1. A trustee in bankruptcy for an employer is required by the
withholding provisions of the Internal Revenue Code of 1954 (IRC)
and similar provisions of the New York City Administrative Code to
withhold taxes from the payment of priority claims for wages earned
by employees prior to the employer's bankruptcy, but unpaid at the
inception of the bankruptcy proceeding. The payment of the wage
claims is "payment of wages" under IRC § 3402(a) requiring
withholding of income taxes, and is wages under IRC § 3102(a)
requiring withholding of social security taxes, and an "employer,"
defined by IRC § 3401(d)(1) to include "the person having
control of the payment" of wages, is present under § 3402(a).
The same rationale applies to the withholding of city income taxes
under the similar City Code provisions. Pp.
419 U. S.
48-52.
2. From the obligation to withhold it follows that the trustee
is also required to prepare and submit to the wage claimants and to
the taxing authorities the reports and returns required of
employers under IRC §§ 6051(a), 6001, and 6011 and
similar provisions of the City Code. P.
419 U. S.
52.
3. Requiring the trustee to withhold, report, and file returns
does not unduly burden the administration of bankrupt estates so as
to contravene the spirit of the Bankruptcy Act, for the burden is
the same as any employer, or receiver, arrangement debtor, or other
fiduciary, with a like number of employees must bear; moreover,
both the IRC and the City Code allow the trustee to withhold taxes
at a flat rate, thus facilitating the tax computation. Pp.
419 U. S.
52-54.
4. Proofs of claim by the United States and New York City with
respect to the withholding taxes on the priority wage claims are
not required. Since tax liability accrues only when the wage is
paid, and since the wages subject to the wage claims here, although
earned before bankruptcy, were not paid prior thereto, so that
the
Page 419 U. S. 44
bankrupt employer's tax liability came into being only during
bankruptcy, the taxes are not like debts of the bankrupt for which
proofs of claim must be filed. Pp.
419 U. S.
54-55.
5. The federal and city withholding taxes are entitled, as are
the priority wage claims from which they emerge, to second priority
of payment under § 64a(2) of the Bankruptcy Act. Such taxes
are not within the fourth priority under § 64a(4), since they
did not become due and owing by the bankrupt until after the wage
claims were paid following bankruptcy. Nor are such taxes entitled
to first priority under § 64a(1), since they are not costs or
expenses of administration of the bankrupt estate, but are part of
the wage clams themselves, and are carved out of the payment of
those claims. Pp.
419 U. S.
55-58.
480 F.2d 184, affirmed.
BLACKMUN, J., delivered the opinion for a unanimous Court.
MR. JUSTICE BLACKMUN delivered the opinion of the Court.
This bankruptcy case raises issues (a) as to whether priority
claims for wages earned by employees prior to an employer's
bankruptcy, but unpaid at the inception of the bankruptcy
proceeding, are subject to withholding taxes, and, if so, (b) as to
whether the taxing entities must file proofs of claim, and (c) as
to which priority of payment, if any, the withholding taxes enjoy
under
Page 419 U. S. 45
§ 64a of the Bankruptcy Act (the Act), 11 U.S.C. §
104(a). [
Footnote 1]
I
On September 15, 1964, Freedomland, Inc., a New York
corporation, filed a petition with the United States District Court
for the Southern District of New York for an arrangement under
Chapter XI of the Act, 11 U.S.C. §§ 701-799. The
arrangement failed, and on August 30, 1965, Freedomland was
adjudicated a bankrupt. Petitioner, William Otte, was appointed and
qualified as the trustee.
During the statutorily prescribed six-month period for the
filing of proofs of claim against the estate,
see
§§ 57 and 63 of the Act, 11 U.S.C. §§ 93 and
103, 413 former employees of Freedomland filed proofs for unpaid
wages (each claim in the amount of $600 or less and all the claims
aggregating approximately $80,000) that had been earned within
three months preceding the filing of the Chapter XI petition. These
wage claims concededly were entitled to a second priority of
payment under § 64a(2). No proofs for any federal income or
Federal Insurance Contributions Act taxes on these wage claims,
withholdable under Chapters 24 and 21, respectively, of the
Internal Revenue Code of 1954, 26 U.S.C. §§ 3401-3404
Page 419 U. S. 46
and 3101-3126, were filed by the United States, and no proofs
for any New York City personal income tax, withholdable under
Chapter 46, Titles T and U, of the New York City Administrative
Code, were filed by the city.
