Liability of the United States for State and Local Taxes on Seized and Forfeited Property (II) ( 1993 )


Menu:
  •        Liability of the United States for State and Local Taxes on
    Seized and Forfeited Property
    In c iv il fo rfe itu re p ro c e e d in g s (u n d e r 21 U S C § 8 8 1 ), th e U n ite d S ta te s is o b lig a te d to pay lie n s for
    s ta le a n d lo cal ta x e s a c c ru in g a fte r the c o m m is s io n o f th e o ffe n se le a d in g to fo rfe itu re an d b e fo re
    th e e n try o f a ju d ic ia l o rd e r o f fo rfeitu re, if th e lie n -h o ld e r e sta b lis h e s, b e fo re the c o u rt e n te rs the
    o r d e r o f fo rfe itu re , th a t it is an in n o cen t o w n e r o f the in te re s t it a sse rts
    In c rim in a l fo rfe itu re p ro c e e d in g s (u n d e r 18 U S C . § 1963 o r 21 U S C . § 8 53), the U n ite d S ta te s m ay
    n o t p a y s u c h h e n s b e c a u s e state and lo cal tax lie n -h o ld e rs a re not b o n a fide p u rc h a se rs for valu e o f
    th e in te re s ts th e y w o u ld a sse rt, and th e re fo re d o n o t c o m e w ith in a n y a p p lic ab le e x c e p tio n to a s ta t­
    ute th a t, u p o n e n try o f a c o u r t’s final o rd e r o f fo rfe itu re , v e sts full o w n e rsh ip re tro a c tiv e ly in the
    U n ite d S ta te s as o f th e d a te o f th e offen se.
    O ctober 18, 1993
    M e m o r a n d u m O p in io n f o r t h e D i r e c t o r a n d C h i e f C o u n s e l
    E x e c u t iv e O f f i c e f o r A s s e t F o r f e i t u r e
    You have asked us to reconsider our opinion that property seized by and for­
    feited to the United States is not subject to state or local taxation for the period
    between the com m ission of the offense that leads to the order of forfeiture and the
    entry o f the order o f forfeiture. See Liability o f the United States fo r State and
    Local Taxes on Seized and Forfeited P roperty, 
    15 Op. O.L.C. 69
    (1991)
    (“Harrison M em orandum ”). In light of the Supreme C ourt’s decision in United
    States v. 92 Buena Vista A ve., 
    507 U.S. 111
    (1993), we partially reverse our opin­
    ion.
    B ecause states and localities may not tax federal property (absent express con­
    gressional authorization),1 the time at which ownership o f forfeited property passes
    to the United States and the extent of the ownership interest that passes to the
    United States determ ine whether state and local taxes are owed. In many property
    transactions, the time and the extent o f transfer o f ownership are unambiguous and
    independent issues. In cases of transfers of ownership under the federal forfeiture
    statutes, however, the answ er to the question of when ownership is transferred has
    been a m atter o f dispute, and of great consequence for the extent of the interest
    transferred.
    T he Harrison M emorandum expresses the Justice D epartm ent’s traditional view
    that title vests in the United States at the time of the offense. This view is based on
    1    See, e g , U n ited S ta te s v C ttx oj D etroit, 355 U S 466, 4 6 9 (1958) ( “ a State cannot constitutionally
    levy a tax d irectly against the G overnm ent o f the U nited States o r its property w ithout the consent o f C o n ­
    gress"), M 'C u llo ch v. M a ryla n d , 17 U S (4 W h eat.) 3 16 (1819).
    104
    Liability o f U.S. fo r State and L ocal Taxes on Seized and F orfeited P roperty
    an interpretation of the “relation back” doctrine, which provides that a judicial or­
    der of forfeiture retroactively vests title to the forfeited property in the United
    States as of the time of the offense that leads to forfeiture, not as o f the time of the
    judicial order itself. See 21 U.S.C. § 881(h) (“[a]ll right, title, and interest in prop­
    erty [subject to forfeiture] shall vest in the United States upon commission of the
    act giving rise to forfeiture . . . .”); 18 U.S.C. § 1963(c), 21 U.S.C. § 853(c)
    (substantially identical to quoted language from 21 U.S.C. § 881(h)). Under the
    Departm ent’s traditional interpretation, title in forfeited property vests in the fed­
    eral government at the time of the offense. The date o f the judicial order o f for­
    feiture is not significant. From the date of the offense, states and other parties are
    barred from acquiring interests in the property from the owner whose interests are
    forfeited to the United States. See In re One 1985 Nissan, 
    889 F.2d 1317
    , 1319-20
    (4th Cir. 1989); Eggleston v. Colorado, 
    873 F.2d 242
    , 245-48 (10th Cir. 1989),
    cert, denied, 
    493 U.S. 1070
    (1990) (cases decided before Buena Vista and consis­
    tent with the Harrison Memorandum).
