Los Angeles County Treasurer v. Mainline Equipment, Inc. , 865 F.3d 1179 ( 2017 )


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  •                      FOR PUBLICATION
    UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
    FOR THE NINTH CIRCUIT
    IN RE MAINLINE EQUIPMENT, INC.,                    No. 15-60069
    DBA Consolidated Repair Group,
    Debtor,                     BAP No.
    14-1429
    LOS ANGELES COUNTY TREASURER
    & TAX COLLECTOR,                                     OPINION
    Appellant,
    v.
    MAINLINE EQUIPMENT, INC.,
    Appellee.
    Appeal from the Ninth Circuit
    Bankruptcy Appellate Panel
    Kurtz, Dunn, and Taylor, Bankruptcy Judges, Presiding
    Argued and Submitted April 5, 2017
    Pasadena, California
    Filed July 31, 2017
    Before: Kim McLane Wardlaw and Consuelo M. Callahan,
    Circuit Judges, and Gordon J. Quist,* District Judge.
    Opinion by Judge Wardlaw
    *
    The Honorable Gordon J. Quist, United States District Judge for the
    Western District of Michigan, sitting by designation.
    2               IN RE MAINLINE EQUIPMENT, INC.
    SUMMARY**
    Bankruptcy
    The panel affirmed the Bankruptcy Appellate Panel’s
    affirmance of the bankruptcy court’s summary judgment in
    favor of a debtor in an adversary proceeding seeking
    avoidance of tax liens on the debtor’s personal property.
    The panel held that the appeal was not mooted by the
    disbursement of the debtor’s bankruptcy estate and the
    dismissal of the Chapter 11 case.
    The panel held that under 
    11 U.S.C. § 545
    (2), the County
    of Los Angeles could not enforce a lien on the personal
    property of a Chapter 11 debtor in possession, when the
    County had failed to perfect the lien as against a bona fide
    purchaser. The panel concluded that Cty. of Humboldt v.
    Grover (In re Cummins), 
    656 F.2d 1262
     (9th Cir. 1981),
    addressing the statutory antecedent to § 545(2), remained
    good law. The debtor could set aside the County’s liens
    because the liens were statutory and were unenforceable
    against a hypothetical bona fide purchaser under California
    law.
    **
    This summary constitutes no part of the opinion of the court. It has
    been prepared by court staff for the convenience of the reader.
    IN RE MAINLINE EQUIPMENT, INC.                   3
    COUNSEL
    Barry S. Glaser (argued), Susan M. Freedman, and Jacquelyn
    H. Choi, Steckbauer Weinhart LLP, Los Angeles, California,
    for Appellant.
    Vanessa M. Haberbush (argued) and David R. Haberbush,
    Haberbush & Associates LLP, Long Beach, California, for
    Appellee.
    Walter J. de Lorrell, III, Senior Deputy; Thomas E.
    Montgomery, County Counsel; Office of County Counsel,
    San Diego, California; for Amici Curiae California State
    Association of Counties and California Association of County
    Treasurers and Tax Collectors.
    OPINION
    WARDLAW, Circuit Judge:
    May the County of Los Angeles enforce a lien on the
    personal property of a Chapter 11 debtor in possession, when
    the County has failed to perfect the lien as against a bona fide
    purchaser? Under 
    11 U.S.C. § 545
    (2), the answer is no, as
    the Bankruptcy Appellate Panel (“BAP”) held in reliance on
    our decision in County of Humboldt v. Grover (In re
    Cummins), 
    656 F.2d 1262
     (9th Cir. 1981), which remains
    good law.
    I.
