Under Texas law of equitable subrogation, is the purchaser of encumbered property who discharges a senior lien as part of the purchase price entitled to subrogate to the position of priority over a junior recorded lien? We answer that the purchaser is subrogated to the senior position and reverse the district court’s summary judgment in favor of the junior lienholder.
Australian Acquisitions, Inc. (AAI) owned a tract of land in Hutchins, Texas. In 1988, AAI executed a deed of trust on this property in favor of Broadlands Limited (Broadlands) to secure a debt of over $2,000,000.00 (Broadlands lien). Broad-lands properly recorded the deed of trust on September 28, 1988. In 1989, the Internal Revenue Service (IRS) filed two federal tax liens on the property. IRS properly recorded the tax liens in Dallas County. The Broadlands lien was superior to the tax liens.
In March 1990, Dietrich Industries, Inc. (Dietrich) agreed to purchase the property from AAI for $385,000.00. At the closing in May, AAI executed a special warranty deed conveying the property to Dietrich. Sale proceeds in the amount of $319,892.01 were paid to Broadlands in consideration for Broadlands’s release of its lien. 1 The parties applied the balance of the sale proceeds to pay closing costs; AAI received no money from the sale.
As established by an uncontroverted affidavit, Dietrich had no actual knowledge of the junior tax liens when it purchased the property. None of the documents pertaining to the Dietrich sale mention the existence of tax liens.
Dietrich asserts that it is entitled to equitably subrogate to Broadlands’s position as the senior lienholder. Dietrich claims priority only to the amount that it paid in discharging the Broadlands lien ($319,-892.01). As an equitable lienholder, Dietrich claims the right to foreclose its own property. Under Dietrich’s theory, the foreclosure proceeds would first be used to satisfy Dietrich’s equitable lien of $319,-892.01, and then be used to satisfy the junior tax liens. In this lawsuit against the United States, Dietrich seeks a declaratory judgment that Dietrich holds an equitable lien which is superior to the federal tax liens. Additionally, Dietrich seeks to judicially foreclose its superior, equitable lien.
Dietrich and the government filed cross-motions for summary judgment. The district court entered summary judgment in favor of the government, concluding that Dietrich is not entitled to subrogation.
II. ANALYSIS
A. Federal Tax Law
The government does not dispute that, prior to AAI’s sale to Dietrich, the Broadlands lien was superior to the tax liens. The parties agree that AAI’s sale to Dietrich did not extinguish the tax liens. So the issue here is the priority of those tax liens, not their existence. In determining the priority of federal tax liens, courts must consider the state law of subrogation.
See
I.R.C. § 6323(i)(2) (“Where, under local law, one person is subrogated to the rights of another with respect to a lien or interest, such person shall be subrogated to such rights for purposes of any [federal tax lien].”);
see also Han v. United States,
B. Texas Subrogation Law
Texas recognizes two types of subrogation: “conventional subrogation” and “legal subrogation.”
Fleetwood v. Med Center Bank,
1. Purchasers of Encumbered Proper-
ty
In Texas, any person who pays the debt of another to protect her own interest in property is entitled to subrogate to the rights of the creditor whose claim was paid.
Fears v. Albea,
Several Texas courts have stated a companion rule: a purchaser who
assumes
payment of a mortgage as part of the purchase price, and
thus becomes the principal and primary debtor,
is not entitled to subrogate to the rights of the lienholder.
See, e.g., Harrison v. First Nat’l Bank of Lewisville,
The government argues that this case is controlled by McDowell. In McDowell, as here, the seller and purchaser agreed that the purchase price would be used to pay the seller’s debt and extinguish the accompanying lien, which was a superior lien. The purchaser, unaware of the existence of a recorded junior lien, believed he was taking the land free of all encumbrances. Sometime after the purchaser bought the property, the junior lienholder sought to foreclose its lien. Relying on the rule that purchasers who assume mortgages may not subrogate, the court of appeals refused to allow the purchaser to subrogate to the rights of the senior lienholder. If McDowell represents Texas law, Dietrich is not entitled to subrogation.
But we believe that
McDowell
contravenes the Texas Supreme Court’s decisions in
Fears
and
Ackerman.
