DocketNumber: Docket No. 30585-89
Judges: Wright,Nims,Korner,Shields,Hamblen,Cohen,Clapp,Gerber,Jacobs,Parr,Wells,Colvin,Halpern,Whalen,Chabot,Swift,Ruwe,Swift,Gerber,Ruwe
Filed Date: 3/11/1991
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 11/14/2024
*20
*459 OPINION
This matter is before the Court on petitioner's motion for protective order filed on July 6, 1990. Petitioner seeks a protective order under
By notices of deficiency dated October 10, 1989, respondent determined the following deficiencies in and additions to petitioner's Federal income tax:
Additions to tax | |||||||
Year | Deficiency | Sec. 6653(a)(1) | Sec. 6653(a)(2) | Sec. 6661 | |||
1983 | $ 37,060 | $ 1,853 | 1985 | 6,608,527 | 330,426 | $ 1,652,132 |
In a petition filed on December 29, 1989, petitioner seeks a redetermination of the deficiencies for both taxable years. Petitioner resided in Dallas, Texas, when she filed her petition. In her petition, petitioner states that on November 29, 1985, petitioner, along with certain other individuals and trusts (the transferors), exchanged Mary Kay Cosmetics, Inc., common stock for: (1) Common or preferred stock of Mary Kay*22 Holding Corp.; and (2) long-term notes of Mary *460 Kay Holding Corp. (this transaction will hereinafter be referred to as the exchange).
In the exchange, petitioner received 131,079 shares of Mary Kay Holding Corp. common stock and $ 10,669,951.10 of long-term notes for 1,399,230 shares of Mary Kay Cosmetics, Inc., common stock. Immediately after the exchange the transferors owned 100 percent of all common and preferred stock of Mary Kay Holding Corp. Petitioner reported on a schedule attached to her Federal income tax return for 1985 that the Mary Kay Holding Corp. long-term notes and common stock were received in a transaction qualifying for nonrecognition treatment under section 351.
On December 5, 1985, MKCI Acquisition Corp. was merged into Mary Kay Cosmetics, Inc. MKCI Acquisition Corp. was a wholly owned subsidiary of Mary Kay Corp., which in turn was a wholly owned subsidiary of Mary Kay Holding Corp. In the merger, the shareholders of Mary Kay Cosmetics, Inc., other than Mary Kay Holding Corp., received cash and debentures of Mary Kay Corp. in exchange for their shares of Mary Kay Cosmetics, Inc. (this transaction will hereinafter be referred to as the leveraged buyout).
*23 After the merger, Mary Kay Cosmetics, Inc., was a wholly owned subsidiary of Mary Kay Corp., which in turn was a wholly owned subsidiary of Mary Kay Holding Corp. Approximately $ 16,609,890 in expenses was incurred by Mary Kay Cosmetics, Inc., in connection with the leveraged buyout.
During June of 1989, respondent began an examination of Mary Kay Corp.'s Federal income tax return for taxable year 1985. As of the date petitioner's motion for protective order was filed, no notice of deficiency had been issued to Mary Kay Corp.
During August of 1989, respondent began an examination of petitioner's Federal income tax return for taxable year 1985. In his notice of deficiency for taxable year 1985, respondent determined that petitioner had received dividends in the amount of the distributed Mary Kay Holding Corp. notes, or $ 10,669,951. Respondent also determined that petitioner had received constructive dividends with *461 respect to $ 2,626,061 of the MKCI leveraged buyout expenses. With respect to taxable year 1983, respondent determined that as a result of adjustments to taxable year 1985, there was no investment credit carryback to taxable year 1983 as claimed by petitioner*24 on her Federal income tax return for that year.
