A. Nguyen & K. Pham v. Delaware County TCB & C. Neumann ~ Appeal of: C. Neumann ( 2020 )


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  •           IN THE COMMONWEALTH COURT OF PENNSYLVANIA
    Amy Nguyen and Kenny Pham                       :
    :
    v.                               :   No. 393 C.D. 2020
    :   Argued: November 12, 2020
    Delaware County Tax Claim                       :
    Bureau and Chadd Neumann                        :
    :
    Appeal of: Chadd Neumann                        :
    BEFORE: HONORABLE P. KEVIN BROBSON, Judge
    HONORABLE CHRISTINE FIZZANO CANNON, Judge (P.)
    HONORABLE ELLEN CEISLER, Judge
    OPINION BY JUDGE BROBSON                            FILED: December 29, 2020
    Appellant Chadd Neumann, the upset tax sale purchaser (Tax Sale Purchaser),
    appeals from an order of the Court of Common Pleas of Delaware County
    (Common Pleas), dated January 15, 2020, which granted Appellees Amy Nguyen’s
    and Kenny Pham’s (Objectors) petition to set aside the upset tax sale (Petition).
    Common Pleas determined that Objectors had standing as equitable owners of the
    property, and the Delaware County Tax Claim Bureau’s (Bureau) deficiencies in
    providing notice of the tax sale to the prior owner of the property pursuant to the
    Real Estate Tax Sale Law (RETSL)1 constituted grounds to set aside the upset tax
    sale. For the reasons that follow, we vacate the order and remand the matter to
    Common Pleas for further proceedings.
    1
    Act of July 7, 1947, P.L. 1368, as amended, 72 P.S. §§ 5860.101-.803.
    I. BACKGROUND
    Pursuant to Section 607 of the RETSL, 72 P.S. § 5860.607, Objectors
    filed the Petition, seeking to set aside the upset tax sale of property located at
    808 Garrett Road, Upper Darby, Pennsylvania (Property). (Original Record (O.R.),
    Item No. 1, ¶ 1.) Objectors averred that the “Property was reportedly exposed to
    a[n] upset tax sale conducted by the [Bureau] on or about September 13, 2018,
    reportedly on account of a tax claim against the prior owner of the . . . Property,
    Nhi Thi Ngoc Phan [(Prior Owner)], for the years 2016 and 2017,” and that
    “the Bureau failed to provide . . . Prior Owner with proper notice of the sale and
    failed to make reasonable efforts to uncover . . .          Prior Owner’s location.”
    (Id., ¶¶ 2, 3.)
    Objectors averred that they have standing to raise exceptions and
    objections, because: (1) they purchased the Property as their residence on
    September 13, 2018—the same day as the reported upset tax sale—for $140,000.00
    (id., ¶¶ 5, 8); (2) at the closing for the sale of the Property, “a check in the amount
    of $13,518.47 was issued to the Bureau for the delinquent taxes owed” (id., ¶ 6);
    (3) after the closing, they “believed they acquired good and record title to the . . .
    Property, free and clear of any tax claims or liens” (id., ¶ 7); (4) they currently live
    at the Property (id., ¶ 9); (5) they “are the owners of the . . . Property through their
    purchase from . . . Prior Owner” (id., ¶ 10); (6) “[d]ays after the [c]losing, the check
    disbursed to the Bureau was returned to the settlement agent that handled the sale of
    the . . . Property,” accompanied by a letter from the Bureau, indicating that the
    property was sold in an upset tax sale on September 13, 2018 (id., ¶ 11, Ex. B);
    and (7) it was at or about that time that Objectors and Prior Owner “learned for the
    2
    first time that the . . . Property had been exposed to the underlying upset tax sale on
    the same date as the [c]losing,” as Prior Owner had not received notice of the upset
    tax sale (id., ¶¶ 12, 13).
    Objectors averred that “the Bureau failed to provide . . . Prior Owner with
    advance notice of a tax claim, lien, or the upset sale of the . . . Property conducted
    on September 13, 2018.” (Id., ¶ 14.) Objectors attached to the Petition what they
    contend is the complete file they received from the Bureau concerning the upset tax
    sale. (Id., ¶ 15.) The file contains copies of a certified mail card directed to
    Prior Owner at the address of the Property, which Objectors describe as appearing
    “to represent the Bureau’s attempt to deliver notice of the [tax] [u]pset [s]ale to . . .
    Prior Owner.” (Id., ¶¶ 15-17.) The return receipt “indicates that a mailing was
    directed, certified mail, restricted delivery” and “contains an illegible signature of
    an individual[] and does not list the printed name of the party” who purportedly
    signed the return receipt. (Id., ¶¶ 18-19.) Objectors averred that, according to the
    United States Postal Service website, the notice was delivered to the Property on
    July 21, 2018. (Id., ¶ 20.) Prior Owner did not sign the return receipt, as she did not
    live at the Property on that date, has never lived at the Property, and had kept the
    Property as an investment—i.e., rental property. (Id., ¶¶ 21-22.) It is unclear who
    signed the return receipt. (Id., ¶ 23.) Moreover, Prior Owner’s tenant at the time
    did not have authority to accept or sign for mail on behalf of Prior Owner, and she
    did not inform Prior Owner of any notice regarding the upset tax sale.
    (Id., ¶¶ 24-25.) The Bureau’s file also includes handwritten notes which appear to
    indicate that the Bureau attempted to call Prior Owner on August 29, 2018, but that
    the call could not be completed as dialed. It is unclear where the Bureau located the
    listed phone number, and a search revealed the number could belong to three
    3
    individuals in the greater Philadelphia area, none of which are Prior Owner.
    (Id., ¶¶ 28-30.) The Bureau had previously attempted to notify Prior Owner as to
    the delinquent 2016 taxes by certified mail to the Property, but the certified mail was
    returned as unclaimed. (Id., ¶ 34.) Based upon the above, Objectors averred that the
    Bureau was aware of circumstances raising a significant doubt as to Prior Owner’s
    receipt of the notice of sale. (Id., ¶ 35.) Nevertheless, the Bureau did not send notice
    to the Prior Owner at her correct address or reasonably attempt to investigate her
    true address. (Id., ¶ 36.) As a result, Prior Owner never received the notice of sale
    nor did she see any posted notice or advertisement of the sale in any publication.
    (Id., ¶¶ 38-40.) Prior Owner had no knowledge or actual notice of the upset tax sale
    until the check disbursed to the Bureau at the closing was returned days later.