In November, 1969, the trustee filed a motion for an order
directing distribution to the 413 priority wage claimants without
deduction for any federal, state, or city withholding taxes. He
also asked that the referee declare that the trustee was not
required to withhold or pay any such tax or to file any report or
return relative thereto with the respective taxing authorities. The
State of New York, although served, filed no response to the
trustee's motion. The United States and the city did respond. The
referee issued an order granting the trustee the relief he
requested. App. 48a-50a. In a supporting memorandum decision, the
referee stated that the withholding and reporting requirements of
the federal and city statutes
"would impose a further burden on the administration of these
estates which is entirely inconsistent with the objective of
efficient expeditious economic administration of bankrupt
estates,"
and that "compliance with withholding and reporting requirements
. . . is utterly inconsistent with the spirit and the letter of the
Bankruptcy Act."
Id. at 36a, 37a.
The United States and the city filed petitions with the United
States District Court to review the referee's order and decision.
After a hearing, the District Court reversed the order and decision
insofar as they pertained to federal taxes. It directed the
withholding of federal taxes on the priority wage claims, and also
concluded that the amounts to be withheld were "taxes which became
legally due and owing by the bankrupt," within the language of
§ 64a(4), and, therefore, were to be paid as tax claims of the
fourth priority. The court observed that little more than a simple
bookkeeping effort would be involved in withholding 25% of the wage
distributions. [
Footnote 2]
Page 419 U. S. 47
It held that proofs of claim were not required because the
employees' proofs gave notice to the trustee and other creditors of
the total amounts distributable on account of the claims. The
District Court, however, ruled against the city on the ground that
the city's personal income tax did not become effective until 1966,
and thus no city tax was due and owing by the bankrupt in 1964 when
the Chapter XI petition was filed.
In re Freedomland,
Inc., 341 F.
Supp. 647 (1972).
The trustee, the United States, and the city all appealed. The
United States Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit affirmed in
part and reversed in part. It held that the trustee was obligated
to withhold, to report, and to pay over the withholding taxes on
the wage claims, and that the taxing entities were not required to
file proofs of claim. It further held, however -- and thus, to this
extent, disagreed with the District Court -- that both the United
States and the city were entitled to be paid as second priority
claimants under § 64a(2).
In re Freedomland, Inc.,
480 F.2d 184 (1973).
We granted the trustee's petition for certiorari (unopposed by
the United States) primarily because the circuits are in disarray
as to the priority to be accorded to withholding taxes on
pre-bankruptcy wage claims. [
Footnote 3] 414
Page 419 U. S. 48
U.S. 1156 (1974). No cross-petition was filed by either the
United States or the city of New York.
II
Withholding, Reports, and Returns
Every Court of Appeals which has faced the issue, including the
Second Circuit in the present case, has held, contrary to the
ruling of the referee, that the withholding provisions of the
Internal Revenue Code, and of state or municipal tax statutes,
require that a trustee in bankruptcy withhold income and social
security taxes from payments of wage claims, and that he prepare
and submit to the wage claimants and to the taxing authorities the
reports and returns statutorily required of employers.
United
States v. Fogarty, 164 F.2d 26, 333 (CA8 1947);
United
States v. Courtu, 178 F.2d 268, 269 (CA6 1949),
cert.
denied, 339 U.S. 965 (1950);
Lines v. California Dept. of
Employment, 242 F.2d 201, 202,
reh. den., 246 F.2d 70
(CA9),
cert. denied, 355 U.S. 857 (1957);
In re
Connecticut Motor Lines, Inc., 336 F.2d 96 (CA3 1964). To the
same effect is
In re Dale, 111 F.
Supp. 109, 111 (Me.1953).
A. The requirement of withholding. Section 3402(a) of the
Internal Revenue Code, 26 U.S.C. § 3402(a), requires "[e]very
employer making payment of wages" to "deduct and withhold upon such
wages . . . a tax determined. . . ." Section 3401(a) defines
"wages" for withholding purposes to mean, with certain exceptions,
"all remuneration . . . for services performed by an employee for
his employer," and § 3401(d) defines "employer" as
Page 419 U. S. 49
"the person for whom an individual performs or performed any
service, of whatever nature, as the employee of such person." The
latter section makes an exception where "the person for whom the
individual performs or performed the services does not have control
of the payment of the wages for such services"; in that case,
"employer" means "the person having control of the payment of such
wages." Sections T46-51.0(a) and U46-8.0 of the New York City
Administrative Code are generally to the same effect. [
Footnote 4]
The trustee contends that the payment of wage claims under the
Bankruptcy Act, although for "wages" within the meaning of that
Act, is not the "payment of wages" under § 3402(a), and that,
in any event, the trustee is not the wage claimant's "employer" to
whom § 3402(a) relates.
