United States Court of Appeals
FOR THE EIGHTH CIRCUIT
___________
No. 00-2812
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United States of America, *
*
Plaintiff - Appellee, *
* Appeal from the United States
v. * District Court for the
* Western District of Arkansas.
Jack Jepsen; Kris Jepsen; Karen Jepsen *
Makutenas, *
*
Defendants - Appellants, *
___________
Submitted: April 12, 2001
Filed: October 10, 2001
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Before WOLLMAN, Chief Judge, LOKEN, Circuit Judge, and BOGUE,* District
Judge. ___________
LOKEN, Circuit Judge.
In August 1989, Illinois resident Jack Jepsen conveyed the family’s Arkansas
vacation home to his children, Kris and Karen. In exchange, Jepsen received a
$10,000 down-payment check from each child and an interest-bearing promissory
note in the amount of $95,000 secured by a mortgage on the property. In April 1994,
the United States assessed a $214,263 tax penalty against Jepsen for failure to pay
*
The HONORABLE ANDREW W. BOGUE, United States District Judge for
the District of South Dakota, sitting by designation.
employment taxes owed by his company, Jepsen of Illinois, Inc. The assessment
created a lien in favor of the United States on all of Jepsen’s “property and rights to
property.” 26 U.S.C. §§ 6321, 6322. After reducing the assessment to judgment, the
United States commenced this action in August 1998 to foreclose its tax lien against
the promissory note and mortgage on the Arkansas property. Following a bench trial,
the district court1 entered a final judgment in favor of the government and ordered a
foreclosure sale of the real property. Jepsen appeals, arguing in the alternative that
he gave the property to his children in 1989, and that the applicable statute of
limitations bars any claim on the promissory note and mortgage. He also objects to
the conditional foreclosure remedy granted against the promissory note. We affirm.
I. Did Jepsen Give the Property to His Children?
By broadly defining the federal tax lien in 26 U.S.C. § 6321, “Congress meant
to reach every interest in property that a taxpayer might have.” United States v. Nat’l
Bank of Commerce, 472 U.S. 713, 719-20 (1985). In applying that statute, “[w]e
look initially to state law to determine what rights the taxpayer has in the property the
Government seeks to reach, then to federal law to determine whether the taxpayer’s
state-delineated rights qualify as ‘property’ or ‘rights to property’ within the compass
of the federal tax lien legislation.” Drye v. United States, 528 U.S. 49, 58 (1999).
Here, Jepsen argues he gave the vacation home to his children in August 1989 and
therefore had no interest in that property when the tax lien came into existence in
1994. He concedes that the note and mortgage would be “property” for purposes of
§ 6321 if the transaction was a sale. Whether the transaction was a gift or a sale is an
issue of state law.
1
The HONORABLE H. FRANKLIN WATERS, United States District Judge
for the Western District of Arkansas.
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Under Arkansas law, proof of a gift requires clear and convincing evidence that
the donor delivered the property intending to make an immediate and final gift and
to release unconditionally all future dominion and control over the property. See
O’Fallon v. O’Fallon ex rel. Ngar, 14 S.W.3d 506, 508 (Ark. 2000). Arkansas law
“presumes a gift when the donor registers legal title in a family member’s name.”
Perrin v. Perrin, 656 S.W.2d 245, 248 (Ark. App. 1983); see Festinger v. Kantor, 616
S.W.2d 455, 463-64 (Ark. 1981). The district court nonetheless concluded that the
August 1989 transfer was a sale, and that no gift of Jack’s property interest in the
resulting note and mortgage occurred before the April 1994 tax assessment. We
review these findings for clear error. See Bishop v. Bishop, 961 S.W.2d 770, 773
(Ark. App. 1998). The following is a summary of the relevant underlying events.
• Jepsen conveyed the property to Kris and Karen by a warranty deed dated
August 15, 1989. Jepsen’s lawyer, George Carberry, prepared the transaction
documents. Carberry filed the deed and mortgage in Baxter County, Arkansas in
October 1989. He then sent the document originals to Robert Bailie, vice president
of finance of Jepsen of Illinois, with a letter stating:
Enclosed are the original, recorded warranty deed and real estate
mortgage relative to Jack’s sale of the Arkansas real estate to Kris and
Karen. These documents should be kept along with Jack’s other real
estate documents.
I am also returning the original promissory note which Jack
should keep.
• In August, Kris and Karen each gave Jepsen a check in the amount of
$10,000 as a down payment on the property. The parties knew, however, that the
children had insufficient funds to cover the checks, and Jepsen never presented them
for payment. In December, Jepsen returned the $10,000 down payment checks to the
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children with a letter stating, “I have decided to give you the down payment required
on the purchase of the Arkansas property.”