On September 20, 1989, respondent issued an administrative summons pursuant to
On October 3, 1989, respondent issued a third-party recordkeeper summons (see
Also on October 3, 1989, respondent issued another third-party recordkeeper summons to Jack Morris (the Rogers/Morris summons). The Rogers/Morris summons relates to an examination of Richard R. and Janice Z. Rogers' 1985 and 1986 taxable years. Richard R. and Janice Z. Rogers' Federal income tax returns for those taxable years were under examination in relation to the exchange. *25 The testimony, information, and documents sought through the Rogers/Morris summons are identical to those sought by the petitioner/Morris summons. As did the petitioner/Morris summons, the Rogers/Morris summons had a return date of November 3, 1989.
During May and June 1990, respondent issued third-party recordkeeper summonses to officials of Morgan, Stanley & Co., Inc., Merrill Lynch Capital Markets, and Rothchild, Inc. (the adviser summonses), seeking certain testimony, information, and documents relating to Mary Kay Corp.'s 1985 and 1986 taxable years.
*462 On October 18, 1989, the return date of the MKC summons, the treasurer of MKC provided certain documents to respondent, but withheld other documents that MKC concluded are subject to the attorney-client privilege. On November 3, 1989, the return date of both the petitioner/Morris summons and the Rogers/Morris summons, Jack Morris provided to respondent the information requested in the summonses and some of the requested documents. Morris withheld other documents on advice of counsel that such documents are subject to the attorney-client privilege.
On April 12, 1990, respondent commenced an action in the U.S. District*26 Court for the Northern District of Texas to enforce the petitioner/Morris summons and the MKC summons. As of the date of petitioner's motion, no action had been taken to enforce the Rogers/Morris summons or the adviser summonses.
In her motion for protective order petitioner seeks an order prohibiting respondent's attorneys, agents, and employees engaged in representing him before this Court from obtaining access to, reviewing, or using any testimony, documents, or other information obtained pursuant to the MKC summons, the petitioner/Morris summons, the Rogers/Morris summons, and the adviser summonses after December 29, 1989, the date her petition was filed.
As a preliminary matter we note that the enforceability of the summonses is not at issue. The parties agree that the District Court, not this Court, has jurisdiction to decide such issue. Sec. 7604. We therefore do not address the issue of whether the summonses are enforceable.
The purpose of discovery in the Tax Court is to ascertain facts which have a direct bearing on the issues before the Court.
Respondent is authorized by
III.
A.
In arguing that the use of administrative summonses to obtain information relating to the pending case undermines our discovery rules, petitioner relies on
*465 In
In*32
*466 After balancing both considerations, the Court found that the Commissioner's use of administrative summonses to interview third-party witnesses and obtain relevant documents concerning the issues in cases pending before the Court impermissibly undermined the Court's discovery rules. The Court held that this was so even if the Commissioner's motives were fully proper. The Court stated its objective in so holding was to "require respondent to present his position in the civil cases pending before us without utilizing any information obtained pursuant to an administrative summons served after the cases were docketed in this Court."
In addition*34 to
The taxpayer in
*467 In connection with the 1983-85 examination, the Commissioner issued a document request and administrative summonses to the taxpayer's employees. The lead attorney for the Commissioner for the trial concerning the earlier years' adjustments was actively participating in the later years' examination. The taxpayer requested a protective order from this Court, concerned that the summonses and document request might be used to gather information for use in the upcoming trial, thus undermining this Court's discovery rules.
After considering the arguments of both parties, this Court issued the requested order, applying the principles of
Upon reconsideration, the Court found that the summonses served on petitioner's employees to appear for interviews and deliver documents in the later years' audit were in the nature of discovery depositions. The Court reasoned that the participation of the Commissioner's lead trial attorney for the 1978-82 deficiencies in the 1983-85 examination would give the Commissioner an unfair advantage. The Court viewed the activities of the Commissioner's attorney and the use of later years' summonses as an attempt to undermine the Court's discovery rules.
The Commissioner argued that the Court lacked the power to prevent it from using the information obtained through the summonses and document request. The Court held that its authority came from two sources. One was necessarily implied from the power of the Court to prescribe rules of practice and procedure. The second source of the Court's power was inherent in its obligation as a judicial body to protect the integrity of its processes and to *468 regulate the proceedings and parties, or the representatives of parties, that appear before it.