In
Fears,
the land in question was encumbered by a first and a second lien. The seller and purchaser agreed that the sale proceeds would be used to pay the first mortgage, which was later released. Unaware of the junior lien, the purchaser expected the land to be free of all liens. The Texas Supreme Court concluded that the purchaser’s payment of the senior lien entitled the purchaser to subrogate to the superior rights of the
The McDowell court might have been correct in stating the rule that a purchaser who assumes a mortgage is not thereafter entitled to subrogation. In fact, McDowell is often cited for such a rule. See, e.g., Cheswick,
Based on Fears and Ackerman, Dietrich is entitled to subrogate to Broad-lands's position as senior lienholder. The government proffers two additional arguments in support of its position that equitable subrogation does not control this case.
2. Constructive Knowledge of the Tax Liens
The government contends that Dietrich is not entitled to equitable subro-gation because Dietrich had constructive knowledge of the tax liens and was negligent in failing to discover the liens. In some jurisdictions constructive knowledge bars a subrogation claim, see, e.g., Hieber v. Florida Nat'l Bank,
3. Partial Payment of the Senior Debt
As a general rule, a person is not entitled to subrogate to the rights of a creditor until the creditor's claim against the debtor has been satisfied or paid in full. Sims,
The government argues that Dietrich's failure to pay the entire debt pr~vents it from subrogating to the rights of Broadlands. We disagree. This general rule requiring payment of the entire debt protects the senior lienholder whose rights are being subrogated (i.e., Broadlands). Sims,
C. Equity
In applying the Texas rules of equitable subrogation, we do not lose sight of the equities. Dietrich purchased the property with the expectation that the property would be free of encumbrances. Had Dietrich been aware of the federal tax liens, it could have structured the purchase in a manner that would have protected its interest. For example, Dietrich might have taken a formal assignment of the Broadlands lien or purchased the property at a foreclosure sale which met the notice requirements of I.R.C. § 7425. Equitable subrogation in this case treats Dietrich as if it took a formal assignment of a portion of the Broadlands lien.
Denying subrogation in this case would give the government an unearned windfall in that it would elevate the government’s liens for no good reason.
See generally
Nelson & Whitman, Real Estate Finance Law § 10.7; Note,
Subrogation of Purchaser to Rights of Senior Mortgagee Against Junior Encumbrances,
48 Yale L.J. 683, 689 (1939). Before AAI’s sale to Dietrich, the government’s tax liens were subordinate to the Broadlands lien. Dietrich’s subrogation does not place the government in a worse position than it occupied before AAI’s sale to Dietrich.
See Sanger Bros.,
Dietrich is entitled to subrogate only to the extent of its payment to Broadlands ($319,892.01). 4 Permitting Dietrich to sub-rogate to the rights of Broadlands does not extinguish the tax liens. At foreclosure, proceeds shall be used to satisfy Dietrich’s equitable lien before being used to satisfy the federal tax liens. 5
III. CONCLUSION
Dietrich holds a superior, equitable lien in the amount of the proceeds paid to Broadlands. Dietrich is now entitled to seek judicial foreclosure of its senior lien. Accordingly, we reverse the district court’s judgment in favor of the government and remand for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
REVERSED AND REMANDED.
Notes
. The lien release is dated April 4, 1990. The release states that "in consideration for the partial payment of the Indebtedness, [Broadlands] has agreed to deliver ... this Release of Lien_” The partial payment was not made until May 1990, and we have no reason to doubt that this release was delivered upon payment of the money.
. The IRS relies on Providence Institution for Savings v. Sims,
The Sims court concluded that its case did not entirely depend upon equitable subrogation, so the court did not decide the effect of constructive knowledge in cases involving purely equitable subrogation.
. According to Dietrich, the tax liens were practically worthless before the sale to Dietrich because the property had no value in excess of Broadlands's security interest.
. Some Texas cases suggest that subrogation extends to the amount paid to discharge the senior debt
plus
interest on that amount.
See Ricketts,
.The government is in a better position than it was before the sale to Dietrich. The government is now entitled to proceeds after satisfaction of the $319,892.01 senior lien. Before the sale to Dietrich, the tax liens were subordinate to Broadlands’s deed of trust, which secured a debt of over $2,000,000.00.