    The Harrison M emorandum considers and rejects several possible grounds for
    limiting the operation of the relation back doctrine and requiring payment of state
    and local tax liens for the period between the offense and the forfeiture order. The
    two grounds of principal concern here are the “innocent ow ner” defense in the civil
    drug forfeiture statute, see 21 U.S.C. § 881(a)(6)2, and the “bona fide purchaser”
    defense in the criminal drug forfeiture statute, see 21 U.S.C. § 853(c), and in the
    forfeiture provision of the RICO statute, see 18 U.S.C. § 1963(c). The Harrison
    Memorandum concludes that these defenses do not protect a state or locality (or
    anyone else) who innocently acquires a property interest after the time o f the of­
    fense. The Supreme C ourt’s decision in Buena Vista forces us to reconsider this
    conclusion. We conclude that the Harrison M em orandum ’s conclusion concerning
    the innocent owner defense must be reversed, but that the Harrison M em orandum ’s
    conclusion regarding the bona fide purchasers defense is correct (although this
    latter conclusion is less certain than the Harrison M emorandum indicates and we
    reach it through an analysis different from that set forth in the Harrison M em oran­
    dum).
    I.
    The civil drug forfeiture statute provides that “no property shall be forfeited
    . . . , to the extent of the interest of an owner, by reason o f any act or omission es­
    tablished by that owner to have been committed or omitted without the knowledge
    or consent of that owner.” 21 U.S.C. § 881(a)(6). The Harrison Memorandum
    ' T he conclusions w ith regard to § 881(a)(6), the innocent o w n er provision im m ediately at issue in B uena
    Visia and applicable to all “ things o f value" traceable to an exchange for a controlled substance also apply to
    § 881(a)(7), w hich co n tain s a nearly identical innocent ow ner provision applicable to real properly used in a
    drug offense See notes 3, 7, injra
    105
    Opinions o f th e Office o f L egal C ounsel
    accepted that “owner” could include a state or locality holding a tax lien on the
    property. See H arrison M 
    emorandum, 15 Op. O.L.C. at 72
    . The Memorandum
    concluded, however, that this “innocent ow ner” provision does not apply to as­
    serted property interests that arise after the tim e of the offense because, as of the
    mom ent o f the offense, the property belongs (by operation of the relation back
    doctrine) to the United States, and not to the person from whom a third party inno­
    cently acquires an interest.
    W e conclude, consistent with the Harrison M emorandum, that a state or locality
    holding a tax lien can be an “owner” as that term is defined in the civil forfeiture
    statute’s innocent ow ner provisions. The broad language of the statute — “[a ] ll. . .
    things o f value” and “ [a]ll real property, including any right, title and interest” —
    provides no reason to exclude a tax lien-holder from the definition of “owner.”
    21 U.S.C. § 881(a)(6), (7). The legislative history urges a broad reading.3 And the
    courts have followed, sometimes explicitly, the path suggested by Congress.4 The
    “innocence” requirem ent o f an innocent ow ner defense would seem to be easy to
    satisfy in most cases. Like an innocent donee or purchaser, a state or locality
    holding a tax lien generally has obtained its interest without knowledge of the of­
    fense giving rise to the forfeiture.
    The Harrison M em orandum ’s further conclusion with regard to the innocent
    owner defense, however, cannot survive the ruling in Buena Vista. The plurality
    and concurring opinions reject the interpretation of the relation back doctrine set
    forth in the Harrison M emorandum, and agree that the innocent owner defense is
    available to persons who acquire interests in forfeitable property after the com m is­
    sion o f the offense that rendered the property subject to forfeiture. The opinions
    differ only as to the reading of the statute that leads to this result.
    The plurality and the concurrence both analyze the common law doctrine of re­
    lation back as transferring ownership of forfeited property retroactively to the date
    of the offense, but only upon the entry of a judgm ent of forfeiture. Until a court
    issues such a judgm ent, this retroactive vesting of ownership in the United States
    does not occur, and all defenses to forfeiture that an owner of the property other­
    wise may invoke will remain available. Thus, a person who has acquired an inter­
    est in the property may raise any such defense in a forfeiture proceeding. If that
    3 S e e Jo in t E xplanatory S tatem en t of Titles II and III o f Pub L No 95-633, 95th C ong , 2d Sess. (1978),
    r ep rin te d in 1978 U S C C A N 9522 (in § 8 8 1 (a)(6 ), “ [t]he term ‘o w n er' should be broadly interpreted to
    include any person w ith a recognizable legal o r equitable interest in the property seized ), see also S. Rep.
