DEALING WITH THE
IRS COLLECTION DIVISION
THE EXPANDING REACH
OF THE FEDERAL TAX COLLECTOR -- THE
CRAFT AND DRYE DECISIONS ©
Burton J. Haynes,
Attorney at Law1
Nothing in life is certain but death
and taxes, and never more so than now. The
reason is that two recent Supreme Court
decisions expand the reach of the federal
tax collector, and some assets which
were previously safe are now in jeopardy. This
article will discuss several situations
in which the IRS now enjoys enhanced
powers to proceed against the property
of delinquent taxpayers. Specifically,
in the paragraphs below we will consider
the surprising and extremely important
Supreme Court decisions in U.S. v
Craft dealing with tenants by the
entireties property, and in Drye v.
U.S. which addresses the effect of
qualified disclaimers.
Two previous articles in this ongoing
series on dealing with the IRS Collection
Division have explained the nature and
scope of the federal tax lien.2 By
way of a brief review, a "lien" is simply
a legal encumbrance in favor of one party
upon the property of another. In
the case of federal income taxes, the
lien is based on §6321 of the Internal
Revenue Code.3 The
lien arises immediately upon the assessment
of any tax, and continues until the tax
liability is paid in full or becomes
unenforceable by operation of law,4 as
for example upon the expiration of the
ten-year statute of limitations on collections.
The filing of a Notice of Federal Tax
Lien (Form 668) merely announces the
existence of the lien, and is not required
-- the lien itself exists as a matter
of law and can be perfected even without
the filing of a notice. However,
filing has significance in establishing
the IRS's priority against other claimants,
such as purchasers, holders of security
interests or mechanic's liens, and judgment
creditors.5 The
federal tax lien attaches to "all property
and rights to property" of the person
liable for the tax.6 And
it is the key phrase "property and rights
to property" which has been at issue
in the two Supreme Court cases that have
recently reshaped the federal tax collection
landscape.
Though the proposition seems to be under
judicial attack, the question of the
nature and extent of a taxpayer's interest
in property has long been thought to
turn on the law of the state in which
the property is located. Forty
years ago, the Supreme Court explained
this concept in Aquilino v. U.S.,
363 U.S. 509 (1960):
The threshold
question in this case, as in all cases
where the Federal Government asserts
its tax lien, is whether and to what
extent the taxpayer had "property" or "rights
to property" to which the tax lien
could attach. In answering that
question, both federal and state courts
must look to state law, for it has
long been the rule that "in the application
of a federal revenue act, state law
controls in determining the nature
of the legal interest which the taxpayer
had in the property sought to be reached
by the statute." (citations omitted)
While not explicitly overturning Aquilino,
the Supreme Court's recent decisions
signal an ever-diminishing role for state
law in determining whether or not a taxpayer
has something amounting to "property
or rights to property."
U.S. v. Craft
On April 17th, while we were thanking
the tax gods for letting us live through
another filing season, the Supreme Court
dropped a bomb on married taxpayers holding
real estate as "tenants by the entireties." In
Maryland, two or more persons can own
property as "joint tenants" or "tenants
in common." In addition, married
persons can hold property in a special
form of concurrent ownership called "tenants
by the entireties." The historical
benefit of tenants by the entireties
is that a spouse's separate creditors
are barred from encumbering or reaching
the property in any way. This result
is obtained because property held as
tenants by the entireties is not viewed
as being owned by either spouse, but
by a legal construct called the "marital
unity." The Supreme Court has now
decided that this long-established rule
of law is fine for everyone but the Internal
Revenue Service.