    Mainline Equipment, Inc., dba Consolidated Repair
    Group (“Mainline”) was in the business of manufacturing,
    4             IN RE MAINLINE EQUIPMENT, INC.
    repairing, and selling cable television equipment. It failed to
    pay property taxes assessed by the Los Angeles County
    Treasurer and Tax Collector (the “County”) on its personal,
    or non-real estate, property. In response, the County recorded
    tax delinquency certificates with the Los Angeles County
    Recorder in 1993, 2010, and 2012. Pursuant to section
    2191.4 of the California Revenue and Taxation Code, the
    recording of the certificates created broad liens on all of
    Mainline’s property in Los Angeles County. Section 2191.4
    provides that “[f]rom the time of filing” tax delinquency
    certificates, “the amount required to be paid together with
    interest and penalty constitutes a lien upon all personal and
    real property in the county” owned by the taxpayer. Though
    section 2191.4 liens attach to both personal and real property,
    Mainline owned only personal property during the relevant
    time period. The County has conceded that it did not record
    any of its liens with the Secretary of State of California; it
    argues that it was not required to do so to perfect the liens.
    In 2012, Mainline filed a voluntary Chapter 11
    bankruptcy petition, scheduling the County as an unsecured
    creditor.    No trustee was appointed, and Mainline
    administered its estate as a “debtor in possession.” It initiated
    an adversary proceeding to set aside the County’s liens on its
    personal property, maintaining that it had the power to do so
    under 
    11 U.S.C. § 545
    (2). The bankruptcy court granted
    summary judgment to Mainline because the liens were
    statutory in nature and, under California law, had not been
    perfected against a hypothetical bona fide purchaser of
    IN RE MAINLINE EQUIPMENT, INC.                           5
    personal property. Therefore, Mainline was entitled to assert
    the rights of a trustee to avoid the liens.1
    In 2015, the BAP affirmed the bankruptcy court’s
    judgment, issuing a published opinion. L.A. Cty. Treasurer
    & Tax Collector v. Mainline Equip., Inc. (In re Mainline
    Equip., Inc.), 
    539 B.R. 165
     (BAP 9th Cir. 2015). The BAP
    found that our decision in Cummins, 
    656 F.2d 1262
    ,
    controlled the outcome of the case and that our reasoning in
    that decision remains sound. In Cummins, we held that a
    bankruptcy trustee could invalidate section 2191.4 liens on
    personal property under the powers given to a trustee by the
    statutory antecedent to § 545(2).
    After the BAP affirmed, the County appealed. During its
    appeal to the BAP in the adversary proceeding, the County
    sought and received a stay of the Chapter 11 bankruptcy case,
    to ensure that Mainline’s assets would not be fully disbursed
    before the County’s right to those assets was adjudicated.
    After the BAP issued its decision, the County sought another
    stay of the bankruptcy case during its appeal to us. The BAP
    denied the motion, allowing the bankruptcy case to move
    forward. Mainline’s attorneys then filed an application for
    attorney’s fees and costs to be disbursed from Mainline’s
    estate, and a motion to dismiss the bankruptcy case. On
    March 9, 2016—while this appeal was pending—the
    bankruptcy court dismissed the bankruptcy case and
    authorized payment of attorney’s fees and costs from the
    1
    Mainline also contended that the liens were avoidable under
    
    11 U.S.C. § 544
    . The bankruptcy court disagreed and granted judgment
    to the County on that claim for relief. Only the § 545(2) claim is at issue
    here.
    6            IN RE MAINLINE EQUIPMENT, INC.
    available cash, “subject to any disgorgement ordered by the
    Ninth Circuit” in relation to this appeal.
    II.
    We have jurisdiction under 
    28 U.S.C. § 158
    (d)(1) to
    review decisions of the BAP. We review de novo a trustee’s
    avoidance power under 
    11 U.S.C. § 545
    (2). See Saslow v.
    Andrew (In re Loretto Winery Ltd.), 
    898 F.2d 715
    , 718 (9th
    Cir. 1990).
    III.
    We reject Mainline’s argument that this appeal was
    mooted by the disbursal of Mainline’s bankruptcy estate and
    dismissal of the Chapter 11 case.