    (Id., ¶ 41.) Had Prior Owner known, she would have taken steps to make sure the
    alleged tax claim was satisfied. (Id., ¶ 42.) Thus, Objectors asserted that the upset
    tax sale should be set aside because the Bureau violated RETSL when it failed to
    provide notice of the sale and failed to exercise reasonable efforts to ascertain the
    whereabouts of the record owner.
    Tax Sale Purchaser answered the Petition on November 19, 2018, arguing that
    Objectors did not have standing to challenge the upset tax sale on the basis of lack
    of notice. (O.R., Item No. 2.) In support of that position, Tax Sale Purchaser averred
    that Objectors did not become record owners of the Property until their deed was
    recorded on September 24, 2018—eleven days after the upset tax sale. (Id., ¶ 1.)
    Furthermore,    Objectors     were    neither   owners     nor    lien   creditors   on
    September 13, 2018, when the upset tax sale occurred. (Id., ¶ 71.) The Bureau did
    not answer or respond to the Petition.
    4
    On December 4, 2018, Common Pleas scheduled a hearing on the matter for
    January 23, 2019. (O.R., Item No. 4.) At the hearing, Tax Sale Purchaser’s attorney
    informed Common Pleas regarding the “preliminary issue” of standing and
    requested that the matter be continued to the April 4, 2019 list to allow the parties to
    submit memoranda of law on the issue of standing before the parties get to the
    Bureau’s burden with regards to the underlying sale. (O.R., Item No. 19 at 4.)
    Thereafter, Objectors and Tax Sale Purchaser filed memoranda of law, addressing
    only the issue of standing. (O.R., Item Nos. 9, 10.) Objectors also filed a praecipe
    to attach affidavits of Objectors to the Petition, along with copies of a deed for the
    Property, dated September 11, 2018—two days before the closing and upset tax
    sale—as well as a reply memorandum. (O.R., Item No. 11.) At the call of the
    April 4, 2019 list, the Tax Sale Purchaser requested that Common Pleas schedule
    oral argument on the issue of standing. (O.R., Item No. 20 at 3-4.) Common Pleas
    heard argument on May 30, 2019. (O.R., Item No. 18.) Toward the conclusion of
    the hearing, Tax Sale Purchaser’s counsel stated: “I understand that if the Court
    [concludes] there’s standing, we’re going to have a hearing on this. We’re going to
    have a real trial . . . .”2 (Id. at 16-17.) The Bureau did not file a brief or participate
    in the oral argument.
    Based on the record, it appears that nothing else occurred until Common Pleas
    issued an order, dated January 15, 2020, granting the Petition. (O.R., Item No. 21
    at 1.) Common Pleas also issued the following findings of fact:
    1. [Objectors] purchased the Property . . . from its [P]rior Owner on
    September 13, 2018[,] for $140,000.00.
    2
    We note, in the event that Common Pleas disagreed with Tax Sale Purchaser’s counsel’s
    understanding of the procedural posture of the matter, it never indicated so.
    5
    2. At the closing for the sale of the Property, a check for $13,518.47
    was issued to [the Bureau] for delinquent taxes owed on the Property
    for the years 2016 and 2017.
    3. Unbeknownst to [Objectors] and the [P]rior Owner, the Property had
    been exposed to the underlying [upset] tax . . . sale on September 13,
    2018[,] and was sold to [Tax Sale Purchaser].
    4. The Record is devoid of any evidence as to the time of the [u]pset
    [t]ax [s]ale on September 13, 2018.
    5. Days after the [c]losing, the $13,518.47 check for delinquent taxes
    on the Property from the [Bureau] was returned to the [s]ettlement
    [a]gent.
    6. Subsequently, [Objectors] learned that the Property had been
    exposed for sale at the [u]pset [t]ax [s]ale on the same date as the
    [c]losing, September 13, 2018.
    7. The [P]rior Owner alleged that she did not receive notice of the
    [u]pset [t]ax [s]ale.
    8. [Objectors] purchased the . . . Property as their residence.
    9. Objectors currently live [at] the . . . Property.
    10. [Common Pleas] held Oral Argument wherein it determined that
    the central issue in this matter was . . . [Objectors’] standing in this
    matter.
    ....
    21. [Objectors] and the [P]rior Owner entered into and signed an
    Agreement of Sale for the Property on June 9, 2018[,] and
    June 16, 2018, respectively.
    22. [Objectors] received the executed deed for the Property on
    September 11, 2018, two days before the September 13, 2018 [u]pset
    [t]ax [s]ale.
    (Id. at 2-5 (citations omitted).) Common Pleas concluded that, “under the doctrine
    of equitable conversion, Objectors acquired rights as ‘equitable owners’ pursuant to
    their [a]greement of [s]ale to purchase the Property from the [P]rior [O]wner.”
    (Id., Conclusion of Law (COL) No. 20.) Common Pleas also found that, “[u]pon
    review of the [r]ecord, [Common Pleas] finds that the [Bureau] failed to meet the
    statutory notice requirements under [RETSL].” (Id., COL No. 24.) Common Pleas
    6
    concluded that, “[i]n light of [Objectors’] standing as equitable owners and the
    deficiencies in providing notice pursuant to [RETSL], the [u]pset [t]ax [s]ale in this
    matter should be set aside.” (Id., COL No. 25.) This appeal followed.3
    II. ISSUES
    On appeal, Tax Sale Purchaser argues that Objectors lack standing to contest
    the upset tax sale. Tax Sale Purchaser also argues that Common Pleas denied him
    due process of law when it granted the Petition without an evidentiary hearing.
    As to this issue, Tax Sale Purchaser contends that Common Pleas denied him the
    opportunity to produce evidence pertaining to notice.
    III. DISCUSSION
    We begin with the threshold question of who has standing to petition to set
    aside an upset tax sale. This Court has explained:
    “The traditional concept of standing focuses on the idea that a person
    who is not adversely impacted by the matter he seeks to challenge does
    not have standing to proceed with the court system’s dispute resolution
    process.” Pittsburgh Palisades Park, LLC v. [Cmwlth.], . . . 
    888 A.2d 655
    , 659 ([Pa.] 2005) (citing William Penn Parking Garage v. City of
    Pittsburgh, . . . 
