M & M Investment Group, LLC v. Ahlemeyer Farms, Inc. and Monroe Bank , 994 N.E.2d 1108 ( 2013 )


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  • ATTORNEY FOR APPELLANT             ATTORNEY FOR AMICUS CURIAE          ATTORNEYS FOR APPELLEES
    Jon L. Orlosky                     ASSOCIATION OF INDIANA              Robert Delano Jones
    Muncie, Indiana                    COUNTIES                            E. Paige Freitag
    Andrew Berger                       Bloomington, Indiana
    ATTORNEYS FOR AMICUS               Indianapolis, Indiana
    CURIAE THE STATE OF INDIANA                                            ATTORNEYS FOR AMICUS
    Gregory F. Zoeller                 ATTORNEYS FOR AMICUS                CURIAE INDIANA BANKERS
    Attorney General of Indiana        CURIAE SRI, INCORPORATED            ASSOCIATION
    Matthew T. Albaugh                  Thomas W. Dinwiddie
    Thomas M. Fisher                   Brent A. Auberry                    Maureen E. Ward
    Solicitor General of Indiana       Benjamin A. Blair                   Indianapolis, Indiana
    Indianapolis, Indiana
    Heather H. McVeigh
    Tamara L. Weaver                   ATTORNEY FOR AMICUS CURIAE
    Deputy Attorneys General           INDIANA COUNTY AUDITORS’
    Indianapolis, Indiana              ASSOCIATION, INC.
    Michelle L. Baldwin
    Fishers, Indiana
    Sep 26 2013, 9:37 am
    In the
    Indiana Supreme Court
    No. 03S04-1211-CC-645
    M & M INVESTMENT GROUP, LLC,
    Appellant (Petitioner below),
    v.
    AHLEMEYER FARMS, INC. AND MONROE
    BANK,
    Appellees (Respondents below).
    Appeal from the Bartholomew Circuit Court, No. 03C01-1109-CC-5167
    The Honorable Stephen R. Heimann, Judge
    On Petition to Transfer from the Indiana Court of Appeals, No. 03A04-1112-CC-639
    September 26, 2013
    David, Justice.
    Before a parcel of real property can be sold at a tax sale, the Indiana Code requires the
    county auditor to mail notice of the pending sale to any mortgagee holding a mortgage on the
    property—provided, however, that the mortgagee has first affirmatively requested such notice by
    submitting a form to the auditor. Is such a procedure permissible under the Due Process Clause
    of the Fourteenth Amendment? The answer, we said over two decades ago, is “Yes.”
    But in this case a bank failed to submit the required form to the Bartholomew County
    auditor and therefore was not notified that one of its mortgaged properties was tax-delinquent
    until after the property had been sold and the buyer requested a tax deed. The bank objected,
    challenging the constitutionality of this statutory scheme in light of a more recent case from the
    U.S. Supreme Court. The trial court below agreed with the bank and refused to issue the tax
    deed, but we remain firm that the answer to the constitutional question is still “Yes,” and
    therefore reverse.
    Facts and Procedural History
    The essential facts of this case are not in dispute. In September 2010, M & M Investment
    Group, LLC purchased a parcel of real property in Bartholomew County at a tax sale. The prior
    owner of the property was Ahlemeyer Farms, Inc. At the time of the sale, Monroe Bank was a
    mortgagee with respect to the property, holding two mortgages properly recorded in
    Bartholomew County.
    Indiana’s statutory scheme for tax sales of real property requires the auditor of the county
    in which the sale is conducted to send notice of the sale, by certified mail, to any mortgagee who
    annually requests such notice. 
    Ind. Code § 6-1.1-24
    -3 (2010). Monroe Bank did not fulfill this
    requirement. Therefore it did not receive pre-sale notice of the property becoming available at a
    tax sale. In accordance with the Indiana Code, though, M & M timely notified Monroe Bank of
    2
    the executed sale and its intent to seek a tax deed for the property. See 
    Ind. Code §§ 6-1.1-25
    -
    4.5, -4.6 (2010).
    M & M filed a petition to direct the Bartholomew County auditor to issue a tax deed for
    the property and Monroe Bank filed a response challenging the tax sale notice statutes as
    unconstitutional under the Fourteenth Amendment to the U.S. Constitution. The trial court did
    not certify the challenge to the constitutionality of a state statute to the Attorney General of
    Indiana, but issued an order holding that Indiana Code § 6-1.1-24-3(b) was unconstitutional and
    denying M & M’s petition.
    M & M appealed, arguing that the trial court’s failure to certify the constitutional
    challenge to the Attorney General was reversible error, and also that the pre-tax notice
    requirement is constitutional. The State filed a brief as amicus curiae, asserting its interest in the
    case and likewise arguing that the notice statute satisfies the requirements of the Due Process
    Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment.1 The Court of Appeals affirmed.2 M & M Investment
    Group, LLC v. Ahlemeyer Farms, Inc., 
    972 N.E.2d 889
     (Ind. Ct. App. 2012).
    1
    The State also filed an amicus brief in support of M & M’s petition to transfer, as did a number of other
    groups like the Association of Indiana Counties, SRI Incorporated, and the Indiana County Auditors’
    Association, Inc. Additionally, the Indiana Bankers Association filed a brief with this Court in support of
    Monroe Bank. We thank them for their collective input and analysis on this matter.
    2
    A step in this case’s appellate process that was neither necessary nor proper under our Appellate Rules
    as this Court has “mandatory and exclusive jurisdiction” over “Appeals of Final Judgments declaring a
    state or federal statute unconstitutional in whole or in part.” Ind. Appellate Rule 4(A)(1)(b); see also Ind.
    Appellate Rule 6.
    3
    We granted transfer, M & M Investment Group, LLC v. Ahlemeyer Farms, Inc., 
    978 N.E.2d 752
     (Ind. 2012) (table),3 thereby vacating the Court of Appeals opinion, Ind. Appellate
    Rule 58(A).
    Standard of Review
    A party challenging a statute as unconstitutional must clearly overcome a presumption of
    constitutionality by a contrary showing. Sims v. U.S. Fidelity & Guar. Co., 
    782 N.E.2d 345
    , 349
    (Ind. 2003). All doubts are resolved in favor of constitutionality and against the challenging
    party. Boehm v. Town of St. John, 
    675 N.E.2d 318
    , 321 (Ind. 1996). We presume that the
    General Assembly did not intentionally violate the constitution and will not interpret a statute
    otherwise unless that interpretation is required by the unambiguous language of the statute. 