The vehicle which the Supreme Court
used to overturn hundreds of years of
statutory and common law was U.S.
v. Craft. The case arose in
Michigan, but the result is equally applicable
in Maryland, Virginia, D.C., and any
other state extending similar protection
to tenants by the entireties property. Here's
the background: In 1972, Don and
Sandra Craft purchased real estate in
Michigan. They failed to file tax
returns for 1979 through 1986, and in
1988 the IRS made an assessment against
Don under its substitute for return (or "SFR")
procedures.7 Although
the Crafts were married, joint filing
status is an election which only taxpayers
can make. Don was the one with
the income, so the SFR assessment was
solely against him. As a result,
his wife Sandra was not liable for the
tax. In March 1989, the IRS filed
a notice of federal tax lien against
Don, and five months later the Crafts
transferred the real estate from joint
ownership into Sandra's separate name. Finally,
although this isn't even mentioned in
the Supreme Court's opinion, in 1992
Don Craft, an attorney, filed bankruptcy
and received a discharge.8 The
bankruptcy discharge meant that the IRS's
only way to collect the tax was to pursue
its pre-petition lien.9
All of this percolated to the surface
when Sandra entered into a contract to
sell the property and the title company
refused to insure the buyer's title unless
the IRS released its lien. The
IRS agreed to do so, but only if the
husband's half of the proceeds was placed
in escrow pending a determination as
to the Service's right to the money. Sandra
sued to quiet title and recovered the
escrowed funds, and the IRS raised two
arguments, both of which were contrary
to the law as we have long understood
it here in Maryland. First, the
IRS asserted that the transfer of title
from tenants by the entireties to the
wife alone was a fraudulent conveyance. Second,
the IRS claimed that its lien attached
to the husband's interest in the tenants
by the entireties property as of the
date of assessment. The District
Court, siding with the IRS but adopting
a slightly different legal theory, found
that the tax lien attached to the property
when the transfer to Sandra destroyed
the tenancy by the entireties. Having
so ruled, the Court did not have to decide
the fraudulent conveyance issue.
On appeal, the Sixth Circuit reversed. Applying
the law as it had been consistently interpreted
in Michigan (and in Maryland, D.C. and
Virginia), the Court held that under
tenancy by the entireties the husband
owned no separate interest in the property,
and he therefore had nothing to which
the federal tax lien could attach. As
a result, the Sixth Circuit sent the
case back to the District Court for consideration
of the fraudulent conveyance issue.
On remand, the District Court held that
since the Sixth Circuit had determined
that Don did not own anything to which
the lien could attach, there couldn't
have been a fraudulent conveyance. In
other words, the transfer from joint
name to the wife's name did no violence
to the IRS's lien interest in the property
because in fact the IRS had no lien interest
in any event. However, the District
Court held that the husband's use of
his own funds to make mortgage payments
on property which was legally beyond
the reach of his separate creditors violated
the Michigan fraudulent conveyance statute. This
did not cause the transfer to be set
aside, but the Court awarded the IRS
an amount equal to the mortgage payments
the husband had made.
At this point, both sides again appealed
to the Sixth Circuit, which this time
affirmed the trial court's new positions,
including the conclusion that the husband's
mortgage payments constituted fraudulent
conveyances recoverable by the IRS. Finally,
on April 17, 2002, the Supreme Court
reversed the Sixth Circuit and adopted
the IRS's original position that the
lien had attached to the tenants by the
entireties property. The Court
also strongly hinted that in any future
case it would hold that an insolvent
husband's transfer of his interest in
tenants by the entireties property to
his wife constitutes a fraudulent conveyance.
The Supreme Court reached these conclusions,
while purporting to honor the role of
state law, by noting that as to tenants
by the entireties property Michigan law
gives each spouse important legal rights. These
include the right to use the property,
and to exclude others from doing so. The
absence of the right to convey ownership,
which clearly the spouses cannot accomplish
except by acting together, was held not
to be determinative. And, the Court
reasoned, once state law gives a taxpayer
rights with respect to property, that
fact is sufficient to permit the attachment
of the federal tax lien to the property. Justice
Thomas, joined by Justice Scalia, argued
that this was a sea change in the relationship
between federal and state law on this
issue:
B)orrowing
the metaphor of property as a bundle
of sticks, a collection of individual
rights which, in certain combinations
constitute property . . . the Court
proposes that so long as sufficient
sticks in the bundle of property belong
to a delinquent taxpayer, the lien
can attach as if the property itself
belonged to the taxpayer. This
amorphous construct ignores the primacy
of state law in defining property interests,
eviscerates the statutory distinction
between property and rights to property
. . . and conflicts with an unbroken
line of authority from this Court,
the lower courts, and the IRS.
