A. J. Bankhead v. Maryland Casualty Co.

197 F. Supp. 879, 9 A.F.T.R.2d (RIA) 642, 1961 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 5723
CourtDistrict Court, E.D. Louisiana
DecidedSeptember 26, 1961
DocketCiv. A. 2131
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 197 F. Supp. 879 (A. J. Bankhead v. Maryland Casualty Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, E.D. Louisiana primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
A. J. Bankhead v. Maryland Casualty Co., 197 F. Supp. 879, 9 A.F.T.R.2d (RIA) 642, 1961 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 5723 (E.D. La. 1961).

Opinion

J. SKELLY WEIGHT, District Judge.

This suit in interpleader involves the sum of $11,208.39 paid into the registry of the court by Airtrol Engineering Company, representing retained percentages on a subcontract between Airtrol and the Yerby Tin Shop. Upon default by Yer-by, his surety, Maryland Casualty Company, was called upon to complete the subcontract and now claims the retained funds. The United States has assessed withholding taxes against Yerby and it likewise claims the fund. While the representative of Yerby’s estate and a ma-terialman are interpleaded, the dispute is essentially between Maryland and the United States.

On October 29, 1956, Airtrol signed a contract with the Louisiana State Authority to provide air conditioning facilities for Louisiana State University at Baton Rouge. Airtrol subcontracted the sheet metal work for the air conditioning to Yerby on December 12, 1956. Maryland executed' a performance bond for Yerby’s contract on November 1, 1956. Pursuant to this bond Yerby assigned all payments due or to become due under the contract to Maryland in case of default. Payment terms for the Airtrol-L. S. U. contract and the Airtrol-Yerby contract both provided for thirty-day estimates of work completed and retention of percentages until completion and acceptance of the work.

With the work 95 per cent' complete, Yerby encountered financial difficulties. On January 3, 1958, Airtrol formally put Yerby in default and called upon Maryland to complete the work. On January 6, 1958, Yerby also called upon Maryland to perform. On January 8, 1958, the United States assessed withholding taxes against Yerby in the amount of $13,988.-01. A later assessment on March 3,1958, will be disregarded since the January 8 assessment would exhaust the fund.

After Yerby’s default Maryland expended $21,911.49 in completing the work and satisfying prior claims arising before Yerby’s default. The job was accepted by the Louisiana State Authority on February 6, 1958. On the same day R. T. Zimmerman filed a mechanic’s lien pursuant to LSA-R.S. 9:4801 and LSA-R.S. 38:2241. 1 A similar lien was. filed by John T. Megison, a foreman, on March 2,1958. Both the Zimmerman and the Megison claims arose before default. Maryland satisfied these claims and asserts the lien rights arising thereunder by subrogation.

On default the retainage on the Yerby contract amounted to $11,208.39. Being faced with several claimants to this fund, Airtrol filed this interpleader.

Although Maryland’s claim rests on three grounds, its principal reliance is on the proposition that the retainage in suit never became the property of Yerby and consequently there was nothing to which the federal tax lien could attach. The United States claims that Yerby had a right to the retained percentages which was perfected on completion of the job, and, under applicable federal law, its claim is prior to all other liens or claims on the fund. '

The contest between the federal tax collector and private claimants for various funds, while of relatively recent origin, has a complexity beyond its years. 2 When the fund involved is retained percentages held by an owner in the presence of a defaulting contractor and an incom- *882 píete building, the contest is even more recent but of comparable complexity, involving, as it does, a host of decisions interpreting priorities, 3 relation back, 4 the "no debt” theory, 5 and, more recently, the application of state property law and federal priority law. 6 From the older cases, and now from recent Supreme Court decisions, certain general principles emerge.

Federal tax liens are not property rights; they are claims to property which require perfecting as do other claims. 7 Being statutory liens, 8 they take preference over open accounts and inchoate and unperfected liens. 9 Likewise, assignments, without more, although prior in time to federal tax assessments, are subordinate to the tax lien because of the greater dignity of the tax lien under federal law. 10

Private claimants may assume a variety of positions. They may be simple creditors, or holders of mechanic’s liens, or assignees, or sureties, or subrogees to private liens, or subrogees to private rights. For a private lienor to take preference over a federal tax lien, its lien must be perfected by prior rec-ordation, 11 or other “perfecting” device cognizable by federal law. Its priority may not be based on a theory of relation back to the date of creation of the original debt. 12 For a private assignee to take preference over a federal tax lien, he apparently must reduce his assignment to judgment, although this is not altogether certain. 13 For a surety to assert subrogative rights to property of parties other than the taxpayer, the surety must show that the property does not belong to the taxpayer against whom the federal tax lien is asserted. 14

In balancing these various claims, it must first be determined whether the taxpayer owns the property against which the federal tax lien is asserted according to state law. 15 If it is determined that the fund in question is the property of the taxpayer, then the various claims to the fund must be ranked according to federal law. 16

*883 . In the present ease, the fund involved' is retained percentages withheld by the general contractor, Airtrol, from the subcontractor, Yerby, and claimed by the federal tax collector and the subcontractor’s surety. The surety’s principal claim, and the one upon which it must stand, is that the retained percentages are the property of Airtrol since the owner, or as in this ease the general contractor, has the right, under Louisiana law, to apply retained percentages to the completion of the work. Thus, only the balance remaining after completion, if any, belongs to the subcontractor and is' subject to the federal tax lien. The surety, if it completes the work, is subrogated to the owner’s rights, and thus the portion of the retained percentages used in completion of the work belongs to the surety.

The respective rights among owners, contractors, contractors’ creditors, and sureties to retained percentages when a job is incomplete have been spelled out by the Louisiana courts and legislature in rather specific terms. The statute creating the Louisiana counterpart to federal interpleader, the concursus proceeding, states in part:

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197 F. Supp. 879, 9 A.F.T.R.2d (RIA) 642, 1961 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 5723, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/a-j-bankhead-v-maryland-casualty-co-laed-1961.