United States District Court Southern District of Ohio Western Division
United States District Court Southern District of Ohio Western Division
United States District Court Southern District of Ohio Western Division
Plaintiff, Dlott, J.
v. Bowman, M.J.
OHIO DEPARTMENT OF
TRANSPORTATION, et al.,
Defendants.
This case involves competing claims for funds (“Funds”) currently held by this
Court. The Internal Revenue Service (“IRS”) seeks the Funds in partial payment of a
tax bill, while Plaintiff Fidelity and Deposit Company of Maryland (“F&D”) asserts that it
is entitled to the same Funds, because the identified taxpayer never acquired any
property interest in the Funds that would be subject to an IRS levy. The case has been
referred to the undersigned magistrate judge for all pretrial proceedings. (Doc. 31).
Currently pending are the parties’ cross-motions for summary judgment. For the
following reasons, I recommend that F&D’s motion be GRANTED and that the cross-
I. Background
Plaintiff F&D filed this declaratory judgment action seeking a judgment that the
Funds were wrongfully levied upon by the IRS and instead belong to F&D. 1 (Doc. 12 at
¶47; see also generally ¶¶38-48). F&D claims entitlement to the Funds based upon its
Services, LLC (“Cosmos”). The Funds, in the amount of $589,049.49, were deposited
into the registry of this Court through a supplemental interpleader action after the IRS
filed a Notice of Tax Levy against the third-party custodian of the Funds. 2
F&D’s surety bonds relate to contracts that were awarded to Cosmos by the Ohio
Department of Transportation (“ODOT”) for public road and bridge projects throughout
Ohio. 3 The total amount of the Funds constitutes far less than the tax bill or the amount
paid out by F&D as surety; thus, both IRS and F&D seek the Funds to recoup only a
Both parties have submitted proposed undisputed findings of fact in this case.
To the extent any dispute exists, all reasonable inferences have been drawn in favor of
Beginning in 2013, Cosmos failed to remit its Form 941 payroll taxes to the IRS
as required by federal law. Ultimately, delinquent taxes were assessed against Cosmos
covering periods ending on December 31, 2013, December 31, 2014, and June 30,
2015 in amounts that presently total more than $1.5 million. Notices of Federal Tax
Liens were filed by the IRS on January 6, 2015, September 3, 2015, and September 30,
2015. All three tax liens were submitted to the Cuyahoga County Office of Fiscal
Beginning in 2012 and continuing until 2015, F&D issued both payment bonds
and separate performance bonds in conformity with public works contracts that Cosmos
2
This Court previously granted the motion of the custodians, two Ohio Defendants to pay the Funds into
the Registry of this Court in exchange for dismissal from this litigation, pursuant to Rules 67(a), Fed. R.
Civ. P. and Local Rule 77.2(b)(2). (See Docs. 41, 42).
3
While a nominal Defendant, Cosmos has not appeared in this action. Lisa Barbacci is the appointed
Receiver for Cosmos.
2
Case: 1:16-cv-00284-TSB-SKB Doc #: 57 Filed: 11/22/17 Page: 3 of 27 PAGEID #: 1729
secured to perform work for ODOT. (See Docs. 45-15, 45-16); see also generally
Beasley v. Monoko, Inc., 195 Ohio App.3d 93, 96 958 N.E.2d 1003, 1005 (Ohio Ct. App.
2011) (explaining that payment bonds ensure that all laborers, suppliers, and
subcontractors are paid in full, while performance bonds ensure that the work is
completed to Ohio’s satisfaction). F&D issued its bonds based in part upon false and
misleading financial information provided to F&D by Cosmos. 4 F&D also entered into a
The bonded projects are the sole source of Funds currently on deposit with this
Court. Seven ODOT Projects generated the Funds, identified by Project numbers
120629, 140182, 140186, 140244, 140540, 150154, 150214, where the first two digits
Under the terms of the contracts, ODOT was to make monthly progress
payments to Cosmos based upon the amount of work deemed to have been completed
by the state’s engineer. ODOT required the submission of periodic Pay Applications to
By 2015, in addition to failing to pay its employment taxes to the IRS, Cosmos
had failed to pay a number of the projects’ sub-contractors and suppliers. Beginning on
August 7, 2015 and continuing through September 29, 2015, those unpaid entities
served ODOT with thirteen notices under Ohio R.C. § 1311.26, a state law that allows
the claimant to claim “a lien upon the unpaid portion of the contract” between the prime
contractor and the State of Ohio on any public project (“mechanic’s lien”). The state law
ensures that work on public projects is completed without the disruption that otherwise
4
The president of Cosmos testified that she submitted an altered and fictitious financial statement to F&D
for the period ending December 31, 2013 that eliminated any reference to the non-payment of taxes, or
the non-payment by Cosmos of certain mandated fringe benefits.
3
Case: 1:16-cv-00284-TSB-SKB Doc #: 57 Filed: 11/22/17 Page: 4 of 27 PAGEID #: 1730
could ensue if unpaid subcontractors and suppliers elected to stop their work. Upon
receipt of the notices under R.C. §1311.26, ODOT was required to retain or withhold
payment from sums that would otherwise be payable to the principal contractor, an
amount that equaled but did not exceed the total amount of the claims. See R.C.
