*402 Opinion
Appeal has been taken by the United States of America from a judgment quieting title to a condominium unit in favor of respondent. The relevant facts of the case are undisputed, and we summarize them only as necessary to resolution of the legal issues presented on appeal.
The Claremont Terrace Condominiums, a large complex of condominium units located in Oakland, California, were built in 1973 and 1974 by Broadway Investors, a limited partnership in which James Dickson and his wife Myra Dickson were general partners. Respondent Claremont Terrace Homeowners’ Association (hereafter referred to as Association or respondent), an unincorporated association of dues paying members, was formed soon after the construction of Claremont Terrace Condominiums complex.
On or about March 29, 1974, James and Myra Dickson obtained a loan in the amount of $18,400 from Golden West Savings and Loan Association, secured by a deed of trust in favor of the lender on Unit No. 203 in the Claremont Terrace Condominiums complex. (Unit No. 203 is the property which is the subject of this.dispute; it will hereinafter be referred to as Unit No. 203 or the property.) The Dicksons never lived on the property, and in fact on July 29, 1974, the Association decided to purchase Unit No. 203 from the Dicksons for occupation by a resident manager. Thereafter, the Association, through its member Roy Peters, negotiated with James Dickson’s uncle, Mort Dickson, to purchase the property.
On December 1, 1974, the Association and the Dicksons executed a “Resident Leave and Option to Purchase” (hereinafter the option agreement), whereby the Association leased Unit No. 203 for $188.23 per month and was given an exclusive option to purchase the property (for 48 months) at a price of $19,026.58. The Association paid $100 in consideration for the option agreement, which was apparently misplaced by Mort Dickson and not recorded until December 22, 1975.
After execution of the option agreement, respondent acted as the owner of the property. Instead of rent, the Association made monthly payments in the amount of the first deed of trust, $142, payable to Broadway Investors, and then later directly to the bank. By and after December 1974, a resident manager occupied Unit No. 203. From March of 1975, respondent made all tax payments on the property.
On May 5, 1975, the Internal Revenue Service assessed a 100 percent penalty against James Dickson in the amount of $109,046.54 for unpaid *403 federal employment taxes. (26 U.S.C. § 6672.) Appellant filed a tax lien against Dickson with the Alameda County Recorder’s office in the amount of the assessed penalty on July 11, 1975.
On December 15, 1975, the Association orally exercised its option to purchase the property, and paid James Dickson $750 for the privilege. 1 When the option was exercised, the Association did not have actual knowledge of the tax lien filed against James Dickson by appellant, but it knew that Dickson was having financial problems. And the Association did not request a title report on the property before it exercised the option.
James Dickson testified that he could not recall signing or delivering to respondent a deed to the property, although his customary business practice was to do so after receiving payment. A deed conveying the property from the Dicksons to respondent was never recorded, nor has one been found. But after receiving payment in December of 1975, the Dicksons acted as if the Association owned the property.
On June 10, 1976, the Dicksons filed for bankruptcy in the federal district court in Oakland, listing liabilities in excess of $4 million and virtually no assets.
The Association first became aware of appellant’s tax lien in September of 1977, when a title search was made. The value of the property at the time of trial was approximately $47,500; thus the Association will lose the taxes and mortgage payments made to date, as well as any equity in the property, in the event appellant’s tax lien is deemed a senior interest in the property.
Appellant claims that the trial court erred by giving respondent’s interest in the property priority over the federal tax lien contending that the lien was assessed and recorded before respondent exercised its option to purchase the property on December 15, 1975, and that such priority is dispositive of the controversy.
Section 6321 of the Internal Revenue Code (26 U.S.C. § 6321)
2
grants the United States a lien upon “all property and rights to property” of a
*404
taxpayer who neglects or refuses to pay taxes.
(Crocker National Bank
v.
Trical Manufacturing Co.
(9th Cir. 1975)
Since the lien granted by section 6321 arises without notice, in order to protect third party claimants, section 6323 was enacted.
(United States
v.
Truss Tite, Inc.
(S.D.Tex. 1968)
The priority of a federal tax lien granted by section 6321 is governed by the common law rule of “first in time is the first in right.”
(United States
v.
Equitable Life
(1966)
Here, appellant duly recorded its tax lien on July 11, 1975,
after
the Association entered into its option contract with taxpayer Dickson but
before
the option was exercised on December 15, 1975. Since the Associ
*405
ation’s option to purchase was never recorded, appellant’s lien must be given priority as first in time unless the grant of the option to purchase
ipso facto
divested Dickson of his interest in the property, so that, in effect, at the time the Internal Revenue Service lien arose, the taxpayer had no property interest to which it could attach.
(Aquilino
v.
United States
(1960)
Concerning the property interest of the Association, we note section 6323(a) which directs that a federal tax lien “shall not be valid as against any
purchaser,
...” until notice of the lien has been filed. (Italics added.) As defined in subdivision (h)(6)(C) of section 6323, “purchaser” specifically includes one who “for adequate and full consideration” acquires an interest in “an option to purchase or lease property or any interest therein, . . .” a definition which seems clearly to embrace the Association. But while the term “purchaser” specifically includes one who acquires an “option to purchase,” such as that granted to the Association, it is also the rule that a competing property interest cannot take priority over a federal tax lien as first in time unless it has become “choate”—i.e., has acquired sufficient substance to be perfected or valid.
(United States
v.
