In this interpleader action, the United States of America and the State of Illinois raise competing claims to the funds of an escrow account. The district court granted summary judgment in favor of the United States.
The relevant facts are not in dispute. Malcolm Quick contracted to buy from the Southwest Mini Mart Corporation (“Mini Mart”) all the assets of a Mini Mart store in Aurora, Illinois. The purchase price was $50,000. Of this amount, $25,000 was allocated for the broker’s commission and the store’s past due rent. The remaining $25,-000 was placed in escrow — pursuant to the contract — to cover any outstanding taxes, penalties or interest owing the United States or the State of Illinois. The contract further specified that these funds — less any amount subsequently claimed by the United States or the State of Illinois— would only be released to Mini Mart upon notice from the Illinois Department of Revenue (IDR) that all tax liabilities had been extinguished. Quick’s attorney, Dennis Hoornstra, was designated the escrow agent.
The IDR eventually contacted Hoornstra, but with some unexpected news. By the IDR’s account, Mini Mart still owed the State of Illinois over $104,000 in state sales taxes, for which reason a bulk sales stop order had been issued. See Retailers’ Occupation Tax Act, Ill.Rev.Stat. ch. 120, § 444j (Smith-Hurd Supp.1990) (authorizing bulk sales stop orders for unpaid state sales taxes). Hoornstra also learned that Mini Mart owed the United States $49,805 in unpaid federal employment taxes. Unfortunately, Mini Mart lacked the finances to cover these liabilities — and, apparently, all its other debts as well, for on November 27, 1987, it filed for bankruptcy. Since the bankruptcy estate did not have enough assets to fully satisfy the claims of either tax creditor, Hoornstra filed this interpleader action in federal court to determine who was entitled to the escrowed funds.
The United States and the State of Illinois filed cross-motions for summary judgment. Both acknowledged that the Internal Revenue Service (IRS) was the first party to file its tax- liens against the escrow. However, the State countered that Mini Mart had no property interest in the escrow to begin with, meaning that the IRS had — essentially—a priority tax lien against' nothing. In that case, continued the State, the United States would only be entitled to the escrow — according to the terms of the contract — if the tax owed was either a sales tax or a tax for which Quick was contingently liable, under the Internal Revenue Code. The State maintained that the tax due the United States failed to meet either description, and hence deserved nothing as beneficiary of the fund:
Our standard of review for this sort of case is well-established. We review the district court’s entry of summary judgment
de novo,
drawing all reasonable inferences in the non-moving party’s favor.
Santella v. Chicago,
As the district court correctly recognized, the threshold question in this case, as in all cases where the federal government asserts a tax lien, is whether and to what extent the taxpayer had “property” or “rights to property” to which the tax lien could attach.
Aquilino v. United States,
Here, the district court found
Bjork
to be dispositive on the issue of whether Mini Mart had a cognizable property interest in the escrow. In
Bjork,
the seller— Cline Letter Service, Inc. — made a bulk transfer of a gift shop and office supply business to the purchaser. Before the sale was consummated, the State of Illinois discovered a $2,500 deficiency in the seller's sales tax payments and, as a result, a bulk sales stop order was issued. The purchaser responded by directing his attorney to hold that- amount in escrow pending a determination of the • exact amount of tax owing to the State. In the meantime, the IRS had also assessed income tax withholding, social security and unemployment taxes against the seller in the amount of $2,323.69; the United States quickly served a notice of levy on the taxpayer, and filed the notice in the appropriate public office. When the State and the federal government could not come to an agreement as to who should have priority to the fund, the
As in the instant litigation, the central issue before the court in Bjork was whether, under Illinois law, the tax-payer-seller had a sufficient property interest in the escrow account when the federal tax liens were filed. We held that it did. In reaching this conclusion, we reasoned that the stop order did not interrupt the transfer of the taxpayer-seller’s beneficial interest in the fund, but merely interrupted its right to possession. According to the Bjork court,
[T]he most reasonable interpretation of the effect of a stop order is that it insures some cache of the seller’s property from which to satisfy the seller’s tax liability only insofar as no perfected lien attaches to the fund prior to the determination of the amount of such liability to the State.
While we recognize that the similarities between Bjork and the instant case seem compelling, we agree with the State’s contention that Bjork is distinguishable. Here, Malcolm Quick protected himself from transferee liability by negotiating for a contract provision which expressly conditioned payment of the escrow funds upon Mini-Mart’s satisfaction of all tax liabilities, or upon release of a stop order. The purchaser in Bjork, by contrast, did not make any analogous contractual arrangement — he simply withheld an amount equal to the state tax deficiency based only on the authority of the stop order. But by that point the taxpayer-seller had already fulfilled his part of the bargain and thereby acquired a legal stake in those withheld funds. As the Bjork court pointed out,
Immediately before the transfer, [the purchaser] had the beneficial interest in the fund. Absent a stop order, there is no question but that the beneficial interest in what became the fund would have shifted to [the seller] at the time of the transfer. This result is dictated by the contract ... by which [the purchaser] agreed to give [the seller] a full $13,000 in cash in return for [the seller’s] business assets. Since the Seller performed his part of the bargain, had there been no stop order [the seller] would have prevailed against [the purchaser] in an action to recover the [withheld amount],
The district court rejected this distinction because it believed that the parties’ contract merely reiterated the provisions of section 5j of the Retailers’ Occupation Tax Act — a provision which already required the purchaser to withhold the amount of the sales tax deficiency.
See
Ill.Rev.Stat. Ch. 120, § 444j. This reasoning, unfortunately, blurs the line between a privately-created legal relationship — such as an escrow or trust — with the requirements of section 5j. Under Illinois law, an escrow is traditionally a written instrument whereby property of the obligor is held by escrowee until the' performance of a condition or happening of an event after which the property is then turned over to the obligee.
Crest Finance Co. v. First State Bank of Westmont,
A brief review of the escrow at issue today makes this distinction even clearer. Although similar to section 5j, the parameters of the escrow created here are broader in scope. To begin with, the escrow man
-Having rejected the United' States’ claim, it only remains for us to determine whether the State’s claim is any better. On its face, paragraph 5(c) of the contract appears to require that the $25,000 escrow be withheld not only for the benefit of the State, but also for the benefit of the United States:
Sales, Use and Unemployment Taxes— Buyer’s attorney at law, shall withhold Twenty Five Thousand and 00/100 Dollars from the purchase price to cover the amount of 1) all taxes, penalties and interests which may be due the United States of America and/or the State of Illinois from the Seller under any [sic] all sales, use and occupation tax statutes or for which the Buyer may be contingently liable under the Internal Revenue Code and the Illinois Revised Statutes.
However, we believe that the above language does not benefit the IRS because the IRS does not collect “sales, use or occupation taxes”; its only claim here is unpaid federal unemployment taxes. Moreover, the United States has never established that Quick is contingently liable to the IRS under any provision of the Internal Revenue Code. That means that the State of Illinois’ claim carries the day, and thus we conclude that the district court should have entered summary judgment in the State’s favor.
The district court’s entry of summary judgment in favor of the United States is Reversed, and the matter is Remanded for proceedings consistent with this opinion.
Notes
This appeal is brought pursuant to Rule 54(b) of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure. As was done in this case, Rule 54(b) allows a district judge to certify for immediate appeal an order that disposes of one or more but fewer than all of the parties or claims in a cáse, provided the judge makes an express determination that there is no just reason to delay the entry of judgment.
Johnson v. Levy Organization Co., Inc.,