    No 98-2 2 5 , at 195, 215 (1984), reprinted in 1984 U .S .C C A N 3182, 3378, 3398 (describing § 881(a)(7)
    as, in effect, ex te n d in g § 88 1 (a)(6 ) to cover re a l property used in a drug offense but not acquired w ith pro­
    ceeds o f p ro h ib ited d rug tran sactio n s)
    4 See, e g ., U n ite d S ta tes v. 7 / 7 S. W oodw ard S t , 2 F 3d 529, 535 (3d C ir.1993) (citing legislative h is­
    tory); U n ited S ta te s v 6 9 6 0 M ira jlo res Ave , 9 9 
    5 F.2d 1558
    , 1561 (11th C ir 1993) ("L ien holders have the
    right to assert th eir claim [s] o f innocent o w n ersh ip " u n d er § 881(a), as interpreted in B uena Vi,\ta); U nited
    Slates v' 6 1 0 9 G ru h b Rd., 886 F 2d 618, 625 n 4 (3d C ir 1989) (cited in Buena Vista and citing legislative
    history); see a lso U nited S ta te s i\ 2350 N W 187 S t . 9 9 
    6 F.2d 1141
    , 1144 (11th C ir 1993) (B uena Vista
    analysis o f § 8 8 1(a) innocent o w n er provisions assum ed to apply where purported innocent ow ner is local tax
    lien holder).
    106
    Liability o f U S. f o r State a n d Local Taxes on Seized an d F orfeited P roperty
    person prevails, a judgm ent of forfeiture will not vest (retroactively) ow nership of
    that property interest in the United States. Buena 
    Vista, 507 U.S. at 125-27
    , 128-
    30 (plurality opinion) 131-38 (Scalia, J., concurring).
    The plurality and the concurrence both conclude that the federal civil forfeiture
    statute is fully compatible with the common law, and that the statutory innocent
    owner clause provides a defense for a third party who innocently acquires owner­
    ship of the property after the offense and before a judgm ent of forfeiture. The plu­
    rality notes that § 881(h), which sets forth the relation back doctrine for the civil
    forfeiture statute, applies that doctrine only to “property described in subsection (a)
    o f this section.” Subsection (a)(6) excepts, from its description o f forfeitable prop­
    erty, the property of an innocent owner. Therefore, in the plurality’s analysis, sub­
    section (a) places the property of an innocent owner beyond the reach of the
    forfeiture and relation back provisions in subsection (h). See Buena 
    Vista, 507 U.S. at 127-30
    . Accordingly, an ownership interest in forfeitable property that is
    transferred to an innocent person (after the offense giving rise to forfeiture) does
    not vest in the United States as of the time of the offense. Indeed, it does not vest
    in the United States at all.
    Interpreting the civil forfeiture statute as a more straightforward codification of
    common law doctrine,5 the concurrence reads the phrase, in subsection (h), ‘“ shall
    vest in the United States upon commission of the act giving rise to forfeiture’” as
    meaning “ ‘shall vest in the United States upon forfeiture, effective as of com m is­
    sion of the act giving rise to forfeiture.’” Buena 
    Vista, 507 U.S. at 134
    (Scalia, J.,
    concurring).6 The result, of course, is the same as under the plurality’s analysis: a
    property interest innocently acquired after the offense is not forfeited to the United
    States if an owner asserts the interest in a proper and timely way, before the entry
    o f a forfeiture judgment.