The Court made clear *37 that it was not implying that all activities of a trial attorney of the Commissioner in an audit would justify the kind of protective order it had issued in that case. The compelling facts in the case, it said in conclusion, justified the protective order it had issued. The language of the opinion is to be interpreted only in that context.
With regard to the summonses issued in the instant case before petitioner filed her petition with this Court (MKC summons, petitioner/Morris summons, and Rogers/Morris summons), we find that
Petitioner argues that we should extend our holding in
*469 We deny petitioner's motion for protective order with respect to the MKC summons, petitioner/Morris summons, and Rogers/Morris summons, which were all served prior to the filing of the petition in this case.
With respect to the adviser summonses, *39 petitioner asks that we grant her motion pursuant to
That is not to say, however, that this Court is powerless to regulate the processes of this Court, viz, the use in this Court of information obtained by administrative summons. It is undisputed that courts have inherent powers vested in the courts upon their creation and not derived from any statute.
Moreover, our own rules contemplate questions of practice and procedure for which there is no applicable rule of procedure and direct the Judge before whom the matter is pending to prescribe an appropriate procedure.
As we have already stated,
Finally, we repeat that the enforceability of the summonses is not here at issue. That is a question for the District Court, and the pendency of a Tax Court proceeding does not deprive the District Court of jurisdiction to determine such enforceability. See
We next consider petitioner's argument that this Court's power to exclude the evidence in question is inherent in its obligation as a judicial body to protect the integrity of its processes and to regulate the proceedings and parties that appear before it. We already have discussed the circumstances that would allow us to regulate the proceedings as requested by petitioner and, based on the record before us, we find that the summonses
We also find that we are not compelled to grant petitioner's motion in order to regulate the proceedings and parties that appear before us. Our holding in this case that a protective order is not appropriate involves legitimate and good faith summonses with respect to other years, to related taxpayers, and to related tax liabilities, and involves the absence of any other underlying facts or circumstances that would justify the issuance of a protective order in this case. Petitioner has failed to show respondent's lack of an independent and sufficient reason for the summonses. The rule we announce herein in no way limits this Court's exercise of its power to issue protective orders or to impose other appropriate sanctions where the underlying facts and circumstances of a particular case establish an abusive or prejudicial situation that warrants relief. If, as we proceed, an abusive or prejudicial situation becomes apparent (which *473 petitioner has so far not shown), we will be able to regulate the proceedings regardless of the rule we announce herein.
We also note that while this Court*47 must, of necessity, control the admission of all evidence in the pending proceeding, any proceedings regarding the enforceability of the administrative summonses will be brought before the Federal District Court, not this Court. On the other hand, if we were to grant petitioner's motion with respect to the adviser summonses, we would then have to supervise the administrative summons process, in order to insure that none of the evidence obtained through that process was introduced into the case. The necessity of such supervision may make the regulation of the case more difficult rather than more efficient.
In conclusion, we deny petitioner's motion for protective order. With regard to each of the summonses other than the adviser summonses, we do so since all were issued prior to commencement of the litigation herein. With regard to the adviser summonses, we do so since petitioner has not shown a lack of a sufficient, independent reason for their issuance.
In light of the foregoing,
Chabot,
My concern is that there seems to be a search for reasons to exclude information developed through administrative summonses while at the same time courts accept information developed through violations of people's constitutional rights. Respectfully, I suggest that we are standing public policy on its head when we approach the lawful statutory *474 administrative summons with as much, or more, suspicion than we do violations of constitutional rights.
