The Nebraska Supreme Court, in Sanitary and Improvement District No. 24 v. Tristar Management, LLC, held that Tristar’s tax deeds foreclosed the SID’s special assessment liens. The issue was whether the SID’s special assessment liens against real estate located within the SID survived Tristar’s acquisition of the property by tax […]
Dirt Alert
Douglas County Property Valuation Protests due June 30
The Douglas County Assessor values properties located in Douglas County as of January 1 of each year with final valuations set on or about May 1 of each year. If a property owner disagrees with the property value that the Assessor assigns, the owner may file a Property Valuation Protest […]
EPA’s Proposed Rule on Reducing Carbon Dioxide Emissions and the Effects on Nebraska
On June 2, 2014, the United States Environmental Protection Agency issued a proposed rule to reduce carbon dioxide emissions from the generation of electricity. The EPA’s Clean Power Plan proposes to reduce emissions nationwide by 30 percent of 2005 levels, by 2030. The proposal’s two main elements are state specific […]
Ambiguous Organizing Documents Can Be Costly for Homeowners’ Associations
On April 1, 2014, the Nebraska Court of Appeals decided Oak Hills Highlands Association, Inc. v. Estate of LeVasseur. The case involved interesting facts and a lesson for homeowners’ associations. Bylaws, declarations, and other organizing documents need to be written in unambiguous language. Specifically, if a homeowners’ association intends to […]
Nebraska Supreme Court Clarifies “Gap and Extend” Law
The Nebraska Supreme Court affirmed a city’s use of the “gap and extend” law in Johnson v. City Fremont. Nebraska Revised Statutes section 18-2001, permits a city to “pave any unpaved street . . . which intersects a paved street for a distance of not to exceed one block on […]