§1311.28 (mandating that, upon receipt of “the affidavit required by section 1311.26 of
the Revised Code, the public authority shall detain” the amount of the claim or claims).
dating from August 2015. (Doc. 45-20). Pursuant to the referenced Ohio law, ODOT
segregated the funds and placed them into a separate bank or escrow account.
Administration wage and fringe benefit provisions. The federally mandated contract
payments for wages and contributions for fringe benefits under the Davis-Bacon Act.
• The contracting agency shall upon its own action or upon written request of
an authorized representative of the Department of Labor withhold or cause to
be withheld from the contractor under this contract … so much of the accrued
payments or advances as may be considered necessary to pay laborers and
mechanics … employed by the contractor or any subcontractor the full
amount of wages required by the contract.
4
Case: 1:16-cv-00284-TSB-SKB Doc #: 57 Filed: 11/22/17 Page: 5 of 27 PAGEID #: 1731
Due to the discovery by September 1, 2015 that Cosmos had not paid the
federally mandated fringe benefits, ODOT withheld additional amounts under the Davis-
the retained amount of fringe benefits as totaling $71,756.34, (see Doc. 45-20), F&D’s
trial counsel has attested, based upon the supplemental deposition testimony of
Danette Shuler of ODOT, that ODOT withheld a total of $458,833.76 for fringe benefits
After September 1, 2015, Cosmos never made any payments that would have
permitted ODOT to release any of the payments retained under Ohio law or under the
funds, but only after F&D provided assurances that it had paid all claims.
On or about September 1, 2015, Cosmos alerted F&D that it was no longer able
to meet its payroll obligations and therefore was seeking assistance under the surety
bonds. F&D agreed to provide financial assistance under the bonds, conditioned on the
F&D, directing ODOT to pay to F&D any funds that otherwise would become due to
Cosmos. The Letters of Direction are dated September 8, 2015, and were transmitted
to ODOT by letter dated September 15, 2015. (See Docs. 12-1 through 12-10).
5
The largest of the fringe benefit claims, in the amount of $175,000, arose from a project where Cosmos
was not the main contractor but instead was a subcontractor to an entity holding the contract with ODOT.
The remaining 7 projects were contracts on which Cosmos had directly contracted with ODOT. (See Doc.
56 at 15).
5
Case: 1:16-cv-00284-TSB-SKB Doc #: 57 Filed: 11/22/17 Page: 6 of 27 PAGEID #: 1732
F&D established a Control Account in a bank in Georgia through which F&D funneled
funds to pay for the continuation of work on the bonded projects after Cosmos
requested F&D’s assistance, and F&D began to perform as surety. Nicholson managed
and controlled the Control Account, as to which Cosmos had no interest or influence.
F&D deposited advances into the Control Account to complete the bonded work,
including the payment of all claims and payment of basic operating expenses of
Cosmos to maintain a skeletal crew in the main office to process payroll, and to review
claims as they were submitted. The Control Account funds were not co-mingled with
Between September 2, 2014 and November 19, 2015, F&D also paid all thirteen
outstanding mechanics’ liens that ODOT had received. (Doc. 43-4 at 4-5, ¶¶ 10-11). In
addition, by March 1, 2016, F&D provided ODOT with the necessary and required
evidence showing that it had paid all past-due and current fringe benefit payments.
(Doc. 43-4 at ¶¶30-34). In total, F&D paid out more than $700,000 in fringe benefits,
although the precise amount withheld by ODOT and attributable to past-due claims (as
Cosmos’s existing property and assets. (Doc. 51-1). 6 A state court Order dated October
2, 2015 placed Cosmos into Receivership, with the appointed Receiver retaining
6
The August 21, 2017 Third Report of Receiver states that Premier Bank and Trust (“Premier”) was the
entity that forced Cosmos into receivership. On September 2, 2015, judgment was entered in favor of
Premier and against Cosmos and two other Defendants, jointly and severally, in the amount of
$1,826,587.37 plus interests and costs. (Doc. 51-1 at 1).
6
Case: 1:16-cv-00284-TSB-SKB Doc #: 57 Filed: 11/22/17 Page: 7 of 27 PAGEID #: 1733
“authority to operate and manage the subject business property, to collect all profits,
rents and revenues generated there from to pay all necessary expense[s] relating to
said management, subject to existing letters of direction with F&D.” (Doc. 12-11 at 4).
Prior to Cosmos being placed into Receivership or the Letters of Direction being
to its role as surety under the bonds, F&D provided funds to complete that remaining
field work. After September 1, 2015, F&D took action to pay all outstanding lien and
fringe benefit claims for which ODOT had retained payments, and paid for all ongoing
wages, fringe benefits, and materials. In short, F&D provided 100% of all funding
required to complete the contracted work, including but not limited to all ongoing labor
and materials costs and payroll taxes for the employees of Cosmos.
Despite performing as surety on the bonds through payments that exceeded one
million dollars for the bonded work, and notwithstanding the fact that Cosmos was in
Receivership, F&D did not immediately take over all of the operations of Cosmos.
