Fifth Amendment privilege against self-incrimination held not
available to member of dissolved law partnership who had been
subpoenaed by a grand jury to produce the partnership's financial
books and records, since the partnership, though small, had an
institutional identity and petitioner held the records in a
representative, not a personal, capacity. The privilege is "limited
to its historic function of protecting only the natural individual
from compulsory incrimination through his own testimony or personal
records."
United States v. White, 322 U.
S. 694,
322 U. S. 701.
Pp.
417 U. S.
87-101.
483 F.2d 961, affirmed.
MARSHALL, J., delivered the opinion of the Court, in which
BURGER, C.J., and BRENNAN, STEWART, WHITE, BLACKMUN, POWELL, and
REHNQUIST, JJ., joined. DOUGLAS, J., filed a dissenting opinion,
post, p.
417 U. S.
101.
MR. JUSTICE MARSHALL delivered the opinion of the Court.
The question presented in this case is whether a partner in a
small law firm may invoke his personal privilege against
self-incrimination to justify his refusal to comply with a subpoena
requiring production of the partnership's financial records.
Page 417 U. S. 86
Until 1969, petitioner Isadore Bellis was the senior partner in
Bellis, Kolsby & Wolf, a law firm in Philadelphia. The firm was
formed in 1955 or 1956. There were three partners in the firm, the
three individuals listed in the firm name. In addition, the firm
had six employees: two other attorneys who were associated with the
firm, one part-time; three secretaries; and a receptionist.
Petitioner's secretary doubled as the partnership's bookkeeper,
under the direction of petitioner and the firm's independent
accountant. The firm's financial records were therefore maintained
in petitioner's office during his tenure at the firm.
Bellis left the firm in late 1969 to join another law firm. The
partnership was dissolved, although it is apparently still in the
process of winding up its affairs. Kolsby and Wolf continued in
practice together as a new partnership, at the same premises.
Bellis moved to new offices, leaving the former partnership's
financial records with Kolsby and Wolf, where they remained for
more than three years. In February or March, 1973, however, shortly
before issuance of the subpoena in this case, petitioner's
secretary, acting at the direction of petitioner or his attorney,
removed the records from the old premises and brought them to
Bellis' new office.
On May 1, 1973, Bellis was served with a subpoena directing him
to appear and testify before a federal grand jury and to bring with
him "all partnership records currently in your possession for the
partnership of Bellis, Kolsby & Wolf for the years 1968 and
1969." App. 6. Petitioner appeared on May 9, but refused to produce
the records, claiming,
inter alia, his Fifth Amendment
privilege against compulsory self-incrimination. After a hearing
before the District Court on May 9 and 10, the court held that
petitioner's personal privilege did not extend to the partnership's
financial books and records, and ordered
Page 417 U. S. 87
their production by May 16. [
Footnote 1] When petitioner reappeared before the grand
jury on that date and again refused to produce the subpoenaed
records, the District Court held him in civil contempt, and
released him on his own recognizance pending an expedited
appeal.
On July 9 1973, the Court of Appeals affirmed in a per curiam
opinion.
In re Grand Jury Investigation, 483 F.2d 961 (CA3
1973). Relying on this Court's decision in
United States v.
White, 322 U. S. 694
(19,44), the Court of Appeals stated that "the privilege has always
been regarded as personal in the sense that it applies only to an
individual's words or personal papers," and thus held that the
privilege against self-incrimination did not apply to "records of
an entity such as a partnership which has a recognizable juridical
existence apart from its members." 483 F.2d at 962. After MR.
JUSTICE WHITE had stayed the mandate of the Court of Appeals on
August 1, we granted certiorari, 414 U.S. 907 (1973), to consider
this interpretation of the Fifth Amendment privilege and the
applicability of our
White decision in the circumstances
of this case. We affirm.
It has long been established, of course, that the Fifth
Amendment privilege against compulsory self-incrimination protects
an individual from compelled production of his personal papers and
effects as well as compelled oral testimony. In
Boyd v. United
States, 116 U. S. 616
(1886), we held that "any forcible and compulsory extortion of a
man's own testimony or of his private papers to be used as evidence
to convict him of crime" would violate the Fifth Amendment
privilege.
Id. at
116 U. S. 630;
see also id. at
116 U. S.
633-635;
Wilson v. United States, 221 U.
