This week, a district court denied an IRS request for an order authorizing issuance of a John Doe Summons. Readers will recall that Section 7609(f) permits the IRS to issue John Doe Summonses seeking tax related information and documents about unknown taxpayers. These taxpayers are unknown, so the IRS cannot give notice to the taxpayers who can then contest the summons. So, Congress required that a federal district judge approve the issuance of the summons.
The IRS sought the court order authorizing it to serve a John Doe summons to the California Board of Equalization for certain a certain discrete record set that would help the IRS identify persons making gift transfers to non-spouse related parties which, the IRS imagined, might have compliance issues with the gift tax. I won't get into the details of the focus of the IRS's interest, since the principal focus would be civil compliance initiatives. The judge refused to authorize the summons, finding that the IRS had not shown that the information and documents were not otherwise reasonably available. Further, although dismissing the motion for authorization without prejudice on the basis stated, the Court cautioned that, if the IRS were to repackage the motion, the court had some serious concerns about whether the IRS could otherwise qualify. The opinion is here.
Read more »
No comments:
Post a Comment