Ky. Rev. Stat. § 134.546

Cause of action on certificates of delinquency -- Sale and deed on

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foreclosure -- No redemption -- Additional rights if owner is a taxing unit. (1) Any action to collect any amount due on a certificate of delinquency or personal property certificate of delinquency may be brought at any time after the passage of one (1) year from the date the taxes became delinquent, and shall be brought within eleven (11) years of the date when the taxes became delinquent. (2) A third-party purchaser may: (a) Institute an action against the delinquent taxpayer to collect the amount of the certificate of delinquency and any other certificates of delinquency subsequently issued to the same third-party purchaser against the same delinquent, and shall have all the remedies available for the enforcement of a debt; (b) Institute an action to enforce the lien provided in KRS 134.420, represented by the certificate of delinquency and those certificates subsequently held by the same third-party purchaser against the same delinquent or property; or (c) Institute one (1) action including both types of actions mentioned in paragraphs (a) and (b) of this subsection, and the joinder of actions shall not be defeated if the delinquent taxpayer has disposed of any property covered by the lien, but the purchaser of the property shall be made a defendant if the judgment is to affect his or her interest in the property, and as between them the delinquent taxpayer shall be responsible. (3) If the state, county, or a taxing district is the owner of a certificate of delinquency or personal property certificate of delinquency, it shall have, in addition to the remedies provided in subsection (1) of this section, the right to distrain and sell any property owned by the delinquent taxpayer, including that on which the lien provided in KRS 134.420 has attached. Any property sold under distraint proceedings shall be sold in the same manner as provided in KRS 131.500, except that the exercise of the power shall be vested in the county attorney. (4) Any property while owned by a delinquent taxpayer shall be subject to foreclosure or execution in satisfaction of a judgment pursuant to an action in rem or an action in personam, or both, to enforce the obligation. (5) If property is sold pursuant to a judgment of foreclosure, it shall be appraised pursuant to the provisions of KRS 426.520, and there shall be a right of redemption as provided in KRS 426.530. If there is no purchaser at a foreclosure sale, the master commissioner shall make a deed to the person or persons shown by record to be the owner of the certificate or certificates of delinquency, and that person or persons shall have a pro rata interest in accordance with the amount of their respective certificates. (6) The department may provide to a third-party purchaser factual information related to the owner or lessee of the coal, oil, gas reserves, or any other mineral resources assessed under KRS 132.820(1) pursuant to an order entered in a foreclosure action involving a certificate of delinquency for unmined coal, oil, gas, or any other mineral resources. The department may promulgate an administrative regulation establishing a fee schedule for the provision of the information described in this subsection. Any fee imposed shall not exceed the greater of the actual cost of providing the information or ten dollars ($10). Effective: April 7, 2010 History: Amended 2010 Ky. Acts ch. 75, sec. 10, effective April 7, 2010. -- Created 2009 Ky. Acts ch. 10, sec. 16, effective January 1, 2010.