    Id.
    Therefore, when a trial court has found a statute unconstitutional our standard of review gives
    even less deference than de novo review. Horseman v. Keller, 
    841 N.E.2d 164
    , 170 (Ind. 2006).
    If there are any grounds for reversal we will do so. 
    Id.
    Discussion
    M & M’s first issue on appeal is that the trial court failed to certify Monroe Bank’s
    constitutional challenge, and this failure mandates reversal. In short summary, M & M is correct
    that the Indiana Code requires trial courts to certify constitutional challenges to state statutes to
    the Attorney General. 
    Ind. Code § 34-33.1-1
    -1(a) (Supp. 2012). It was error for the trial court
    3
    Ahlemeyer Farms is not seeking relief, nor did they file a brief with this Court. However, as a party to
    the tax deed petition they remain the captioned party on appeal even though Monroe Bank is the party
    asserting the constitutional challenge. See Ind. Appellate Rule 17(A).
    4
    not to do so here, and that error prevented the State from intervening and presenting its
    arguments as to the constitutionality of the tax sale statute. The State, however, has since
    asserted its interests by way of a well-written amicus brief and we see no need to remand (nor
    does the State request it) in order that we take longer to get to the same place as we are now. The
    constitutional challenge is a question of law that this Court can resolve without further
    proceedings before the trial court.
    The crux of this case, rather, is the trial court’s finding that the Indiana Code provisions
    governing pre-sale notice “do not provide constitutionally protected due process to Monroe Bank
    as mortgagee.”     (Appellant’s Br. at 12.)     It appears to have based this conclusion on an
    interpretation of a 1983 U.S. Supreme Court case, Mennonite Bd. of Missions v. Adams, 
    462 U.S. 791
     (1983), which the trial court said “held that notification of a mortgagee by publication
    is insufficient notice.” (Appellant’s Br. at 12.) Before we delve into whether that proposition is
    correct, some background is in order.
    I. Indiana’s Tax Sale Statutes
    Indiana’s tax sale statutes have long required the county auditor to post notice in the
    county courthouse and publish notice in a newspaper of the properties being brought up for a tax
    sale. See, e.g., 
    Ind. Code § 64-2202
     (1951). And for over fifty years, the auditor has also been
    required to provide the owner of the property with notice by mail to the owner’s last known
    address. 
    Ind. Code § 64-2202
     (1961). Prior to a 1980 amendment, however, the statutes did not
    require the auditor to provide any form of pre-sale notice by mail or service to the mortgagee of
    one of those properties.
    Purchase of a property at a tax sale does not automatically entitle the purchaser to
    possession. Instead the auditor would issue the purchaser a certificate of sale, whereupon “the
    purchaser acquires a lien against the real property for the entire amount paid. The lien of the
    purchaser is superior to all liens against the real property which exist at the time the certificate is
    5
    issued.” 
    Ind. Code § 6-1.1-24
    -9(b) (2010). To obtain the deed to the property, the purchaser
    must then follow the procedures allowing for redemption by an owner or mortgagee, and then
    seek to quiet title. See generally Ind. Code 6-1.1-25.
    In broad strokes, this was the statutory scheme the U.S. Supreme Court faced in
    Mennonite, 
    462 U.S. at
    792–94,4 in which a property owner failed to pay property taxes and the
    property—located in Indiana and subject to a validly recorded mortgage—was sold at a tax sale.
    In accordance with the existing tax sale statutes, notice of the sale was posted in the county
    courthouse, published in a newspaper, and mailed to the property owner. Neither the owner nor
    the mortgagee appeared or responded to the notices. The mortgagee did not learn the property
    had been sold until the expiration of the redemption period, when the purchaser sought to quiet
    title.
    The mortgagee argued that it had not received constitutionally adequate notice of the
    pending sale or opportunity to redeem and the U.S. Supreme Court agreed, concluding that “the
    manner of notice provided to [the mortgagee] did not meet the requirements of the Due Process
    Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment.” 
    Id. at 800
    . It specifically noted that publication and
    posting in the courthouse are designed to attract buyers to a tax sale, not the property owners or
    mortgagees. 
    Id. at 799
    . Owners and mortgagees have an interest in the property but “do not
    make special efforts to keep abreast of such notices.” 
    Id.
    It therefore found those forms of notice unreasonable when “an inexpensive and efficient
    mechanism such as mail service is available.” 
    Id.
     (quoting Greene v. Lindsey, 
    456 U.S. 444
    , 455
    (1982)). “Notice by mail or other means as certain to ensure actual notice is a minimum
    4
    Though Mennonite was decided in 1983, the relevant events took place prior to the 1980 amendment to
    the tax sale statutes. See Mennonite, 
    462 U.S. at
    793 n.2. The Court therefore did not consider the
    constitutionality of the statute as amended, the substance of which we discuss below.
    6
    constitutional precondition to a proceeding which will adversely affect the liberty or property
    interests of any party” when “its name and address are reasonably ascertainable.”                
    Id.
    Consequently, the Court held that when a mortgagee is identified in a publicly recorded
    mortgage, notice by publication “must be supplemented by notice mailed to the mortgagee’s last
    known available address, or by personal service.” 
    Id. at 798
    . Constructive notice alone was only
    sufficient when the mortgagee was not reasonably identifiable. 
    Id.
    In 1980, the General Assembly amended the tax sale statutes to additionally require
    notice by certified mail to the mortgagee of any real property being put forth for tax sale. 
    Ind. Code § 6-1.1-24
    -4.2 (1982); Act of February 28, 1980, P.L. 45-1980, § 1, 
    1980 Ind. Acts 534
    .
    However, the mortgagee had to first annually request such notice by way of a form and agree to
    pay a fee to cover the mailing costs, not to exceed ten dollars. 
    Id.
    In 1986, the statute was amended again to require the auditor to send pre-sale notice to all
    mortgagees and “other persons having a substantial property interest of public record that would
    be affected by the sale of real property under this chapter.” 
    Ind. Code § 6-1.1-24
    -4.2 (1989); Act
    of March 11, 1986, P.L. 60-1986, § 4, 
    1986 Ind. Acts 888
    . No request by the mortgagee or
    interest-holder was first required. 
    Id.
