The question presented in this appeal is whether business records temporarily surrendered to the Internal Revenue Service on a voluntary basis in connection with a tax investigation may be retained and copied by the IRS after the owner of the documents has formally demanded their return and withdrawn consent to the making of copies.
The defendant is an IRS agent to whom the plaintiff, a professional corporation, entrusted thousands of pages of records after the issuance of an administrative summons but before steps had been taken to make compliance with the summons mandatory. The agent took the documents to another city, kept them for months, and rejected several informal requests for their return. The plaintiff then revoked the consent given earlier, but the agent held on to the documents in order to make copies. The originals were finally returned after the plaintiff sued to get them back; the agent refused to give up the copies.
Concluding that retention of copies made after the revocation of consent violated the plaintiffs Fourth Amendment right to be “secure” in its papers “against unreasonable searches and seizures,” we shall direct that the copies be turned over to the plaintiff.
I.
Plaintiff Richard A. Vaughn, DDS, P.C., a corporation with offices in Highland Park, Michigan, was the subject of an investigation by the Internal Revenue Service concerning possible violations of the federal tax laws. In connection with this investigation defendant Frederick G. Baldwin, an IRS agent, issued an administrative summons to the president of the corporation, Dr. Vaughn, calling for the production of thousands of documents. Dr. Vaughn voluntarily complied and agreed to let the IRS make copies. The documents were delivered to the IRS on November 23 and December 15, 1988, and were lodged in an IRS office located in Mt. Clemens, Michigan. Mt. Clemens is more than 20 miles from Highland Park.
The plaintiff subsequently made several informal requests for the return of the documents. The requests were denied. On May 11, 1989, the plaintiff made a formal demand for the papers. Again the IRS refused to comply. One week later the plaintiff issued a written revocation of consent to the IRS’s retention of the records, and a suit in the nature of a replevin action was filed on May 22,1989. The IRS continued to make copies, and finally started returning the originals on June 12. The last of the documents were given back on July 25, 1989, more than eight months after the original production. The district court then dismissed the lawsuit as moot.
The present suit was brought pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 1361 to compel Agent Baldwin to turn over all photocopies made after the withdrawal of consent on May 18, 1989. The complaint also sought damages.
The district court denied a motion by the plaintiff for summary judgment, and the court dismissed the action on motion by the defendant IRS agent. This appeal followed. The plaintiffs sole contention on appeal is that the Fourth Amendment precludes the IRS from keeping photocopies made after the plaintiff withdrew its consent. The court is without jurisdiction to review other claims made in the district court.
McMurphy v. City of Flushing,
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It is clear that the IRS was entitled to copy the records while they were in its lawful possession and to keep the copies after the plaintiff regained possession of the originals.
Sovereign News Co. v. United States,
In granting Agent Baldwin’s motion to dismiss, the district court suggested that applying the Fourth Amendment to cases such as this one would merely make it easier for taxpayers to insulate their records from the IRS through an “extrajudicial remedy.” A similar suggestion was made in
Mason v. Pulliam,
The Fourth Amendment is not an “extrajudicial remedy,” and the constitutional rights of taxpayers cannot be sacrificed to the convenience of the IRS. “If the Government comes by evidence of tax obligations through means which callously disregard a citizen’s constitutional rights, the naked possession of such information is not a basis for retention and use.”
United States v. Chapman,
Agent Baldwin attempts to distinguish
Mason
on the ground that in that case the taxpayer turned over records without an administrative summons having been issued, whereas here the plaintiff was responding to a summons. Chief Judge Clark rejected such a distinction in
Linn v. Chivatero,
Citing
United States v. Ponder,
It is “unreasonable” searches and seizures that are proscribed by the Fourth Amendment, of course, and the position taken by the IRS agent in this case was clearly unreasonable. The agency had months to examine and copy the plaintiff’s records, and during that time Dr. Vaughn was told that the only way he could see the
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records would be to go to Mt. Clemens. When Dr. Vaughn finally made a formal demand for the return of the documents, it took more than two months and a lawsuit to get them back. Throughout the entire episode, the government’s attitude was basically “ ‘[t]he joke is on you. You shouldn’t have trusted us.’ ”
Brandt v. Hickel,
When the plaintiff voluntarily complied with the IRS summons, it had the right to expect fair treatment in return. See
St. Regis Paper Co. v. United States,
The judgment of the district court is REVERSED and the case is REMANDED for entry of a summary judgment ordering that all copies of the plaintiff’s documents made after May 18,1989, be turned over to the plaintiff.
Notes
. The rest of the panel did not reach the issue.
Linn,