    346 A.2d 269
    , 280-81 ([Pa.] 1975) (plurality)). In other
    words, a person must be aggrieved or have a legally sufficient interest
    in a matter to have standing. As stated by our Supreme Court:
    [A]n individual can demonstrate that he is aggrieved if he
    can establish that he has a substantial, direct, and
    immediate interest in the outcome of the litigation in order
    to be deemed to have standing. An interest is ‘substantial’
    if it is an interest in the resolution of the challenge which
    ‘surpasses the common interest of all citizens in procuring
    obedience to the law.’ Likewise, a ‘direct’ interest
    3
    “Our scope of review in tax sale cases is limited to determining whether the trial court
    abused its discretion, rendered a decision with a lack of supporting evidence, or clearly erred as a
    matter of law.” Shipley v. Tax Claim Bureau of Delaware Cnty., 
    74 A.3d 1101
    , 1104 n.3
    (Pa. Cmwlth. 2013) (quoting Plank v. Monroe Cnty. Tax Claim Bureau, 
    735 A.2d 178
    , 181 n.6
    (Pa. Cmwlth.), appeal denied, 
    747 A.2d 373
     (Pa. 1999)).
    7
    mandates a showing that the matter complained of ‘caused
    harm to the party’s interest,’ i.e., a causal connection
    between the harm and the violation of law. Finally, an
    interest is ‘immediate’ if the causal connection is not
    remote or speculative.
    
    Id.
     . . . , 888 A.2d at 660 (citations omitted).
    CR 2018 LLC v. Columbia Cnty. Tax Claim Bureau, 
    229 A.3d 398
    , 402 (Pa.
    Cmwlth. 2020) (quoting Shipley, 
    74 A.3d at 1105
    ). “‘Whether [an individual] ha[s]
    standing, as an equitable owner, to file [a petition to set aside a tax sale] pursuant to
    Section 607 of the [RETSL, 72 P.S. § 5860.607,] is a question separate from whether
    [the individual is] entitled to notice.’” Id. (quoting Shipley, 
    74 A.3d at 1105
    ).
    “Section 607(b) of the RETSL provides, in relevant part, that ‘objections or
    exceptions [to a tax sale] may be filed by any owner or lien creditor.’”
    
    Id.
     (quoting 72 P.S. §5860.607(b)). Section 102 of the RETSL, 72 P.S. § 5860.102,
    defines “owner” as
    the person in whose name the property is last registered, if registered
    according to law, or, if not registered according to law, the person
    whose name last appears as an owner of record on any deed or
    instrument of conveyance recorded in the county office designated for
    recording and in all other cases means any person in open, peaceable
    and notorious possession of the property, as apparent owner or owners
    thereof, or the reputed owner or owners thereof, in the neighborhood of
    such property; as to property having been turned over to the bureau
    under Article VII [(relating to property purchased by taxing districts
    prior to the RETSL)] by any county, ‘owner’ shall mean the county.
    Section 607(d) of the RETSL limits the challenges to upset tax sales by owners of
    the real estate at the time of the upset tax sale and limits objections or exceptions to
    the “regularity or legality of the procedures of the bureau in respect to such sale.”
    “This Court has recognized that ‘[t]he legislature designated [in the RETSL]
    that only owners or lien creditors may file objections or exceptions to the return of
    the [tax bureau] and confirmation nisi by the trial court of the tax sale.’”
    8
    CR 2018 LLC, 229 A.3d at 402-03 (quoting Appeal of Yardley, 
    646 A.2d 751
    , 755
    (Pa. Cmwlth. 1994) (emphasis omitted)). “Therefore, one who is neither an ‘owner’
    nor a lienholder [on the date of the tax sale] cannot complain of noncompliance with
    the notice provisions.”     In re Petition of Crouthamel, 
    412 A.2d 645
    , 647
    (Pa. Cmwlth. 1980).
    Simply stated, persons who are not owners or lien creditors of the property at
    the time of the tax sale do not have standing to file objections or other exceptions.
    First Horizon Home Loan Corp. v. Adams Cnty. Tax Claim Bureau, 
    847 A.2d 774
    ,
    777 (Pa. Cmwlth. 2004) (First Horizon). Objectors, based on the record before us,
    are not lien holders. Consequently, their only avenue to have standing in this case
    is to show they were “owners” of the property at the time of the upset tax sale
    pursuant to Section 102 of the RETSL. As noted above, Common Pleas concluded
    that Objectors were equitable owners of the Property at the time of the upset tax sale.
    A. Equitable Owners
    Tax Sale Purchaser contends that Common Pleas erred when it concluded that
    Objectors have standing to challenge the tax sale based on their equitable interest in
    the Property at the time of the tax sale. We begin by briefly reviewing the law that
    provides for equitable ownership.
    The Pennsylvania Supreme Court has stated that “[i]t is well-established
    law . . . that when the [a]greement of [s]ale is signed, the purchaser becomes the
    equitable or beneficial owner through the doctrine of equitable conversion.”
    DiDonato v. Reliance Standard Life Ins. Co., 
    249 A.2d 327
    , 329 (Pa. 1969) (citing
    Payne v. Clark, 
    187 A.2d 769
     (Pa. 1963)). The Supreme Court has explained:
    The doctrine of equitable conversion arose out of the power of
    the chancellor to compel the performance which was intended by the
    parties. This power was grounded in the principle that equity treats as
    done those things that should be done, quod fieri debet facile
    9
    praesumitur. It is precisely because of the equitable remedy of specific
    performance that fundamental real property rights are created in a
    purchaser of realty prior to delivery of the deed. Kerr v. Day, 
    14 Pa. 112
     (1850). The principles applicable to the sales of real property
    between private parties are equally applicable to sales for delinquent
    taxes. . . . Thus, the doctrine of equitable conversion is applicable to a
    sale for delinquent taxes and its operation conveys equitable title to the
    purchaser.
    Pivirotto v. City of Pittsburgh, 
    528 A.2d 125
    , 127-28 (Pa. 1987).
    We have previously addressed whether non-record owners of a property
    subject to an upset tax sale have standing to file objections to the upset tax sale under
    Section 607 of the RETSL. Husak v. Fayette Cnty. Tax Claim Bureau, 
    61 A.3d 302
    (Pa. Cmwlth. 2013). In Husak, the owners acquired the subject property via a
    quitclaim deed in 2006, but they did not record the deed until after the tax sale.
    
    Id. at 303
    . The tax sale purchaser argued that the owners lacked standing to file
    objections because a lender, Fannie Mae, was the record owner of the property at the
    time of the September 2010 tax sale and remained so until the owners finally
    recorded their quitclaim deed in March 2011. 
