96-1 USTC P 50,018,
UNITED STATES of America; Cheryl J. Butcher, IRS Revenue
Agent, Petitioners-Appellees,
v.
Marc D. BLACKMAN, personally and in his representative
capacity as a partner of Rasom, Blackman & Weil,
formerly known as Ransom, Blackman &
Simson, Respondent-Appellant.
No. 94-35990.
United States Court of Appeals,
Ninth Circuit.
Argued and Submitted Nov. 13, 1995.
Decided Dec. 29, 1995.
David B. Markowitz and Robert D. Bulkley, Jr., Markowitz, Herbold, Glade & Mehlhaf, and Robert H. Hoevet, Hoevet & Snyder, Portland, Oregon, for respondent-appellant.
Charles E. Brookhart and Gary R. Allen, United States Department of Justice, Washington, D.C., for petitioners-appellees.
Appeal from the United States District Court for the District of Oregon.
Before: BROWNING, RYMER and T.G. NELSON, Circuit Judges.
T.G. NELSON, Circuit Judge:
Attorney Mark Blackman, personally and in his capacity as partner in the law firm of Ransom, Blackman & Weil, appeals the district court's order granting the petition of the Internal Revenue Service ("IRS") to enforce a summons served on Blackman pursuant to the Internal Revenue Code, 26 U.S.C. Secs. 7402(a) and 7604(a) ("I.R.C." or "the Code"). The IRS seeks information to complete several Internal Revenue Service Forms 8300 filed by Blackman in 1987, 1988, and 1991 pursuant to I.R.C. Sec. 6050I. We have jurisdiction under 28 U.S.C. Sec. 1292, and we affirm.
FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY
I.R.C. Sec. 6050I requires a person receiving more than $10,000 in cash during a single trade or business transaction to file IRS Form 8300, providing the name, address, occupation and social security number of the payor, along with the date and nature of the transaction and the amount involved. The instant dispute concerns four such forms filed by Blackman, a partner in the Portland, Oregon, law firm of Ransom, Blackman & Weil, in 1987, 1988 and 1991. The forms were essentially complete save for information identifying the client-payors and the nature of the services rendered by Blackman or his firm in exchange for the cash. The IRS served a summons on Blackman in 1990 and again in 1992 asking for information to complete the forms. On both occasions, Blackman appeared before the IRS and refused to supply the information, claiming attorney-client privilege and his duty to maintain client confidences and secrets under Oregon law.
In February 1994, the IRS initiated an enforcement proceeding against Blackman in the federal district court. The court issued Blackman an Order to Show Cause, in response to which Blackman filed a memorandum and two affidavits, one of which was under seal. After hearing oral argument on June 23, 1994, in a proceeding consolidated with one involving Norman Sepenuk, another criminal defense attorney, the trial court granted enforcement of the IRS summons. Blackman timely appealed.
The district court incorporated portions of its opinion in United States v. Sepenuk,
ANALYSIS
1. John Doe summons
As noted infra, I.R.C. Sec. 6050I provides that any person engaged in a trade or business must file a form 8300 for any cash transaction (or two or more related transactions) in excess of $10,000. 26 U.S.C. Sec. 6050I. Form 8300 requires disclosure of information identifying the payor, and any agent conducting the cash transaction on the part of the payor, as well as the amount and nature of the transaction. The IRS is empowered to serve a summons on any person from whom it seeks information necessary to ascertain that person's tax liability. 26 U.S.C. Sec. 7602(a). It may seek to enforce the summons through the jurisdictionally appropriate federal district court. 26 U.S.C. Secs. 7402(b), 7604(a).
