This is an appeal from a preliminary injunction issued pursuant to section 7408 of the Internal Revenue Code. 26 U.S.C. § 7408. We affirm.
FACTS AND PROCEEDINGS BELOW
Approximately ten years ago appellant, Gordon S. Buttorff, organized and is now executive director of Constitutional Trust Associates, a group engaged in a commercial tax practice doing business in Dallas, Texas. Since at least 1976, appellant and his associates have promoted, sold, and serviced a trust package, 1 the “Constitutional Pure Equity Trust” (also referred to by the parties as a “Pure Equity” or “Family Trust”) which they said would enable its purchasers to avoid probate, significantly reduce income tax liability, and keep financial dealings private. Appellant is neither a lawyer 2 nor an accountant, though he does employ accountants to prepare tax returns.
A. The Trust. Appellant advised cus-' tomers to transfer all their property (including such items as bank accounts, stocks, vehicles, insurance, furniture, jewelry, residences and other real estate) to a trust and then claim the expenses of up
Such an arrangement was said to yield tax benefits in one of two ways. If no income were conveyed to the trust while a variety of deductions were claimed, a substantial loss would result which was then transferred to the taxpayer’s personal tax return as a “distributable net loss” of the trust and used to reduce the personal taxable income to zero or near zero. On the other hand, if the taxpayer conveyed all or most of his income to the trust along with all income producing assets, deductions claimed by the trust could offset income reported by the trust leaving little or no net income to be reported. The taxpayer would then report little or no income on his personal tax return apart from amounts distributed to him by the trust as “consulting fees” (though his actual occupation did not change) or in the form of the trust’s distributable .net income. Another tax benefit said to follow from use of the trust is income splitting. It was said that when the. taxpayer conveyed part of his income to the trust he would put himself in a lower tax bracket by lowering the amount reported on the personal return. Income conveyed to the trust was then offset by deductions.
Appellant’s clients generally had their tax returns completed by preparers recommended by him. They were also instructed not to seek professional advice from any lawyer or accountant, who were said not to understand such trusts. Appellant also told customers that the trust was unlikely to be examined by the Internal Revenue Service (“IRS”), but, if it were, it would withstand scrutiny.
B. IRS Treatment of Pure Equity Trusts. The IRS has consistently refused to recognize such trusts as vehicles for shifting income away from the actual earner or for generating deductions not otherwise available. Thus, when returns of appellant’s clients are identified and audited, only deductions which would normally be allowed to an individual, such as home mortgage interest, or to a legitimate business, such as an office in the home used as the exclusive business location, are allowed. Personal expenses are not allowed as deductible merely because property is owned by the trust, and legitimate business expenses are deductible regardless of whether a business is owned by the trust.
The IRS estimated that 464 income tax returns were generated from trusts sold by appellant for the years 1978 to 1981. After properly realigning income and legitimate deductions, the IRS estimates (at an average rate of $6,866 per return) total tax deficiencies of $8.2 million (exclusive of penalties and interest) are attributable to appellant’s customers. The wages and overhead for auditing the returns of his customers are estimated to have cost the IRS more than $400,000.
DISCUSSION
This Court has stated: “When an injunction is explicitly authorized by statute, proper discretion usually requires its issuance if the prerequisites for the remedy have been demonstrated and the injunction would fulfill the legislative purpose.”
Donovan v. Brown Equipment and Service Tools, Inc.,
A. Statutory Criteria.
The district court also found that issuing the injunction would fulfill the legislative purpose by specifically finding that the two requirements imposed by section 7408 4 were met — that appellant’s conduct was subject to penalty under section 6700 and that injunctive relief is appropriate in this case to prevent a recurrence of the conduct.
1. Subject to Penalty. Section 6700 penalizes any person who makes statements regarding the tax benefits of an arrangement organized or sold by him which he
(a) Trust invalid. Several United States Courts of Appeals and the United States Tax Court have consistently invalidated similar trusts for federal income tax purposes on an individual taxpayer basis.
6
We cite only a few of the many cases so holding.
