Glenda Scoville appeals a district court 2 judgment sustaining, in part, a tax levy on insurance proceeds payable to her under a fire insurance policy. We affirm.
In May of 1975, Scoville married a dentistry student named Joseph May, and supported him until his graduation. In 1979, May opened a dental practice in Jefferson City, Missouri. He prevailed upon Scoville to work for his practice without salary, which she did for five years. May subsequently opened another practice in Kansas City, Missouri. In 1979, May also became a self-styled “tax protestor,” and failed to file tax returns from 1979 to 1993.
In 1983, the couple purchased a farm in Cleveland, Missouri. May’s distrust of banks and paper money led him to collect $40,000 worth of nickels, dimes and quarters. . The couple used this amount to make a down payment on the property. Neither May nor Scoville could recall to which of them this money belonged. May suggested it was Scoville’s as she had worked for him for five years without salary. However, when asked how he had convinced her to accept such a working arrangement, he testified, “I’m a sly devil.” Scoville on the other hand could not identify what portion of the $40,000 belonged to her. The farm was titled in Scoville’s name, and she signed a $60,000 promissory note and a securing deed of trust for the balance of the purchase price.
*1200 May and Seoville divorced in December of 1983. In the divorce settlement, Sco-ville took ownership of the farm, valued at $100,000, along with May’s dental equipment including his chairs, x-ray machines and office furnishings. May received a car and some accumulated gold and silver. Seoville subsequently leased May’s dental equipment back to him. At trial, Seoville was unable to identify any property retained by May. After the divorce, Seoville received child support payments and began drawing a salary of $14,000 per year, which the district court found was unrelated to hours worked.
May and Seoville had two children while they were married and three more after the divorce. After the divorce, May continued to live at the farm when working in Kansas City. He continued to maintain personal property at the farm, including chickens for cockfighting, gold and silver reserves and dental equipment. On at least two occasions, he offered to sell the farm to third parties. May kept some additional property, registered in the name of the Basic Bible Church, at the farm, and also maintained a bank account under that name. He periodically provided Seoville with money for house payments.
In his dental practice, May also employed Helen Chalender and Traci Stroud, a mother and daughter. Chalender testified May. told her that he used a $10,000 money order to pay off the outstanding mortgage on the farm and that he divorced Seoville in order to use her as a tax shelter. Stroud testified May paid her in cash, and recounted visiting various banks with him where he would cash checks from patients. He would endorse them with a highlighter, on the theory that the marker would not show up on a microfiche. May told her he did so in order to hide money from the IRS, and also told her he divorced Seoville in order to put assets in her name, where the IRS could not reach them.
May and Seoville remarried in August 1992, because of an IRS investigation into May’s failure to file tax returns. In November of that year, May was indicted on various tax-related charges. That same month, Seoville left for Costa Rica, taking along her youngest son, where her four other children soon joined her. At trial, Seoville testified that she left the continental United States partly in order to avoid having to testify against May.
While Seoville was in Costa Rica, May continued to live at the farm. In April, 1993, the farm was completely destroyed by fire. On April 15, May contacted State Farm insurance adjuster Jan Wagoner Combs to initiate the claims process under a policy which named Seoville as the insured. After Seoville learned of the loss she also contacted Combs. Rather than leave directions for contacting her in Costa Rica, which she suggested would be difficult, Seoville directed Combs to leave messages with May. May also directed Combs to deal with him. Ml correspondence between Combs and Seoville went through May’s Jefferson City office. Combs referred to May as “Mr. I,” meaning “Mr. Insured.” May filled out and returned personal property inventory forms to State Farm. Needing more information, State Farm forwarded the forms to Seoville, who completed and signed them. May could not sign them as he had been incarcerated. State Farm subsequently issued two checks, one for $92,086 to cover damage to the farm improvements, and one for $60,688 for lost personal property. The IRS levied both checks to address a $179,185 jeopardy tax assessment against May.
Seoville filed a wrongful levy action against the United States under 26 U.S.C. § 7426, alleging May had no interest in the *1201 insurance proceeds. The district court found first that May retained an interest in the insurance proceeds because Scoville held the farm as his nominee, and second that as a member of Scoville’s household, May was an insured by definition under the policy. The district court awarded Scoville $46,648 in insurance payments for personal property she proved was hers alone, but sustained the government’s levy as to the remainder of the payments for personal property and the payments for the destruction of the farm improvements. Scoville appeals.
