Mortgage

[62-2 USTC
¶9631]Southern Railway Company and Morgan Guaranty Trust Company of New
York, as Trustee, Appellants v. United States of America, et al.,
Appellees United States of America, Appellant v. Southern Railway
Company and Morgan Guaranty Trust Company of New York, as Trustee,
Appellees
(CA-5),
U. S. Court of Appeals, 5th Circuit, No. 19257, 306 F2d 119, 7/19/62
[1954 Code Sec. 3466]
Priority in
admin
istration: Claims for taxes v. mortgage: Taxes as expense of
operation.--The Government's claim for taxes had priority over the
claims of a bondholder and a judgment creditor for Freight interchange
charges. Since the receiver continued to operate the property the taxes
were an ordinary expense of operation and the supremacy of the mortgage
debt is of no significance in the distribution of funds in payment of
costs of
admin
istration of the receivership. The Government's claim was also superior
to the claim for attorney fees of the trustee under the mortgage since
no services of value were rendered to the fund. However, attorney fees
of the bondholder were superior since valuable services were rendered to
the fund out of which the claims were to be paid.
Earl E.
Eisenhart, Jr., Washington, D. C., Emory F.
Rob
inson, 500 Jackson Bldg., Gainesville, Ga., Charles J. Bloch, Ellsworth
Hall, Jr., 710 Walnut St. Bldg., Macon, Ga., for taxpayers. E. D.
Kenyon, Wm. B. Gunter, Kenyon-Gunter Bldg., 220 Sycamore St.,
Gainesville, Ga., Charles L. Goodson, United States Attorney, Slayton
Clemmons, Assistant United States Attorney, Atlanta, Ga., Louis F.
Oberdorfer, Assistant Attorney General, Lee A. Jackson, Frederick E.
Youngman, Moshe Schuldinger, Department of Justice, Washington 25, D.
C., for the United States.
Before BROWN
and WISDOM, Circuit Judges, and DEVANE, District Judge.
BROWN, Circuit
Judge:
This cas is a
piece of
Americana
. It comes face to face with three markers of our early 20th century
civilization--railroads, railroad financing, and equity receiverships.
And as to the first and third, it marks the end of a railroad and the
equity receivership that kept it going for over thirty-five years.
Typical of the dissatisfactions which brought about complex bankruptcy
reorganization machinery, this receivership seems finally to have become
almost an end in itself. And, as with so many others, while well run and
contributing undoubtedly to the regional economy, when it is all over,
what is left but a pittance. So small is the salvage that, as another
mark of the era, once the expenses of court functionaries and their
various counsel were out of the way and the more substantial cumulative
claims of the ubiquitous and ever-patient tax collectors, national,
state and local, were taken care of, there was nothing left for the
ordinary business creditors or, for that matter, even for the mortgage
bondholders. On the present order, therefore, the railroad was run for
the Receiver and the tax collectors.
The Railroad
whose demise is memorialized by our decree was the Tallulah Falls
Railway Company. It ran for 58 miles from
Cornelia
,
Georgia
, up through
Tallulah
Falls
--from whence its name came--and surrounding scenic country, then on
through Clayton and
Dillard
,
Georgia
, terminating at
Franklin
,
North Carolina
. History undoubtedly bears out what we were told, that for a long time
this Railroad was the busy and principal means of transportation as
vacationers went to and from this popular scenic summer resort area. But
it was more important than it was profitable. And, it is an
understatement to say, its end--fiscal and physical--was long in coming.
1
On
March 10, 1909
, all of the properties of the Railroad were put under a first mortgage
to secure bond in the amount of $1,519,000. Within a year's time the
bonds were in default and never thereafter was a single dime paid on
principal or interest. Sixteen years later this Federal Court
receivership began in 1926. When the decree of foreclosure was entered,
February 28, 1961
, this paper debt amounted to $5,430,425. But on a carefully constructed
sale by units with extensive advertising across the nation all the
railroad brought was $302,000.
After first
ordering the payment of $35,733.60 for Receiver's, attorneys',
commissioners' fees, etc., the balance for distribution was only
$262,526.48. Thus the receivership, precipitated in 1926 by the trustee
to secure enforcement of the mortgage bonds, ended up with less than 17%
of the original face of the bonds and 4.8% of principal and accumulated
interest. But from the standpoint of the mortgage bondholders for whom
the suit had been filed, the receivership maintained, and the properties
operated, it turned out to be even worse than that. For the Court
allowed the tax claims of the
United States
and various State political entities to share pro rata the whole of this
balance as partial, but preferential, payment of their allowed claims
aggregating $311,099.30.
The
disappointed business creditor and the holder of all bonds is now one
party, Southern Railway Company. Save for inconsequential amounts denied
to the trustee and its
New York
counsel, Southern is the principal appellant. The Federal Government
cross-appeals as to the District Court's allowance of a fee to Charles
Bloch, Esq., the local and leading counsel for the trustee, Southern and
the bondholders.