See, e.g., Zmuda v. Commissioner,
(i) Deduction of personal consumption expenses. Appellant told clients that once they had conveyed their personal assets, such as cars and residences, to a trust they could deduct personal consumption expenses such as fire insurance, utilities, and repair and maintenance — indeed, almost everything except food consumed at home. However, “[i]t is fundamental to our income tax regime that personal consumption expenditures — food, clothing, travel, education, entertainment — do not generate income tax deductions unless they are somehow inextricably linked to the production of income.”
Schulz,
(ii) Assignment of income. Under appellant’s trust arrangement, his clients conveyed their prospective future earned income, or “lifetime services” and the right to receive income for performance of those services, to the trust in an effort to avoid personal taxation on that income. However, it is a well established rule that income is taxed to the person who earns it,
Commissioner v. Culbertson,
“Where the taxpayer simply assigns his lifetime services and income earned from the performance of those services, and the taxpayer rather than the trust has ‘ultimate direction and control’over the earning of the compensation,’ the conveyance is ineffective to shift the tax burden from the taxpayer to the trust.” Vnuk,621 F.2d at 1320 (citing Wesen-berg v. Commissioner,69 T.C. 1005 , 1010-11 (1978)).
To the same effect are
Hanson,
As in those cases, appellant’s clients were not bona fide servants of the trust because the trust had no right to supervise the taxpayer’s employment or determine the resulting income or benefit, and the taxpayer had no legal duty to earn money or perform services for the trust.
7
The grantor’s purported conveyance of lifetime services to the trust does not create such a legal obligation because the grantor is on both sides of the transaction, as employee and as trustee, leaving no one to enforce the obligation.
Schulz,
(iii) Grantor trust. Similar trusts have also been invalidated for federal income tax purposes under the “grantor trust” provisions. 26 U.S.C. §§ 671-77.
E.g., Vnuk,
Appellant attempts to distinguish his trust from those consistently invalidated for tax purposes by the courts as grantor trusts. In the trust arrangements examined in the court below, the wife generally conveyed all her interest in their joint property to the husband who then conveyed all their property to the trust, and both husband and wife became trustees and beneficiaries. Thus, technically, the wife is not a grantor. The district court refused to accept this distinction, stating that “[a] a trust is not sheltered from the operation of the grantor trust provisions by an artificial construction of adversity between parties.”
United States v. Buttorff,
(iv) Sham. Finally, it has frequently been recognized that trusts of this sort are mere shams, wholly lacking in any real substance and thus without any effect whatever for federal tax purposes.
See Zmuda,
(b) Knowledge and materiality. Therefore, the fact that appellant assured customers that the purported tax benefits of the trust could lawfully be availed of, despite consistent rejection of similar schemes by the courts for the above reasons, and the fact that appellant counseled his clients not to seek separate opinions from lawyers or accountants, demonstrate that the district court was correct in finding that appellant knew or had reason to know that his representations to his customers regarding the tax benefits of his trust package were false and misleading. Furthermore, appellant’s customers whose IRS audits have resulted in disallowance of many of the claimed trust deductions testified that, had they known of the IRS treatment of these trusts, they probably would not have bought appellant’s package. Thus, appellant’s false statements regarding tax benefits should be considered material within the meaning of section 6700. According to the legislative history, a matter is considered material to the arrangement “if it would have a substantial impact on the decision making process of a reasonably prudent investor.” S.Rep. No. 97-494, 97th Cong.2d Sess. 267 (1982), reprinted in 1982 U.S.Code Cong. & Ad.News 781, 1015. This test was amply met here.
2. Prevention of Recurrence. Section 7408 further requires the district court to consider the appropriateness of an injunction in light of the need to prevent a recurrence of the violation. The district court specifically found that an injunction was “necessary” for this purpose. The court cited appellant’s previous conviction for aiding and abetting taxpayers in filing fraudulent tax forms,
United States v. Buttorff,
In making this determination, the United States suggests an analogy to the injunctions issued to enforce securities laws in which courts have considered such factors as the defendant’s having previously been found liable for illegal conduct, the degree of scienter, whether the infraction is an isolated occurrence, whether the defendant maintains that his past conduct was blameless, and whether his occupation would place him in a position where future violations could be anticipated.
