A tаxpayer brought suit under the federal “quiet title” act, 28 U.S.C. § 2410, challenging a levy that the Internal Revenue Service had placed against his wages because he had failed to pay income tax in 1985 and 1986. The district court dismissed the suit on the ground that it was not within the scope of the quiet-title act and anyway was barred by the “anti-injunction” act, 26 U.S.C. § 7421, which forbids the maintenance of a suit brought “for the purpose of restraining the assessment or collection of any [federal] tax.”
The quiet-title act waives the federal government’s sovereign immunity with respеct to suits to determine title to real or
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personal property on which the United States has or claims a lien. 28 U.S.C. § 2410(a). The government argues, correctly in our view, that the aсt is inapplicable both to Harrell’s wages that have already been paid over to the Internal Revenue Service by his employer pursuant to the levy and to wages that Harrell has not yet earned but expects to earn in the future. As to the former, .the government now has not a lien on but title to the money,
Hughes v. United States,
This leaves, however, wages that Harrell has already earned but that have not yet been paid over to the government pursuant to the levy. Once an employee has earned wages by having donе the work that under his explicit or implicit employment contract entitles him to those wages, he has a vested right to them.
Colosi v. Electri-Flex Co.,
All the quiet-title act does is waive soverеign immunity. It does not authorize quiet-title suits; it does not confer federal jurisdiction over them; it merely clears away the obstacle that sovereign immunity would otherwise place in the path of such a suit. Harrell has no problem, however, finding a basis for federal jurisdiction for his quiet-title suit; it is 28 U.S.C. § 1340, which bestows on the federal district courts original jurisdiction of any civil action arising undеr the internal revenue laws. Harrell’s claim is that the levy on his wages violated the provisions authorizing federal tax liens; that claim arises under the Internal Revenue Code and is therеfore within the jurisdiction conferred by section 1340. But nothing in that section or for that matter in section 2410 itself prescribes the remedial details of the quiet-title
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action, and for these the courts have usually turned to state law.
United States v. Brosnan,
Now Illinois appears — no stronger word is possible — not to allow a quiet-title action with respect to personal property unless it is closely related to real estate, for example proceeds of the sale of land.
American Invs-Co Countryside, Inc. v. Riverdale Bank,
The question remains whether Harrell is in fact seeking to challenge the levy, as distinct from the tax assessment that led the Internal Revenue Service to impose it. At this stage of the inquiry the question whether the suit is within the waiver of sovereign immunity brought about by the quiet-title act and whether it is barred by the аnti-injunction act merge. For if it is really a suit to challenge Harrell’s tax liability rather than to challenge merely the means for enforcing that liability, it is both outside the scope of the quiet-title act and barred by the anti-injunction act.
Although the complaint states that the Internal Revenue Service did not follow proper procedures in placing a lеvy on Harrell’s wages, the memorandum that Harrell (proceeding pro sé) filed in the district court in support of his motion for injunctive relief explains that the reason the government wаs unable to comply with the requirements for a valid levy is that Congress has no constitutional authority over citizens of the states of the United States, as opposed to residents either of the District of Columbia or of U.S. territories and possessions. Lacking such authority the federal government could not make a valid tax assessment against Harrell and therefоre had no basis for levying on his wages. Clearly, then, the challenge is not to the levy as a method of collection but to the taxes sought to be collected, and such a chаllenge cannot be brought under 28 U.S.C. § 2410 and is in any event barred by 26 U.S.C. § 7421. So the district court was correct that it had no jurisdiction over the case — and for another reason: Harrell’s challenge to the tax assessment is frivolous,
United States v. Hilgeford,
In thus going outside the complaint to find that the suit is frivolous, we do no violence to the many decisions which say that a plaintiff cannot amend his complaint by a brief that he files in the district court or the court of appeals. E.g.,
Thomason v. Nachtrieb,
AFFIRMED.