Notes of Decisions
Cited in 9 cases (3 in the last 5 years), 2011–2025 · leading case: In re Joseph
In re Joseph (2018) kyeb · cites it 16× “546(4) creates a "statutory security interest in the subject properties for the amounts of the unsatisfied in rem judgments, which it perfected by filing its notices of lien...." [ECF No. 132, p. 7 of 16.] KTBS cited no authority to support its argument that K.”
U.S. Bank National Ass'n v. Tax Ease Lien Investments 1, LLC (2011) kyctapp · cites it 3× “KRS 134.546(2) states that “[a] third-party purchaser may .”
Farmers National Bank v. Commonwealth (2015) kyctapp “KRS 134.546(2). However, they must wait one year after the taxes become delinquent before filing suit.”
Wood v. Tax Ease Lien Investment 1, LLC (2014) kyctapp “Appellant claimed he was an “indispensable party to this action and he has not been joined in this action and his In Personam and In Rem actions as guaranteed by KRS 134.546(2) concerning his 2009 Shelby County Delinquent Tax Bill # 13696 which remains outstanding and unpaid.”
Ky. Tax Bill Servicing, Inc. v. City of Covington (2021) kyed · cites it 13× “Covington’s Alternative Defense Covington alternatively argues that Counts I, II, III, and IV of the Amended Complaint should be dismissed, as to certain properties, because Plaintiff did not file foreclosure actions within the necessary time period required by Ky. Rev. Stat. §…”
Keith Smith v. Apex Fund Services as Custodian for Ceres Tax Receivables, LLC (2025) ky · cites it 8× “KRS 134.546 explains that third party purchasers of certificates of delinquency may institute actions to collect the debt or enforce the lien.”
Pleasant Unions, LLC v. Kentucky Tax Company, LLC (2021) ky · cites it 4× “(2) Anytime after the expiration of the one (1) year tolling period established by KRS 134.546, the third-party purchaser may institute an action to collect the amount due on a certificate of Within fifty (50) days after the issuance of a certificate of delinquency to a private…”
Donald R. Nagel, Jr. (2019) kyeb · cites it 4× “§ 134.546 (“Cause of Action on Certificates of Delinquency”) states: A third-party purchaser may: (a) Institute an action against the delinquent taxpayer to collect the amount of the certificate of delinquency and any other certificates of delinquency subsequently issued to the…”
Brandon Mills v. Ricky Mills Individually (2020) kyctapp “In fact, Hazel Enterprises does not cite this statute in its counter-claim and instead brought its claim under KRS 134.546 to foreclose upon the property to enforce its lien.”
— Ky. Rev. Stat. § 134.546(1) — 1 case
Ky. Tax Bill Servicing, Inc. v. City of Covington (2021) kyed “Covington’s Alternative Defense Covington alternatively argues that Counts I, II, III, and IV of the Amended Complaint should be dismissed, as to certain properties, because Plaintiff did not file foreclosure actions within the necessary time period required by Ky. Rev. Stat. §…”
— Ky. Rev. Stat. § 134.546(2) — 4 cases
U.S. Bank National Ass'n v. Tax Ease Lien Investments 1, LLC (2011) kyctapp “KRS 134.546(2) states that “[a] third-party purchaser may .”
Farmers National Bank v. Commonwealth (2015) kyctapp “KRS 134.546(2). However, they must wait one year after the taxes become delinquent before filing suit.”
Wood v. Tax Ease Lien Investment 1, LLC (2014) kyctapp “Appellant claimed he was an “indispensable party to this action and he has not been joined in this action and his In Personam and In Rem actions as guaranteed by KRS 134.546(2) concerning his 2009 Shelby County Delinquent Tax Bill # 13696 which remains outstanding and unpaid.”
Donald R. Nagel, Jr. (2019) kyeb “§ 134.546 (“Cause of Action on Certificates of Delinquency”) states: A third-party purchaser may: (a) Institute an action against the delinquent taxpayer to collect the amount of the certificate of delinquency and any other certificates of delinquency subsequently issued to the…”
— Ky. Rev. Stat. § 134.546(4) — 1 case
In re Joseph (2018) kyeb “546(4) creates a "statutory security interest in the subject properties for the amounts of the unsatisfied in rem judgments, which it perfected by filing its notices of lien...." [ECF No. 132, p. 7 of 16.] KTBS cited no authority to support its argument that K.”
— Ky. Rev. Stat. § 134.546(5) — 4 cases
In re Joseph (2018) kyeb “546(4) creates a "statutory security interest in the subject properties for the amounts of the unsatisfied in rem judgments, which it perfected by filing its notices of lien...." [ECF No. 132, p. 7 of 16.] KTBS cited no authority to support its argument that K.”
U.S. Bank National Ass'n v. Tax Ease Lien Investments 1, LLC (2011) kyctapp “KRS 134.546(2) states that “[a] third-party purchaser may .”
Keith Smith v. Apex Fund Services as Custodian for Ceres Tax Receivables, LLC (2025) ky “KRS 134.546 explains that third party purchasers of certificates of delinquency may institute actions to collect the debt or enforce the lien.”
Donald R. Nagel, Jr. (2019) kyeb “§ 134.546 (“Cause of Action on Certificates of Delinquency”) states: A third-party purchaser may: (a) Institute an action against the delinquent taxpayer to collect the amount of the certificate of delinquency and any other certificates of delinquency subsequently issued to the…”
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