DECISION
This motion brought by the Debtor, Amsterdam Avenue Development Associates (“Amsterdam”), pursuant to section 1146(c) of the Bankruptcy Code, 11 U.S.C. § 1146(e) (1986), seeks an order exempting it from payment of New York State and City Real Estate Transfer Taxes, N.Y. Tax Law § 1402 and N.Y.C. Administrative Code II46-2.0 as authorized by N.Y. Tax Law § 1201 (McKinney 1988) (collectively the “Deed Taxes”), and exempting the purchaser of the Debtor’s property from the payment of New York State and City Mоrtgage Taxes, N.Y. Tax Law §§ 253 and 253-a (McKinney 1988) (the “Mortgage Taxes”).
The Commissioner of Finance of the City of New York, the City Register of the City of New York, and the Department of Taxation and Finance of the State of New York oppose the Debtor’s motion on the grounds that the Mortgage Taxes are not “stamp taxes or similar taxes” and thus fall without the statutory tax exemption provided by section 1146(c) and that the sеction 1146(c) exemption was never intended by Congress to apply to solvent debtors. The City also opposes the motion on the grounds that the Second Circuit decision declaring that the Deed Taxes are “stamp taxes or similar taxes,”
City of New York v. Jacoby-Bender,
I.
The Debtor, a New York limited partnership, operated an 120 unit apartment building located at 850 Amsterdam Avenue. It filed a voluntary petition for relief under Chapter 11 of the Bankruptcy Code on March 11, 1988 with the Bankruptcy Court for the Eastern District of New York. Venue was subsequently transferred to the Southern District of New York. Pursuant to its second amended joint plan of reorganization, confirmed by this Court on March 20, 1989, the Debtor sold the apartment building to West Side Associates (“West Side”) for $5,440,000. The sale enabled the Debtor to satisfy all of its creditors’ clаims with interest in full, and in cash, on the effective date of its plan and to pay a dividend to its partners.
*456 Title closed on May 1, 1988. At closing, West Side paid the entire purchase price in cash. To finance the purchase price, West Side obtained a loan of $3,750,000 from American Savings Bank, FSB (“Bank”) secured by a first mortgage on the apartment building.
In an interim interlocutory order dated April 27, 1989, this Court, inter alia, directed the Register for thе County of New York to record the prospective deed of the property from the Debtor to West Side and the prospective mortgage in favor of the Bank without payment of the Deed Taxes or Mortgage Taxes, provided that an escrow be established for the payment of the Mortgage Taxes. An escrow was established and the Register so recorded the deed and mortgage.
The tаxes from which the Debtor seeks exemption are as follows:
(a) a New York State Tax of 1% on the recording of the $3.75 million mortgage, payable by West Side, New York State Mortgage Tax, N.Y.Tax Law § 253 (McKinney 1988) (“Mortgage Tax”);
(b) a New York City tax of 1.25% on the recording of the above mortgage, payable by West Side, New York City Mortgage Tax, N.Y.Tax Law § 253-a (McKinney 1988) (“Mortgage Tax”);
(c) a New York State tax of 0.4% on the recording оf the deed transfering title to the real property, payable by the Debtor with West Side contingently liable in the event that the tax is not paid or the grantor is exempt from the tax, New York State Real Estate Transfer Tax, N.Y.Tax Law § 1402 (McKinney 1988) (“Deed Tax”);
(d) a New York City tax of 2% on the recording of the above deed, payable in a like manner, New York City Real Estate Transfer Tax, N.Y. Administrative Code §§ 1146 — 2.0, 2104 as authorized by New York Tax Law § 1201 (McKinney 1988) (“Deed Tax”).
II.
Section 1146(c) cryptically provides: “The issuance, transfer or exchange of a security, or the making or delivery of an instrument of transfer under a plan confirmed under Section 1129 of this title may not be taxed under any law imposing a stamp tax or similar tax.” Thus, in order for a deed or instrument of transfer to qualify for this tax exemption, three criteria must be met: (a) the tax must be a stamp or similar tax, (b) imposed upon the making or delivery of an instrument transfеrring an interest in property, (c) in connection with a confirmed bankruptcy plan.
A.
It is established that the New York State and City Deed Taxes levied upon a debtor’s transfer of property to fund its confirmed reorganization plan meet the three pronged test of section 1146(c).
Jacoby-Bender,
In
Jacoby-Bender,
the Bankruptcy Court, in a well reasoned opinion by Judge Hall, found that the Deed Taxes exhibit two of the essential characteristics of stamp taxes in that the amount of the tax is usually determined by the consideration cited in the document of transfer and that the taxes must be paid as a prerequisite to the document’s recordation.