Southern's
claim as a creditor is made up of two principal amounts. The first is
the Traffic Balance claim in the net sum of $139,657.52. 2
The other is the Operating Expense claim in the amount of $106,016.65. 3
The District Court, as had the special Master, allowed each of these
claims. But it found that the tax claims had a priority over either one
or both of them. Consequently, the Court, while impliedly approving the
Master's holding that the Traffic Balance claim was not in the nature of
a trust fund, held that it was in any event inferior to the tax claims.
Thus Southern, as creditor and as bondholder, lost out altogether. As
bondholder Southern's principal contention is that the mortgage lien is
superior to tax claims so there can be no question of equitable priority
or apportionment. Failing in that status, Southern, as creditor, then
raises substantially these questions in the main contest between it and
the governmental tax claimants. Does the Traffic Balance claim
constitute a trust fund entitling it to priority over all other creditor
claimants? If not, what is the relative priority as between the tax
claims, on the one hand, and either one or both of the claims of
Southern, as creditor?
Traffic
Balance Claim
This grows out
of the interchange of freight at
Cornelia
,
Georgia
, between Southern and the receivership Railroad. The two carriers had a
junction settlement arrangement under which freight interchanged was
re-billed at Cornelia. On traffic moving inbound to the
Tallulah
Falls
, Southern paid all prior participating carriers their divisions or
proportions of the revenue for traffic handled over their lines. For
these advances as well as for its own division or proportions of the
inbound freight charges, Southern looked to the Receiver for
reimbursement and payment. As to such inbound shipments, the Receiver
would, and did, collect the freights from consignees. On movements
out-bound from the
Tallulah
Falls
, the destination carrier collected the freight charges and paid over to
Southern the share due it as well as the
Tallulah
Falls
. The settlement arrangement called for adjustment four times a month.
On striking the balance, payment was to be made by, or to, the Receiver
or Southern as the case might be.
While the
formal record is sketchy on the point, we get the impression that the
trouble with this account started in 1958. The Receiver was apparently
making a strenuous effort in the maintenance and repair of the Railway
properties to overcome the deficiencies which made the Railroad simply
unsafe to operate. Saftey considerations ultimately led to the Court's
insistence, and the Interstate Commerce Commission's concurrence, that
the Railroad be abandoned. It is clear that the account first became in
arrears in June 1958. By August 1958, it had increased to over $21,000;
in November $37,000; by October, 1958, $105,000; and the maximum of
$152,000 was reached in September 1960. Of course, Southern was aware of
what was going on.
On September
30, 1960, Southern filed C. A. 871 seeking a judgment for the balance
due and injunctive relief requiring the Receiver to segregate so much of
the freight moneys collected from the consignees as represented the
amounts "collected for or on behalf of or belonging to * * *
Southern." On
October 24, 1960
, the Court entered a partial judgment in C. A. 871. The Court found
that the Receiver had repeatedly advised Southern that he was unable to
make the payments, but though this condition continued, no specific
demand for segregation of funds was made until about May 1960. The Court
also found that the Receiver had used "portions of funds collected
as freight revenue * * * belonging to Southern * * * for the operation
of the receivership properties." And in a conclusion of law the
Court declared that "The amounts collected by the [Receiver] for
the account of Southern * * * under what is known as the junction
settlement arrangement constitute trust funds and * * * are collected
[by the Receiver] as the property of * * * Southern * * * and are its
property." Part of the relief granted was a requirement that such
collections be segregated. This was done. 4
But it should
be pointed out that only Southern and the Receiver were parties to C. A.
871. The taxing authorities were not actual parties. Presumably because
of this the Court, after granting summary judgment on
March 2, 1961
, for foreclosure of the mortgage, entered an additional supplemental
decree in C. A. 871 on
March 10, 1961
. The Court fixed the sum with interest due by the Receiver, but in
connection with the prayer of Southern that the Court "adjudge,
decree and declare the rights and legal relations of the parties * * *
and particularly that the Court declare that the monetary judgment
herein rendered should be superior to the claims of the Receiver and his
attorney," the Court declined to make such declaration. It
expressly held that "The rank of the judgment in that respect, as
well as its priority in the distribution of funds which are or may
hereafter come into the hands of the Receiver for distribution under the
orders of this Court, shall remain for future determination by the
Court." It is that "future determination" subsequently
made which is the dispute here. Whereas in C. A. 871, as between the
Receiver and Southern, the Court held the collections to have been
"trust funds" the special Master rejected "the contention
that the judgment represents trust funds". He found--and with no
contradiction--however, that these freight collections had been used by
the Receiver "without express Court permission for operating
expenses." Here the Master likened it to the Operating Expense
claim which would, at most, mean that the collection and the
unauthorized diversion of such freight monies "might constitute an
unauthorized, albeit involuntary loan by the Receiver."