    A bankruptcy appeal may become moot in two different
    ways. First, it may become constitutionally moot if
    intervening events make it “impossible for the appellate court
    to fashion effective relief.” Focus Media, Inc. v. Nat’l Broad.
    Co. (In re Focus Media, Inc.), 
    378 F.3d 916
    , 922 (9th Cir.
    2004). Second, the appeal may become equitably moot if the
    appellants failed to diligently pursue a stay of the bankruptcy
    case and thus permitted “such a comprehensive change of
    circumstances to occur as to render it inequitable” to hear the
    appeal. 
    Id. at 923
     (quoting Trone v. Roberts Farms, Inc. (In
    re Roberts Farms, Inc.), 
    652 F.2d 793
    , 798 (9th Cir. 1981)).
    This appeal is not constitutionally moot because we can
    still provide “effective relief” to the County. In its order
    awarding fees and costs to Mainline’s counsel and disbursing
    the last of Mainline’s assets, the bankruptcy court expressly
    made the payment “subject to any disgorgement” we might
    IN RE MAINLINE EQUIPMENT, INC.                   7
    order in this appeal. The bankruptcy court correctly
    interpreted our caselaw, which provides for an award of such
    relief. See 
    id.
     (noting that our court could “order the
    disgorgement of attorney’s fees previously paid out of Focus’
    estate to the [appellees’] attorneys”).
    Nor is this appeal equitably moot. The County diligently
    pursued two stays to prevent disbursement of Mainline’s
    remaining assets. In addition, though the bankruptcy case
    moved forward, there has not been such a “comprehensive
    change of circumstances” as to render it inequitable for us to
    hear this appeal. This is not a complex case where it is
    difficult to unwind the already-completed transactions. “[A]n
    order compelling disgorgement of [attorney’s] fees and
    expenses [does] not require the bankruptcy court to unravel
    a complicated bankruptcy plan.” 
    Id.
     at 923–24 (second
    alteration in original) (quoting S.S. Retail Stores Corp. v.
    Ekstrom (In re S.S. Retail Stores Corp.), 
    216 F.3d 882
    , 884
    (9th Cir. 2000)). It requires “only that one party disgorge
    money it has received, money that would then be distributed
    pursuant to the bankruptcy court’s final decree.” 
    Id. at 924
    (quoting S.S. Retail Stores Corp., 
    216 F.3d at 884
    ).
    IV.
    A. 
    11 U.S.C. § 545
    (2) Allows a Chapter 11 Debtor in
    Possession to Set Aside Liens Against Its Estate.
    After a company files a bankruptcy petition under Chapter
    11, it must reorganize its affairs and restore its finances. As
    a “debtor in possession,” it creates a plan to satisfy its debts
    while retaining control of its business operations and
    property. See W. Homer Drake & Christopher S. Strickland,
    Chapter 11 Reorganizations §§ 1:1, 1:7 (2d ed. 2017). It may
    8            IN RE MAINLINE EQUIPMENT, INC.
    also initiate separate “adversary proceedings” in bankruptcy
    court—similar to civil lawsuits—to abrogate certain claims
    on its assets. See Fed. R. Bankr. P. 7001; see also 8 William
    L. Norton Jr. & William L. Norton III, Bankruptcy Law and
    Practice § 160:4 (3d ed. 2017). Federal bankruptcy statutes
    describe claims that may be avoided through an adversary
    proceeding.
    
    11 U.S.C. § 545
    (2) is one of those statutes. It affords a
    debtor in possession the power to invalidate liens on its
    property, so long as the liens meet certain requirements:
    The trustee may avoid the fixing of a statutory
    lien on property of the debtor to the extent
    that such lien . . . is not perfected or
    enforceable at the time of the commencement
    of the case against a bona fide purchaser that
    purchases such property at the time of the
    commencement of the case, whether or not
    such a purchaser exists . . . .
