Mark Twain once said, "Never put off till tomorrow what may be done the day after tomorrow
 just as well." But Twain's advice doesn't always pay when it comes to 
taxes. The calendar watchers at the IRS charge a 5% per month failure to
 file penalty, up to 25% of the amount due, along with a ½% per
 month failure to pay penalty, also up to 25% of the total amount due. 
And the IRS isn't the only tax man to pay attention to deadlines, even 
if they don't loom as large in our minds as April 15. 
Presidio Terrace is a private block-long oval of a street in San 
Francisco's pricey Presidio Heights neighborhood, lined with 35 
multimillion-dollar mansions. Residents have included Senator Dianne 
Feinstein, Representative Nancy Pelosi, and former San Francisco Mayor 
Joseph Alioto. There's a stone-gate entrance to the street, a rent-a-cop
 stationed at the gate to keep out snoopy mcsnoopfaces, and a manicured 
island inside the oval for residents to enjoy.
The street and sidewalks are owned by a homeowners association 
made up of surrounding residents. Because it's private, the association 
pays tax on the property — in this case, a whopping $14 per year. Now, 
$14 may not sound like it can power a lot of local government. But the 
city still wants their money. So, every year, the Treasurer-Tax 
Collector dutifully mails the bill to the association's accountant on 
nearby Kearny Street.
There's just one teensie-weensie, tiny little problem. That 
accountant hasn't worked for the HOA since the 1980s. (Oops.) That means
 the bill hasn't been paid since MTV still played music videos 
and Madonna was a doe-eyed ingenue. Suddenly, $14 per year snowballed 
into $994 in taxes, penalties, and interest. Most of the street's 
residents could have covered it with spare change from their couch 
cushions. But the city went ahead and put the street up for auction!
Enter Michael Cheng and his wife Tina Lam, real estate investors 
from nearby South Bay. Cheng spotted the listing for the auction and 
smelled money. He wasn't the only bidder looking to pick up this 
particular opportunity. But he outlasted the rest and, for $90,100 — 
sight unseen — the street was theirs!
So how can a couple of scrappy young real estate investors 
monetize their ownership of a block-long street surrounded by 
card-carrying 1%-ers? Start with parking. The street has 120 spots, 
which make it a potential gold mine in a city where a single parking 
space recently sold for $80,000. (And if the folks on the street don't 
want to pay to park in front of their own houses, maybe the Chengs could
 rent spots to the peasants living outside the gates?)
Needless to say, the people who actually live on Presidio Terrace
 aren't nearly as excited about paying to park on their own street as 
the investors who just bought it. The residents have hired an attorney, 
of course. (Funny how many of these weekly stories involve hiring an 
attorney.) They've petitioned the city to void the sale, and scheduled a
 hearing for October. And they've sued the city to stop the Chengs from 
flipping the street to anyone else until after they're done with that fight. 
Twenty years ago, an author named Richard Carlson made a fortune selling a book called Don't Sweat the Small Stuff: and It's All Small Stuff. Unfortunately, sometimes you really do
 have to sweat the small stuff. Fortunately, you've got us. So let us 
sweat it for you, and save you a buck or two in the process!
 
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