S. 361,
221 U. S. 377
(1911). The privilege applies to the business records of
Page 417 U. S. 88
the sole proprietor or sole practitioner as well as to personal
documents containing more intimate information about the
individual's private life.
Boyd v. United States, supra; Couch
v. United States, 409 U. S. 322
(1973);
Hill v. Philpott, 445 F.2d 144 (CA7),
cert.
denied, 404 U.S. 991 (1971);
Stuart v. United States,
416 F.2d 459! 462 (CA5 1969). As the Court explained in
United
States v. White, supra, at
322 U. S.
698,
"[t]he constitutional privilege against self-incrimination . . .
is designed to prevent the use of legal process to force from the
lips of the accused individual the evidence necessary to convict
him or to force him to produce and authenticate any personal
documents or effects that might incriminate him."
See also Curcio v. United States, 354 U.
S. 118,
354 U. S. 125
(1957);
Couch v. United States, supra, at
409 U. S.
330-331.
On the other hand, an equally long line of cases has established
that an individual cannot rely upon the privilege to avoid
producing the records of a collective entity which are in his
possession in a representative capacity, even if these records
might incriminate him personally. This doctrine was first announced
in a series of cases dealing with corporate records. In
Wilson
v. United States, supra, the Court held that an officer of a
corporation could not claim his privilege against compulsory
self-incrimination to justify a refusal to produce the corporate
books and records in response to a grand jury subpoena
duces
tecum directed to the corporation. A companion case,
Dreier v. United States, 221 U. S. 394
(1911), held that the same result followed when the subpoena
requiring production of the corporate books was directed to the
individual corporate officer. In
Wheeler v. United States,
226 U. S. 478
(1913), the Court held that no Fifth Amendment privilege could be
claimed with respect to corporate records even though the
corporation had previously been dissolved. And
Page 417 U. S. 89
Grant v. United States, 227 U. S.
74 (1913), applied this principle to the records of a
dissolved corporation where the records were in the possession of
the individual who had been the corporation's sole shareholder.
To some extent, these decisions were based upon the particular
incidents of the corporate form, the Court observing that a
corporation has limited powers granted to it by the State in its
charter, and is subject to the retained "visitorial power" of the
State to investigate its activities.
See, e.g., Wilson v.
United States, supra, at
221 U. S.
382-385. But any thought that the principle formulated
in these decisions was limited to corporate records was put to rest
in
United States v. White, supra. In
White, we
held that an officer of an unincorporated association, a labor
union, could not claim his privilege against compulsory
self-incrimination to justify his refusal to produce the union's
records pursuant to a grand jury subpoena.
White announced
the general rule that the privilege could not be employed by an
individual to avoid production of the records of an organization,
which he holds in a representative capacity as custodian on behalf
of the group. 322 U.S. at
322 U. S.
699-700. Relying on
White, we have since upheld
compelled production of the records of a variety of organizations
over individuals' claims of Fifth Amendment privilege.
See,
e.g., United States v. Fleischman, 339 U.
S. 349,
339 U. S.
357-358 (1950) (Joint Anti-Fascist Refugee Committee);
Rogers v. United States, 340 U. S. 367,
340 U. S.
371-372 (1951) (Communist Party of Denver);
McPhaul
v. United States, 364 U. S. 372,
364 U. S. 380
(1960) (Civil Rights Congress).
See also Curcio v. United
States, supra, (local labor union).
These decisions reflect the Court's consistent view that the
privilege against compulsory self-incrimination should be
"limited to its historic function of protecting only the natural
individual from compulsory incrimination through
Page 417 U. S. 90
his own testimony or personal records."
United States v. White, supra, at
322 U. S. 701.
White is only one of the many cases to emphasize that the
Fifth Amendment privilege is a purely personal one, most recent
among them being the Court's decision last Term in
Couch v.
United States, 409 U.S. at
409 U. S.
327-328. Relying on this fundamental policy limiting the
scope of the privilege, the Court in
White held that
"the papers and effects which the privilege protects must be the
private property of the person claiming the privilege, or at least
in his possession in a purely personal capacity."
322 U.S. at
322 U. S. 699.
Mr. Justice Murphy reasoned that
"individuals, when acting as representatives of a collective
group, cannot be said to be exercising their personal rights and
duties nor to be entitled to their purely personal privileges.
Rather, they assume the rights, duties and privileges of the
artificial entity or association of which they are agents or
officers and they are bound by its obligations."
Ibid.
