OPINION
The appellant, Scotty’s Contracting & Stone Company (Scotty’s), filed this action seeking to quash two third-party summonses issued by the Internal Revenue Service to Scotty’s accountants. The district court denied Scotty’s petition to quash and granted the government’s motion for summary enforcement of the summonses. Scotty’s appeals. For the following rеasons, we affirm.
In 1998, the IRS initiated an investigation into the federal tax liabilities of James Scott for the years 1994, 1995 and 1996. Scott, a resident of Kentucky, is the owner and operator of appellant Scotty’s. On June 12, 2001, Douglas McEwen, a Special Agent with the IRS Criminal Investigation Division, issued summonses to Richard Callahan and Kent Kirby, who were accountants for both Scott and Scotty’s during the relevant years. According to his declaration, Agent McEwen issued these summonses in furtherance of his investigation “to determine whether James D. Scott has unreported federal income tax liabilities for the 1994 through 1996 tax years, and whether James D. Scott has committed any offense under the internal revenue laws.” Among other things, the summonses requested testimony regarding Scotty’s tax records.
On July 2, 2001, Scotty’s filed this action seeking to quash the summonses. In response, the government moved for summary enforcement of the summonses. Scotty’s contended that the IRS issued the summonsеs in bad faith because the IRS issued them for the sole purpose of a criminal investigation. Furthermore, Scotty’s argued that enforcement of the summonses would violate Kentucky’s accountant-client privilege.
The district court denied Scotty’s petition to quash and granted the government’s motion for summary enforcement. Although it found that this court had not yet decided the issue, the district court relied upon opinions from other circuits in concluding that the IRS may properly issue summonses for the sole purpose of a criminal investigation. In addition, the district court found that Kentucky’s ac *787 countant-client privilege does not prevent enforcement of validly issued summonses.
This appeal presents a novel legal issue for this court: Whether the IRS may validly issue a summons pursuant to 26 U.S.C. § 7602, as amended in 1982, for the sole purpose of a criminal investigation. Before addressing this question of statutory interpretation, however, we must confront two preliminary arguments made by the government.
First, in an argument not raised below, the government asserts that Scotty’s does not have standing to challenge the summonses on the basis that they were issued for the sole purpose of a criminal investigation because Scott, not Scotty’s, was the subject of the criminal investigation. While issues of standing, which are jurisdictional in nature, may be considered for the first time on appeal,
United States v. Van,
The second preliminary argument asserted by the government is that the subject summonses are valid no matter how the statutory-interpretation question is resolved because the summonses were issued for civil, as well as criminal, investigatory purposes. The district court, however, did not reach this factual question and instead held that the IRS may issue summonses for purely criminal investigаtory purposes under § 7602. We decline the government’s invitation to make initial findings of fact regarding whether the summonses were issued for partly civil investigatory purposes. We instead review the district court’s legal determination that under § 7602, as amended in 1982, the IRS may validly issue summonses solely for criminal investigatory purposes.
In 1978, the Supreme Court decided that the IRS may not validly issue a summons pursuant to § 7602 for the sole purpose of a criminal investigation, even if the criminal investigation has not yet been referred to the Department of Justice for prosecution.
United States v. LaSalle Nat’l Bank,
In § 7602 Congress has bestowed upon the Service the authority to summon production for four purposes only: for “ascertaining the correctness of any return, making a return where none has been made, determining the liability of any person for any internal revenue tax ... or collecting any such liability.” Congress therefore intended the summons authority to be used to aid the determination and collection of taxes. *788 These purposes do not include the goal of filing criminal charges against citizens. Consequently, summons authоrity does not exist to aid criminal investigations solely.
Id.
at 317 n. 18,
In 1982, Congress amended § 7602 in two ways significant to this appeal. First, Congress added a fifth purpose for which the IRS could issue summonses. The statute now provides that the IRS may issue summonses for “the purpose of inquiring into any offense connected with the administration or enforcement of the internal revenue laws.” 26 U.S.C. § 7602(b). Second, Congress explicitly dictated when the IRS’s summonsing authority ends: when the IRS refers a criminal investigation to the Department of Justice. 26 U.S.C. § 7602(d)(1) (“No summons may be issued under this title ... with respect to any person if a Justice Department referral is in effect with respect to such person.”). The statute defines the point at which “[a] Justice Department referral is in effect” as the time when the IRS “recommend[s] to the Attorney General a grand jury investigation of, or the criminal prosecution of, such person” or when “any request is made under section 6103(h)(3)(B) for the disclosure of any return or return information ... relating to such person.” 26 U.S.C. § 7602(d)(2).