E.g., Securities and Exchange Commission v. Commonwealth Chemical Security, Inc.,
B. Adequate Remedy at Law.
Appellant contends that the injunction is improper because the government has an adequate remedy at law by prosecution under the criminal sections of the Internal Revenue Code and Title 18. We recognize that “[a]s a general rule, courts are reluctant to issue injunctions against the commission of a crime,” although “if the court finds that the prosecution of the criminal charge is not an adequate remedy, as when the conduct is creating a widespread public nuisance ... the fact that a crime is involved should not prevent the court from entering an injunction.” 11 Wright & Miller, Federal Practice and Procedure: Civil § 2942 at 386-87.
Here, however, we deal with a statute expressly authorizing injunctive relief at the request of the Secretary of the Treasury, on the finding by the court of stated preconditions, against actions denounced as wrongful by positive, public law. In such an instance, the traditional equity guidelines for injunctive relief, both preliminary and permanent, may be somewhat modified.
See, e.g., Donovan v. Brown Equipment Dynamics, Inc.,
As we have observed, section 7408 authorizes an injunction at the request of the Secretary where the court finds that the person enjoined has engaged in conduct subject to penalty under section 6700 and “injunctive relief is appropriate to prevent recurrence of such conduct.” No other requirements are stated. The district court found that the injunction was “necessary” to prevent recurrence of the prohibited conduct. This is tantamount to a finding that criminal and other legal sanctions would not suffice to prevent such recurrence.
Prior to the enactment of section 6700, the Internal Revenue Code contained no penalty provisions specifically directed toward promoters of abusive tax shelters and other abusive tax avoidance schemes. In appropriate cases, the promoter might be subject to civil or criminal penalties for false or fraudulent return preparation or willful attempts to evade tax. S.Rep. No. 97-494, 97th Cong.2d Sess. 266 (1982),
reprinted in
1982 U.S.Code Cong. & Ad. News 781, 1014. The legislative history of sections 6700 and 7408 indicates a congressional finding that these and other existing legal remedies for halting abusive tax shelters were not adequate.
10
Indeed, the legislative purpose in enacting these statutes was to allow the IRS to attack the growing
“The committee believes that the penalty provisions of present law are ineffective to deal with the growing phenomenon of abusive tax shelters. Abusive tax shelters must be attacked at their source: the organizer and salesman____ [T]he Internal Revenue Service can be expected to approach the problem with vigor since prevention of abusive shelter promotions will require less manpower than enforcement actions against numerous investor-taxpayers____
((
“The bill provides for a penalty on promoters of investments with abusive positions (see sec. 331 of the bill [section 6700] described, above). The committee believes that the most effective way in which this new penalty can be enforced is through injunctions against violators to prevent recurrence of the offense. The ability to seek injunctive relief will insure that the Internal Revenue Service can attack tax shelter schemes years before such challenges would prove possible if the Internal Revenue Service were required to await the filing and examinations of tax returns by investors. Thus, injunctive relief will better enable the Internal Revenue Service to protect the integrity of the tax laws and to protect potentially innocent investors against widespread marketing of such tax schemes.” S.Rep. No. 97-494, 97th Cong., 2d Sess. 266, 268 (1982) reprinted in 1982 U.S.Code Cong. & Ad.News 781, 1014, 1016.
This method avoids the drain on the resources of the IRS required by auditing individual accounts, a multiplicity of suits on the same issue against individual taxpayers, and piecemeal litigation, all of which would only encourage violations in the doubtless accurate belief that the IRS would be unable to detect and pursue every taxpayer in violation.
Moreover, section 7408 specifically provides that “[t]he court may exercise its jurisdiction over such action ... separate and apart from any other action brought by the United States against such person.” 26 U.S.C. § 7408(a). And, the legislative history clearly indicates that section 7408 was intended to provide an additional remedy against promoters of abusive tax shelters, but “not in any way [to] restrict the right of the United States to commence or carry on any other action against the organizer or seller.” S.Rep. No. 97-494, 97th Cong., 2d Sess. 269 (1982), reprinted in U.S.Code Cong. & Ad.News 781, 1017.