    In sum, we reverse the Harrison M emorandum’s conclusion that the innocent
    owner defense, set forth in 21 U.S.C. § 881(a), does not protect state and local
    claims for tax liabilities arising between the time of an offense rendering property
    subject to forfeiture and the issuance of a court order of forfeiture.7
    3    The concurrence specifically rejects the p lu rality 's reading o f the phrase, in subsection (h), "property
    described in subsection (a)" as m eaning, in effect, “property forfeitable under subsection (a) ” T he co n cu r­
    rence stresses that subsection (h) refers to '‘property d escrib ed in subsection (a)." not property d eem ed for­
    feitable under subsection (a) Since subsection (a) describes property generally and does not declare that
    property that cannot be forfeited is not ' ’p ro p e rty ,' the “property described in subsection (a)* refers to all
    relevant property interests, including those o f innocent ow ners Buena Vista, 507 U S. at 133 (S calia, J ,
    concurring)
    6 The concurrence "ack n o w le d g e ^ ] that there is som e textual difficulty w ith th[is] interp retatio n ,'1 but
    argues, first, that the im precision im puted to the quoted language in subsection (h) is to be e xpected “ in a
    legal culture fam iliar with retroactive forfeiture" and, second, that the civil forfeiture statute as a whole,
    including subsection (d) and u s adoption o f forfeiture procedures applicable under 19 U.S C.             1602-1631,
    does not make sense if one rejects the c o n cu rre n ce 's reading o f subsection (h) (and the plurality s reading o f
    subsections (a) and (h)). B uena Vista, 507 U S at 134 (Scalia, J . concurring).
    7 The local tax lien cases decided by low er courts since the Suprem e C ourt s decision in B uena Vista do
    not alter our conclusion In 2 3 5 0 N .W 187 S t , 996 F 2d 1141, the court vacated the ju d g m en ts in tw o cases
    in w hich the district courts had relied on the interpretation o f the relation back doctrine d escrib ed in the
    107
    Opinions o f the Office o f L eg a l C ounsel
    II.
    The two federal criminal forfeiture statutes addressed in the Harrison M em o­
    randum do not contain an innocent owner defense. Those statutes, however, do
    provide protection for a “transferee [who] establishes in a hearing [to ‘am end’ an
    order o f forfeiture] that he is a bona fide purchaser for value of [the] property
    [subject to criminal forfeiture] who at the time of purchase was reasonably without
    cause to believe that the property was subject to forfeiture.” 21 U.S.C. § 853(c);
    18 U.S.C. § 1963(c) (same). The Harrison M emorandum concluded that this
    statutory “bona fide purchaser” defense is not available to a state or locality as­
    serting a lien for tax liability incurred after the offense that made the property sub­
    ject to forfeiture.
    W e conclude, consistent with the apparent assumption of the Harrison M em o­
    randum, that such tax liens are “property” or an “interest” in property under the
    two crim inal forfeiture statutes. Both statutes define property broadly, as including
    all “real property” and all “tangible and intangible personal property, including
    rights, privileges, interests, claims and securities.” 21 U.S.C. § 853(b); 18 U.S.C.
    § 1963(b) (same); see also 21 U.S.C. § 853(c), (n)(6); 18 U.S.C. § 1963(c), (1)(6)
    (forfeiture and bona fide purchaser defense provisions referring to “interest” in
    such property). The legislative history and the courts’ application of this statutory
    language also suggest a definition o f property interests broad enough to include
    state and local tax liens on real property.8
    H a m so n M em orandum , and had granted sum m ary ju d g m e n t ag ain st a county invoking the innocent ow ner
    defense in 21 U .S.C . § 8 8 1 (a)(6), (7) to assert liens for properly taxes ow ed for som e o f the p en o d betw een
    an o ffen se giving rise to forfeiture and the en try o f a ju d g m en t o f forfeiture. The appellate court rem anded
    the cases for fu rth er co n sideratio n in light o f th e Suprem e C o u rt's d ecision in B uena Vista
    In U n ite d S ta tes v 7501 S W Virginia St., N o 9 2 -9 2 1 -B E (D O re Aug. 3, 1993), the district court held
    that a c o u n ty asserting a lien, for taxes accruing after the offense, in a forfeiture proceeding was an innocent
    ow ner un d er § 8 8 1 (a)(6), but that the relation b ack doctrine had vested the title in the U nited States as o f the
    date o f the o ffen se and therefore precluded p ay m en t o f the tax lien. T o support this conclusion, the court
    quoted the p lu ra lity ’s statem en t in Buena Vista that “ [o]ur d ecisio n d enies the G overnm ent no benefits o f the
    relation b ack d o ctrin e " Slip op. at 6 (quoting 507 U.S at 129). T he court has taken this quotation out of
    context, in terp retin g it as m eaning, in effect, “ o u r decision denies the G overnm ent no benefits o f the relation
    back d o c trin e as it had been understood, erro n eo u sly , in the case law that Buena Vista rejects ” T he district
    court sim p ly m isu n d erstan d s o r ignores the S u p rem e C o u rt's holding. T his m isinterpretation does not ap ­
    pear to be w idely shared by courts applying th e Buena Vista analysis o f the relation back d o c tn n e in analo­
    gous co n te x ts See, e.g , U nited States v D a cca rett, 6 F 3d 37, at 53-54 (2d C ir 1993); U nited States v
    41741 N a t 7 Trails W ay, 
    989 F.2d 1089
    , 1091 (9th C ir. 1993); 2350 N .W 187 St., 99
    6 F.2d 1141
    , 1144;
    U nited State* v. O ne 1990 L in co ln Town Car, 
    817 F. Supp. 1575
    , 1579-80 ( N D G a 1993).
