OVERVIEW
The Internal Revenue Service appeals from the district court’s order denying its petition to enforce a summons directing Robert T. Gilleran to appear before an IRS revenue agent, pursuant to I.R.C. § 7602, in connection with the IRS’s investigation of Gilleran’s tax liability for 1987 and 1988. We reverse and remand.
DISCUSSION
The district court held that service of an IRS summons by leaving it at the taxpayer’s last and usual place of abode violates the Due Process Clause, unless it is also mailed to the taxpayer at said abode. The district court erred.
The Internal Revenue Code unambiguously authorizes the IRS to serve a summons by leaving it at the taxpayer’s last and usual place of abode, with no requirement that the summons also be mailed to the taxpayer or deposited with a competent person. 26 U.S.C. § 7603. An IRS summons, however, is not self-enforcing.
United States v. Samuels, Kramer & Co.,
To obtain enforcement of the summons, the IRS must first establish its “good faith” by showing: 1) that the summons was issued for a legitimate purpose; 2) that the information sought is relevant to that purpose; 3) that the information sought is not already within the IRS’s possession; and 4) that the administrative steps required by the Internal Revenue Code have been followed.
United States v. Powell,
Once the IRS has established its good faith, the district court issues an order requiring the taxpayer to show cause, at an enforcement hearing, why the summons should not be enforced.
Id.
The district' court acquires personal jurisdiction over the taxpayer by service of the show cause order and the petition for enforcement of the summons.
United States v. Bichara,
At the enforcement hearing, an adversary proceeding, the taxpayer may challenge the summons on any appropriate ground.
United States v. Church of Scientology,
The sworn declaration by Revenue Agent Bowman satisfied the government’s “minimal” showing that the good-faith requirement had been met.
See United States v. Abrahams,
REVERSED and REMANDED with instructions to reinstate the IRS’s action to enforce the summons.