While
Southern, by its exceptions to the Master's report and in the argument
of them before the District Judge, did insist that if tracing were the
determinant, it should be given a chance to offer testimony, the record
does not reflect what it would have been. We can credit fully, as did
the Master, the proposition that the Receiver wrongfully diverted the
funds for operating expenses. We can assume, as the findings imply, that
much of this money then went into repairs, replacements, and maintenance
of worn out and dilapidated facilities and equipment as this enterprise
was undergoing its death struggle on the eve of the coroner's verdict
from the ICC. Ionion Steamship Co. of
Athens
v. United Distillers of
America
, 5 Cir., 1956, 236 F. 2d 78, 1956 AMC 1750. But considering the
very small amount received for all of the Railroad properties sold as
they were in two units, it would be an affectation to send this hoary
case back to commence its 37th year on a quest as artificial as that.
But Southern
makes a contention worthy of serious consideration that independent of
tracing, these were trust funds for which a priority ahead of the tax
claim should have been accorded. This is based on a line of cases which
hold as much where certain funds have been wrongfully applied by the
Court appointee during the pendency of a receivership, bankruptcy, or
reorganization operation. 5
But each of these cases substantially involves monies belonging to, and
collected for, various governmental agencies in the form of withholding
taxes, sales or excise taxes, payroll taxes, and the like. Where a
statute makes a business or its court-appointed successor a collector of
public funds, we think there is a strong policy at work to give them an
effective priority. Any other principle not only jeopardized the process
of tax collection, but it means that through the unauthorized use of
public funds, some creditors (those who were paid by such funds or their
equivalent) have received a substantial actual preference.
But apart from
quasi public collections, from a practical point of view, we do not see
where using money which rightfully belonged to Southern is of any
substantial difference from using a railroad car, or a jointly operated
railroad track, or a jointly maintained railroad depot which belonged to
Southern, but for which rent and other charges were never paid by the
Receiver. Actually, it was not as bad as Southern makes it out. The
Receiver had a right to collect and to retain. The duty to remit
was limited to the balance when and as struck in the periodic
settlement. Only then did funds, rightfully collected and mingled,
acquire a "trust" character.
It is true, of
course, that Southern protested the unauthorized diversion of these
funds. And the Court expressly found that it did not acquiesce in these
practices. But this went on with no effective action taken and all the
while no one better than Southern knew the precarious condition--fiscal
and physical--of this ailing Railroad. Nevertheless, Southern continued
to disburse its own funds to its prior connecting carriers with a full
awareness that the funds were not being reimbursed by the Receiver, and
that, as with the routine day-to-day operating charges, the Receiver was
using its money, its supplies, and its facilities on which to run the
Railroad.
The
consequence is that we affirm the District Court's holding that this was
not a claim entitled to preference.
Operating
Expense Claim
At the same
time, we are of the clear view that the Traffic Balance claim just
discussed has a standing at least as good as, and equal to, the
Operating Expense claim. That claim cannot really be questioned as an
expense of carrying on the receivership. But in a very real, and
actually an even more direct, sense the continued substantial direct
contribution of much needed cash represented by the Traffic Balance
claim was what enabled the Railroad to keep on running. It shares,
therefore, with the others as Operating Expenses.
The
Supremacy of the Mortgage
Southern tries
to circumvent the problem of preference and priority by the bold
assertion that the mortgage has a supremacy over the competing tax
claims. Of course, when it does so, its status is that of a bondholder,
not a commercial creditor. In doing so, it likewise champions the cause
of the Trustee (and its
New York
counsel) for the small fees which the District Court disallowed.
Southern's
agitation over this simply misses the mark. But by this contention it
serves to emphasize why the tax claims are not asserted in the usual
terms of a lien having an absolute statutory priority. Thus the Federal
Government candidly acknowledges that it does not in any way rely on 31
USCA §191 which, enacted originally in 1797, has come to be known as §3466.
This is no gratuitous concession. It is a forthright recognition of at
least this fact of life that this statutory priority gives way to a
valid recorded first mortgage. This is so no matter how sweeping and
emphatic the terminology of §3466 is. Brent v. The Bank of
Washington
, 1836, 35 U. S. (10 Peters) 596, 611, 9 L. Ed. 547; Savings
& Loan Society v. Multnomah County, 1898, 169
U. S.
421, 428, 18 S. Ct. 392, 42 L. Ed. 803; United States v. Bond, 4
Cir., 1960, [60-2 USTC ¶9532] 279 F. 2d 837, 841, cert. den. 364 U. S.
895, 81 S. Ct. 220, 5 L. Ed. 2d 189; Exchange Bank & Trust Co. v.
