Arkansas2

[55-2 USTC
¶9589]Commercial Credit Corporation, Plaintiff v. Phil Schwartz, d/b/a
Phil Schwartz Hudson Sales; Phil Schwartz and Mable Lee Schwartz; The
Commercial National Bank; Kelly Motors, Inc.; Olin S. Godwin, Director
of Internal Revenue; T. J. Blackmon; and United States of America,
Defendants
In
the United States District Court for the Eastern District of Arkansas,
Western Division, Civil Action No. LR-2784, 130 FSupp 524, March 24,
1955
[1939 Code Secs. 3670-3672--similar to 1954 Code Secs. 6321-6323]
Tax liens: Priority: State taxes v. federal taxes.--X, an
individual, was subject to three federal government liens for unpaid
federal income and withholding taxes, one state lien for unpaid
unemployment compensation taxes, and three individual liens in the form
of real estate and chattel mortgages. The state tax lien was recorded
prior in point of time to any of the federal liens, although a bank
mortgage preceded the state lien. After sale of X's realty and
satisfaction of the bank mortgage, the federal government contended that
by reason of 1939 Code Sec. 3670, its lien had priority as against the
state. The District Court held that in absence of allegations of
insolvency on the part of the debtor, the federal priority statute
impliedly supplements Code Sec. 3670, thus requiring that liens take
priority in the order in which they attach and become choate.
Accordingly, priority was accorded to the state tax lien.
Tax liens: Priority: Legality of allocation of proceeds from
distraint sale: Equitable conversion.--After distraint sale of X's
personal property, the government, holding one lien superior to a
chattel mortgage of Z and two liens inferior to the chattel mortgage of
Z, satisfied its inferior liens from the proceeds of the distraint sale.
This left an outstanding government lien which was still superior to the
chattel mortgage of Z, as well as two government liens superior to a
real property mortgage lien of Z. With proceeds from the sale of X's
real property in issue, the government sought to satisfy its superior
lien (which was a lien, as with all government liens, on both real and
personal property). Z claimed that the government, by its allocation of
the proceeds from the distraint sale of the personal property, had
prejudiced both his chattel mortgage lien and his real property
mortgage. The District Court held that, although the chattel mortgage
was extinguished by the distraint sale, the government's allocation of
the distraint sale proceeds was wholly unjustified. By the doctrine of
equitable conversion, Z's real property mortgage claim was to have been
satisfied after the government applied both the distraint sale and the
real property proceeds to its two superior real property liens. The
balance, if any, was to be paid to Z in partial discharge of his real
property mortgage lien. Z has recourse only to a deficiency judgment
against X for the unsatisfied portion of his mortgage lien as well as
the full amount of his unsatisfied chattel mortgage. For memorandum
opinion on motion to file amended answer, see 55-1 USTC ¶9190.
Barber, Henry
& Thurman,
Donaghey
Building
,
Little Rock
,
Ark.
, for plaintiff. Talley & Owen,
Rector
Building
,
Little Rock
,
Ark.
, for defendant, Schwartz. Townsend & Townsend, Commercial National
Bank Building, Little Rock, Ark., for defendant, Commercial National
Bank. Julius C. Acchione, Assistant United States Attorney, for
defendant,
United States
.
Memorandum
LEMLEY,
District Judge:
This cause
comes on for hearing upon the motion for summary judgment filed herein
by the United States, which was made a party defendant under the
provisions of 28 USCA, Section 2410, the responses to said motions filed
by the plaintiff, Commercial Credit Corporation, and Kelly Motors, Inc.
and the Commissioner of Labor of the State of Arkansas, defendants
herein, together with the cross-motions for summary judgment filed by
the plaintiff and by Kelly Motors, which motions have been submitted
upon written briefs. 1
From our consideration of the record we are satisfied that there are no
genuine issues as to any material facts, and that the case can be
disposed of upon the pending motions.