    8      S e e S. R ep No. 98 -2 2 5 , at 193, reprinted in 1984 U S C .C A N at 3376 (section enacting current 18
    U S C § 1963(c) and 21 U .S C § 853(c) “allo w s the use o f crim inal forfeiture as an alternative to civil for­
    feiture in all drug felony c ase s’*), 
    id. at 211,
    rep rin ted in 1984 U .S.C C A N at 3394 (property defined as
    subject to crim in al fo rfeiture under 18 U S C . § 1963(a) and 21 U S C . § 853(a) is equivalent to property
    subject to civil fo rfeitu re un d er 21 U S C § 8 8 1 (a)), U nited S ta te s v. Reckm eyer, 
    836 F.2d 200
    , 205 (4th Cir.
    1987) (u n secu red cred ito r w ho has reduced h is claim to ju d g m e n t and acquired a lien could seek an am end­
    m ent to a fo rfeitu re o rder under 21 U S C § 853(n)); U n ited S ta tes v R obinson, 
    721 F. Supp. 1541
    , 1545
    (D .R .I. 1989) (a leaseh o ld in terest ordinarily is a real p roperty interest w ithin the definition m 21 U.S C
    § 8 5 3 (b )), se e also U n ited S ta tes v M onsanto, 491 U S. 600, 6 0 6 -09 (1989) (noting breadth o f forfeitable
    property u n d e r 21 U S.C . § 853(a))
    108
    L ia b ility o f U S fo r Slate a n d Local Taxes on Seized and F orfeited P roperty
    The Harrison Memorandum suggests two arguments — one based on the rela­
    tion back doctrine and another based on the definition of bona fide purchaser — to
    support its conclusion that the bona fide purchaser defense does not extend to
    holders of property interests that consist o f liens for state and local taxes for the
    period after the offense and before a judgm ent of forfeiture.
    A.
    The Harrison M em orandum ’s central argument concerning the relation back
    doctrine addresses the bona fide purchaser defense no less than the innocent owner
    defense. See Harrison M
    emorandum, 15 Op. O.L.C. at 72
    . On the interpretation
    set forth in the Harrison Memorandum, the United States has owned the property
    since the com m ission of the offense giving rise to the criminal forfeiture, and no
    one, including a bona fide purchaser, can later acquire any interest from the former
    owner.
    Although the question is a closer one than in the civil forfeiture context, we
    conclude that the Supreme C ourt’s decision in Buena Vista rejects this argum ent as
    well.9 We recognize that the plurality’s holding is based on a reading o f the civil
    forfeiture statute (and its innocent owner provisions) and does not address the
    criminal forfeiture statutes (and their bona fide purchaser provisions). That hold­
    ing also does not require the plurality to adopt the interpretation of the common
    law relation back doctrine that the opinion sets forth. Nonetheless, the plurality’s
    discussion of the common law doctrine makes clear that it agrees with the concur­
    rence that the relation back doctrine vests ownership retroactively in the United
    States only upon entry of a final judgm ent of forfeiture. Under that reading, if a
    state or locality establishes that it is a “bona fide purchaser” of an interest in the
    property by virtue of a tax lien, and does so before a court orders forfeiture, the
    order of forfeiture will not extend to the lien-holder’s interest and, therefore, will
    not vest title to that interest in the United States.10
    W e also recognize that the concurrence in Buena Vista suggests that the relation
    back doctrine precludes a bona fide purchaser defense under the criminal statutes
    where it allows an innocent owner defense under the civil statute. As the concur­
    rence points out, the criminal forfeiture statutes establish a procedure by which a
    person asserting a bona fide purchaser defense raises that defense after the court
    has entered an order o f forfeiture. See 21 U.S.C. § 853(n); 18 U.S.C. § 1963(1). In
    contrast, the civil forfeiture process (on both the plurality’s and the concurrence’s
    9 Cf. U nited S ta tes v H arry, 831 F Supp. 679, 686-87 (E D Iow a) (draw ing on B uena Vista d iscussion of
    innocent ow ners to resolve bona fide p u rch aser issue under the crim inal forfeiture statute)
    10 This conclusion w ould follow rather sim ply from the C o u rt's analysis in Buena Vista w hen the state or
    locality asserts its bona fide purchaser defense at or before the proceedings in w hich the court issues an order
    o f forfeiture T he con clu sio n is less certain under the procedure set forth in the crim inal forfeiture statutes,
    which provides for assertio n o f bona fide purchaser claim s at a hearing held after the court issues an initial
    order o f forfeiture T he rem ainder o f this subsection addresses this issue
    109
    Opinions o f th e O ffice o f L egal C ounsel
    reading) contem plates that a person asserting an innocent owner defense will do so
    before the court enters an order o f forfeiture. As the concurrence sees it, in the
    former case, the court order already has vested title retroactively in the United