In dealing with disputes about excludability of evidence obtained in violation of people's rights under the United States Constitution, the Supreme Court has frequently stressed the undesirability of excluding from evidence information that may be reliable and important in enabling the triers of fact to decide correctly the cases that are before them. *49 (See, e.g., our recent discussion in
*50 Another area in which evidence is excludable, even though it may be highly reliable and persuasive, is under
When we get beyond these situations, we find another command. This is the command in the Federal Rules of Evidence, as enacted by the Congress, that "All relevant evidence is admissible, except as otherwise provided by the Constitution of the United States, by Act of Congress, by these rules, or by other rules prescribed by the Supreme Court pursuant to statutory authority."
Historically, this Court's approach to discovery has been to insist on the parties' exchanging the relevant information informally and agreeing to inclusions of evidence (where parties' disputes are not settled) by the stipulation process. This Court has not been willing to institute the bulk of the formal discovery procedures that appear to cause such extraordinary expenses, gamesmanship, and injustices in some courts. Accordingly, except for the procedures in titles VII and VIII of the Tax Court *51 Rules of Practice & Procedure, this Court has not afforded the parties the right of Court-enforced nonconsensual discovery. By the same token, this Court has not ordinarily sought to interfere with the opportunities of the parties to obtain information. On the contrary, this Court's focus on the stipulation process has been designed to push the parties to voluntarily provide each other with information relevant to the case at hand.
Accordingly, as I see it, it should be an unusual circumstance for this Court to forbid a party to acquire information or use information that it has acquired unless the information has come from constitutional violations, violations of grand jury secrecy, or violations of some other public policy which is of such importance that it overrides the importance of facilitating the presentation of reliable, persuasive, and otherwise admissible evidence to the trier of fact.
The administrative summons, the effects of which petitioner seeks to insulate herself from in the instant case, is not a creature of court rules but is, rather, authorized specifically by statute. The Congress has prescribed respondent's statutory authority and has specified the tribunals*52 in *476 which that statutory authority is to be tested. Those tribunals do not include this Court.
There may be circumstances in which we may conclude that there has been such an abuse with regard to an administrative summons that we might restrict the use of information obtained thereby. However, the fact that the information was obtained by an administrative summons surely should not itself be a ground for restriction or even a ground for suspicion. The administrative summons is a tool specifically authorized by the Congress. The policy considerations of the administrative summons have been examined and reexamined by the Congress on many occasions. The Congress has changed its mind on many occasions. Whatever the policy balances may be at any particular time, they are for the Congress to determine. I submit that, for our purposes, we are obligated to take the administrative summons as a fact of life; we should do so not because we agree with the Congress' policy but, rather, because the Congress has exercised its constitutional authority and we must follow it (just as we must follow the Congress' decisions as to inclusion of income, deductions of expenses, allowances*53 of credits, and the 90-day period for petitioning the Tax Court).
Respectfully, I suggest that those who are concerned about "a level playing field" should take their legitimate concerns to a different forum -- the U.S. Congress. In the meanwhile, I would approach respondent's use of the administrative summons with no more suspicion than any party's use of any method of gathering information that does not require this Court's compulsory process. I would be vigilant to prevent abuse, but I would require the complaining party to explain where the abuse lies, especially if the complaining party seems to be reluctant to provide relevant information as part of this Court's stipulation process.
Swift,
(1) The opinions in
In
The motions for protective orders in
Under
Section 6103(h) states that information obtained by the IRS through the use of administrative summonses is excepted from the general rules of nondisclosure where it is to be used in subsequent and related court litigation. If the per se rule set forth in
Further, the discovery rules of this Court were never intended to be used as a vehicle to limit the admissibility of otherwise relevant information. As discussed below, it is exactly this type of information (i.e., relevant information that has been lawfully obtained) that the Tax Court traditionally has required a party to produce informally under the
Lastly, even if the use of a summons were to be viewed as a means of acquiring information not available under our rules, it does *57 not necessarily follow that suppression of evidence is a proper remedy. Suppression of evidence, even if predicated on a court's supervisory powers, has been restricted to those areas where the remedial objective of suppressing evidence (namely, the deterrence of future illegal activity) is most efficaciously served, and suppression must be balanced against the undesirable effect of impeding the fact finding process.
