It is the contention of the appellant that the interest of the petitioner in the trust is "property" or "a right to property" within the meaning of section 115 of title 26 of the United States Code; that by reason of that fact it possesses a lien upon the trust income; that it is not limited in the enforcement thereof by the laws of the State of New York, permitting the establishment of a spendthrift trust; and that the order directing payment to the petitioner should be reversed.
Section 115 of title 26 of the United States Code, in so far as material herein, reads as follows:
"§ 115. Lien for taxes. (a) If any person liable to pay any tax neglects or refuses to pay the same after demand, the amount (including any interest, penalty, additional amount, or addition to such tax, together with any costs that may accrue in addition thereto) shall be a lien in favor of the United States upon allproperty and rights to property, whether real or personal,belonging to such person. Unless another date is specifically fixed *Page 254 by law, the lien shall arise at the time the assessment list was received by the collector and shall continue until the liability for such amount is satisfied or becomes unenforceable by reason of lapse of time."
It is contended by respondents that the interest of a beneficiary in a trust estate is not a property right of such nature that it comes within the purview of section 116 of title 26 of the United States Code so as to enable the government to distrain it. Section 116 of chapter 3 of title 26 of the United States Code provides as follows:
"§ 116. Distraint for taxes. If any person liable to pay any taxes neglects or refuses to pay the same within ten days after notice and demand, it shall be lawful for the collector or his deputy to collect the said taxes, with 5 per centum additional thereto, and interest as aforesaid, by distraint and sale, in the manner hereafter provided, of the goods, chattels, or effects, including stocks, securities, bank accounts, and evidences of debt, of the person delinquent as aforesaid, * * *."
Then follow provisions for certain exemptions not material here.
Clearly the interest of the beneficiary of a spendthrift trust is not to be deemed included under the definition of any one of the words "goods, chattels, or effects, including stocks, securities, bank accounts, and evidences of debt."
Section 142 of chapter 3 of title 26 of the United States Code provides in part as follows:
"Suits for fines, penalties, and forfeitures, and taxes. * * * and taxes may be sued for and recovered in the name of the United States, in any proper form of action, before any district court of the United States for the district within which the liability to such tax is incurred * * *."
Section 117 of chapter 3 of title 26 of the United States Code provides that the collector may levy upon all property and rights to property belonging to the person *Page 255 neglecting or refusing to pay taxes. These three sections, 116, 117 and 142, provide the statutory method of enforcing the lien created by section 115. If they are to be deemed exclusive, then the appellant, not having adopted one of those methods, must fail in its effort to enforce its lien or to have its lien adjudicated in this proceeding.
It is conceded that if it were to proceed under section 142 as a judgment creditor, it would be limited as would any other judgment creditor to whatever benefit it might obtain under a garnishment proceeding instituted pursuant to section 684 of the Civil Practice Act, since in the enforcement of judgments, the United States by act of Congress is limited to the remedies available in a State court for the enforcement of a judgment. For the same reason it could not levy upon the income from a trust fund not being subject to levy and sale. The property right of defendant not being a subject of distraint and not subject to levy, and no judgment having been recovered, the appellant can succeed only if it has a general right exclusive of the statutory provisions to enforce its lien in an equitable proceeding in the State court.
Statutory liens cannot be extended by the courts to those cases not provided for by the statute. (Buchan v. Sumner, 2 Barb. Ch. 165, 195; Aldine Mfg. Co. v. Phillips, 118 Mich. 162.)
"Where a statute creates a specific lien, and gives a specific remedy for the enforcement of such lien, a court of equity has no jurisdiction to enforce it, in the absence of some such special ground of equitable interposition, such as renders the remedy at law unavailable or inadequate." Equity will enforce a statutory lien "where jurisdiction has been acquired for other purposes. But the jurisdiction * * * to enforce * * * rests upon the statute, and can extend no further." (17 Ruling Case Law, 613, 614; Marshall v. Wabash Ry. Co., 201 Mich. 167.) *Page 256
While a court of equity "having acquired jurisdiction for other purposes, may, as an incident to general relief granted, order property sold to satisfy a lien, it has no jurisdiction to enforce a lien, either common law or statutory, upon a bill filed solely for that purpose." (Marshall v. Wabash Ry. Co., supra, p. 178; Aldine Mfg. Co. v. Phillips, supra; Greil Bros. Co. v. City of Montgomery, 182 Ala. 291; 1 Jones on Liens [3d ed.], § 94.)