    States (effective as o f the date o f the offense) before the “transferee” asserts a
    claim to be a bona fide purchaser. In the latter case, however, the court will not yet
    have issued the order vesting title retroactively when the “owner” asserts an inno­
    cent ow ner claim. (The concurrence argues that the civil statute’s use of the term
    “ow ner” and the criminal statutes’ use of “transferee” reflects this distinction and
    suggests its significance.) On this view, if a transferee’s claim to be a bona fide
    purchaser succeeds and the court am ends the order of forfeiture, the amendment
    does not void, retroactively, the initial retroactive vesting of title in the United
    States. The am endm ent to the initial order of forfeiture simply effects a new trans­
    fer of title to the bona fide purchaser, leaving undisturbed the United States’ own­
    ership from the time o f the offense to the time o f the amendment to the forfeiture
    order. See Buena 
    Vista, 507 U.S. at 136
    (Scalia, J., concurring).
    The Buena Vista concurrence fails to establish, however, that the criminal for­
    feiture statutes’ bona fide purchaser defense does not protect liens for state and
    local tax liabilities incurred after the offense giving rise to the forfeiture. Only the
    concurrence advances the argument. The plurality does not join in it, and nothing
    in the dissenting opinion suggests that the dissenters would adopt the concurrence’s
    views.
    Further, the concurrence’s argum ent reads too much into the actual, multi-step
    procedures by which a court adjudicates a criminal forfeiture claim. It thereby
    overlooks — or confuses those procedures with — the more fundamental legal
    (and fictional) process through which a retroactive transfer o f ownership occurs.
    The better interpretation o f the criminal forfeiture statutes is that the procedures of
    entering an order of forfeiture, holding a hearing at which transferees assert claims
    to be bona fide purchasers, and am ending the order of forfeiture upon successful
    presentation o f such a claim are but phases in a single (if protracted) process for
    determ ining what property interest vests, retroactively, in the United States when
    the court enters its final, amended order of forfeiture. The entire process is the
    equivalent o f the single order of forfeiture in the civil context.
    This interpretation fits more easily with the statutory language, especially when
    that language is read in light of the discussion in Buena Vista of common law rela­
    tion back doctrine. The criminal forfeiture statutes provide that title in property
    subject to forfeiture “shall be ordered forfeited to the United States unless the
    transferee establishes” that he is a bona fide purchaser for value, and that “the
    United States shall have clear title to [the] property” only “following the court’s
    disposition o f all petitions” filed by transferees asserting claims to be bona fide
    purchasers. 21 U.S.C. § 853(c), (n)(7); 18 U.S.C. § 1963(c), (1)(7) (emphasis
    added). Such language would seem to suggest that the United States never obtains
    title from a bona fide purchaser, not that the U nited States first obtains title and
    110
    L iability o f U S. f o r State an d Local T axes on Seized a n d F orfeited P roperty
    then must give it back. Only after the entry o f the final, amended order of forfei­
    ture would ownership vest retroactively in the United States.11
    This conclusion also avoids an incongruity that the concurrence’s interpretation
    would create: an innocent owner (under the civil statute) would owe state and lo­
    cal taxes from the moment he or she acquired the property, but a bona fide pur­
    chaser for value (under the criminal statutes) would not owe taxes from the time he
    or she acquired the property until the time the court amended the order o f forfei­
    ture.
    Finally, the conclusion we reach also is consistent with the statutory distinction
    between “ow ner” and “transferee.” A person claiming to be a bona fide purchaser
    is nothing more than a transferee until he or she establishes to the court that he or
    she is a bona fide purchaser (whether the transferee does so after an initial forfei­
    ture order, as the statute contemplates, or at some earlier stage). Only after the
    transferee has made this showing is he or she recognized as an owner (indeed, an
    innocent owner) of a particular type. Similarly, a person claiming to be an inno­
    cent owner is recognized as an innocent owner only after he or she proves to the
    court that he or she meets the standards o f innocent ownership. Before that, such a
    person is, in the eyes of the court, merely a transferee. The civil forfeiture laws
    simply do not address or refer explicitly to those who assert, but have not yet es­
    tablished, that they are innocent owners.
