A friend was recently hit with an alleged delinquency after 11 years!
Originally Posted by cheatercheater
I don't know Texas tax law, but this is a familiar problem with other states that raises statute of limitations issues. In most states the law limits the state's ability to collect back taxes to a certain number of years after a return was filed. If your friend has been returning and paying his property tax assessment over this time it's likely that s/he cannot be held liable for anything over 3 or 4 years of delinquencies.
BUT . . . . check with a lawyer in Texas. The rules vary from state to state. Gotta look for a local attorney to help with this one. There's a lot of technical details that have to be met before you can raise a statute of limitations defense.
FYI - this same sort of thing is currently happening to lots of people and companies in California. The state is in financial crisis so they just started sending out "tax due" notices - some dating back twenty years - to anyone and everyone hoping that some people would just cut a check and send it back without bothering to look up whether they actually owed the assessment. Many companies got a notice that they owed California sales tax even though they never made any sales inside California. A lot of homeowners got notices that their assessment were not fully paid even though they were. Unfortunately, some people did just what the state wanted and sent a check without ever bothering to think about it.
It's worth the money to hire an attorney on this one. If there's a chance to exclude some of the back assessment under a statute of limitations law then your friend could easily have 75% of the back assessment canceled outright. Don't know the amount of money involved here but I'd suspect that the potential savings would make it more than worthwhile to get professional help.
Cheers,
Mazo.