• The promissory note bore interest at nine-and-a-half percent, payable
annually, with the entire principal due on August 15, 1992. Neither Kris nor Karen
made any interest or principal payments on the note, nor did Jepsen ever demand any
payment. The original of the note cannot be found; Jack assumes he destroyed it.
During discovery, Bailie produced a copy of the note and the other documents
Carberry had sent him.
• In April 1995, Kris applied for a bank loan secured in part by the Arkansas
property. The bank did a title search and discovered the 1989 mortgage to Jepsen.
Kris brought the mortgage to Jepsen’s attention, and he released it for no
consideration. At about this time, Karen executed a quit claim deed conveying her
interest in the property to Kris. Jepsen’s release and Karen’s quit claim deed were
recorded in Baxter County in April 1995.
• At trial, Jepsen testified that he intended the August 1989 transfer to be a gift
but left the documentation to Carberry and Bailie. His memory of the details was
hazy eleven years later. Kris testified:
In August of 1989 I wanted to purchase the property from my
father. At that time I could not afford to. . . .
Around the time [Jepsen] returned the [$10,000] check to me, he
discussed that he was just going to, you know, give me and Karen the
property. I think he realized we couldn’t afford to buy the property so
he decided to give it to us.
Karen and Carberry had no recollection of the 1989 transaction. Bailie testified that
he would only have acted at the direction of Jepsen.
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On this record, the district court’s finding that the August 1989 transaction was
not a gift is not clearly erroneous. To prove the conveyance was a gift, Jepsen needed
clear and convincing evidence that he intended to make an immediate and final gift
at that time. Clear and convincing evidence is “evidence by a credible witness whose
memory of the facts about which he testifies is distinct, whose narration of the details
is exact . . . and whose testimony is so . . . convincing as to enable the fact-finder to
come to a clear conviction . . . of the truth of the facts related.” Bishop, 961 S.W.2d
at 773. Jepsen’s memory of the August 1989 transaction was indistinct and inexact,
the contemporary documents were all consistent with a sale, and even Kris testified
that he intended to purchase the property in August 1989.
Jepsen attempts to rescue his position by arguing that even if the August 15
transaction were a sale, he later changed his mind and gave the property to his
children when he returned their down payment checks in December 1989. But as the
district court noted, the letter accompanying the returned checks states that Jepsen
was giving each child the $10,000 check, not his entire property interest in the note
and mortgage. The trial testimony did not provide clear and convincing evidence to
the contrary.
Alternatively, Jepsen argues in his reply brief that the promissory note was
discharged and his interest in the mortgage extinguished when he destroyed the note.
He relies on § 3-604 of the Uniform Commercial Code as adopted in Illinois,2 which
would govern this issue under Arkansas choice-of-law principles. But Jepsen did not
argue this theory to the district court, nor did he present clear and convincing
evidence that he destroyed the note with the requisite intent to discharge his
children’s obligation to pay the instrument. In these circumstances, we decline to
2
“A person entitled to enforce an instrument, with or without consideration,
may discharge the obligation of a party to pay the instrument (i) by an intentional
voluntary act, such as . . . destruction, mutilation, or cancellation of the instrument.”
810 ILL. COMP. STAT. Ch. § 5/3-604 (Smith-Hurd 2000).
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depart from our normal rule that we do not consider issues first raised in a reply brief.
See, e.g., United States v. Darden, 70 F.3d 1507, 1549 n.18 (8th Cir. 1995), cert.
denied, 517 U.S. 1149 (1996).
Jepsen further argues that his release of the mortgage in April 1995
extinguished the government’s right to foreclose its tax lien on this property. The
district court concluded that release of the mortgage did not affect the government’s
pre-existing tax lien, citing cases holding that “once a lien has attached to an interest
in property, the lien cannot be extinguished . . . simply by a transfer or conveyance
of the interest.” United States v. Rodgers, 461 U.S. 677, 691 n.16 (1983). On appeal,
Jepsen argues that the government merely acquired Jepsen’s right to reinstate the
released mortgage under Arkansas law. But the survival of a federal tax lien is a
question of federal law, and Jepsen cites no authority for the proposition that a
taxpayer may defeat an existing lien by releasing a mortgage. In general, “Congress
did not intend that taxpayers have the prerogative to relinquish rights in property in
favor of avoiding tax liability.” Drye Family 1995 Trust v. United States, 152 F.3d
892, 899 (8th Cir. 1998), aff’d, 528 U.S. 49 (1999).