[Parties]
The plaintiff
commenced this action in the Chancery Court of Pulaski County, Arkansas
(Little Rock) for the purpose of foreclosing a chattel mortgage and a
real estate mortgage covering, respectively, certain personal property
and certain realty of the defendant, Phil Schwartz; since the United
States held tax liens covering both the real and personal property of
Schwartz, it was made a party defendant; the Commercial National Bank of
Little Rock, which held a first mortgage on the real estate of Schwartz,
and the State, which claimed a lien on all of his property by virtue of
certain unpaid unemployment compensation taxes, were likewise made
parties, together with other lienors, and Kelly Motors, which had
purchased certain of the personal property of Schwartz at a distraint
sale conducted by the Government, was also named as a defendant. The
Government removed the case here, as provided by 28 USCA, Section 1444.
[Claims]
This
litigation involves the conflicting claims of the plaintiff, the
Government, and the State to a fund now on deposit in the registry of
this court, representing the balance of the proceeds of the foreclosure
sale of Schwartz' real estate remaining after satisfaction of the Bank's
first mortgage and the payment of the costs of said sale. We are also
called upon to determine the title which Kelly Motors obtained to the
property which it purchased at the distraint sale which has been
mentioned; and there is also involved a counterclaim for malicious
prosecution which Kelly Motors has filed against the plaintiff. The
facts in the case, insofar as here pertinent, are substantially as
follows:
[Facts]
For some years
prior to the filing of this suit the defendant, Schwartz, was engaged in
the automobile business in
Little Rock
. In March of 1951 he and his wife executed and delivered to the Bank a
first mortgage on the real estate here involved, which mortgage secured
a debt of $8,000.00; said mortgage was properly recorded and is conceded
to have been a first lien on said real estate.
In December of
1951 Schwartz owed the State $1,257.50, representing unpaid unemployment
compensation taxes; on
December 28, 1951
the Commissioner of Labor filed with the Circuit Clerk of Pulaski
County, Arkansas a certificate of assessment covering said indebtedness.
Under the provisions of the pertinent Arkansas statutes (Ark. Stats.,
1947, Sections 81-1117e, 26-1121, 26-1123, and 29-130) said certificate
upon its filing acquired the status of a judgment of the Circuit Court
of said County and was from the time of filing a lien on all of the real
estate in Pulaski County belonging to Schwartz; since the State never
sued out any execution, however, it never acquired a lien on Schwartz'
personal property.
[Government
Liens]
On March 27,
1953 the Government, acting under the authority of 26 USCA, Section
3670-3672, filed with the Circuit Clerk a notice of lien for unpaid
income taxes alleged to be due from Schwartz with respect to income
received in 1948, the amount being $10,486.71; for convenience this lien
will be referred to as "Government's Lien No 1." On
June 26, 1953
Schwartz executed a chattel mortgage in favor of the plaintiff covering
certain personal property and securing a debt of $6,000, which mortgage
was duly filed in the Circuit Clerk's office. On
July 10, 1953
the Government filed two additional notices of lien, based upon
assessments for certain unpaid withholding taxes aggregating $3,936.18;
while two separate notices were filed, the parties have treated them as
a unit, and we shall do likewise and shall refer to the two liens
collectively as "Government's Lien No. 2". On the same day
that Government's Lien No. 2, was filed Schwartz and his wife executed a
second mortgage on his real estate to the plaintiff securing a debt of
$4,000.00, but this mortgage was not filed for record until the next
day. On
September 21, 1953
the Government filed still another notice of lien based upon another
assessment for unpaid withholding taxes amounting to $1,530.54, which
lien we shall call "Government's Lien No. 3". Although certain
other liens and claims thereafter came into existence, they obviously
stand too low in the order of priority to ever participate in the fund
now in court, and we do not stop to enumerate them.
[Order
of Liens]
From the
foregoing it will be seen that as of September 21, 1953 the property of
Schwartz was subject to the following liens in order of time: First, the
Bank's first mortgage lien on Schwartz' real estate. Second, the State's
lien for unpaid unemployment compensation taxes, which was a judgment
lien on his real estate. Third, the Government's Lien No. 1, which was a
statutory lien on all of Schwartz' property, both real and personal.