Tubbs Mfg. Co., 5 Cir., 1957, [57-2 USTC ¶9803] 246 F. 2d 141; United
States v. Atlantic Municipal Corp., 5 Cir., 1954, [54-1 USTC ¶9392]
212 F. 2d 709, 711.
The Government
is not contending that its tax claims are superior to the mortgage debt
as such. What the Government asserts, and properly so, is that something
has intervened which compels some practical adjustment. The intervening
event is the equity receivership in which the properties are operated
for the benefit of all creditors including the superior mortgage
bondholders. A means must be found, then, to pay the cost of such
operations. Consequently, bondholders and mortgagees of a debtor in
receivership must stand aside in a distribution of assets until the
expenses of the
admin
istration of the receivership are satisfied. Fosdick v. Schall,
1879, 99 U. S. 235, 25 L. Ed. 339; Burnham v. Bowen, 1884, 111 U.
S. 776, 4 S. Ct. 675, 28 L. Ed. 596; Michigan v. Michigan Trust Co.,
1932, 286 U. S. 334, 52 S. Ct. 512, 76 L. Ed. 1136; Union Trust Co.
v. Illinois Midland R. Co., 1886, 117 U. S. 434, 6 S. Ct. 809, 29 L.
Ed. 963; Kennebec Box Co. v. O. S. Richards Corp., 2 Cir., [1925
CCH ¶7081] 1925, 5 F. 2d 951.
And, of
course, following this reasoning a practical view requires that, quite
apart from the question of relative priority, taxes be regarded as an
essential element of the cost of the operation of the business
admin
istered under a receivership. The statute fixes it, 28 USCA §960, as do
Court decisions. Michigan v. Michigan Trust Co., supra;
Reconstruction Finance Corp. v. Missouri-Kansas-Texas R. Co., 8
Cir., 1941, 122 F. 2d 326; Liberty Mutual Ins. Co. v. Johnson
Shipyards Corp., 2 Cir., 1925, [1 USTC ¶131] 6 F. 2d 752. Taxes as
an unavoidable expense of operation are readily appreciated in the form
of ad valorem taxes on the ownership of property. Thus Judge Learned
Hand expressed it: "The taxes, which were a condition upon their
continued occupation, were as much a part of their expenses as heat,
custody, or current upkeep * * *. The receivers having once chosen to
accept the property, the taxes were an expense of operation, regardless
of the outcome." MacGregor v. Johnson-Cowdin-Emmerich, Inc.,
2 Cir., 1930, 39 F. 2d 574, 576. And this was elaborated upon by Judge
Sanborn, "This is not because such taxes are debts of the insolvent
or the trust estate or because the receivers have assumed the
obligations of the mortgagor to pay taxes upon the mortgaged premises,
but because the receivers are operating the property, and current taxes
are to be regarded as ordinary expenses of operation."
Hennepin
County
v. M. W. Savage Factories, 8 Cir., 1936, 83 F. 2d 453, 455.
The result is,
therefore, that the supremacy of the mortgage debt, unquestioned as it
is, is of no significant relevance in the distribution of funds in
payment of costs of
admin
istration of the receivership estate.
Priority
or Equality of Tax Claims
Of course, the
theory allowing recovery of taxes as a cost of operations is important
in determining relative priority of ranking. As we have seen, no
statutes give priority, and those which purport to are held to give way
to a superior mortgage lien. The cases allow tax claims because they
bear an essential relation to the continued operation of the business.
This is to introduce equitable and practical considerations, rather than
mandatory absolutes. Thus, as we once phrased it, here the door for
participation by the Government in the fruits is "opened only by
the touch of the wand of equity and not by the sheer weight or the loud
peremptory knock of the sovereign's sceptor."
United States
v. Maryland Casualty Co., 5 Cir., 1956, 235 F. 2d 50, 53, 1956
AMC 1822, 1826.
When the
theory of an operating expense is the sole basis for the allowance of
the tax claims, we think it is a distortion to ascribe to them a
priority over all other operational claims. Operational expenses they
surely are, but they are scarcely more operational than other
traditional charges, such as repair and maintenance of railway
equipment, rental and apportionment of operating charges for jointly
maintained tracks and depots, rental or railway cars, or the like. In
reaching contrary conclusions, it is often said that priority should be
accorded tax claims because without taxes there would be no Government
and without Government there would be no business. But this
for-want-of-a-nail-argument should not close our eyes to reality. We
know that the Governments of each of the cities and counties, those of
the States of Georgia and North Carolina and of the United States did,
and would have continued to, exist regardless of the fate of the
Tallulah Falls Railway Company. So it is actually more realistic to say
that without the continued operations by the receivership, there would
have been no payrolls to generate the taxes or the contributions to the
Railroad Retirement Fund which are here involved. 6
This is no
mere theorizing in determining what ought to be done in this particular
record, for it is uncontradicted that this is the way the taxing
authorities treated this matter until the enterprise collapsed, and it
was time for the lawyers to enter as gleaners.
