Plaintiff-Appellant Bonneville Distributing, Inc. (“Bonneville”) appeals the district court’s grant of summary judgment to Defendants-Appellees Green River Development Associates, Inc., William S. Greaves, and Stanley DeWaal (collectively, “Green
Background
This action involves a joint venture between Bonneville and Green River under which the jоint venturers operated a truck stop in Green River, Utah. The joint venture began in 1983 with Triangle Oil, Inc. (“Triangle”) and Green River as the original joint venturers. Pursuant to the joint venture agreement, Triangle was entitled to receive one-half cent per gallon of motor fuel sold and was also to receive common carrier rates for fuel delivered to the truck stop. In 1990, with Green River’s approval, Triangle assigned its interest to Bonneville. At the time of the assignment, Triangle’s property was subject to federal tax liens.
In April, 1993, Bonneville commenced a state court action against Green River seeking recovery of an account receivable allegedly owed to Bonneville and for payment for fuel sold and delivered. In August of 1993, the Internal Revenue Service (“IRS”) served a Notice of Levy to Greеn River upon all of Triangle’s property and rights to property. After several inquiries, the IRS notified Green River that the Notice of Levy applied to Bonneville’s interest in the joint venture and that any payments to Bonneville should go to the IRS. In 1995, Green River notified Bonneville that it was dissolving the joint venture effective December 11, 1995. According to Green River, it was dissolving the joint venture pursuant to a clause in the agrеement providing for termination upon the end of the underlying truck stop lease. The IRS reviewed Green River’s dissolution plan and agreed to accept payments of Bonneville’s liquidated interest.
Bonneville then brought an additional claim of wrongful dissolution that was eventually consolidated with the original action. Due to the levies, Green River filed a counterclaim naming the United States as an additionаl defendant and sought declaratory relief with respect to whether the United States or Bonneville was entitled to receive payments related to Bonneville’s joint venture interest. The United States removed the case to federal court. The district court granted the United States’ unopposed motion for summary judgment, thus reducing the tax liens against Triangle to judgment and concluding that Bonneville’s joint venturе interest was subject to the tax lien. The district court also granted summary judgment to Green River after concluding that 26 U.S.C. § 6332(e), which provides immunity to third parties who comply with IRS levies, prevented Bonneville from bringing its state law claims against Green River.
On appeal of that decision, a panel of this Court affirmed the district court “on all issues relating to Green River’s honoring of the federal tax levies ... against Bonneville’s interest in the joint venture.” United States v. Triangle Oil Co., No. 98-4147, slip op. at 10 (10th Cir. Jun.12, 2000) (Aplt.App. at 517). The panel reversed the district court, however, “insofar as it dismissed with prejudice all of Bonneville’s state law claims against Green River,” and stated further that “[o]n this record, we are not persuaded that all of Bonneville’s state law claims are necessarily subsumed in Green River’s section 6332(e) defense.” Id.
On remand, the district court again granted summary judgment tо Green River. The district court began by quoting the panel in the prior appeal where it stated: “Once the levy was served, the IRS effectively stood in the shoes of Bonneville and acquired constructive possession of whatever rights Bonneville had in joint venture assets in the possession of Green River.” See id. at 8-9 (ApltApp. at
Standard of Review
We review the grant of summary judgment de novo, applying the same legal standard used by the district court. L & M Enter., Inc. v. BEI Sensors & Sys. Co.,
Discussion
The district court’s conclusion that Bonneville had no standing to bring claims related to its joint venture interest necessarily involved an interpretation of the effect of the IRS’s levy power against that interest. Although there is no question that the IRS properly exercised its levy power in this ease, we find it necessary to review the relevant statutory provisions to determine the effect its actions had on Bonneville’s joint venture interest. To satisfy a tax deficiency, thе IRS may impose a lien on any “property” or “rights to property” belonging to a taxpayer. 26 U.S.C. § 6321. To complement this provision, § 6331(a) allows “the Secretary to collect such tax ... by levy upon all property and rights to property ... on which there is a lien....” Id. § 6331(a). “The term ‘levy’ as used in this title includes the power of distraint and seizure by any means.” Id. § 6331(b). This.administrative levy power is justified by “the need of the government promptly to secure its revenues.” United States v. Nat’l Bank of Commerce,
“We look initiаlly to state law to determine what rights the taxpayer has in the property the Government seeks to reach, then to federal law to determine whether the taxpayer’s state-delineated rights qualify as ‘property’ or ‘rights to property.’ ” Drye v. United States,
Given the property and rights to property pertaining to Bonneville’s interest in the joint venture, it is clear that the IRS properly accepted the proceeds from the dissolution of the joint venture. Those proceeds represented Bonneville’s share of the surplus of joint venture assets over the joint venture’s liabilities and the levy attached to that surplus. Kaufman,
Requiring closer scrutiny, however, is the question as to whether the acceptance of the plan of dissolution and the subsequent payment of the proceeds to the IRS divested Bonneville of those state-law property rights other than its economic interest in the joint venture. Even if the IRS had foreclosed on Bonneville’s interest in the joint venture, which it did not do, under Utah law Bonneville would still remain a partner and would still be able to exercise management rights and proportionate control over specific partnership property. See Utah Code Ann. §§ 48-1-24, 48-1-25 (partner retains management rights). As such, the fiduciary duty that Green River owed to Bonneville still remained even subsequent to the dissоlution of the joint venture. See Utah Code Ann. § 48-1-18 (fiduciary duty of partner to other partners applies to formation, conduct, or liquidation of the partnership). We cannot say that Bonneville’s state law claims related to its status as a partner, as opposed to its status as owner of an interest in the partnership, were obliterated with the IRS’s collection of the proceeds resulting from the dissolution.
