These four cases have been consolidated for the purpose of appeal and are presented on an agreed statement of facts. The appeals are by the United States of America from judgments involving the relative priority of an attachment lien of defendant Morrison, and a subsequent lien of the United States for taxes.
George Styliano and his wife, Genell Styliano, owned four parcels of real property in San Diego County. Three of these were mortgaged, one to Robert M. Rewick, et al., one to Robert M. DeWitt, et al., and one to Ray C. Cavell, et al. The fourth parcel had been sold and conveyed by the Stylianos to Alberta Winther and Margaret G. Young, and there was a balance owing to the Stylianos on the purchase price.
The Stylianos were indebted also to defendant Wilton M. Morrison on a promissory note. On October 17,1946, Morrison brought an action against the Stylianos on this note and on the same day he procured the issuance of a writ of attachment in the action, pursuant to which, during the month of October, 1946, the interests of the Stylianos in the various parcels of real estate involved in the four actions were attached. Morrison recovered a judgment against the Stylianos in the sum of $78,938.55 on April 24, 1947, and recorded an abstract thereof in the office of the County Recorder of San Diego County on May 2,1947.
After the levy of the Morrison attachment, but before the recovery of his judgment and the recording of the abstract, certificates of assessment of federal taxes were received in the office of the Collector of Internal Revenue at Los Angeles, and notices of federal tax liens against all property belonging to the Stylianos were filed in the office of the County Recorder of San Diego County. The notices were filed for record on December 3, 1946, December 5, 1946, December 10, 1946, and January 22,1948.
*611 In the Winther case the action was to determine the interests of the purchasers in the property, and the balance thereon had been deposited in court. The trial court ordered that the $1,500 so deposited be paid to Morrison in satisfaction pro tanto of the judgment lien, and held that the United States had a lien on the balance which was inferior to that of Morrison. The Rewick, DeWitt and Cavell cases were actions for foreclosure of mortgages and the plaintiffs therein recovered judgments in which the court ordered the mortgaged property sold and the proceeds applied as follows: First, to the payment of the respective mortgage judgments and costs; second, to the satisfaction of the Morrison judgment lien pro tanto; third, any balance to be paid to the United States on its federal tax lien. In each of the cases Morrison asserted his lien by virtue of the attachment and judgment and no question is raised as to the regularity of the attachment proceedings or judgment, or the correctness of the judgments of the trial court respecting the claims of the plaintiffs in any of the four actions.
The sole question involved on this appeal is whether the court erred in holding that the tax claims of the United States were subordinate to the attachment and judgment lien of defendant Morrison.
Section 542a of the Code of Civil Procedure provides in part that ‘ ‘ [t] he lien of the attachment on real property attaches and becomes effective upon the recording of a copy of the writ, together with a description of the property attached, and a notice that it is attached with the county recorder of the county wherein said real property is situate. ’ ’ It is further provided that “ [t]he attachment . . . shall be a lien upon all real property attached for a period of three years after the date of levy unless sooner released or discharged either as provided in this chapter, or by dismissal of the action. ” Since it is conceded that the attachment herein was properly issued and properly levied upon the property, it is evident that Morrison perfected a lien thereon which secured and insured the payment to him of any judgment that was recovered by him in the action, insofar as the property attached could be applied to the judgment.
(Halstead
v.
Halstead,
The lien of the United States in the instant action was placed upon the property of the Stylianos after the attachment lien was perfected under the laws of California. It is the position of the United States that at the time its lien attached, Morrison had only a potential right of a contingent lien and that such a lien is inchoate and is not sufficiently specific or perfected to prevent a subsequent federal tax lien from attaching to the property with priority. In support of its position the United States relies on sections 3670, 3671, and 3672 of the Internal Revenue Code [53 Stats. 448 et seq.], 26 United States Code Annotated. Section 3670 provides: “If any person liable to pay any tax neglects or refuses to pay the same after demand, the amount (including any interest, penalty, additional amount, or addition to such tax, together with any costs that may accrue in addition thereto) 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."
Section 3671 is as follows: “Unless another date is specifically fixed by law, the lien shall arise at the time the assessment list was received by the collector and shall continue until the liability for such amount is satisfied or becomes unenforceable by reason of lapse of time. ’ ’
Section 3672 provides, with respect to the liens referred to in sections 3670 and 3671, that: “Such lien shall not be valid *613 as against any mortgagee, pledgee, purchaser, or judgment creditor until notice thereof has been filed by the collector-(1) In accordance with the law of the State or Territory in which the property subject to the lien is situated, whenever the State or Territory has by law provided for the filing of such notice; ...”
Under the provisions of section 3671,
supra,
the tax lien in this ease arose on December 3d, 5th and 10th, 1946, and on January 22, 1948, the dates on which notices of tax liens were filed for record in San Diego County. It is argued by the United States that when its lien arose Morrison was not a mortgagee, a pledgee, a purchaser or a judgment creditor, and that his attachment lien is subordinate to the tax lien. In support of its argument appellant relies principally upon the case of
MacKenzie
v.
United States,
The Hens created by sections 3670 and 3671 of the Internal Revenue Code are general and not priority Hens.
(Board of Supervisors of La. State University
v.
Hart,
Whatever interest the Stylianos had in the real property involved, at the time of the tax Hen, was subject to the attachment, and any mortgage or conveyance by them would be subject to the rights of an attaching creditor. It foHows that the tax Hen attached to whatever ownership the Stylianos had in the property at the time the Hen arose and that the government could acquire only such title as the Stylianos then had. As was said in
New York Cas. Co.
v.
Zwerner,
It should also be noted that while section 3672 of the Internal Revenue Code provides that the tax lien shall not be valid as against any mortgagee, pledgee, purchaser or judgment creditor until notice has been filed by the collector, it does not provide that the mortgagee shall be one who has recorded his mortgage; it does not expressly state that after notice is filed the lien in favor of the government shall be subject to all existing mortgages, or that the lien shall be superior to them. The priority of liens as between mortgagees, pledgees, purchasers and judgment creditors is not therein provided for. As we read the section its purpose is to afford notice to those named, of the existence of tax claims, before dealing with the property.
(Exchange Nat. Bank of Tulsa
v.
Davy,
In
Board of Supervisors of La. University
v.
Hart,
The court held that the nature of the rights flowing from an attachment in that state (Louisiana) must be determined by the law of that state; that the lien of the attachment when recognized by judgment relates back to the date of the seizure and is superior to or primes any intervening mortgages, liens, encumbrances or purchases; that while a lien and privilege resulting from an attachment in its strictest sense is not a judgment, it is specific and attaches to the priority from the moment of the seizure and is superior to a lien, mortgage or privilege thereafter arising and the situation is not altered if the judgment recognizing the attachment is rendered subsequent to the intervening lien, mortgage or privilege; that the tax lien of the United States attached to the property of Smith (against whom the assessment was levied) in the condition in which the property was at the time the lien arose; that at the time Smith’s property was attached by the Louisiana State University it was in the custody of the court and that the tax lien was subject to the attachment lien. The court considered the MacKenzie case, supra, but did not consider *615 it to be controlling as the tax lien in that ease arose prior to the issuance of the attachment.
In
United States
v.
Yates
(Tex.Civ.App.),
In
United States
v.
52.11 Acres of Land,
The rights acquired by Morrison by virtue of his attachment at a time when the property was free of tax liens must be determined by the law of California.
(Gray
v.
Little,
Judgments affirmed.
Griffin, Acting P. J., concurred.
Appellant’s petition for a hearing by the Supreme Court was denied November 14,1949.
