1. Under R.S. § 3466, claims of the United States against
an insolvent debtor who has made an assignment for the benefit of
creditors
held entitled to priority over liens here
asserted under Virginia law by a landlord for rent and by a
municipality for taxes. P.
323 U. S. 355.
2. Whether a lien created by state statute is of such character
as to bring it within a claimed exception to the priority of the
United States under R.S. § 3466 is a federal question. P.
323 U. S.
356.
182 Va. 351, 28 S.E.2d 741, reversed.
Certiorari, 322 U.S. 722, to review the affirmance of a decree
determining the priority of payment of claims of creditors.
MR. JUSTICE MURPHY delivered the opinion of the Court.
The issue here is whether, in a state proceeding under a general
assignment for benefit of creditors, Section 3466 of the Revised
Statutes, 31 U.S.C. § 191, gives priority to a claim of the
United States over a landlord's lien and a municipal tax lien.
Mrs. Oeland Roman, the assignor, operated a restaurant in
Danville, Virginia, on premises leased from respondent, Waddill,
Holland & Flinn, Inc. On June 19, 1941, she executed a general
deed of assignment to a trustee for
Page 323 U. S. 354
the benefit of creditors, specifically conveying all personal
property, fixtures, and equipment used by her in the conduct of the
restaurant and located on the premises. This property remained on
the premises until sold by the trustee on July 12, 1941. After
deduction of appropriate administrative expenses, a sum of
$1,407.29 remained. Four creditors claimed priority of payment from
this amount.
(1) The United States claimed the sum of $1,559.63, plus
interest, representing certain unpaid federal unemployment
compensation taxes and a debt arising out of a Federal Housing
Administration transaction.
(2) The Virginia Unemployment Compensation Commission made a tax
claim of $66.38, plus interest. The Commission's claim, however,
was conceded to be subordinate to that of the United States, and
need not be further considered here.
(3) The City of Danville claimed $300.55 as personal property
taxes still unpaid. On July 2, 1941, the City Collector distrained
on all of the property on the leased premises.
(4) The landlord, Waddill, Holland & Flinn, Inc., claimed
$1,500.00 for six months' rent due and to become due. The
assignor's lease from this firm ran for five years beginning
January 1, 1937, at a monthly rental of $250.00. On July 1, 1941,
twelve days after the deed of assignment was executed, the firm
obtained the issuance of a distress warrant for 3 2/5 months' past
due rent and an attachment for 2 3/5 months' future installments of
rent. On the same day, the firm levied the warrant and attachment
on the assignor's property located on the leased premises.
The trustee under the general assignment filed a petition in the
Corporation Court of Danville, reciting the various claims and
requesting advice as to the proper distribution. That court held
that the landlord was entitled to priority in payment over the
claims of the United States and the
Page 323 U. S. 355
Virginia Unemployment Compensation Commission, but that its
claim was subordinate to that of the City of Danville for taxes in
the sum of $222.31. On appeal by the United States, the Supreme
Court of Appeals of Virginia affirmed this order of distribution.
182 Va. 351, 28 S.E.2d 741. We granted certiorari because of the
importance of the problems raised and because of asserted conflict
with this Court's decisions in
New York v. Maclay,
288 U. S. 290, and
United States v. Texas, 314 U. S. 480.
Section 3466 of the Revised Statutes provides in pertinent part
that "the debts due to the United States shall be first satisfied"
whenever any person indebted to the United States is insolvent or,
"not having sufficient property to pay all his debts, makes a
voluntary assignment thereof." We hold that this statute clearly
subordinates the claims of both the landlord and the municipality
to that of the United States. The judgment of the court below must
accordingly be reversed.
The words of Section 3466 are broad and sweeping and, on their
face, admit of no exception to the priority of claims of the United
States.
Thelusson v.
Smith, 2 Wheat. 396,
15 U. S. 425;
United States v. Texas, supra, 314 U. S. 484.
But this Court in the past has recognized that certain exceptions
could be read into this statute. The question has not been
expressly decided, however, as to whether the priority of the
United States might be defeated by a specific and perfected lien
upon the property at the time of the insolvency or voluntary
assignment.