    Id. at 304
    . The tax sale purchaser
    argued that the owners were not record “owners” as defined by Section 102 of the
    RETSL so they could not file objections pursuant to Section 607 of the RETSL. 
    Id.
    (citing 72 P.S. §§ 5860.102, 5860.607). The Court of Common Pleas of Fayette
    County determined that, despite not recording the deed until after the sale, the
    owners were the equitable, if not legal, owners of the property at the time of the tax
    sale; therefore, they were persons aggrieved by the tax sale. Id. at 305. We agreed
    with common pleas that the owners had standing even though they did not hold
    record title and concluded that, “[b]y purchasing the subject property back from
    Fannie Mae in April 2006 for $150,000 and receiving a quitclaim deed for it,
    10
    [the o]wners acquired, at the very minimum, equitable title, a legally recognized
    interest in the subject property.” Id. at 310 (citing Pivirotto, 528 A.2d at 128).
    A few months later, in Shipley, we determined that a wife had an equitable
    interest in a property purchased with joint funds while she and her husband were
    married, even though she was not mentioned on the recorded deed. Shipley, 
    74 A.3d at 1106
    . Consequently, she had standing to challenge the judicial tax sale of the
    property. 
    Id.
     The Court of Common Pleas of Delaware County denied her petition
    to set aside the judicial tax sale and found that the county tax claim bureau satisfied
    the notice requirements of Section 102 of the RETSL, 72 P.S. § 5860.102. Id.
    We reversed, holding that, although the tax claim bureau was not required to provide
    notice to the wife of the impending judicial sale because she was not the legal owner,
    the wife had standing to challenge the judicial tax sale of the property. Id.
    The following year, in Moore v. Keller, 
    98 A.3d 1
     (Pa. Cmwlth. 2014),
    we reviewed a case involving a petition to set aside a tax sale filed by the executrix
    of the estate of a deceased record owner. The Court of Common Pleas of Luzerne
    County denied the petition, concluding that the executrix was neither an “owner”
    nor “lien creditor” of the property as defined by Section 102 of the RETSL and,
    consequently, lacked standing to petition to set aside the tax sale pursuant to
    Section 607(b) of the RETSL. Moore, 
    98 A.3d at
    3 (citing 72 P.S. §§ 5860.102,
    5860.607(b)). On appeal, we reversed common pleas’ decision. We reasoned:
    The Section 102 definition of “owner” is relevant to whether the
    [tax bureau] was required to provide [the executrix] with notice of a
    real estate tax sale conducted pursuant to Section 602 of the [RETSL].
    As demonstrated by Husak, whether [the executrix] had standing to
    challenge the tax sale is based upon whether she had the requisite
    substantial, direct, and immediate interest in the sale of property to
    qualify as an aggrieved party. [Husak,] 
    61 A.3d at 309-10
    . At the time
    of the tax sale, [the executrix] had been living at the [p]roperty
    for 18 years and had invested substantial sums in capital improvements
    11
    and had been paying the tax bill. . . . Although [the executrix] is not an
    “owner” as defined by the [RETSL] because her name is not on the last
    registered deed to the [p]roperty, she is an equitable owner of the
    [p]roperty as a devisee[,] . . . [and] [w]e conclude that [the executrix],
    as an equitable owner, has the requisite substantial, direct and
    immediate interest in the sale of property to challenge a tax sale.
    Id. at 4.
    Tax Sale Purchaser argues that the facts and law in Husak, Moore, and Shipley
    are easily distinguishable and should not apply to Objectors’ situation in this case.
    He argues that, in Husak, we concluded that the petitioners were owners as defined
    by Section 102 of the RETSL because they “were in open, peaceful and notorious
    possession of the property for many years prior to the sale and were in possession of
    an unrecorded Quit Claim Deed executed by the immediately previous titleholder,
    Fannie Mae.” (Tax Sale Purchaser’s Brief at 11.) He submits that, in Moore, we
    granted standing to the executrix based on her being a specific devisee of the
    deceased record owner and that, when her mother died in 1999, no decedent estate
    was ever opened for her prior to the tax sale in September 2012. (Id. at 11, 12.)
    Tax Sale Purchaser argues that we reversed because, “as a specific devisee
    (as contrasted to merely an intestate heir) under her mother’s will, legal title to that
    property passed at her death to the [t]estatrix . . . . This all occurred well before the
    date of the upset tax sale.” (Id. at 12.) Finally, he notes that, in Shipley, we granted
    the wife standing because of her “inchoate and contingent right to equitable
    distribution in the subject property under . . . Pennsylvania[’s] Divorce Code”4 based
    on the fact of her marriage, purchase of the property, and contribution of joint funds
    to purchase the property, which occurred long before the upset tax sale. (Id.)
    Tax Sale Purchaser instead directs our attention to this Court’s decision in
    Fongsue v. Tax Claim Bureau of Delaware County and Roland Oris (Pa. Cmwlth.,
    4
    23 Pa. C.S. §§ 3101-3904.
    12
    No. 1229 C.D. 2007, filed January 5, 2009) (Oris), appeal denied, 
    981 A.2d 221
    (Pa. 2009).5 There, the purchaser of a property at an upset tax sale, Roland Oris
    (Oris), appealed the order of the Court of Common Pleas of Delaware County that
    granted a petition to set aside the upset tax sale. Oris, slip op. at 1. In January 1956,
    a deed was recorded for the property naming Oscar and Louise Boozer as owners.
    
    Id.,
     slip op. at 1, 2. Both owners died intestate in the 1990s. 
    Id.,
     slip op. at 2.
    In September 2002, the Delaware County Board of Assessment changed the mailing
    address for notices concerning the property to Ronald Boozer (Boozer), the elder
    Boozers’ only child, who lived in Baltimore, Maryland. 
    Id.
     As of that date, no
    executor or administrator of Louise Boozer’s estate had been appointed by the
    Register of Wills of Delaware County. 
    Id.
    In the summer of 2006, the property was vacant and Boozer placed the
    property on the market. 
    Id.,
     slip op. at 3. Sometime before July 19, 2006, the
    Tax Claim Bureau of Delaware County sent three separate notices of public sale to
    Boozer in Baltimore, and he signed for all three notices on the certified mail return
    receipt cards. 
    Id.,
     slip op. at 2. A notice of public sale was posted on the property
    on July 25, 2006, and the property was among those listed for tax sale in three area
    newspapers. 
    Id.
     On August 4, 2006, a notice of public sale was sent to Boozer in
    Baltimore, and the notice was not returned as undeliverable. 