The payments to the wage claimants who filed in this case are
payments for services performed by them for their former employer,
Freedomland, before the commencement of the proceeding under the
Act. There is, and can be, no dispute as to this. The fact that the
services were performed for the bankrupt, rather than for the
trustee, and the fact that payment is made after the employment
relationship terminated, do not convert the remuneration into
something other than "wages," as defined by § 3401(a) of the
Internal Revenue Code. That statute, as has been noted, broadly
defines "wages" to include, with stated exceptions not material
here, "all remuneration." And § 3401(d), in defining
"employer," twice refers to services that the employee "performs or
performed." It thus speaks in the past tense as well as
Page 419 U. S. 50
the present, and thereby plainly reveals that a continuing
employment relationship is not a prerequisite for a payment's
qualification as "wages." The income tax withholding regulations
since 1943 have so provided in specific terms. 26 CFR §
31.3401(a)-1(a)(5); Treas.Reg. 120 § 406.205(b) (1954);
Treas.Reg. 116 § 405.105 (1944 and 1951 eds.); Treas.Reg. 115
§ 404.101(a) (1943). The regulations are not in conflict with
the statute; they further the statutory purpose, and are
reasonable; and they are a valid exercise of the rulemaking power.
Cammarano v. United States, 358 U.
S. 498,
358 U. S.
507-512 (1959). [
Footnote 5]
The payment of the wage claims is thus "payment of wages" under
§ 3402(a) of the Internal Revenue Code.
The fact that, in bankruptcy, payment of wage claims is effected
by one other than the bankrupt former employer does not defeat any
withholding requirement. Although § 3402(a) refers to the
"employer making payment of wages," § 3401(d)(1), as also has
been noted, provides that, if the person for whom the services were
performed "does not have control of the payment of the wages for
such services," the term "employer" then means "the person having
control of the payment of such wages." This obviously was intended
to place responsibility for withholding at the point of control.
The petitioner trustee suggests that control rests in the referee,
rather than in the trustee, because of the former's duty, under
§ 39a(5) of the Act, 11 U.S.C. § 67(a)(5),
Page 419 U. S. 51
to "declare dividends." We need not determine whether it is the
trustee, with his responsibility, under §§ 47a(8) and
(11) of the Act, 11 U.S.C. §§ 75(a)(8) and (11), for
making recommendations and actual payments, or the referee, with
his supervision over the general administration of the bankrupt
estate, or the estate itself, that has "control of the payment of
such wages" within the meaning of § 3401(d)(1) of the Internal
Revenue Code. One of them is the "employer," and, as such, has the
duty to withhold or to order the withholding, as the case may be.
[
Footnote 6] An "employer,"
under § 3402(a), is thus present.
The situation is the same with respect to FICA withholding.
Section 3102(a) of the Internal Revenue Code, 26 U.S.C. §
3102(a), provides that the tax is to be collected by the employer
by deducting "from the wages as and when paid." Here, too, the
payments clearly are "wages" under that statute, even though again,
at the time of payment, the employment relationship between the
bankrupt and the claimant no longer exists. And here, also, the
regulations long and consistently have been to this effect. 26 CFR
§ 31.3121(a)-1(i); Treas.Reg. 128 § 408.226(a) (1951);
Treas.Reg. 106 § 402.227(a) (1940). The fact that the FICA
withholding provisions of the Code do not define "employer" is of
no significance, for that term is not to be given a narrower
construction for FICA withholding than for income tax
withholding.
Because of the identity of definition already observed,
n 4,
supra, the same rationale
necessarily applies to the New York City withholding tax.
Page 419 U. S. 52
The trustee finally suggests that the placing of a withholding
obligation upon the trustee amounts to the imposition of a penalty
barred by § 57, of the Act, 11 U.S.C. § 93(j). This
argument, however, rests upon the presence of § 6672 of the
Internal Revenue Code, 26 U.S.C. § 6672, and §§
T46-65.0(g) and U46-35.0(g) of the New York City Administrative
Code, all of which impose a penalty, apart from the tax, on a
person who willfully fails to fulfill his obligation to withhold or
who willfully attempts to evade or defeat any tax. That, obviously,
is not this case.