    Then in 1989 the legislature changed the statutory scheme again. Indiana Code § 6-1.1-
    24-4.2 was repealed entirely and Indiana Code § 6-1.1-24-3 was amended to include a new
    subsection (b), requiring the county auditor, in addition to notice by publication and posting, to
    mail notice by certified mail “to any mortgagee who annually requests a copy of the notice.”
    
    Ind. Code § 6-1.1-24
    -3(b); Act of May 5, 1989, P.L. 83-1989, §§ 5, 18, 
    1989 Ind. Acts 930
    , 941
    (section 5 amended 
    Ind. Code § 6-1.1-24
    -3 and section 18 repealed 
    Ind. Code § 6-1.1-24
    -4.2). It
    also added a new clause providing that “the failure of the county auditor to mail this notice or its
    7
    nondelivery does not affect the validity of the judgment and order.” 
    Id.
     This remains the form
    of the statute today.5
    And this was the statutory structure before this Court in 1992 when we decided a trio of
    cases addressing constitutional questions related to the tax sale statutes as they had been
    amended over the preceding decade. Elizondo v. Read, 
    588 N.E.2d 501
     (Ind. 1992); see also
    Griffin v. Munco Assoc., 
    589 N.E.2d 220
     (Ind. 1992); Miller Reeder Co. v. Farmers State Bank
    of Wyatt, 
    588 N.E.2d 506
     (Ind. 1992). And as this structure remains (in relevant part) largely the
    same, a review of those cases completes the background of these statutes and thus informs—if
    not compels—our result today.
    In the primary of the three cases, Elizondo, the Elizondos executed a mortgage on a piece
    of recreational property in 1979. From 1981 to 1984, all property tax statements were sent to
    one address. Unbeknownst to the county auditor’s office, however, the Elizondos moved twice
    within that same period of time. The Elizondos never updated their address with the auditor’s
    office, although the auditor also had other records on file showing the second of the Elizondos’
    three addresses. Additionally, the third of their addresses (the correct one) was reflected in the
    phone book.
    All the notices sent to the first address were returned marked either “Unclaimed” or
    “Undeliverable as addressed. No forwarding order on file.” The Elizondos did not pay the taxes
    due on the property and it became eligible for a tax sale.
    5
    In full, Indiana Code § 6-1.1-24-3(b) now provides:
    At least twenty-one (21) days before the application for judgment is made, the county
    auditor shall mail a copy of the notice required by sections 2 and 2.2 of this chapter by
    certified mail, return receipt requested, to any mortgagee who annually requests, by
    certified mail, a copy of the notice. However, the failure of the county auditor to mail
    this notice or its nondelivery does not affect the validity of the judgment and order.
    8
    In 1984, the auditor’s office sent the Elizondos a courtesy letter and then a certified letter
    containing the formal notice of the tax sale. The mortgagee on the property had not completed
    the statutory request form and thus no pre-sale notice was sent to the mortgagee at all. The letter
    to the Elizondos also came back marked “Unclaimed,” and pursuant to the statutory scheme at
    the time, the auditor published a notice of tax sale in several local newspapers. The property was
    purchased at the tax sale by a third party and at the end of the redemption period a “notice of
    redemption or issuance of tax deed” was sent to the first address. This came back marked
    “Undeliverable as addressed. No forwarding order on file.” The purchasers received a tax deed.
    The Elizondos sued, and this Court confronted the dual questions of whether the statutory
    scheme provided constitutionally sufficient notice to the mortgagee and the Elizondos. Elizondo,
    588 N.E.2d at 502. We found that it did in both regards. Id. at 504, 505.
    We noted that Mennonite requires a mortgagee to receive “notice reasonably calculated
    to appraise him of a pending tax sale,” and that “constructive notice alone” was not
    constitutionally sufficient. Id. at 503 (quoting Mennonite, 
    462 U.S. at 798
    ). At the same time,
    constitutional sufficiency depended on the practicalities and peculiarities of each case, and the
    U.S. Supreme Court had rejected establishing a specific formula to balance the interests of the
    State and the mortgagee. 
    Id.
     In our view, the 1980 amendment to the tax sale statutes, and
    specifically Indiana Code § 6-1.1-24-4.2, properly balanced those interests.
    We said the statutory procedure “protects the State’s interest in receiving taxes while
    relieving it of the sometimes tremendous administrative burden of checking all public records to
    ascertain whether any mortgages have been taken on the property, whether these mortgages are
    viable, and whether the address on the mortgages is dependable.” Id. at 503–04. At the same
    time, “the interest-holder’s ability to take reasonable steps to protect his interest” was “a crucial
    aspect of the balancing test.” Id. at 504. And here, “the interest-holder needed only to complete
    a simple form to insure notice. The fact that the interest-holder chose not to avail itself of this
    method of protecting its interest is not sufficient grounds to demand that the State be required to
    conduct a more burdensome, costly search.” Id.
    9
    With respect to the Elizondos themselves, we noted that they failed to update their
    address, but at the same time the auditor’s office had within its own records several alternative
    listings. Id. And “[l]ike information in possession of other public officials, knowledge of
    information contained in records maintained by a county auditor may be imputed to the auditor.”
    Id. The inverse of that was also true: “the auditor does not have knowledge of, nor should be
    required to seek knowledge of, information contained in records or documents not routinely
    maintained by and within the auditor’s office.” Id. We specifically refuted the argument that the
    auditor was constitutionally required to search the phone book or “records of other offices such
    as the recorder or the court clerk.” Id. All the statute required was for the auditor to send notice
    to the owner’s last known address, “that is, the last address of the owner of the specific property
    in question of which the auditor has knowledge from records maintained in its office.” Id.
    The record did not reflect whether any of the alternative addresses within the auditor’s
    office actually linked the Elizondos to the tax sale property. And while it was reasonable to
    require an auditor who receives an “Unclaimed” notice to search his own office for other
    addresses, it was not reasonable “to require the auditor to speculate as to whether these possible
    alternatives are addresses for the property owner who owes taxes on the property in question or
    another taxpayer with the same name.” Id. at 505. This might not be an issue in a small county,
    with a name as unique as Urbano Elizondo, but when applying a state-wide lens to the question
    of constitutionality, searching for “Mary Smith” in Marion County or “John Jones” in Lake
    County would be a much greater problem. Id.
    We thus upheld the statute against the Elizondos’ constitutional challenge and held that
    due process required the auditor to search his or her own records for alternate addresses for the
    owner of the property at issue. Id. But due process did not “require the auditor to engage in
    speculation as would be the case when there is nothing to link the alternative address to the
    property at issue.” Id.
