One Brody, a former resident of Massachusetts, having survived various personal difficulties with the government due to nonpayment of his income tax, cf. Brody v. United States, 1 Cir., 1957,
Policy No. 11,653,183 (hereinafter the ’183 policy) was issued to Brody in April 1943 in the face amount of $30,000 on the 15-year endowment plan. This meant that the policy totally “matured,” viz., became payable to the endowment beneficiary, in April 1958. It would also have become payable on the insured’s death had that occurred prior to the en
*32
dowment maturity. The amount payable in either instance was the face amount, plus any accumulated dividends, less any outstanding indebtedness and interest thereon. If the policy matured as an endowment the payee was the insured, whereas in case of death it was a named beneficiary. The right to change the beneficiary was reserved, and in 1957 Brody designated the Internal Revenue Service as the (revocable) beneficiary. Prior to maturity the insured could, from among other policy rights, elect to surrender the policy, or to borrow against it up to the current “Loan and Surrender Value” pursuant to a table contained in the policy. This table recited the dollar amount of the cash surrender value for each policy year, and stated that the loan value was the same amount minus a prepaid interest deduction computed to the next anniversary date. The reason for the difference is that a loan leaves the policy in force, where as surrendering it terminates the insurance. While the policy did not expressly say so, it has been held that surrendering the policy for its surrender value implies a physical delivery. Kothe v. Phoenix Mut. Life Ins. Co., 1929,
Policy No. 10,777,528 (hereinafter the ’528 policy) in the face amount of $1,-000, was originally written in a different form, but in 1956 Brody converted it to an endowment policy maturing January 21, 1962, prepaying all premi-urns. 4 The general policy provisions and circumstances, including the naming of the government as beneficiary, were otherwise similar to the ’183 policy. 5
The foregoing facts appearing, the government moved for summary judgment. Equitable resisted on the ground that Brody was an indispensable party, ineffectively served by publication, and that in his absence it was not liable on the policies unless they were physically surrendered, from which it would follow that if it paid now it could be obligated to pay a second time. The court granted the government’s motion and decreed that the liens were foreclosed. It ordered Equitable to pay the government the “cash value and proceeds * * * computed as of the day of payment,” which, while perhaps not precise, served to designate amounts which the company admits it would have owed had Brody then surrendered the policies and demanded payment. It further decreed that upon such payment every obligation of Equitable with respect to the policies would be discharged as to all persons. In its accompanying opinion the court stated that Equitable’s cases of United States v. Massachusetts Mut. Life Ins. Co., 1 Cir., 1942,
Equitable’s first contention is that under Mass. Mutual the surrender of the policies was an absolute requirement, or condition precedent, to any liability. Mass. Mutual involved an unma-
*33
tured policy, and we will defer discussing it until later.
6
The ’183 policy had matured even before the government filed notice of lien, and was absolutely owing except for whatever effect was due the surrender requirement. Under these circumstances the special considerations which moved us in Mass. Mutual do not apply. The provisions for physical surrender of the policy in connection with obtaining the matured value is a mere housekeeping matter to permit the company to tidy up its affairs. As the district court pointed out, an insurance policy is not a negotiable instrument or specialty embodying the obligation. Cf. Rosenthal v. Maletz, 1948,
Considering, accordingly, the matured obligation represented by the ’183 policy as absolutely owing to the insured, the question is whether it can be reached in this proceeding. The government says there is no problem. It concedes that the basic statute, section 7403, supra, fn. 2, made Brody an indispensable party, Macatee, Inc. v. United States, 5 Cir., 1954,
“In an action in a district court to enforce any lien upon or claim to, or to remove any incumbrance or lien or cloud upon the title to, real or personal property within the district, where any defendant cannot be served within the State, or does not voluntarily appear, the court may order the absent defendant to appear or plead .by a day certain. *****
“If an absent defendant does not appear or plead within-the time allowed, the court may proceed as if the absent defendant had been served with process within the State, but any adjudication shall, as regards the absent defendant without appearance, affect only the property which is the subject of the action. * * *” -.,4
* * * * * *
The omitted portions are material in connection with the ’528 policy, and will appear infra. The function of this statute, insofar as here relevant, is to give absent nonresident parties claiming an interest in property over which the court seeks to exercise jurisdiction due notice and opportunity to be heard, a fundamental condition not to jurisdiction, but to its assertion. Cooper v. Reynolds, 1870,
In the absence of any applicable constitutional limitations,
7
we must give the phrase “personal property” in section 1655 the broad meaning necessary to effectuate the scope of these other provisions.
