Neil FEINBERG; Andrea E. Feinberg; Kellie McDonald, Petitioners, v. COMMISSIONER OF INTERNAL REVENUE, Respondent.
No. 15-1333.
United States Court of Appeals, Tenth Circuit.
Dec. 18, 2015.
813 F.3d 813
Notably,
Because the district court‘s certification ruling did not expressly address the
III
The district court‘s order is REVERSED and the case is REMANDED to the district court for further consideration of plaintiffs’ motion for class certification. Sentry‘s unopposed motion for leave to file exhibit under seal is GRANTED.
James D. Thorburn of The Law Office of James D. Thorburn, LLC, Greenwood Village, CO (Richard A. Walker of The Law Office of Richard A. Walker, P.C., Longmont, CO, with him on the petition) for Petitioners.
Patrick J. Urda, Attorney, Appellate Section, Tax Division (Caroline D. Ciraolo, Acting Assistant Attorney General, Tax Division, and Gilbert S. Rothenberg and Richard Farber, Attorneys, Appellate Section, Tax Division, with him on the response) of the United States Department of Justice, Washington, D.C., for Respondent.
Before GORSUCH, HOLMES, and MORITZ, Circuit Judges.
This case owes its genesis to the mixed messages the federal government is sending these days about the distribution of marijuana. The Feinbergs and Ms. McDonald run Total Health Concepts, or THC, a not-so-subtly-named Colorado marijuana dispensary. They run the business with the blessing of state authorities but in defiance of federal criminal law. See
Our petitioners are busy fighting the IRS‘s policy. After the agency disallowed their business expense deductions and sent them a large bill, the Feinbergs and Ms. McDonald challenged that ruling in tax court. Among other things, they argued that the agency lacked authority to determine whether THC trafficked in an unlawful substance and, as a result, they suggested that their deductions should have been allowed like those of any other business. As the litigation progressed, though, the IRS issued discovery requests asking the petitioners about the nature of their business—no doubt seeking proof that they are indeed trafficking in marijuana, just as the agency alleged. The Feinbergs and Ms. McDonald resisted these requests, asserting that their Fifth Amendment
It‘s here where the parties’ fight took an especially curious turn. The IRS responded to the petitioners’ invocation of the Fifth Amendment by filing with the tax court a motion to compel production of the discovery it sought. Why the agency bothered isn‘t exactly clear. In tax court, after all, it‘s the petitioners who carry the burden of showing the IRS erred in denying their deductions and by invoking the privilege and refusing to produce the materials that might support their deductions the petitioners no doubt made their task just that much harder. See Tax Ct. R. 142(a)(1). And harder still because in civil matters an invocation of the Fifth Amendment may sometimes lawfully result in an inference that what you refuse to produce isn‘t favorable to your cause. See, e.g., Baxter v. Palmigiano, 425 U.S. 308, 318, 96 S.Ct. 1551, 47 L.Ed.2d 810 (1976).
Still, the IRS chose to pursue a motion to compel. And in support of its motion the agency advanced this line of reasoning. Yes, of course, the IRS said, it thinks THC‘s deductions are impermissible precisely because they arise from activity proscribed by federal criminal statutes. Yes, the Fifth Amendment normally shields individuals from having to admit to criminal activity. But, the IRS argued, because DOJ‘s memoranda generally instruct federal prosecutors not to prosecute cases like this one the petitioners should be forced to divulge the requested information anyway. So it is the government simultaneously urged the court to take seriously its claim that the petitioners are violating federal criminal law and to discount the possibility that it would enforce federal criminal law.