    We reached similar results in Miller Reeder Co. and Griffin. In Miller Reeder Co., the
    mortgagee also failed to file the proper form to obtain notice of the pre-tax sale, as required by
    10
    statute. Miller Reeder Co., 588 N.E.2d at 506. Nor did either of two mortgagees do so in
    Griffin. Griffin, 589 N.E.2d at 221. In Griffin, however, the auditor took the additional step of
    sending a form to the county recorder asking if any mortgages were recorded on the subject
    property; the recorder’s response noted “none found” but in fact both mortgages were properly
    recorded. Id. We nevertheless upheld the statute because “[t]he filing of a mortgage . . . in the
    recorder’s office does not work to enter the mortgagee’s name and address in the property tax
    records maintained in, and relied upon, by the county auditor for the purposes of tax records.”
    Id. The fact that the recorder’s office returned “none found” was, in fact, illustrative of “the
    cumbersome, time-consuming process associated with conducting a search of what may literally
    be hundreds of thousands of recorded property interests.” Id. at 222. An additional goal of the
    request-notice scheme was, we believed, “to help reduce possible errors in determining what
    parties hold an interest in the property and, consequently, wish to receive notice.” Id.
    Finally, a more recent U.S. Supreme Court opinion, Jones v. Flowers, 
    547 U.S. 220
    (2006) also merits review and consideration for its impact on this evolving line of statutes and
    jurisprudence. Jones owned a home in Arkansas subject to a mortgage. Jones paid the mortgage
    every month for thirty years, with the mortgagee paying the required property taxes. But after
    Jones paid off the mortgage, he neglected to pay the property taxes and the property was certified
    as delinquent and subject to a tax sale.6 The Commissioner of State Lands mailed a certified
    letter to Jones at the home, providing notice of the delinquency, the pending tax sale, and Jones’s
    right to redeem. The letter was returned marked “Unclaimed.” The Commissioner published a
    notice of the sale in a local newspaper and ultimately the property was sold. At that point the
    Commissioner mailed Jones another certified letter at the same address, notifying him that the
    home would be sold if he failed to redeem. This letter also came back “Unclaimed.” After a
    statutory post-sale redemption period passed, the purchaser served an unlawful detainer notice on
    6
    Jones no longer lived there by then, having moved into an apartment after divorcing his wife four years
    prior. His wife and daughter apparently still lived in the home.
    11
    the property which was received by Jones’s daughter. That was the first time Jones heard of the
    delinquency, the sale, or his right to redeem. The Arkansas Supreme Court determined that
    “attempting to provide notice by certified mail satisfied due process in the circumstances
    presented,” and affirmed the sale and transfer of the deed. 
    Id. at 225
    .
    The U.S. Supreme Court reversed, holding “that when mailed notice of a tax sale is
    returned unclaimed, the State must take additional reasonable steps to attempt to provide notice
    to the property owner before selling his property, if it is practicable to do so.” 
    Id. at 226
    . The
    issue was “whether due process entails further responsibility when the government becomes
    aware prior to the taking that its attempt at notice has failed.” 
    Id. at 227
    . And while the letters
    mailed by certified mail were reasonably calculated to reach Jones and provide him notice, “it
    does not alter the reasonableness of the Commissioner’s position that he must do nothing more
    when the notice is promptly returned ‘unclaimed.’” 
    Id. at 232
    . To the contrary, the Court
    identified a number of additional reasonable steps that the Commissioner could have taken to
    notify Jones, such as resending the notice by regular mail, posting notice on the front door, or
    addressing the letter to “occupant.” 
    Id.
     at 234–35.
    At the same time, the Court drew a line at searching for Jones’s address “in the Little
    Rock phonebook and other government records such as income tax rolls.” 
    Id.
     at 235–36. “An
    open-ended search for a new address—especially when the State obligates the taxpayer to keep
    his address updated with the tax collector—imposes burdens on the State significantly greater
    than the several relatively easy options outlined above.” 
    Id. at 236
     (internal citation omitted).
    Nevertheless, the Court said that when a state learns that notice has not been received it “cannot
    simply ignore that information in proceeding to take and sell the owner’s property.” 
    Id. at 237
    .
    And in Jones, “additional reasonable steps were available for Arkansas to employ before taking
    Jones’s property.” 
    Id. at 238
    .
    Despite a statement by the U.S. Supreme Court in Jones that it wanted to avoid
    prescribing the form of notice required, or redrafting a state’s notice statute, see 
    id. at 238
    , that
    was exactly the impact in Indiana. In 2007, the General Assembly amended Indiana Code § 6-
    12
    1.1-24-2 to require additional steps in the event a notice is returned marked “Unclaimed.” See
    
    Ind. Code § 6-1.1-24
    -4 (2010); Act of April 26, 2007, P.L. 89-2007, § 2, 
    2007 Ind. Acts 1371
    .
    Those additional steps mirror the steps from Jones of mailing by first class mail, posting notice at
    the property, or researching auditor records to determine a more complete or accurate address.
    
    Id.
       But see Marion Cnty. Auditor v. Sawmill Creek, LLC, 
    964 N.E.2d 213
     (Ind. 2012)
    (incorporating Jones into due process framework but highlighting difference between mail
    returned “unclaimed” and mail returned “not deliverable as addressed, unable to forward” and
    noting information learned from such marking makes first-class mail attempt unreasonable).
    II. Did Jones Abrogate Elizondo with Respect to Mortgagees?
    As an initial matter, it is unmistakable that Jones creates tension over the viability of at
    least part of our decision in Elizondo. Certainly if a county auditor in Indiana today sent a notice
    to a property owner and received it back marked “unclaimed,” then Jones would compel the
    additional steps of at least mailing the notice by first class mail, posting it on the front door,
    and/or addressing it to “occupant.” And to the extent there was any flexibility in Jones to not
    take those steps, the 2007 legislative amendment removed it. Thus, we think it safe to say that
    the portion of Elizondo dealing with a property owner has been abrogated to the extent it implies
    an auditor may receive a notice back “unclaimed” and then effectively sit on his or her hands and
    do nothing more—and if the abrogation was not by Jones, then definitely it was by statutory
    amendment.