    Section 545(2) expressly applies to a “trustee” and does not
    mention debtors in possession. However, a debtor in
    possession has the same powers as a trustee and may
    invalidate liens pursuant to § 545(2). See 
    11 U.S.C. § 1107
    (a); see also James Lockhart, Avoidance Under
    § 545(2) of Bankruptcy Code of 1978, 
    154 A.L.R. Fed. 1
    ,
    § 2(a) (1999).
    Certain requirements must be met for the debtor in
    possession to avoid a lien. First, a debtor in possession may
    invalidate only statutory liens—liens arising “solely by force
    of a statute on specified circumstances or conditions.” See
    
    11 U.S.C. § 101
    (53). Liens arising out of the common law,
    IN RE MAINLINE EQUIPMENT, INC.                     9
    a judicial proceeding, or a contract are not avoidable. See
    4 Norton & Norton, supra § 64:1. Second, the lien must fail
    what we have termed the “hypothetical bona fide purchaser
    test.” See Loretto Winery, 
    898 F.2d at 718
    . Under that test,
    the bankruptcy court must consider whether the lien would be
    valid if the debtor sold the subject property to a bona fide
    purchaser—a purchaser for value, in good faith, and without
    notice of the lienholder’s rights in the property. See
    Lockhart, supra § 12. If the lien would be valid against such
    a purchaser, the lien is also valid against the estate. If not, the
    lien may be invalidated. State law governs this analysis. See
    Loretto Winery, 
    898 F.2d at 718
    .
    Congress passed § 545(2) to address state-created
    “disguised priorities” which would “exhaust all of the
    debtor’s estate, leaving little for general creditors.” Lockhart,
    supra § 2(a). Section 545(2) placed restrictions on these
    “spurious statutory liens” arising under state law to prevent
    distortion of the federal bankruptcy distribution process. Id.
    Congress determined that “if the lien created by state law is
    so tenuous that it can be defeated by transfer of the subject
    property to a bona fide purchaser, it should not be good
    against the trustee in bankruptcy.” Id.
    B. Under 
    11 U.S.C. § 545
    (2), Mainline May Avoid the
    County’s Liens.
    Section 545(2) allows Mainline to avoid liens that are
    (1) statutory and (2) unenforceable against a hypothetical
    bona fide purchaser under California law. We agree with the
    10              IN RE MAINLINE EQUIPMENT, INC.
    bankruptcy court and the BAP that our decision in Cummins
    controls and that Mainline may set aside the County’s liens.2
    1. The County’s Liens Are Statutory.
    The Bankruptcy Code defines a statutory lien as one
    “arising solely by force of a statute on specified
    circumstances or conditions.” 
    11 U.S.C. § 101
    (53).
    The County filed certificates documenting Mainline’s tax
    delinquency with the Los Angeles County Recorder. Under
    California Revenue and Tax Code section 2191.4, by filing
    those certificates, the County obtained liens “upon all
    personal and real property in the county” owned by Mainline.
    Because the County’s liens arose “solely by force of statute,”
    they meet § 545(2)’s first requirement for avoidance.
    2. The County’s Liens Are Invalid Against a Bona Fide
    Purchaser.
    Section 2191.4 not only created the County’s liens but
    also describes their enforceability. Therefore, we look to
    section 2191.4 to determine whether the County’s liens are
    enforceable against a bona fide purchaser. For purposes of
    our analysis, we apply California’s definition of a bona fide
    purchaser: one who purchases for “value, in good faith, and
    without actual or constructive notice of another’s rights.”
    2
    The County argues that Cummins is inapposite because, in that case,
    Humboldt County conceded that section 2191.4 liens are avoidable under
    § 545(2). But we did not rely on that concession. Rather, we analyzed the
    statutory text and the legislative scheme to reach our decision. 
    656 F.2d at
    1264–65. Further, though Cummins involved the statutory predecessors
    to § 545(2) and section 2191.4, the statutes at issue here are the same in
    all material respects.
