The United States petitioned the district court to enforce an Internal Revenue Service (IRS) summons served on Author Services, Inc. (ASI) in connection with a criminal tax investigation of L. Ron Hubbard. 1 ASI contended the IRS was not acting in good faith and sought an evidentiary hearing to support that contention. ASI appeals from the district court’s denial of its request for an evidentiary hearing and from the enforcement order; the United States appeals from the district court’s restriction on the IRS’s use of the documents, prohibiting release of the documents to any other government agency without a court order unless criminal tax prosecution is sought. We affirm.
BACKGROUND
In August 1984 the Los Angeles District Office of the IRS began a tax investigation of individuals connected with the Church of Scientology (Church), including L. Ron Hubbard. On September 13, 1984 the IRS served an administrative summons in connection with the Hubbard investigation on ASI, a literary business management company whose principal client was L. Ron Hubbard.
ASI refused to produce the documents because it could not get the IRS to agree to a nondisclosure agreement specifying the IRS would not provide copies of the produced documents to persons not involved in the IRS investigation without ASI approval. The IRS commenced judicial process to enforce the summons on April 3, 1985.
The Church of Scientology moved to intervene and the district court granted the motion on June 10, 1985. ASI and the Church both opposed enforcement on the ground that the IRS was seeking enforcement in bad faith. On June 10, 1985 the district court held a hearing on enforcement of the summons. The court denied ASI’s request for an evidentiary hearing, taking judicial notice of the fact that the evidentiary hearing held April 29 and 30, 1985 in the related case,
United States v. Zolin,
(appeal pending, 9th Cir. Docket Nos. 85-6065, 6105), had produced no evidence of IRS bad faith. The court ordered the summons enforced but added that no documents produced could be delivered by the IRS to any agency or individual without
DISCUSSION
I. Evidentiary Hearing
This court in 1975 approved the use of limited evidentiary hearings in summons enforcement proceedings for the purpose of sifting out “those rare cases where bald allegations of harassment or improper purpose can be substantiated.”
United States v. Church of Scientology,
In this case the district court denied the request on the ground that the bad faith allegations had been raised and held to be insubstantial in the related
Zolin
case, in which the court recently had held an evidentiary hearing. The court took judicial notice of the facts developed in the
Zolin
hearing, and in doing so it did not abuse its discretion. It is well established that a court may take judicial notice of its own records.
Shuttlesworth v. City of Birmingham,
The factual allegations in Zolin were identical to those raised by ASI. Specifically ASI sought to prove the IRS’s bad faith by showing that: (1) the IRS had improperly advised Department of Justice (DOJ) attorneys of the time and place (Ventura Holiday Inn) of scheduled witness interviews, with the consequence that DOJ attorneys interviewed the witnesses on the same day, allegedly under color of IRS authority; and (2) the IRS had improperly released information to a third party, Gerald Armstrong, who allegedly was involved in a plot to discredit an ASI officer. Both of these allegations were made during the Zolin hearing by the Church’s attorney. The hearing consisted of a one hour and fifteen minute examination of Phillip Xanthos, IRS Branch Chief of the Los Angeles Criminal Investigation Division. Xanthos denied there was any communication with the DOJ about the Ventura interviews and he denied that Armstrong was on the IRS payroll. The court was convinced by his testimony that the summons was validly issued pursuant to a bona fide criminal tax investigation and that there was no improper purpose.
The judge then said, at the June 10 ASI proceeding, that he saw no need for another hearing and that nothing ASI wished to offer as evidence would change his mind. ASI argued that it wanted to cross-examine Kruse, a DOJ attorney, and Lipkin, the IRS agent responsible for setting up the Ventura interviews, because they could shed more light on the bad-faith claim arising out of that incident. The judge indicated the matter had been litigated far beyond what was reasonable in a proceeding of that sort. Kruse’s Declaration expressly stated he had not used any IRS authority or legal process to assist in his defense of the DOJ in the Church tort suit against the Government. Lipkin’s Declaration similarly denied that DOJ had ever asked him to summon any witness.
