The city of Atlanta mistakenly tore down a man’s home. Now, they are suing him for $68K in demolition costs

1srelluc

Diamond Member
Nov 21, 2021
41,189
57,973
3,488
Shenandoah Valley of Virginia

First, the city demolished his home. Now, they are trying to foreclose on the property to pay for the $68,000 in demolition costs.

The whole time, an Atlanta man said the paperwork had the wrong address on it.

“I’m not going to let the city take this from me. I’m going to fight them tooth and nail,” said homeowner Everett Tripodis.

It’s just an empty lot now, but the city demolished his southwest Atlanta house. Now, Tripodis told Channel 2 consumer investigator Justin Gray that he has been served with a lawsuit from the city of Atlanta saying they intend to foreclose and take the property.

“When I saw that came from the city, I was quite excited. Maybe it was a letter of apology. Maybe it was a check. Maybe they’re going to justly compensate me. I opened it up and realized that they were suing me,” Tripodis said.

Gray first reported in March, how before tearing down the house, the city sent its notices that a city inspector found the house unfit for habitation to the wrong addresses. Certified letters were “returned to sender.”

Even the official demolition hearing notice was for Lawton Avenue zip code 30314. But Tripodis’s home is on Lawton Street, which is in the 30310 zip code about 1.4 miles away.

Our Channel 2 Action story got the attention of the City Council.

A review of the city’s demolition, or “in rem” process, reported to the council in April found that some property owners were unaware their homes were up for demolition.

But now, even after those problems were flagged to city leaders, Tripodis got served with a lawsuit. The city is alleging that “the property should be sold at public outcry unless one or more of the interested parties tenders the full redemption amount.”

That amount with interest is now more than $68,000 in demolition costs.

“After you air the story, after everyone sees it, instead of them fixing the problem, they double down and do it again. It’s like after the slap comes the spit in my face. I’m just frustrated,” Tripodis said.

Tripodis had already filed a lawsuit against the city for the demolition. That’s still stuck in the Fulton Court system. He only has a matter of a few weeks to respond to the foreclosure suit.

Gray contacted the mayor’s office about this story. They tell us they are researching the situation.


Sent the condemnation notices to the wrong address, tore his falling apart house down then sued him. That guy may have won the litigation lottery.
Government is in the wrong regardless. Either:

A) It's the right house, and the owner was not given the chance to challenge the assessment, make suitable repairs, or have any means of preventing the demolition

B) They tore down the wrong house.

If it's option A, then the question becomes, "was it deliberate?". It very well could have been to, so they didn't have to fight the owner in court, or so they may have thought.


Blah!....Black dem run city gonna black dem run city.....That will teach him to vote Republican or I wonder which Atlanta City councilman wanted the lot? ;)




 
Nope....We're not going to make it.

ChargeFamily4Bullet.jpg
 

First, the city demolished his home. Now, they are trying to foreclose on the property to pay for the $68,000 in demolition costs.

The whole time, an Atlanta man said the paperwork had the wrong address on it.

“I’m not going to let the city take this from me. I’m going to fight them tooth and nail,” said homeowner Everett Tripodis.

It’s just an empty lot now, but the city demolished his southwest Atlanta house. Now, Tripodis told Channel 2 consumer investigator Justin Gray that he has been served with a lawsuit from the city of Atlanta saying they intend to foreclose and take the property.

“When I saw that came from the city, I was quite excited. Maybe it was a letter of apology. Maybe it was a check. Maybe they’re going to justly compensate me. I opened it up and realized that they were suing me,” Tripodis said.

Gray first reported in March, how before tearing down the house, the city sent its notices that a city inspector found the house unfit for habitation to the wrong addresses. Certified letters were “returned to sender.”

Even the official demolition hearing notice was for Lawton Avenue zip code 30314. But Tripodis’s home is on Lawton Street, which is in the 30310 zip code about 1.4 miles away.

Our Channel 2 Action story got the attention of the City Council.

A review of the city’s demolition, or “in rem” process, reported to the council in April found that some property owners were unaware their homes were up for demolition.

But now, even after those problems were flagged to city leaders, Tripodis got served with a lawsuit. The city is alleging that “the property should be sold at public outcry unless one or more of the interested parties tenders the full redemption amount.”

That amount with interest is now more than $68,000 in demolition costs.

“After you air the story, after everyone sees it, instead of them fixing the problem, they double down and do it again. It’s like after the slap comes the spit in my face. I’m just frustrated,” Tripodis said.

Tripodis had already filed a lawsuit against the city for the demolition. That’s still stuck in the Fulton Court system. He only has a matter of a few weeks to respond to the foreclosure suit.