In 1939 and
again in 1942 the Receiver was faced with, and faced up to, a critical
problem. As a person, a citizen and a Court officer he was conscious of
his duty to remit currently all State and Federal payroll taxes and
similar payroll contributions. But, he reported formally to the Court,
he could not continue to run the Railroad if these taxes were currently
paid. The Court instructed the Receiver to work something out. And this
he most assuredly did. For by formal agreements of August 1, 1939, and
renewed again in June 1942, and approved in each instance by the
District Court in the equity receivership case, the United States
Collector of Internal Revenue and the Georgia Bureau of Unemployment
Compensation made binding agreements concerning the current payment of
taxes. The agreement recited that the Receiver had advised the District
Court that payment of such taxes "had not been made and could not
be made without seriously crippling or preventing the further operation
of the Railroad." It was first agreed 7
that these payroll taxes should be classified as operating expenses of
the Railroad. Next, operating expenses were divided into class (1) and
(2), with the taxes in (2). All expenses in (1) were to be first paid
before operating revenues were to be used for taxes (2). Of course
paragraph (e) excluded "application to the corpus of the
receivership estate." But, as we have pointed out above, these tax
claims do not, and cannot, go to the corpus of the estate itself. The
corpus of the estate was subject to a first preferred mortgage. And, in
any case, the proceeds of the sale of the property do not technically
qualify as "current operating revenue" out of the surplus of
which the taxes were to be paid.
We have
mentioned this not because we regard it as binding as a legal
proposition, for in that case it might itself give the Operating Expense
creditor (Southern) a priority without regard to the trust theory or
otherwise. We mention it to show the reasonableness--hence the
equity--of considering one not more, but not less, important than the
other as a real operation expense. Consequently, whatever might be
proper under conditions and circumstances other than those presented in
this prolonged litigation, we think that without indicating approval or
disapproval of contrary expressions applicable to different situations, 8
this is the case in which all of these expenses should be thrown
together so that each will participate in the net fund for distribution
in the proportion that each of the claims bears to the total of all
claims. 9
See 3 Collier, Bankruptcy (14th Ed.) §62.14 at 1533. 10
Trustee
and Its New York Counsel's Fees
The District
Court disallowed the fee of $500 to the Trustee under the mortgage
indenture and fees of $3,014.96 to its
New York
counsel. Here again the claim rests on the supremacy of the mortgage and
a liberal application of its own terms. For reasons outlined above, we
are not dealing with that here. Consequently, the question is whether
these two fee claimants have contributed to the sum out of which
admin
istrative expenses of the receivership are to be paid. On this record
the Government is right in its contention that the initiation of a
general receivership gives the moving party no lien or charge against
the property in the hands of the receiver, and such party has no
priority in distribution. 11
So far as this record reveals, the bondholders were protecting their own
interests only, and their activities made no contribution to the whole.
We therefore affirm the disallowance.
Fee
of Charles Bloch
The District
Court allowed a fee to Charles Bloch, Esq. who appeared here and below
as leading counsel for Southern, as bondholder, Southern as creditor,
and the trustee. No question was raised below, or is now raised here, as
to the amount of the fee or the finding that in fact he rendered
services of value to the whole fund. With the fee of the trustee (and
its
New York
counsel) disallowed, logic might suggest that the same disposition
should follow here. But this is again to forget that equity, by its
nature, is to take regard of factors which distinguish things which
appear to be, but really are not, alike. A couple of specific things
from this record will illustrate why the trial Court was justified in
finding that this counsel, as a sort of landbased General Average, made
contributions of value to the fund out of which the claims are now to be
paid.
First, he was
one of the active counsel who helped the District Court construct the
plan of sale by which properties were divided into two units. This
divided properties on a practical basis which undoubtedly made their
purchase more attractive and hence at a higher price.
Next, a very
critical stage was reached on the hearing to confirm the sale. The
successful bidder, a community promotion enterprise, was doubtful of its
ability to comply pending final determination of priorities of claims.
Hence additional time was essential. None of the parties opposed
allowing additional time. But it was thought by nearly all to be
essential to have the sale confirmed with time extended 30 days to
permit compliance. This was necessary to avoid the likelihood of a long
and costly delay in point of time, advertising expense, and the like if
confirmation of the sale itself was postponed only to have the sale take
place a second time. Following this course, a 30-day extension for
compliance was informally accepted, but then a real stumbling block
arose. The Receiver advised the Court that insurance on the properties
had been cancelled by the insurers effective as of the date of the
hearing. The insurers had, the Receiver advised, positively declined to
extend the insurance any further. The Court expressed an unwillingness
to have the properties exposed without insurance. At this practical
impasse, a recess was suggested by this counsel, and through the
facilities available to him in connection with his representation of
these other interests, the insurers were prevailed upon by Southern to
extend the insurance.
We do not mean
that this itself was worth the amount of the fee allowed. It does,
however, illustrate that this counsel was, and has been, rendering
services of immediate value. All were apprehensive here of one of two
things. First, the sale would not be consummated which would present the
likelihood that on a second sale the price obtained would not be so
favorable. And second, in any event, the parties were all in agreement
that the mechanical details of arranging for a second sale would prolong
this old case another three to six months during all of which time there
would be further pressing problems growing out of the necessity of the
Receiver taking some care of the properties and the like.