    For these reasons, we do not believe that the concurrence’s discussion o f the le­
    gal significance of the differences between the civil and criminal forfeiture statutes
    (which, in any case, is unnecessary to its conclusions) is correct.
    B.
    The Harrison Memorandum also states that state and local tax authorities cannot
    “qualify as bona fide purchasers for value” under the criminal forfeiture statutes.
    Harrison M 
    emorandum, 15 Op. O.L.C. at 72
    . The Memorandum does not set forth
    the basis for this conclusion. The Buena Vista plurality and concurrence have
    nothing to say about this issue and, thus, do not require a reversal o f the Harrison
    Memorandum. Although the matter is not free from doubt, we believe that the
    stronger argument is that state and local tax lien-holders are not “bona fide pur­
    chasers.”
    11    A lthough the statutory language does not fit perfectly w ith the interpretation adopted here, som ew hat
    im precise drafting concerning the sequence o f events leading to a retroactive vesting o f title is, as the B uena
    Vista concurrence points out, perhaps to be expected in a legal culture fam iliar with retroactive vesting See
    Buena Vista, 507 U S al 134.
    M oreover, the legislative history o f the crim inal forfeiture provisions also seem s to su pport the in te rp reta ­
    tion set forth in this M em orandum . It refers to hona fide p u rch aser claim s, raised after the initial forfeiture
    order, as “ in essence, . . . challenges to the validity o f the o rder o f forfeiture," and, w hen successful, as
    ■‘render[ing] that portion o f the o rder o f forfeiture reaching [the bo n a fide p u rc h a se r's] interest in v a lid ” S
    Rep. No. 98-225, at 208, reprinted in 1984 U S C .C .A .N . at 3391 (em phasis added)
    111
    O pinions o f the O ffice o f L egal C ounsel
    The courts have not adopted a clear and uniform view of how to interpret “bona
    fide purchaser” under the criminal forfeiture statutes. See, e.g., United States v.
    Lavin, 
    942 F.2d 177
    , 182-89 (3d Cir. 1991) (bona fide purchaser acquires interest
    through volitional, advertent and, generally, commercial transaction; victim of em­
    bezzlem ent acquired interest through unwitting and inadvertent tortious action of
    another and therefore was not a bona fide purchaser); 
    Reckmeyer, 836 F.2d at 206
    -
    08 (bona fide purchaser includes a general, unsecured creditor of defendant who
    gave value to defendant in arms’-length transaction with expectation that he would
    receive equivalent value in the future, and whose interest must have been in some
    part o f the forfeited property because debtor’s entire estate had been forfeited); cf.
    United States v. Campos, 
    859 F.2d 1233
    , 1237-38 (6th Cir. 1988) (general, unse­
    cured creditor is not a bona fide purchaser, because he does not have a legal inter­
    est in the forfeited property); Torres v. $36,256.80 U.S. Currency, 
    827 F. Supp. 197
    , 203 (S.D .N .Y . 1993) (similar to Campos', also pointing out significance, for
    general, unsecured creditor, of unusual circumstance in Reckmeyer that entire es­
    tate had been seized); United States v. Mageean, 
    649 F. Supp. 820
    , 824, 829 (D.
    Nev. 1986) (definition of bona fide purchaser cannot be “stretch[ed]” to include
    tort claim ants, but “there is no reason that a good-faith provider o f goods and
    services,” although an unsecured creditor, “cannot be a bona fide purchaser”), a ff’d
    without opinion, 
    822 F.2d 62
    (9th C ir. 1987); see also United States v. 
    3181 S.W. 138th
    Place, 
    778 F. Supp. 1570
    , 1574-75 (S.D. Fla. 1991) (civil forfeiture case
    stating that locality is not bona fide purchaser by virtue of tax lien), vacated on
    other grounds, 99
    6 F.2d 1141
    (11th Cir. 1993); S. Rep. No. 98-225, at 201, 209,
    reprinted in 1984 U.S.C.C.A.N. at 3384, 3392.
