Wе must decide whether the taxpayer or the government bears the risk of loss when funds on deposit at a bank for practical purposes disappear after being levied upon by the Internal Revenue Service (“IRS”) and removed frоm a taxpayer’s bank account. We have jurisdiction pursuant to 28 U.S.C. §§ 1291 and 1346(a)(1), and we hold that, in light of the burden of proof on the taxpayer in a tax refund case, the risk of loss necessarily falls upon the taxpayer.
I
In tax year 1994, Plaintiff-Appellant Ian Michael Stead and his former wife, Lynan K. Stead, filed a federal income tax return but underpaid their tax liability by $7,574.31. The IRS issued a notice of balance due on November 13, 1995, and, when the Steads did not respond, issued a notice of intent to levy the Steads’ assets on January 22, 1996. Despite these measures, the tax liability remained unsatisfied.
On August 29, 1996, the IRS issued a notice of levy to First Interstate Bank in the amount of $9,023.26 for funds on deposit in an account belonging to From Gifted Hands, Inc., a corpоrate entity controlled by Ian Michael Stead. On September 4, 1996, First Interstate Bank debited the From Gifted Hands, Inc. account in the amount of $9,023.26. The withdrawal appeared as a “Miscellaneous Debit” on the Steads’ monthly statement. Shortly
Although the levied upon funds were removed from the Steads’ account, the final destination of the funds, if in fact they were ever transferred from the bank, is not disclosed by the record. The funds were not returned to the Steads, and the IRS does not have any record of receiving the funds from First Interstate Bank or Wells Fargo Bank. Consequently, on July 21, 1997, the IRS issued a second notice of intent to levy the Steads’ property. Ian Michael Stead then inquired with the IRS regarding the first levy and debit from the account at First Interstate Bank. In response, the IRS notified Ian Stead on May 20, 1998 that the government had contacted Wells Fargo Bank and that the bank could not locate any reсord of the $9,028.26 levy payment. For reasons that are unclear from the record, neither the Steads nor the IRS appears to have attempted to recover the missing funds from First Interstate Bank or Wells Fargo Bank.
On February 1, 2002, Ian Stead and his subsеquent wife, Belinda A. Stead, refinanced their home and paid $11,641.01 to the IRS. Upon receipt of this payment, the Steads’ tax dispute was resolved to the satisfaction of the IRS, and, on February 8, 2002, the IRS released its tax lien.
On May 30, 2002, the Steads filed an аmended 1994 tax return seeking a refund in the amount of $11,679.00 for double payment of their 1994 tax liability. The IRS did not act on the Steads’ claim within six months, I.R.C. § 6532(a)(1), and the Steads then filed a claim for a refund in the United States District Court. 1
In 2003, the IRS subpoenaed Wells Fargo Bank, but the bank informed the IRS that any records of the September 4, 1996 debit from the Steads’ account had been destroyed due to “the retention schedule of the bank.” The district court granted summary judgment in favor of the IRS on the ground that the Steads could not bеar the burden of proving that the $9,023.26 debited from their account on September 4, 1996 was remitted to the IRS. The Steads appeal.
II
When a taxpayer fails to pay his or her federal individual income tax, a lien in favor of the government arises by operation of law on the taxpayer’s property and rights to property, whether held by the taxpayer or by a third party. I.R.C. § 6321.
2
The government may perfect this lien through one of two procedures: an administrative tax levy pursuant to 1.R.C. § 6331, or a lien-foreclosure suit in federal district court pursuant to I.R.C. § 7403.
United States v. Nat’l Bank of Commerce,
Although a person or entity in possession of property subject to a levy must ordinarily remit the property to the government immediately, I.R.C. § 6332(a); Treas. Reg. § 301.6332-l(a)(l), banks are subject to special rules and must wait twenty-one days before relinquishing levied upon funds, I.R.C. § 6332(c); Treas. Reg. § 301.6332-3. Following the serviсe of notice, a bank has only two defenses: 1) the levied upon property is not in its possession, and 2) the levied upon property is subject to prior judicial attachment or execution.
Nat’l Bank of Commerce,
Ill
We turn to the question whether the levy and debit from the From Gifted Hands, Inc. account satisfied the Steads’ 1994 tax liability.
3
The Steads raise their claim in the context of a tax refund suit, and, as a result, they bear the burden of showing that they overpaid their 1994 taxes.
United States v. Janis,
The record is devoid of evidenсe that the government took title to or dominion and control over any property owned by the Steads. Contrary to the Steads’ assertions, the issuance of a tax levy does not in itself transfer ownership of the levied upon property from the taxpayer to the IRS.
Whiting Pools, Inc.,
Under most circumstances, a tax is “paid” when the government becomes the owner of the property.
4
Cash v. United States,
Moreover, the remedies available to the IRS under §§ 6331 and 6332 are “analogous to the remedies available to private secured creditors” under Article 9 of the Uniform Commercial Code.
Whiting Pools, Inc.,
There are situations in which the government exerts such extensive dominion and control over a levied property that it should bear the risk оf any loss.
See, e.g., United States v. Pittman,
IV
The Steads further argue that the levy upon and debit of the funds in their First Interstate Bank' account was a taking without just compensation that violated the Fifth Amendment. We reject this argument. The government did not appropriate thе funds on deposit at First Interstate Bank for its own use and did not take actual possession of or exert dominion and control over the funds.
Cf. Pittman,
V
Both parties are to a degree at fault in this unfortunate situation. For their part, the Steads failed timely to pay their full income tax liability for tax year 1994, did not respond to the notice of balance due or to the notice of intent to levy, and further did not follow up with First Interstate Bank and Wells Fargo Bank to ensure that the funds subject to the tax levy were remitted to the IRS.
See United States v. Triangle Oil,
AFFIRMED.
Notes
. Although Belinda A. Stead did not file the initial deficient tax return, she has standing to seek a refund as a taxpayer who allegedly overpaid a tax liability to the IRS, even though the tax was assessed against a third party.
United States v. Williams,
. Certain types of property are statutorily exempted from a § 6321 tax lien pursuant to I.R.C. § 6323.
. We review de novo a district court decision to grant summary judgment.
Abelein v. United States,
. Although service of a notice of levy gives the IRS power over the levied property, it does not guarantee that the amount lеvied upon will flow into the coffers of the United States Treasury. Because property levied upon by the IRS remains subject to the claims of other creditors,
Nat’l Bank of Commerce,