The situation in which one spouse owes
tax but the other does not can come about
in a variety of ways:
- H owes taxes prior to the marriage. (Marriage
does not make W liable for H's taxes,
nor does it subject her separate property
to H's tax lien.)
- H and W file their tax returns "married
filing separately," with only one spouse
owing tax.
- H is assessed the trust fund recovery
penalty, but W had nothing to do with
H's business and is not liable.
- H and W file a joint return but W
is later exonerated under the IRC §6015
innocent spouse rules.10
- H and W file a joint return but H
later discharges his liability in bankruptcy.
In all these situations, real estate
held by husband and wife as tenants by
the entireties was heretofore safe from
attachment by either spouse's separate
creditors.11 And
after the Supreme Court's decision in Craft that
is still the case for all creditors except
your friendly, neighborhood federal tax
collector. The Sheriff of Nottingham
would be jealous.
Drye v. U.S.
The second Supreme Court case worthy
of discussion is Drye v. U.S.,
528 U.S. 49 (1999). This case was
decided December 7, 1999, and was relied
upon by the Court in its analysis in Craft. Drye involved
an effort to thwart the IRS through a "qualified
disclaimer." For those who don't
do probate work and are not familiar
with the term, a disclaimer is an election
by an heir to turn his back on property
to which he would otherwise be entitled
under a will or under the applicable
laws of intestacy. Here are the
facts: Mrs. Irma Drye died intestate
(i.e. without a will) in 1994. She
had one son, Rohn Drye, and he was appointed
as administrator of her estate. Under
the Arkansas intestacy statute, her property
would have passed to him. Unfortunately,
Mr. Drye had serious federal tax problems,
and if he had distributed the money from
his mother's estate to himself, the IRS
would have soon relieved him of it.
So what's a creative guy to do? Mr.
Drye (or more likely his lawyer) came
up with the bright idea of disclaiming
his interest in the estate. Like
most states, Arkansas law provides that
when an heir disclaims, his or her entitlement
passes instead to whoever would have
received it had the person disclaiming
predeceased the decedent. In Mr.
Drye's case, this meant that his mother's
assets would pass to his daughter instead
of to him. This was arranged, and
upon receiving the distribution from
her grandmother's estate, Mr. Drye's
daughter promptly put the money into
a trust under which she and her parents
were the beneficiaries. Arkansas
law provides that the creditors of a
person disclaiming an interest in an
estate cannot reach the assets thus disclaimed,
which is consistent with the legal fiction
that the disclaimant died prior to the
decedent.
The similarity to Craft is that
the federal courts looked to state law
to determine whether the taxpayer had
something amounting to "property or rights
to property," and then had to decide
whether to honor state law purporting
to put such property beyond the reach
of the taxpayer's creditors. Remember,
the pattern here is that once a property
right is deemed to exist, any provision
of state law preventing creditors from
attaching such property is ineffective
against the IRS. The difference
which was ignored by the majority opinion
in Craft is that with tenants
by the entireties property, state law
specifies that neither spouse has a separately
cognizable property interest, whereas
in the case of a disclaimer the party
disclaiming clearly has a property right
which state law simply permits him to
abandon and thereby direct to whoever
would have inherited such property had
he not survived the decedent.