If, however, the IRS seeks information regarding the potential tax liability of an unnamed taxpayer, it may not summarily issue a summons, but must follow the procedures laid out in 26 U.S.C. Sec. 7609. If the unnamed taxpayer is known to the IRS, it must provide him or her with notice and opportunity to intervene pursuant to 26 U.S.C. Sec. 7609(a) and (b). Where, however, "the IRS does not know the identity of the taxpayer under investigation, advance notice to that taxpayer is, of course, not possible." Tiffany Fine Arts, Inc. v. United States,
To create a prima facie case validating the summons, the IRS must show the investigation has a legitimate purpose, that the inquiry is relevant to that purpose, that the information sought is not already in the possession of the IRS, and that it followed all requisite administrative steps. United States v. Powell,
We review for clear error the district court's ruling that the IRS has met the requirements for enforcement of its summons. Abrahams,
Blackman argues that the IRS is really seeking information about his clients, and is not seriously investigating him or his law firm at all. He contends that the information sought by the IRS "can have absolutely no relevance to any legitimate investigation" of himself or the firm, and urges that the IRS be required to follow John Doe procedures. The IRS claims it is only investigating Blackman and not his clients, though it conceded in reference to Sepenuk that any information it acquires as a result of its investigation may be used to initiate investigation of unnamed clients or third parties. See Sepenuk,
The Supreme Court held in Tiffany that even where the IRS admits it has a "dual motive"--that is, that its investigation is aimed at unnamed as well as named persons--a John Doe summons is not required, so long as the trial court determines as a matter of fact that the IRS's investigation of the named party is legitimate.
Blackman insists, however, that the IRS is solely interested in his clients, and asks the panel to consider the following out-of-circuit decisions: United States v. Ritchie,
The Ritchie court held that because the district court's conclusion that the a law firm's clients were the real and sole focus of an IRS summons directed at the firm was "not clearly erroneous," the IRS should have used the John Doe procedure.1
In Gertner, the district court found that the IRS's interest in the law firm under investigation was "pretextual" and that the IRS was in fact only interested in the law firm's clients.
The First Circuit affirmed on circumscribed grounds. Finding that the district court's determination of the IRS's motives was not clearly erroneous, it held that the IRS was required to comply with John Doe procedures. See Gertner,
In both Ritchie and Gertner, the courts of appeal held the John Doe procedure was necessary based on the district courts' supportable findings that the IRS's investigation of the named parties was illegitimate. In the present case, by contrast, the district court found the investigation of Blackman and his firm to be legitimate under Powell. See Sepenuk,
In the absence of compelling evidence to support Blackman's allegations concerning the IRS's motives for its investigation, we hold the district court's finding of legitimacy was not clearly erroneous and affirm that the IRS was not required to follow John Doe procedures in serving its summons upon Blackman.
2. Attorney-client privilege
We review de novo the district court's rulings on the scope of the attorney-client privilege as they involve mixed questions of law and fact. Clarke v. American Commerce National Bank,
Blackman argues that the issue is not just one of privilege, however, but also of duty. According to Blackman, Oregon Revised Statute Sec. 9.460(5), in effect at all relevant times, not only codifies the attorney-client privilege, but also imposes a positive duty upon the lawyer to avoid disclosure of his client's confidences and "secrets."2
This argument is specious. Because the attorney-client privilege protects the client, not the attorney, see, e.g., Abrahams,
The Eighth Circuit recently considered a similar argument and concluded that "Congress cannot have intended to allow local rules of professional ethics to carve out fifty different privileged exemptions to the reporting requirements of 26 U.S.C. Sec. 6050I." United States v. Sindel,
As a general rule, client identity and the nature of the fee arrangement between attorney and client are not protected from disclosure by the attorney-client privilege. Ralls v. United States,
As there is no evidence that any of Blackman's clients who may be implicated in this dispute are currently the subject of ongoing investigation, the district court correctly found that the last link doctrine does not apply.3 See Sepenuk,
In United States v. Hodge & Zweig,
In deciding whether either Sepenuk or Blackman had met his burden in establishing the applicability of the exception, the district court questioned whether it was appropriate to consider the in camera affidavits. In spite of its reservations, the court proceeded to review them. See Sepenuk,
With reference to both Blackman and Sepenuk, the district court found, based in part on its review of the sealed affidavits, that the identity, fee arrangement and purpose information sought by the IRS was not privileged. See Sepenuk,
The district court specifically considered in its order Blackman's argument that two of the questioned transactions in his case did not involve fee arrangements. The court found as to the first non-fee related transaction that Blackman "has failed to establish that the transfer of funds related in any direct way to the purpose for which respondent was retained." As to the second, the court found that Blackman "has failed to establish that the temporary transfer of funds to his account constitutes a 'confidential' communication."
