Lead Opinion
OPINION
These cases are before us on petitioners’ motion for a protective order under Rule 103 (a) (10), Tax Court Rules of Practice and Procedure. We deny the motion for the reasons stated below and append some additional comments which we hope will facilitate the further proceedings in these cases.
The substantive gravamen of petitioners’ complaint is that the deficiency notices involved herein stem from second examinations of the books and records of the corporate petitioners under section 7605;
On the basis of the foregoing, petitioners seek an order directing respondent to produce and deliver into the custody of the Court, and thereby make available for inspection by the petitioners prior to trial, all documents (whether in the custody of the Commissioner of Internal Revenue, the Secretary of the Treasury, the Attorney General of the United States, or any of their agents or designees) relating to the audit of petitioners’ Federal income tax returns for 1966 through 1968 and any investigation of petitioners Thomas Gambino and Joseph Gambino by the Department of Justice, the Internal Revenue Service, or the Federal Strike Force Against Organized Crime operating in New York City. Petitioners assert that such an order is necessary to prevent the possible destruction or concealment of the documents involved and to enable the petitioners to prove, by such documents, the allegations of their amended petitions that respondent’s determination of deficiencies in each of their Federal income tax liabilities for 1968 arose from official actions violating their constitutional rights.
Petitioners also ask us, in the event that their allegations are established, to declare respondent’s determinations hull and void and therefore decide that there is no deficiency due from any of them for 1968; alternatively, petitioners ask that we shift to respondent the burden of proof or the burden of going forward with the evidence.
In terms of petitioners’ primary request herein — to wit, an impounding order under Rule 103(a) (10) — we are satisfied that they are not entitled to such relief. Initially, we note that Rule 103 (a) contains the following prefatory language to the specification of the types of protective orders which the Court will consider issuing: “for good cause shown, the Court may make any order which justice requires to protect a party or other person from annoyance, embarrassment, oppression, or undue burden or expense.”
Moreover, we note that impoundment is not customarily used to compel the production of documents before a court. Rather, it provides a means for retaining such documents in the court’s custody after they have been properly produced by other means, such as pretrial discovery, subpoenas duces tecum, or voluntarily by a party or witness to the litigation. United States v. Birrell,
We come now to what we consider the crux of the matter before us: if petitioners were able to establish their allegations of discrimination in their selection as objects of an otherwise legitimate tax audit, would they be entitled to the benefit of any of the requested forms of relief? If not, such allegations would be immaterial to the resolution of the instant cases and petitioners would, therefore, not be warranted in their attempts to compel the production of any documents sought to establish those allegations. Cf. William O'Dwyer,
As a general rule, this Court will not look behind a deficiency notice to examine the evidence used or the propriety of respondent’s motives or of the administrative policy or procedure involved in making his determinations. Human Engineering Institute,
This Court has on occasion recognized an exception to the rule of not looking behind the deficiency notice when there is substantial evidence of unconstitutional conduct on respondent’s part and the integrity of our judicial process would be impugned if we were to let respondent benefit from such conduct. Efrain T. Suarez, supra. But even in such limited situations, we have refused to declare the deficiency notice null and void, as petitioners would have us do. See Efrain T. Suarez,
In the area of the criminal law, “mere selectivity in prosecution creates no constitutional problem.” See United States v. Steele,
Assuming without deciding that a similar standard should be applied to civil tax litigation (cf. Hugo Romanelli,
What is more, petitioners are not faced with prejudicial action by a Government agency which will, absent protective intervention by this Court, result in a final determination of petitioners’ tax liabilities or in the establishment of facts which will be deemed undisputed and inexorably lead to the imposition of such liabilities. Cf. Shapiro v. Thompson, supra; United States v. Falk, supra; United States v. Steele, supra. Indeed, their right to a trial de novo in this Court is the critical factor which distinguishes practically all of the cases relied upon by petitioners. Compare Bob Jones University v. Simon, supra; Robida v. Commissioner,
The broad sweep of the power to enforce revenue laws has repeatedly been recognized. E.g., Donaldson v. United States,
The foregoing reasoning also disposes of petitioners’ attempt to attack the validity of the second examinations nnder section 7605(b). In a prior proceeding, petitioners unsuccessfully attacked the summons issued in connection with such examinations. See United States v. Gambino, an unreported case (S.D. N.Y. 1971,
We conclude that petitioners’ motion should be denied and that these cases should proceed to trial in due course.
An appropriate order will be entered.
Notes
All references are to the Internal Revenue Code of 1954, as amended and in effect during tie times pertinent herein.
Rule 103(a) (10) permits the issuance of an order, “That documents or records be impounded by the Court to insure their availability for purposes of review by the parties prior to trial and use at the trial.”
We also note that, since only the taxable year 1968 Is involved in the docketed cases with respect to which the motions herein have been made, it is at least open to question whether petitioners may reach documents, etc., pertaining to other taxable years.