Fourth, the plaintiff's chattel mortgage lien on the personal property
covered thereby. Fifth, the Government's lien No. 2, which was a
statutory lien on all of Schwartz' property. Sixth, the plaintiff's
second mortgage on the real estate. And, seventh, the Government's Lien
No. 3 covering all of Schwartz' property. The situation just outlined
can probably to be more readily comprehended by reference to the
following tabulation:
Liens
on Schwartz' Property in Order of Time
A. Real Estate
1. The Bank's
first mortgage.
2. The State's
tax lien.
3. The
Government's Lien No. 1.
4. The
Government's Lien No. 2.
5. The
plaintiff's second mortgage.
6. The
Government's Lien No. 3.
B.
Personal Property
1. The
Government's Lien No. 1.
2. The
plaintiff's chattel mortgage.
3. The
Government's Lien No. 2.
4. The
Government's Lien No. 3.
[Distraint
Sale
]
Prior to
September 16, 1953 the Government issued four warrants of distraint,
based respectively, on the tax liabilities secured by its Liens No. 1,
No. 2, and No. 3; 2
and on the date just mentioned officials of the Government, acting under
said warrants, seized the personal property of Schwartz located at his
place of business in Little Rock and covered by the plaintiff's chattel
mortgage. Two days later Schwartz was notified that this property would
be sold at auction, as provided by 26 USCA, Section 3690; this notice
referred to all four of the distraint warrants which have been
mentioned. The gross amount of Schwartz' tax liability was $15,944.30,
including penalty, lien fees, advertising costs, and interest computed
up to September 29, 1953.
On
October 5, 1953
the distraint sale was held, and Kelly Motors purchased the personal
property for $7,400, which it duly paid. Prior to the sale bidders were
advised of the conditions thereof including the proviso that the
Government was selling "only the right, title, and interest of the
taxpayer in the property offered for sale", and that it would not
warrant or defend the title thereto.
[Allocation
of Proceeds]
When the
Government received the purchase price of the personal property, it made
an allocation thereof, the legality of which is sharply challenged here
both by the plaintiff and by Kelly Motors. Instead of applying all of
the proceeds to the tax liability secured by its Lien No. 1, its senior
tax lien, the Government applied said proceeds so as to extinguish
completely its Lien No. 2 and Lien No. 3; the surplus still remaining
was then applied so as to reduce. Lien No. 1 by $2,349.77, leaving a
balance of $8,136.94 still unpaid. 3
Thereafter the plaintiff commenced this action.
Shortly after
the case was removed to this Court, the real estate was sold by
agreement, and the Bank's first lien was discharged in full. The balance
remaining after discharging the Bank's claim and paying the expenses of
the sale, which balance amounts to $7,758.87, is now being held in the
registry of this Court pending final determination of the relative
priorities of the respective claims. Since the money now on hand
represents proceeds of the sale of real estate, it stands in the place
of the land and will be treated as such; hence it is subject to the
plaintiff's second real estate mortgage, but is not subject to the
chattel mortgage.
[Federal
v. State]
The first
controversy which we shall take up is that between the State and the
Government. While the latter does not deny that the State's lien is
superior in point of time to its tax liens, it contends none the less
that it is entitled to priority; we cannot agree. Neither the State nor
the Government ever undertook to seize the Schwartz real estate or
subject it to sale; hence, at the commencement of this action both of
said lienors held general statutory liens on the land, which liens have
now attached to the moneys on deposit in the registry. Since 26 USCA,
Section 3670, upon which the Government's liens are based, gives no
priority thereto, and since there are no allegations of insolvency on
the part of Schwartz, which would bring into play the provisions of the
federal priority statute, R. S., Section 3466, 31 USCA, Section 191, the
relative standings of the liens now in question must be determined upon
the principle that "the first in time is the first in right",
and priority must be accorded to the State's lien to the extent of the
unpaid balance of the 1951 assessment, which amounts to $317.00, plus
interest. U. S. v. City of New Britain et al., 347
U. S.
81 [54-1 USTC ¶9191].
