Lead Opinion
The Internal Revenue Service (IRS) appeals from the district court’s order conditionally enforcing two IRS summonses served on Laddie F. Jose (Respondent) as trustee of the Jose Business Trust and Jose Family Trust. The condition requires the IRS Examination Division to give Respondent five days notice prior to transferring the summoned documents to any other division within the IRS, including the Criminal Investigation Division. This court initially dismissed the appeal as not yet ripe. The Supreme Court reversed and remanded for this court to consider the merits. We decided sua sponte to consider the merits of this case en bane. We have jurisdiction pursuant to 21 U.S.C. § 1291 and we reverse.
I.
This case arose when Leslie M. Nishimura (Nishimura), Revenue Agent of the IRS, commenced a civil tax investigation of the Jose Business Trust and Jose Family Trust for the tax years 1990 and 1991. In furtherance of the investigation, Nishimura sought to review certain trust documents in the possession of the Respondent. Respondent submitted these documents to Nishimura but restricted him from photocopying or disclosing their contents to anyone else without his permission. Nishimura initially agreed to these restrictions but then returned the doc
Following the return of the documents to Respondent, IRS Revenue Officer Alan Ochi-ae served Respondent with two IRS summonses for testimony and the production of documents. When Respondent refused to comply, the IRS brought a summons enforcement action. At the enforcement hearing, the IRS represented to the magistrate judge that they sought the documents for the sole purpose of a civil investigation and established the four Powell criteria required to enforce a summons: (1) a legitimate purpose for the investigation; (2) an inquiry relevant to the purpose; (3) that the information sought was not already in the possession of the IRS; and (4) that the IRS had complied with the administrative steps required by the code. Respondent did not dispute the validity of the summonses for a civil tax investigation. However, Respondent did voice an unsubstantiated concern that these documents were going to be handed over to the United States Attorney’s Office for criminal prosecution and requested an equitable order stating that the IRS could not turn the documents over to the United States Attorney’s Office without prior notification. In response, the magistrate judge issued an even broader order requiring the IRS to notify Respondent five days prior to circulating, transferring, or copying the summoned documents to any other division of the IRS, including the Criminal Investigation Division. The district court adopted the magistrate judge’s recommendation to enforce the summonses along with the five day notice requirement, rejecting the IRS’ contention that the district court lacked the authority to impose the condition.
On appeal to the Ninth Circuit, the IRS again asserted that the district court lacked the authority to impose this condition on the summonses. The Ninth Circuit dismissed the ease as not yet ripe because no attempt had been made to transfer the summoned documents to another division. United States v. Jose,
II.
The determination of whether the district court may conditionally enforce IRS summonses under the Internal Revenue Code is a question of statutory interpretation subject to de novo review. Spicer Accounting, Inc. v. United States,
III.
The summons power is an investigative tool provided by Congress to enable the IRS to determine and assess all taxes due under the Internal Revenue Code. Section 7602 grants the Secretary or his delegate wide latitude to summons information necessary for investigative purposes.
If the summoned party refuses to produce the requested information, the government may seek judicial enforcement of the summons under § 7604. At the enforcement hearing, the IRS “must show that the investigation will be conducted pursuant to a legitimate purpose, that the inquiry may be relevant to the purpose, that the information sought is not already within the Commissioner’s possession, and that the administrative steps required by the Code have been followed.” United States v. Powell,
The taxpayer “may challenge the summons on any appropriate grounds,” including failure to satisfy the Powell requirements or abuse of the court’s process. Reisman v. Caplin,
In this case, there is no doubt that the IRS established the Powell requirements for a valid civil tax investigation. Neither party disputes this fact. The “heavy” burden was thus on the Respondent to “allege specific facts and evidence to support his allegations” that the IRS was proceeding in bad faith with the improper purpose of gathering information for criminal prosecution. It is well established that the IRS is acting in bad faith if it pursues a summons enforcement after having already decided to make a recommendation for prosecution to the United States Attorney’s Office. LaSalle,
IV.
Because the IRS satisfied the Powell requirements and Respondent failed to meet his burden of establishing bad faith or an improper purpose, the magistrate judge appropriately recommended enforcement of the summonses. However, in response to Respondent’s concerns, the magistrate judge took the enforcement proceeding one step further. He recommended, and the district court adopted, a conditional enforcement scheme requiring the IRS to notify Respondent five days prior to transferring the summoned documents to any other division within the IRS. The imposition of this condition brings us to the primary issue in this case: May the district court conditionally enforce IRS summonses, or is it limited to enforcing or denying summonses?