Based on his reading of Baird and progeny, Blackman argues that the district court misapplied the law. He states that because his receipt of the funds was "inextricably linked to the legal service his firm was retained to provide," the identity of the fee-payers and the services are privileged. Blackman is mistaken. As we stated in Ralls, "the correct test [ ] is whether the fee-payer's identity and the fee arrangements are so intertwined with confidential communications that revealing either ... would be tantamount to revealing a privileged communication."
Attorney Ralls was subpoenaed to provide information concerning the identity of a fee-payer who retained him to defend a third party, where the fee-payer had advised Ralls of his involvement in the crime with which the defendant was charged. Id. at 225-26. We held that the fee arrangements and fee-payer's identity were therefore "inextricably intertwined with confidential communications" and protected by the attorney-client privilege. Id. at 226.4 No such fact pattern exists here.
The Second and Eleventh Circuits have held that, absent extraordinary circumstances, Sec. 6050I does not conflict with traditional attorney-client privilege. See United States v. Goldberger & Dubin, P.C.,
The Goldberger court further suggested that even if a communication might technically fall within the scope of the attorney-client privilege, the privilege must yield where it "collides head on with a federal statute that implicitly precludes its application."
We hold that Blackman has failed to establish that the circumstances involving the clients whose identities are at stake here are such that disclosure of the information sought in conjunction with Sec. 6050I would be "tantamount to [the revelation of] a confidential professional communication." Tornay,
3. Blackman's Fifth Amendment privilege
Courts have rejected the argument that completion by an attorney of Form 8300 violates the client's Fifth Amendment rights. See Ritchie,
Blackman argues that his own Fifth Amendment rights are implicated, however, because he is the one being investigated. He avers the district court was mistaken in stating that only documents and not testimony is required of him, because the IRS petition refers to testimony as well as records. Blackman argues that under Curcio v. United States,
Insofar as Blackman may be required to testify orally at a hearing pursuant to enforcement of the summons, his Fifth Amendment argument is premature. United States v. Rendahl,
As the Supreme Court explained in Braswell v. United States, while Curcio drew a line between "oral testimony and other forms of incrimination" in holding that a custodian of records cannot be compelled to condemn himself by his own oral testimony in the absence of a grant of prosecutorial immunity, it distinguished "those cases in which a corporate officer was required to produce corporate records and merely identify them by oral testimony." Braswell,
As for the documentary information sought by the IRS, the "collective-entity" rule preserved in Braswell nullifies Blackman's Fifth Amendment argument. Id.
Because Blackman may not rely upon the privilege to avoid producing records belonging to his law firm, we hold that the Fifth Amendment does not preclude enforcement of the IRS summons.
4. Additional arguments
Finally, Blackman asserts that he wishes to "preserve [the following arguments] for possible later review": 1) the practice of law is not a "trade or business" under I.R.C. Sec. 6050I; 2) Sec. 6050I unconstitutionally interferes with: a) the Sixth Amendment right to counsel; b) his clients' Fifth Amendment right to remain silent; c) attorneys' and clients' First Amendment rights of attorney and client; and d) his clients' due process rights. As Blackman concedes, all of these arguments have been rejected by the courts that have considered them.
Because Blackman does not specifically argue any of these claims, we deem them waived and do not reach them. Officers for Justice v. Civil Serv. Comm'n,
For the foregoing reasons, the district court's order is AFFIRMED.
Notes
The Ritchie court deemed that the facts of the case did not necessitate requiring the IRS to start all over, but warned the IRS that in the future, "if it cannot demonstrate a bona fide interest in investigating the tax liability of the party summoned, it must comply with Sec. 7609(f)."
Section 9.460(3) provided (prior to amendment in September 1991):
"An attorney shall ... maintain inviolate the confidence, and at every peril to the attorney, preserve the secrets of the clients of the attorney."
Blackman relies on United States v. Gertner,
We distinguished cases where the lawyer acts as a "mere conduit for the transfer of money," even where the fee-payer also sought the attorney's legal advice. Ralls,