    IN RE MAINLINE EQUIPMENT, INC.              11
    12 B.E. Witkin et al., Summary of California Law § 328 (10th
    ed. 2016); see also Gates Rubber Co. v. Ulman, 
    214 Cal. App. 3d 356
    , 364 (1989).
    a. The plain language of section 2191.4 establishes
    that the County’s liens are unenforceable against
    a bona fide purchaser.
    In Cummins, we held that section 2191.4 “expressly
    ma[kes] invalid against a [bona fide purchaser]” personal
    property liens obtained under the statute. 
    656 F.2d at 1265
    ;
    see also Franchise Tax Bd. v. Danning (In re Perry),
    
    487 F.2d 84
    , 86 (9th Cir. 1973). Section 2191.4 has not
    materially changed since that decision, and we reject the
    County’s argument that our interpretation of the statute was
    incorrect.
    Section 2191.4 provides in relevant part:
    From the time of filing the certificate for
    record pursuant to Section 2191.3, the amount
    required to be paid together with interest and
    penalty constitutes a lien upon all personal
    and real property in the county owned by and
    then assessed to and in the same name as the
    assessee named in the certificate or acquired
    by him or her in that name before the lien
    expires, except that the lien upon unsecured
    property shall not be valid against a
    purchaser for value or encumbrancer without
    actual knowledge of the lien when he or she
    acquires his or her interest in the property.
    The lien has the force, effect, and priority of
    a judgment lien and continues for 10 years
    12             IN RE MAINLINE EQUIPMENT, INC.
    from the time of the recording of the
    certificate unless sooner released or otherwise
    discharged. (emphasis added)
    The statute expressly provides that liens on personal property
    are unenforceable against a bona fide purchaser. It states that
    personal property liens are not “valid against a purchaser for
    value or encumbrancer without actual knowledge of the lien
    when he or she acquires his or her interest in the property.”
    A bona fide purchaser lacks notice of anyone else’s rights in
    the subject property. Without any notice, a bona fide
    purchaser necessarily lacks knowledge of another’s rights.
    Cf. 12 B.E. Witkin et al., supra § 331 (“[A] subsequent
    purchaser may . . . have actual knowledge or constructive
    notice . . . and, if so will not be a bona fide purchaser.”).
    Therefore, a bona fide purchaser falls within the statute’s
    exception to the enforceability of personal property liens.3
    b. That section 2191.4 liens generally have the force
    and effect of judgment liens does not make them
    enforceable against a bona fide purchaser of
    personal property.
    The County points out that section 2191.4 provides that
    liens created by the statute have “the force, effect, and
    priority of a judgment lien.” According to the County, this
    “judgment lien” provision renders its liens enforceable
    3
    The County argues that, for purposes of our analysis, the
    hypothetical bona fide purchaser should be defined as one with actual
    knowledge of another’s rights in the subject property. However, that
    argument runs headlong into California’s definition of a bona fide
    purchaser, which explains that a bona fide purchaser lacks any notice of
    another’s rights in the property.
    IN RE MAINLINE EQUIPMENT, INC.                13
    against a bona fide purchaser. It relies on the fact that in
    California some judgment liens—those that have been
    recorded with the Secretary of State—are valid against a bona
    fide purchaser of personal property. See 
    Cal. Civ. Proc. Code § 697.510
    . We reject the County’s argument for two reasons.
    First, even if the County were correct that, construed by
    itself, the judgment lien provision suggests that the County’s
    liens are perfected against a bona fide purchaser, its reading
    of section 2191.4 as a whole is untenable. “A specific
    provision relating to a particular subject will govern in
    respect to that subject, as against a general provision,
    although the latter, standing alone, would be broad enough to
    include the subject to which the more particular provision
    relates.” S.F. Taxpayers Ass’n v. Bd. of Supervisors, 
    2 Cal. 4th 571
    , 577 (1992) (quoting Rose v. State, 
    19 Cal. 2d 713
    ,
    723–24 (1942)); see also Fox Ins. Co. v. Ctrs. for Medicare
    & Medicaid Servs., 
    715 F.3d 1211
    , 1224 (9th Cir. 2013). As
    we discuss above, there is an express exception to the
    enforceability of liens created by section 2191.4—liens on
    personal property are not perfected against bona fide
    purchasers. That exception must control against the more
    general judgment lien provision, which applies to both
    personal and real property.