Given the facts presented to the court, it did not abuse its discretion in refusing to hold another hearing.
This court reviews a summons enforcement decision under the clearly erroneous standard.
Ponsford v. United States,
The only enforcement requirement in dispute is the purpose of the investigation. ASI urges that the entire investigation was being conducted in bad faith, for the collateral purpose of discovering information which could be useful to the DOJ in defending in several on-going civil suits brought by the Church. ASI contends that the district court applied the wrong standard in evaluating the purpose of the investigation. ASI argues the court improperly focused only on the good faith of this particular summons rather than of the investigation as a whole. The court said during the Zolin hearing that “this case is not going to get expanded into a full-scale investigation of how the IRS gets its information. The question is whether this summons proceeding is a legitimate part of a legitimate tax investigation.” The court asked on several occasions why questions about the circumstances of the Ventura interviews were relevant to the good faith of the ASI summons. Nevertheless, the court heard the examination of Xanthos and reviewed all the pleadings and concluded the summons met the Powell standards because no evidence had been adduced which showed improper purpose.
ASI relies on
United States v. La Salle National Bank,
It is crucial to note that in
La Salle National Bank
the Court stressed that bad faith is found only if the IRS abandons its
institutional
responsibility to determine and collect taxes, not if a single agent is actuated by an impermissible motive.
Id.
at 316,
ASI also contends the IRS improperly disclosed information to a third party, Armstrong. This claim was not thoroughly explored in the
Zolin
hearing, but all Declarations by the agents involved indicate Armstrong was merely a witness interviewed by the IRS, and that there was no improper exchange of information. ASI relies on a Declaration by John Peterson, an attorney defending the Church in a suit
The district court’s decision to enforce the summons was not clearly erroneous.
III. Authority to Restrict Disclosure
District courts have jurisdiction to enforce IRS summons under 26 U.S.C. §§ 7402(b) and 7604(a) (1982). The Government argues that the court exceeded its authority by placing restrictions on the IRS’s use of the information obtained through enforcement of the ASI summons. 2 The Government says the effect of the court’s restriction is to enjoin the IRS from disclosing return information and that IRS disclosure is exclusively regulated by 26 U.S.C. § 6103 (1982). Because Congress has enacted a comprehensive scheme regulating disclosure, the Government urges that the district court was without authority to impose these restrictions.
The Government cites no case, and we have discovered none, which so restricts the authority of a district court. In effect, the Government says the court is limited to either enforcing a summons or denying enforcement. Clearly this is not the case. A district court is required by
Powell,
Of course the district courts also have the broad authority, under 26 U.S.C. § 7402(a) (1982), to issue any orders or decrees “as may be necessary or appropriate for the enforcement of the internal revenue laws.”
The Government also argues that since the court’s order is, in effect, an injunction prohibiting disclosure, it violates the Anti-Injunction Act, 26 U.S.C. § 7421(a) (1982), which prohibits judicial interference with the process of determining tax liability. The statute has been construed to prevent equitable relief which restrains assessment or collection of a tax.
Blech v. United States,
CONCLUSION
There was no abuse of discretion or error in the district court’s decision. The district court’s order enforcing the summons against ASI and restricting disclosure of the summoned information is
AFFIRMED.
Notes
. During the pendency of this appeal, L. Ron Hubbard died, and ASI argues that the cause is now moot because the IRS summons was issued in furtherance of an exclusively criminal investigation. We are persuaded that the investigation of Mr. Hubbard, although primarily criminal in nature, entails essential civil elements as well, which survive his death. The summons seeks documents relating to the financial affairs of L. Ron Hubbard as they pertain to his tax liability or to any offenses connected with internal revenue laws. Therefore, this appeal is not moot.
. The Order says: "The documents produced in response to the summons shall not be delivered by the IRS to any other government agency unless criminal tax prosecution is sought or an order of court is obtained.”
