In Re Oil & Gas Producers Having Processing Agreements With Kerr-McGee Corp.

500 F. Supp. 440, 47 A.F.T.R.2d (RIA) 1053, 1980 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 9633
CourtDistrict Court, W.D. Oklahoma
DecidedAugust 15, 1980
DocketCIV-80-897-T
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 500 F. Supp. 440 (In Re Oil & Gas Producers Having Processing Agreements With Kerr-McGee Corp.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, W.D. Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re Oil & Gas Producers Having Processing Agreements With Kerr-McGee Corp., 500 F. Supp. 440, 47 A.F.T.R.2d (RIA) 1053, 1980 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 9633 (W.D. Okla. 1980).

Opinion

ORDER

RALPH G. THOMPSON, District Judge.

The government brings this ex parte proceeding pursuant to 26 U.S.C. §§ 7402(a), *441 7609(f) and 7609(h). The specific remedy sought by the government is an order permitting service of a John Doe summons upon Kerr-McGee Corporation. By a separate motion filed herein, the government also seeks to have these proceedings sealed from public view.

The John Doe Summons Issue

26 U.S.C. § 7609 is the statute that authorizes the Internal Revenue Service (IRS) to acquire a taxpayer’s records from someone other than the taxpayer. Whenever a summons is issued to such a third-party record-keeper, the provisions of the statute allow the taxpayer an opportunity to intervene and assert any legal objections to the IRS’s acquisition of his or her records that the third-party reeordkeeper may have. There is, however, an exception to this important protection. The exception is that when the identity of the taxpayer is not known and is thus not revealed in the summons the IRS proposes to serve, the IRS must petition the Court for issuance of a “John Doe” summons, which does not name the taxpayers to whom records sought from the third-party reeordkeeper apply. The Court is required to determine the merits of such a petition for a summons on the basis of an ex parte hearing only. In such ex parte cases, the burden is upon the IRS to establish:

“(1) the summons relates to the investigation of a particular person or ascertainable group or class of persons,
(2) there is a reasonable basis for believing that such person or group or class of persons may fail or may have failed to comply with any provision of any internal revenue law, and
(3) the information sought to be obtained from the examination of the records (and the identity of the person or persons with respect to whose liability the summons is issued) is not readily available from other sources.” 26 U.S.C. § 7609(f).

The government has commenced this proceeding for the purpose of serving upon Kerr-McGee Corporation a John Doe summons whereby Kerr-McGee would be required to produce the following:

“1. Original copies of any and all processing agreements between Kerr-McGee Corporation and any other party concerning the processing of crude oil and/or natural gas, or any other raw petroleum products, at Kerr-McGee’s Lisbon, Louisiana facility, for the calendar years 1977 and 1978. The processing agreements will include, but are not limited to, all such agreements whether written or oral, whereby Kerr-McGee processed the product of another party in return for a percentage of the product so produced and/or for a specified monetary amount, or any other arrangement, as payment for such processing services.
2. Names and addresses of all parties with whom Kerr-McGee Corporation had processing agreements, during the calendar years 1977 and 1978, as referred to above.
3. Original settlement sheets showing the volume of raw products input into the processing stream from each party with whom Kerr-McGee had a processing agreement during the calendar years 1977 and 1978, the gross volume and description by name of each product derived from such input and the volume of output by product which was delivered to such party, or sold for the account of such party, for each calendar month of 1977 and 1978. If Kerr-McGee retained a percentage of the products as processed as its processing fee, what product was retained and the volume of each product for each month. The information sought in this paragraph is sought only for processing done at Kerr-McGee’s Lisbon, Louisiana facility.”

As is indicated by numbered paragraph 9 of the government’s petition, the ascertainable class of persons to which the summons relates is “all persons having oil and gasoline processing agreements with Kerr-McGee under which Kerr-McGee processes raw petroleum products into finished products which are subject to tax.” Thus, the IRS has satisfactorily established the first criteria under the statute that the summons *442 relates to the investigation of an ascertainable group or class of persons.

Additionally, the government makes an arguable case that the information sought, and the identities of the persons with respect to whom the summons is proposed to issue, is not readily available from other sources. In this regard, the government notes that there are a large number of oil and gas producers (over 150 in the Shreveport, Louisiana, telephone directory alone), and the only alternative source for the information would be to identify and audit virtually every oil and gas producer. It should be noted that the government recognizes that the information sought is available from other sources. However, the information is far more centrally located in the hands of Kerr-McGee and is therefore more readily available from Kerr-McGee than through individual audits.

The troublesome question is whether the government has shown there is a reasonable basis for believing that persons who have processing agreements with Kerr-McGee may fail or may have failed to comply with any provision of the internal revenue statutes. The government contends that a large number of Louisiana oil producers having processing agreements similar to those sought from Kerr-McGee have sold, or may have sold, finished gasoline without paying the gasoline excise tax and without registering as a buyer or seller of tax-free gasoline. In support of this contention, the government asserts that, as of April 30, 1980, there were only 83 registrations to sell gasoline tax-free in the State of Louisiana and that only a few of these (as the government puts it, “a small percentage”) are oil producers. Additionally, the government asserts that only 161 taxpayers in Louisiana filed tax returns which reported the tax on gasoline.

The issue presented here is whether the IRS is seeking to utilize the John Doe summons procedure to conduct a fishing expedition by intruding excessively into the private affairs of both the taxpayer and the third-party recordkeeper. The purpose to which the IRS intends to put the information acquired through the John Doe summons is explained in numbered paragraph 8 of the petition as follows:

“Once the name, addresses and identities of oil and gasoline producers are learned, their tax returns for the applicable years will be requested from the applicable Internal Revenue Service Centers, and those returns will be examined, as warranted. If they have not filed such returns, an examination to determine their excise tax liabilities, if any, will be initiated as necessary.”

From this statement of purpose it is apparent that the IRS is seeking to discover the identity of any oil and gas producer doing business with Kerr-McGee’s Lisbon, Louisiana, facility, for the purpose of then determining whether to audit certain of those individuals.

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Bluebook (online)
500 F. Supp. 440, 47 A.F.T.R.2d (RIA) 1053, 1980 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 9633, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-oil-gas-producers-having-processing-agreements-with-kerr-mcgee-okwd-1980.