Therefore, Cosmos remained listed as the general contractor on the bond for a period of
time. However, Cosmos expended no funds for that bonded work after September 1,
2015. In order to continue the work, Cosmos relied solely on the performance of F&D
as surety to advance all necessary funds to: “(a) pay the workers in the field to continue
performing the work…; (b) to pay claims as they were reviewed and approved; (c) to
satisfy lien claims filed against the funds payable on the bonded projects, (d) to pay
fringe benefits…and (e) to pay selective expenses for the continued operation of the
main office [of Cosmos] to retain key employees of Cosmos to review claims as they
came in and to coordinate the work in the field.” (Doc. 43-2 at ¶14, Affidavit; see also
7
Case: 1:16-cv-00284-TSB-SKB Doc #: 57 Filed: 11/22/17 Page: 8 of 27 PAGEID #: 1734
Doc. 43 at 5, asserting that F&D advanced funds to pay for “field labor and selected
office personnel to maintain Cosmos’ operations for several months as the work on the
established Control Account from September 1, 2015 through January 2016, when F&D
Consistent with its performance as surety for work conducted after September 1,
2015, F&D prepared Payment Applications and vouchers reflecting invoices dated
between November 2015 and March 2016. Those Payment Applications had not been
prepared or approved by ODOT at the time that F&D began to perform as surety.
ODOT subsequently approved payment; the Funds at issue represent that payment.
On October 26, 2015, the IRS served its first Notice of Levy on ODOT, relating to
taxes owed by Cosmos through December 31, 2013 in the amount of $294,026.89. The
IRS served an Amended Notice of Levy on ODOT on December 28, 2015 for the
additional 2014 an 2015 tax periods. The initial and amended Levies served on Ohio
reflect a liability of $1,336,105.82. Upon being served with the Notice of Levy
concerning Funds as to which the IRS sought its levy to attach, 7 ODOT withheld from
F&D any further payments on the bonded projects for the referenced Pay Applications,
ODOT did not declare Cosmos to be in default on the bonded projects until April
7
A tax levy, unlike a tax lien, is a type of asset seizure. See generally U.S. v. National Bank of
Commerce, 472 U.S. 713, 720 (1985); Phelps v. U.S., 421 U.S. 330, 336-337 (1975).
8
At one point after the levies were served on ODOT, ODOT erroneously and improperly released funds
not to F&D, but to Cosmos. When F&D learned of that issue, it filed an objection with the state court
overseeing the receivership, and Cosmos ultimately was found to be in contempt based upon the state
court’s determination that Cosmos had no interest in the funds under state law. (Doc. 43-4 at 11-12, ¶
29). The state court’s ruling is consistent with the conclusion of the undersigned that Cosmos had no
property interest in payment on any Pay Application for work performed after September 1, 2015, which
work was solely funded by F&D in exchange for the assignment of Cosmos’s future contingent right to
payment to F&D as its surety.
8
Case: 1:16-cv-00284-TSB-SKB Doc #: 57 Filed: 11/22/17 Page: 9 of 27 PAGEID #: 1735
4, 2016. On that date, Ohio formally assigned to F&D, in its continuing role as surety,
the remaining scope of work on two bonded projects that had yet to be completed. No
portion of the Funds relates to work on the two projects completed by F&D after ODOT
Applications that had been submitted for work performed and approved after it received
the notice of the IRS levy but before March 30, 2016. In short, the Funds represent
payments for the discrete time period during which F&D was performing as surety under
Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 56(a) provides that summary judgment is proper
“if the movant shows that there is no genuine dispute as to any material fact and the
evidence is such that a reasonable jury could return a verdict for the nonmoving party.”
Anderson v. Liberty Lobby, Inc., 477 U.S. 242, 248 (1986). A court must view the
evidence and draw all reasonable inferences in favor of the nonmoving party.
Matsushita Elec. Indus. Co. v. Zenith Radio Corp., 475 U.S. 574, 587 (1986). The
moving party has the burden of showing an absence of evidence to support the non-
moving party’s case. Celotex Corp. v. Catrett, 477 U.S. 317, 325 (1986).
Once the moving party has met its burden of production, the non-moving party
cannot rest on his pleadings, but must present significant probative evidence in support
of his complaint to defeat the motion for summary judgment. Anderson v. Liberty
9
Case: 1:16-cv-00284-TSB-SKB Doc #: 57 Filed: 11/22/17 Page: 10 of 27 PAGEID #: 1736
Lobby, Inc., 477 U.S. at 248-49. The mere existence of a scintilla of evidence to
support the non-moving party’s position will be insufficient; the evidence must be
sufficient for a jury to reasonably find in favor of the nonmoving party. Id. at 252.
The fact that the parties have filed cross motions for summary judgment in this
The Court reviews each party's motion separately, determining, for each
side, whether a judgment may be entered in accordance with the
standards of Rule 56. Both motions must be denied if the Court finds that
there is a genuine issue of material fact. If, however, there is no genuine
issue and one or the other party is entitled to prevail as a matter of law,
the Court will render judgment.
Klaus v. Hilb, Rogal & Hamilton Co. of Ohio, 437 F.Supp.2d 706, 732 (S.D. Ohio, 2006).
F&D initiated this lawsuit against the IRS in order to claim an interest in property
that F&D alleges has been wrongfully levied upon. See 26 U.S.C. §7426(a). In addition
to the general standard of review applicable under Rule 56, this Court must consider
that F&D “bears the ultimate burden of showing that the levy was wrongful.” WRK
Rarities, LLC v. United States, 165 F. Supp.3d 631, 636 (N.D. Ohio 2016); PBV, Inc. v.
