[Code of Federal Regulations]
[Title 26, Volume 18]
[Revised as of April 1, 2004]
From the U.S. Government Printing Office via GPO Access
[CITE: 26CFR301.6332-1]

[Page 285-287]
 
                       TITLE 26--INTERNAL REVENUE
 
    CHAPTER I--INTERNAL REVENUE SERVICE, DEPARTMENT OF THE TREASURY 
                               (CONTINUED)
 
PART 301_PROCEDURE AND ADMINISTRATION--Table of Contents
 
               Seizure of Property for Collection of Taxes
 
Sec. 301.6332-1  Surrender of property subject to levy.

    (a) Requirement--(1) In general. Except as otherwise provided in 
Sec. 301.6332-2, relating to levy in the case of life insurance and 
endowment contracts, and in Sec. 301.6332-3, relating to property held 
by banks, any person in possession of (or obligated with respect to) 
property or rights to property subject to levy and upon which a levy has 
been made shall, upon demand of the district director, surrender the 
property or rights (or discharge the obligation) to the district 
director, except that part of the property or rights (or obligation) 
which, at the time of the demand, is actually or constructively under 
the jurisdiction of a court because of an attachment or execution under 
any judicial process.
    (2) Levy on bank deposits held in offices outside the United States. 
Notwithstanding subparagraph (1) of this paragraph (a), if a levy has 
been made upon property or rights to property subject to levy which a 
bank engaged in the banking business in the United States

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or a possession of the United States is in possession of (or obligated 
with respect to), the Commissioner shall not enforce the levy with 
respect to any deposits held in an office of the bank outside the United 
States or a possession of the United States, unless the notice of levy 
specifies that the district director intends to reach such deposits. The 
notice of levy shall not specify that the district director intends to 
reach such deposits unless the district director believes--
    (i) That the taxpayer is within the jurisdiction of a U.S. court at 
the time the levy is made and that the bank is in possession of (or 
obligated with respect to) deposits of the taxpayer in an office of the 
bank outside the United States or a possession of the United States; or
    (ii) That the taxpayer is not within the jurisdiction of a U.S. 
court at the time the levy is made, that the bank is in possession of 
(or obligated with respect to) deposits of the taxpayer in an office 
outside the United States or a possession of the United States, and that 
such deposits consist, in whole or in part, of funds transferred from 
the United States or a possession of the United States in order to 
hinder or delay the collection of a tax imposed by the Code. For 
purposes of this subparagraph, the term ``possession of the United 
States'' includes Guam, the Midway Islands, the Panama Canal Zone, the 
Commonwealth of Puerto Rico, American Samoa, the Virgin Islands, and 
Wake Island.
    (b) Enforcement of levy--(1) Extent of personal liability. Any 
person who, upon demand of the district director, fails or refuses to 
surrender any property or right to property subject to levy is liable in 
his own person and estate in a sum equal to the value of the property or 
rights not so surrendered, together with costs and interest. The 
liability, however, may not exceed the amount of the taxes for the 
collection of which the levy was made. Interest is to be computed at the 
annual rate referred to in regulations under section 6621 from the date 
of the levy, or, in the case of a continuing levy on salary or wages 
(see section 6331(d)(3)), from the date the person would otherwise have 
been obligated to pay over the wages or salary to the taxpayer. Any 
amount recovered, other than cost, will be credited against the tax 
liability for the collection of which the levy was made.
    (2) Penalty for violation. In addition to the personal liability 
described in subparagraph (1) of this paragraph (b), any person who is 
required to surrender property or rights to property and who fails or 
refuses to surrender them without reasonable cause is liable for a 
penalty equal to 50 percent of the amount recoverable under section 
6332(d)(1). No part of the penalty described in this subparagraph shall 
be credited against the tax liability for the collection of which the 
levy was made. The penalty described in this subparagraph is not 
applicable in cases where bona fide dispute exists concerning the amount 
of the property to be surrendered pursuant to a levy or concerning the 
legal effectiveness of the levy. However, if a court in a later 
enforcement suit sustains the levy, then reasonable cause would usually 
not exist to refuse to honor a later levy made under similar 
circumstances.
    (c) Effect of honoring levy--(1) In general. Any person in 
possession of, or obligated with respect to, property or rights to 
property subject to levy and upon which a levy has been made who, upon 
demand by the district director, surrenders the property or rights to 
property, or discharges the obligation, to the district director, or who 
pays a liability described in paragraph (b)(1) of this section, is 
discharged from any obligation or liability to the delinquent taxpayer 
and any other person with respect to the property or rights to property 
arising from the surrender or payment.
    (2) Exception for certain incorrectly surrendered property. Any 
person who surrenders to the Internal Revenue Service property or rights 
to property not properly subject to levy in which the delinquent 
taxpayer has no apparent interest is not relieved of liability to a 
third party who has an interest in the property. However, if the 
delinquent taxpayer has an apparent interest in property or rights to 
property, a person who makes a good faith determination that such 
property or rights to property in his or her possession has been levied 
upon by the Internal Revenue

