I.
Suburban Motor Freight went into bankruptcy owing premiums to the Ohio Bureau of Workers’ Compensation. When the Bureau filed a proof of claim classifying the unpaid premiums as excise taxes under 11 U.S.C. § 507, the Trustee, Stephen Yoder, filed an objection, maintaining that these premiums were in fact fees, and not entitled to priority. The Bankruptcy Court found that the premiums were entitled to priority status,
II.
The Bankruptcy Code
1
gives priority to certain “allowed unsecured claims of governmental units”; among other things, it gives priority to “an excise tax on ... a [prepetition] transaction.” 11 U.S.C. § 507(a)(7)(E). The Code does not grant “governmental units” priority on all of their claims against debtors, however; creditors of all stripes must directly tie their priority claims to specific provisions of the statute.
United States v. Embassy Restaurant, Inc.,
For the purposes of priority under the Bankruptcy Act, the Supreme Court in 1941 defined taxes 2 as including
those pecuniary burdens laid upon individuals or their property, regardless of consent, for the purpose of defraying the expenses of government or of undertakings authorized by it.
City of New York v. Feiring,
The courts have disagreed as to whether a bankrupt’s unpaid workers’ compensation premiums constitute “excise taxes” which the Government may collect from the estate ahead of other creditors.
3
Courts which have looked at the issue in the context of the Ohio workers’ compensation system have generally held unpaid premiums to be taxes,
see In re Carlton Enterprises, Inc.,
The Circuits which have looked at this issue have disagreed as to whether workers’ compensation premiums are entitled to priority. Largely, their conclusions have turned on whether an individual State’s program is monopolistic, requiring the participation of all employers operating within the State, or whether the state system merely “competes” with private insurers or requires employers to get private insurance.
Compare New Neighborhoods v. West Virginia Workers’ Compensation Fund,
Some courts, however, have allowed a rather problematic criterion to sneak into their analyses; namely, that the defining feature of a tax is its “public purpose.” The Bankruptcy Court opinion being appealed here, affirmed by the District Court, followed one such pronouncement by the Ninth Circuit,
In re Lorber Industries of California,
(a) An involuntary pecuniary burden, regardless of name, laid upon individuals or property;
(b) Imposed by, or under the authority of the legislature;
(c) For public purposes, including the purposes of defraying expenses of government or undertakings authorized by it;
(d) Under the police or taxing power of the state.
In re Lorber Industries,
The second and fourth “prongs” of the Lorber test describe virtually every government program; the first prong raises only the question of involuntariness, which in this case is largely conceded. What is left is the single question of whether money demanded by the Government is to be put toward “public purposes,” including “defraying the expenses of government.” Needless to say, all money collected by the Government goes toward defraying its expenses, and is used for public purposes. 4 The threat of the Lorber reasoning, then, is that the Government automatically wins priority for all money any debtor owes it, regardless of the nature of the payments.
This is not an idle fear. The Fourth Circuit, which commendably tackled the issue at bar in
New Neighborhoods,
This Circuit has stood nearly alone in expressing this concern. In
In re Jenny Lynn Mining Co.,
[O]ne purpose of most governmentally imposed fees is to support the agency that administers the program under which the fee is charged, presumably serving some public purpose. If this were the deciding factor, all such fees would be “taxes” for bankruptcy purposes.
Id. We instead noted that “the deposit was required because the operator had requested a permit, and the permit bestowed a discrete benefit on the applicant — the privilege of operating a surface mine.” Id. at 588. 6
Bearing in mind these concerns, we elect to follow the relatively balanced approach crafted by the Fourth Circuit in
New Neighborhoods v. West Virginia Workers’ Compensation Fund,
Although the Fourth Circuit did weigh the “public purpose” of the West Virginia system along 'with its centralized and compulsory nature,
see New Neighborhoods,
Undoubtedly, Congress provided priority for unpaid tax claims because of the public purpose of tax revenues; the workings of Government cannot await bankruptcy distribution alongside unsecured creditors, with the possibility, even the probability of receiving pennies on the dollar of what the taxpayer-debtor owed. But to say as a matter of definition that all taxes are collected for public purposes does not allow the Government to say that all funds collected for public purposes are taxes; the converse does not necessarily follow from the premise. Thus, looking at the public purpose of a payment due the Government may help determine whether the payment is akin to a tax, but this must not be the determinative criterion.
In the case at bar, we recognize the public purpose of the workers’ compensation premiums in the proper context in holding that they are entitled to priority in bankruptcy; since the Ohio system is centralized and universal, “injured employees ... depend upon the financial soundness of the [Workers’ Compensation] Fund....” New
Neighborhoods,
III.
For the reasons discussed, we therefore hold that unpaid premiums due the Ohio Bureau of Workers’ Compensation are entitled to priority in bankruptcy under 11 U.S.C. § 507(a)(7)(E) as “excise taxes.” The order of the District Court affirming the judgment of the Bankruptcy Court is affirmed.
Notes
. Title 11 of the United States Code.
. We recognize, of course, that Congre has changed the law of bankruptcy in considerable measure since 1941; nonetheless, taxes have consistently been entitled to priority status, and the
Feiring
definition still applies in attempting to distinguish "taxes” from other types of exactions or payments in the bankruptcy context.
See, for example, In re Cassidy,
. The premiums would classify as "excise” taxes since the payments are not directly assessed like an income tax but are indirectly assessed, the employer's obligation "aris[ing] through the transaction or act of employing.”
New Neighborhoods v. West Virginia Workers' Compensation Fund,
. Or so they say.
. We acknowledge, of course, that § 507 also provides priority status for two other types of unsecured claims of governmental units, viz., certain customs duties and obligations of the debtor relative to the maintenance of the capital of an insured depositary institution.
. In so holding, we distinguished
United States v. River Coal Co., Inc.,
