This ease is a companion of United States v. Overman (9th Cir.)
Appellant Silverstein, a judgment creditor of the debtors Leopold and Wilma Ackerman, appeals from a district court order affirming a referee’s order awarding to the United States the entire proceeds from the trustee’s sale of certain community assets. He contends that (1) the federal tax lien could not have attached to the marital community, (2) if it could attach thereto, its attachment was confined to the husband’s interest in the community, and (3) the United States should have been compelled to exhaust the noncom-munity property before resorting to the community to satisfy its debt.
Leopold and his former wife, Leslie, were divorced in 1961. In 1962, after Leopold had married Wilma, the Internal Revenue Service levied assessments against Leopold and Leslie for deficiencies in their 1959 income tax. The Service filed a tax lien based on those assessments on August 3, 1965. On August 25 and 26, 1965, Silverstein levied a writ of garnishment on certain assets of Leopold’s and Wilma’s marital community, including a note and some common stock, the proceeds from the sale of which are the subject of this appeal. Another judgment creditor, Tryon, levied a writ of garnishment on the common stock in 1966.
In a contest among the United States, Silverstein, and Tyron over the distribution of the proceeds of the note and the stock following the bankruptcy trustee’s sale of those assets, the referee decided that the Government’s tax lien attached to the whole of the community property, that the Government’s lien had priority over state creditors, and that equitable marshaling of assets was not required. The district court agreed.
In Overman we held that a husband’s undivided one-half interest in Washington marital community is “property” or “rights to property” within the meaning of section 6321 of the Internal Revenue Code (26 U.S.C. § 6321) to which a federal tax lien, based on the husband’s antenuptial tax liability, could attach. We also decided that the district court could, in its discretion, allow Government foreclosure of that lien during the life of the community even though, under state law, such *1150 foreclosure was not generally allowed a state creditor.
The community property law of Arizona does not differ materially from that of Washington. (Maricopa County v. Douglas (1949)
As in Overman, the Government had a lien only on the taxpayer-husband’s undivided one-half interest in the community; it had no lien on the wife’s interest. And as we stated in Overman, the Government may not exceed the taxpayer’s interest in enforcement of its lien. We must therefore delete the Government as a contestant to Wilma Ackerman’s interest in the community and hold that the Government may not receive from its liens more than one half of the value of the community estate. There is, as yet, no final order of distribution of the assets of the bankrupts’ estate, and we cannot therefore pass on the rights of the respective parties to particular assets in that estate.
Silverstein also argues that the bankruptcy court should have applied the equitable doctrine of marshaling to require the United States to satisfy its liens out of property separately owned by Mr. Ackerman. There is some dispute about the quick sale value of that property, but we need not resolve it. We hold that a junior lienholder cannot invoke the marshaling doctrine to prevent the United States from enforcing its tax liens against any property for which enforcement is authorized by the applicable federal statutes. A contrary holding would create a substantial burden, unauthorized by statute, upon the collection of federal revenue.
(See
Kovacs v. United States (9th Cir.)
Finally, Silverstein argues (albeit indirectly) that enforcement of the liens against the community property is prevented by United States v. Kaufman (1925)
While the argument has a certain logical appeal, the rule for part
*1151
nerships is easily distinguishable from our situation.
Kaufman
very expressly relied on the Bankruptcy Act’s recognition of the partnership as a separate entity for the purpose of establishing priorities. (
The order is reversed and the cause is remanded for further proceedings not inconsistent with the views herein expressed.