B. The requirement of reports and returns. This routinely
follows from the obligation to withhold. Section 6051(a) of the
Internal Revenue Code, 26 U.S.C. § 6051(a), provides that a
person required to withhold must furnish the employee a written
statement showing the wages subject to withholding and the amount
withheld on account of each tax. A duplicate of that statement is
to be available for filing with the Internal Revenue Service.
§ 6051(d). Sections 6001 and 6011 require every person
responsible for payment or collection of taxes to keep such records
and make such returns as the Secretary prescribes. The applicable
regulations respond to these statutes. 26 CFR §§
31.6001-1, 31.6001-2, 31.6001-5, 31.6011(a)-6(a)(1), and 31.6051-1;
Rev.Proc. 71-18, 1971-1 Cum.Bull. 684. It is undisputed that the
petitioner trustee must comply with these provisions if he is
subject to the withholding requirements of §§ 3402 and
3102.
Nicholas v. United States, 384 U.
S. 678,
384 U. S. 693
(1966).
The New York City Administrative Code provisions are to similar
effect, §§ T46-52.0 and T46-54.0, U46-9.0 and U46-11.0,
and we reach the same conclusions with respect to reports and
returns thereunder.
C. Expense and delay. The trustee argues, as the referee held,
that the imposition of obligations to withhold,
Page 419 U. S. 53
report, and file returns places a burden on the administration
of bankrupt estates that is at odds with economic and expeditious
administration and with the spirit of the Act. He places some
reliance, as did the referee, on the paper by Referee Hiller, The
Folly of the
Fogarty Case, 32 Ref.J. 54 (1958), where the
author states that "the application of the
Fogarty rule is
sheer nonsense," and that the case is "out of harmony with sound
bankruptcy law."
Id. at 54, 56.
There is, of course, an overriding concern in the Act with
keeping fees and administrative expenses at a minimum so as to
preserve as much of the estate as possible for the creditors. 3A W.
Collier, Bankruptcy �� 62.05[1], 62.02[5] (14th
ed.1972). And it cannot be denied that paperwork takes time and
occasions expense. In this particular case, withholding must be
computed on the 413 wage claims; returns (Forms W-2, W-3, and 941)
must be prepared and furnished the claimant and the Internal
Revenue Service; records must be maintained; and the taxes withheld
must be remitted to the respective taxing entities.
We are not persuaded, however, that this burden would be so
undue as to be inconsistent with or violative of the spirit of the
Act. It is the same burden, no more and no less, that any employer
of the same size must bear, and it is the same burden that is borne
by any receiver or arrangement debtor or any other fiduciary with a
like number of employees. The burden is not disproportionate.
[
Footnote 7] Further, the
Internal Revenue Service has endeavored to lighten the load by its
alternative 25% combined bankruptcy
Page 419 U. S. 54
withholding rate for income and FICA taxes.
See
n 2,
supra. New York
City has done the same with its 1% withholding rate. Neither should
the burden make it necessary, as is so often and so easily
suggested, to employ an accountant. Computations at the rates of
25% and 1%, respectively, are simple and elementary arithmetic
exercises, hardly worthy of an accountant's talent; a high school
student is able to make those computations, as is any bookkeeper,
clerk, or the trustee himself. The added tasks of withholding,
reporting, returning, and remitting are contemplated, in our view,
by the Act. The interests of the taxing entities, who are
creditors, too, and, through them, the interests of the public,
outweigh the minuscule added burden for the estate.
See Swarts
v. Hammer, 194 U. S. 441,
194 U. S. 444
(1904). If relief is to be considered for bankrupt estates in this
respect, it is a matter for legislative, not judicial, concern.
There is nothing in the Act or in the Internal Revenue Code that
relieves the trustee of these duties.
Cf. §§
7507, 108(b), 371, and 372 of the Internal Revenue Code, 26 U.S.C.
§§ 7507, 108(b), 371, and 372.
III
Proofs of Claim
The trustee asserts that, because the United States and the city
failed to file proofs of claim for the taxes at issue, payment
thereof is barred. It is said that these taxing entities were on
notice, by reason of Freedomland's bankruptcy schedules, that the
bankrupt owed the priority wage claims; that these claims were to
be filed within six months; that the entities could obtain an
extension of time, under § 5n of the Act, 11 U.S.C. §
93(n), in which to compute and file their claims; and that they
chose to ignore the referee's bar order directed, among others, to
"taxing authorities and agencies," App. 24a.