The trial
Judge knew, as we certainly do as well, that this disposition of this
rundown dilapidated property having no going-concern value as an
operating unit, just did not happen. It took the concerted co-operative
efforts of the Court, the special Commissioner appointed, and all
counsel including this counsel. It was for the trial Judge to assay the
value of the services and the extent to which they contributed toward
bringing about a fund out of which the objecting creditor--the United
States Government--now gets substantial payment of tax claims which,
with its approval, had long been held in abeyance. We therefore affirm
the allowance of this fee.
State
Tax Claims
Southern
attacks the allowance of the tax claims of the
Georgia
and
North Carolina
entities on the grounds that they are inferior to the first mortgage
lien, and in any case the
Georgia
claims are barred for any years prior to 1954. For the reasons
previously outlined, the tax claims of these State entities are allowed,
not because they are superior to the mortgage lien, but because they
represent actual practical cost of operation during receivership. The
limitation defense rests on certain cited Georgia Code provisions for
failure of the various taxing authorities to issue executions.
Consequently, it is urged, these entities lost whatever liens for taxes
they may have had. It is conceded, of course, that by virtue of the
Federal equity receivership, any such executions could not have been
satisfied. The failure to take this "paper" step having no
practical value or significance, affords no obstacle. In satisfaction of
claims for taxes which arose and were payable during the Receiver's
operations, but the collection of which was stayed and forbidden by the
receivership injunction, a court of equity on equitable grounds may
certainly allow a pro rata participation in the small fruits remaining.
The
Epitaph
It therefore
follows that the decree is reversed and modified in part, and affirmed
in part. As there may be mechanical problems in adjusting specific
claims, or the like, the case is remanded to the District Court to
permit it to enter such orders as may be required which are consistent
with this opinion. This will also, we hope, permit the District Court
which has nurtured this case for so long to memorialize the end of
Equity No. 5 and with it Tallulah Falls Railway Company.
Reversed and
modified in part, and as modified affirmed.
Affirmed in
part.
Reversed and
remanded.
1
In 1933 the Interstate Commerce Commission authorized the abandonment of
the entire line of Tallulah Falls Railway Company, but the Court did not
order the abandonment. But finally in August 1959 under direction of the
District Court, the Receiver applied to the Interstate Commerce
Commission for permission to abandon and this was granted
November 17, 1960
.
2
The judgment in Civil Action No. 871 totaled $147,095.53 But the Court
in fixing priorities in the receivership distribution allowed Southern
full credit for certain funds approximating $8,000 in the receiver's
hands which the decree in C. A. 871 had required him to keep separate.
3
Judgment was entered pursuant to stipulation between the Receiver and
Southern. This represented, as detailed, amounts owed by the Receiver
for his proper proportion of freight car repairs, tests and inspection
of track scale at Cornelia, Georgia, taxes, and charges on operation of
joint facilities, stations, rental of station and tracks, material
furnished by Southern, hire and per diem of freight cars, repairs on
railway equipment, and the like.
4
See note 2, supra.
5
City of New York v. Rassner, 2 Cir., 1942, 127 F. 2d 703 (New
York City Sales Tax statute making a vendor a "trustee"); In
re Airline-Arista Printing Corp., 2 Cir., 1959, [59-2 USTC ¶9499]
267 F. 2d 333; affirming per curiam S. D. N. Y., 1957, [57-2 USTC
¶10,043] 156 F. Supp. 403 (Federal income and social security taxes
withheld from wages paid to employees); Hercules Service Parts Corp.
v. United States, 6 Cir., 1953, [53-1 USTC ¶9281] 202 F. 2d 938
(Federal income and social security taxes withheld from wages paid to
employees); Shipe v. Consumers Service Co., N. D. Ind., 1928, 28
F. 2d 53 (state gasoline sales tax); cf. In re Allied Electric
Products, Inc., D. N. J., 1961, [61-2 USTC ¶9622] 194 F. Supp. 26
(withholding taxes deducted from wages paid employees).
6
By stipulation and order the tax claim of the
United States
was:
Social Security Act ........ 1936-1939 $ 4,707.80
Railroad Unemployment
Insurance Act .............. 1939-1961 48,756.01
Railroad Retirement Act .... 1937-1961 146,927.63
$200,391.44
None of these
involves taxes or tax contributions withheld from employees. All such
withholdings were promptly remitted by the Receiver.
7
"* * * it is/agreed by the Receiver * * * and the * * * Collector
of Internal Revenue * * * as follows:
"(a) the
taxes * * * accrued and yet to accrue under * * * of the Social Security
Act and the * * * Carriers Taxing Act shall be classified as operating
expenses of the Railroad.