    Id.
     That same day,
    Boozer and Fongsue executed a standard agreement for the sale of real estate, with
    the closing scheduled to take place on September 6, 2006. The closing did not take
    place on September 6, 2006, and it was rescheduled to September 22, 2006, because
    Boozer failed to obtain Letters of Administration on behalf of Louise Boozer. 
    Id.
    5
    Pursuant to Commonwealth Court Internal Operating Procedure Section 414(a), 
    210 Pa. Code § 69.414
    (a), an unreported opinion of the Court filed after January 15, 2008, may be cited
    only “for its persuasive value, but not as binding precedent.”
    13
    In the interim, Oris purchased the property for the upset tax sale price on
    September 13, 2006. 
    Id.
     At the closing between Boozer and Fongsue held on
    September 22, 2006, Fongsue paid $89,000.00 in consideration for the property, plus
    closing costs. 
    Id.
     Immediately after the closing, a check was tendered for past taxes
    due to the tax bureau. 
    Id.
    Fongsue filed a petition to set aside the upset tax sale in November 2006, and
    common pleas granted the petition in May 2007, concluding that Fongsue had
    standing because “she was an aggrieved party with an interest in the [p]roperty and
    deserved legal protection.” 
    Id.,
     slip op. at 4. Common pleas reasoned that because
    the owners of the property were deceased and could not receive notice of the sale,
    the provisions of Section 607.1 of RETSL,6 72 P.S. § 5860.607a, were triggered, and
    the tax bureau did not use reasonable effort to discover the whereabouts of the
    owners. Id.
    Oris, on appeal, contended that Fongsue lacked standing because she was not
    the owner of the property at the time of the tax sale and Boozer’s interest had already
    been divested by the tax sale when he delivered the deed to Fongsue. Id., slip op.
    at 4, 5. We reversed common pleas and concluded that, pursuant to Section 102 of
    the RETSL, Fongsue was neither an owner nor a lien holder of the property at the
    time of the upset tax sale. Id., slip op. at 5. We noted that Fongsue “has not pointed
    to any statute or case law which expands the definition of owner to include an
    equitable owner.” Id., slip op. at 7. “The trial court erred when it determined
    Fongsue had standing.” Id.
    We relied on this Court’s decision in First Horizon, where we addressed a
    similar situation. First Horizon Home Loan Corporation (First Horizon) was the
    6
    Added by the Act of July 3, 1986, P.L. 351.
    14
    holder of a mortgage federally insured by the Department of Housing and Urban
    Development (HUD) on property located in Adams County.                First Horizon,
    
    847 A.2d at 775
    . After the mortgage fell into default, First Horizon acquired
    ownership of the property through foreclosure and obtained a deed to the property
    in March 2002. 
    Id.
     The deed was recorded the same day. 
    Id.
     In July 2002, the
    Adams County Tax Claim Bureau sent a notice of public tax sale to First Horizon
    stating that the property was scheduled for sale on September 13, 2002, due to unpaid
    real estate taxes for the year 2000. 
    Id.
     First Horizon received the notice. 
    Id.
    In August 2002, First Horizon conveyed the property to HUD in accordance
    with applicable federal regulations. 
    Id.
     The deed from First Horizon to HUD was
    recorded that same month, but First Horizon did not contact the tax bureau
    concerning the September 13, 2002 tax sale and the transfer of the property to HUD.
    
    Id.
     The property was sold at a tax sale on September 13, 2002. 
    Id. at 775
    .
    First Horizon filed objections and exceptions to the tax sale pursuant to
    Section 607 of the RETSL, asserting that the tax sale must be set aside because
    proper notice was not provided to HUD, the owner of the property on the date of the
    sale. 
    Id.
     The tax bureau argued, in relevant part, that First Horizon lacked standing
    to file objections to the tax sale. 
    Id. at 776
    . Common pleas, after a hearing on
    First Horizon’s objection to the tax sale, concluded that First Horizon lacked
    standing because, under Section 607 of the RETSL, it was neither an owner nor a
    lien creditor. 
    Id.
     First Horizon appealed. 
    Id.
     We concluded, in pertinent part, that
    there was no statutory basis to support First Horizon’s claim to standing, and
    common pleas properly held that First Horizon lacked standing to contest the sale.
    
    Id. at 777
    .
    15
    Recently, in Matos v. Berks County Tax Claim Bureau, 
    228 A.3d 976
    (Pa. Cmwlth. 2020), we held that an option to purchase a leased property creates an
    equitable interest in a tenant who holds such an option. In Matos, two tenants entered
    into a “rent to own” agreement with the owner of the property paying a down
    payment of $7,000.00, $850.00 a month to rent the property, and $250.00 a month
    toward the purchase of the property. Matos, 228 A.3d at 978. The lease agreement
    expired on March 30, 2018. Id. The property was sold at a tax sale to the purchaser
    in September 2018. Id. The tenants challenged the sale based on the tax claim
    bureau not complying with the strict notice requirements of the RETSL and asserted
    they had standing based on the lease agreement that included an option to purchase
    the property. Id. The Court of Common Pleas of Berks County held that the tenants
    lacked standing to challenge the tax sale because their lease agreement expired
    before the tax sale, and it dismissed the case based on the pleadings. Id. The tenants
    appealed. Id.
    We reversed common pleas’ decision concerning the tenants’ standing and
    remanded the case for further proceedings. Id. at 982. After reviewing our decisions
    in Shipley and Husak, we noted that “Pennsylvania courts have long held that an
    option to purchase land conveys a substantial and legally recognized equitable
    interest in the optionee,” using the Pennsylvania Supreme Court’s decision in
    Detwiler v. Capone, 
    55 A.2d 380
     (Pa. 1947), as an example. We noted our Supreme
    Court’s decision in Detwiler, wherein that court observed:
    An option to purchase is analogous to a contract for the sale of
    land; it is in nature an encumbrance on the land pledged. In such case
    the [optionor] is a trustee of the legal title for the benefit of the
    purchaser. . . . Equity regards the person bound to convey as having
    done what he should have done, i.e.[,] made the conveyance, and treats
    him as trustee for the optionee. Where an option is exercised the title
    16
    to the optionee relates back to the date of the option and his interest is
    regarded as real estate of that time[.]
    Matos, 228 A.3d at 981 (quoting Detwiler, 55 A.2d at 383) (internal quotation marks
    and citations omitted). Based upon that reasoning, we concluded that the tenants
    asserted a substantial, immediate, and direct interest in the property because they
    hold an option to purchase the property and paid $18,000.00 toward the purchase.