Since no artificial organization may utilize the personal
privilege against compulsory self-incrimination, the Court found
that it follows that an individual acting in his official capacity
on behalf of the organization may likewise not take advantage of
his personal privilege. In view of the inescapable fact that an
artificial entity can only act to produce its records through its
individual officers or agents, recognition of the individual's
claim of privilege with respect to the financial records of the
organization would substantially undermine the unchallenged rule
that the organization itself is not entitled to claim any Fifth
Amendment privilege; and largely frustrate legitimate governmental
regulation of such organizations. Mr. Justice Murphy put it
well:
"The scope and nature of the economic activities of incorporated
and unincorporated organizations and their representatives demand
that the constitutional
Page 417 U. S. 91
power of the federal and state governments to regulate those
activities be correspondingly effective. The greater portion of
evidence of wrongdoing by an organization or its representatives is
usually to be found in the official records and documents of that
organization. Were the cloak of the privilege to be thrown around
these impersonal records and documents, effective enforcement of
many federal and state laws would be impossible. The framers of the
constitutional guarantee against compulsory self-disclosure, who
were interested primarily in protecting individual civil liberties,
cannot be said to have intended the privilege to be available to
protect economic or other interests of such organizations so as to
nullify appropriate governmental regulations."
Id. at
322 U. S. 700
(citations omitted).
See also Wilson v. United States,
supra, at
221 U. S.
384-385.
The Court's decisions holding the privilege inapplicable to the
records of a collective entity also reflect a second, though
obviously interrelated, policy underlying the privilege, the
protection of an individual's right to a "
private enclave where
he may lead a private life.'" Murphy v. Waterfront Comm'n,
378 U. S. 52,
378 U. S. 55
(1964). We have recognized that the Fifth Amendment "respects a
private inner sanctum of individual feeling and thought" -- an
inner sanctum which necessarily includes an individual's papers and
effects to the extent that the privilege bars their compulsory
production and authentication -- and "proscribes state intrusion to
extract self-condemnation." Couch v. United States, supra
at 409 U. S. 327.
See also Griswold v. Connecticut, 381 U.
S. 479, 381 U. S. 484
(1965). Protection of individual privacy was the major theme
running through the Court's decision in Boyd, see, e.g.,
116 U.S. at 116 U. S. 630,
and it was on this basis that the Court in Wilson
distinguished the corporate records involved in
Page 417 U. S. 92
that case from the private papers at issue in
Boyd.
See 221 U.S. at
221 U. S. 377,
221 U. S.
380.
But a substantial claim of privacy or confidentiality cannot
often be maintained with respect to the financial records of an
organized collective entity. Control of such records is generally
strictly regulated by statute or by the rules and regulations of
the organization, and access to the records is generally guaranteed
to others in the organization. In such circumstances, the custodian
of the organization's records lacks the control over their content
and location and the right to keep them from the view of others
which would be characteristic of a claim of privacy and
confidentiality. Mr. Justice Murphy recognized the significance of
this in
White; he pointed out that organizational records
"[u]sually, if not always, . . . are open to inspection by the
members," that "this right may be enforced on appropriate occasions
by available legal procedures," and that "[t]hey therefore embody
no element of personal privacy." 322 U.S. at
322 U. S.
699-700. And here lies the modern-day relevance of the
visitorial powers doctrine relied upon by the Court in
Wilson and the other cases dealing with corporate records;
the Court's holding that no privilege exists
"where, by virtue of their character and the rules of law
applicable to them, the books and papers are held subject to
examination by the [state],"
221 U.S. at
221 U. S. 382,
can easily be understood as a recognition that corporate records do
not contain the requisite element of privacy or confidentiality
essential for the privilege to attach.
The analysis of the Court in White, of course, only makes sense
in the context of what the Court described as "organized,
institutional activity." 322 U.S. at
322 U. S. 701.
This analysis presupposes the existence of an organization which is
recognized as an independent entity apart from its individual
members. The group must be relatively
Page 417 U. S. 93
well organized and structured, and not merely a loose, informal
association of individuals. It must maintain a distinct set of
organizational records, and recognize rights in its members of
control and access to them. And the records subpoenaed must, in
fact, be organizational records held in a representative capacity.
In other words, it must be fair to say that the records demanded
are the records of the organization, rather than those of the
individual under
White.
