[Code of Federal Regulations]
[Title 27, Volume 1]
[Revised as of April 1, 2003]
From the U.S. Government Printing Office via GPO Access
[CITE: 27CFR70.27]

[Page 942-943]
 
            TITLE 27--ALCOHOL, TOBACCO PRODUCTS AND FIREARMS
 
 CHAPTER I--ALCOHOL AND TOBACCO TAX AND TRADE BUREAU, DEPARTMENT OF THE 
                                TREASURY
 
PART 70--PROCEDURE AND ADMINISTRATION--Table of Contents
 
        Subpart C--Discovery of Liability and Enforcement of Laws
 
Sec. 70.27  Right to intervene; right to institute a proceeding to quash.

    (a) Notified person. Under 26 U.S.C. 7609(a), the Bureau must give a 
notice of summons to any person, other than the person summoned, who is 
identified in the description of the books and records contained in the 
summons in order that such person may contest the right of the Bureau to 
examine the summoned records by instituting a proceeding to quash the 
summons. Thus, if the Bureau issues a summons to a bank requesting 
checking account records of more than one person all of whom are 
identified in the description of the records contained in the summons, 
then all such persons are notified persons entitled to notice under 26 
U.S.C. 7609(a). Therefore, if the Bureau requests the records of a joint 
bank account of A and B, both of whom are named in the summons, then 
both A and B are notified persons entitled to notice under 26 U.S.C. 
7609(a).
    (b) Right to institute a proceeding to quash--(1) In general. Title 
26 U.S.C. 7609(b) grants a notified person the right to institute a 
proceeding to quash the summons in the United States district court for 
the district within which the person summoned resides or is found. 
Jurisdiction of the court is based on 26 U.S.C. 7609(b). The act of 
filing a petition in district court does not in and of itself institute 
a proceeding to quash under 26 U.S.C. 7609(b)(2). Rather, the filing of 
the petition must be coupled with notice as required by 26 U.S.C. 
7609(b)(2)(B).
    (2) Elements of institution of a proceeding to quash. In order to 
institute a proceeding to quash a summons, the notified person (or the 
notified person's agent, nominee, or other person acting under the 
direction or control of the notified person) must, not later than

[[Page 943]]

the 20th day following the day the notice of the summons was served on 
or mailed to such notified person:
    (i) File a petition to quash in the name of the notified person in a 
district court having jurisdiction.
    (ii) Notify the Bureau by sending a copy of that petition by 
registered or certified mail to the Bureau employee and office 
designated to receive the copy in the notice of summons that was given 
to the notified person, and
    (iii) Notify the recordkeeper by sending to that recordkeeper by 
registered or certified mail a copy of the petition.

Failure to give timely notice to either the summoned party or the Bureau 
in the manner described in this paragraph means that the notified person 
has failed to institute a proceeding to quash and the district court has 
no jurisdiction to hear the proceeding. Thus, for example, if the 
notified person mails a copy of the petition to the summoned person but 
not to the designated Bureau employee and office, the notified person 
has failed to institute a proceeding to quash. Similarly, if the 
notified person mails a copy of such petition to the summoned person, 
but instead of sending a copy of the petition by registered or certified 
mail to the designated employee and office, the notified person gives 
the designated employee and office the petition by some other means, the 
notified person has failed to institute a proceeding to quash.
    (3) Failure to institute a proceeding to quash. If the notified 
person fails to institute a proceeding to quash within 20 days following 
the day the notice was served on or mailed to such notified person, the 
Bureau may examine the summoned records following the 23rd day after 
notice of the summons was served on or mailed to the notified person 
(see 26 U.S.C. 7609(d)(1)).
    (c) Presumption no notice has been mailed. Title 26 U.S.C. 
7609(b)(2)(B) permits a notified person to institute a proceeding to 
quash by filing a petition in district court and notifying both the 
Bureau and the summoned person. Unless the notified person has notified 
both the Bureau and the summoned person in the appropriate manner, the 
notified person has failed to institute a proceeding to quash. If the 
copy of the petition has not been delivered to the summoned person or 
the person and office designated to receive the notice on behalf of the 
Bureau within 3 days from the close of the 20-day period allowed to 
institute a proceeding to quash, it is presumed that the notification 
has not been timely mailed.

(26 U.S.C. 7609)

[T.D. ATF-301, 55 FR 47609, Nov. 14, 1990]