    Id. We determined that common pleas erred by focusing on the expiration of the
    lease agreement, “which did not extinguish [the t]enants’ equitable interest in the
    property[,] . . . [and] [t]he equitable interest created by the option agreement will
    relate back to the date of the option.” Id.
    Here, Common Pleas concluded that Objectors were equitable owners of the
    Property at the time of the upset tax sale due to their execution of an agreement to
    purchase the Property prior to the closing on September 13, 2018. Common Pleas
    did so without having created an evidentiary record, presumably having relied on
    the pleadings and affidavits. In support of Common Pleas’ disposition of the matter
    at this stage of the proceedings, Objectors contend that Tax Sale Purchaser failed to
    verify his response to the Petition or challenge Objectors’ affidavits and, as a result,
    admitted all the facts in the Petition and lost the opportunity to make a later factual
    challenge via an evidentiary hearing. We disagree.
    In Battisti v. Tax Claim Bureau of Beaver County, 
    76 A.3d 111
    , 113
    (Pa. Cmwlth. 2013), we determined that the Pennsylvania Rules of Civil Procedure
    did not apply to proceedings under Section 607 of the RETSL because they are not
    civil actions; the term “pleading” as used in the Rules of Civil Procedure “is a term
    of art that does not include a petition filed under Section 607 of the [RETSL].”7
    7
    In Battisti, the appellant (taxpayer) paid her 2008 school district taxes six days late
    causing her payment to be short $6.30 in interest. Battisti, 
    76 A.3d at 112
    . The taxpayer later paid
    (Footnote continued on next page…)
    17
    
    Id. at 115
    . We further concluded that there was no mechanism that allowed a petition
    filed pursuant to Section 607 to be decided on the petition and answer and that the
    “pleadings” were not closed when the motion for judgment on the pleadings was
    filed.8 
    Id.
     We determined that denying the objections to the upset tax sale without
    an evidentiary hearing was a denial of due process to the taxpayer. 
    Id.
    Based upon Battisti, we are persuaded that Common Pleas erred in relying on
    the pleadings and affidavits as evidence of the circumstances surrounding Objectors’
    purchase (or attempted purchase) of the Property for purposes of determining
    whether Objectors were equitable owners at the time of the upset tax sale rather than
    conducting an actual evidentiary hearing.
    B. Legal Owners
    Objectors offer an alternate basis for standing, not directly addressed by
    Common Pleas or Tax Sale Purchaser—i.e., legal ownership of the Property.
    Objectors argue that they acquired status as legal owners of the Property when
    Prior Owner executed and delivered the deed to them on September 11, 2018
    (i.e., two days before the tax sale of the property). Objectors submit:
    her 2009 taxes, but the $6.30 delinquency for the 2008 taxes remained unpaid, leading to the tax
    claim bureau selling her home in an upset tax sale. 
    Id.
     The taxpayer challenged the upset tax sale,
    arguing that she did not have notice that her payment for the 2008 taxes was short by $6.30, and
    she did not have notice of the scheduled upset tax sale. 
    Id.
     The taxpayer’s petition named the
    purchaser of the property and the tax claim bureau as respondents. 
    Id. at 113
    . The court of
    common pleas, without holding a hearing, granted the purchaser’s motion for judgment on the
    pleadings and dismissed the petition to set aside the upset tax sale. 
    Id.
     The taxpayer appealed. 
    Id.
    8
    For example, some counties utilize standing orders or local rules to specify the procedures
    for petitions challenging an upset tax sale. If a court of common pleas chooses to have the
    Pennsylvania Rules of Civil Procedure apply to this type of statutory proceeding, it can certainly
    make that known through a standing order or a local rule. In this case, neither party has asserted
    that a standing order or a local rule exists that allows a party to file the equivalent of a motion for
    judgment on the pleadings to dismiss the case. In the absence of such an order or local rule, we
    will follow our decision in Battisti.
    18
    Under Pennsylvania law, title to real estate may be passed by
    execution and delivery of a deed, before or even without recording it.
    In re Estate of Pentrack, 
    405 A.2d 879
     (Pa. 1979); Sovereign Bank v.
    Harper, 
    674 A.2d 1085
     (Pa. Super. [] 1996). The delivery of the deed
    for real property is necessary to render it legally operative and to
    convey title. Herr v. Bard, . . . 
    50 A.2d 280
     ([Pa.] 1947); Atiyeh v. Bear,
    . . . 
    690 A.2d 1245
     [(Pa. Super.), appeal denied, 
    698 A.2d 63
    (Pa. 1997)]); Hogue v. Hogue, . . . 
    174 A. 598
     ([Pa. Super.] 1934).
    Significantly, legal title to real property passes from a grantor to
    a grantee as of the date of delivery of the deed thereto. Malamed v.
    Sedelsky, . . . 
    80 A.2d 853
     ([Pa.] 1951). It is not necessary that delivery
    of a deed should be made to the grantee himself or herself, but rather, a
    delivery to a third person (e.g., a settlement agent) for the grantee may
    constitute a valid delivery sufficient to pass title. Fiore v. Fiore, . . .
    
    174 A.2d 858
     ([Pa.] 1961); In re: Rynier’s Estate, . . . 
    32 A.2d 736
    ([Pa.] 1943); DiMaio v. Musso, 
    762 A.2d 363
     ([Pa. Super.] 2000);
    In re Padezanin, 
    937 A.2d 475
     (Pa. Super. [] 2007).
    (Objectors’ Brief at 12, 13.) A close examination of the four Pennsylvania Supreme
    Court cases Objectors rely upon is warranted.
    First, in In re Estate of Pentrack, the decedent’s nephew was appointed
    administrator of the decedent’s estate. In re Estate of Pentrack, 405 A.2d at 880.
    The decedent’s brother and sister-in-law conveyed property to the decedent by a
    deed in April 1962, but the deed was never recorded. Id. Decedent, several months
    before he died, gave the deed to his nephew with instructions to return the property
    back to his brother by destroying the deed when he died. Id. The nephew did not
    destroy the deed. Id. Instead, the nephew filed a petition for a declaratory judgment,
    which, in pertinent part, sought a determination of whether the title to the property
    was legally conveyed by the decedent back to the decedent’s brother and the
    brother’s wife. Id. The Orphans’ Court division of the Court of Common Pleas of
    Cambria County held there was no gift of real estate back to the brother and
    sister-in-law and that the property remained with the estate. Common pleas, upon
    review en banc, determined that there was a gift of the real estate and the property
    19
    was conveyed back to the brother and sister-in-law. Id. The nephew appealed the
    en banc decision. Id.