The Court in
White had little difficulty in concluding
that the demand for production of the official records of a labor
union, whether national or local, in the custody of an officer of
the union, met these tests.
See id. at
322 U. S.
701-703. The Court observed that a union's existence in
fact, if not in law, was "as perpetual as that of any corporation,"
id. at
322 U. S. 701,
that the union operated under formal constitutions, rules, and
bylaws, and that it engaged in a broad scope of activities in which
it was recognized as an independent entity. The Court also pointed
out that the official union books and records were distinct from
the personal books and records of its members, that the union
restricted the permissible uses of these records, and that it
recognized its members' rights to inspect them. Although the Court
was aware that the individual members might legally hold title to
the union records, the Court characterized this interest as a
"nominal," rather than a significant, personal interest in
them.
We think it is similarly clear that partnerships may and
frequently do represent organized institutional activity so as to
preclude any claim of Fifth Amendment privilege with respect to the
partnership's financial records. Some of the most powerful private
institutions in the Nation are conducted in the partnership form.
Wall Street law firms and stock brokerage firms provide significant
examples. These are often large, impersonal,
Page 417 U. S. 94
highly structured enterprises of essentially perpetual duration.
The personal interest of any individual partner in the financial
records of a firm of this scope is obviously highly attenuated. It
is inconceivable that a brokerage house with offices from coast to
coast handling millions of dollars of investment transactions
annually should be entitled to immunize its records from SEC
scrutiny solely because it operates as a partnership, rather than
in the corporate form. Although none of the reported cases has
involved a partnership of quite this magnitude, it is hardly
surprising that all of the courts of appeals which have addressed
the question have concluded that
White's analysis requires
rejection of any claim of privilege in the financial records of a
large business enterprise conducted in the partnership form.
In
re Mal Brothers Contracting Co., 444 F.2d 615 (CA3),
cert.
denied, 404 U.S. 857 (1971);
United States v.
Silverstein, 314 F.2d 789 (CA2),
cert. denied, 374
U.S. 807 (1963);
United States v. Wernes, 157 F.2d 797,
800 (CA7 1946).
See also United States v.
Onassis, 125 F.
Supp. 190, 205-210 (DC 1954). Even those lower courts which
have held the privilege applicable in the context of a smaller
partnership have frequently acknowledged that no absolute exclusion
of the partnership form from the
White rule generally
applicable to unincorporated associations is warranted.
See,
e.g., United States v. Cogan, 257 F.
Supp. 170, 17174 (SDNY 1966);
In re Subpoena Duces
Tecum, 81 F. Supp.
418, 421 (ND Cal.1948).
In this case, however, we are required to explore the outer
limits of the analysis of the Court in
White. Petitioner
argues that, in view of the modest size of the partnership involved
here, it is unrealistic to consider the firm as an entity
independent of its three partners; rather, he claims, the law firm
embodies little more than the personal
Page 417 U. S. 95
legal practice of the individual partners. Moreover, petitioner
argues that he has a substantial and direct ownership interest in
the partnership records, and does not hold them in a representative
capacity. [
Footnote 2]
Despite the force of these arguments, we conclude that the lower
courts properly applied the
White rule in the
circumstances of this case. While small, the partnership here did
have an established institutional identity independent of its
individual partners. This was not an informal association or a
temporary arrangement for the undertaking of a few projects of
short-lived duration. Rather, the partnership represented a formal
institutional arrangement organized for the continuing conduct of
the firm's legal practice. The partnership was in
Page 417 U. S. 96
existence for nearly 15 years prior to its voluntary
dissolution. [
Footnote 3]
Although it may not have had a formal constitution or bylaws to
govern its internal affairs, state partnership law imposed on the
firm a certain organizational structure in the absence of any
contrary agreement by the partners; [
Footnote 4] for example, it guaranteed to each of the
partners the equal right to participate in the management and
control of the firm, Pa.Stat.Ann., Tit. 59, § 51(e) (1964),
and prescribed that majority rule governed the conduct of the
firm's business, § 51(h). [
Footnote 5] The firm maintained a bank account in the
partnership name, had stationery using the firm name on its
letterhead,
Page 417 U. S. 97
and, in general, held itself out to third parties as an entity
with an independent institutional identity. It employed six persons
in addition to its partners, including two other attorneys who
practiced law on behalf of the firm, rather than as individuals on
their own behalf. It filed separate partnership returns for federal
tax purposes, as required by § 6031 of the Internal Revenue
Code, 26 U.S.C. § 6031. [
Footnote 6] State law permitted the firm to be sued,
Pa.Rule Civ.Proc. 2128, and to hold title to property,
Pa.Stat.Ann., Tit. 59, § 13(3), in the partnership name, and
generally regarded the partnership as a distinct entity for
numerous other purposes. [
Footnote
7]
Equally important, we believe it is fair to say that petitioner
is holding the subpoenaed partnership records in a representative
capacity. [
Footnote 8] The
documents which
Page 417 U. S. 98
petitioner has been ordered to produce are merely the financial
books and records of the partnership. [
Footnote 9] These reflect the receipts and disbursements
of the entire firm, including income generated by and salaries paid
to the employees of the firm, and the financial transactions of the
other partners. Petitioner holds these records subject to the
rights granted to the other partners by state partnership law.