Because § 7602 now grants the IRS the authority to issue summonses for the purpose of investigating “any offense” relating to the tax code, we conclude that the IRS may validly issue summonses for the purpose of investigating a criminal offense, even if that is the sole purpose for the summonses. According to thе plain language of the statute, the IRS’s authority to issue summonses for the purpose of investigating any offense relating to the tax code is extinguished only when the investigation is referred to the Department of Justice. The statute does not say that the IRS may issue summonses for the purpose of investigating any offense, unless the sole purpose is to investigate a criminal offense.
Cf. United States v. Arthur Young & Co.,
In reaching this conclusion, we join several other circuits. The Second, Third, Eighth, Tenth, and Eleventh Circuits have all concluded that the IRS may validly issue a summons pursuant to 26 U.S.C. § 7602, as amended in 1982, for the sole purpose of a criminal investigation.
United States v. Milkman,
Scotty’s, however, contends that the opposite conclusion is supported by Supreme Court precedent. Scotty’s cites
United States v. Stuart,
Although the
Stuart
Court did not explicitly clarify what it viewed as the “essence” of the holding in
LaSalle National Bank,
it is apparent that the Court was referring to the portion of the holding in
LaSalle National Bank
that the IRS may nоt issue a summons once it has recommended prosecution to the Justice Department. Crucial to the Court’s decision to uphold enforcement of the summonses at issue in
Stuart
was the Court’s strict interpretation of § 7602(d), which provides that the IRS may not issue a summons once a “Justice Department referral is in effect.” Because there was no Justice Department referral in effect, the Court in
Stuart
found that § 7602 did not bar enforcement of the summonses, even if the Canadian tax investigation had reached a stage analogous to a Justice Department referral.
Id.
at 362-63,
Scotty’s also relies upon two previous Sixth Circuit opinions in support of its position. Neither of these opinions, however, addresses the issue on appeal here. In
United States v. Beebe,
In the unpublished decision
United States v. Ahee,
Scotty’s also cites decisions from the First, Fourth, Fifth, Seventh, and Ninth Circuits in support of its position. The decisions cited by Scotty’s from thе First, Fifth, and Ninth Circuits all simply restate in
dicta
the holding of
LaSalle National Bank
without discussing the 1982 amendment to § 7602.
United States v. Lawn Builders of New England, Inc.,
The decision cited by Scotty’s from the Seventh Circuit states in a footnote that the IRS may not use its summonsing authority for the sole purpose of a criminаl investigation, but the only authority cited for this proposition is an earlier Seventh Circuit case, which expressly declines to resolve the issue of how the 1982 amendment to § 7602 affects the holding in La-Salle National Bank.
United States v. Berg,
In sum, the plain language of § 7602, as amended in 1982, makes clear that the IRS has the authority to issue summonses for the purpose of investigating “any offense” relating to the tax code, so long as the investigation has not been referred to the Department of Justice. The statute does not contain an exception for investigating purely criminal offenses, and we decline to create suсh an exception to the statute’s express grant of authority.
As an alternative argument, Scotty’s claims that Kentucky’s accountant-client privilege, codified at K.R.S. § 325.440, protects the information sought by the IRS in the subject summonses. The Supreme Court, however, has held that the IRS’s summonsing authority under § 7602 is not limited by any state lаw accountant-client privilege.
Arthur Young & Co.,
Scotty’s suggests that Arthur Young & Co. may no longer be good law in light of the 1998 codification of 26 U.S.C. § 7525, which creates a limited federal accountant-client privilege. The privilege established under § 7525, however, is narrow and does not purport to federalize Kentucky’s or any other state’s accountant-client privilege. Therefоre, § 7525 does not affect the holding in Arthur Young & Co. that state-created privileges do not limit the IRS’s summonsing authority. Significantly, Scotty’s has not asserted that the limited federal accountant-client privilege defined by 26 U.S.C. § 7525 protects the information sought by the IRS in the subject summonses.
For all the foregoing reasons, we affirm the judgment of the district court.
Notes
. While the
Beebe
court was not explicit regarding which version of § 7602 it was apply
*790
ing, the government’s brief in the
Beebe
case confirms that the court was applying § 7602 as it existed before 1982. As addendum C to its brief in the present case, the government submitted a copy of a page of its brief in the
Beebe
case. This excerpt makes clear that in the
Beebe
case the government conceded that the 1982 аmendment to § 7602 was not applicable because the summons in
Beebe
was issued prior to the effective date of the 1982 amendment. We take judicial notice of this page of a brief submitted as part of the proceedings in a different case.
See Lyons v. Stovall,
