delivered the opinion of the Court.
The United States has sought review of a decision of the Supreme Court of Arkansas subordinating the federal tax lien (26 U. S. C. § 6321) to a lien for attorney’s fees included in an antecedent mortgage contract.
In October of 1960, taxpayers defaulted on the first mortgage monthly installment and failed thereafter to
On November 15,1961, the Chancery Court entered its decree of foreclosure which fixed the attorney’s fee at $1,250 and determined the priority of the various claimants. After satisfaction of court and foreclosure sale costs, Pioneer American was -accorded first priority for principal, interest and the attorney’s fee; The Development Company took next on principal and interest under the second mortgage; Alfred J. Anderson shared thereafter on his mechanic’s lien and the United States took last. The property was sold and proceeds were received which satisfied all claims except $3,615.28 of the federal tax liens.
3
The United States appealed to the Supreme Court of Arkansas asserting that it was entitled to priority
It goes unchallenged that the claim for the attorney’s fee, arising out of the obligations assumed by the taxpayer in 1958, became enforceable under Arkanas law as a contract of indemnity at the time of default in October 1960 before the filing of the first federal tax liens. Furthermore, it is evident that the suit in which this attorney’s fee was earned was commenced on March 24, 1961, prior to the filing of the unpaid federal tax liens crucial to this suit, i. e., the liens of April 14, July 17, and October 3, 1961. Nevertheless, because this fee had not been incurred and paid and could not be finally fixed in amount until November 15, 1961, after all the federal liens had been filed, we hold that the claim for attorney’s fees remained inchoate at least until that date and that the federal tax liens are entitled to priority.
The priority of the federal tax lien provided by 26 U. S. C. § 6321 as against liens created under state law is governed by the common-law rule — “the first in time is the first in right.”
United States
v.
New Britain,
As for. a lien created by state law, its priority depends “on the time it attached to the property in question and became choate.”
United States
v.
New Britain, supra,
at 86;
United States
v.
Security Tr. & Sav. Bank,
We reject respondents’ contention that the choateness rule has no place when a mortgage under § 6323 (a) involved. The predecessor to § 6323 was first enacted by Congress in 1912 in order to protect' mortgagees, purchasers and judgment creditors against a secret lien for assessed taxes and to postpone the effectiveness of the tax, lien as against these interests until the tax lien was filed. H. R. Rep. No. 1018, 62d Cong., 2d Sess. The section dealt with the federal lien only and it did not purport to affect the time at which- local liens were deemed to arisé or to become choate or to subordinate the tax lien to tentative, conditional or imperfect state" liens. Rather, we believe Congress intended that if out of the whole spectrum of state^created liens,, certain liens áre tó enjoy the preferred status granted by § 6323, they should at least have attained the degree of perfection required of other liens and be choate for the purposes of the federal rule.
The Court has never held that mortgagees face a less demanding test of perfection than other interests when competing with the federal lien. Indeed
United States
v.
Ball Constr. Co.,
Clearly the identity of the lienholder and the property subject to the lien are definite here, but it is equally "apparent that the amount of the lien for attorney’s fees was undetermined and indefinite when the federal tax liens in question were filed.
8
The mortgage held by respondents secured a promissory note which obligated the mortgagor maker to pay a “reasonable attorney’s fee” “in the event of default” and “of the placing of this note in the hands of an attorney for collection.” By the time the federal liens subordinated by the Arkansas courts were placed of public record, default had occurred, the mortgagee had elected to declare the note due and payable, an attorney' had been engaged and a suit to foreclose the mortgage had been filed. But the “reasonable attorney’s fee” — reasonable in relation to the service to be performed by the
Ball
once again provides a parallel. Sums due the contractor-taxpayer under a particular construction contract were assigned to the surety as security for any future indebtedness of the contractor to the surety arising under that contract or any other. After the filing of the federal tax lien against the contractor, the surety made advances to complete another contract of the taxpayer, as the surety was obligated to do under its bond issued on that contract, and the taxpayer thereby became indebted to the surety. The majority held the surety’s interest “inchoate and unperfected” at the time of the filing of the federal tax liens.