In the case
just mentioned certain property in New Britain, Connecticut was subject
to certain mortgages, statutory liens for municipal taxes and water
rents, and federal tax liens; it appears that some of the municipal
liens were prior in time to some of the federal tax liens, and,
conversely, that some of the federal liens were prior in time to some of
the municipal liens. In foreclosure proceedings, wherein the property
failed to sell for enough to discharge all liens, the Government and the
City each contended that all of its liens were superior to all of those
of its adversary. The State courts agreed with the City on the theory
that under
Connecticut
law the City's liens were "specific" and
"perfected," whereas the federal liens were merely
"general". The Supreme Court of the United States reversed, it
being held that it made no difference in cases involving real estate,
and where the taxpayer was not insolvent, that one lien was
"specific" and the other "general," that the liens
of both the Government and the City were "perfected" in the
sense that the identity of the lienors, the property subject to the
liens, and the amounts thereof had been established, that 26 USCA,
Section 3670 did not give any priority to the federal liens, that the
State could not impair the standing of the federal liens without the
consent of Congress, and that under such circumstances the relative
priorities of the liens must be determined upon the principle that
"the first in time is the first in right", (347 U. S. at 85).
In this connection the Court said: "This principle is widely
accepted and applied in the absence of legislation to the contrary. We
think that Congress had this cardinal rule in mind when it enacted Sec.
3670, a schedule of priority not being set forth therein. Thus, the
priority of each statutory lien contested here must depend on the time
it attached to the property and became choate." (347
U. S.
at 85-86)
In the course
of its opinion the Court distinguished U. S. v. Security Trust &
Savings Bank, 340 U. S. 47 [50-2 USTC ¶9492], on the ground that
there the lien set up in opposition to that of the Government was an
inchoate attachment lien which did not ripen into judgment until after
the federal lien attached; and also distinguished U. S. v. Gilbert
Associates, 345 U. S. 361 [53-1 USTC ¶9291], on the ground that
there the taxpayer was insolvent and R. S., Section 3466 was applicable.
In the instant case only real state is involved, there is no question of
insolvency, and both the state and federal liens are "choate"
and "perfected" as those terms are used by the Supreme Court.
Hence, the situation presented here is essentially the same as that
presented in the
New Britain
case; and, of course, we shall follow that decision.
[Allocation
Issue]
Turning now to
the remaining questions of priority, the plaintiff contends that the
Government had no right to apply the proceeds of the distraint sale in
the manner in which they were in fact applied, but that since they were
so applied, the Government is now precluded from changing the allocation
and holds such proceeds as a trustee for its benefit. Alternatively, it
contends that Kelly Motors bought subject to its chattel mortgage lien.
The Government argues that it had the right to make the allocation which
has been mentioned and denies that it is a trustee for the benefit of
the plaintiff; it takes the position that the unpaid portion of its Lien
No. 1 is superior to the plaintiff's real estate mortgage, and that the
funds in court should be applied in satisfaction of the balance of Lien
No. 1, which would practically, if not entirely, exhaust said fund.
Moreover, the Government urges that in any event Kelly Motors bought
subject to the plaintiff's chattel mortgage, and that the latter has not
been prejudiced by the allocation of the proceeds of the distraint sale.
It is the position of Kelly Motors that it bought free from the
plaintiff's lien, and that the plaintiff's contentions to the contrary
are frivolous and actuated by malice, and that their assertion amounts
to a malicious prosecution. 4
There is a
dispute between the parties as to whether or not a representative of the
plaintiff attended the distraint sale and warned prospective bidders
that they would buy subject to the lien of its chattel mortgage, but we
find it unnecessary to resolve that dispute since if the sale was in
fact made subject to the mortgage, nothing would be added to the
plaintiff's case by the fact that one of its representatives gave the
alleged notice; on the other hand, if the sale had the effect of
extinguishing the chattel mortgage lien, that effect could not be
avoided by the protestations of its representative to the contrary.
There is
clearly no merit in the plaintiff's argument that the Government
occupies a position of trustee for its benefit. The Government had the
right to make the sale and to utilize the proceeds thereof in the
discharge of Schwartz' tax liability; if the sale was subject to the
plaintiff's lien, the latter has not been prejudiced thereby or by the
allocation made of the proceeds; if on the contrary such sale
extinguished the mortgage lien, plaintiff is in no position to complain.