Petitioner has no direct ownership interest in the records; rather,
under state law, they are partnership property, and petitioner's
interest in partnership property is a derivative interest subject
to significant limitations.
See Ellis v. Ellis, 415 Pa.
412, 415-416, 203 A.2d 547, 549-550 (1964). Petitioner has no right
to use this property for other than partnership purposes without
the consent of the other partners. Pa.Stat.Ann., Tit. 59, §
72(2)(a). Petitioner is, of course, accountable to the partnership
as
Page 417 U. S. 99
a fiduciary, § 54(1), and his possession of the firm's
financial records is especially subject to his fiduciary
obligations to the other partners. Indeed, Pennsylvania law
specifically provides that "every partner shall at all times have
access to and may inspect and copy any of [the partnership books]."
§ 52. [
Footnote 10] To
facilitate this right of access, petitioner was required to keep
these financial books and records at the firm's principal place of
business, at least during the active life of the partnership.
Ibid. The other partners in the firm were -- and still are
-- entitled to enforce these rights through legal action by
demanding production of the records in a suit for a formal
accounting. § 55. [
Footnote
11]
It should be noted also that petitioner was content to leave
these records with the other members of the partnership at their
principal place of business for more than three years after he left
the firm. Moreover, the Government contends that the other partners
in the firm had agreed to turn the records over to the grand jury
before discovering that petitioner had removed them from their
offices, and that they made an unavailing demand upon petitioner to
return the records. Whether or not petitioner's present possession
of these records is an unlawful infringement of the rights of the
other partners, this provides additional support for our conclusion
that it is the organizational character of the records and the
representative aspect of petitioner's present possession of
Page 417 U. S. 100
them which predominates over his belatedly discovered personal
interest in them.
Petitioner relies heavily on language in the Court's opinion in
White which suggests that the "test" for determining the
applicability of the Fifth Amendment privilege in this area is
whether the organization
"has a character so impersonal in the scope of its membership
and activities that it cannot be said to embody or represent the
purely private or personal interests of its constituents, but
rather to embody their common or group interests only."
322 U.S. at
322 U. S. 701.
We must admit our agreement with the Solicitor General's
observation that "it is difficult to know precisely what situations
the formulation in
White was intended to include within
the protection of the privilege." Brief for United States 21. The
Court in
White, after stating its test, did not really
apply it, nor has any of the subsequent decisions of this Court. On
its face, the test is not particularly helpful in the broad range
of cases, including this one, where the organization embodies
neither "purely . . . personal interests" nor "group interests
only", but rather some combination of the two.
In any event, we do not believe that the Court's formulation in
White can be reduced to a simple proposition based solely
upon the size of the organization. It is well settled that no
privilege can be claimed by the custodian of corporate records,
regardless of how small the corporation may be.
Grant v. United
States, 227 U. S. 74
(1913);
Fineberg v. United States, 393 F.2d 417, 420 (CA9
1968);
Hair Industry, Ltd. v. United States, 340 F.2d 510
(CA2 1965);
cf. George Campbell Painting Corp. v. Reid,
392 U. S. 286
(1968). Every State has now adopted laws permitting incorporation
of professional associations, and increasing numbers of lawyers,
doctors, and other professionals are choosing to conduct their
business affairs
Page 417 U. S. 101
in the corporate form, rather than the more traditional
partnership. Whether corporation or partnership, many of these
firms will be independent entities whose financial records are held
by a member of the firm in a representative capacity. In these
circumstances, the applicability of the privilege should not turn
on an insubstantial difference in the form of the business
enterprise.
