delivered the opinion of the Court.
The issue here is whether, in a state proceeding under a general assignment for benefit of creditors, Section 3466 of the Revised Statutes, 31 U. S. C. § 191, gives priority to a claim of the United States over a landlord’s lien and a municipal tax lien.
Mrs. Oeland Rоman, the assignor, operated a restaurant in Danville, Virginia, on premises leased from respondent Waddill, Holland & Flinn, Inc. On June 19, 1941, she executed a general deed of assignment to a.trustee for *354 the benefit of creditors, specifically conveying all personal property, fixtures and equipment used by her in the conduct of the restaurant and located on the premises. This property remained on the premises until sold by the trustee on July 12, 1941. After deduction of appropriate administrative expenses, a sum of $1,407.29 remained. Four creditors claimed priority of payment from this amount.
(1) The United States claimed the sum of $1,559.63, plus interest, representing certain unpaid federal unemployment compensation taxes and a debt arising out of a Federal Housing Administration transaction.
(2) The Virginia Unemployment Compensation Commission made a tax claim of $66.38, plus interest. The Commission’s claim, however, was conceded to be subordínatelo thаt of the United States and need not be further considered here.
(3) The City of Danville claimed $300.55 as personal property taxes still unpaid. On July 2,1941, the City Collector distrained on all of the property on the leased premises.
(4) The landlord, Waddill, Holland & Flinn, Inc., claimed $1,500.00 for six months’ rent due and to become due. The assignor’s lease from this firm ran for five years beginning January 1, 1937, at a monthly rental of $250.00. On July 1, 1941, twelve days after the deed of assignment was executed, the firm obtained the issuance of a distress warrant for 3 2/5 months’ рast due rent and an attachment for 2 3/5 months’ future installments of rent. On the same day, the firm levied the warrant and attachment on the assignor’s property located on the leased premises.
The trustee under the general assignment filed a petition in the Corporation Court of Danville, reciting the various claims and requesting advice as to the proper distribution. That court held that the landlord was entitled to priority in payment over the claims of the United States and the
*355
Virginia Unеmployment Compensation Commission but that its claim was subordinate to that of the City of Dan-ville for taxes in the sum of $222.31. On appeal by the United States, the Supreme Court of Appeals of Virginia affirmed this order of distribution.
Section 3466 of the Revised Statutes provides in pertinent part that “the debts due to the United States shall be first satisfied” whenever any person indebted to the United States is insolvent or, “not having sufficient property to pay all his debts, makes a voluntary assignment thereof.” We hold that this statute clearly subordinates the claims of both the landlord and the municipality to that of the United States. The judgment of the court below must accordingly be reversed.
The words of § 3466 are broad and sweeping and, on their face, admit of no exception to the priority of claims of the United States.
Thelusson
v.
Smith,
The landlord rests its claim upon certain provisions of the Virginia Code of 1936. Sections 5519 and 5523 authorize a landlord to levy distress for six months’ rent upon “any goods of the lessee . . . found on the prеmises, or which may have been removed therefrom not more than thirty days. . . . for not more than six months’ rent if the premises are in a city or town.” Section 5524 provides that the goods of the tenant on leased premises in a city or town may not be removed by alienor or purchaser, nor taken under legal process, save “on the terms of paying to -the person entitled to the rent so much as is in arrear, and securing' to him so- much as is to become due,” not to exceed six months’ rent. Other sections provide for officers making the distress under warrant from a justice; founded upon an affidavit of the person claiming the rent, and for- such officers to make returns of their actions and proceedings upon such warrants. Provisions are also made for legal proceedings looking, toward the possession and sale of the property to satisfy the debt.
The Supreme Court of Appeals of Virginia has here held that these sections “give the landlord a lien which is fixed and specific, and not one which is merely inchoate, and "that such a lien exists independent of the right of distress or attachment; which aré merely remedies- for enforcing it.”
Tested by its legal effect under Virginia law, the landlord’s lien in this instance appeared to serve “merely as a caveat of a more perfect lien to come.” New York v. Maclay, supra, 294. As of the date of the voluntary assignment, it was neither specific nor perfected. It gave the landlord only a general power over unspecified property rather than an actuаl interest in a definitive portion or portions thereof.
Specificity was clearly lacking as to the lien on June 19, 1941, the date of the assignment. On that day it was still uncertain whether the landlord would ever assert and insist upon its statutory lien. Until that was donе it was impossible to determine the particular six months’ rent, or a proportion thereof, upon which the lien was based. The lien did not relate to any particular six months’ rent but could attach only for the rent which might be due at or after the time when the lien was asserted.
Wades
v.
Figgatt,
Nor was the statutory lien perfected as a matter of actual fact, regardless of how complete it may have been as a matter of state law. The tenant was divested оf neither title nor possession by the silent existence of the landlord’s statutory lien on the date of the assignment. Only after the lien was actually asserted and an attachment or a distraint leveled, enabling the landlord to satisfy his claim out of the seized goods, could it be argued that such goods *359 severed themselves from the general and free assets of the tenant from which the claims of the United States were entitled to priority of payment. Prior to that time, the lien operated to do no more than prevent the removal of goods from the premises by certain classes of persons, Va. Code § 5524, and give the landlord priority in distribution under state law provided that the goods remained on the premises. Such a potential, inchoate lien could not disturb the clear command of § 3466 of the Revised Statutes. Something more than a “caveat of a more perfect lien to come” was necessary.
The lien of the City of Danville stands in no better position insofar as the claim of the United States is concerned. The muniсipality contends that it assessed taxes on specific items of furniture and equipment pursuant to annual levies made by the city council and that a lien attached to such property on January 1, 1941, by operation of state law. It claims that this lien attached before the claim of the United States was acquired and hence had priority.
Under Virginia law, however, a municipal tax confers a lien on personal property which enables the city to follow it whеrever it may be taken only if the assessment is specifically made on such property.
Drewry
v.
Baugh & Sons,
Reversed.
