Stegenga v. Department of Treasury

445 N.W.2d 495, 179 Mich. App. 307
CourtMichigan Court of Appeals
DecidedAugust 8, 1989
DocketDocket 110329
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 445 N.W.2d 495 (Stegenga v. Department of Treasury) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Michigan Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Stegenga v. Department of Treasury, 445 N.W.2d 495, 179 Mich. App. 307 (Mich. Ct. App. 1989).

Opinion

Sawyer, J.

Defendant appeals from an order of the circuit court permanently enjoining it from seizing a liquor license for a bar and restaurant which was formerly owned by plaintiffs and transferred pursuant to an installment sale of the establishment. Defendant sought to attach the liquor license to collect tax liens against the transferee of the license, Qualey-Reid, Inc. Plaintiffs have retaken possession of the bar and restaurant and entered into an agreement to resell it to another party, including a transfer of the license. We affirm.

Plaintiffs sold the bar and restaurant known as the "Saw Mill,” located in Traverse City, to Qualey-Reid in 1981. Plaintiffs financed a large portion of the sale price and retained a security interest in the furniture, fixtures, equipment, inventory, and accounts receivable. Plaintiffs perfected this security interest by filing a financing statement with the Secretary of State. The liquor license was not listed in the financing statement. Plaintiffs assert that the liquor license was not included in the security agreement or financing statement because of the restrictions imposed by the Liquor Control Commission’s Rule 19, being 1979 AC, R 436.1119, subsection 3 of which prohibited a security agreement from including the license or alcoholic liquor.

Qualey-Reid neglected to pay state sales and withholding taxes and defendant filed tax liens against Qualey-Reid for the delinquent taxes. Meanwhile, Qualey-Reid also defaulted upon its *310 purchase agreement with plaintiffs and plaintiffs retook possession of the bar and restaurant on August 21, 1986. By agreement entered into on that date, Qualey-Reid agreed to return possession of the bar and restaurant to plaintiffs and cooperate in having the liquor license transferred to plaintiffs or their designee. Plaintiffs also agreed to sell the bar and restaurant and transfer the liquor license to a third party, pending, of course, approval by the Liquor Control Commission. Plaintiffs gave notice of their plans to defendant, which announced its intention to seize the liquor license and enforce its tax liens. In response, plaintiffs brought the instant action to enjoin defendant from interfering with the operation of the bar and restaurant and from seizing the liquor license or other assets of the bar and restaurant.

The question before us appears to be one of first impression, namely, whether defendant can place a tax lien on a liquor license. Defendant argues that a liquor license is a property interest subject to a tax lien, citing a number of federal cases. Plaintiffs respond that the trial court correctly concluded that, while there is a property interest in a liquor license for due process considerations, there is not a property interest such that a tax lien may be attached to a license. We do not believe that we must resolve this question, as the circumstances of this case allow us to conclude that defendant may not attach its tax lien to the liquor license involved.

As previously noted, the Liquor Control Commission’s Rule 19 at the time of the sale by plaintiff to Qualey-Reid prohibited attachment of a security interest to a liquor license. This Court, however, has recognized that a licensee who sells his establishment and transfers his liquor license to the vendee may, as part of the transaction, enter into *311 a contract with the purchaser for a reassignment of the liquor license to the vendor in the event of a default on the installment sales contract. See Bunn v Liquor Control Comm, 125 Mich App 84, 92; 335 NW2d 913 (1983). This Court’s decision did not, however, upset the rule that a security interest in the license cannot be granted. Id. Furthermore, it also noted that the transfer of the license would still be subject to approval by the Liquor Control Commission. Id. at 92-93.

In the case at bar, a major thrust of defendant’s argument is that its tax lien should take priority over any interest by plaintiffs in a reassignment of the license to themselves since their security interest in the license was not listed in the security agreement or financing statement. Defendant dismisses plaintiffs’ argument regarding Rule 19 by arguing that Rule 19 is invalid in light of the provisions of the Uniform Commercial Code which control the filing of financing statements. We believe that defendant’s argument is disingenuous.

At the time plaintiffs sold their establishment and agreed to the transfer of their liquor license to Qualey-Reid, a rule promulgated by the Liquor Control Commission prohibited plaintiffs from taking a security interest in the license. Thus, it is entirely reasonable and expected that the liquor license would not be listed by plaintiffs in the security agreement or on the financing statement. Yet, the state now argues that plaintiffs’ compliance with that rule should work to their detriment by allowing the state to have a higher priority claim against the license than do plaintiffs. Regardless of the validity of Rule 19, we do not believe that equity would permit defendant to now argue that Rule 19 is invalid and plaintiffs’ compliance with that rule should work to their detriment.

*312 Although defendant and the Liquor Control Commission are separate divisions of the state government, they are, nevertheless, both part of the executive branch of the government of the State of Michigan. As such, we believe that equity prohibits the government from, on the one hand, promulgating a rule and, on the other hand, denying the validity of that rule to the detriment of a person who complied with the rule. That is, the government is estopped from denying the validity of its own rule where to hold the rule invalid would work to the detriment of a private party. It makes no difference that it may have been a different department, division, bureau, or commission which promulgated the rule.

Indeed, the federal courts have recognized the existence of an equitable lien on behalf of a transferee of a liquor license where Rule 19 prohibited the transferee from taking a security interest. See In the Matter of Gullifor, 47 BR 450 (ED Mich, 1985). Turning to the case at bar, although the liquor license was not listed on the security agreement or financing statement, the security agreement and financing statement do make clear that plaintiffs intended to retain a security interest in all of the assets to the extent permitted by law. Additionally, plaintiffs have represented that the purchase agreement between themselves and Qualey-Reid provided for a reassignment of the liquor license in the event of default on the installment sales contract, though we have been unable to find a copy of that purchase agreement in the lower court record and cannot confirm this fact. 1

In sum, we believe that, since a promulgated rule of the state provided that petitioners could not retain a security interest in the liquor license, *313 the state cannot now seek to benefit from the fact that plaintiffs did not retain a security interest in that liquor license.

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Bluebook (online)
445 N.W.2d 495, 179 Mich. App. 307, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/stegenga-v-department-of-treasury-michctapp-1989.