See In re rand Jury Subpoena Duces
Tecum, 358 F.
Supp. 661, 668 (Md.1973).
This might be a different case if it involved a small family
partnership,
see United States v. Slutsky, 352 F.
Supp. 1105 (SDNY 1972);
In re Subpoena Duces Tecum, 81
F. Supp. at 421, or, as the Solicitor General suggests, Brief for
United States 22-23, if there were some other preexisting
relationship of confidentiality among the partners. But in the
circumstances of this case, petitioner's possession of the
partnership's financial records in what can be fairly said to be a
representative capacity compels our holding that his personal
privilege against compulsory self-incrimination is
inapplicable.
Affirmed.
[
Footnote 1]
Although the wording of the subpoena was arguably broad enough
to encompass them, the District Court expressly excluded any client
files from the scope of its order.
[
Footnote 2]
Petitioner also argues that we have already decided the issue
presented in this case, and held that the Fifth Amendment privilege
could be claimed with respect to partnership records, in the
Boyd case. It is true that the notice to produce involved
in
Boyd was, in fact, issued to E. A. Boyd Sons, a
partnership.
See 116 U. S. 616,
116 U. S. 619.
However, at this early stage in the development of our Fifth
Amendment jurisprudence, the potential significance of this fact
was not observed by either the parties or the Court. The parties
treated the invoice at issue as a private business record, and the
contention that it might be a partnership record held in a
representative capacity, and thus not within the scope of the
privilege, was not raised. The Court therefore decided the case on
the premise that it involved the "compulsory production of a man's
private papers."
Id. at
116 U. S. 622.
It was only after
Boyd had held that the Fifth Amendment
privilege applied to the compelled production of documents that the
question of the extension of this principle to the records of
artificial entities arose. We do not believe that the Court in
Boyd can be said to have decided the issue presented
today.
See United States v. Onassis, 125 F.
Supp. 190, 208 (DC 1954).
In any event, the Court in
Boyd did not inquire into
the nature of the Boyd & Sons partnership or the capacity in
which the invoice was acquired or held. Absent such an inquiry, we
are unable to determine how our decision today would affect the
result of
Boyd on the facts of that case.
See
infra at
417 U. S.
101.
[
Footnote 3]
Petitioner properly concedes that the dissolution of the
partnership does not afford him any greater claim to the privilege
than he would have if the firm were still active. Brief for
Petitioner 31 n. 12. Under Pennsylvania law, dissolution of the
partnership does not terminate the entity; rather it continues
until the winding up of the partnership affairs is completed,
Pa.Stat.Ann., Tit. 59, § 92 (1964), which has not yet occurred
in this case. Moreover, this Court's decisions have made clear that
the dissolution of a corporation does not give the custodian of the
corporate records any greater claim to the Fifth Amendment
privilege.
Wheeler v. United States, 226 U.
S. 478,
226 U. S.
489-490 (1913);
Grant v. United States,
227 U. S. 74,
227 U. S. 80
(1913). We see no reason why the same should not be true of the
records of a partnership after its dissolution.
[
Footnote 4]
The record in this case is quite sketchy, and it is unclear
whether the partnership here had adopted a formal partnership
agreement. Petitioner apparently had a 45% interest in the profits
of the firm, which suggests that there may have been such an
agreement. However, there is no indication that any such agreement
made any material change in the provisions of state law regarding
the management and control of the firm or the rights of the other
partners with respect to the firm's financial records. In any
event, the existence of a formal partnership agreement would merely
reinforce our conclusion that the partnership is properly regarded
as an independent entity with a relatively formal organization.
[
Footnote 5]
Pennsylvania has adopted the provisions of the Uniform
Partnership Act, which is also in force in 40 other States and the
District of Columbia.
[
Footnote 6]
As we observed only last Term, a "partnership is regarded as an
independently recognizable entity apart from the aggregate of its
partners" for a number of purposes under the Internal Revenue Code.
United States v. Basye, 410 U. S. 441,
410 U. S. 448
(1973).
[
Footnote 7]
Of course, state and federal law do not treat partnerships as
distinct entities for all purposes. But we think that partnerships
bear enough of the indicia of legal entities to be treated as such
for the purpose of our analysis of the Fifth Amendment issue
presented in this case. The fact that partnerships are not viewed
solely as entities is immaterial for this purpose.