"(b) All
operating expenses shall be divided into two divisions, viz:
"(1) The
current operating expenses that are essential and necessary to the
operation of the railroad, such as maintenance of way and equipment,
coal and other supplies, salaries, wages, and other miscellaneous and
general operating expenses;
"(2) The
taxes herein mentioned.
"(c) The
current operating revenue from the Railroad shall be applied first to
the current operating expenses [(b)(1)] * * *
"(d)
After the * * * operating [expenses] as defined * * * have been paid,
the balance if any of the current operating revenue shall be applied to
the taxes [(b)(2)] * * *.
"(e) This
agreement applies only to current operating revenue and shall not be
considered as having any application to the corpus of the receivership
estate. * * *".
8
The Government particularly stresses: Piedmont Corp. v. Gainsville
& N. W. R. Co., N. D. Ga., 1929, 30 F. 2d 525; Wire Wheel
Corp. v. Fayette Bank & Trust Co., 7 Cir., 1928, 30 F. 2d 318; Coy
v. Title Guaranty & Trust Co., 9 Cir., 1915, 220 Fed. 90; Reconstruction
Finance Corp. v. Missouri-Kansas-Texas R. Co., 8 Cir., 1941, 122 F.
2d 326; Liberty Mutual Ins. Co. v. Johnson Shipyards Corp., 2
Cir., 1925, [1 USTC ¶131] 6 F. 2d 752.
9
Total claims allowed:
United States
Government ................ $200,391.44
Georgia
and
North Carolina
Political
Entities ................................ 110,707.86
Southern's claims:
Traffic Balance Net ..................... 139,657.52
Operating Expenses ...................... 106,016.65
Total ................................... $556,773.47
These
participate pro rata in the balance for distribution of $262,526.48.
10
"On the other hand, even taxes accruing during the course of
admin
istration should not and may not fare any better than other expenses of
admin
istration, since all such items are within the first priority, so that
where there are not sufficient funds to pay expenses of
admin
istration in full, the trustee acts negligently and at his own risk if
he gives such taxes precedence over other
admin
istrative expenses. * * *"
11
The Government cites George v. St. Louis Cable & W. Ry. Co.,
E. D. Mo., 1890, 44 Fed. 117; Bergins v.
Rob
bins, 1929, 109
Conn.
329, 146 Atl. 724; Winakur v. Leibowitz, 1937, 173
Md.
252, 195 Atl. 592.
[63-1 USTC
¶9197]
United States of America
, Plaintiff v. Michael Wideika, et al., Defendants
U.
S. District Court,
Dist.
Kan.
, Civil Action No. KC-1624,
11/6/62
[1954 Code Sec. 6323]
Lien for taxes: Priority of liens: Fact finding.--In a
foreclosure proceeding it was held that prior mortgage liens were
superior to liens for Federal taxes.
Thomas E.
Joyce, Assistant United States Attorney, Federal Bldg., Kansas City,
Kan., for United States. Thomas A. Stratton, 768 County Line,
Kansas City
,
Kan.
, for Michael Wideika. Alan W. Farley, Huron Bldg., Kansas City, Kan.,
for Gibraltar Savings & Loan Ass'n.
Judgment
Entry
STANLEY, JR.,
District Judge:
Now on this
the 16th day of October, 1962, comes regularly on for hearing and
disposition the above-entitled action. Plaintiff, the United States of
America, appeared by Thomas E. Joyce, Assistant United States Attorney
for the District of Kansas; the defendant, Michael Wideika, appeared in
person and by Thomas A. Stratton, his attorney of record, and the
defendant, Gibraltar Savings & Loan Association, appeared by Alan W.
Farley, its attorney; and the Court, after hearing evidence and
arguments of counsel and being well and fully advised in the premises,
finds that both defendants in this action were duly and regularly served
with summons by the United States Marshal for the District of Kansas and
have filed their answers herein, the answer of defendant, Michael
Wideika, having been filed in open court this date, and the answer of
the defendant, Gibraltar Savings and Loan Association having been filed
on October 3, 1962. The Court further finds that on March 3, 1960, the
District Director of Internal Revenue for the District of Kansas
prepared a notice of federal tax lien under the Internal Revenue Laws
for income tax due and owing by the defendant, Michael Wideika, to
plaintiff in the sum of $505.01 for the year of 1957; $516.85 for the
year of 1956; $538.18 for the year of 1955 and $559.51 for the year
1954, all of which taxes were assessed on November 6, 1959, making a
total sum of $2,119.55; that said notice of federal tax lien under the
Internal Revenue Law was duly filed for record in the office of the
Register of Deeds of Wyandotte County, Kansas, March 4, 1960, and
recorded in Book 1697, at page 532 of the records of said office; the
Court further finds that the taxes set forth in said law bear interest
at the rate of six per cent per annum from the assessment date; the
Court further finds that thereafter and on the 23rd day of May, 1961,
the District Director of Internal Revenue for the District of Kansas
prepared a notice of Federal Tax lien, under the Internal Revenue Law,
for income tax due and owing by the defendant, Michael Wideika, to
plaintiff in the sum of $514.56 for the year 1958 and in the sum of
$502.09 for the year 1959, all of which taxes were assessed on April 14,
1961, making a total sum of $1,016.65, that said notice of federal tax
lien under the Internal Revenue Law was filed for record in the office
of the Register of Deeds of Wyandotte County, Kansas, on May 23, 1961,
and recorded in Book 1777, at page 581 of the records of said office.