Rossotti, 1999 WL 220123 at *1 (6th Cir. April 6, 1999)(Table). There is no dispute that
F&D has carried its initial burden under the statute to show that it was not the entity
against whom the tax is assessed, and that it has some legally cognizable interest in the
Funds. See generally, 26 U.S.C. §7426. However, F&D also has the burden to show
that the IRS wrongfully levied upon the Funds. WRK Rarities, LLC v. United States. 165
F. Supp.3d at 636; see also McGinness v. U.S., I.R.S., 90 F.3d 143, 145 (6th Cir. 1996).
F&D argues that: the levy was wrongfully placed on property in which Cosmos
held no property interest whatsoever. The IRS may only levy property in which the
10
Case: 1:16-cv-00284-TSB-SKB Doc #: 57 Filed: 11/22/17 Page: 11 of 27 PAGEID #: 1737
taxpayer has a property interest. See generally U.S. v. National Bank of Commerce,
472 U.S. 713, 720 (1985). Thus, the IRS cannot seize property wholly owned by a third
party, where the delinquent taxpayer has no interest in that property. Only if F&D
carries its burden to show that the IRS wrongfully levied upon the Funds does the
burden shift back to the IRS “to establish, by substantial evidence, a ‘nexus’ or
‘connection’ between the taxpayer and the property levied upon.” WRK Rarities, 165 F.
For the reasons discussed below, I conclude that F&D has carried its burden to
show that the levy was wrongfully placed by the IRS on property in which Cosmos had
no interest. I further conclude that the IRS has failed to rebut F&D’s evidence to show
some nexus that Cosmos had to the Funds, to which its levy could attach. Resolution of
the Funds under state law, there is no need to reach F&D’s alternative arguments that
the levy was invalid for other reasons; or that, even if Cosmos had some property
The IRS makes much of the fact that it filed and recorded tax liens against
subsequent levy served by the IRS on ODOT, the date of the IRS liens filed against
Cosmos is irrelevant unless Cosmos held a property interest in the Funds. Moreover,
“[a] federal tax lien…is not self-executing.” State Bank of Fraser v. U.S. 861 F.2d 954,
958 (6th Cir. 1988). In order to enforce its liens, the IRS had the option of either filing a
11
Case: 1:16-cv-00284-TSB-SKB Doc #: 57 Filed: 11/22/17 Page: 12 of 27 PAGEID #: 1738
intervention as long as there is no dispute that the property being levied upon, or
alleged property is held by a third party custodian, the notice of levy is served upon the
custodian pursuant to 26 U.S.C. § 6332(a). Here, the IRS served its notice on October
26, 2015, asserting that its levy attached to the Funds then held by ODOT, based upon
F&D argues that it has satisfied its burden of proof “to demonstrate its rightful
entitlement” to the Funds, and that the IRS “has failed to meet its own burden of proof to
establish that Cosmos ever had a property right” to the Funds. (Doc. 50 at 2). While the
undersigned might quibble with F&D’s articulation of the burden of proof, 9 I agree that
Cosmos did not have any interest in the Funds either when the IRS first filed its liens
against Cosmos, or when it served its notice of levy upon ODOT. Because Cosmos
never held or acquired any property interest in the Funds, F&D has carried its initial
burden to show that the levy was improper. See generally Com. of Ky. For Benefit of
United Pacific Ins. Co. v. Laurel County, 805 F.2d 628, 632 (6th Cir. 1986) (“The plaintiff
surety does not, and in our view could not, argue that the levy in this case was improper
or unlawful if taxpayer Y & S had any interest in the progress payment to which the tax
9
Arguably, the burden to establish that Cosmos had some form of property interest in the Funds does not
shift to the IRS unless and until F&D first carries its burden to show that Cosmos had no such property
interest. Showing that F&D also had an interest in the funds is not the same as showing that Cosmos
had no interest, since more than one party may have an interest in the same property. Nevertheless, for
the reasons stated, F&D has carried its requisite burden to show a lack of any interest held by Cosmos.
12
Case: 1:16-cv-00284-TSB-SKB Doc #: 57 Filed: 11/22/17 Page: 13 of 27 PAGEID #: 1739
The determination of property rights is made under state law. Federal law
becomes determinative only after a property right has been lawfully established under
state law, in order to establish the priority of a tax lien that has been levied upon the
interest held by the taxpayer. See generally United States v. Bank of Celina, 721 F.2d
The IRS simplistically argues that because the Funds represent payments under
contracts between ODOT and Cosmos, and not (technically) on contracts between
ODOT and F&D, that Cosmos retained a property interest in those payments under the
contracts. Under this view, the alleged “property interest” springs from the right of
payment under referenced contracts. The IRS argues that the property interest of
Cosmos in payment under the contracts was not extinguished until April 4, 2016, when
ODOT formally declared Cosmos to be in default and reassigned the remaining bonded
Alternatives, 2 F.3d 670, 674 (6th Cir. 1993), is clearly distinguishable. In that case,
the court held that the contractor had earned a right to a final progress payment
because the contractor had completed all work and no conditions remained to be
performed under the contract. In other words, the right to payment was not a contingent
right based upon the anticipated performance of future work, as presented in this case,
but instead was a fully vested right to payment under the contract, akin to an accounts
receivable for merchandise that has already been delivered. In contrast to Construction
Alternatives, the Funds at issue in this case were generated only after F&D stepped in
to perform its obligations as surety. But for F&D’s performance as surety under both
13
Case: 1:16-cv-00284-TSB-SKB Doc #: 57 Filed: 11/22/17 Page: 14 of 27 PAGEID #: 1740
performance and payment bonds, none of the work that generated the Funds could
Nevertheless, the IRS argues that because Cosmos nominally remained a party
to the contracts, F&D cannot recover. In other words, the IRS asserts that up until April
4, 2016 when ODOT declared a default, Cosmos should be deemed to have retained
some form of property interest in future payment from ODOT. Under this view, a surety
that completes a public works project in conformity with its contractual obligations, after
its principal makes a claim under the performance and payment bonds, should be
unless and until the State formally declares the contractor to be in default. The IRS
posits that as long as the contracts remained in existence (prior to the declaration of
default), no mere contractual claim by Cosmos against its surety for performance could
The position of the IRS is untenable and contrary to Ohio law for two reasons.
