This appeal tests the enforceability of an administrative summons issued under § 7602 of the Internal Revenue Code of 1954, 26 U.S.C. § 7602, and served upon the Continental Bank and Trust Company (“the bank”) pursuant to § 7608 of the Code, 26 U.S.C. § 7603.
The summons was issued by special agent Thomas L. Harkness of the Internal Revenue Service in connection with his investigation of the income tax liability of Wayne F. and Vola C. Belnap (“the taxpayers”), husband and wife, who were customers of the bank during at least part of the years in question, 1970-71. The summons demanded that the bank produce for examination the following items:
1. Such of [the bank’s] records as reflect deposits including deposit tickets and deposited items to the account of [the taxpayers] . . . and the account of Belnap Insurance Counselors Trust Account . . . for the period January 1, 1970 to January 1, 1972.
2. Cancelled checks drawn on the account of [the taxpayers] and the account of Belnap Insurance Counselors Trust Account for the period January 1, 1970 through February 15, 1972.
In response to the summons, the bank appeared and asserted that the examination sought to be conducted pursuant to the summons would involve an unreasonable search of the bank’s records in contravention of the fourth amendment, a taking of the bank’s property without just compensation in contravention of the fifth amendment, and an infringement upon the right of privacy of other customers of the bank and of persons named either as payees on checks written by taxpayers or as drawers on checks payable to taxpayers. Accordingly, the bank refused to testify or to produce any records for examination.
The IRS thereafter petitioned for the judicial enforcement of its summons under 26 U.S.C. §§ 7402(b) and 7604(a), the district court granted the IRS’ motion for summary judgment, and this appeal by the bank fol^wed. We affirm the judgment of the district court.
The import of appellant’s fourth amendment argument is that the summons portends an unreasonable search because of the financial burden which such a search would impose upon the appellant. Appellant has not argued, as was done in Bisceglia v. United States, 6 Cir.,
The Third Circuit has previously considered the same question in United States v. Dauphin Deposit Trust Co., 3 Cir.,
The rationale of Dauphin Deposit that the existence of a general duty to respond to a government summons justifies the imposition of some financial burden, has been variously expressed in other cases. Thus, in United States v. Jones,
We conclude that, on the facts of the instant case, enforcement of the summons will not result in an unconstitutional “taking” under the fifth amendment. Appellant has not suggested that the summons is insufficiently precise or not issued in furtherance of a legitimate IRS purpose, except to the extent it touches incidentally on the records of third parties. See United States v. Powell,
The question of the rights of third parties — persons other than those served with the summons — most often arises where the taxpayer being investigated seeks to intervene in the action brought to enforce the summons. Thus, in Donaldson v. United States,
In the case at bar, the bank asserts derivatively the interests of parties other than the taxpayers, and suggests that as a matter of both constitutional law and statutory construction the summons may not be enforced because of its impact on those interests. We disagree. If, in Donaldson, the taxpayer himself could not intervene to assert his own interests, then our conclusion here follows perforce.
In Galbraith v. United States, 10 Cir.,
With similar reasoning, it is evident to us that no constitutional bar exists to the enforcement here of the summons. Had the customers, or even the taxpayers themselves, sought to intervene, they could have asserted no proprietary interest in the bank’s records. SEC v. First Security Bank, 10 Cir.,
Evidently, then, the customers could raise no justifiable expectation of privacy, an essential element, we believe, of a constitutional right of privacy argument. United States v. White,
The bank’s final argument, that the examination purportedly authorized by the summons exceeds the statutory reach of § 7602, is also without merit. The case law history of that section makes clear that § 7602 should be “liberally construed in recognition of the vital public purposes which [it serves].” De Masters v. Arend, 9 Cir.,
On balance, we believe that the cursory inspection of random records indicated by the summons in this case does not offend the rationale or the language of § 7602. Thus the summons is properly authorized by that section. “Were we to hold otherwise ... we would un-warrantedly cast doubt upon and stultify the Service’s every investigatory move.” Donaldson v. United States, supra
Affirmed.