    Monroe Bank goes further, though, and argues that Jones abrogated Elizondo with
    respect to its holding on the mortgagees as well. It claims this is true because “[j]ust as Jones
    had failed to comply with the Arkansas statute to update his address with the county, Monroe
    Bank did not request that it be provided certified mail notice prior to a tax sale under Indiana
    Code Section 6-1.1-24-3(b).”      (Appellee’s Br. at 13.)     Monroe Bank therefore analogizes
    “[r]equiring a mortgagee with a publicly recorded mortgage to request notice as a condition
    precedent to receiving notice” to “requiring an owner to update his address in order to receive
    13
    presale notice,” an idea that Monroe Bank believes “Jones clearly rejects.” (Appellee’s Br. at
    14.) We disagree with this assertion.
    For one thing, Jones did not deal with the issue of notice required to a mortgagee, and the
    U.S. Supreme Court is not in the habit of deciding issues not presented to it, or involving entities
    not party to the suit or statutes not being applied. See U.S. Const. Art. III, § 2; Mennonite, 
    462 U.S. at
    804 n.2 (declining to address constitutionality of 1980 amendment to tax sale statutes).
    Moreover, analysis of the sufficiency of notice in a property deprivation matter under the Due
    Process clause of the Fourteenth Amendment turns on “the practicalities and peculiarities of the
    case,” and “will vary with circumstances and conditions.” Elizondo, 588 N.E.2d at 503.
    The U.S. Supreme Court has always addressed these cases independently based on the
    class of interest at stake, see Jones, 
    547 U.S. at
    229 (citing Mullane v. Cent. Hanover Bank &
    Trust Co., 
    339 U.S. 306
     (1950) (beneficiaries of common trust fund), Mennonite, 
    462 U.S. at 791
     (mortgagees), Dusenbery v. United States, 
    534 U.S. 161
     (2002) (owners of seized money
    and cars), Tulsa Prof’l Collection Servs., Inc. v. Pope, 
    485 U.S. 478
     (1988) (creditors of estate),
    and Greene, 
    456 U.S. at 444
     (tenants in public housing)), and so have we, see Elizondo, 588
    N.E.2d at 502, 504. While those cases relate to, inform, and persuade each other, it would be
    erroneous to presume that they control issues and parties beyond their own scope. Each class of
    interest merits its own analysis.
    And furthermore, while the U.S. Supreme Court has the authority to overturn our
    decisions or declare them (and our statutes) unconstitutional under the U.S. Constitution, and the
    General Assembly has the obvious power to abrogate our case law by enactment or amendment
    of statutes, it remains the function of this Court to determine the scope or impact of a U.S.
    Supreme Court decision on our jurisprudence when that decision does not address the issue,
    parties, or statute involved. See In re Petition to Transfer Appeals, 
    202 Ind. 365
    , 376, 
    174 N.E. 812
    , 817 (1931); State ex rel. Meyer-Kiser Bank v. Super. Ct. of Marion Cnty., 
    202 Ind. 589
    ,
    600, 
    177 N.E. 322
    , 325–26 (1931); cf. Agostini v. Felton, 
    521 U.S. 203
    , 237–38 (1997). The
    U.S. Supreme Court did not address section 6-1.1-24-3(b) in Jones and the General Assembly
    14
    did not amend that provision post-Jones. Thus, regardless of how Elizondo has been flagged in
    online publications, see Marion Cnty. Auditor v. Sawmill Creek, LLC, 
    938 N.E.2d 778
    , 786 n.4
    (Ind. Ct. App. 2010), vacated on trans., it has remained—and still remains—the law with respect
    to the pre-sale notice required to mortgagees in the state of Indiana unless and until this Court,
    the Indiana General Assembly, or the U.S. Supreme Court says otherwise.
    III. Does Section 6-1.1-24-3(b) Provide Constitutionally Sufficient Notice to a Mortgagee?
    Monroe Bank’s argument is an invitation for us to revisit that portion of Elizondo dealing
    with mortgagees and reach a different conclusion in light of Jones’s holding with respect to
    property owners. For the reasons we discuss below, our conclusion remains the same.
    Prior to the government’s taking of a property interest, “due process requires the
    government to provide ‘notice reasonably calculated, under all the circumstances, to apprise
    interested parties of the pendency of the action and afford them an opportunity to present their
    objections.’” Jones, 
    547 U.S. at 795
     (quoting Mullane, 
    339 U.S. at 314
    ). “The means employed
    must be such as one desirous of actually informing the absentee might reasonably adopt to
    accomplish it.” Mullane, 
    339 U.S. at 315
    . Any assessment of the constitutional adequacy of the
    notice must balance “the interest of the State” against “the individual interest sought to be
    protected by the Fourteenth Amendment.” 
    Id. at 314
    . Here, we assess the sufficiency of notice
    given prior to the State initiating a process that, if uninterrupted, would extinguish a mortgagee’s
    interest in the collateral supporting the mortgage.
    As for the private interest at stake, it is unequivocal that “a mortgagee possesses a
    substantial property interest that is significantly affected by a tax sale.” Mennonite, 
    462 U.S. at 798
    . “[A] mortgagee acquires a lien on the owner’s property which may be conveyed together
    with the mortgagor’s personal obligation to repay the debt secured by the mortgage.” 
    Id.
     This
    security interest usually—but not always—takes precedence over liens subsequently attached to
    the same property, and if the full tax sale and redemption process were run to its conclusion, that
    15
    security interest would be nullified. 
    Id.
     Thus, the mortgagee “is entitled to notice reasonably
    calculated to apprise him of a pending tax sale.” 
    Id.
    All of this does not, however, necessarily compel the conclusion that in our weighing of
    the State’s interest and the private interest, a mortgagee’s interest will tip the scale to the same
    degree as a property owner’s and thus impose the same burden on the State. Put simply, a
    mortgagee is not a property owner. See 
    id.
     at 793 n.1 (“Because a mortgagee has no title to the
    mortgaged property under Indiana law, the mortgagee is not considered an ‘owner’ for purposes
    of [the tax sale statutes].”); Ind. Dept. of State Revenue v. Colpaert Realty Corp., 
    231 Ind. 463
    ,
    469, 
    109 N.E.2d 415
    , 418 (1952) (“In Indiana a mortgage is a lien—a mere security for the debt.
    The mortgagee has no title to the land mortgaged.”); cf. Baldwin v. Moroney, 
    173 Ind. 574
    , 580,
    
    91 N.E. 3
    , 6 (1910) (mortgagee not “deemed the owner” under tax laws unless mortgagee takes
    possession of mortgaged property).