First, neither Construction Alternatives nor any other Ohio case authority suggests that
Cosmos had any more than a contingent future interest in periodic payments for the
bonded projects. If Cosmos ceased work under the contracts, ODOT would cease
payment, as the contracts permitted payment only for completed work approved by
ODOT – irrespective of whether or not Cosmos had committed any breach or whether it
subrogated to that future contingent right to payment. F&D’s right to payment existed
not only under the bonds and the Letters of Direction, but was recognized by the state
14
Case: 1:16-cv-00284-TSB-SKB Doc #: 57 Filed: 11/22/17 Page: 15 of 27 PAGEID #: 1741
court in the Receivership proceeding. Therefore, once the right to property (payment)
was actually earned and vested, it belonged to F&D and not to Cosmos.
with work due to its precarious financial condition, and made a claim under the bonds.
F&D had an obligation to its principal, Cosmos, to perform as surety based upon the
submission of a valid claim. Nothing in the language of the bonds restricted that
contractual obligation to the date that the principal was formally declared to be in default
by ODOT, nor does Ohio law support such a proposition. See generally, Jeffrey B.
*15 (Ohio Ct. App. July 21, 2000) (rejecting argument that surety’s payment was
voluntary, noting that surety is primarily and jointly liable with the principal debtor under
Ohio law). ODOT was well aware of the financial difficulties that Cosmos was
experiencing and the risk that presented to the completion of the bonded projects. In
September 2015, Cosmos and F&D reached agreement on the claim presented by
Cosmos, with F&D agreeing to step in as surety to pay 100% of all costs, consistent
with F&D’s obligation under both performance and payment bonds, so that the work on
the public projects could continue. In exchange, Cosmos executed Letters of Direction
assigning Cosmos’s future interest in payments under the contracts from ODOT to F&D.
and began making periodic payments to the surety in conformity with the Letters of
surety under the bonds prior to ODOT’s declaration of default versus F&D’s continued
15
Case: 1:16-cv-00284-TSB-SKB Doc #: 57 Filed: 11/22/17 Page: 16 of 27 PAGEID #: 1742
performance under the same bonds after ODOT’s declaration of default is neither
persuasive nor relevant to the issue of whether Cosmos ever obtained, much less
retained, any property interest in the Funds. The IRS’s position ignores Ohio’s law on
subrogation, and the clear application of Ohio statutory and case law to the facts of this
case. See also generally, Aetna Cas. & Surety Co. v. U.S., 845 F.2d 971 (Fed. Cir.
As previously stated, the primary case on which the IRS chiefly relies, In re:
Construction Alternatives, is readily distinguishable. When the IRS filed tax liens
against the delinquent taxpayer/contractor in that case, the contractor (“CA”) sought the
protection of the bankruptcy court. After the public school district and CA agreed on the
amount of the final progress payment, the IRS and the surety both filed claims in the
bankruptcy court. The surety argued that CA had no property interest in the final
payment, but only a “legal interest,” because in the surety’s view, CA had failed to
satisfy all terms of the contract by failing to pay some subcontractors, which the surety
paid. Focusing on the specific contractual language at issue under Ohio law, the Sixth
Circuit held that because “it is undisputed that the work on the project was complete,”
CA owed nothing more to the school under the contract, and had earned a property
right to its final payment. Id. at 674. The appellate court held that the fact that the same
payment was subject to the liens of others (namely the surety) did not nullify the
contractor’s vested property interest, which arose upon completion of its contracted
work. “[A] tax lien can attach to a taxpayer’s interest in property regardless of whether
the interest is less than full ownership or is only one among several claims of
16
Case: 1:16-cv-00284-TSB-SKB Doc #: 57 Filed: 11/22/17 Page: 17 of 27 PAGEID #: 1743
ownership.” Id., (internal quotation and citation omitted). A later unpublished case,
citing Construction Alternatives, similarly affirmed a trial court’s ruling that where it was
undisputed that the contractor had completed all work, entitling it to receipt of a final
payment to which an IRS lien could attach, rejecting the surety’s argument that the
contractor’s failure to pay two subcontractors forfeited the contractor’s property interest,
or that the surety’s post-levy payment created a superior lien. See Wayne County Bd.
of County Com’rs v. Mendel, 22 Fed. App. 488, 491 (6th Cir. 2001). 10 It is worth noting
that the lower court in Mendel also pointed out that no mechanic’s liens had been filed
under R.C. § 1311.26, 11 and that no impediment existed under the language of the
contract that precluded that contractor’s right to the final payment. See id., 2000 WL
Just as the prior completion of all work by the contractor was critical to the
holdings in Construction Alternatives and Mendel, the different order of events in this
case (as well as different contractual language and application of state and federal law)
been completed and the right to final payment had fully accrued, here Cosmos had not
even begun – and had certainly not completed - any of the work that formed the basis
for the post-September 2015 Pay Applications submitted by F&D that generated the
Funds. 12 In fact, beginning on September 1, 2015 through October 26, 2015 when the
IRS served notice of its levy, ODOT was making periodic progress payments to F&D in
conformity with the Letters of Direction. (See e.g., Doc. 43-4 at 910, ¶¶ 26-27 (attesting
10
The timing of events in the unpublished Mendel case is somewhat ambiguous, and neither the trial court
nor appellate courts discussed the specifics of the contract at issue in that case.
