a lot more than $90K I'm betting. The residents have filed suit to try and reverse the tax sale which happened two years ago BTW. I don't know much about tax law, so I have no idea how that'll go.
There are over a 100 private roads in the city of San Fran, each and every one of them has to have taxes paid on them by the owners. And they all do, except this particular neighborhood. The people who bought the street did pretty well, their whole intention I'm betting is that they are hoping to sell the street back to the neighborhood for a significant profit, but barring that they can turn the damn road into a toll road. Make the residents pay a fee each and every time they leave their house to drive or hell, even walk on the sidewalk.
But yeah, in the US if you don't pay your personal property taxes your personal property gets auctioned off to pay the tax debt. That's what "purchased for unresolved tax debt" means.