Conard v. Atlantic Insurance
Co., 1 Pet. 386,
26 U. S. 441,
26 U. S. 444;
Brent v. Bank of
Washington, 10 Pet. 596,
35 U. S.
611-612;
Spokane County v. United States,
279 U. S. 80,
279 U. S. 95;
United States v. Knott, 298 U. S. 544,
298 U. S. 551;
New York v. Maclay, supra, 288 U. S.
293-294;
United States v. Texas, supra,
314 U. S.
485-486. It is within this suggested exception that the
landlord and the municipality seek to bring themselves. Once again,
however, we do not reach a decision as to whether such an exception
is permissible, for we do not
Page 323 U. S. 356
believe that the asserted liens of the landlord and the
municipality were sufficiently specific and perfected on the date
of the voluntary assignment to cast any serious doubt on the
priority of the claim of the United States.
The landlord rests its claim upon certain provisions of the
Virginia Code of 1936. Sections 5519 and 5523 authorize a landlord
to levy distress for six months' rent upon
"any goods of the lessee . . . found on the premises, or which
may have been removed therefrom not more than thirty days . . . for
not more than six months' rent if the premises are in a city or
town."
Section 5524 provides that the goods of the tenant on leased
premises in a city or town may not be removed by a lienor or
purchaser, nor taken under legal process, save "on the terms of
paying to the person entitled to the rent so much as is in arrears,
and securing to him so much as is to become due," not to exceed six
months' rent. Other sections provide for officers making the
distress under warrant from a justice, founded upon an affidavit of
the person claiming the rent, and for such officers to make returns
of their actions and proceedings upon such warrants. Provisions are
also made for legal proceedings looking toward the possession and
sale of the property to satisfy the debt.
The Supreme Court of Appeals of Virginia has here held that
these sections
"give the landlord a lien which is fixed and specific, and not
one which is merely inchoate, and that such a lien exists
independent of the right of distress or attachment, which are
merely remedies for enforcing it."
182 Va. at 363, 28 S.E.2d at 746. It has also held that such a
lien "relates back to the beginning of the tenancy," 182 Va. at
364, 28 S.E.2d at 746, thus giving it force and effect on date of
the voluntary assignment. These interpretations of the Virginia
statutes, as propositions of state law, are binding. But it is a
matter of federal law as to whether a lien created by state statute
is sufficiently specific and perfected to raise questions as to
Page 323 U. S. 357
the applicability of the priority given the claims of the United
States by an act of Congress. If the priority of the United States
is ever to be displaced by a local statutory lien, federal courts
must be free to examine the lien's actual legal effect upon the
parties. A state court's characterization of a lien as specific and
perfected, however conclusive as a matter of state law, cannot
operate by itself to impair or supersede a longstanding
Congressional declaration of priority.
Field v.
United States, 9 Pet. 182,
34 U. S. 201;
United States v. Oklahoma, 261 U.
S. 253,
261 U. S. 260;
Spokane County v. United States, supra, 279 U. S.
90.
Tested by its legal effect under Virginia law, the landlord's
lien in this instance appeared to serve "merely as a
caveat of a more perfect lien to come."
New York v.
Maclay, supra, 288 U. S. 294. As
of the date of the voluntary assignment, it was neither specific
nor perfected. It gave the landlord only a general power over
unspecified property, rather than an actual interest in a
definitive portion or portions thereof.
Specificity was clearly lacking as to the lien on June 19, 1941,
the date of the assignment. On that day, it was still uncertain
whether the landlord would ever assert and insist upon its
statutory lien. Until that was done, it was impossible to determine
the particular six months' rent, or a proportion thereof, upon
which the lien was based. The lien did not relate to any particular
six months' rent, but could attach only for the rent which might be
due at or after the time when the lien was asserted.
Wades v.
Figgatt, 75 Va. 575, 582. And if it were asserted at a time
when the tenancy had terminated or would terminate within six
months of the date to which rent had been fully paid, the lien
could only cover less than six months' rent. Conceivably, the
amount of rent due or to become due was uncertain on the day of the
assignment. The landlord may have been mistaken as to the rental
rate or as to payments previously made, and the tenant may have
been entitled
Page 323 U. S. 358
to a set-off.