8
It cannot be determinative that historically the principal use of this statute was in connection with liens upon tangible property. Cf. Crichton v. Wingfield, 1922,
Special questions arise with respect to the ’528 policy. In United States v. Massachusetts Mut. Life Ins. Co., (Mass. Mutual), supra, the defendant insurance company refused to recognize a notice of levy and distraint whereby the government sought to obtain the cash surrender value of an unmatured policy on the life of a defaulting taxpayer.
9
The government thereupon brought an action under section 3710(b) of the Internal Revenue Code of 1939 (now I.R.C. (1954) § 6332(b)) for a “penalty” measured by the value of the “property, or rights to property, subject to distraint * * * ” wrongfully withheld. The defense was that the policy had not been
*35
surrendered by the insured. We held for the company. In an opinion carefully analyzing the mutual rights and obligations of the parties under a policy of life insurance we stated,
In other words, what we held in Mass. Mutual was that the government, by merely filing a notice of lien, or by an ex parte attempt to obtain the surrender value by levy, could not exercise the insured’s election for him and make the company’s obligation to pay mature as a debt in “possession.” 11 Not presently *36 owing the surrender value, it was not “in possession of property * * * subject to distraint” in the sense that it could incur the section 3710(b) penalty for failure to respond. 12
There were sound practical reasons for this. The surrender value of a life insurance policy is related to the normal life expectancy of the insured, usually as of the date the policy was purchased. It constitutes the minimum worth of the policy. As we pointed out in Mass. Mutual an insured may be in various degrees of health and have but a short expectancy, making the actual value of his policy much greater. For poor health, or other reasons, he may be not rein-surable at any cost. The government failed in that case precisely for the reason that it could be permitted neither to exercise the insured’s election to surrender the policy 13 and cut off other rights in a procedure which did not afford him and other interested parties the opportunity to protect their interests in the manner provided herein under section 7403 and by section 1655, nor to expose the insurance company to multiple liability, United States v. Penn. Mut. Life Ins. Co., supra.
Nor does United States v. Bess, 1958,
*37
Although the district court’s opinion that the Mass. Mutual line of decisions has been discredited was unwarranted, nonetheless Equitable’s position is not advanced. In the present case the government does not seek to proceed summarily against the company, but has brought a plenary action joining the insured. Had there been personal service on the insured within the jurisdiction no one would question the court’s right to reach the policy. United States v. Bess, supra,
If the insured is served only by publication, as in the case at bar, there may be an additional problem not recognized by the court in United States v. Metropolitan Life Ins. Co., supra, and not adverted to by the parties here. We mention it, however, lest our decision be too broadly construed. Section 1655 provides that when any defendant cannot be served within the state, or does not voluntarily appear, an order to appear
“ * * * shall be served on the absent defendant personally if practicable, wherever found. * * *. Where personal service is not practicable, the order shall be published as the court may direct, not less, than once a week for six consecutive weeks.
*****
“Any defendant not so personally notified may, at any time within one year after final judgment, enter his appearance, and thereupon the court shall set aside the judgment and permit such defendant to plead on payment of such costs as the court deems just.”
This means that an absent defendant who fails to appear and who was not personally served, even though the publication was made can as of right have the judgment vacated within the year.
17
Perez v. Fernandez, 1911,
In these circumstances in the ordinary case where the insured or other parties having possible interests in the policy are not personally served and fail to appear, we might feel it inappropriate to foreclose on the contract to the extent of taking the surrender value directly and terminating the contract. Different considerations apply to enforcing the lien against the loan value. In such a case such maximum loan might be taken as would permit an arrangement under the flexible powers given to the court by section 7403, to continue the policy in force for the year available to reopen the judgment. Such questions, however, need not concern us here, for the ’528 policy matured as a simple debt prior to the decree. The decree, appropriately, spoke as of the date of its entry. 20 For the government to be awarded all of the net proceeds would accordingly effect no damaging change of position nor prevent the restoration of the status quo if Brody should hereafter exercise his right to have the judgment set aside.
Judgment will be entered affirming the judgment of the District Court. 21
Notes
. “If any person liable to pay any tax neglects or refuses to pay the same after demand, the amount * * * shall be a lien in favor of the United States upon all property and rights to property, whether real or personal, belonging to such person.”
. Summarizing, subsection (a) “Filing,” provides for an action in the district court “to enforce the lien of the United States under this title with respect to such tax or liability or to subject any property, of whatever nature, of the delinquent, or in which he has any right, title, or interest, to the payment of such tax or liability.” Subsection (b) “Parties,” provides that all persons “claiming any interest” in the property shall be made parties. Subsection (c) “Adjudication and Decree,” provides for an adjudication of all matters involved, and permits a sale of the property by decree of court and distribution in accordance with the interests of the parties. Subsection (d) “Receivership,” permits the court to appoint a receiver with power, inter alia, to enforce the lien.