Finally, citing McKay v. Capital Resources Co., 940 S.W.2d 869 (Ark. 1997),
Jepsen argues that the United States may not foreclose on the note and mortgage
because Arkansas law requires a creditor either to produce the original promissory
note or to comply with the requirements of the Uniform Commercial Code relating
to lost, stolen, or destroyed negotiable instruments. See ARK. STAT. ANN. § 4-3-309.
But these authorities deal with a creditor suing as holder of the note, not with the
enforcement of a federal tax lien. The United States presented convincing evidence
as to the terms of the note and the fact that Jepsen was the holder of the note when it
was lost or destroyed. Jepsen cites no authority suggesting that this evidence was
insufficient to establish a property interest against which the tax lien may be enforced.
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II. The Statute of Limitations Issue.
The United States “acquires by its lien and levy no greater right to the property
than the taxpayer himself has at the time the tax lien arises.” St. Louis Union Trust
Co. v. United States, 617 F.2d 1293, 1301 (8th Cir. 1980). Jepsen argues that the
government’s claim to enforce the promissory note and mortgage is time-barred
because the statute of limitations on claims for payment of the note expired before the
government filed this action in August 1998. Applying Arkansas conflict of law
principles, the district court determined that Illinois law governs this issue because
the note was made in Illinois. See Cooper v. Cherokee Vill. Dev. Co., 364 S.W.2d
158, 161-62 (Ark. 1963). The parties agree that Illinois law applies.
In 1989, when the promissory note was executed, Illinois law provided that
“actions on . . . promissory notes . . . shall be commenced within 10 years next after
the cause of action accrued.” 735 ILL. COMP. STAT. § 5/13-206 (1989). Applying this
statute, the district court concluded that Jepsen had the right to enforce the note for
the ten years following August 15, 1992, its maturity date. Jepsen argues that the
Illinois Uniform Commercial Code was amended on January 1, 1992, to provide a
six-year statute of limitations on suits to enforce negotiable instruments such as the
promissory note here at issue. See 810 ILL. COMP. STAT. § 5/3-118(a) (1992); Krajcir
v. Egidi, 712 N.E.2d 917, 922 (Ill. App. 1999). But the six-year statute was repealed
on January 1, 1998, before this action was commenced. See Ill. Pub. Act 90-451,
§ 10 (1997).
The 1997 statute also amended § 5/13-206 to add rules regarding the accrual
of causes of action on promissory notes dated after January 1, 1998, rules taken from
the six-year statute being repealed. See Ill. Pub. Act 90-451, § 5. Jepsen argues that
these amendments confirm that § 5/13-206 does not apply to the note in this case. We
disagree. In our view, the amendments resolved accrual issues for promissory notes
dated after January 1, 1998, while leaving existing promissory notes subject to the
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earlier version of § 5/13-206, which was carried forward unaltered in the amended
law. Thus, the district court properly applied the ten-year statute of limitations in
concluding that Jepsen had a right to enforce the promissory note and mortgage when
the United States commenced this action to enforce its tax lien on his property.
III. The Remedy Issue.
The district court entered final judgment for the United States in the amount
of $361,908.02, consisting of the amount of the April 1994 assessment, a small lien
fee, and interest through June 15, 2000. The judgment further recited that the
outstanding balance of the interest-bearing promissory note, and therefore Jepsen’s
interest as mortgagee in the Arkansas real property, was $252,650.40 as of May 22,
2000. The court ordered the real property sold, with the proceeds to be applied to the
costs of sale, any delinquent property taxes, and then the judgment in favor of the
United States (the sale has been stayed pending this appeal). The court’s judgment
then addressed the issue of the promissory note:
6. If the proceeds from the sale [of the real property] are
insufficient to pay the amount due to the United States herein, then the
United States may, in its discretion, request this Court to order the sale
of Defendant Jack Jepsen’s rights to payment under the promissory note
in accord with 28 U.S.C. § 2004.
On appeal, Jepsen challenges paragraph 6 of the final judgment, arguing that
it potentially makes Kris and Karen liable for the full amount of the judgment in favor
of the United States, rather than the amount due under the promissory note. This
issue is speculative, because we do not know if the sale of the real property will leave
a deficiency, and it is premature, because the district court has not entered a final
order setting the terms for any sale of the promissory note. Appeal of this post-
judgment collection issue must therefore await a final or otherwise appealable order
concluding the relevant portion of the collection proceedings. See In re Joint E.&S.
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Dists. Asbestos Litig., 22 F.3d 755, 760 (7th Cir. 1994). Jepsen’s further contention
that Karen should not be liable on the promissory note because she quit-claimed her
interest in the real property to Kris is without merit.
For the foregoing reasons, the judgment of the district court is affirmed.
A true copy.
Attest:
CLERK, U. S. COURT OF APPEALS, EIGHTH CIRCUIT.
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