Plaintiff-appellant James Eicher filed IRS Forms 1040A for the years 1981 and 1982 which provided no information except his name, address, social security number, and filing status. He placed an asterisk on each line calling for other information and attached the following footnote to the return:
“Due to the fact as stated that anything I state on this form may be used against me in a ‘DUE PROCESS COURT OF LAW.’ I am claiming my Fifth Amendment rights as prescribed by the “Constitution” which you and every employee of the U.S. Govt, has sworn to do so and has taken an oath to do so.”
Under section 6702 of the Internal Revenue Code, 26 U.S.C. § 6702, which authorizes imposition of a civil penalty for the filing of a frivolous return, the IRS assessed a $500 penalty for each of plaintiff’s purported returns. Pursuant to section 6703(c) of the *29 Code, 26 U.S.C. § 6703(c), plaintiff paid 15 percent of the penalty, or $75, for each year and filed with the IRS a refund claim, which was denied. Plaintiff then filed suit against the defendant-appellee United States in the district court, claiming that the penalty was invalid because his assertion of the Fifth Amendment privilege was lawful and not frivolous, and also raising a number of constitutional challenges to sections 6702 and 6703. The district court, without oral argument, granted the government’s motion for summary judgment, apparently on the grounds that plaintiff's purported returns were frivolous within the meaning of § 6702 as a matter of law, plaintiff’s constitutional claims were merit-less, and plaintiff had not demonstrated the existence of any genuine issue of material fact.
Plaintiff filed the instant appeal, in which he raises the following arguments: 1) plaintiff’s assertion of the Fifth Amendment privilege was not frivolous; 2) section 6702 is unconstitutionally vague in that it authorizes imposition of a penalty for a “frivolous” return; 3) the section 6702 penalty could not constitutionally be imposed against plaintiff without a prior hearing; 4) the penalty infringed plaintiff’s First Amendment rights; and 5) the district court could not properly dismiss plaintiff’s complaint without an evidentiary hearing. We affirm.
It is well-settled that a taxpayer may not assert a blanket claim of Fifth Amendment privilege to avoid providing any financial information on an income tax return.
Betz v. United States,
We see no merit to any of plaintiff’s constitutional challenges. Since plaintiff’s returns certainly are “frivolous” under any definition, plaintiff lacks standing to challenge section 6702 on grounds of vagueness,
Welch v. United States,
We can discern no reason why the district court should have held an evidentiary hearing prior to granting summary judgment. Plaintiff alleged no facts below that would suggest any basis for his blanket assertion of privilege. No factual 'inquiry into plaintiffs state of mind or purported good faith in filing the returns was necessary, since a penalty may be assessed under section 6702 regardless of the taxpayer’s “good faith” in filing his frivolous return.
Kahn, supra,
As we have pointed out, plaintiff’s appeal raises arguments wholly without legal foundation and repeatedly rejected by the courts. Other courts have imposed sanctions against appellants who brought appeals raising identical arguments.
Betz, supra,
The judgment of the district court is affirmed. Double costs are assessed against appellant.
Notes
. We see no substance to plaintiffs claim that the section 6702 penalty is criminal, not civil, in nature, nor to his contention that an income tax return should be considered a subpoena.
