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Yo_Mama_Been_Loggin

(136,066 posts)
Fri Feb 27, 2026, 03:58 PM Feb 27

Justices appear dubious of challenge to constitutionality of foreclosure sales [View all]

Source: SCOTUS Blog

The argument yesterday in Pung v Isabella County had two distinct threads. On the one hand, the justices who discussed the question presented seemed to have no doubt that they would reject the idea that the customary practice of selling real estate at an auction to recover delinquent taxes amounts to a taking without just compensation. On the other hand, multiple justices were incensed at what appeared to them to be the high-handed treatment of the taxpayer by the local government.

On the legal question, the complaint of the taxpayer (Michael Pung) is that when the county sold his property at a foreclosure sale based on unpaid taxes, the price at the foreclosure sale was less than the fair-market value of the property. In his view, that means that the takings clause of the Fifth Amendment (that “private property” shall not “be taken for public use, without just compensation”) requires the county to compensate him for the shortfall – to write him a check for the difference between the fair-market value of the property (estimated by an appraiser) and the price it sold for when the county auctioned it at a public sale.

During oral argument, the justices identified several difficulties with Pung’s position. For one thing, Pung is challenging the constitutionality of something that pretty routinely has been going on in every American jurisdiction since before the adoption of the Constitution. So it wasn’t entirely unfair of Justice Clarence Thomas to ask Philip Ellison (Pung’s counsel), in the first question of the morning, what he would “do with the fact that the English and American legal traditions seem to permit these sorts of foreclosures?” In a similar vein, Justice Sonia Sotomayor challenged Ellison to “[g]ive me a holding from a court in our 250-year history where we have said that the measure … on a tax foreclosure is fair market value, not the auction price.”

Another issue, related to the first one, is that accepting Pung’s position probably would bring an end to the use of foreclosure sales to force the payment of taxes. As Justice Elena Kagan pointed out, repeatedly, the logic of Pung’s position is that when the government has sold the property of the delinquent taxpayer at an auction, then, in the normal case where the distressed sale at an auction does not produce the fair market value, the jurisdiction would have to come out of pocket and use other funds to repay the delinquent taxpayer for the “shortage” at the sale. Justices Ketanji Brown Jackson and Amy Coney Barrett seemed particularly taken with this problem, finding it unfair to suggest that other taxpayers, the ones that are not delinquent, should have their taxes paid to compensate those that refused to pay their own taxes. As Jackson commented, it “seems like real unfairness” to “the rest of the American people, that we are paying you because you didn’t pay your taxes and the government had to foreclose on your house.”

Read more: https://www.yahoo.com/news/articles/justices-appear-dubious-challenge-constitutionality-153000589.html

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