The contention
that the Government, having made the aforesaid allocation of the
proceeds of the sale, is now precluded from re-allocating them, may be
shortly answered by pointing out that the Government is not attempting
to make any re-allocation. On the contrary, it is insisting that the
allocation which it made was legal and proper. We are not here
confronted with a situation involving an attempt by a creditor to change
a legal application of a payment to a particular debt or part of a debt,
where such change, if allowed, would work to the prejudice of a third
party. We are satisfied that if the application made by the Government
was unauthorized or illegal, this Court in determining the respective
priorities of the claims to the fund in its hands has the power and the
duty, in the application of the familiar maxim that equity regards as
done that which should have been done, to disregard the improper
allocation, and to determine the priorities of the conflicting liens as
though a proper allocation had been made.
With those
preliminary questions out of the way, we come down to a consideration of
the two real issues in the case as between the plaintiff, the
Government, and Kelly Motors, namely, the correctness of the
Government's allocation of the proceeds of the sale, and the title which
Kelly Motors acquired at said sale. Our decision on these issues will
dispose of the case, except for the counterclaim of Kelly Motors to
which we shall later refer.
[Decision
on Allocation]
In passing
upon the correctness of the allocation of the proceeds of the sale it
should first be said that, although the Government has had the remedy of
distraint and sale available to it since at least 1866, 5
it does not appear that prior to this time the courts have been called
upon to determine how the proceeds of distraint sales should be
allocated where the Government holds a plurality of tax liens one of
which is superior and one or more of the others inferior to a mortgage
lien of a third party; at least we have been cited to no such case, and
we have found none.
It will be
recalled, however, that in the New Britain case, supra,
the Supreme Court held that 26 USCA, Section 3670 confers no priority on
federal tax liens, and that in cases not involving insolvency, such
liens should take priority, as far as real estate is concerned, along
with other liens in the order in which they attach and become choate;
and, as heretofore pointed out, the Court considered that that principle
was the "cardinal rule" which Congress had in mind in enacting
Section 3670 without including a schedule of priorities therein.
Furthermore, the Court quoted with approval the following language of
Chief Justice Marshall in Rankin v. Scott, 12 Wheat. 177, 179:
`The
principle is believed to be universal, that a prior lien gives a prior
claim, which is entitled to prior satisfaction, out of the subject it
binds, unless the lien be intrinsically defective, or be displaced by
some act of the party holding it, which shall postpone him in a Court of
law or equity to a subsequent claimant.'" (347
U. S.
at 85)
We
would consider it strange indeed if the Congress intended for the courts
to be bound by the principle, "the first in time is the first in
right," but intended for the collection officials of the Government
to be left free to disregard that principle. We do not attribute any
such intent to Congress, and hold that the principle just mentioned is
as binding upon the collection officials as it is upon the courts.
The effect of
giving recognition in the instand proceedings to the allocation made by
the Government of the proceeds of the sale of the personal property
would be to permit the Government to satisfy out of such proceeds two
junior liens while preserving its senior lien for enforcement against
the fund which stands in the place of the real estate and with respect
to which the rights of the plaintiff are inferior. The injustice of such
a result is manifest to our eyes. And it appears to us unthinkable that
any court would have made the allocation which the Government has here
made, had application been made to it originally for a determination as
to how the proceeds of the distraint sale involved in this case should
be applied. We do not think that the mere fact that the Government had
the power, which it exercised, to invoke the summary remedy of distraint
and sale gave to its employees the right to make the allocation in
question. While those employees were, of course, bound to be diligent in
the protection of the Government's rights, they were also required to
deal fairly with other lienors, to recognize their security rights, and
to act in conformity with the principle of priority which has been
mentioned. We are of the opinion, therefore, that the collection
officials were required to apply all of the proceeds of the distraint
sale, after deducting the lien fees and advertising costs, to the
satisfaction of Government's Lien No. 1; and in determining priorities
in the instant case we shall, as a court of equity, consider that such
was done.