Gray contacted the mayor’s office about this story. They tell us they are researching the situation.


Sent the condemnation notices to the wrong address, tore his falling apart house down then sued him. That guy may have won the litigation lottery.
Government is in the wrong regardless. Either:

A) It's the right house, and the owner was not given the chance to challenge the assessment, make suitable repairs, or have any means of preventing the demolition

B) They tore down the wrong house.

If it's option A, then the question becomes, "was it deliberate?". It very well could have been to, so they didn't have to fight the owner in court, or so they may have thought.


Blah!....Black dem run city gonna black dem run city.....That will teach him to vote Republican or I wonder which Atlanta City councilman wanted the lot? ;)




I could support your position if you weren't such an ignorant bigot.
I'd rather not give the impression your hate is justified.
 
A couple of questions here.....................

If they tore down the wrong house, is the house they were supposed to tear down still standing?

And..................if it is the wrong house, why in the hell did they tear it down in the first place? Are those city employees so incompetent that they can't read a map or a zip code?

Sounds like this guy who had his house torn down has a strong case against the city. I'd like to see him sue the city and force them to rebuild a house of the same size and amenities as the house they tore down or better. Plus reimburse him for any expenses that he may have incurred from having to find a place to live, as well as a few thousand extra just for the pain in the ass I'm sure the situation has caused him.
 
A couple of questions here.....................

If they tore down the wrong house, is the house they were supposed to tear down still standing?

And..................if it is the wrong house, why in the hell did they tear it down in the first place? Are those city employees so incompetent that they can't read a map or a zip code?

Sounds like this guy who had his house torn down has a strong case against the city. I'd like to see him sue the city and force them to rebuild a house of the same size and amenities as the house they tore down or better. Plus reimburse him for any expenses that he may have incurred from having to find a place to live, as well as a few thousand extra just for the pain in the ass I'm sure the situation has caused him.
My bet is it was his condemned house and they sent the letters to the wrong address on purpose. I'll also bet the amount he's being sued for is close to the value of the lot.
 

First, the city demolished his home. Now, they are trying to foreclose on the property to pay for the $68,000 in demolition costs.

The whole time, an Atlanta man said the paperwork had the wrong address on it.

“I’m not going to let the city take this from me. I’m going to fight them tooth and nail,” said homeowner Everett Tripodis.

It’s just an empty lot now, but the city demolished his southwest Atlanta house. Now, Tripodis told Channel 2 consumer investigator Justin Gray that he has been served with a lawsuit from the city of Atlanta saying they intend to foreclose and take the property.

“When I saw that came from the city, I was quite excited. Maybe it was a letter of apology. Maybe it was a check. Maybe they’re going to justly compensate me. I opened it up and realized that they were suing me,” Tripodis said.

Gray first reported in March, how before tearing down the house, the city sent its notices that a city inspector found the house unfit for habitation to the wrong addresses. Certified letters were “returned to sender.”

Even the official demolition hearing notice was for Lawton Avenue zip code 30314. But Tripodis’s home is on Lawton Street, which is in the 30310 zip code about 1.4 miles away.

Our Channel 2 Action story got the attention of the City Council.

A review of the city’s demolition, or “in rem” process, reported to the council in April found that some property owners were unaware their homes were up for demolition.

But now, even after those problems were flagged to city leaders, Tripodis got served with a lawsuit. The city is alleging that “the property should be sold at public outcry unless one or more of the interested parties tenders the full redemption amount.”

That amount with interest is now more than $68,000 in demolition costs.

“After you air the story, after everyone sees it, instead of them fixing the problem, they double down and do it again. It’s like after the slap comes the spit in my face. I’m just frustrated,” Tripodis said.

Tripodis had already filed a lawsuit against the city for the demolition. That’s still stuck in the Fulton Court system. He only has a matter of a few weeks to respond to the foreclosure suit.

Gray contacted the mayor’s office about this story. They tell us they are researching the situation.


Sent the condemnation notices to the wrong address, tore his falling apart house down then sued him. That guy may have won the litigation lottery.
Government is in the wrong regardless. Either:

A) It's the right house, and the owner was not given the chance to challenge the assessment, make suitable repairs, or have any means of preventing the demolition

B) They tore down the wrong house.

If it's option A, then the question becomes, "was it deliberate?". It very well could have been to, so they didn't have to fight the owner in court, or so they may have thought.


Blah!....Black dem run city gonna black dem run city.....That will teach him to vote Republican or I wonder which Atlanta City councilman wanted the lot? ;)




I know what I would do.
 

Forum List

Back
Top