Response for Famspear and LPC:Famspear wrote:Dear David Merrill: Yes, I don't know the context of your reference to these statutes. I will say that what your quote appears to be an excerpt of section 6323(f)(1)(B), which would apply only in certain states (not sure which ones). I think the provision that would apply in many if not most states would be section 6323(f)(1)(A).
By the way, do you know the basic purpose of section 6323? This is a not trick question - I'm just curious to hear something about the connection between section 6321 and section 6323. (I do sometimes ask trick questions, but I'll try to label them as such when I ask them.) Yours, Famspear
Lay readers should keep in mind that there are really only three types of liens:
(1.) Consensual liens, granted by the property owner in exchange for financial consideration -- a cash loan, the purchase money necessary to buy the asset, etc.
(2.) Judgment liens, which are the result of a judgment in a lawsuit, and are "abstracted" against realty (attach to realty) by filing in the deed records, but, as to personalty, attach only when non-exempt assets are levied (seized) by process (writ of levy and execution by a sheriff, etc.); levy is followed by a sheriff's sale, called an "execution on the levy."
(3.) Statutory liens, which are created by statute, and usually attach automatically or by unilateral creditor action, without judicial intervention. Tax liens, federal and state, M&M liens, PACA liens, etc., are statutory liens.
As a result of the 1999/2000 amendments to Art. 9, all states now have one central office for filing of general liens against non-real estate assets (except fixtures, crops growing, unharvested timber). Therefore, the IRS tax lien, in order to defeat the priority of non-IRS secured creditors, must be filed with the central office (county filing, for non-real estate related personal property, was abolished nationwide). Note that, for entities that are not human beings, the filing is in the state of organization, giving a big boost the Delaware economy). County filing is still required for crops growing, timber unharvested, fixtures, and the like.
Where the item is subject to special perfection, such as boats, motors, house trailers not permanently affixed to realty, motor vehicles which are not inventory, the IRS rarely (acually, in my experience, never) perfects, because for those items perfection requires notation on the title or some such equivalent. This does not mean that the lien does not attach; just that the lien has no perfection or priority against anyone other than the taxpayer.
The IRS perfects against realty by filing in the local (usually county) real estate records.
Keep in mind that filing of a tax lien is merely a perfection step, and has nothing to do with the effectiveness of the lien against the owner taxpayer.
Of course, state/local ad valorem tax liens, and similar liens, attach and are automatically perfected as first liens ahead of all lenders each Jan. 1, in most states, or, in some, twice a year, I think. Those tax liens are never "filed" -- but on most, there is no personal liability, either.
There are all sorts of statutory liens out there, from PACA to M&M -- all of which attach automatically and some of which require no filing.
And, where state law statutory liens are involved, at least in the states I am familiar with, judicial aciton is required only to FORECLOSE.