
Dirt lawyers understand that South Carolina appellate courts will overturn tax sales on the flimsiest of technicalities. Our courts require strict compliance with the tax sale statutory requirements. In an August 21 Supreme Court case*, a tax sale was overturned because the tax collector failed to post the required conspicuous notice.
Alvetta Massenberg inherited a 2.54-acre undeveloped tract of land near the rural community of Alcola in Clarendon County in 1997. She paid taxes through 2015 but failed to pay taxes in 2016. The tax sale process began.
The property is densely forested and triangular in shape. One side faces a two-lane paved secondary road known as Plowden Mill Road. This road is marked with a double-yellow center line and solid white fog lines. The second side of the property faces a one-lane dirt road known as Robert Rees Durant Road. This road has very little shoulder area and the surrounding vegetation crowds the one lane of travel.
The tax collector sent the required “notice of delinquent property taxes” by regular mail to Massenberg’s permanent address in Charlotte and sent another notice by certified mail. The certified mail notice was returned, and the tax collector turned to the required alternative notice of South Carolina Code §12-51-40(c). That subsection requires the tax collector to “take exclusive physical possession of the property…by posting a notice at one or more conspicuous places on the premises.”
The tax collector hired a private contractor to post the notice, but gave the contractor no instruction and no guidance on how to—or ever whether to—post the notice in a “conspicuous” place. The contractor posted a “Notice of Levy” printed on an 8.5 x 11-inch sheet of paper on a tree facing the one-lane road.
Testimony indicated traffic on the paved road would be 100 times more than traffic on the dirt road.
The Master found the posting was appropriate. The Court of Appeals affirmed.
On appeal, the Supreme Court focused on the very narrow question before it, that is, whether the notice was posted in a conspicuous place. The Court stated that the statute does not require that the notice be posted in the most conspicuous place, only that it be posted at “one or more conspicuous places.”
The Court held that the process of selecting a conspicuous place is necessarily comparative and a judgment call. The Court found it critical that the Clarendon County tax collector exercised no judgment at all. Rather, she entrusted the responsibility to a private contractor without instruction. And there was no evidence that the contractor even knew of the “conspicuous place” requirement.
The Court held that the posting was clearly not in a conspicuous place.
*Massenberg v. Clarendon County Treasurer, South Carolina Supreme Court Opinion 28234 (August 21, 2024).