Widow who missed tax bill gets farm back

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Sergeant Bob

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Widow who missed tax bill gets farm back

Sold for $15,000 but buyer says elderly woman's hug trumps $1 million land

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Posted: November 15, 2003
1:00 a.m. Eastern



© 2003 WorldNetDaily.com

An 89-year-old woman who lost her home because of $572 in unpaid taxes will get it back from the man who bought the million-dollar property in a government auction for $15,000.

Helene Shue, who has lived on her 41-acre farm near Hershey, Pa., for five decades, had paid her taxes in full every year – including this one – but was short in her 2001 payment, the Harrisburg Patriot-News reported.

The buyer, Philip Dobson of Middle Paxton Township, Pa., informed Shue's nephew, John Arndt, he would give back the land after the story gained national attention.

Dobson, a business owner who invests in real estate, said, according to the paper, he "had no idea when I bought it that there was an 89-year-old widow living there. I found that out when I was reading the newspaper."

The decision to give it back, he said, "was a no-brainer, a moral issue, not a legal one. The property should be returned to her."

"I got something better than a million-dollar property," he told the Harrisburg daily. "I got a hug from a little old lady. That was worth more than anyone could imagine."

The county has agreed to reimburse Dobson.

Arndt and Dobson went to Shue's home together to give her the news.

"Oh, my God, I can't believe it," Shue said, hugging Dobson and her nephew. "I won't forget this day."

The land and home in South Hanover Township has apple, cherry and peach orchards along with beef cattle and pigs Shue named after family members, the paper reported. She is so fond of the property she once turned down a $1 million offer for it.

The county's tax bureau maintained it gave her all the proper notification before putting up the land for auction, including posting notices on her door.

But when Arndt learned of the sale, he filed a petition with Dauphin County Court to intervene. Officials then set up a meeting between Dobson and Arndt, who said he was "overwhelmed" when Dobson agreed to give the land back, according to the Patriot-News.

"Mr. Dobson is a fine, upstanding person," Arndt said, putting an arm around Dobson's shoulders. "When the land was sold, my aunt said, 'This could kill me.' Now, she has it back."

Arndt's attorney, Anthony McBeth, said the county tax-claim bureau does its best to follow the law, the paper reported. But he believes the law itself needs to allow for better screening so people such as Shue, who have a good track record of payments, "do not have all they worked for exposed to a sale."

Arndt said his aunt planned to pay the $572 tax bill yesterday.

"This had a happy ending," he told the Patriot-News. "I plan to help her more with her mail and bills after this so nothing falls between the cracks."
 
Great story with a good (and proper) ending. Nice guy btw...

However, the pessimist in me says that the family will hock her farm the instant that she is gone... :barf:
 
Dobson was a fool. He should have kicked the old lady out, built 200 cheap houses that all look alike on the 41 acres, and sold them each for $500,000. His actions will cost him his "Ruthless Developer's Club" membership. :D
 
The original story was posted here on this board a few days ago. She had missed one quarter's tax bill from maybe a year or so earlier, and she wasn't even informed about it or the tax sale, IIRC .
I can see how it could happen. I had something similar (no sale though) happen to me. My mortgage company (who I pay escrow to for taxes and insurance) didn't pay my taxes for a year and a half! I received absolutely no notice about it. The only reason I did find out was I decided to refinance to a lower interest rate and it was found when they tried to clear the title.

Property taxes are one of my pet peeves, as you never really own your property. You are always beholden to the government and they can snatch it away at will if you don't pay up (in violation of your 5th Amendment rights), and the amount you are required to pay increases EVERY year! We don't have property rights, we have property privileges.

Luckily for this woman, Mr. Dobson is a fine man with a sense of fairness (and there are alot who would call him stupid, to say the least) seldom seen these days. Not a whole lot of people would turn down one million dollars, for a $18,000 investment! I salute him!

Yes marvl, I realize you were being sarcastic:D
 
Sgt Bob,

Developers are one of my pet peeves. They're ruining the country in a lot of places, and especially along the front range of the Rockies here in Colorado. I went to a gun show last year and a guy had a beautiful Ruger M77 in .416 Rigby on his table. I remarked, "Damn, that's quite a cannon you have there. But what's big enough to use it on around here?" He paused, leaned across the table, and said "Developers." :D
 
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