The failure to pay federal taxes results in a lien on “all property and rights to property, whether real or personal, belonging to” the delinquent taxpayer. 26 U.S.C. § 6321. The IRS may levy upon all property to which this hen attaches. 26 U.S.C. § 6331(a). This levy power extends to property held in the name of persons or entities other than the delinquent taxpayer, to the extent that the taxpayer has an interest in such property.
See G.M. Leasing Corp. v. United States,
Because such a levy will necessarily implicate the property rights of individuals other than the delinquent taxpayer, any person other than the delinquent taxpayer who claims an interest in the levied property may file an action against the United States under 26 U.S.C. § 7426(a)(1). To prevail, a plaintiff must demonstrate “an interest ... superior to the United States’ interest in the property, and that the levy was wrongful.”
Bremen Bank & Trust Co. v. United States,
A levy is wrongful when made on property in which the delinquent taxpayer actually has no interest.
Pate v. United States,
In this case, the government bore the burden of proving a nexus between
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May and the proceeds of the insurance contract. Scoville then bore the burden of proving May lacked any interest in those proceeds. Whether May had such an interest is a question of state law.
United States v. Rodgers,
A nominee is one who holds bare legal title to propei'ty for the benefit of another. Black’s Law Dictionary (7th ed.1999). Under Missouri law, one who holds such title has no actual interest in the property, which remains with the beneficial owner.
H.B. Deal Const. Co. v. Labor Discount Center, Inc.,
(1) a conveyance to a spouse or near relative; (2) inadequacy of consideration; (3) transactions different from the usual method of transacting business; (4) transfers in anticipation of suit or execution; (5) retention of possession by the debtor; (6) the transfer of all or nearly all of the debtor’s property; (7) insolvency caused by the transfer; and (8) failure to produce rebutting evidence when circumstances surrounding the transfer are suspicious.
First Home Savs. Bank v. C & L Farms, Inc.,
Regardless of whether the relationship between May, Scoville and the property at issue was actually fraudulent, the evidence amply demonstrates May’s retention of a beneficial interest in the farm and the insurance policy sufficient to carry the government’s burden. The divorce agreement gave Scoville the farm along with most of May’s property, including his dentistry equipment. Scoville could not name any item of property retained by May. May continued to live at and make use of the farm, and to treat it as his own. Chal-ender testified that May paid off the outstanding mortgage on the farm, and May dealt directly with the insurance adjustors when Scoville was in Costa Rica. The district court found that May structured all his dealings so as to protect his assets from taxation, and discredited all testimony to the contrary. Based on all the evidence before it, the district court found Scoville acted as May’s nominee, a finding which is not clearly erroneous.
Scoville argues that under Missouri law, insurance proceeds are personal prop
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erty and not subject to liens previously attached to the insured property. We note first that in
Phelps v. United States,
Seoville directs us to
Herpel v. Farmers Ins. Co.,
The government amply carried its burden in proving a nexus between May and the insurance proceeds. The burden of proof thus shifts back to Seoville to prove that in fact May had no such interest upon which to levy. We agree with the district court that Seoville did not satisfy this burden. Seoville faded to prove to whom the purchase money belonged, failed to explain her and May’s course of conduct, and failed to adequately develop any factual or legal basis which would nullify May’s beneficial interest in the farm or the insurance proceeds.
Seoville also appeals the district court’s ruling permitting Chalender and Stroud to testify by deposition. We have considered Scoville’s arguments and find them without merit.
Accordingly, the judgment of the district court is affirmed.
Notes
. The Honorable Howard F. Sachs, United Stales District Judge for the Western District of Missouri.
. Scoville argues that the government must further prove that it had probable cause for the levy at the time that it occurred, directing us to
Flores v. United States,
. Seoville also appeals the district court’s conclusion that the State Farm insurance policy also covered May. The policy covered the named insured along with relatives who were members of her household. Given our resolution of the nominee question, we do not take up this challenge.