    The more operative question is whether Indiana Code § 6-1.1-24-3(b) is reasonably
    calculated, under all the circumstances, to provide a mortgagee with notice of the pending tax
    sale.   Or, more specifically to Monroe Bank’s actual claim, whether it is constitutionally
    permissible for the statute to condition the first-class mailing of actual notice on a requirement
    that the mortgagee first affirmatively request such notice by way of a simple form.
    As we said in Elizondo, the State implemented this procedure to “protect[] the State’s
    interest in receiving taxes while relieving it of the sometimes tremendous administrative burden
    of checking all public records to ascertain whether any mortgages have been taken on the
    property, whether these mortgages are viable, and whether the address on the mortgages is
    dependable.” Elizondo, 588 N.E.2d at 503–04. At the same time, “[t]he interest holder will be
    certain to receive notice and take whatever action deemed appropriate by simply filing the
    necessary form in the auditor’s office.” Id. at 504.
    To that end, Monroe Bank says “the decision in Jones reaffirms the principle in
    Mennonite that a party’s ability to take steps to safeguard its own property interests does not
    16
    relieve the State of its constitutional obligation to provide adequate notice prior to the taking of a
    protected property interest.” (Appellee’s Br. at 13.) According to Monroe Bank, our decision in
    Elizondo “ignored” that “important constitutional principle” and “[t]hus, where, as here, the
    mortgagee has a publicly recorded mortgage, Mennonite and Jones support the conclusion that
    due process requires that the government provide pre-tax sale notice by mail or personal service,
    regardless of whether the mortgagee has requested it.” (Appellee’s Br. at 14.)
    It is ironic that Monroe Bank acknowledges a mortgage must be properly recorded in
    order for the mortgagee’s interest to be protected. It is axiomatic that responsibility for this
    recording—and the consequences for failure to do so—fall on the mortgagee.                   And if,
    hypothetically, Monroe Bank failed to comply with the statutory requirement to properly record
    its mortgage, we do not imagine it would argue that its property interest had been
    unconstitutionally taken after a tax sale. Thus, Monroe Bank leaves us with the argument that it
    is constitutionally unacceptable for the State to require it to take any action whatsoever under the
    tax sale statutes, but yet readily accepts—without explaining why it is any different—that the
    State already requires it to take affirmative steps pursuant to our recording statutes.
    If nothing else, this acceptance of statutory obligation on one hand—coupled with a
    denunciation for a different statutory obligation on the other hand—leads us to believe that the
    statement that “a party’s ability to take steps to safeguard its interests does not relieve the State
    of its constitutional obligation,” Mennonite, 
    462 U.S. at 799
    , was not, in fact, a wholesale
    repudiation of any and all such statutory obligations. After all, even Mennonite notes that a
    mortgage must be properly recorded in order for the interest to be protected. 
    Id. at 798
    .
    Instead, the statement refers to the relative sophistication of a party and its ability, in the
    context of our earlier statute requiring only constructive notice to a mortgagee, to “have means at
    their disposal to discover whether property taxes have not been paid and whether tax sale
    proceedings are therefore likely to be initiated.” 
    Id. at 799
    . Whether a mortgagee has those
    means or not, constructive notice is “designed primarily to attract prospective purchasers to the
    tax sale,” and is “unlikely to reach those who, although they have an interest in the property, do
    17
    not make special efforts to keep abreast of such notices.” 
    Id.
     In other words, just because a
    mortgagee might have the means and wherewithal to scan tax sale notices for properties for
    which it holds a mortgage, does not mean the State can solely rely on such a method—because
    such notice is geared to persons seeking to obtain an interest in real property, not to persons
    seeking to protect an existing interest in a particular parcel of real property.
    Indeed, as the Mennonite dissent pointed out, the party’s actual ability to protect itself
    had long been a factor to be considered when analyzing the “totality of circumstances” in a due
    process claim. 
    Id. at 803
     (O’Connor, J., dissenting) (citing Mullane, 
    339 U.S. at 315
    ). And the
    majority likewise specifically highlights that a party’s inability to protect itself is a factor to
    consider, in that “particularly extensive efforts to provide notice may often be required when the
    State is aware of a party’s inexperience or incompetence.”            Id. at 799.   Most often, this
    consideration has taken the form of a state’s failure to take additional steps when it knows its
    “usual” method will be unsuccessful—and, notably, in those circumstances the due process
    violation had nothing to do with the State’s requirement that a party take initial, affirmative steps
    to protect its interest.
    For example, in Robinson v. Hanrahan, 
    409 U.S. 38
     (1972), the Court found a due
    process violation where the State mailed notice of a forthcoming forfeiture proceeding to a
    criminal defendant’s home of record—an address the defendant was required to keep updated by
    statute—but it was known at the time that the defendant did not live there because he was
    incarcerated by the State. Id.; see also Jones, 
    547 U.S. at 232
     (noting requirement in Robinson
    that defendant affirmatively register his mailing address, and pointing out that “we found that the
    State had not provided constitutionally sufficient notice, despite having followed its reasonably
    calculated scheme, because it knew that Robinson could not be reached at his address of record”
    (emphasis added)). And likewise in Jones, the flaw was not that the State required the property
    owner to keep his address updated, which it did by statute, but that the State failed to take
    additional steps aimed at notifying the owner after the mailed notice was returned unclaimed.
    Jones, 
    547 U.S. at 225
    .
    18
    But more to the point, Monroe Bank’s apparent alternative—that a county auditor be
    required to comb the files of the recorder’s office to see if a mortgage is recorded for a tax-
    delinquent property, assess whether the mortgage is still valid, and then determine whether the
    mortgage accurately reflects the mortgagee’s identity and address—remains unnecessary for two
    reasons: it would unreasonably tip the scales of our analysis by imposing too great a burden on
    the State, and the burdens this approach would impose would not result in a greater likelihood of
    successful notification.