Vermont
(1964)
It is settled that the nature and extent of a property interest competing with a federal tax lien for priority will be determined by reference to
state
law.
(Aquilino
v.
United States, supra,
Under California law, the grant of an option to purchase is not the equivalent of a sale of property
(Rollins
v.
Stokes
(1981)
But a new contract is not made at the time the option is exercised: ‘“On the contrary, the contract has already been made as far as the optionor is concerned, but is merely subject to conditions which are removed by acceptance. . . .’”
(Rollins, supra,
Other options include the following. An unexercised option to purchase contained in a lease constitutes a covenant running with the land.
(Chapman
v.
Great Western Gypsum Co.
(1932)
Thus, when the Association acquired its option to purchase on December 1, 1974, it possessed an indefeasible right to acquire the property and from that moment the taxpayer was helpless to prevent its acquisition by respondent. And when the Association elected to exercise its option to purchase, the contract for sale was merely completed. As earlier observed, its right to the property necessarily related back to the date on which it acquired the option from Dickson, therefore achieving priority over both the assessment and appellant’s recorded tax lien.
Relying primarily upon
United States
v.
Security Trust & Sav. Bk.
(1950)
Contrary to appellant’s contention the relation-back doctrine is not used here to transform an inchoate lien interest into a choate one, since California law recognizes an option to purchase, once exercised, as a choate right
ab initio (Rollins
v.
Stokes, supra,
Appellant further contends that even if the Association’s option to purchase is considered a recognizable property right which would “relate back” upon exercise, under federal law the tax lien must prevail because— pursuant to section 6323—a competing claimant must be a “purchaser” before notice of the federal tax is filed in order to be given priority. Since the Association neither exercised nor recorded its option to purchase before the tax lien was recorded on July 11, 1975, appellant maintains that respondent was not the “purchaser” of a property interest according to subdivision (h)(6) of section 6323.
We disagree. Subdivision (h)(6) of section 6323 statute does not limit the definition of “purchaser” to one who has recorded or otherwise perfected an interest in property; it gives purchaser status and priority to one who holds a property right “valid under
local law
against subsequent purchasers
*408
without actual notice.” (Italics added.) Thus, the language of subdivision (h)(6) preempts judicial definition of choateness.
(Major Electrical Supplies Inc.
v.
J. W. Pettit Co.
(M.D.Fla. 1977)
Contrary to appellant’s contention, since recordation is not essential to legal recognition of a property interest, but only affects its priority as against subsequent bona fide purchasers, an unrecorded option may be a valid property right.
(Wells Fargo Bank
v.
PAL Investments, Inc.
(1979)
With respect to the problem of notice, it is the rule in California that constructive is the equivalent of actual notice, and that it may be inferred from an optionee’s possession of the premises.
(Chapman, supra,
“The possession required to impart notice to a subsequent purchaser must be open, notorious, exclusive and visible, and not consistent with the record title.”
(High Fidelity Enterprises, Inc.
v.
Hull, supra,
Here, after the Association entered into the lease contract and acquired the option to purchase, it made the monthly payments on the property, and, more importantly, employed a resident-manager who occupied Unit No. 203 beginning in December 1974. In our view, appellant was chargeable with knowledge of that possession, and of the contract between James Dickson and the Association, for a subsequent inquiry would plainly have revealed such information. Appellant has accordingly
not
met its burden of establishing lack of notice. We therefore conclude that the option to purchase was valid at the time it was granted on December 1, 1974
(Utley
v.
Smith, supra,
The judgment is affirmed.
Holmdahl, J., and Weinstein, J., * concurred.
Notes
Oral acceptance of the option to purchase did not comply with the terms of the agreement, which required exercise of the option in writing. But neither party objected to respondent’s manner of exercising the option to purchase, and the Dicksons do not claim an interest in the property.
Section 6321 provides: “If any person liable to pay any tax neglects or refuses to pay the same after demand, the amount (including any interest, additional amount, addition to tax, or assessable penalty, together with any costs that may accrue in addition thereto) shall be a lien in favor of the United States upon all property and rights to property, whether real or personal, belonging to such person.”
According to section 6322: “Unless another date is specifically fixed by law, the lien imposed by section 6321 shall arise at the time the assessment is made and shall continue until the liability for the amount so assessed (or a judgment against the taxpayer arising out of such liability) is satisfied or becomes unenforceable by reason of lapse of time. ”
In
U.S.
v.
Pioneer American Ins. Co.
(1963)
Federal law is the same. A competing claimant can be a “purchaser” as that term is used in 26 United States Code section 6323(a) even though his property interest has not been recorded.
(Haye
v.
United States
(C.D.Cal. 1978)
Again, section 6323 is consistent; it states, in subdivision (i): “For purposes of this subchapter, an organization shall be deemed for purposes of a particular transaction to have actual notice or knowledge of any fact from the time such fact is brought to the attention of the individual conducting such transaction, and in any event from the time such fact would have been brought to such individual’s attention if the organization had exercised due diligence. An organization exercises due diligence if it maintains reasonable routines for communicating significant information to the person conducting the transaction and there is reasonable compliance with the routine. Due diligence does not require an individual acting for the organization to communicate information unless such communication is part of his regular duties or unless he has reason to know of the transaction and that the transaction would be materially affected by the information.” (See also
Atlantic Nat. Bank
v.
United. States
(Ct.Cl. 1976)
Assigned by the Chairperson of the Judicial Council.