Accordingly, given the district court’s adequately supported findings and the provisions and legislative history of section 7408, we hold that the existence of criminal or other legal sanctions did not require that the district court deny the requested in-junctive relief.
C. Unclean Hands.
Appellant contends that the government may not invoke the court’s equity jurisdiction to seek an injunction because it did not come to equity with “clean hands.”
See
11 Wright & Miller
supra,
§ 2946 at 411-17. Appellant claims that a special agent of the IRS, in the course of a criminal investigation, obtained a list of the names and addresses of his customers from an “informant” who had burglarized his office, that this list was used by the special agent in a criminal investigation, and that customers on the list were later audited resulting in information regarding the returns of some of these clients which was used as evidence in this case. However, “[t]he alleged wrongdoing of the plaintiff does not bar relief unless the defendant can show that he has personally been injured by the plaintiff’s conduct.”
Mitchell Brothers Film Group v. Cinema Adult Theatre,
D. Limits of Injunction.
Appellant argues that the injunction 11 is so broad that it would prevent him from pursuing his occupation of tax planning and counseling. However, it is clear from the order issued by the district court, that appellant is enjoined only from promoting, selling, or servicing the Constitutional Pure Equity Trust or a similar type of trust whose like purported tax benefits have been discredited in previous cases against individual taxpayers. 12 Appellant promoted and sold a packaged kit of forms and documents, purportedly offering a variety of advantages including tax benefits. No evidence was offered to show that any of appellant’s customers would have purchased the packaged trust for nonfederal tax reasons or that any of his customers failed to take advantage of the purported federal tax benefits. The whole key to the marketing and sale of the trusts was obviously the falsely represented purported tax advantages.
We narrowly construe the injunctive order to enjoin appellant from promoting, selling, or servicing the Constitutional Pure Equity Trust and similar schemes only if the trust or similar scheme is sold, promoted, or serviced in a context which is to some extent commercial, and only if the trust or similar scheme is sold, promoted, or serviced to any extent expressly or impliedly on any basis, representation, or prediction of any purported federal tax benefits from such trust or scheme, or with any intent to afford a user thereof any such
E. First Amendment.
Finally, we turn to appellant’s principal contention, that the First Amendment prohibits the district court’s injunction as a prior restraint on his right to disseminate information regarding estate and income tax planning. We affirm the district court’s rejection of this argument on the basis that the First Amendment does not protect commercial speech which is inherently misleading or has proven subject to abuse, nor does it protect commercial speech which promotes an illegal activity or transaction.
Central Hudson Gas & Electric Corp. v. Public Service Commission,
As appellant concedes, he is engaged in commercial speech for profit. The statements he has made concerning the purported tax benefits of the Constitutional Pure Equity Trust were made in an effort to promote and sell the packaged trust forms and his personal services in connection therewith, all for profit. The United States Supreme Court has summarized the commercial speech doctrine in the context of advertising for professional services: “Truthful advertising related to lawful activities is entitled to the protections of the First Amendment. But when the particular content or method of the advertising suggests that it is inherently misleading or when experience has proved that in fact such advertising is subject to abuse, the States may impose appropriate restrictions. Misleading advertising may be prohibited entirely.”
In re R.M.J.,
The United States Supreme Court also continues to refuse to shield commercial speech which promotes an illegal activity or transaction.
Pittsburgh Press Co. v. The Pittsburgh Commission on Human Relations,
Furthermore, in enjoining appellant’s misleading commercial speech, the district court was relying upon the legislative determination that an injunction was an appropriate form of restriction. Section 7408 specifically provides for an injunction when the organizer or salesman of a plan makes false or fraudulent statements of a material nature regarding tax benefits of participating in the plan — conduct which is subject to penalty under section 6700 — and where an injunction is appropriate to prevent recurrence. We do not today decide that section 7408 is constitutional in all its possible applications. However, in this case, where it has been determined that appellant’s statements regarding the tax benefits of his trust, which constitute commercial speech, are misleading in the context contemplated by Congress in enacting the statute, and the injunction prohibiting such statements is adequately tailored and construed to enjoin only such commercial speech which has been shown to be both misleading and likely to promote illegal activity, such representations are not protected by the First Amendment against restraint authorized by section 7408 and properly found necessary in the particular
Appellant argues that the injunction does more than protect against misleading information but prohibits him from disseminating any information regarding tax planning or trusts. It is true that the Supreme Court has also stated, “[although the potential for deception and confusion is particularly strong in the context of advertising professional services, restrictions upon such advertising may be no broader than reasonably necessary to prevent the deception.”