Page 419 U. S. 55
This argument, in our view, misconceives the nature of the taxes
that are to be withheld. Liability for the taxes accrues only when
the wage is paid. Sections 3402(a) and 3101(a) of the 1954 Code;
New York City Administrative Code §§ T46-51.0(a) and
U46-8.0. The wages that are the subject of the wage claims,
although earned before bankruptcy, were not paid prior to
bankruptcy. Freedomland had incurred no liability for the taxes.
Liability came into being only during bankruptcy. The taxes do not
partake, therefore, of the nature of debts of the bankrupt for
which proofs of claim must be filed.
Furthermore, the filing of proofs by the United States and New
York City obviously would serve no purpose here. Proofs apprise the
trustee and other creditors of the existence of claims against the
estate. The priority wage claims themselves, however, cover the
gross wages earned and unpaid. These include any tax that is to be
withheld. The tax is not an added increment.
We conclude, therefore, that proofs of claim on the part of the
United States and of New York City with respect to withholding
taxes on priority wage claims are not required.
IV
With withholding taxes thus determined as properly applicable to
priority wage claims, their placement in the payment scale under
§ 64a must be determined. [
Footnote 8] The choice lies between the first priority
(costs and expenses
Page 419 U. S. 56
of administration), urged by the United States; the second
priority (wages and commissions, limited as the statute specifies),
urged by the city of New York; the fourth priority ("taxes which
became legally due and owing by the bankrupt"), urged by none of
the parties here; and no priority at all. The third and fifth
priorities clearly have no possible application to these taxes.
We readily reject the fourth priority. The withholding taxes are
not taxes which became due and owing by the bankrupt. As has been
noted above, the taxes did not become due and owing at all until
the claims, constituting wages, were paid. This took place after
bankruptcy, not before. The situation, thus differs from that,
where the bankrupt paid wages prior to bankruptcy, but the taxes
withheld were not remitted to the taxing entities by the time of
the inception of the bankruptcy proceeding. The latter would be
taxes "which became legally due and owing by the bankrupt."
See
In re John Horne Co., 220 F.2d 33 (CA7 1955);
Pomper v.
United States, 196 F.2d 211 (CA2 1952).
We similarly reject the first priority, although we recognize
that this appears to be the favorite conclusion reached by those
courts that have passed upon the issue.
See n 3,
supra. The leading case for
this approach is
United States v. Fogarty, supra. The
Court there, however, without a statement of underlying reasons,
merely concluded that the taxes "should be allowed and classified
as an expense of administration," 164 F.2d at 33. In
Lines v.
California Dept. of Employment, supra, the court followed
Fogarty and held that, because the tax accrued "subsequent
to the filing of the petition in bankruptcy, such tax had the
character of an expense of administration." 246 F.2d at 71.
We think that more than a general observation that the taxes
arose during bankruptcy is required to dignify
Page 419 U. S. 57
withholding taxes with the prime status of first priority. We
grant that the very language of § 64a(1) ("including the
actual and necessary costs and expenses of preserving the estate
subsequent to filing the petition") necessarily indicates that
first priority items include some in addition to those that
preserve or develop the bankrupt estate. Withholding taxes,
however, do not strike us as costs or expenses of doing business.
They are attributable in their entirety to the availability of
funds for the payment of priority wage claims. They accrue only as
those claims are paid and, to the extent of that payment, the
payment of the taxes should be assured. In addition, it is
anomalous to accord withholding taxes a higher priority than the
wage claims to which they so directly relate. They can be computed
only upon the amount of funds available for payment of the wage
claims, and should not have a computational base greater than those
payments. The withholding taxes are, in full effect, part of the
claims themselves and derive from and are carved out of the payment
of those claims. We therefore fully agree with the Second Circuit's
observation, 480 F.2d at 190: "Conceptually, the tax payments
should be treated in the same way as the wages from which they
derive and of which they are a part."
We see nothing in
United States v. Randall,
401 U. S. 513
(1971), with its observation,
id. at
401 U. S. 515,
that the Bankruptcy Act "is an overriding statement of federal
policy on this question of priorities," that is contrary to the
result we reach here. That case concerned § 7501(a) of the
Internal Revenue Code, 26 U.S.C. § 7501(a), with its provision
for a trust fund for withheld taxes, and the impact of that
statute, when not complied with, upon payment of first priority
costs and expenses of administration.
Randall is not a
holding, as the trustee would claim, Brief for Petitioner 119, that
the withholding
Page 419 U. S. 58
taxes do not have the same priority as the wage claims
themselves.
