Michael Frierdich brought this suit against the United States contending that it had made a wrongful levy on property that Frierdich had “an interest in or lien on,” 26 U.S.C. § 7426(a)(1), and seeking a judgment for some $37,000, which he claimed to be the value of his interest. 26 U.S.C. § 7426(b)(2)(B). After a bench trial, the district judge dismissed the suit on the ground that the interest claimed by Frier-dich in the property in question was not the kind that supports standing to bring a third-party suit for wrongful levy — third party because Frierdich is not the taxpayer from whom the Internal Revenue Service was seeking to collect taxes by making the levy in question.
To explain the character of Frierdich’s interest, we must work through a series of transactions. In October 1985 the corporation of which Frierdich was the president and controlling stockholder, Universal Beverage Sales, a distributor of beverages, made a contract to sell its principal assets to Twin Rivers Distributing Company in exchange for cash installment payments and other consideration. After the sale Universal’s principal asset was the right to receive the agreed-upon payments from Twin Rivers. The payment stream not being large enough, however, to meet all of Universal’s financial obligations, in February of the following year Frierdich and his wife borrowed $400,000 from the Lemay Bank and Trust Company to pay Universal’s debts. As collateral for the loan Fri-erdich caused Universal to assign its right to receive payments from Twin Rivers to the bank. Later he caused Universal to make a subordinated assignment of the same right to him so that, should the bank be repaid in full, subsequent payments by Twin Rivers would go directly to him.
A post-nuptial property agreement between Frierdich and his wife, confirmed in their divorce decree in January 1988, assigned to her all of his rights in Universal, as well as his subordinated right to future payments from Twin Rivers. He also had Universal assign to her any right it might have to future payments from Twin Rivers notwithstanding its assignment of the right to the bank. And he agreed to indemnify her for any debts of Universal for which she might become liable.
Universal owed unpaid federal employment taxes to the Internal Revenue Service, which in 1989 seized assets of Twin Rivers equal to the amount which that company still owed Mrs. Frierdich (by assignment from Universal and her husband) on the contract with Universal. That seizure is the levy which precipitated this suit, to which Mrs. Frierdich is not a party. After the levy, the bank released the assignment to it of Universal’s right to the payments under the Twin Rivers contract, but Frier-dich and his wife remained liable on their promissory note to the bank for the $400,-000 loan that they had obtained from the bank to pay Universal’s debts. Mr. Frier-dich argues that his having taken out a personal loan from the bank to pay debts of Universal gives him an “equitable” interest, not further specified, in the money that Twin Rivers owed Universal and that it now owes his former wife by virtue of the assignment from Universal to him, his assignment of all his interest in Universal to her, and the release by the bank of the assignment that Universal had made to it.
But is Frierdich’s interest in that income an “interest” within the meaning of the statute? On this, the central question in the case, the government to our dismay has been unhelpful. It insists, on the authority of
Valley Finance, Inc. v. United States,
The word “interest” in the statute gains coloration from its neighbor, “lien.” When interest and lien are conjoined, the inference arises that the legislature was referring to ownership or its near equivalents, such as leasehold and lien. The granting to the holders of such interests of the right to challenge wrongful levies is necessary to provide an effective remedy against such levies. Suppose the IRS takes from T, the delinquent taxpayer, by way of levy property belonging to O, or property nominally belonging to T but so far in hock to C that T is unwilling to incur the expense of trying to keep it out of the Service’s hands, or property owned by T but leased to L so
The relation to ordinary notions of standing, whether constitutional notions founded on interpretation of Article III of the Constitution or common law notions found in tort law or statutory interpretations, as in antitrust law or under RICO,
Holmes v. Securities Investor Protection Corp.,
— U.S. -,
Mr. Frierdich’s interest is even more remote. He was not a creditor; Twin Rivers owed him nothing. He was a contingent creditor, who would become an actual one only if (for example) his former wife reassigned her rights in the contract between Twin Rivers and Universal to him in exchange for his indemnifying her for the debt she owed the Lemay Bank on account of Universal’s debts. And even if Mr. Frierdich’s interest were sufficient to confer standing, that interest was no more impaired by the seizure than his ex-wife’s was. Which is another reason for confining standing to persons who have a claim of some sort to specific property. The unsecured creditor of a solvent debtor loses nothing, or very little, when a small part of the debtor’s property is seized; he had not looked to that property to assure the repayment of his loan. It is otherwise when the creditor was counting on that piece of property to assure repayment and had obtained a security interest accordingly. The extinction of that interest by a wrongful levy hurts. The unsecured creditor lacks a comparable interest. We therefore hold in
AFFIRMED.