[Note
and Mortgage]
The Court
further finds that the defendant, Michael Wideika, was a single man on
the 18th day of August, 1953, and on that date made, executed, and
delivered to his co-defendant Gibraltar Savings & Loan Association,
his note and mortgage in the sum of $3,250.00, on Lot 43, Summerfield
Park, an addition in and a part of Wyandotte County, Kansas, which note
and mortgage was recorded in the office of the Register of Deeds of
Wyandotte County, Kansas, in Book 1396 at page 63, and that, thereafter,
and on November 20, 1953, defendant, Michael Wideika, a single man,
made, executed, and delivered to his co-defendant, Gibraltar Savings
& Loan Association, his note and mortgage in the sum of $750.00, on
Lot 43, Summerfield Park, an addition in and a part of Wyandotte County,
Kansas, which note and mortgage was recorded in the office of the
Register of Deeds of Wyandotte County, Kansas, in Book 1408, at page
462. That there is now due and owing on said notes and mortgages from
defendant, Michael Wideika, to his co-defendant, Gibraltar Building,
Loan and Savings Association, whose corporate name has been changed to
Gibraltar Savings and Loan Association, the sum of $1,540.46 as of this
date and that said sum bears interest at the rate of 6 per cent per
annum from this date until paid. The Court further finds that the
defendant, Michael Wideika, has not paid to the plaintiff the income tax
for which aforementioned notices of federal tax liens were filed in the
office of the Register of Deeds of Wyandotte County, Kansas, and that
the full amounts thereof, to-wit: the sum of $2,119.55, with interest at
the rate of 6 per cent per annum from November 6, 1959; and the sum of
$1,016.65 with interest at the rate of 6 per cent per annum from April
14, 1961, are due and unpaid, and that said tax liens constitute a lien
on Lot 43, Summerfield Park, an addition in and a part of Wyandotte
County, Kansas, subject only to the lien of the defendant Gibraltar
Savings and Loan Association, and that said tax liens should be
foreclosed.
[Liens
Foreclosed]
IT IS,
THEREFORE, BY THE COURT CONSIDERED, ORDERED, ADJUDGED AND DECREED that
the defendant Gibraltar Savings and Loan Association has a first and
prior lien against Lot 43, Summerfield Park, an addition in and a part
of Wyandotte County, Kansas, under a certain morgage dated August 18,
1953 and recorded in the office of the Register of Deeds of Wyandotte
County, Kansas, in Book 1396, at page 63, and a certain mortgage, dated
November 20, 1953 and recorded in the office of the register of deeds of
Wyandotte County, Kansas, in Book 1408, at page 462, which mortgage lien
is in the sum of $1,540.46, with interest at the rate of 6 per cent per
annum from this date until paid, and it is by the Court further
considered, ordered, adjudged and decreed that the lien of the
plaintiff, the United States of America, for income taxes for the years
of 1954 to 1957, both inclusive in the sum of $2,119.55, with interest
at the rate of 6 per cent per annum from November 6, 1959, to date in
the sum of $374.44 and the Federal tax lien of the plaintiff, the United
States of America for income taxes for the years 1958 and 1959, in the
sum of $1,016.65, with interest at the rate of 6 per cent per annum from
April 17, 1961 to date in the sum of $91.81 constitutes valid liens
against Lot 43, Summerfield Park, an addition in and a part of Wyandotte
County, Kansas, in the total sum of $3,602.46, plus interest at the rate
of 6 per cent per annum from this date until paid, subject only to the
mortgage lien of the defendant, Gibraltar Savings and Loan Association,
as hereinbefore set forth, be and the same are hereby foreclosed and
said Lot 43, Summerfield Park, an addition in and a part of Wyandotte
County, Kansas, be and the same is hereby ordered sold without
appraisement and without the right of redemption by the United States
Marshal for the District of Kansas at public sale at the front door of
the Wyandotte County Court House in the City of Kansas City, Kansas, and
that the proceeds of said sale be first applied to the costs accruing in
this action, second, to the mortgage lien of the defendant, Gibraltar
Savings and Loan Association and third, to the tax liens of the
plaintiff, the United States of America, and fourth, the balance, if any
there be, to abide the further order of the Court in the premises and
that upon the confirmation of said Marshal's sale that the Marshal be
ordered and directed to execute to the purchaser a good and sufficient
deed to said property.