Supreme Court leans towards property rights for individuals in seizure cases.

TL;DR Summary
The US Supreme Court is considering the appeal of a 94-year-old Minnesota woman who lost her home over a small unpaid tax bill and received no compensation. The practice, known as "home equity theft," is legal in roughly a dozen states that allow municipalities to seize and sell a property and keep the entirety of earnings, regardless of the value of the outstanding tax bill. Many justices suggested the practice could run afoul of the Fifth Amendment's prohibition against government taking private property without "just compensation." A decision in the case is expected by the end of June.
- Supreme Court weighs 'equity theft' claim after state seized 94-year-old's home ABC News
- 94-year-old Minneapolis woman's property case makes it to the Supreme Court KARE 11
- Supreme Court seems to favor woman who got $0 in condo sale The Associated Press
- U.S. Supreme Court hears Minneapolis woman's fight for proceeds from the sale of her condo after it was seized for back taxes Star Tribune
- Supreme Court tilts toward woman with seized condo in property rights case NPR
Reading Insights
Total Reads
0
Unique Readers
0
Time Saved
4 min
vs 5 min read
Condensed
88%
814 → 98 words
Want the full story? Read the original article
Read on ABC News