The district court denied judicial enforcement of an Internal Revenue Service summons issued pursuant to 26 U.S.C. § 7602. We reverse.
Talley, an IRS special agent in the Intelligence Division, was investigating the federal income tax liability of Leroy Dale Hines for the years 1967-1971. On October 16, 1972, he issued а summons to Paul Hodgson, a lawyer, requiring him to produce records of all charges to or in behalf of Hines during the years 1966-1971 for legal services and records of all moneys received from, or credited to, Hines for such services. The requested records included amounts, payment dates, names of those making payment or causing credit to be made, and the manner in which payments or credits were made. The wording of the summons was broad enough to cover services other than legal but it is agreed that the services which Hodgson performed fоr Hines were the result of an attorney-client relationship.
Hodgson responded to the summons, declined to produce the records or to testify, and asserted the attorney-client privilege. The United States and the special agent then petitioned for enforсement. See 26 U.S.C. §§ 7402(b) and 7604(a). Hodgson’s answer, supported by his affidavit, admits possession of records reflecting receipts from Hines, and alleges that those records would disclose the general nature of the services rendered. The answer affirmatively says that the special agent was conducting a criminal investigation of Hines for the years in question and asserts the attorney-client privilege as a justification for refusal to respond. After two hearings at which the special agent was the only witness, the district court denied enforcement оn the ground *1177 that the records and information sought were protected by the claimed privilege.
The question is whether the attorney-cliеnt privilege extends to the records and information sought from attorney Hodgson. In the area of federal income tax investigation the claim of privilege is controlled by federal law. United States v. Finley, 5 Cir.,
Attorney Hodgson made a blanket claim of the privilege. A general refusal to cooperate is not еnough. He must normally raise the privilege as to each record sought and each question asked so that at the enforcement hеaring the court can rule with specificity. United States v. Cromer, 9 Cir.,
In Donaldson v. United States,
Donaldson requires that a § 7602 summons be issued in good faith,
The respondent attorney argues that if we reverse on the attorney-client privilege, the case must be remanded for a determination оf the good faith issue by the trial court. We are not so persuaded. At two hearings in the district court the parties were given full opportunity tо present what they wished. The only basis which the record presents for a holding of bad faith is the number of cases which had been brought against the client Hines. The fact that the taxpayer-client had been subject to five previous lawsuits does not immunize him from the summons which is the produсt of the current investigation. This is not a case like Billingsley in which the trial court did not consider good faith. See
The judgment is reversed with directions to order enforcement of the summons. The mandate shall issue forthwith.
