Under the law of Virginia and the charter of the City of
Richmond, the city's claim for delinquent taxes on personal
property, unsupported by distraint, is no better than the claim of
a general creditor, and is inferior to a landlord's lien secured by
levy of a distress warrant. P.
249 U. S.
177.
Section 64a of the Bankruptcy Act, in directing payment of taxes
before dividends to creditors, means general creditor; when by the
local law a lien for a private debt is superior to a claim for
taxes, its status is preserved by § 67d (as it was before 1910) if
the lien was given or accepted in good faith and not in fraud of
the act, for a present consideration.
Id.
240 F. 45 affirmed.
The case is stated in the opinion.
MR. JUSTICE McREYNOLDS delivered the opinion of the Court.
November 4, 1909, the Chancery Court at Richmond, upon petition
filed the preceding day, appointed a receiver for the Ainslie
Carriage Company; February 3, 1910, the company was adjudged
bankrupt in involuntary proceedings instituted November 6, 1909. At
time of receiver's appointment, taxes assessed upon the bankrupt's
personal property for the years 1907, 1908, and 1909 were due
the
Page 249 U. S. 175
City of Richmond for which it had not distrained, although
having authority so to do. Respondents, landlords of the bankrupt,
under express statutory authority, levied a distress warrant
November 1, 1909, upon its goods and chattels on account of rent
due for the period since April 1, 1908. The question is whether
their claim is entitled to priority of payment over the taxes. The
circuit court of appeals answered in the affirmative. 240 F.
545.
The city, while not disputing that levy of the distress warrant
gave respondents a valid lien, claims priority under § 64a,
Bankruptcy Act
"The court shall order the trustee to pay all taxes legally due
and owing by the bankrupt to the United States, state, county,
district, or municipality in advance of the payment of dividends to
creditors, and upon filing the receipts of the proper public
officers for such payment he shall be credited with the amount
thereof, and in case any question arises as to the amount or
legality of any such tax, the same shall be heard and determined by
the court."
Respondents maintain: (1) that their lien, perfected through
distraint, was fully protected by § 67d (as it read prior to 1910),
Bankruptcy Act
"Liens give or accepted in good faith and not in contemplation
of or in fraud upon this act, and for a present consideration,
which have been recorded according to law, if record thereof was
necessary in order to impart notice, shall not be affected by this
act;"
and (2) that, under Virginia law, such a lien is superior to the
inchoate one which the city had for unpaid taxes but neglected to
perfect by exercising the summary power granted by its charter to
distrain therefor after September first in year for which
levied.
It is not denied that respondents obtained a present valid lien
upon the bankrupt's goods and chattels distrained November 1, 1909,
nor is it now claimed this was annulled by adjudication of
bankruptcy. That the
Page 249 U. S. 176
City of Richmond had no lien for past-due taxes upon these goods
and chattels when the chancery court receiver took possession, we
think must be regarded as settled by
Jackson Coal Co. v.
Phillips Line, 114 Va. 40 (1912), and this notwithstanding
differences between its charter, and that of Petersburg. The
Supreme Court of Virginia there said (pp. 49-50):
"With respect to that part of the decree appealed from, which
directed the payment of taxes due from the Phillips Line, and its
predecessor in title, to the state of Virginia and the city of
Petersburg, out of the fund under the control of the court, and
giving the taxes priority of payment over the creditors of the
receivers, the court erred, except as to the taxes for the year
1910. The property upon which these taxes were assessed was wholly
personal, and no effort appears to have been made, certainly as to
the years prior to 1910, either by the auditor of the state or by
the City of Petersburg, to collect the taxes until the property was
placed in the hands of the receivers in this cause and an account
of debts against the Phillips Line ordered. The state had a right,
under §§ 604-623 of the Code, for one year from the date on which
the taxes in her favor were assessed, to levy upon the property
assessed with the taxes, which right was not exercised, and it
appears that the City of Petersburg had a right of distress against
the property assessed with taxes in its favor which the city might
have exercised before the taxes were returned delinquent, or the
property upon which they were assessed had passed into the hands of
subsequent purchasers, and thereby secured a lien therefor, but
these rights were never exercised. Under these circumstances,
neither the state nor the city had a lien upon the property of the
Phillips Line when it went into the hands of the receivers for the
taxes due them, respectively, and therefore the position of the
state and city was no better than that of the general
Page 249 U. S. 177
creditors of the company, and they were not entitled to share in
the proceeds of sale of the company's property, except as to the
amount of taxes due them [the state and the city], respectively,
for the year 1910, assessed against and due from the
receivers."
Respondents therefore must prevail unless priority over their
lien is given by § 64a to claim for taxes which, under state law,
occupied no better position than one held by a general creditor.
Section 67d, Bankruptcy Act, quoted
supra, declares that
liens given or accepted in good faith and not in contemplation of
or in fraud upon this act shall not be affected by it. Other
provisions must, of course, be construed in view of this positive
one. Section 64a directs that taxes be paid in advance of dividends
to creditors, and "dividend" as commonly used throughout the act
means partial payment to general creditors. In § 65b, for example,
the word occurs in contrast to payment of debts which have
priority. And as the local laws gave no superior right to the
city's unsecured claim for taxes, we are unable to conclude that
Congress intended by § 64a to place it ahead of valid
lienholders.
New Jersey v. Anderson, 203 U.
S. 483, is not decisive of any point here contested; it
only adjudged that New Jersey's claim was for a tax within the
meaning of § 64a, and entitled to be treated accordingly.
See
New Jersey v. Lovell, 179 F. 321.
The judgment below must be
Affirmed.
MR. JUSTICE DAY and MR. JUSTICE CLARKE dissent.