Ultimately, the tax court sided with the IRS and ordered the petitioners to produce the discovery the agency demanded—and it is this ruling the Feinbergs and Ms. McDonald now ask us to overturn. Because the tax court proceedings are still ongoing and no final order exists that might afford this court jurisdiction in the normal course, the petitioners seek a writ of mandamus. But, of course, courts of appeals only rarely intervene in ongoing trial court proceedings, and winning a writ of mandamus poses a special challenge. To secure a writ, the petitioners must show that no other adequate means exist to secure the relief they seek. They must also show a clear and indisputable entitlement to that relief. And even if they can satisfy these two requirements, the petitioners still must convince this court that exercising its discretion to intervene in an ongoing trial court proceeding is “appropriate” in the interests of justice. See Cheney v. U.S. Dist. Court, 542 U.S. 367, 380-81, 124 S.Ct. 2576, 159 L.Ed.2d 459 (2004); Kerr v. U.S. Dist. Court, 426 U.S. 394, 403, 96 S.Ct. 2119, 48 L.Ed.2d 725 (1976); United States v. Copar Pumice Co., 714 F.3d 1197, 1210 (10th Cir.2013).1
In light of questions and possibilities like these, you might be forgiven for wondering whether, memos or no memos, any admission by the petitioners about their involvement in the marijuana trade still involves an “authentic danger of self-incrimination.” Maybe especially given the fact that the government‘s defense in this case is wholly premised on the claim that the petitioners are, in fact, violating federal criminal law. And given the fact that counsel for the government in this appeal candidly acknowledged that neither the existence nor the language of the DOJ memoranda can assure the petitioners that they are now, or will continue to be, safe from prosecution. And given the fact that this court has long explained that, once a witness establishes that “the answers requested would tend to incriminate [him]” under the law of the land, the Fifth Amendment may be properly invoked without regard to anyone‘s “speculat[ion] [about] whether the witness will in fact be prosecuted.” United States v. Jones, 703 F.2d 473, 478 (10th Cir.1983).
But even if their Fifth Amendment objection bears merit, the petitioners still face a problem. As we‘ve seen, a writ of mandamus isn‘t available when an appeal in the normal course would suffice to supply any necessary remedy. And in Mid-America‘s Process Service v. Ellison, 767 F.2d 684 (10th Cir.1985), this court expressly held that any error in a district court‘s order compelling production of civil
Admittedly, the government unearthed Mid-America‘s Process only after briefing in this appeal finished, citing the case for the first time in a supplemental letter to the court. But the petitioners have now had a chance to consider and reply to the government‘s submission concerning Mid-America‘s Process. And, in our judgment, they have identified no satisfactory way to distinguish the decision. The petitioners do argue that their case involves the Fifth Amendment rights of natural persons, while Mid-America‘s Process involved a corporation‘s claim to a Fifth Amendment privilege against self-incrimination. And, they note, the Supreme Court has cast doubt on the viability of corporate invocations of the privilege. See Braswell v. United States, 487 U.S. 99, 116, 108 S.Ct. 2284, 101 L.Ed.2d 98 (1988). But while not without some surface appeal, we don‘t see how on more careful examination this distinction will do. For Mid-America‘s Process expressly looked past the corporate form of the claimant in that case, took account of the individual petitioners’ underlying privilege claims, and held that an appeal after final judgment would suffice to remedy any individual injury as well. See 767 F.2d at 685-86 & n. 1.4
Besides, even if Mid-America‘s Process didn‘t control this case (it does) the petitioners still offer us no persuasive reason for thinking an appeal after final judgment would fail to remedy any wrong they might suffer. Suppose the petitioners are right and the tax court‘s order compelling production violates their Fifth Amendment rights. If they defy the tax court‘s order and that court issues an improper monetary or other sanction, this court would seem well able to undo the sanction after final judgment. By contrast, if the petitioners choose to comply with the discovery order under protest and the materials they produce are unlawfully used against them at trial, this court would still seem to enjoy ample authority to offer a remedy, maybe even in the form of a new trial without resort to the materials in question.
Of course there are nuances here, but even they seem like they can be fairly addressed later. For example, if the petitioners stand on their privilege we would face the difficulty of separating out a permissible adverse inference (sometimes employable, as we‘ve seen, in civil cases even when the Fifth Amendment is validly invoked) from an impermissible sanction. But no one suggests that task is beyond us after final judgment. Similarly, if the petitioners choose to produce the discovery under compulsion we might have to confront the question whether any error by the tax court in ordering production was harmless and so beyond our power to remedy after final judgment. But that sort of
In the end, then, the petitioners fail to offer a convincing reason to think that without an immediate remedy they will face an irreparable injury. Maybe we‘re missing something. Maybe a future party will show us what it is we‘re missing. But the petitioners have not done that much here. And that by itself supplies an independent reason, beyond even our controlling precedent, to withhold the extraordinary remedy of mandamus in this case.
The petition is denied.
GORSUCH
CIRCUIT JUDGE