11
Similarly, no mechanic’s liens had been filed in the Construction Alternatives case.
12
As discussed below, the undersigned recognizes a possible exception for Retained Funds correlated
with Pay Applications submitted by Cosmos prior to September 1, 2015.
17
Case: 1:16-cv-00284-TSB-SKB Doc #: 57 Filed: 11/22/17 Page: 18 of 27 PAGEID #: 1744
to receipt of some payments from ODOT for Payment Applications submitted by F&D
prior to October 26, 2015)). And beginning on September 1, 2015, it was the surety,
and not Cosmos, that provided 100% of the financing and ensured the completion of the
bonded work.
The Letters of Direction confirmed that any right to future payment for contracted
work performed through F&D’s funding accrued to F&D, in its subrogated role as surety,
and not to Cosmos. On October 2, 2015, an Ohio court ratified the validity of the
parties’ agreement that the contingent/future right to payment under the ODOT projects
belonged to F&D, by expressly stating that the rights of the Receiver were subject to the
The assignment of the sole right to payment for future performance of the
bonded work occurred in September 2015, well before the IRS served its Notice of Levy
upon ODOT. Although the undersigned has concluded that any right to payment under
the ODOT contracts was only a contingent future interest (as opposed to a vested
property interest for completed work), that limited interest belonged to F&D alone, as a
performing surety, after September 1, 2015. Case law confirms that Ohio law upholds
the subrogation rights of performing sureties under both equitable and legal principles.
See American Ins. Co. v. Ohio Bur. of Workers Comp., 62 Ohio App.3d 921, 923-925,
577 N.E.2d 756, 758-759 (Ohio Ct. App. 1991) (holding that under Ohio law, principles
injustice,” noting construction cases in which “the surety will be subrogated to the
18
Case: 1:16-cv-00284-TSB-SKB Doc #: 57 Filed: 11/22/17 Page: 19 of 27 PAGEID #: 1745
The IRS has failed to show, and cannot show, that Cosmos had any interest in
Funds generated for work that Cosmos had not yet begun to perform prior to enlisting
the assistance of its surety. The fact that Cosmos’s name remained on the contracts
from September 1, 2015 until April 4, 2016 simply did not imbue Cosmos with any
present property interest in the Funds, in part because the contracts expressly
conditioned periodic payments by ODOT upon the completion of work and approval of a
Payment Application. The determination that the nature of Cosmos’s interest was an
expectancy interest, rather than a vested property right to future payment for work yet to
be performed, and that such interest was lawfully assigned to F&D as surety in
September 2015 under the bonds and the Letters of Direction, is consistent with basic
principles of subrogation under Ohio law. See e.g. Pearlman v. Reliance Ins. Co., 371
U.S. 132, 83 S.Ct. 232 (1962) (holding that surety who paid laborers and materialmen
under payment bond had property interest in entire retained fund held back by
government under contract under doctrine of equitable subrogation, and that debtor in
bankruptcy held no property interest in retained fund); see also generally American Ins.
Co. v. Ohio Bureau of Workers’ Comp, 62 Ohio App. 3d 921, 577 N.E.2d 756
(explaining principles of subrogation under Ohio law); Euclid Nat’l Bank v. Cenci
Excavating Co., 1978 WL 215865, at *8 (Ohio App 1978) (citing Perlman and confirming
September 1, 2015, F&D possessed all future rights to payment, taking steps (the
19
Case: 1:16-cv-00284-TSB-SKB Doc #: 57 Filed: 11/22/17 Page: 20 of 27 PAGEID #: 1746
If the whole of the Funds on deposit with this Court were payable as the result of
work performed after F&D began performing as surety and provided 100% of all
funding, and after Cosmos executed the Letters of Direction, then no further analysis
would be required. For the reasons explained above, Cosmos never acquired any
property interest in those Funds under state law, whereas F&D has adequately proven
its property rights to the whole of the Funds based upon its performance as surety.
(the “Retained Payments”). 13 The Retained Payments were withheld both under Ohio
law for the thirteen mechanic’s liens that various subcontractors had submitted to
ODOT, and under the federal Davis-Bacon Act for payment of fringe benefits. (See
claimed were due and owing from ODOT”). The Retained Payments were retained and
on October 26, 2015 when the IRS served notice of its levy. Because ODOT
segregated the Retained Payments from the amount owed to Cosmos on work that
already had been completed by Cosmos, before Cosmos made any request for
assistance from its surety, a threshold issue arises concerning whether Cosmos itself
acquired some form of property interest in the Retained Payments based upon its
13
An ambiguity is evident from the arguments of the parties. On the one hand, F&D argues that “[b]y the
time ODOT received the IRS levies [on October 26, 2015], the project funds generated for work before
September 1, 2015 had already been released to F&D.” (Doc. 43 at 12, emphasis added). On the other
hand, much of F&D’s argument is that it is entitled to the Funds on deposit because those Funds
represent reimbursement to F&D of payments of debts for which ODOT had Retained Payments.