See Allen v. Hart, 18 Grat. 722, 59 Va.
722, 737;
Hancock v. Whitehall Tobacco Co., 100 Va. 443,
447, 41 S.E. 860. Moreover, while the lien legally attached to all
such property as might be on the premises when the lien was
asserted or within thirty days prior to distraint, the landlord
could distrain goods only to the extent necessary to satisfy the
rent justly believed to be due, the tenant possessing an action for
damages for excessive distraint. Va.Code, § 5783;
Fishburne v. Engledove, 91 Va. 548, 22 S.E. 354;
Gurfein v. Howell, 142 Va.197, 128 S.E. 644. Thus, until
the extent of the lien was made known by the landlord and until
some steps had been taken to distrain or attach sufficient property
to satisfy the lien, it was impossible to specify the goods
actually and properly subject to the lien. Some of the goods on the
premises may have been subject to mortgages or liens which attached
before the goods were brought on the premises, in which case the
landlord's lien would be inferior. Va.Code, § 5523. And if
other goods were removed after the date of the voluntary assignment
but more than thirty days before the distraint, or attachment, the
right of distraint and attachment as to those goods would
disappear. Va.Code, § 5523;
Dime Deposit & Discount
Bank v. Wescott, 113 Va. 567, 75 S.E. 179. These factors
compel the conclusion that neither the rent secured by the lien nor
the property subject to the lien was sufficiently specific and
ascertainable on the day of the voluntary assignment to fall within
the terms of the suggested exception.
Nor was the statutory lien perfected as a matter of actual fact,
regardless of how complete it may have been as a matter of state
law. The tenant was divested of neither title nor possession by the
silent existence of the landlord's statutory lien on the date of
the assignment. Only after the lien was actually asserted and an
attachment or a distraint levied, enabling the landlord to satisfy
his claim out of the seized goods, could it be argued that such
goods
Page 323 U. S. 359
severed themselves from the general and free assets of the
tenant from which the claims of the United States were entitled to
priority of payment. Prior to that time, the lien operated to do no
more than prevent the removal of goods from the premises by certain
classes of persons, Va.Code § 5524, and give the landlord
priority in distribution under state law provided that the goods
remained on the premises. Such a potential, inchoate lien could not
disturb the clear command of Section 3466 of the Revised Statutes.
Something more than a "
caveat of a more perfect lien to
come" was necessary.
The lien of the City of Danville stands in no better position
insofar as the claim of the United States is concerned. The
municipality contends that it assessed taxes on specific items of
furniture and equipment pursuant to annual levies made by the city
council, and that a lien attached to such property on January 1,
1941, by operation of state law. It claims that this lien attached
before the claim of the United States was acquired, and hence had
priority.
Under Virginia law, however, a municipal tax confers a lien on
personal property which enables the city to follow it wherever it
may be taken only if the assessment is specifically made on such
property.
Drewry v. Baugh & Sons, 150 Va. 394, 400,
401, 143 S.E. 713;
Chambers v. Higgins, 169 Va. 345, 351,
352, 193 S.E. 531. The Corporation Court of Danville recognized
that the city had not made such an assessment in this case, since
it held that assessment of the furniture and equipment as a unit
was sufficient to satisfy this rule "so long as they remained on
the premises where the owner's business was conducted." It realized
that, if this property unit were separated or removed from the
premises, different results would follow. Unless and until
distraint was levied, which in this case occurred thirteen days
after the voluntary assignment, it was uncertain whether the
furniture and equipment would remain intact as a unit on the
premises, and hence be subject
Page 323 U. S. 360
to the tax lien. If such property had been removed, distraint
could then have been levied on other undetermined property of the
tenant. At least until actual distraint, therefore, there was no
certainty as to the property subject to the lien and no transfer of
title or possession relative to any property. Such a lien cannot be
said to be so explicit and perfected on the date of the voluntary
assignment as to fall within the claimed exception to the priority
of the United States.
Reversed.
MR. JUSTICE JACKSON is of opinion that the judgment should be
affirmed for the reasons stated by the Supreme Court of Appeals of
Virginia.