In support of
its position the Government cites a number of cases recognizing and
applying the well-established rule that in cases of voluntary payments
where no direction as to application is given by the debtor, the
creditor may apply the payment as he pleases, even though the result of
the application is damaging to third persons. But that rule is
applicable only to voluntary payments; it has no application to
involuntary payments, such as the one involved in this case. 40 Am. Jur.
"Payment", Sections 109 and 119.
[Chattel
Mortgage Extinguished]
Taking up now
the question of whether or not the distraint sale extinguished the lien
of the plaintiff's chattel mortgage, we conclude that it did, and that
Kelly Motors owns the property which it bought, free and clear from all
claims of the plaintiff. In Blacklock v. U. S., 208
U. S.
75, it was held that where the Government, having a prior tax lien,
sells the property under distraint, the sale cuts off a subsequent
mortgage. Had the Government in the instant case simply issued one
warrant, based on the 1948 tax liability of Schwartz, the lien of which
was superior to that of plaintiff's mortgage, the situation in the Blacklock
case would have been exactly duplicated; and we do not believe that a
different result is called for merely because the Government sold under
four warrants instead of one, particularly in view of our conclusion
that the proceeds of the sale should have been applied entirely to the
1948 tax liability.
While our
conclusion that Kelly Motors bought free from the plaintiff's lien is
strengthened by our view that the proceeds of the sale should have been
applied entirely to the 1948 tax obligation, it is not dependent
thereon. We think that the sale in question extinguished plaintiff's
chattel mortgage lien, regardless of the legality or propriety of the
allocation eventually made of the proceeds of said sale. It should be
kept in mind that Kelly Motors had no control whatever over the
application of the money which it paid for the property; and we feel
that it had the right to rely upon the fact that one of the distraint
warrants under which the sale was held was issued with respect to a tax
liability the lien of which was superior to plaintiff's mortgage lien.
To hold otherwise would render doubtful and insecure titles obtained at
distraint sales, which in turn would discourage bidding at such sales to
the detriment of both the Government and the taxpayer.
In his
argument on this phase of the case we think that counsel for the
Government has misconceived the meaning of 26 USCA, Section 3697(b),
which provides in substance that a sale under a distraint warrant passes
to the purchaser "all right, title, and interest" of the
delinquent taxpayer in the property sold; that phrase is also contained
in the standard instructions to bidders which were read to the bidders
in the instant case. Counsel seems to think that said phrase refers to
the right, title and interest of the taxpayer at the time of the sale;
but Blacklock v. U. S., supra, makes it clear that the phrase
refers to the right, title or interest of the delinquent at the time the
Government's lien attaches, and that where that lien is superior, the
sale extinguishes inferior liens.
[Ultimate
Conclusions]
Coming now to
the ultimate question of the relative priorities of the claims to the
fund with which we are concerned, we conclude that after the payment of
any unpaid costs in this action, the balance of the fund should be
applied in the following order: First, to the satisfaction of the unpaid
portion of the State's claim based upon its 1951 certificate of
assessment. Second, to the satisfaction of that portion of Schwartz'
1948 income tax liability remaining after deducting from the total
amount thereof a sum equal to the net proceeds of the distraint sale,
which, as we view the matter, should have been applied in their entirety
to said liability. Third, to the satisfaction of the Government's Lien
No. 2, which is superior to the claim of the plaintiff, as far as the
real state is concerned. Finally, the balance, if any, should be paid
over to the plaintiff in partial discharge of the lien of its second
mortgage on the real estate. Plaintiff is also entitled to a deficiency
judgment against Schwartz based upon said mortgage, and, likewise, to a
judgment against him for any other indebtedness originally secured by
the chattel mortgage, the lien of which we have held to have been
extinguished by the distraint sale.