20
Case: 1:16-cv-00284-TSB-SKB Doc #: 57 Filed: 11/22/17 Page: 21 of 27 PAGEID #: 1747
completion of the work. See State of Ohio ex rel. Star Supply, Div. of Start Indus., Inc.
v. City of Greenfield, 528 F. Supp. 955, 958 (S.D. Ohio 1981) (holding that the
“threshold question…is whether the contractor had any property interest in the fund
ODOT would not release either the Retained Payments or new payments on Pay
Applications to F&D until the surety satisfied all debts for which ODOT had Retained
Payments. (See Doc. 43-2 at 5 ¶27, Affidavit of Gregory Kilburn, explaining that ODOT
would release funds to F&D upon proof that F&D had advanced funds to pay claims,
satisfy liens, or pay fringe benefits; Doc. 43-4 at 8, ¶24, Affidavit of Jeanie McNulty,
stating that ODOT withheld the release of funds on F&D’s Pay Application No. 7 on
Project 14-0182 due to Cosmos’s earlier failure to pay fringe benefits under the Davis-
I conclude as a matter of law that, notwithstanding the fact that the work that
caused ODOT to segregate the Retained Payments was completed prior to the
involvement of the surety, Cosmos never acquired any property interest in the Retained
Payments to which an IRS lien or levy could have attached. In other words, the
undersigned agrees with F&D’s alternative theory that it is entitled to an award of the
Funds based upon its later payment, as surety, of the outstanding liens and fringe
benefits claims.
F&D argues that Cosmos did not acquire any property interest in the Retained
Payments under the express language of the contract (including the incorporated rider
of the Davis-Bacon Act) and Ohio Revised Code §1311.28. F&D further contends that it
is entitled to the Retained Payments because F&D paid out more than $700,000 in
21
Case: 1:16-cv-00284-TSB-SKB Doc #: 57 Filed: 11/22/17 Page: 22 of 27 PAGEID #: 1748
fringe benefits claims, 14 as well as more than $500,000 in mechanic’s liens. I agree
as “essentially” an argument that ODOT held the Retained Payments “in trust” for the
benefit of unpaid laborers and suppliers. Under this theory, the IRS presumes that
Cosmos had earned a property right to the Retained Payments, but that ODOT
nevertheless held that property in trust for other lienholders against the same property.
Construction Alternatives for its rejection of a surety’s argument that the school district
in that case was holding funds as a trustee for unpaid suppliers and contractors. There,
the Sixth Circuit held that no Ohio law creates a constructive trust in favor of unpaid
suppliers or contractors, and further determined that no trust was created (by the
entitlement to its final progress payment for the completed work. 15 The IRS argues that
“a state-law trust favoring what are in substance mechanic[’]s lien claims over federal
tax liens would conflict both with the plainly controlling federal provision giving more
limited priority to mechanics liens over federal tax liens, as well as the strong policy of
14
Considering that the amount that F&D paid out exceeds the amount on deposit with this Court, it is
obvious that ODOT did not withhold $700,000. There is conflicting evidence concerning the precise
amount of Retained Payments that were withheld under the Davis-Bacon Act, but the IRS does not
dispute the amount that F&D claims to have paid out.
15
The IRS argues that the Sixth Circuit’s holding that Ohio law does not create a trust should be read as a
blanket rule that applies even when funds are expressly retained under R.C. §1311.28. The IRS
concedes that the school did not retain funds under that provision in Construction Alternatives, but
suggests that “if the judges believed that [§1311.28 could] …create a trust, the opinion would not have
said flatly that Ohio law did not create a trust,” but instead would have clarified the possibility of an
exception under §1311.28. This is nonsense. Judicial opinions are written based on the facts and legal
arguments presented in each case. The IRS’s theory as to what the court might have held had it been
presented with different facts and different legal arguments is pure speculation, and irrelevant since F&D
does not argue that a “trust” exists, but instead that no property right ever arose in favor of Cosmos for
the Retained Payments under Ohio law.
22
Case: 1:16-cv-00284-TSB-SKB Doc #: 57 Filed: 11/22/17 Page: 23 of 27 PAGEID #: 1749
federal law to assure that payroll taxes are given priority even when no federal lien
The fatal flaw to the IRS’s argument is that F&D has never advocated the “trust”
theory relied upon by the surety in Construction Alternatives, but instead proceeds
under an entirely different (and more persuasive) legal theory that Cosmos never
acquired any property interest in the Retained Funds. 16 Not only does the IRS
significantly mischaracterize F&D’s legal theory, but Pearlman v. Reliance Ins. Co., 371
U.S. 132 (1962) is controlling with regard to the Retained Payments in this case. In
Construction Alternatives, the court pointed out that because the subcontractors had not
filed mechanic’s liens under Ohio’s statute, the school district “was not required or
permitted to retain any money…” Id. at 676. By contrast, in Pearlman, the U.S.