We therefore conclude that these federal and city withholding
taxes are entitled, as are the priority wage claims from which they
emerge, to second priority of payment under § 64a(2) of the
Act, 11 U.S.C. § 104(a). [
Footnote 9]
The judgment of the Court of Appeals is affirmed.
It is so ordered.
[
Footnote 1]
"§ 104. Debts which have priority."
"(a) The debts to have priority, in advance of the payment of
dividends to creditors, and to be paid in full out of bankrupt
estates, and the order of payment, shall be (1) the costs and
expenses of administration, including the actual and necessary
costs and expenses of preserving the estate subsequent to filing
the petition . . . ; (2) wages and commissions, not to exceed $600
to each claimant, which have been earned within three months before
the date of the commencement of the proceeding, due to workmen . .
. ; (4) taxes which became legally due and owing by the bankrupt to
the United States or to any State or any subdivision thereof which
are not released by a discharge in bankruptcy. . . ."
[
Footnote 2]
Under Internal Revenue Service directives, a trustee in
bankruptcy, upon paying priority wage claims, has the option of
withholding income and FICA taxes either at a combined flat rate of
25% or at the rates prescribed by §§ 3101 and 3402 of the
Code, 26 U.S.C. §§ 3101 and 3402.
[
Footnote 3]
First priority:
United States v. Fogarty, 164 F.2d 26,
33 (CA8 1947);
Lines v. California Dept. of Employment,
242 F.2d 201, 203,
reh. den., 246 F.2d 70 (CA9),
cert.
denied, 355 U.S. 857 (1957). Second priority:
In re
Freedomland, Inc., 480 F.2d 184, 190 (CA2 1973). Fourth
priority:
In re Connecticut Motor Lines, Inc., 336 F.2d
96, 102-106, 108 (CA3 1964).
In
In re John Horne Co., 220 F.2d 33, 35 (CA7 1955), a
case concerning wages paid prior to bankruptcy, the court stated:
"We are not impressed with the reasoning of the court in the
Fogarty case."
See also Note, 56 Mich.L.Rev. 631
(1958); Comment, Bankruptcy -- Priorities -- Fourth Priority
Assigned Payroll Taxes on Second Priority Wages, 40 N.Y.U.L.Rev.
360 (1965); Note, 19 Rutgers L.Rev. 546 (1965).
[
Footnote 4]
The terms "wages" and "employer," as they appear in Titles T and
U of the City Code are given the same meanings they have in the
Internal Revenue Code. New York City Administrative Code
§§ T46-1.0(c) and U46-1.0(b), (e), and (
l)
(1971).
[
Footnote 5]
We see nothing to the contrary in
United States v. Embassy
Restaurant, Inc., 359 U. S. 29
(1959), which is pressed upon us by the trustee. The issue there
was whether contributions by an employer to a union welfare fund,
as required under a collective bargaining agreement, were entitled
to second priority as "wages . . . due to workmen." There is no
such issue here, for the trustee acknowledges, as he must, that the
present claims are, indeed, for "wages," within the meaning of the
Bankruptcy Act.
[
Footnote 6]
"The result would be no different if it is argued that the
bankruptcy court, rather than its trustee is 'the person having
control of the payment of such wages.' There is no provision
excepting a court from the requirement of withholding on amounts
paid an employee."
United States v. Fogarty, 164 F.2d at 32.
[
Footnote 7]
The District Court, on review of the referee's order and
decision, received evidence with respect to costs of compliance. It
concluded that compliance "adds only slightly to the trustee's
inescapable task and cost of verifying each claim before payment."
341 F.
Supp. 647, 654 (SDNY 1972).
[
Footnote 8]
The trustee has paid the priority wage claims, with the taxes
withheld and set aside. This was done, however, pursuant to an
agreement that the rights of the parties would not be affected
thereby. The United States, therefore, is not in a position to
claim that a trust fund has been established under § 7501(a)
of the Internal Revenue Code, 26 U.S.C. § 7501(a).
See
United States v. Randall, 401 U. S. 513
(1971);
Nicholas v. United States, 384 U.
S. 678,
384 U. S.
690-691 (1966).
[
Footnote 9]
This conclusion makes it unnecessary for us to consider whether,
if the Government were to prevail in its first priority argument,
the judgment of the Court of Appeals here could be modified in the
absence of a cross-petition by the United States. We are advised
that the bankrupt estate's assets are sufficient to pay all first
and second priority claims in full. Tr. of Oral Arg. 28-29. Whether
the withholding taxes have first, rather than second priority
status is, therefore, of no practical consequence to the Government
in the present case.