Mrs. Falik brought this action- in April, 1962, in the District Court for the Eastern District of New York to remove a tax lien of the United States as a cloud on the title to her home at Woodmere, Long Island. The lien was for withholding and social security taxes due from two corporations, of which the Commissioner of Internal Revenue had found her to have been a responsible officer, see Internal Revenue Code of 1954, §§ 3102, 3403, 6672 ;
1
Mrs. Falik alleged that this finding was erroneous. The United States made a motion to dismiss for want of jurisdiction, amplified by an accompanying affidavit which spoke of sovereign immunity and the bar against injunctive or declaratory tax relief; Judge Dooling denied the motion,
The district court had subject-matter jurisdiction over the action as one “arising under any Act of Congress providing for internal revenue * * 28 U.S.C. § 1340. While 28 U.S.C. § 2410(a) does not create a new “federal” claim, contrast § 7424, the present suit nevertheless does “arise under” the revenue laws because Mrs. Falik’s liability as a responsible officer depends directly on the “construction or effect” of certain of those laws. United States v. Coson,
We do not consider either of our cited decisions to be dispositive. Pipóla v. Chicco, supra, was a state court action by purchasers of real estate who, because of error by a title searcher, had failed to receive notice of a duly filed United States tax lien; the United States removed and counterclaimed for foreclosure of the lien, under what is now § 7403, which the district court granted. The case came to us on the assumption, not seriously contested by the Government,
The statute on which the plaintiff relies, enacted in 1931, 46 Stat. 1528, had initially given consent of the United States only in any action “for the foreclosure of a mortgage or other lien upon real estate * * The words “to quiet title to” were added in 1942, when the statute was being broadened to include personal property, 56 Stat. 1026. The addition resulted from a request of Attorney General, later Mr. Justice, Jackson; he explained the reason as indicated in the margin. 4
It is plain that a taxpayer whose property has been subjected to a federal tax lien does not come within the Attorney General’s examples of intended plaintiffs, although the Pipólas did. Still, the plaintiff here may argue that we must take the words that Congress used in 1942 rather than the draftsman’s illustrations —a position to which, ironically, no one has ever spoken more persuasively than did this very draftsman after he had assumed another role. 5 By the same token, says the plaintiff, since the statute does not restrict the grounds on which title may be “quieted,” the courts should impose none.
The argument might have merit if the 1942 enactment had been an independent piece of legislation. But it was -not; it was an amendment, represented as a rather inconsequential one, to the 1931 statute. And we conclude that under the 1931 statute a junior lienor could not have questioned the essential validity of an assessment underlying a senior Government tax lien.
It would be unlikely in the last degree that by an amendment to the Judicial Code, relating to all mortgage or lien claims of the United States, the 1931 Congress meant to give private mortgagees or lienors a right to take the initiative in an attack on the validity of tax assessments, which the taxpayer himself had never had and was not then given. As we showed in Pipóla,
If no such breach in the wall was effected in 1931 in favor of lienors of real property, it would strain credulity to suppose that, by adopting what was represented as a rather unimportant amendment in 1942, Congress meant to open a much larger breach in favor of all taxpayers owning property, real or personal When the Attorney General spoke of “questionable or valueless Government liens,” see fn. 4, he was speaking ol liens voidable on grounds such as we have suggested — not of cases where the only “question” was whether the Commissioner had erred, in fact or in law, in making the underlying assessment. Congress “did not inadvertently add a colonial wing to a gothic cathedral,” ICC v. J-T Transport Co.,
Plaintiff argues that an action to quiet title is not a suit for an injunction and, more particularly, not a suit “for the purpose of restraining the assessment or collection of any tax,” which § 7421(a) alone forbids. Literally that is so, and it is true that an action like the present, where the lien remains of record until and unless a court determines the underlying assessment to be invalid, is less dangerous to the revenue than one in which a taxpayer obtains an injunction against assessment or collection and is free to dispose of his property while the suit goes on. But the action is quite similar to that contemplated by the Declaratory Judgment Act, 28 U.S.C. § 2201, to which Congress was quick to attach an exception “with respect to Federal taxes” — explaining that application of a declaratory judgment procedure in federal tax matters “would constitute a radical departure from the long-continued policy of Congress * *.” S.Rep. No. 1240, 74th Cong., 1st Sess. 11 (1935). Plaintiff contends also that since the lien could not be foreclosed without exposing the underlying assessment to scrutiny, United States v. O’Connor, supra,
Most of the district courts that have recently had occasion to consider the issue here presented, have reached a conclusion contrary to that under review. Batts v. United States,
The order denying the Government’s motion is reversed, with instructions to dismiss the complaint for failure to state a claim on which relief can be granted.
Notes
. All section references are to the Internal Revenue Code of 1954 save as otherwise stated.
. 28 U.S.C. § 1444 authorizes removal of any such action brought in a state court.
. If Pipóla had involved only the plaintiffs’ claim, the result could be defended on the additional ground, here adopted, that 28 U.S.C. § 2410(a) does not allow initiation of a suit on the merits of the assessment, regardless of defenses available when the Government sues under § 7403. But this argument would not cover the Government’s counterclaim in Pipóla under § 7403 to foreclose the lien.
. “It should be observed in this connection that under existing law there is no provision whereby the owner of real estate may clear his title to such real estate of the cloud of a Government mortgage or lien. Welch v. Hamilton (S.D.Calif.),
“In many instances persons acting in good faith have purchased real estate without knowledge of the Government lien or in the belief that the lien had been extinguished. In other instances, mortgagees have foreclosed on property and have failed to join the United States. It appears that justice and fair dealing would require that a method be provided to clear real-estate titles of questionable or valueless Government liens. Accordingly, I suggest that the bill be amended by inserting the phrase ‘to quiet title or’ between the words ‘matter’ and ‘for the foreclosure of’ in line 4 of page 2 of the bill.” H.R.Rep. No. 1191, 77th Cong., 1st Sess. 2 (1941) ; S.Rep. No. 1646, 77th Cong., 2d Sess. 2 (1942).
. See concurring opinions of Mr. Justice Jackson in Schwegmann Bros. v. Calvert Distillers Corp.,
. See also the extracts from the legislative history in United States v. Brosnan,
. As the Government points out, Coson could well have been decided on that ground.
. Some other possibilities are suggested in United States v. Morrison,
. Although it may not be clear that the transferee or mortgagee of a taxpayer can pay and litígate, see Pipola,
