UNITED STATES OF AMERICA, Plaintiff—Appellee, versus THOMAS ROY CLARK, Defendant—Appellant.
No. 19-10186
United States Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
March 4, 2021
Appeal from the United States District Court for the Northern District of Texas USDC No. 2:17-CR-17
Before HIGGINBOTHAM, COSTA, and OLDHAM.
Thomas Clark owes more than half a million dollars in restitution for health care fraud. To recover some of this amount, the United States sought to garnish accounts Clark maintains with brokerage firms and life insurance companies. The district court issued writs of garnishment for those accounts.
I.
Clark pleaded guilty to health care fraud after operating a chiropractic clinic that fraudulently billed insurance companies for services he performed without a license. The district court sentenced Clark to 41 months’ imprisonment and ordered him to pay the defrauded insurance companies $514,576.29 under the Mandatory Victim Restitution Act (MVRA). See
The Act generally allows the government to garnish any of the defendant‘s property to satisfy a restitution order. United States v. Elashi, 789 F.3d 547, 549 (5th Cir. 2015) (citing
Clark invokes one of those exemptions. It provides that a defendant who has a court-ordered child-support obligation can prevent the government from garnishing “so much of his salary, wages, or other income as is necessary to comply with” the child-support judgment.
Clark estimates that he owes $1,000 per month in child support (his Presentence Report listed the figure as $634/month). He argues that funds he holds in two “retirement accounts” are exempt from garnishment to the extent that, if withdrawn, they would constitute “other income” he needs to meet these support obligations. One of the accounts is a revocable living trust with Edward D. Jones & Co. As of April 2018, the account had a “value of $4,486.05 comprised of shares of 3 mutual funds.” The other is an Individual Retirement Account (IRA)2 with Southern
II.
Although we generally review a district court‘s garnishment order for abuse of discretion, we take a closer look when the appeal turns on an issue of statutory interpretation. That is because “[a] district court necessarily abuses its discretion if its conclusion is based on an erroneous determination of the law.” Elashi, 789 F.3d at 548. We therefore consider de novo whether Clark‘s accounts qualify for the child-support exemption.
The MVRA generally permits the government to garnish assets held in a retirement account, including an IRA, to satisfy a restitution order. See United States v. Berry, 951 F.3d 632, 636 (5th Cir. 2020). But we have not decided whether retirement account assets otherwise subject to garnishment may qualify as “salary, wages, or other income” exempt from seizure under
To determine whether retirement account assets constitute “other income” beyond the government‘s reach, we start with the law‘s text. See United States v. Mahmood, 820 F.3d 177, 188 (5th Cir. 2016). The tax code does not provide a standalone definition of “income.” It instead targets “gross income,” which includes “all income from whatever source derived,” subject to specific exclusions.
Despite these expansive definitions of income, income is a different category than assets. An asset is “an item of value owned.” Asset, WEBSTER‘S THIRD NEW INTERNATIONAL DICTIONARY (2002). Assets themselves are usually not income, though assets often generate income. See BITTKER ET AL. ¶ 34.01 (describing “stocks, bonds, real estate, or other income-producing assets“). Consider an asset like real estate.
A bank or investment account is similar. The corpus of the account—amounts previously deposited into the account which counted as income when they were first received by the accountholder—is an asset but not income. Cf. Usery v. First Nat‘l Bank of Ariz., 586 F.2d 107, 110–11 (9th Cir. 1978) (holding that money deposited into a bank account no longer constituted “earnings” under the Consumer Credit Protection Act); Citronelle-Mobile Gathering, Inc. v. Watkins, 934 F.2d 1180, 1191 (11th Cir. 1991) (checks received for personal services no longer considered “compensation” under state law “once commingled with other funds” in a bank account). The accountholder does not have to keep paying tax on the corpus of the account every year. But the money the corpus generates each year—whether as interest, dividends, or capital gains—is income.
Under this basic distinction between income and assets, the corpus of a typical bank or brokerage account would not be considered “other income.” Perhaps this is why Clark does not seek the child-support exemption for most of the accounts the government seeks to garnish.
The “income” question is not so simple, however, when it comes to Clark‘s IRA. But see United States v. Jones, 2013 WL 1151494, at *7 (D. Kan. Jan. 29, 2013) (concluding without detailed analysis that IRA funds were not exempt as “other income” under section 6334(a)(8)). The corpus of a traditional IRA was never taxed as income. See supra note 2. So when an individual withdraws money from a traditional IRA, that distribution—the corpus as well as any gains—is taxed.
Looking solely at the ordinary definition of “income” thus does not resolve whether a retirement account qualifies. As a result, we turn to canons of construction to help resolve the uncertainty.
One familiar canon instructs us to view “other income” more narrowly in the context of
The Sixth Circuit did just that, concluding that an inheritance was not protected from an IRS levy as “other income” under
Another part of the levy exemption statute reinforces the conclusion that “other income” should be limited to things like salary or wages that are received for “services rendered.” Woods, 46 F.3d at 24. The subsection of the statute immediately following the child-support exemption allows, for tax but not restitution purposes,4 a minimum exemption for “wages, salary, and other income.”
exemption, the statute first addresses individuals who are “paid or receive[] all of [their] wages, salary, and other income on a weekly basis.”
Calibrating the minimum exemption to a weekly amount makes sense for salary, wages, and even less consistent (but still usually periodic) payments for services rendered like “bonuses, tips, commissions, and fees.” Woods, 46 F.3d at 24 (recognizing that
We thus agree with the Sixth Circuit that the child-support exemption only applies to money akin to salary and wages—meaning amounts received directly for labor such as “bonuses, tips, commissions, and fees.” Woods, 46 F.3d at 24. That does not describe Clark‘s retirement accounts, so the judgment garnishing those accounts is AFFIRMED.