Statutory liens are affected but slightly by the general principles and considerations applicable to the common law lien. Statutory liens may exist although the creditor has not possession of the property sought to be subjected to a lien, whereas possession independent and exclusive in the party who claims the lien is indispensable to the existence of a common law lien. In the respect that the lien may exist in the absence of possession, statutory liens are somewhat more akin to certain forms of equitable liens. However, statutory liens are unlike equitable liens in that the jurisdiction to enforce them, as stated above, rests upon the respective statutes by which they are created. The statute creating the lien here under consideration provides certain specific methods of enforcement, none of which have been adopted by the appellant and some of which could not be adopted by reason of the fact that the nature of the property sought to be subjected to the lien is such that those methods are inapplicable. The statute does not give a right to proceed in equity for enforcement of the lien and while in certain cases where jurisdiction has been acquired for other purposes a court of equity will enforce a statutory lien, it would seem that it will do so only by giving effect to a method of enforcement provided for under the statute creating the lien.
The appellant in this case has failed to show that the remedy at law is unavailable. Its right to maintain an action for collection of the tax is undisputed. The other *Page 257 remedies specified in the statute being inapplicable by reason of the nature of the property, do not constitute remedies in the instant case. The appellant contends that the remedy at law is inadequate. It can hardly be said to be inadequate in the sense that it entitles the appellant to equitable relief when the limit of its adequacy grows out of the lack of effectiveness of a judgment which lack results from a limitation put upon the effectiveness of a judgment by Congress when providing that a judgment shall have the same force and effect and be enforceable in the same manner as a judgment of the State court. To permit the appellant to succeed in establishing its lien in this proceeding would be to give an effectiveness to the lien not provided for by the statute under which the lien was created. In other words, that statute gives specific means of enforcement which, with respect to this particular property, would not give priority to the lien over other judgment creditors. If its lien be established in this proceeding it will be given such preference and that is exactly the benefit which the appellant seeks, namely, that the entire income of the fund is subject to a prior lien in its favor by reason of the tax liability.
Its position in that respect is untenable.
The appellant argues and it must, I think, be recognized that the lien of a United States tax upon property as to which the lien is applicable is paramount when considered in connection with the effect of State exemption statutes such as the statutes of the State of New York permitting the establishment of spendthrift trusts. While the lien is in terms made applicable to "all property and rights to property, whether real or personal," no method other than by judgment is provided for the enforcement of the lien against the income from such trust and the effect of a judgment is limited by act of Congress to enforcement as in the case of a judgment of the State court. Thus, it would seem that the property in question is not property to which the lien is applicable in the sense that it may be *Page 258 enforced in the manner by which it is sought to be enforced in the present proceeding. By its refusal to adjudicate that a lien exists in favor of the government with respect to the income from this trust, the Surrogate's Court has in no wise affected any rights which the government now has. It may still avail itself of the statutory method. It may, without doubt, reach the money in the hands of the respondent Rosenberg to the same extent it could reach any other funds which he might possess. By refusing to extend the lien to the income in the hands of the trustee, the courts below have merely refused to provide a remedy not specified in the statute and to make the lien applicable to funds to which it would not be applicable except for a decree favorable to the contention of the government. If Congress had intended to extend the lien to trust funds it could have so stated in the statute, as it did with respect to bank accounts, and had Congress so stated there would then have been presented the question as to the power of the State to exempt funds included under the statutory lien, a question which is not here present for the reason that a statutory lien cannot be extended by implication and by judicial construction.
The order appealed from should be affirmed, with costs.
LEHMAN, O'BRIEN, LOUGHRAN and FINCH, JJ., concur with CROUCH, J.; HUBBS, J., dissents in opinion in which CRANE, Ch. J., concurs.
Ordered accordingly. *Page 259