The mayor of a northern New Jersey town has been evicted from his home for failing to pay his mortgage and taxes amid a three-year foreclosure fight, records show.

Bogota Mayor Christopher Kelemen owed nearly $500,000, according to court papers.

The Republican mayor moved into his late father’s house last month, records show.

This was the fourth time Wells Fargo took Kelemen to court over back payments on his house in the last 15 years, records show. The bank filed foreclosure paperwork in 2006, 2010 and 2013.

Kelemen’s house has been on the market since March when it was listed for $434,600 — but the listing is now hovering well below $400,000, according to Trulia.

Kelemen did not return calls for comment.

The mayor’s eviction was first reported by New Jersey Globe, the politics site run by David Wildstein, who is well-known as the mastermind behind the Bridgegate scandal.