In this action to quiet title, defendant-appellant Internal Revenue Service appeals an adverse district court summary judgment enjoining the IRS from seizing the property in questiоn and holding that plaintiff-appellee’s interest in the property is superior to that of the IRS. We affirm. BACKGROUND
In September 1985, plaintiff-appellee Tompkins sold real property in Georgia to the Hildreths, retaining a purchase money wraparound security interest. 1 At the time *819 of the purchase, the Hildreths owed money to the Internal Revenue Service, and the IRS had a properly filed lien on all Hildreth property, including after-acquired property. As a result, when the Hildreths acquired Tompkins’ property, the IRS also acquired а lien on that property; its lien, however, was subordinate to Tompkins’. 2
Within a year, the Hildreths defaulted, and Tompkins foreclosed, exercising his right under the security deed and state lаw to conduct a non-judicial foreclosure sale. In 1986, Tompkins purchased the property at the foreclosure sale for the amount of its secured interest plus fеes, approximately $100,000. Although the sale was publicly advertised according to Georgia law, the IRS received no specific, individualized notification as defined in Seсtion 7425 of the Internal Revenue Code, 26 U.S.C.A. § 7425(c)(1). Both parties agree that one of the consequences of this oversight was continuation of the IRS lien after the sale. 26 U.S.C.A. § 7425(b)(1).
In 1989, the IRS levied upon and seized the property in partial satisfaction of the Hildreths’ unpaid federal income tax liabilities. Shortly thereafter, Tompkins brought this action to quiet title, asserting the levy was wrongful and seeking to enjoin sale of the property. The district court granted summary judgment for Tompkins, concluding that his lien not only survived the foreclosure sale, but also remained superior to the IRS lien.
Tompkins’ Lien
State law traditionally governs the definition of property interests to which a federal tax lien may attach.
United States v. Rodgers,
State law usually dictates that senior lienors become fee owners when they purchase at a foreclosure sale conducted on their own lien. In states that adhere to the merger doctrine, the lesser estate (or lien) “mergеs” into the greater estate and is thereby extinguished. Because the merger doctrine varies in its application from state to state, the former senior lienor’s proрerty interest depends upon how applicable state law treats merger.
Despite general codification of the merger doctrine,
3
“an intent
not
to merge will be presumed and will control” in the state of Georgia.
Gosnell v. Waldrip,
This equitable exception to the merger doctrine has been decisive in many Georgia cases.
See Fraser v. Martin,
Both Tompkins and the IRS agree that Tompkins never manifested an intent to merge lien and fee. Tompkins’ best interests compel thе exception and not merger; otherwise, his entire interest in the property exception and not merger; otherwise, his entire interest in the property can be wiped out by the IRS, with no *820 relief from his continued liability as holder of the first mortgage. The only realistic conclusion under Georgia law is that no merger of the lien and fee took place when Tompkins bought the property at foreclosure; his lien continues.
Our decision is consistent with those reflecting state merger law comparable to Georgia’s.
See, e.g., United States v. Colorado,
Nor do we act inconsistently with the two circuit cases concluding that merger extinguished the senior lien.
United States v. Polk,
Because federal law governs the priority of a tax lien against other claims to property,
Rodgers,
Failure to Notify Under 26 U.S.C.A. § 7425
The argument that Tompkins’ property rights (or lack thereof) post-sale can be determined by section 7425 runs counter not only to case law, but also to the plain language of the statute itself, which is entitled, appropriately, “Discharge of Liens,” not “Priority of Liens.” Nowhere does section 7425 indicate that the priority status of the tax lien changes when no notice (or improper notice) is given. Instead, the statute says that the sale, or ensuing title, is “made subject to and without disturbing [the federal] lien or title” (emphasis added). 4
The enactment of section 7425 came about in part because Congress believed that the interests of the United States were insufficiently protected where, pursuant to state law, junior federal tax liens were being extinguished without notice to the United States. S.Rep. No. 1708, 89th Cong., 2d Sess., reprinted in 1966 U.S.Code Cong. & Admin.News 3722, 3748. If any pre-emptive effect was intended by Congress, we believe it is limited to prеemption of local laws which would completely discharge the government’s junior interest without clear notice to the government.
Notice provides the government with the “opportunity to review its position and determine the appropriate action without placing an undue burden on a foreclosing
*821
creditor.”
Id.
If notice of a non-judiciаl foreclosure sale is properly given and the United States consents to the sale, the sale divests the property of the government lien. 26 U.S.C.A. § 7425(c)(2). Even when the United States dоes not consent, proper notice gives effect to local law, which, in most cases, operates to discharge the junior liens. 26 U.S.C.A. § 7425(b)(2). The survival (not the elevation) of inferior federal tax liens is the penalty Congress intended to impose on senior lienholders who fail to give the presale notice prescribed by section 7425.
See First Am. Title Ins. Co.,
Priority of Liens
Having determined that both the Tompkins lien and the IRS lien continue following the foreclosure sale, we return to federal law to determine the priority of those interests.
See Rodgers,
We therefore hold as a matter of law that Tоmpkins’ lien survived his purchase at the non-judicial foreclosure sale, although he failed to give notice to the IRS before the sale. Furthermore, Tompkins’ lien retains its priоrity over the federal tax lien, and the government was properly enjoined from levying on and selling the real property in question.
The district court is AFFIRMED.
Notes
. The property was sold for 199,500, 90% of which was dеferred. The deferred amount was secured by a purchase money, wraparound mortgage on the property. Under this type of arrangement, the mortgagee, Tomрkins, remained liable on a superior (first) mortgage *819 despite his sale of the property, but he used the payments received from his purchaser/mortgagor, the Hildreths, to make payments on the first mortgage.
. A tax lien is generally subordinate to a previously perfected security interest in real property, such as a prior mortgage. 26 U.S.C.A. § 6323(a).
. O.C.G.A. § 44-6-2.
. Only the most torturous stretch of the phrase "subject to" would permit section 7425 to be interpreted as defining priority levels, and that interpretation requires ignoring the words "without disturbing” the lien.