    First, as discussed above, we have refused to require the State to take such additional and
    burdensome steps.7 Elizondo, 588 N.E.2d at 504; see also Griffin, 589 N.E.2d at 221–22. And
    Jones makes clear that this rejection remains valid and that this sort of “open-ended” cross-
    agency search is not constitutionally necessary and imposes “significantly greater” burdens on
    7
    The various amici in support of M & M provide some attempt to quantify the cost of this burden. The
    State notes that such a search equates to a comprehensive title search which, on parcels of land with
    relatively low value, can often cost more than the sum of delinquent taxes. (State’s Amicus Br. on Trans.
    at 11–12 (citing Frank S. Alexander, Tax Liens, Tax Sales, and Due Process, 
    75 Ind. L.J. 747
    , 789
    (2000)).) The Association of Indiana Counties estimates the cost of just one title search at between $115
    and $175, and with over 55,000 tax sale-eligible parcels in Indiana in 2011 alone, presents a minimum
    additional cost—though divvied amongst the counties—at over $6 million. (Assoc. of Ind. Cnty’s
    Amicus Br. on Trans. at 4.) Though some percentage of this cost would be recouped as a result of tax
    sales, it would appear that millions would still be borne by the county’s general tax base—and
    specifically by those county residents who are not delinquent in their own property taxes. (SRI, Inc.’s
    Amicus Br. on Trans. at 9–10.) And the Indiana County Auditor’s Association estimates an annual
    burden of 4,600 employee hours to accomplish these searches. (Ind. Cnty Auditor’s Assoc., Inc.’s
    Amicus Br. on Trans. at 4.)
    The Indiana Bankers Association calls these projections speculative and unreliable, and argues
    that the additional searches required would result in a greater success rate in terms of payment of
    delinquent taxes because mortgagees “would step forward when property owners do not and would remit
    the delinquent taxes to the county” because they “generally are in a better financial position to pay those
    taxes than are property owners who have fallen behind and mortgagees want to protect their collateral.”
    (Ind. Bankers Assoc. Amicus Br. on Trans. at 10.) We agree with the IBA that the cost projections are no
    doubt speculative in some degree—but so are its presumptions that mortgagees would step forward to
    promptly remit property taxes.
    19
    the State. Jones, 
    547 U.S. at
    235–36. “We do not believe the government was required to go
    this far.” 
    Id. at 236
    .
    Moreover, as we discussed before, the General Assembly briefly adopted legislation in
    line with Monroe Bank’s position by way of the 1986 statutory amendment to section 6-1.1-24-
    4.2. But just a few years later in 1989 it reinstated the requirement that a mortgagee request
    notice by repealing section 6-1.1-24-4.2 and enacting the section 6-1.1-24-3(b)—and that is the
    way the statute has remained ever since. This certainly appears to be nothing less than a
    legislative repudiation of assigning such a burdensome process to county officials.
    But second, when the means employed by the State to provide notice must be “such as
    one desirous of actually informing the absentee might reasonably adopt to accomplish it,” and be
    “reasonably calculated, under all the circumstances, to apprise interested parties of the pendency
    of the action and afford them an opportunity to present their objections,” Mullane, 
    339 U.S. at
    314–15, we believe even the expensive and time-consuming title search through a recorder’s
    office cannot reasonably be conceived of as leading to the actual name and address of the actual
    mortgagee with an interest in the property—not in today’s era of mortgage-backed securities and
    trading. In fact, the more likely result for these cases on the whole would be a lower accuracy
    rate than the method currently in place—a factor we must weigh significantly in our analysis.
    Cf. Mathews v. Eldridge, 
    424 U.S. 319
    , 344 (1976) (“[P]rocedural due process rules are shaped
    by the risk of error inherent in the truthfinding process as applied to the generality of cases, not
    the rare exceptions.”).
    We recently explored the complexities, perils, and pitfalls of the modern mortgage
    environment in Citimortgage, Inc. v. Barabas, 
    975 N.E.2d 805
     (Ind. 2012), reh’g denied, and
    described the mix of borrowers, lenders, loan servicers, brokers, underwriters, etc., as a “mass
    delusion” far beyond the traditional—and virtually nonexistent these days—exchange involving
    only a borrower and a lender. 
    Id. at 808
    . This delusion began in the 1970s with the development
    of mortgage-backed securities, wherein a mortgage is sold, bundled, and re-sold amongst
    investment banks. This “used to require multiple successive assignments, each of which had to
    20
    be recorded on the county level at considerable inconvenience and expense to the investment
    banks involved.” 
    Id. at 809
    .
    But in the 1990s, a number of those investment banks collaborated in establishing
    Mortgage Electronic Registration Systems, Inc. MERS, as it is known, operates a database
    identifying the servicing, ownership, and assignment rights for mortgage loans throughout the
    United States, and member banks identify MERS as “nominee” and “mortgagee” on the
    mortgage. 
    Id.
     The member banks can then buy, sell, and trade those mortgages internally
    without ever having to update or notify a county recorder’s office—creating an information
    hurdle that can result in chaos when issues like foreclosure arise.8 See 
    id.
     at 809 n.4 (“There is
    no public record of the real party in interest in these mortgages, and MERS does not require
    member banks to report transfers. The resulting paucity of information has caused significant
    confusion for banks, borrowers, and courts.” (internal citation omitted)).
    Today, some sixty percent of the nation’s mortgages are not recorded in the name of the
    actual lender, its assignee, or a party with any economic interest in the debt or collateral—
    instead, even the most comprehensive title search on such a property would reveal only MERS.
    See 
    id. at 809
    . And while we noted that—in the context of the particular contract at issue in
    Citimortgage and the foreclosure statutes—MERS was effectively the lender’s agent for service
    of process in a foreclosure suit, 
    id.
     at 814–15, we explicitly rejected a request to expand our
    8
    For example, in Citimortgage a buyer received a mortgage from Irwin Mortgage Company, a MERS
    member bank. The mortgage contained language identifying MERS as mortgagee and nominee, and
    provided an address for a centralized MERS office. Years later, the buyer took a second mortgage from
    ReCasa Financial Group—a non-member bank. The buyer fell behind on the second mortgage and
    ReCasa successfully filed a foreclosure suit against the buyer and Irwin Mortgage, but did not serve
    notice on MERS. Unbeknownst to ReCasa, Irwin Mortgage’s interest had been bought and sold and was
    then owned by Citimortgage. MERS assigned the mortgage to Citimortgage and Citmortgage then
    intervened to set aside the foreclosure judgment. Ultimately, this Court held that Citimortgage could
    rightfully intervene and protect the priority of its lien. Citimortgage, 975 N.E.2d at 818.
    21
    definition of “mortgagee” to “an entity like MERS that neither holds title to the note nor enjoys a
    right of repayment,” id. at 817.