    W e are aw are o f no case that has decided the precise question at issue here. We
    acknow ledge that some o f the claim s that courts have rejected are weaker than
    those presented by tax liens, and that at least one court has pointed to a primary
    purpose o f the crim inal forfeiture statutes’ relation back provisions that would not
    be served by denying the bona fide purchaser defense to holders o f liens for state
    and local taxes. See 
    Reckmeyer, 836 F.2d at 208
    (“C ongress’s primary concern in
    adopting the relation-back provision was to make it possible for courts to void
    sham or fraudulent transfers that w ere aimed at avoiding the consequences of for­
    feiture”). N onetheless, we have found no authority that has construed bona fide
    purchaser broadly enough to encompass such a tax lien-holder.
    A state or locality does provide something o f value, in the form of government
    services, in return for the interest it acquires in property (ultimately in the form of a
    lien) by virtue o f its taxing authority. This exchange, however, does not fit the
    transactional, arm s’-length exchange of values contemplated in the case law and
    suggested by the statutory phrase “bona fide purchaser for value.” 12
    12      See, e g., L a vtn , 942 F 2d at 185-86 (C o n g re ss deriv ed bona fide purchaser exception '‘from hornbook
    co m m ercial law ” p rin cip le o f protecting th e ‘“ innocent p u rch aser for valuable c o n sid e ra tio n ’” w hich had
    d e v elo p ed at co m m o n law “ in order to p ro m o te finality in com m ercial transactions and thus to . . foster
    112
    L ia b ility o f U.S. fo r Stale an d Local Taxes on Seized an d F orfeited Property
    Therefore, we do not reverse the Harrison Memorandum’s conclusion that the
    bona fide purchaser provisions cannot be relied upon to require payment of state
    and local tax liens.13
    III.
    For the reasons set forth above, we reach the following conclusions: In civil
    forfeiture proceedings (under 21 U.S.C. § 881), the United States may — and, in­
    deed, must — pay liens for state and local taxes accruing after the commission of
    the offense leading to forfeiture and before the entry of a judicial order o f forfei­
    ture, if the lien-holder establishes, before the court enters the order of forfeiture,
    that it is an innocent owner of the interest it asserts. In criminal forfeiture pro­
    ceedings (under 18 U.S.C. § 1963 or 21 U.S.C. § 853), however, the United States
    may not pay such liens because state and local tax lien-holders are not bona fide
    purchasers for value of the interests they would assert, and therefore do not come
    within any applicable exception to a statute that, upon entry of a court’s final order
    of forfeiture, vests full ownership retroactively in the United States as of the date of
    the offense.
    WALTER DELLINGER
    Assistant Attorney General
    Office o f Legal Counsel
    com m erce” ), Reckm ever, 836 F 2 d at 208 (scope o f bona fide p urchaser provision “construed liberally'* is to
    protect “all persons who give value to the defendant in an arm s’-length transaction w ith the expectation that
    they w ould receive equivalent value in return” )
    The H arrison M em orandum also found that paym ent o f liens for state and local taxes, accruing after the
    offense, was not w ithin the A ttorney G e n eral’s discretionary authority under 28 U.S C § 524(c)(1)(D )
    (“'paym ent o f valid liens     . against property that has been forfeited") or 28 U .S.C § 524(c)( 1)(E) (paym ents
    “in connection w ith rem ission o r m itigation procedures relating to property forfeited” ). W e reach the same
    conclusion through a different analysis A tax lien-holder who establishes that he or she is an innocent
    ow ner under the civil forfeiture statute or a bona fide purchaser under the crim inal statutes is protected from
    the operation o f the relation back doctrine, and need not rely on the A ttorney G e n eral's discretionary pay­
    m ent o f a valid hen o r rem ission o r m itigation of a forfeiture that has not occurred w ith respect to the lien­
    h o ld e r's interest S ee S. Rep. No. 98-225, at 207-08, 217, rep rin ted in 1984 U.S C C A .N at 3390-91, 3400,
    Lavin, 942 F 2 d at 185 (bona fide purchaser provisions designed to require protection previously left to
    discretion o f A ttorney G eneral). If the tax lien-holder fails to establish that he or she is protected by one of
    these defenses to forfeiture, there can be no “valid lien” for taxes to be paid and no forfeited interest (in the
    form o f tax liabilities) for the A ttorney G eneral to "rem ift] o r m itigat[e] ” B ecause ow nership of the property
    will have vested in the U nited States as o f the com m ission o f the offense, state and local authorities cannot
    (absent a congressional w aiver o f im m unity from stale and local taxation that we do not find in 28 U .S C.
    § 524 or elsew here) levy taxes on such property after the dale o f the offense any more than they co u ld levy
    taxes on a federal courthouse o r post office
    113