9
Ball
therefore rejects as inchoate an assignee’s or mortgagee’s lien to secure future indebtedness of the taxpayer-debtor. The creditor holds merely “a
caveat
of a more perfect lien to come.”
New York
v.
Maclay,
The court below was in error and its judgment is reversed and the cause remanded for further proceedings not inconsistent with this opinion.
Reversed and remanded.
Notes
The deed of trust provided, in addition:
“That if either the party of the sécond part [trustee] or the party of the first part [mortgagor] shall become a party to any suit or proceeding at law or in equity in reference to its interest in the premises herein conveyed, the reasonable costs, charges and attorney’s fees in such suit or proceeding shall be added to 4he principal sum then owing by the party of the first part and shall be secured by this instrument, and the note secured hereby shall, at the option of the holder, become due and collectible.
. . . . .
“The proceeds of any sale under this deed of trust shall be applied ... as follows:
“First: To-pay the costs and expenses of executing this trust, and any and all sums expended on account of costs of litigation, attorney’s.fees, ground rents, taxes, insurance premiums, or any advances made or expenses incurred on account of the property sold, with interest thereon.
“Second: To retain as compensation, a commission as set forth by the laws of the State of Arkansas.
“Third: To pay off the debt secured hereby, including accrued interest thereon, as well as any other sums owing . . . pursuant to this instrument.”
The federal tax liens, as of the date of the order of distribution, November 15, 1961, were as follows:
Lien of November 29, 1960.........;............ $659.67
Lien of January 30,1961........................ 1,661.03
Lien of April 14,1961.......................... 1,344.69
Lien of July 17, 1961.......................... 1,653.23
Lien of October 3, 1961........................ 1,164.04
The first two liens, November 29, 1960, and January 30, 1961, were satisfied in full. $546.68 was available for partial payment of the April 14, 1961, lien. The balance of the April lien and the full amounts of the July 17 and October 3, 1961, liens remained unsatisfied.
The United States did not challenge the priority of the mechanic’s, lien or of any other distribution fixed by the decree.
Once the attorney’s fee is subordinated to the federal tax liens, the $1,250 would be borne by the other claimants in order of seniority among themselves under state law. On the basis of the present decree, the share of the mechanic’s lienor Anderson would be eliminated and that of the second mortgagee, The Development Company, reduced by half.
“While it is true that the filing of the notice of the tax lien may constitute notice in the case of real property, it is inequitable for the statute to provide that it constitutes notice as regards securities.' For example, when a broker purchases a security for his customer on the exchange, it is obviously impossible for him to check all the offices in which a notice of the tax lien may be duly filed to determine whether the security is subject to such lien.' A like situation exists with respect to over-the-counter and' direct transactions in securities. An attempt to enforce such liens' on recorded notice would in many cases impair the negotiability of securities and seriously interfere with business transactions. The adoption of the amendment will remove an existing hardship without causing any undue loss of revenue.” H. R. Rep. No. 855, 76th Cong., 1st Sess. 26 (1939).
“The effect of a lien in relation to a provision of federal law for the collection of debts owing the United States is always a federal question. Hence, although a state court’s classification of a lien as specific and perfected is entitled to weight, it is subject to reexamination by this Court.”
United States
v.
Security Tr. & Sav. Bank,
There is nothing in
Security Mortgage Co.
v.
Powers,
Contrast
Crest Finance Co.
v.
United States,
See in accord, with respect to attorney’s fees,
United States
v.
Bond,
This argument would require us to revitalize the long since rejected relation-back doctrine. See
United States
v.
Security Tr. & Sav. Bank,
See note 5, supra.
By the same token respondents’ contention that the rules against “unjust enrichment” are violated by preferring the tax lien to the claim for attorney’s fees is without merit. Both New Britain and Buffalo Savings Bank prefer the federal lien even though the mortgagee’s interest in the proceeds will be reduced by later-arising local taxes having priority under state law over the mortgagee. The attorney’s services, moreover, were rendered for the benefit of the mortgagee to protect his interest in .the property, and the United States, holding an adverse interest, received no such benefit from them that its interest is to be charged-therefor.
