The Observer wrote:Ok, I am confused. Who, if anyone, was foreclosing?
The IRS....federal tax liens.
Maybe Prof will be kind enough to address whether the Isom ruliing would allow the IRS to levy on the accounts.
To the extent that the IRS assessed a given tax and filed a notice of federal tax lien prior to the date of commencement of the case (May 29, 2012) in the proper place or places, the government could ask for relief from the stay and, if the stay were lifted, generally could seize assets to satisfy the tax secured by the lien. I don't know much about Chapter 13 cases, so if there are any special wrinkles that modify that rule in Chapter 13, maybe someone here can help us.
To summarize for those not familiar with the
Isom case:
In
Isom, I believe the debtors were granted a discharge that actually covered the taxes in question. The problem, of course, was that the tax claims were secured (i.e., there was a valid tax lien).
The debtors in
Isom tried to argue that the discharge covered the entire amount of tax liability. The Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit rejected that argument. The perfected tax lien is not affected by the discharge.
In Phil Hart's case, I agree with the prior posters here -- the tax liabilities are probably non-dischargeable anyway, on a variety of grounds.
But even to the extent that Hart's taxes would be dischargeable, the discharge (with respect to a given asset) wipes out only
the portion of tax amount that exceeds the value of the assets that secure the tax lien. Under the Bankruptcy Code, a bankruptcy discharge covers only personal liability, not
in rem liability.
Simple example: Tax lien, properly perfected. Unpaid tax is $100,000. If the only asset covered by the lien has a value of $90,000 (ignore incidental costs to foreclose, etc.), then the discharge covers only the $10,000 difference; the IRS can seize the asset, sell it for $90,000, and satisfy the tax debt to the extent of that $90,000.
EDIT: The case is
Isom v. United States (In re Isom), 901 F.2d 744 (9th Cir. 1990).
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