[[Page 287]]

Service and who surrenders the property to the United States in response 
to the levy is relived of liability to a third party who has an interest 
in the property or rights to property, even if it is subsequently 
determined that the property was not properly subject to levy.
    (3) Remedy. In situations described in paragraphs (c)(1) and (c)(2) 
of this section, taxpayers and third parties who have an interest in 
property surrendered in response to a levy may secure from the Internal 
Revenue Service the administrative relief provided for in section 
6343(b) or may bring suit to recover the property under section 7426.
    (4) Examples. The provisions of this paragraph (c) may be 
illustrated by the following examples:

    Example 1. M Bank is served with a notice of levy for an unpaid tax 
liability due from A in the amount of $2,000. M Bank holds $2,000 in a 
checking account in the names of A or B or C. Although all of the 
deposits into the account were made by B and C, A has an unrestricted 
right to withdraw the funds from the account. M Bank surrenders the 
entire account to the district director at the end of the holding period 
provided in section 6332(c). Under paragraph (c)(1) of this section, M 
Bank is not liable to B or C for any amount, even if B or C prove that 
the funds in the account did not belong to A, because A's unrestricted 
right to withdraw the funds is an interest which in subject to levy. B 
or C may, however, seek the return of the funds from the United States 
as provided in sections 6343(b) and 7426 of the Internal Revenue Code.
    Example 2. A is indebted to B for $400. Unbeknownst to A, B has 
assigned his right to receive payment to C. A is served with a notice of 
levy for an unpaid tax liability due from B for $400. A, acting with no 
knowledge of the assignment to C, surrenders $400 to the district 
director. A is discharged from his obligation to pay B, the taxpayer. 
Under paragraph (c)(2) of this section, because B had an apparent 
interest in the funds that A owed to B, and because A determined in good 
faith that those funds had been levied upon, A is also discharged from 
any liability to C, even though the money is not properly subject to 
levy. C may, however, seek return of the payment from the United States 
as provided in sections 6343(b) and 7426 of the Internal Revenue Code.
    Example 3. M Bank is served with a notice of levy for an unpaid tax 
liability due from ``John H. Smith, Sr.'' in the amount of $5,000. M 
Bank fails to read the notice of levy carefully. When searching its 
records, M Bank finds the name of ``John H. Smith, Jr.'' and looks no 
further. M Bank surrenders $5,000 from John H. Smith, Jr.'s checking 
account to the district director. M Bank is not discharged from 
liability under section 6332(e) of the Internal Revenue Code because the 
delinquent taxpayer (John H. Smith, Sr.) had no apparent interest in the 
account of John H. Smith, Jr. (Generally, John H. Smith Jr. may seek 
return of the payment from the United States as provided in sections 
6343 and 7426 of the Internal Revenue Code.)

    Example 4. M Bank is served with a notice of levy for an unpaid tax 
liability due from ``Robert A. Jones'' in the amount of $5,000. M Bank 
searches its records and identifies four separate accounts of $1,000 
each in the name of ``Robert A. Jones.'' All four accounts list 
different addresses and social security identification numbers. M Bank 
surrenders all four accounts totalling $4,000 in response to the levy. M 
Bank could not in good faith have determined that all four accounts were 
levied upon. Therefore, M Bank is not discharged from liability to any 
person other than the taxpayer whose account was levied upon.

    (5) Effective date. Paragraph (c) of this section is effective 
January 11, 1993. However, persons surrendering property to the Internal 
Revenue Service may rely on the regulations with respect to levies 
issued after November 10, 1988.

    (d) Person defined. The term ``person,'' as used in section 6332(a) 
and this section, includes an officer or employee of a corporation or a 
member or employee of a partnership, who is under a duty to surrender 
the property or rights to property or to discharge the obligation. In 
the case of a levy upon the salary or wages of an officer, employee, or 
elected or appointed official of the United States, the District of 
Columbia, or any agency or instrumentality of either, the term 
``person'' includes the officer or employee of the United States, of the 
District of Columbia, or of such agency or instrumentality who is under 
a duty to discharge the obligation. As to the officer or employee who is 
under such duty, see paragraph (a)(4)(i) of Sec. 301.6331-1.


[32 FR 15241, Nov. 3, 1967, as amended by T.D. 7180, 37 FR 7317, Apr. 
13, 1972; T.D. 7620, 44 FR 27988, May 14, 1979; T. D. 8466, 58 FR 17, 
Jan. 4, 1993; T. D.8467, 58 FR 3829, Jan. 12, 1993]

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