In re R.M.J.,
We recognize that an arguably related issue is presently pending before the United States Supreme Court by virtue of its grant of certiorari in
Securities and Exchange Commission v. Lowe,
Our appellant Buttorff seeks to distinguish the Second Circuit’s decision in Lowe on the basis that it is essentially a licensing case — Lowe was merely prohibited from engaging in a business for which he was not licensed as required by federal law. Here no federal law requires that Buttorff be licensed in order to engage in the business of giving tax advice. Consequently, appellant urges that this is a substantially weaker case for injunctive relief than Lowe. We are not persuaded. While its licensing aspects may prove to be determinative, other aspects of Lowe reflect that in many respects it presents a substantially less compelling case for First Amendment exception than the case now before us.
As the district court pointed out in Lowe:
“Investment advisory material disseminated to the public is not commercial advertising of a product or service. Such publications are not the words of a seller peddling his own wares or services, but those of an apparently detached observer commenting on the value of choses offered or held by others. To be sure, the investment publisher has a financial motivation to disseminate his analyses and recommendations, but so may the literary publisher or political pamphleteer. Their motivations differ in kind from the monetary incentives characteristic of the advertiser of a particular product.” Securities and Exchange Commission v. Lowe,556 F.Supp. 1359 , 1366 (E.D.N.Y.1983) (emphasis added). 13
We mention Lowe not to intimate any view on the merits of the decision there, but rather because it points up how the present case falls so clearly within the First Amendment exception for pure commercial speech which is both misleading and tends to promote illegal conduct.
We conclude that the district court’s injunction, expressly authorized by section 7408, does not violate appellant’s rights under the First Amendment.
For the foregoing reasons, the decision of the district court is affirmed.
AFFIRMED.
Notes
. Appellant sold a kit of trust forms which included a declaration, introductory materials, and step-by-step instructions for creating and maintaining the trust. Appellant also participated in setting up the trusts and provided for preparation of his customers’ income tax returns for the first year after the trust was created. Although the forms were basically the same for all customers, the purchase price of the documents and service varied, based on the value of the assets, placed in the trust.
. The Texas Committee on the Unauthorized Practice of Law filed a complaint against But-torff and his associates (none of whom is licensed to practice law in Texas) in state court. The parties stipulated, with the court’s approval, that the promotion and sale of the Constitutional Pure Equity Trust violated state statutes prohibiting the unauthorized practice of law. On December 16, 1982, that court entered an agreed temporary injunction restraining appellant and his organization from promoting any such trust or device as a method for reducing or eliminating income taxes (except as accountants are permitted to give such advice pursuant to the Internal Revenue Code and regulations), or from preparing any legal documents for any third person. Committee on the Unauthorized Practice of Law, State of Texas v. Buttorff, No. 83-1368 (Dist.Ct. of Dallas County, 95th Judicial Dist. of Texas, December 16, 1982).
. These factors, which are expressly set out in the district court’s opinion, are: (1) A showing of substantial likelihood that the plaintiff will prevail on the merits; (2) a substantial threat of irreparable injury if the injunction is not granted; (3) the threatened injury to the plaintiff outweighs the potential harm from the injunction to the defendant; and (4) the public interest will not be jeopardized by the grant of the injunction.
See, e.g., Canal Authority of Florida v. Callaway,
. Section 321(a) of the Tax Equity and Fiscal Responsibility Act of 1983 "TEFRA”, Pub.L. No. 97-248, 96 Stat. 324, added section 7408 to the Internal Revenue Code of 1954. Section 7408 provides:
"§ 7408. Action to enjoin promoters of abusive tax shelters, etc.