    No reason has been presented to us, nor do we find one sua sponte, to assume that the
    agency relationship MERS has with its member banks extends to service of process in tax sales.9
    Thus, even if we were to require a county auditor to perform a burdensome title search through
    the recorder’s office, in a substantial percentage of cases the identity of the actual mortgagee
    would still not be “reasonably identifiable.” Mennonite, 
    462 U.S. at 798
     (constructive notice
    alone insufficient when “mortgagee is identified in a mortgage that is publicly recorded”
    (emphasis added)). Instead the auditor would have to contact MERS, request the identity and
    address of the actual mortgagee, validity of the mortgage and debt, and—assuming MERS would
    release the information in response to a non-foreclosure action—send a certified letter to the
    mortgagee and hope that the mortgage did not change hands again in the interim.10 All of this
    would therefore only serve to increase the State’s financial and time burdens with little return in
    terms of reliability.11 See 
    id.
     at 798 n.4 (“We do not suggest, however, that a governmental body
    9
    Significant to our decision in Citimortgage was that the foreclosure statutes require “the mortgagee or an
    assignee shown in the record” to be named as defendants, 
    Ind. Code § 32-29-8-1
     (2008), but here notice
    under the tax sale statutes is only to be sent to the mortgagee, 
    Ind. Code § 6-1.1-24
    -3, and the owner(s) of
    record, 
    Ind. Code § 6-1.1-24
    -4.
    10
    One of the additional challenges in Citimortgage, for example, was that Irwin Mortgage—having
    already sold its interest in the property—responded to the foreclosure suit by filing a disclaimer of its
    interest, leading ReCasa and the trial court to believe that there was no superior lien on the property.
    Citimortgage, 975 N.E.2d at 810.
    11
    And this says nothing of the fact that membership in MERS is not a requirement in the exchange of
    mortgage-backed securities. It is a company providing a service that banks can join. In alternative
    instances where a bank participates in the mortgage-backed securities market but elects not to join MERS,
    instances which are unidentifiable from the face of the recorded mortgage, the perils of relying on the
    mortgagee as identified by a title search are even greater.
    Because transactions involve the assignment of hundreds or even thousands of
    mortgages, there is a temptation to skip the step of recording an assignment in the public
    records, particularly when the assignment is only a temporary collateral assignment.
    Transactions sometimes take the form of nothing more than an unrecorded pledge of the
    22
    is required to undertake extraordinary efforts to discover the identity and whereabouts of a
    mortgagee whose identity is not in the public record.”).
    In short, the only reasonably certain way for an auditor to know who has a viable
    mortgage on a property so that adequate notice may be sent to the proper party is for the
    mortgagee to complete a simple form and submit it to the auditor. Whether mortgagees do this
    on their own, or an entity similar to MERS steps in and performs the task as an agent, this is
    hardly an onerous burden in light of the benefit obtained; and is far less onerous than the burdens
    the alternative would place on the State in exchange for a far lower degree of benefit.
    Therefore our conclusion today is no different than the conclusion we reached over two
    decades ago in Elizondo. In balancing the interests of the State and the interests of the pertinent
    class, and in light of the particular circumstances and conditions relevant to the class and its
    property interest, the statutory requirement that a mortgagee complete a form aimed at
    guaranteeing notice before a property is put up for a tax sale is a “means employed . . . such as
    one desirous of actually informing the absentee might reasonably adopt to accomplish it,” and
    therefore not offensive to the U.S. Constitution.12 Mullane, 
    339 U.S. at 315
    .
    mortgages in bulk to the bank, together with delivery of the original notes to the bank for
    perfection. In many instances, even the task of holding possession of the notes is
    outsourced to a bailee who holds the notes for the bank’s benefit. The mortgages might
    be transferred many times by unrecorded assignment in bulk without physically moving
    the notes, but with the bailee simply signing a receipt changing the name of the lender for
    whom it holds the notes.
    David E. Peterson, Cracking the Mortgage Assignment Shell Game, 
    85 Fla. B.J. 10
    , 11 (2011).
    Moreover, even when the lender bank remains the holder of the mortgage, that does not guarantee that the
    auditor’s request for a lien search from the recorder will be successful. See, e.g., Griffin, 589 N.E.2d at
    221.
    12
    Monroe Bank also challenges the final section of Indiana Code § 6-1.1-24-3(b), which provides that
    even when a mortgagee files the form requesting notice, “failure of the county auditor to mail this notice
    or its nondelivery does not affect the validity of the judgment or order.” Monroe Bank argues that this
    23
    Conclusion
    The requirement found in Indiana Code § 6-1.1-24-3(b), that a mortgagee annually
    request, by certified mail, a copy of notice that a parcel of real property is eligible for sale under
    the tax sale statutes, does not violate the Fourteenth Amendment’s Due Process Clause. We
    therefore reverse the trial court and remand.
    Dickson, C.J., Rucker, Massa, and Rush, JJ., concur.
    “savings clause” effectively excuses failure on the part of the auditor even when that failure wholly
    deprives a mortgagee of notice of the pendency of a tax sale. Because we find no violation of the Due
    Process Clause with respect to the requirement that a mortgagee submit the request form to the auditor’s
    office—and it is unequivocal that Monroe Bank did not do so here—we need not reach the merits of this
    issue.
    We nevertheless tend to agree with Monroe Bank on this point, though, and it may be wise for the
    General Assembly to address this clause before it becomes a central or dispositive issue in a case. To be
    sure, it certainly seems significant that neither M & M nor the State, nor any of the amici in support of M
    & M, offered any arguments to the contrary on this point. But regardless, we also note that even if we
    reached the merits of this issue and held this clause unconstitutional in light of Jones’s point that the State
    cannot simply ignore information it has within its possession when proceeding to take a private property
    interest, Jones, 
    547 U.S. at 237
    , that would not mean—in this case—that Monroe Bank deserved relief.
    That is because “[a] statute bad in part is not necessarily void in its entirety.” Smylie v. State,
    
    823 N.E.2d 679
    , 685 (Ind. 2005) (quoting Dorchy v. Kansas, 
    264 U.S. 286
    , 289–90 (1924)), cert. denied.
    “Provisions within the legislative power may stand if separable from the bad. But a provision, inherently
    unobjectionable, cannot be deemed separable unless it appears both that, standing alone, legal effect can
    be given to it and that the legislature intended the provision to stand, in case others included in the act and
    held bad should fall.” 
    Id.
     It certainly appears that the “savings clause” is severable from the remainder of
    section 6-1.1-24-3(b), and therefore a finding that it is unconstitutional would not adversely affect our
    decision that the form requirement is constitutional.
    24