Chapter 17 PARKS AND RECREATION*
Section 17-150 Tax bills; form and content.
Each tax bill shall contain a brief general statement of
the facts authorizing its issue, the
amount for which it is issued, the name of the record owner and the description of the property
against which it is issued, the rate of interest which it bears, when it begins to bear interest, and
shall state that it is a lien against the land therein described, and give the time that the lien
continues. Tax bills shall bear no interest for sixty (60) days after the date of issue, at which time
such tax bills shall be due and payable in full. After the expiration of sixty (60) days, tax bills
shall bear interest, on the unpaid balance, at a rate of nine (9) percent, which rate shall be set
forth in the ordinance authorizing the issuance thereof. Every tax bill shall be a lien against the
lot, tract or parcel of land described therein for a period of ten (10) years after date of issue,
unless sooner paid. The lien, for tax bills payable in installments, shall expire one (1) year after
the date of maturity of the last installment, except when it becomes necessary to bring suit to
enforce the lien, in which case the lien shall continue until the expiration of the litigation. If the
property owner cannot be served by legal process, a suit may be brought by attachment or by any
other legal remedy. Tax bills shall be prima facie evidence of what they contain, of their own
validity and of the facts authorizing their issue. No mere informality or clerical mistake in any of
the proceedings shall be a defense thereto. Any error made in issuing any tax bill may be
corrected by the city clerk, either by interlineation or by issuing a new tax bill in lieu of the
erroneous one. When a tax bill is corrected by interlineation, the date of making same shall be
certified by the clerk on the margin or back of the bill. In any action brought on any tax bill, the
court shall have the authority to correct any error in the tax bill.
(Ord. No. 13929 § 1, 1-18-94)