See United
States v. White, 322 U. S. 694,
322 U. S. 697
(1944).
[
Footnote 8]
Petitioner argues that as a partner in the firm, he has an
interest in the firm's records as co owner which entitles him to
claim the privilege against self-incrimination. But such an
ownership interest exists in a partnership of any size. Moreover,
the same ownership interest is presented in the case of a labor
union or other unincorporated association. The Court's decision in
White clearly established that the mere existence of such
an ownership interest is not, in itself, sufficient to establish a
claim of privilege.
See also Wheeler v. United States, 226
U.S. at
226 U. S.
489-490;
Grant v. United States, 227 U.S. at
227 U. S.
79-80.
MR. JUSTICE DOUGLAS argues in dissent that the partnership as an
entity is not under investigation by the grand jury, rather that
petitioner is the target of the inquiry. Assuming that this is
true, it does not give petitioner any greater claim to the
privilege. We have rejected this same argument in holding that the
privilege cannot be maintained with respect to corporate records,
in words fully applicable here:
"Nor is it an answer to say that, in the present case the
inquiry before the grand jury was not directed against the
corporation itself. The appellant had no greater right to withhold
the books by reason of the fact that the corporation was not
charged with criminal abuses. That, if the corporation had been so
charged, he would have been compelled to submit the books to
inspection, despite the consequences to himself, sufficiently shows
the absence of any basis for a claim on his part of personal
privilege as to them; it could not depend upon the question whether
or not another was accused."
Wilson v. United States, 221 U.
S. 361,
221 U. S. 385
(1911).
[
Footnote 9]
Significantly, the District Court here excluded any client files
from the scope of its order.
See n 1,
supra. A different case might be
presented if petitioner had been ordered to produce files
containing work which he had personally performed on behalf of his
clients, even if these files might for some purposes be viewed as
those of the partnership.
[
Footnote 10]
The Court in
White, in pointing out that union records
were generally open to inspection by the members, 322 U.S. at
322 U. S.
699-700, relied upon
Guthrie v. Harkness,
199 U. S. 148,
199 U. S. 153
(1905), where the Court observed that "the members of an ordinary
partnership [have the same right] to examine their company's
books."
[
Footnote 11]
To implement these rights, Pennsylvania law permits any partner
to bring suit against the partnership, and the partnership to sue
any partner. Pa.Rule Civ.Proc. 2129.
MR. JUSTICE DOUGLAS, dissenting.
Bellis, the petitioner, was formerly one of three partners in a
small law firm; the partnership was dissolved, and Bellis currently
has lawful possession of the firm's records. The grand jury has
subpoenaed those records apparently for the purpose of a tax
investigation directed against Bellis personally.
* He refused to
comply, claiming his Fifth Amendment privilege against
self-incrimination, but the Court today holds that privilege not
available to Bellis. I think the case is clearly controlled by
Boyd v. United States, 116 U. S. 616, and
thus I dissent.
Page 417 U. S. 102
In
Boyd, the Court held that the Fifth Amendment
privilege extends to the production of papers personally held as
well as to the compulsion of testimony.
"[W]e have been unable to perceive that the seizure of a man's
private books and papers to be used in evidence against him is
substantially different from compelling him to be a witness against
himself."
116 U.S. at
116 U. S. 633.
In purporting to distinguish this case from Boyd, the Court relies
on
United States v. White, 322 U.
S. 694, involving a subpoena directed to a union, not to
any individual, for the production of official union documents.
White, in turn, relied on cases holding that the privilege
against self-incrimination is a personal one, which can be claimed
only by natural persons, and not by corporations.
Id. at
116 U. S. 690,
citing
Hale v. Henkel, 201 U. S. 43;
Wilson v. United States, 221 U. S. 361;
Essgee Co. v. United States, 262 U.
S. 151.
"[T]he papers and effects which the privilege protects must be
the private property of the person claiming the privilege, or at
least in his possession in a purely personal capacity."
White, supra, at
322 U. S.
699.
In extending these corporation cases to the union papers
involved in
White, we stressed that the test is not a
mechanical one, but "whether one can fairly say under all the
circumstances that a particular type of organization has a
character so impersonal in the scope of its membership and
activities that it cannot be said to embody or represent the purely
private or personal interests of its constituents, but rather to
embody their common or group interests only."
