This is аn appeal by Kyle, acting collector of internal revenue, hereinafter referred to as the сollector, from a decree of the District Court for the Eastern District of Pennsylvania. The collector imposed a lien for taxes against John J. Mc-Guirk for $3,648.82. McGuirk was the assured in a standard contract of life insurance of which his wife, the appellee herein, was beneficiary. The assured had the right to change the beneficiary,- to borrow on the policy, and to receive the cash surrender value. The collector issued a warrant of distraint directing that a levy be made on the property rights of McGuirk in the policy. The warrant was served upon the insurance company which had issued the policy to McGuirk, to recover the value of the pоlicy. The appellee filed a petition in the District Court praying that the warrant of distraint be vacated uрon the ground that under the laws of the state of Pennsylvania no distraint to satisfy creditors of an assured can be made upon a policy of insurance payable to the wife of the assured.
*213 The Pennsylvania Act of June 28, 1923, P.L. 884 (40 P.S.Pа. § 517) upon which the appellee relies provides that: “The net amount payable under any policy оf life insurance or under any annuity contract upon the life of any person, heretofore or hereafter made for the benefit of or assigned to the wife or children or dependent relative of such person, shall be exempt from all claims of the creditors of such person arising out of or based upon any obligation created after the passage of this act, whether or not the right to change the named beneficiary is reserved by or permitted to such person.” The District Court held that the act applied and entered a decree quashing the warrant of distraint. The collector appealed. He questions the jurisdiction of the District Court to enter the decree, and contends that the warrant of distraint was valid and enforceable.
The distraint is clearly nonenforceable if the state exemption act cited above applies. We find no authority for applying the act. As was said by the Tenth Circuit in Cannon v. Nicholas (C.C.A.)
The distraint is likewise nonenforceable if the property rights in the policy belong to the wife оf the assured as beneficiary, for if, by the law of Pennsylvania, ownership of the policy is in the wife, the policy may not be subjected to the payment of the taxes of the assured. We have been referred to no deсisions of the Supreme Court of Pennsylvania which directly rule the question whether a policy such as the one invоlved in the instant case is the property of the assured or of the beneficiary. The views of the Pennsylvania Supreme Court, as declared in Weil, Appellant, v. Marquis,
The District Court felt constrained, in view of R.S. § 933 (28 U.S.C.A. § 746), to quash the warrant of distraint. We think, however, inasmuch as the collector had instituted summary proсeedings for the collection of iniernal revenue, the statute referring to an attachment of proрerty upon process instituted in a court of the United States does not apply. The collector’s process was not instituted in the court below. He was brought into that court through process instituted against him by the appellee. The final paragraph of the statute reads: “Nothing herein contained shall interfere with any priority of the United States in the payment of debts.” We think this indicates that the intention of Congress was that state laws should not interfere with the expeditious collection of debts due the United States.
The decree of the District Court is reversed.