Even were we to assume that Bonneville’s state law claims attached only to its interest in the joint venture, the district court’s conclusion that Bonneville lacked standing because the IRS divested Bonneville of all interest in the joint venture still could not stand. Although the IRS levy power does provide the IRS with abilities “to enforce its tax liens that are greater than those possessed by private secured creditоrs,” it still does not “transfer ownership of the property to the IRS.” Whiting Pools,
Green River advances a number of arguments to persuade us that Bonneville has lost its right to bring its state law claims. To begin, Green River relies on the “law of the case” doctrine to establish that: (1) the IRS levy attached to Bonneville’s interest in the joint venture and the IRS “stood in the shoes of Bonneville and acquired constructive possession of whatever rights Bonneville had,” and (2) the United States succeeded to Bonneville’s right to consent to the dissolution of the joint venture and the valuation of its interest. Aplee. Br. at 8. While we agree that the panel decision in the prior appeal established these points, nothing in our present opinion contradicts those two conclusions. We have already recognized that the IRS had every right to agree to the dissolution plan, but have simply not gone so far as to say that the IRS, by accepting the proceeds of the dissolution, wiped out every property right or cause of action Bonneville had in relation to its joint venture participation. Neither case that Green River cites supports its position that the IRS administrative levy subsumed all of Bonneville’s joint venture property rights. In United States v. Spurgeon,
Green River also relies on an IRS district counsel’s internal memorandum for support of its assertion that Bonneville lacks standing. In that memorandum, thе district counsel stated,
In effect, the Service levied upon the chose in action. Based upon [Spurgeon and other cases], it appears that Bonneville has no standing in its lawsuit, since it is in the lawsuit only as a successor or transferee of Triangle Oil and the Service seized “all the right, title, and interest of Triangle Oil” in the funds that are the subject of the lawsuit.
ApltApp. at 521. In addition to Spurgeon, which we have already distinguished, the district counsel also relied on United States v. Geissler,
Green River also relies on the Kane case to support the district court’s decision that Bonneville lacked standing to bring its state law claims. In Kane, the IRS sent a notice of levy to a trust company that was the custodian of the mutual fund shares in the taxpayer’s Individual Retirement Account (“IRA”).
Nothing in our opinion is inconsistent with the Kane decision. Like the court in Kane, we have recognized that the IRS “stepped into the taxpayer’s shoes” and exercised the same right the taxpayer had available, viz., the right to receive the proceeds upon dissolution. See Kane,
Green River has suggested in its brief as well as in oral argument that Bonneville’s only avenue for relief in this case is a wrongful levy action pursuant to 26 U.S.C. § 7426. That section allows a party claiming an interest in property that has alleg
Finally, Green River asserts that Bonneville’s state law claims should be dismissed because of the protection afforded by 26 U.S.C. § 6332(e). That section provides that an individual who, “upon demand by the Secretary, surrenders ... property or rights to property ... shall be discharged from any obligation or liability to the delinquent taxpayer ... with respect to such property or rights to property arising from such surrender or payment.” 26 U.S.C. § 6332(e). Although the IRS has interpreted the immunity under that section broadly, see 26 C.F.R. § 301.6632-l(c)(2), the language of the statute limits the protection to a party’s actions “arising from such surrender or payment.” 26 U.S.C. § 6332(e). Thus, as the panel concluded in the prior appeal, Green River “is entitled to the protection of section 6332(e),” but only in relation to its “honoring of the federal tax levies.” Triangle Oil, slip op. at 10 (Aplt.App. at 517). On these facts, we decline to extend the immunity afforded under § 6332(e) to the entire series of events that occurred prior to the actual surrender of the dissolution proceeds to the IRS.
Green River cites the “law of the case” doctrine to support its assertion that § 6332(e) immunity applies, but, in this case, we disagree that the doctrine prevents Bonneville from maintaining its state law claims. Courts use “law of the case” to “promote decisional finality” and rely on it to prevent relitigation of an issue already decided in prior proceedings of the same case. Octagon Res., Inc. v. Bonnett Res. Corp. (In re Meridian Reserve, Inc.),
At oral argument, counsel for Bonneville conceded that the amount of money it anticipated from this litigation would never reach the current amount of the levy against the joint venture interest. Furthеr, although the IRS did not file a brief in this appeal, it has notified the clerk of this court by letter that any additional amounts that Bonneville recovers should be paid to the United States up to the full
Accordingly, we REVERSE the district court’s order granting Green River’s motion for summary judgment and REMAND to the district court for further proceedings.