The Supreme Court, affirming the Eighth
Circuit, found that Mr. Drye had a valuable
and enforceable right to his mother's
estate, and that his effort to ignore
this right by disclaiming it did not
mean that it didn't exist. Indeed,
the fact that Mr. Drye could decide whether
to accept the property or allow it to
pass to another evidenced a dominion
and control sufficient to support the
attachment of the lien. In the
Court's words, "(j)ust as exempt status
under state law does not bind the federal
collector, so federal tax law is not
struck blind by a disclaimer."12
It should be noted that the Court's
analysis in Drye, especially given
its reaffirmation in Craft, can
be applied to situations beyond the disclaimer
at issue in that case. So for example,
the analysis confirms that property held
in a so-called "spendthrift trust" is
subject to attack by the IRS. Such
a trust typically gives financial benefits
to a beneficiary, but then seeks to restrict
the rights of creditors to reach those
benefits. However, a trust instrument
can only determine the nature and extent
of the beneficiary's right to the trust's
corpus and income; it cannot control
the effect of the federal tax lien on
that right. Thus, if the trust
gives the beneficiary enforceable rights
to the trust's income or corpus, any
provision of state law or of the trust
instrument itself purporting to place
that right beyond the reach of the beneficiary's
creditors is generally not effective
against the federal tax lien, regardless
of whether the applicable state law recognizes
spendthrift trusts as against other creditors.13 This
proposition was confirmed by the Court's
opinion in Drye, which included
the following explanatory footnote:
In recognizing
that state-law rights that have pecuniary
value and are transferable fall within §6321,
we do not mean to suggest that transferability
is essential to the existence of "property" or "rights
to property" under that section. For
example, although we do not here decide
the matter, we note that an interest
in a spendthrift trust has been held
to constitute "property for purposes
of §6321" even though the beneficiary
may not transfer that interest to third
parties.
So in this context as well, state law
protections effective against most other
creditors are wholly ineffective against
the IRS.14
Conclusion
While the Drye decision was not
unexpected and was at least consistent
with previous cases interpreting disclaimers
and even spendthrift trusts, Craft was
a real shock, upsetting hundreds of years
of settled law. As Justice Thomas
observed in his dissent,
. . . the
Court nullifies (insofar as federal
taxes are concerned, at least) a form
of property ownership that was of particular
benefit to the stay-at-home spouse
or mother. She is overwhelmingly
likely to be the survivor that obtains
title to the encumbered property; and
she (as opposed to her business-world
husband) is overwhelmingly unlikely
to be the source of the individual
indebtedness against which a tenancy
by the entirety protects. It
is regrettable that the Court has eliminated
a large part of this traditional protection
retained by many States.
In effectively representing our clients,
we must be aware of this major expansion
of the IRS's ability to reach previously
protected assets. Once again, the
Court has reminded us that state law
is not federal law, and that we confuse
the two at our peril.
1 Mr.
Haynes is an attorney with
offices in Burke, VA,
and Burtonsville, MD, and is a member of the Maryland Society
of Accountants' Newsletter
Committee. From 1973
to 1981 he was a Special
Agent with the IRS Criminal
Investigation Division
in Baltimore, and in 1980
was named "Criminal
Investigator of the Year" by
the Association of Federal
Investigators. He
specializes in civil and
criminal tax disputes and
litigation, IRS collection
problems, and the tax aspects
of bankruptcy and divorce. (phone
703-913-7500; website www.bjhaynes.com)
2 The
Freestate Accountant, Vol 37,
No. 4 and No. 5.
3 In
addition to the general tax lien,
there are special liens for estate
and gift taxes. See IRC §6324.
6 IRC §6321;
Regs. §301.6321-1. See
also Glass City Bank v. U.S.,
326 U.S. 265 (1945).
8 Craft
v. U.S., 140 F.3d 638 (6th
Cir. 1998).
9 A
discharge does not disturb a secured
creditor's lien on property owned
by the debtor at the time the petition
is filed. See the author's
article on discharging tax debts
in bankruptcy in The Freestate
Accountant, Vol. 36, No. 1.
10 See The
Freestate Accountant, Vol.
35, No. 4 and Vol. 37, No. 3, for
the author's articles on the innocent
spouse rules.
11 State
v. Friedman, 283 Md. 701, 393
A.2d 1356 (1978).
12 This
was consistent with a previous disclaimer
case, U.S. v. Irvine, 511
U.S. 224 (1994), cited in both Drye and Craft.
13 Maryland
enforces spendthrift trusts with
certain exceptions. See Watterson
v. Edgerly, 388 A.2d 934, 935-36
(Md. Ct. Spec. App. 1978). In
general, if income is withheld by
the trustee, a beneficiary may sue
to get it; accordingly, there is
a cognizable property right, and
the federal tax lien can attach.
14 The
ability of the IRS to leap over state
laws protecting assets from creditors
can also be seen in the treatment
of retirement savings held in IRAs,
401(k) accounts and pension plans. See
the author's article on this subject
in The Freestate Accountant,
Vol. 37, No. 6.