Jacoby-Bender,
On appeal, the Second Circuit affirmed and held that where “a transfer, and hence an instrument or transfer, is necessary to the cоnsummation of a plan,” the transfer is “under a plan” within the meaning of § 1146(c), regardless of whether or not the plan itself mentioned the instrument of transfer.
Jacoby-Bender,
Jacoby-Bender
is binding precedent; the City of New York’s characterization of the Circuit’s holding as erroneous is of no weight here. As in
Jacoby-Bender,
consummation of Amsterdam’s plan “ ‘depended almost entirely upon the sale of the building,’ the sale in turn depending upon the delivery of the deed.”
Jacoby-Bender,
B.
With respect to the Mortgage Taxes, this Court, per Judge Cornelius Black-shear, recently held, following the reasoning of
Jacoby-Bender,
that the New York State and City Mortgage Taxes imposed upon the recording of a convertible mortgage
obtained by a debtor
also constitute a “stamp tax or similar tax.”
In the Matter of The Baldwin League of Independent Schools,
Case No. 88B-10401 (CB) (June 21, 1989) (oral opinion). There, as here, the City argued that the Mortgage Tax is imposed solely upon the exercise of the privilege of recording the mortgage and not upon the grant of the mortgage itself. In so ruling, Judge Blackshear, however, followed the Supreme Court’s ruling in
Federal Land Bank of New Orleans v. Crosland,
Judge Blackshear further found that, like the deed tax analyzed in
Jacoby-Bender,
the Mortgage Tax is imposed upon a written instrument, and must be paid as a prerequisite to the document’s recordation.
Jacoby-Bender,
The second prong of the section 1146(c) test, that the mortgage be an instrument of transfer employed to deliver an interest in property, was also held to have been satisfied in
Baldwin,
and is satisfied here. Under New York law, a
mortgage
is considered an interest in property,
WL Development Corp. v. Trifort Realty, Inc.,
Because the debtor in Baldwin itself was obtaining the mortgage on its only asset in order to consummate its plan of reorganization, the third prong of the section 1146(c) test was obviously satisfied.
Since
Baldwin
has been appealed, the City and State both argue here that under New York law a mortgage tax is
not
considered to be a tax on a transfer of an interest in property but a tax payablе for the privilege of recording a mortgage,
see Citibank, N.A. v. N.Y.S. Tax Commission,
The City further argues that the
Crosland
decision and
Pittman v. Home Owners Loan Corp.,
Like the State of Alabama in
Crosland,
the City and State emplоy the condition of recordation as a practical mode of collecting a general tax. In practice, mortgages must be recorded. Absent recording, a mortgage may not be released, discharged of record, or received in evidence in any action or proceeding, N.Y. Tax Law § 258 (McKinney 1988), financial institutions are legally required to promptly record any mortgage they accept, N.Y. Banking Law § 235(6)(a) (McKinney 1988) (savings banks), and it will not be effective against bona fide purchasers for value,
Cantrup,
C.
The City also argues that the section 1146(c) tax exemption violates the Tenth Amendment’s implicit grant to the states of their sovereign taxing power. It is settled, howеver, that Congress can confer immunity from state taxation,
California State Bd. of Equalization v. Sierra Summit, Inc.,
— U.S. -,
D.
The State and City further assert that the section 1146(c) exemption was never intended to benefit solvent debtors. The State argues that given that the predecessors to section 1146(c), section 267 of the Bankruptcy Act of 1898, 11 U.S.C. § 667 (repealed) and section 77B(f), 11 U.S.C. § 207 (repealed), were found in Chapter X of the former Act, which provided only for reorganizations of financially distressed corporations, it is likely that when Section 1146(e) was carried into the new Chapter 11 under the Bankruptcy Code, Congress gave *459 no thought to expanding the tax exemption to favor solvent debtors.
It is clear that the lеgislative history sheds no light on whether Congress sought to limit or expand the exemption. But it is equally clear that Congress intended, in the passage of Chapter 11, to extend bankruptcy relief to solvent debtors, such as those suffering cash flow difficulties, who file Chapter 11 petitions in good faith. Such debtors can and do file bankruptcy petitions and confirm Chapter 11 plans. The plain language of section 1146(c), in referring to all plans, makes no differentiation between solvent and insolvent debtors. Had Congress, in its near decade long substantial overhaul of the bankruptcy system, sought to limit the exemption to insolvent debtors, it surely would have found the words to express such an intent.
See United States v. Ron Pair Enterprises, Inc.,
— U.S. -,
III.