    The Pennsylvania Supreme Court determined that because title to real estate
    may be passed by delivery of a deed without recording it, the 1962 conveyance of
    the property gave title to the decedent. Id. (citing Malamed, 80 A.2d at 853).
    The Supreme Court, however, determined that decedent’s attempt to re-convey the
    title to his brother and sister-in-law at the time of his death violated Section 4 of
    what is referred to as the Statute of Frauds, Act of April 22, 1856, P.L. 532, 33 P.S.
    § 2, and that “[a]n agreement to sell land not signed by the seller or an agent cannot
    be enforced against the seller.” Id. The Pennsylvania Supreme Court concluded
    that, because there was not a writing signed by decedent re-conveying the property,
    the property remained with the estate. Id. Accordingly, we agree with Objectors
    that title to real estate may be passed by execution and delivery of a deed, before or
    even without recording it.
    Second, in Herr, the plaintiffs were two sisters who filed a bill in equity
    seeking to compel their other sister, the defendant, to: (1) produce and record two
    deeds for three tracts of land in Lancaster County; (2) declare two deeds covering
    part of the same property null and void; and (3) enjoin the defendant from selling or
    in any way disposing of the real estate. Herr, 50 A.2d at 281. The chancellor, after
    a hearing on the bill and answer, found against the plaintiffs. Id. The Court of
    Common Pleas of Lancaster County, en banc, dismissed the plaintiffs’ exceptions
    and affirmed the chancellor’s decision. Id. The plaintiffs appealed, arguing, in
    relevant part, that the chancellor erred in finding that there was no delivery of the
    deed conveying the home property and the thirteen-acre tract even though the deed
    20
    was executed and acknowledged by their father in 1935. Id. The Pennsylvania
    Supreme Court wrote:
    It is well established that delivery of a deed is necessary in order
    to render it legally operative . . . and that delivery is to be inferred from
    grantor’s words and acts evidencing an intention on his part to surrender
    his title to the property embraced by his conveyance, and to invest his
    grantee therewith . . . . It is the general rule that there is a presumption,
    in the absence of proof to the contrary, that a deed was executed and
    delivered on the day it was acknowledged.
    Id. at 281, 282 (citations omitted). The Supreme Court concluded that the grantor,
    by keeping the deed, did not intend to divest himself of the title to the home property
    and thirteen acres, and it affirmed common pleas’ decision. Id. at 282. Accordingly,
    we agree with Objectors that the delivery of the deed for real property is necessary
    to render it legally operative and to convey title.
    Third, in Malamed, the defendants purchased a property in Philadelphia by
    paying the down payment and taking title in the name of one of the defendant’s
    brothers, who was a veteran, in order to obtain a mortgage through the Veteran’s
    Administration. Malamed, 80 A.2d at 854. The defendant’s brother obtained a
    mortgage for the property, “but all of the purchase price over and above the
    mortgage, as well as the adjustment expenses at settlement, were paid by the
    [defendants,] who entered into and remained in the exclusive possession of the
    premises.” Id. The deed to the defendant’s brother was dated and recorded in
    February 1947, and in June 1949, he executed and delivered a deed for the premises
    to the defendants. Id. The deed was not recorded until December 1949. Id.
    The defendant’s brother, after delivery of the deed to the defendants but before it
    was recorded, executed a judgment note in favor of the plaintiff, and judgment was
    entered in October 1949. Id. The judgment was executed, and the sheriff sold the
    21
    property to the plaintiff, as judgment creditor, in July 1950, with the deed delivered
    to the plaintiff in due course. Id. The plaintiff filed an action for possession and to
    quiet title. The Court of Common Pleas of Philadelphia County entered judgment
    for the plaintiff, reasoning that a trust against judgment creditor, mortgagees, or
    purchasers is void unless a written declaration of trust by the holder of legal title has
    been recorded. Id. The defendants appealed.
    On appeal, the Pennsylvania Supreme Court, in relevant part, reversed the
    common pleas’ decision, concluding that the “trust was completely executed by the
    delivery of an unrecorded deed by [the defendant’s brother] to defendants before the
    plaintiff had become a creditor of [the defendant’s brother] . . . .” Id. at 854
    (emphasis in original). The Supreme Court further concluded that the defendants
    were not relying on “equitable title but upon a legal title established by the delivery
    of a prior unrecorded deed.” Id. at 856. “Delivery is all that is necessary to pass
    title, recording is only essential to protect by constructive notice any subsequent
    purchasers, mortgagees and new judgment creditors.” Id. (emphasis in original).
    Accordingly, we agree with Objectors that legal title to real property passes from a
    grantor to a grantee as of the date of delivery of the deed thereto.
    Finally, in Fiore, the husband-grantor, during his lifetime, executed a deed to
    his wife-grantee, conveying his interest in lands in Allegheny County.
    Fiore, 174 A.2d at 859. In September 1940, the husband asked an attorney to
    prepare a deed for purposes of recording. Id. At that time, the deed was executed,
    witnessed, and acknowledged. Id. The husband died in September 1942. Id.
    The deed was not recorded until November 1957, long after the husband’s death,
    when the wife became aware of the transaction after the deed was rediscovered.
    Id. at 860. His son, the plaintiff, instituted an action in equity in the Court of
    22
    Common Pleas of Allegheny County against decedent’s wife, the defendant, to
    obtain judicial nullification of the deed. The chancellor dismissed the complaint,
    and common pleas, en banc, granted a final decree in favor of the defendant.
    Id. at 859. The plaintiff appealed. Id.
    The Pennsylvania Supreme Court summarized the relevant law as follows:
    In order to validate defendant’s claim to the ownership of
    the property involved[,] there are two indispensable requisites:
    (1) a donative intent upon the part of the grantor, i.e., an intent to make
    a gift to the grantee then and there, when the deed was executed; [and]
    (2) a delivery of the deed to the grantee, either actual or constructive,
    which divested the donor of all dominion over the property and invested
    the donee therewith. The recording of the deed was not essential to its
    validity or transaction of the title. Nor was it essential that the grantee
    have knowledge of the transaction. By subsequent acceptance, she
    ratified the original delivery if such occurred.