In this case, as in
Assuming a protective order is justified in a case, a further significant question is raised by the broad protective orders that were issued in
(2) The discovery issue involved in
In light of the above, I respectfully suggest that it is especially appropriate to provide at this time to the litigants in this Court additional guidance concerning the continued viability or lack thereof of the Tax Court's traditional informal stipulation and discovery process in the context of the large cases that are now being filed and that will be filed in the years ahead.
Routinely and particularly with regard to major clients, accountants, and lawyers (in preparing tax returns, in giving accounting and legal advice, and certainly prior to litigating a case) investigate what information from related taxpayers and from other years of their clients is relevant *480 to the current year returns, or to the pending transaction, controversy, or litigation. It would thus appear to be prima facie fair *60 and appropriate that respondent's agents and counsel, in the large complex tax cases, also have a keen interest in investigating and obtaining information from related taxpayers and from other years that may be relevant to the issues in a pending case.
Similarly, to the extent information from related taxpayers and from other years of the same taxpayers, in fact, is relevant to issues pending before us, this Court in my opinion should have the same interest in such information.
How then, in the large cases, is relevant information from related taxpayers and from other years to be discovered for use in this Court?
I believe that even in the large cases counsel for both parties generally should continue to utilize this Court's informal stipulation and informal discovery process to develop such information. See
Where -- in large cases and in connection with a complete and thorough development of the relevant facts -- counsel believes that there is a need to question certain key witnesses or potential witnesses of the opposing party, counsel should proceed under
Where consensual depositions under Rule 74 cannot be agreed to, counsel should*62 contact the Court to discuss the appropriateness of formal depositions. I suggest that the Court, in the large cases, and in such situations, should not be as hesitant as it has been in the past to order third-party nonconsensual depositions under Rule 75.
The approach suggested herein emphasizes the Tax Court's strong interest in deciding cases based on all relevant information, and it would provide guidance to counsel in the large cases regarding how that information generally is to be developed. It reaffirms the Tax Court's continued use and primary reliance on good faith, reciprocal, and complete informal discovery, even in the large, complex cases. It recognizes and suggests that some increase in the use of depositions under Rules 74 and 75 may be appropriate in the large cases, and it would appear to minimize potential abuses of respondent's summons authority in connection with pending cases.
1. All section references are to the Internal Revenue Code of 1954 as amended and in effect for the years in issue. All Rule references are to the Tax Court Rules of Practice and Procedure, unless otherwise indicated.↩
1. 50 percent of the interest due on the deficiencies.↩
1. Justice Powell summarized many concerns in
The costs of applying the exclusionary rule even at trial and on direct review are well known: the focus of the trial, and the attention of the participants therein, are diverted from the ultimate question of guilt or innocence that should be the central concern in a criminal proceeding. Moreover, the physical evidence sought to be excluded is typically reliable and often the most probative information bearing on the guilt or innocence of the defendant. As Mr. Justice Black emphasized in his dissent in
"A claim of illegal search and seizure under the
Application of the rule thus deflects the truthfinding process and often frees the guilty. The disparity in particular cases between the error committed by the police officer and the windfall afforded a guilty defendant by application of the rule is contrary to the idea of proportionality that is essential to the concept of justice. Thus, although the rule is thought to deter unlawful police activity in part through the nurturing of respect for In a different context, Dallin H. Oaks has observed: "I am criticizing, not our concern with procedures, but our preoccupation, in which we may lose sight of the fact that our procedures are not the ultimate goals of our legal system. Our goals are truth and justice, and procedures are but means to these ends. . . . "Truth and justice are ultimate values, so understood by our people, and the law and the legal profession will not be worthy of public respect and loyalty if we allow our attention to be diverted from these goals." Ethics, Morality and Professional Responsibility,
1.
(3) Taxable years, etc., treated separately. -- For purposes of this subsection, each taxable period (or, if there is no taxable period, each taxable event) and each tax imposed by a separate chapter of this title shall be treated separately.↩
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