I’ll bet the environmentalists could be behind a tax plan in
North Carolina like that. They love to push all old cars off the road and to
dry up the parts sources (those old cars back in the woods) so you can’t keep
the old cars running. They think every old car is a gas hog, excess green-house
gas emitter, and general polluter. They are making it expensive to own an old
car on purpose.
A sharp lawyer
could see the gold his share of a class action suit could bring in. Just think
of how much excess tax has been collected on every old car in the state valued
many times their true value, over the last 10 years, and the lawyer could potentially
collect a third! Or the threat of such a lawsuit could convince the politicos to
change the tax process as a compromise for letting them keep their past
ill-gotten gains.
Dave Homstad
56 Dodge
D500
-----Original
Message-----
From: Forward Look Mopar
Discussion List [mailto:L-FORWARDLOOK@xxxxxxxxxxxxx]On Behalf Of Ted Blackington
Sent: Saturday, April 21, 2007
7:45 AM
To: L-FORWARDLOOK@xxxxxxxxxxxxx
Subject: [FWDLK] property
taxes/old cars
In
North Carolina an annual property tax must be paid on every vehicle. It matters
not whether the car is usable or licensed. . A special "book" is
kept in the state capitol which gives the local assessor the "correct
rate" at which to tax your old car. The book assumes every old car,
including that rusted out old Model A in the wood behind your house is a
restored model. Appeal is virtually impossible, as I stated in another post a
few minutes ago. One must go to Raleigh with a hired lawyer after filing a petition
and formally present your appeal to a tax appeal board. This is what I was told
by letter when I protested my tax bill.
As
mentioned above, the tax is an ANNUAL one, and though it decreases slightly
each year on new cars, it increases on "antique" models.
I have
many friends who "hoard" old parts cars "out back" that are
in great fear of the tax assessors finding their ":stash." Especially
so since they have begun using aircraft to spot these vehicles. North Carolina
is NOT a tax friendly state to homeowners or old car lovers. And yet each year
I receive an "invitation" to enter my 55 Imperial in the annual
Christmas Parade. For free, of course.
Oh
yes-fail to pay the tax on that "junker" out back and they will
refuse to license your regular driver.
Ted ( who would get the h--ll out of here if someone would
buy his house!!)
See
what's free at AOL.com.