Aftеr appellant John Roberts failed to comply with a court order compelling the production of certain documents requested by appellee, the Internal Revenue Service (“I.R.S. or “Service”), the United States District Court fоr the Northern District of Georgia found him in civil contempt, imposing prison time and daily fines to pressure Roberts into obedience with the Court’s earlier mandate. Roberts protests, insisting that he lacks possession of the sought after documents and thus cannot satisfy the court’s demand. However, following a prima facie showing of a violation, mere protestations are insufficient to establish inability to comply with a court’s order, for the burden of production on this issue then shifts to the alleged contemnor. The court below determined that the Service made a prima facie showing that Roberts disobeyed the court’s enforcement order and further found that Roberts failed to rebut that prima facie showing of nonсompliance. We affirm the contempt order.
I.
The Service is investigating John Roberts’ financial affairs. Accordingly, on August 4, 1986, I.R.S. Special Agent Randy Taylor issued an administrative summons directing Roberts to appear, testify, and produce certain corporate records regarding Southern Forest Products, Inc. (“Southern”) and Century Wood Products, Inc. (“Century”), a pair of Georgia corporations at that time wholly owned by Roberts. 1
Roberts failed to appear at the aрpointed time, and the Service petitioned the district court for an order enforcing the summons. 2 The district court ordered Roberts to show cause why he should not be compelled to comply with the summons, and it scheduled a hearing on the matter to be held before a United States magistrate.
At the hearing before the magistrate, Roberts argued against enforcement of the summons on the equitable ground that compliance with such an order would jeopardize his rights in other cases then pending on appeal. The magistrate found that Roberts neither denied possession of the
Pursuant to the court’s enforcement order, Special Agent Taylor directed Roberts to appear before Taylor at Roberts’ attorney’s office on October 6, 1987. On that date, Taylor arrived аt the attorney’s office as arranged, but Roberts did not. Instead, Roberts’ attorney offered Taylor a statement signed by Roberts which contended that Roberts did not have the requested records in his custody and control, and that he was unawarе of their location, if they existed.
Finding Roberts’ response unacceptable, the Service moved the district court for a contempt order to coerce Roberts into full compliance. The district court ordered Robеrts to show cause why he should not be held in contempt. At the show cause hearing, both Roberts and his former co-shareholder in the two corporations, Ellen Wilbanks, testified. Roberts and Wilbanks had been fifty percent shareholders in Southern and Cеntury until mid-1986.
Ellen Wilbanks testified that she had maintained the corporations’ checkbooks and bank accounts. An outside accounting firm prepared the corporations’ financials, which included computer-generated monthly statements of receipts and disbursements as well as profit and loss figures. To assist the accountants, the corporations provided the firm with bank statements, cancelled checks, receipts, deposit slips, and other documents, all of which were returned to Wilbanks with the monthly financial statements.
Following a falling-out in 1985, Roberts and Wilbanks sued each other. In May of 1986, as part of a settlement of those lawsuits, Wilbanks sold to Roberts her shares in the two corporations. At that time, Wil-banks returnеd to Roberts all the records of Southern and Century in her possession. These records included the documents furnished to the accountants and the retained monthly financials. Roberts testified that he did not maintain the corporate records, was unsure of what records had been kept, and could not recall what records he received from Wilbanks in 1986. Roberts insisted that the summoned documents had not been in his custody or control at the time the summons was served, and that he prеsently lacked possession of those documents.
II.
As a threshold matter, we must determine whether the nature of the contempt proceeding below was civil or criminal.
Smith v. Sullivan,
The standard of review on appeal from a grant of civil contempt is whether the district court abused its discretion.
In re Newton,
Here, the Service met its initial burden by introducing the uncontroverted declaration of Special Agent Taylor stating that Roberts has not сomplied with the court’s enforcement order. Roberts, however, failed to carry his burden of production.
To the extent Roberts’ defense of inability rested on an asserted lack of possession of the requested records at the time the summons was served, his argument was foreclosed by the court’s enforcement order itself, which remains
res judicata
on the issue of possession at that time.
Maggio v. Zeitz,
Roberts was free to argue, however, that he was unable to produce at the time of the contempt proceeding.
Id.
at 760,
III.
The Service argues that Roberts’ appeal is frivolous and urges this court to аward the Service double costs and attorney’s fees pursuant to Rule 38, Federal Rules of Appellate Procedure. The Service’s position is that Roberts has brought this appeal “solely to delay incarceration under the District Court’s contempt order.” We have held that sanctions are justified where an appeal is “patently frivolous.”
Hobson v. Fischbeck,
IV.
Because the district court applied the correct legal test, it did not abuse its discretion in finding Roberts in civil contempt. Additionally, the record shows that Roberts did not make “all reasonable efforts” to comply with the district court’s enforcement order demanding production of documents concerning the corporations Southern and Century. Thus, we affirm the district court’s contеmpt order.
AFFIRMED.
Notes
. Special Agent Taylor is granted authority to examine records, take testimony, and issue summonses by I.R.C. § 7602 (West 1967 and Supp. 1988).
. The district court is granted jurisdiction to enforce such summonses by I.R.C. §§ 7402(b) and 7604(a) (West 1967 and Supp.1988).
. In
Bonner v. City of Prichard,
