This аppeal involves a priority dispute between the Miller plaintiffs and the Internal
The lengthy history of this case may be briefly summarized. In 1988, the Millers sued Tony Alamo and several Alamo-run organizations, including the Foundation, under the Fair Labor Standards Act and various state laws. The district court decided Alamo’s corporations were nothing more than his alter egos. We affirmed that decision on appeal. See Miller v. Tony & Susan Alamo Found.,
Seeking to collect on their judgment, the Millers executed on other property owned by Alamo and his enterprisеs. That property was sold, netting $340,000. Several parties intervened to lay claim to the execution sale proceeds, among them the IRS. The district court ordered the $340,000 disbursed to the Millers, the Govеrnment appealed, and we affirmed. See Miller v. Alamo,
The Government contended it was immune from the Millers’ garnishment action, but the district court held the Government’s intervention waived its sovereign immunity. The district court based its ruling chiefly on two statutes, 26 U.S.C. § 7424 (1994) and 28 U.S.C. § 2410(a) (1994). Under the terms of § 7424, when the United States intervenes in a lawsuit to аssert a hen on “the property which is the subject of [the suit],” § 2410 “shall apply ... as if the United States had originally been named a defendant in such action or suit.” Section 2410(a), in turn, waives the Government’s immunity from civil аctions affecting property on which the United States has or claims a hen. Claims under § 2410(a) have a limitations period of six years. See 28 U.S.C. § 2401(a) (1994). The district court also held that by intervening, the Government waived its sovereign immunity based on “general principles governing intervention under [Federal Rule of Civil Procedure] 24(a).” The Government argued below, and argues on appeal, that the Millers could disрute the IRS’s levy of the Fort Smith/Nashville property only under 26 U.S.C. § 7426(a)(1) (1994). Section 7426(a)(1) waives the Government’s immunity for wrongful levy suits brought by a third party — that is, any person “other than the person against whom is assessed the tax оut of which such levy arose” — who claims an interest in or hen on the property. Wrongful levy actions are subject to a nine-month statute of limitations. See 26 U.S.C. § 6532(c)(1) (1994).
Under the doctrine of sovereign immunity, the Unitеd States is immune from suit unless it consents to be sued. See United States v. Dalm,
We take up first the district court’s conclusion that the Government waived its immunity under “general principles governing intervention.” In defense of this obscure holding, the Millers cite a flurry of cases they say stand for the proposition that when a sovereign intervenes in a lawsuit, it relinquishes its immunity as to all issues in the litigatiоn between the sovereign and an adverse party. The Millers’ broad overstatement is seriously misleading. We acknowledge the long-established principle “that when the [Government itself seeks its rights at thе hands of the court, equity requires that the rights of other parties interested in the subject-matter should be protected.” Carr v. United States,
These principles defeat the Millers’ argument. The “property in controversy” thе Government intervened to claim was the $340,000 in proceeds from the Millers’ execution sale. Under the cases just cited, and more importantly under 26 U.S.C. § 7424, the district court properly exercised jurisdiction over the Millers’ adverse claim to that sum. It is equally clear, however, the Government’s intervention did not give the district court jurisdiction over the Millers’ garnishment action on the Fort Smith/Nashville property. The Millers’ execution sale proceeds and the Fort Smith/Nashville property are different matters, as we have observed before. See Miller,
We turn now to the district court’s conclusion that 26 U.S.C. § 7424 and 28 U.S.C. § 2410 waived the Government’s immunity to the Millers’ garnishment action. Contrary to the district court’s view, the Millers could not avail themselves of these statutes because their sole recourse was a claim for wrongful levy under 26 U.S.C. § 7426(a)(1). Section 7426(a)(1) is the exclusive remedy of third parties who seek to assert claims on IRS-levied property. See Rosenblum v. United States,
The Millers resist this conclusion, contending § 7426(a)(1) is not their exclusive remedy in this ease because the Government’s intervention under 26 U.S.C. § 7424 opened up 28 U.S.C. § 2410 as an alternative path around the sovereign immunity barrier. We disagree. The Millers’ claim on the Fort Smith/Nashville property is exactly the kind of claim to which § 7426(a)(1) by its terms applies. By enacting § 7426(a)(1), Congress unequivocally waived immunity for third-party clаims on levied property, subject to a nine-month statute of limitations. Congress
Even if the Millers were not relegated solely to § 7426(a)(1) for their remedy, we would still find their claim to the Fort Smith/Nashville property barred by sovereign immunity. This is so because § 7424 can reasonably be read as waiving immunity only for the Millers’ claim to the $340,000 already in dispute when the Government intervened. Although the Millers offer an alternative interpretation of §§ 7424 and 2410 that would broaden the scope of waiver to encompass the Millers’ claim on the Fort Smith/Nashville property, we must accept the narrower plausible reading because it more strictly construes the scope of § 7424’s immunity waiver in favor of the sovereign. This case closely resembles Nordic Village, which concerned a disрute over whether the waiver of sovereign immunity contained in a particular section of the Bankruptcy Code extended to claims against the Government for monetary relief. See Nordic Village,
Finally, we turn briefly to the Millers’ cross-appeal сoncerning the district court’s award of storage costs to the Government. The district court explained the award by saying storage of the Fort Smith/Nashville property at Government expense benefited the Millers as well as the Government. That explanation made sense in the context of the Millers’ victory in the lien priority fight. Now that we have undone this result, however, the district court’s rationale for the storage cost award has disappeared. For this reason, and because neither the district court nor the parties cite any legal authority to sustain the award, we vacatе the award of storage costs.
We vacate the district court’s judgment and remand to the district court with directions to dismiss the Millers’ claim to the Fort Smith/Nashville proceeds for lack of subject-matter jurisdiction.