. There could be no new beneficiary, nor any assignment which could affect the company, because the policies required any such change to be made in writing and filed at the home office. Cases cited by the company which have disregarded such provisions as between competing claimants for equitable reasons have not required a company that paid without notice of conflicting claims to pay twice.
. It is arguable that any unearned prepaid amounts should he treated differently, with respect to the lien, from the amounts governed by the loan and cash surrender provisions of the policy. See Pyle, Liability of Life Insurance and Annuities for Unpaid Income Taxes of Living Insureds, Annuitants, and Beneficiaries, 9 Tax L.Rev. 205, 325, 337-338 (1954). However, the parties have not discussed this point and we need not pursue it.
. Apparently dividends on this policy were to be applied to provide additional paid-up endowment insurance. No explicit disposition or even any mention of such amounts, if any, appears in the record. We do not decide to what extent, if at all, the government’s lien might effectively proscribe the application of dividends to this use. See, generally, Pyle, supra, at 334-335, 340-342.
. The district court, and the parties, in speaking of the ’528 policy treated it as unmatured, which it was at the date of the institution of suit. This was the correct approach, because unless the company’s obligations constituted property within the district at that time there could be no basis for quasi in rem jurisdiction. Crichton v. Wingfield, 1922,
. There are none. Cf. Chicago, R. I. & Pac. Ry. v. Sturm, 1899,
. There is a suggestion in Eguitable’s brief that there are further obstacles in that it “is not organized under the laws of Massachusetts nor is its principal office here.” We could not accept the proposition that a debt or other incorporeal obligation on which the obligor can be sued elsewhere can be restricted for the purposes of section 1655 to the obligor’s domicile. See fn. 7, supra; cf. United States v. First National City Bank, 2 Cir., 1963,
. See I.R.C. (1939) §§ 3670-72, 3690, 3692, 3710(a), now I.R.C. (1954) §§ 6321-23, 6331(a), (b), 6334(c), 6332(a).
. The amount of real insurance at any moment during the life of the policy is the difference between the cash surrender value and the face amount. An election to take the cash value prior to maturity is a discharge of the insurance feature of the contract. We cannot agree with the oft-quoted statement in In re McKinney, D.C.S.D.N.Y., 1883,
. Section 3710 of the 1939 Code then under consideration read “in possession of property * * * ” whereas present section 6332 reads “in possession of (or obligated with respect to) property * * This does not change the concept of a present obligation.
. It would unnecessarily prolong tliis opinion to consider to wliat extent the governemnt could subject rights in insurance policies to distraint and sale. As the court said in United States v. Stock Yards Bank, 6 Cir., 1956,
. It is important to note that we were there, and are here, talking in terms of contractual rights, and surrendering the policy in a contractual sense as distinguished from mere physical delivery. If Brody’s Florida attorney, for example, had complaisantly turned over these policies without authority it would in our view have affected the present case in no particular. Equitable, and companies in other cases, do themselves a disservice, in the sense of beclouding the issues, when they talk in terms of physical surrender.
. With the greatest deference, a not strictly accurate characterization. See fn. 10, supra. The surrender value also represents what might be termed a savings factor.
. In Bess the policy had matured. Moreover, all parties were before the court. Our decision conflicts with neither the holding, the language, nor the reasoning. The district court’s view, on the other hand, that Mass. Mutual, which was nowhere mentioned, was discredited by Bess leads to peculiar difficulties. In United States v. Salerno, D.C.D.Nev., 1963,
. A policy “loan” is not, of course, a true loan as there is no obligation to repay. Board of Assessors of Parish of Orleans v. New York Life Ins. Co., 1910,
. It is perhaps unnecessary to point out that the reopening protection thus afforded, on the theory that foreclosure of the lien would itself tend to result in actual notice, is particularly important where the property foreclosed is a chose in action and the suit may be brought, and the newspaper publication made, in a state where the absent defendant has no other connections. However, it is this very protection that, from the standpoint of due process, makes it fair to apply section 1655 as broadly as we do.
. Perez v. Fernandez was decided under a statute which read “actually personally notified” rather than “personally notified.” Act of March 3, 1875, c. 137, § 8, 18 Stat. 472. We have no reason to believe, however, that a substantive *38 change was intended by the present codification.
. We are not, of course, speaking about equitable relief under F.R.Civ.P. 60.
. The government’s lien had attached to the entire bundle of Brody’s property rights in the contract, including his right to receive the endowment proceeds. It was this right, which had ripened and bore fruit at the time foreclosure was decreed, that the government collected upon. Cf. United States v. Bess, supra (Government obtains surrender value at death, not value when lien attached); United States v. Dallas National Bank, 5 Cir., 1947,
. After this opinion was settled we received copies of the Third Circuit opinions in United States v. Sullivan,