    However, there must have been a delivery of the instrument to
    the grantee and while the execution, sealing, acknowledging, and
    recording of a deed gives rise to a presumption of delivery, this is a
    factual presumption and as such, is rebuttable.
    For a legal delivery to be effected, it is not necessary that the
    deed be delivered directly to the grantee. It may be placed in the
    possession of a third party for delivery to the grantee upon the
    happening of a specified contingency. In such cases, the delivery date
    is that when the donor effectuated his intention.
    Id. at 859-60 (citations omitted). The Supreme Court reasoned that based on the
    record, the husband “continued his complete control over the property until his death
    . . . [and] [a]t no time did he tell the grantee in the deed, or any members of his
    family, that he had deeded over his interest to the defendant.”            Id. at 860.
    The Supreme Court reversed the decree and directed common pleas to enter a decree
    in favor of the plaintiff. Id. at 861. Accordingly, we agree with Objectors that it is
    not necessary that delivery of a deed be made to the grantee himself or herself, but
    23
    rather, a delivery to a third person (e.g., a settlement agent) for the grantee may
    constitute a valid delivery sufficient to pass title.
    For the reasons set forth above, a determination based on the pleadings and
    affidavits as to whether Objectors were legal owners at the time of the upset tax sale
    based on having allegedly received the deed to the Property prior to the
    September 13, 2018 upset tax sale would be improper. An evidentiary hearing is
    required to resolve this issue.
    C. Due Process
    We now address Tax Sale Purchaser’s argument that Common Pleas abused
    its discretion when it denied him due process of law by granting the Petition without
    an evidentiary hearing. Tax Sale Purchaser argues that Common Pleas abused its
    discretion when he was denied the opportunity to produce evidence that Prior Owner
    was provided with the notice of sale prescribed by Section 602 of the RETSL and
    that Prior Owner had actual notice of the upset tax sale prior to September 13, 2018.
    Common Pleas did not address this issue in its Pa. R.A.P. 1925(a) opinion.
    “It is the trial court’s exclusive province, as fact-finder, to evaluate evidence
    adduced at the proceedings, make credibility determinations, and draw inferences
    from the evidence presented.” In re Consolidated Reps. & Return by Tax Claims
    Bureau of Northumberland Cnty. of Props., 
    132 A.3d 637
    , 644 (Pa. Cmwlth.)
    (Northumberland Cnty.) (en banc), appeal denied, 
    141 A.3d 482
     (Pa. 2016).
    “‘Pennsylvania courts have long recognized the broad discretion of the fact-finding
    [t]rial [c]ourt . . . .’” 
    Id.
     (quoting Brady v. Borough of Dunmore, 
    479 A.2d 59
    , 62
    (Pa. Cmwlth. 1984)). As our Supreme Court explained:
    “[J]udicial discretion” requires action in conformity with law on facts
    and circumstances before the trial court after hearing and due
    consideration . . . . An “abuse of discretion” or failure to exercise sound
    discretion is not merely an error in judgment. But if, in reaching a
    24
    conclusion, [the] law is overridden or misapplied, or the judgment
    exercised is manifestly unreasonable or lacking in reason, discretion
    must be held to have been abused.
    Northumberland Cnty., 132 A.3d at 653 (quoting In re Deed of Trust of Rose Hill
    Cemetery Ass’n Dated Jan. 14, 1960, 
    590 A.2d 1
    , 3 (Pa. 1991)).
    “Our Supreme Court has emphasized that due process under both the
    United States and Pennsylvania Constitutions must be satisfied whenever the
    government subjects a citizen’s property to forfeiture for nonpayment of taxes.”
    Battisti, 
    76 A.3d at 113
    . Further:
    [A] taxing authority’s strict compliance with the tax law does not
    necessarily satisfy the demands of due process. There can be no
    deprivation of property without notice and an opportunity to be heard.
    Interests in real property [are] entitled to the most rigorous
    [due process] protections. Where a question of fact is raised, a hearing
    is necessary because [w]ithout a full hearing on the matter, the door
    might be opened to fraud.
    Once [the t]axpayer presented a prima facie challenge to the tax
    sale, it became the burden of the [t]ax [c]laim [b]ureau to prove strict
    conformance with the notice provisions of the [the RETSL]. The [t]ax
    [c]laim [b]ureau’s answer and [the p]urchaser’s answer and new matter
    raised a dispute on the central factual question, i.e., whether
    [the t]axpayer was given the notice required for an upset tax sale to be
    valid under the [RETSL] and under the Due Process Clause found in
    the United States and Pennsylvania Constitutions.
    Battisti, 
    76 A.3d at 116
     (citations omitted). We vacated the common pleas order
    granting the purchaser’s motion for judgment on the pleadings, and we remanded
    the matter for an evidentiary hearing. 
    Id. at 116-17
    .
    Here, we agree with Tax Sale Purchaser that Common Pleas abused its
    discretion when it denied him the opportunity to produce evidence at an evidentiary
    hearing. Common Pleas denied Tax Sale Purchaser an opportunity to present
    evidence in support of his contentions that Prior Owner was provided with the notice
    of sale prescribed by Section 602 of the RETSL and that Prior Owner had actual
    25
    notice of the upset tax sale prior to September 13, 2018. As a result, Tax Sale
    Purchaser did not receive the due process to which he is entitled. See Battisti.
    IV. CONCLUSION
    For the above reasons, we vacate Common Pleas’ order and remand the matter
    to Common Pleas with direction that it conduct an evidentiary hearing. During that
    hearing, the parties may present evidence regarding Objectors’ standing and whether
    the Bureau complied with the requirements of RETSL, including evidence relating
    to notice received by Prior Owner and the Bureau’s attempts to notify Prior Owner
    of the upset tax sale.
    P. KEVIN BROBSON, Judge
    26
    IN THE COMMONWEALTH COURT OF PENNSYLVANIA
    Amy Nguyen and Kenny Pham              :
    :
    v.                         :   No. 393 C.D. 2020
    :
    Delaware County Tax Claim              :
    Bureau and Chadd Neumann               :
    :
    Appeal of: Chadd Neumann               :
    ORDER
    AND NOW, this 29th day of December, 2020, the order of the Court of
    Common Pleas of Delaware County (Common Pleas), dated January 15, 2020, is
    VACATED, and the matter is REMANDED to Common Pleas with instructions that
    Common Pleas conduct an evidentiary hearing and issue a new decision and order.
    Jurisdiction relinquished.
    P. KEVIN BROBSON, Judge