[Federal
Jurisdiction]
As to the
counterclaim of Kelly Motors, we have serious doubt as to our
jurisdiction to entertain, it, and we feel that it should be remanded to
the
Chancery
Court
of
Pulaski
County
for further proceedings. It is well settled that the limited
jurisdiction of the federal courts must be clearly established, and that
doubts as to the existence of federal jurisdiction must be resolved
against it. While 28 USCA, Sections 2410 and 1444 clearly give us the
power to consider all questions relating to the property here involved,
we doubt that Congress in enacting those sections intended to confer
jurisdiction on the federal courts to pass upon collateral disputes
between the private litigants, with which the Government has no concern,
in cases which could not have been removed to such courts except for the
presence of the United States as a lien claimant. While it may be
inferred from the pleadings that the plaintiff is not an Arkansas
corporation, whereas Kelly Motors is, nevertheless nowhere in the record
have we been able to find any averment as to the State of the
plaintiff's incorporation, and the original complaint named as a
defendant an individual who turned out to be a citizen of Louisiana.
Although it is probable that plaintiff is not a
Louisiana
corporation, there is no presumption that it is not, and, of course, in
order for this Court to have had original jurisdiction in this case, as
between the private litigants, there would have had to have been
complete diversity of citizenship between the plaintiff and all of the
defendants. But conceding that such complete diversity did exist between
the private litigants, and that this Court possessed original
jurisdiction in the constitutional sense, the fact remains that
plaintiff did not file the suit here but selected the State court as its
forum and named as defendants Arkansas citizens and corporations,
including Kelly Motors, which prevented the case from being removable by
any of the private litigants, 28 USCA, Section 1441(b). It was not until
later that the Government was made a party, and the removal provisions
of 28 USCA, Section 1444 came into play. Moreover, when the counterclaim
is viewed apart from the questions concerning the property involved in
the case, it appears that, although diversity exists between plaintiff
and Kelly Motors, the amount of the counterclaim is less than $3,000.00.
Hence, said counterclaim could not have been filed here originally as an
independent suit.
[Conclusion]
A summary
judgment in accordance with the foregoing is today being entered, which
will have the effect of establishing the priorities of the several
claims to the moneys in court and the right of the plaintiffs to the
deficiency judgment; it will also have the effect of quieting the title
of Kelly Motors to the property which it purchased at the distraint
sale, as against all claims of the plaintiff, and of remanding to the
State Court the counterclaim of Kelly Motors against the plaintiff. We
lack sufficient data, however, to undertake at this time to set forth
the specific sums of money which should be disbursed to the respective
parties, or to state the amount of the deficiency judgment to which the
plaintiff is entitled. Counsel, however, should have no difficulty in
making the necessary computations, and when such has been done a motion
for an order of disbursement, together with a motion for an order
definitely fixing the amount of the plaintiff's deficiency judgment, can
be presented. Should disagreement arise in connection with these matters
the same can be disposed of by the Court after notice and hearing, if
the latter should appear necessary.
1
The Commissioner of Labor has filed no formal cross-motion for summary
judgment, but we do not think that this precludes us at this time from
awarding him such relief as he may be entitled to under the facts as
disclosed by the record before us. See 3 Barron & Holtzoff,
"Federal Practice & Procedure," Section 1239, page 104;
and 6
Moore
's Federal Practice, 2d Ed., Section 56.12, pp. 2088 et seq. Since the
Commissioner is a party to this suit in his representative capacity and
represents the State, we shall hereinafter refer to him simply as
"the State".
2
As already pointed out, "Lien No. 2" was actually two liens,
and two warrants of distraint were issued based upon the tax liabilities
secured thereby. At the time these warrants were issued no notice of
Lien No. 3 had been filed, but said lien had come into existence, as
between the parties when the assessment list came into the hands of the
Collector; the notice of Lien No. 3 was filed prior to the distraint
sale presently to be mentioned.
3
The record reflects certain minor discrepancies in figures, which we do
not undertake to adjust at this time.
4
Kelly Motors further contends that the plaintiff's chattel mortgage was
a fraudulent conveyance, and it has filed a motion for leave to amend
its pleadings so as to incorporate said contention therein, which motion
is resisted by the plaintiff. The view which we take of the case renders
it unnecessary for us to pass on said motion or to consider the validity
of the plaintiff's mortgage.
5
See Historical Notes following Sections 3690 and 3700 of Title 26, USCA