Id. at
322 U. S. 701.
In finding that the union was such an impersonal organization, the
court pointed out that the union's existence is not dependent upon
the life of any member, that it separately owns property apart from
any of its members or officers, that its treasury exists apart from
the personal funds of its members, and
Page 417 U. S. 103
that, without special authorization, no member can bind the
union.
Id. at
322 U. S.
701-702. None of these factors is present here in this
small three-man law firm. Pennsylvania, as have most States, has
adopted the Uniform Partnership Act, Pa.Stat.Ann., Tit. 59, §
1. This partnership would dissolve automatically upon the death of
any member, § 93, and any partner can bind the entire
partnership in the conduct of its affairs, § 31. No new member
can join without unanimous consent of the partners, § 51(g).
In Pennsylvania, as in many States, a partnership can hold and sell
property in its own name, Pa.Stat.Ann., Tit. 15, § 12773;
Pa.Stat.Ann., Tit. 59, § 13, but each partner individually is
a co owner of that property, § 72, and in many substantive
legal respects, the ownership by the partnership is different in
kind from ordinary ownership of property. Any legal liabilities
arising from property owned by the partnership, of course, extend
to the partners individually if the common partnership assets are
exhausted, § 37.
I would treat a partnership as
Boyd treated it. This
partnership is as different from a labor union or the run of
corporations as black is from white. By the Court's opinion, a man
and wife who form a law partnership or medical partnership or
dental partnership are treated as some kind of new "entity" so as
to expand the power of government into an area from which the Fifth
Amendment excludes it. The nature of a partnership is not even a
federal question; it turns on its creator, the State. Pennsylvania
tells us by its Supreme Court that a Pennsylvania partnership "is
treated as an aggregate of individuals and not as a separate
entity."
Tax Review Board v. Shapiro Co., 409 Pa. 253,
260, 185 A.2d 529, 533. For federal income tax purposes, the
partnership pays no tax, it is merely the conduit through which
income passes
Page 417 U. S. 104
to the taxpaying partners. Internal Revenue Code §§
701 ,702, 26 U.S.C. §§ 701, 702.
The majority refers to large law firms or brokerage houses as
examples of partnerships which take on the characteristics of
independent entities in the manner of corporations. None that I
know could properly be considered an organization with
"a character so impersonal in the scope of its membership and
activities that it cannot be said to embody or represent the purely
private or personal interests of its constituents,"
White, supra, at
322 U. S. 701.
That certainly is not the case presented here. At times, the law
may treat unlikes as if they were alike; but it surpasses
understanding when a two- or three-man partnership is treated the
same as members or officers of a giant corporation or a giant
union.
See United States v. Cogan, 257 F.
Supp. 170 (SDNY 1966) (Frankel, J.). This small three-man firm
had no real existence apart from the three individual
attorneys.
All this only goes to demonstrate that
Bellis was not
holding the records involved here as a representative of some
separate, impersonal entity with no rights under the Fifth
Amendment. The records he holds are his own, in both a legal and a
practical sense. Nor could the grand jury investigation result in
any finding of tax liability by the partnership as a separate
entity, for the partnership has no tax obligations other than the
filing of informational forms that aid in determining the
liabilities of the individual partners. It was only Bellis
individually, or his two former partners, against whom the
investigation could have been directed. If Bellis had been
conducting a solo practice, his claim of privilege could not be
overridden, as the Government here necessarily conceded. I am
unable to perceive why he should be held to have forfeited that
constitutional right by joining with two others in a
partnership.
Page 417 U. S. 105
Indeed, the significance of the distinction is so obscure that
the Court did not even see fit to notice it in Boyd itself, where,
in fact, the subpoena was directed at a partnership and not an
individual. As the Government here concedes, Brief for United
States 14 n. 10, both parties and the Court assumed in
Boyd that the partnership documents there sought were
personal property.
"This command of the Fifth Amendment . . . registers an
important advance in the development of our liberty -- 'one of the
great landmarks in man's struggle to make himself civilized.' Time
has not shown that protection from the evils against which this
safeguard was directed is needless or unwarranted. This
constitutional protection must not be interpreted in a hostile or
niggardly spirit."
Ullmann v. United States, 350 U.
S. 422,
350 U. S. 426.
But it is the niggardly view which prevails today, with the Court
effectively overruling
Boyd in holding that the Government
can compel an individual to produce his private records to aid a
Government investigation of him. That is a view I cannot join.
*
See App. 24; Tr. of Oral Arg. 8.