Supreme Court explained that where the contract permitted the owner to retain a portion
of the amount due to the contractor to cover payments to suppliers and subcontractors,
and the owner withheld those funds, the contractor acquired no property interest in
those funds, but instead the retained funds belonged to the surety. Likewise here,
ODOT was both contractually and legally required, under Ohio and federal law, to
withhold the Retained Payments. Because ODOT complied with its legal obligations
and actually did withhold those Retained Payments, Cosmos had no property interest in
those funds.
persuasive authority of Pearlman, multiple cases support F&D’s position that Cosmos
16
Even if F&D had argued a “trust” theory, at least one Sixth Circuit case would appear to support that
theory based upon the express language of the contracts at issue in this case. See Federal Ins. Co. v.
Fifth Third Bank, 867 F.2d 330 (6th Cir. 1969). Again, however, since F&D does not argue the theory,
there is no need for this Court to more closely examine it.
23
Case: 1:16-cv-00284-TSB-SKB Doc #: 57 Filed: 11/22/17 Page: 24 of 27 PAGEID #: 1750
had no property interest in the Retained Payments under Ohio law to which any federal
tax lien or levy could attach. See, e.g., In re Design Intern. Ohio Corp., Case No. 1.-92-
00642, 1994 WL 912422 (Bankruptcy Court, S.D. Ohio Sept. 14, 1994) (distinguishing
Construction Alternatives, holding that where contract expressly provided for retainage,
contractor never acquired property interest and funds were payable outside of
bankruptcy estate to surety who paid for materials); Winzeler Excavating Co. v. Brock,
694 F. Supp. 362, 366 (N.D. Ohio 1988)(suggesting in dictum that contractor had no
property interest in portion of funds retained under the Davis-Bacon Act that would
support a due process claim, but holding that “assuming arguendo” that contractor had
any such property right, theoretical due process claim would not lie because
subcontractor, despite having a property interest in small portion of retained funds that
exceeded amount properly withheld under R.C. §1331.28, so that IRS lien could attach
to only portion of excess retained funds); accord Capital Indemnity Corp. v. United
States, 452 F.3d 428 (5th Cir. 2006) (holding that where city had contractual right to
withhold amounts necessary to satisfy subcontractor and suppliers’ claims, the retained
funds are not the contractor’s property, and federal government’s tax lien did not
attach).
There is no dispute that ODOT was legally required under Ohio law to retain
such portion of any amount “due and unpaid” to Cosmos as to which it had received
affidavits. See R.C. § 1311.28. It also was legally required to withhold contributions for
fringe benefits under the Davis-Bacon Act. The cases cited above confirm that Cosmos
24
Case: 1:16-cv-00284-TSB-SKB Doc #: 57 Filed: 11/22/17 Page: 25 of 27 PAGEID #: 1751
did not ever acquire any property interest in the Retained Payments, since ODOT
withheld no more than mandated by Ohio law and/or the Davis-Bacon Act.
Payments, the undersigned concludes that F&D has demonstrated its entitlement to
reimbursement of its payments of Cosmos’s debts for the mechanic’s liens and fringe
benefits that the Retained Payments represent. Therefore, although the undersigned
previously concluded that F&D is entitled to payment of the Funds as a result of its post-
September 1, 2015 funding for all work on Payment Applications that generated the
Funds, the undersigned alternatively and additionally concludes that the Funds should
be paid out to F&D as reimbursement of its payments of the debts that generated the
Retained Payments.
Because the IRS loses on the threshold questions of whether Cosmos ever
acquired any property interests in the Funds or Retained Payments, there was no
taxpayer property to which the IRS liens or levy could attach. Therefore, there is no
need to review the parties’ alternative arguments concerning whether the IRS or F&D
would hold a superior lien interest under 26 U.S.C. § 6323. But see generally, Glenn v.
American Sur. Co., 160 F.2d 977 (6th Cir. 1947) (holding that surety had right to
retained payments, plus interest; in part because it had priority over tax lien).
Because F&D has carried its burden of proof to establish that the IRS improperly
levied against Funds that belong exclusively to F&D, and the IRS has failed to carry its
burden to establish a nexus between the Funds and any property interest that was held
25
Case: 1:16-cv-00284-TSB-SKB Doc #: 57 Filed: 11/22/17 Page: 26 of 27 PAGEID #: 1752
43) be GRANTED, and that the cross-motion of the IRS for summary judgment (Doc.
the Court, the Funds on deposit with this Court shall be released in their entirety to F&D,
s/ Stephanie K. Bowman
Stephanie K. Bowman
United States Magistrate Judge
26
Case: 1:16-cv-00284-TSB-SKB Doc #: 57 Filed: 11/22/17 Page: 27 of 27 PAGEID #: 1753
Plaintiff, Dlott, J.
v. Bowman, M.J.
OHIO DEPARTMENT OF
TRANSPORTATION, et al.,
Defendants.
NOTICE
Pursuant to Fed. R. Civ. P 72(b), any party may serve and file specific, written
objections to this Report and Recommendation (“R&R”) within FOURTEEN (14) DAYS
of the filing date of this R&R. That period may be extended further by the Court on
timely motion by either side for an extension of time. All objections shall specify the
portion(s) of the R&R objected to, and shall be accompanied by a memorandum of law
FOURTEEN (14) DAYS after being served with a copy of those objections. Failure to
make objections in accordance with this procedure may forfeit rights on appeal. See
Thomas v. Arn, 474 U.S. 140 (1985); United States v. Walters, 638 F.2d 947 (6th Cir.
1981).
27