These conclusions drawn from extant authority bring us to the principal issue raised on this motion: Whether a tax on a mortgage granted by a non-debtor to a third party bank in consideration of a loan utilized to purchase estate property comes within the third prong of section 1146(c). More precisely, the question is whether such a mortgage is “an instrument of transfer under a plan.”
Although a remedial statute such as the Bankruptcy Code is to be liberally construed,
CCA Partnership,
Like the
Sierra Summit
Court, we find “[njothing in the plain language of the statute, its legislative history, or the structure of the Bankruptcy Code [to] indicate that Congress intended to exclude taxes” paid by a second party purchaser of estate property for recording a mortgage granted to a third party bank.
Sierra Summit,
Section 1146(c) exempts transactions made pursuant to a confirmed bankruptcy plan. The
Jacoby-Bender
court, by referring to section 1123 of the Bankruptcy Code, 11 U.S.C. § 1123 (1986), found that sales of debtor property to entities wholly unrelated to the debtor, like the sale from Amsterdam to West Side, are properly сonsidered transactions made “under a plan.”
Jacoby-Bender,
From the prеcept that one section of an integrated statute is to be construed in light of other sections,
Blue Chip Stamps v. Manor Drug Stores, Inc.,
To this evidence of congressiоnal intent is to be added a jurisdictional concern. The notion of a “transfer under a plan” connotes a transfer over which the bankruptcy courts have jurisdiction. This Circuit, following
United States v. Huckabee Auto Co.,
This concern and Congress’ having given no evidence of having contemplated a plan to embrace a non-debtor transaction strongly indicate that section 1146(c) is not to be construed to exempt taxes on instruments of transfer to which a dеbtor is not a party.
To this the Debtor argues that the Court’s proper focus lies not on the parties to the tax but upon the instrument itself. That argument is misplaced. Several cases reason that once an instrument is exempt, it remains so throughout the transaction regardless of whether it is the debtor or
*461
the non-debtor upon whom the tax is levied and they thus extend the section 1146(c) exemption to non-debtor granteеs required to pay transfer taxes.
See e.g. CCA Partnership,
The Debtor also maintains that since the mortgage obtained by the purchaser of its property was necessary to fund the purchase price, which could have been higher but for the Mortgage Taxes imposed, the obtaining of the mortgage should be classified as lying "under a confirmed plan.” It points out that the Mortgage Taxes will amount to the not insignificant amount of $84,375 and adds that its plan provides that one-half of that amount is to be paid to the Debtor should the section 1146(c) exemption apply.
As Judge Augustus Hand commented in dismissing a similar argument: “What the trustee is really complaining of is ... his inаbility to sell to a purchaser who would be exempt from a tax and because of such exemption would pay a higher price to him than would ordinarily be paid for the goods sold. It seems unreasonable to treat the absence of an exemption as a burden upon the normal exercise of a governmental function.”
In re Leavy,
In sum, we conclude, guided by the Supreme Court’s mandate in Sierra Summit requiring careful examination of claims for exemption from state taxation not clearly expressed by Congress, Sierra Summit at 2235, there is no evidence that Congress intended, or that section 1146(c) is to be construed, to provide an exemption from state and local mortgage taxes on a mortgage given by a purchaser to a bank in order to fund a purchase of-estate property from a Chapter 11 debtor. Absent any indication by Congress that it so intended, and in light of the indicia drawn from seсtion 1123 and the jurisdiction cases noted above, such a mortgage, although necessary to fund a purchase price payable to the Debtor, and hence a plan, simply can .not be construed to be an instrument of transfer under a confirmed plan.
For the foregoing reasons, the motion must be and is hereby granted to the extent of the Deed Taxes and is otherwise denied. The Debtor shall settle an оrder consistent with this decision.
Notes
. Section 101(50), 11 U.S.C. § 101(50), provides:
'transfer' means every mode, direct or indirect, absolute or conditional, voluntary or involuntary, of disposing of or parting with property or with an interest in property, in-eluding retention of title as a security interest and foreclosure of the debtor’s equity of redemption. ...
Thus, the grant of mortgage is a transfer of an interest in property.
. Section 1123(a)(5)(B), 11 U.S.C. § 1123(a)(5)(B), provides that a plan shall рrovide such adequate means for the plan’s implementation as "transfer of all or any part of the property of the estate to one or more entities, whether organized before or after the confirmation of such plan;".
. Section 1123(b), 11 U.S.C. § 1123(b), provides, inter alia, that a plan may provide for: "the sale of all or substantially all of the property of the estate, and the distribution of the proceeds of such sale among holders of claims or interests", 11 U.S.C. § 1123(b)(4), as well as include "any other appropriate provision not inconsistent with the applicable provisions of this title,” 11 U.S.C. § 1123(b)(5).