"(a) Authority to seek injunction. — A civil action in the name of the United States to enjoin any person from further engaging in conduct subject to penalty under section 6700 (relating to penalty for promoting abusive tax shelters, etc.) may be commenced at the request of the Secretary. Any action under this section shall be brought in the district court of the United States for the district in which such person resides, has his principal place of business, or has engaged in conduct subject to penalty under section 6700. The court may exercise its jurisdiction over such action (as provided in section 7402(a)) separate and apart from any other action brought by the United States against such person.
“(b) Adjudication and decree. — In any action under subsection (a), if the court finds—
“(1) that the person has engaged in any conduct subject to penalty under section 6700 (relating to penalty for promoting abusive tax shelters, etc.), and
"(2) that injunctive relief is appropriate to prevent recurrence of such conduct, "the court may enjoin such person from engaging in such conduct or in any other activity subject to penalty under section 6700.”
. Section 6700 provides in pertinent part:
“§ 6700. Promoting abusive tax shelters, etc.
“(a) Imposition of Penalty. — Any person who—
"(1)(A) organizes (or assists in the organization of)—
"(i) a partnership or other entity,
"(ii) any investment plan or arrangement, or
"(iii) any other plan or arrangement, or
"(B) participates in the sale of any interest in an entity or plan or arrangement referred to in subparagraph (A), and
"(2) makes or furnishes (in connection with such organization or sale)—
"(A) a statement with respect to the allowa-bility of any deduction or credit, the excluda-bility of any income, or the securing of any other tax benefit by reason of holding an interest in the entity or participating in the plan or arrangement which the person knows or has reason to know is false or fraudulent as to any material matter, or
"(B) a gross valuation overstatement as to any material matter,
"shall pay a penalty equal to the greater of $1,000 or 10 percent of the gross income derived or to be derived by such person from such activity.
“(c) Penalty in addition to other penalties. —The penalty imposed by this section shall be in addition to any other penalty provided by law."
. This fact makes
United States v. Dahlstrom,
. These factors also distinguish this sort of trust arrangement from the "leased employee cases.”
Vnuk,
. For example, although appellant admits that he became aware of the prohibition against the assignment of income in 1977, a taped promotional speech, which includes references to the purported benefits of income assignment, was being made available to prospective customers as late as the month this suit was filed.
. In fact, appellant was convicted on five counts of knowingly and willfully violating the preliminary injunctive order entered below in October 1984 in the United States District Court for the Northern District of Texas. United States v. Buttorff, No. CR3-84-129-G (N.D.Tex.1984).
. Thus,
United States v. Petersen,
. That order provides in pertinent part:
“IT IS ORDERED that defendant Buttorff and all those in active concert or participation with him, including Constitutional Trust Associates and all those acting by, for, or through it, are hereby enjoined and restrained as follows:
“1. Defendant and others described above are prohibited, pending the final hearing and determination of this action, from selling and promoting either directly or indirectly the 'Constitutional Pure Equity Trust,’ or any similar scheme or device.
"2. Defendant and others described above are prohibited, pending final determination, from representing that such a trust, scheme, or device eliminates or reduces the federal tax liability of a participant, and are prohibited from furnishing or distributing materials, including tape recordings and written information, which so indicate.
“3. Defendant and others described above are prohibited, pending final determination, from performing services for others such as counseling, tax return preparation, or preparation of deeds, resolutions, minutes, or other legal documents in connection with such trust, scheme or device, including those trusts sold or formed prior to the entry of this Order."
. Similar orders enjoining the organization, promotion, sale, or servicing of a named trust plan have been issued by other courts, both to prevent conduct subject to penalty under section 6700 and under other Internal Revenue Code sections.
E.g., United States v. Hutchinson,
83-1 U.S.T.C. Para. 9322 (S.D.Cal. April 6, 1983) (permanently enjoining the organization, promotion, sale, or servicing of named trust or similar trusts which conduct was found to violate section 6700 and was also subject to injunctive relief under section 7407, which authorizes injunctions against tax preparers engaging in fraudulent or deceptive conduct which substantially interferes with the proper administration of internal revenue laws);
United States v. Landsberger,
. Nevertheless, the district court did rule that the SEC could prevent Lowe from providing his subscribers "current information by telephone” as this "creates the danger of personal advice.”