Previous decisions by this court have held that the district court may conditionally enforce IRS summonses:
The terms of an enforcement order rest within the discretion of the district court, and its discretion is ‘considerable.’ Courts routinely modify summonses to protect taxpayers’ interests. This power has been construed to give a court the authority to condition enforcement of a summons on an IRS agreement to cease improper disclosures.
United States v. Author Services,
Thereafter, the Fifth Circuit came out strongly against conditional summonses in Barrett,
In a summons enforcement proceeding, the district court’s only task is to determine whether the summons should or should not be enforced. This inquiry is limited to ensuring that the government has complied with the four Powell criteria, and that its process is not being abused. There is no statutory authority, nor Congressional indication that existing statutes supply the authority, nor Supreme Court authority, to allow the district court to make any consideration except whether to enforce or not enforce the summons.... There is no middle ground because to create that remedy would unduly hamper the investigative efforts of the IRS.
Id. at 1350 (citations omitted).
As stated in Barrett, this holding is in line with the Supreme Court’s consistent pattern of declining “to circumscribe the breadth of the summons authority that Congress intended to grant the IRS ‘absent unambiguous directions from Congress’ ” in favor of upholding the IRS’ investigatory powers and discretion. Id. at 1349-50 (citations omitted); see United States v. Arthur Young & Co.,
Upon reconsideration, we agree with the Fifth Circuit’s reasoning and holding in Barrett that “[t]he sole purpose of the enforcement proceeding is to ensure that the IRS has issued the summons for proper purpose and in good faith,”
Notes
. Unless otherwise indicated, all code sections herein refer to the Internal Revenue Code. 26 U.S.C. §§ 1-9722 (1994).
. We recognize that the present case can be distinguished from Author Services and Zolin on
. The Supreme Court granted certiorari in Zolin, stating without discussion that it was “evenly divided with respect to the issue of the power of the district court to place restrictions upon the dissemination by the IRS of information obtained through a § 7604 subpoena-enforcement action."
Shortly after Zolin, the Ninth Circuit again recognized the district court's power to conditionally enforce IRS summonses in United States v. Abrahams,
Dissenting Opinion
dissenting:
I agree with Judge Hawkins that we should not overrule the line of cases that
The district court, which was fully familiar with the history of the case and the parties, allowed the IRS Examination Division to transfer the summonsed documents to other divisions in the IRS, provided that the Examination Division gave Respondent five days’ advance notice of such transfer. The district court’s condition was de minimis, and was imposed only to ensure that the IRS would not abuse the court’s process. Compare United States v. Barrett,
For a long time we have recognized that “[t]he terms of an enforcement order rest within the discretion of the district court, and [that] its discretion is considerable.” Author Services,
Concurrence in Part
concurring in part and dissenting in part:
At a time when there is unprecedented concern about excessive enforcement efforts by tax collectors,
By shearing district court judges of this important option, we lessen the ability of the first line of defense against the potential of overreaching government action. This is all the more unfortunate on these facts because, as the government admitted at argument and as the majority acknowledges in footnote 2, it is simply not necessary to decide this case on the basis the majority chooses. In doing so, we give government more power and authority than it concedes is necessary to achieve its enforcement goals in this case. The majority no doubt believes it is not overreaching, but merely anticipating what the Supreme Court might do in this area. But that is not our job. As Judge Learned Hand observed, lower courts should resist the inclination to “embrace the exhilarating opportunity of anticipating a doctrine which may be in the womb of time, but whose birth is distant.”
The prior decisions of this Court the majority overrules today, United States v. Abrahams,
. See, e.g., Albert B. Crenshaw, With Little Opposition or Debate, House Passes Bill That Would Overhaul IRS, Wash. Post, Nov. 6 1997, at A14; John M. Broder, Director of I.R.S. Issues an Apology for Agent Abuses, N.Y. Times, Sept. 26, 1997, at A6; Tom Herman, Staffers Tell of Wrongdoing by Fellow Aides, Wall St. J„ Sept. 26, 1997, A4.
. Spector Motor Service v. Walsh,
. The IRS may disclose a taxpayer's return to the Department of Justice where “the treatment of an item reflected on such return is or may be related to the resolution of an issue in the proceeding or investigation.” 26 U.S.C. § 6103(h)(2)(B). It may disclose the return or “return information” where "such ... information relates or may relate to a transactional relationship between a person who is or may be a party to the proceeding and the taxpayer which affects, or may affect, the resolution of an issue in such proceeding or investigation.” 26 U.S.C. § 6103(h)(2)(C).
. The panel decision, United States v. Jose,