    Second, the County’s interpretation of the judgment lien
    provision is incorrect. In Franchise Tax Board v. Danning
    (In re Perry), 
    487 F.2d 84
     (9th Cir. 1973), we were
    confronted with an identical judgment lien provision in a
    different tax lien statute. Judgment liens recorded with the
    county were perfected against real property, and thus the Tax
    Board’s liens were perfected against real property. 
    Id.
    However, the Tax Board’s liens were not perfected against
    personal property. 
    Id.
     To perfect a judgment lien against
    14             IN RE MAINLINE EQUIPMENT, INC.
    personal property, a lienholder had to “go[] further” than
    recording with the county and “levy[] a warrant for the
    collection of the tax.” 
    Id.
     The Tax Board had not taken those
    additional steps, and thus its liens were not perfected against
    personal property. 
    Id.
     Several years later, in Cummins, we
    adopted the same interpretation of section 2191.4’s judgment
    lien provision. 
    656 F.2d at 1265
    .
    Under Perry and Cummins, section 2191.4’s judgment
    lien provision did not give the County’s liens the same
    enforceability as any judgment lien. Rather, it gave the
    County’s liens—which were recorded with the county—the
    validity of a judgment lien recorded with the county.
    Judgment liens recorded with the county are enforceable
    against real, but not personal, property. See 
    Cal. Civ. Proc. Code §§ 697.310
    , 697.510. Though judgment liens recorded
    with the Secretary of State are enforceable against personal
    property, the County took no additional steps to perfect its
    liens beyond recording them with the county.4
    The County argues that our interpretation of the judgment
    lien provision in Perry and Cummins is no longer sound. At
    the time those cases were decided, judgment liens could be
    enforced against a bona fide purchaser of personal property
    only by levying, or seizing, the property. Now, a judgment
    lien on personal property can be perfected by recording it
    with the Secretary of State. See 
    Cal. Civ. Proc. Code § 697.510
    . But, as the BAP aptly noted, “[A] bedrock fact
    considered in [those cases] has not changed; more than a
    4
    As the BAP recognized, to obtain liens valid against a bona fide
    purchaser of personal property, the County would have needed to obtain
    a money judgment against Mainline, and then record the judgment with
    the Secretary of State.
    IN RE MAINLINE EQUIPMENT, INC.                  15
    county filing is necessary for perfection that defeats the
    claims of a bona fide purchaser.” Mainline Equip., 539 B.R.
    at 171. Therefore, we reaffirm our holding that a county
    filing, by itself, is insufficient to perfect a lien on personal
    property against a bona fide purchaser. Our reasoning in
    Perry and Cummins is not undercut by the intervening change
    to California law. See TC Heartland LLC v. Kraft Foods
    Grp. Brands LLC, 
    137 S. Ct. 1514
    , 1520 (2017) (“A clear,
    authoritative judicial holding on the meaning of a particular
    provision should not be cast in doubt and subjected to
    challenge whenever a related though not utterly inconsistent
    provision is adopted in the same statute or even in an
    affiliated statute.” (quoting A. Scalia & B. Garner, Reading
    Law 331 (2012))).
    V.
    The County obtained statutory liens on Mainline’s
    personal property under section 2191.4. That statute
    expressly provides that liens on personal property are invalid
    against a bona fide purchaser. Therefore, the BAP and the
    bankruptcy court correctly concluded that Mainline could
    avoid the County’s liens under § 545(2), and properly relied
    on our decision in Cummins.
    AFFIRMED.