BRASWELL v. United States
No. 87-3
SUPREME COURT OF THE UNITED STATES
487 U.S. 99
March 1, 1988, Argued
June 22, 1988, Decided
Rehnquist,
C. J., delivered the opinion of the Court, in which White, Blackmun, Stevens,
and O'Connor, JJ., joined. Kennedy, J., filed a dissenting opinion, in which
Brennan, Marshall, and Scalia, JJ., joined, post, p. 119.
CHIEF
JUSTICE REHNQUIST delivered the opinion of the Court.
This case presents the question whether the custodian of corporate records may
resist a subpoena for such records on the ground that the act of production
would incriminate him in violation of the Fifth Amendment. We conclude that he
may not.
From 1965 to 1980, petitioner Randy Braswell operated his business -- which
comprises the sale and purchase of equipment, land, timber, and oil and gas
interests -- as a sole proprietorship. In 1980, he incorporated Worldwide
Machinery Sales, Inc., a Mississippi corporation, and began conducting the
business through that entity. In 1981, he formed a second Mississippi
corporation, Worldwide Purchasing, Inc., and funded that corporation with the
100 percent interest he held in Worldwide Machinery. Petitioner was and is the
sole shareholder of Worldwide Purchasing, Inc.
Both companies are active corporations, maintaining their current status with
the State of Mississippi, filing corporate tax returns, and keeping current
corporate books and records. In compliance with Mississippi law, both
corporations have three directors, petitioner, his wife, and his mother.
Although his wife and mother are secretary-treasurer and vice-president of the
corporations, respectively, neither has any authority over the business affairs
of either corporation.
In August 1986, a federal grand jury issued a subpoena to "Randy Braswell,
President Worldwide Machinery Sales, Inc. [and] Worldwide Purchasing, Inc.,"
App. 6, requiring petitioner to produce the books and records of the two
corporations. n1 The subpoena provided that petitioner could deliver the records
to the agent serving the subpoena, and did not require petitioner to testify.
Petitioner moved to quash the subpoena, arguing that the act of producing the
records would incriminate him in violation of his Fifth Amendment privilege
against self-incrimination. The District Court denied the motion to quash,
ruling that the "collective entity doctrine" prevented petitioner from asserting
that his act of producing the corporations' records was protected by the Fifth
Amendment. The court rejected petitioner's argument that the collective entity
doctrine does not apply when a corporation is so small that it constitutes
nothing more than the individual's alter ego.
n1 The subpoena requested the
following: receipts and disbursement journals; general ledger and subsidiaries;
accounts receivable/accounts payable ledgers, cards, and all customer data; bank
records of savings and checking accounts, including statements, checks, and
deposit tickets; contracts, invoices -- sales and purchase -- conveyances, and
correspondence; minutes and stock books and ledgers; loan disclosure statements
and agreements; liability ledgers; and retained copies of Forms 1120, W-2, W-4,
1099, 940 and 941.
The United States Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit affirmed, citing Bellis
v. United States, 417 U.S. 85, 88 (1974), for the proposition that a
corporation's records custodian may not claim a Fifth Amendment privilege no
matter how small the corporation may be. The Court of Appeals declared that
Bellis retained vitality following United States v. Doe, 465 U.S. 605 (1984),
and therefore, "Braswell, as custodian of corporate documents, has no act of
production privilege under the fifth amendment regarding corporate documents."
In re Grand Jury Proceedings, 814 F. 2d 190, 193 (1987). We granted certiorari
to resolve a conflict among the Courts of Appeals. n2 484 U.S. 814 (1987). We
now affirm.
n2 Compare In re Grand Jury
Proceedings (Morganstern), 771 F. 2d 143 (CA6) (en banc), cert. denied, 474 U.S.
1033 (1985); In re Grand Jury Subpoena (85-W-71-5), 784 F. 2d 857 (CA8 1986),
cert. dism'd sub nom. See v. United States, 479 U.S. 1048 (1987); United States
v. Malis, 737 F. 2d 1511 (CA9 1984); In re Grand Jury Proceedings (Vargas), 727
F. 2d 941 (CA10), cert. denied, 469 U.S. 819 (1984), which have refused to
recognize a Fifth Amendment privilege, with United States v. Antonio J. Sancetta,
M. D., P. C., 788 F. 2d 67, 74 (CA2 1986); In re Grand Jury Matter (Brown), 768
F. 2d 525 (CA3 1985) (en banc); United States v. Lang, 792 F. 2d 1235, 1240
(CA4), cert. denied, 479 U.S. 985 (1986); In re Grand Jury No. 86-3 (Will
Roberts Corp.), 816 F. 2d 569, 573 (CA11 1987); In re Sealed Case, 266 U.S. App.
D. C. 30, 832 F. 2d 1268 (1987), which have recognized a Fifth Amendment
privilege.
There is no question but that the contents of the subpoenaed business records
are not privileged. See Doe, supra; Fisher v. United States, 425 U.S. 391
(1976). Similarly, petitioner asserts no self-incrimination claim on behalf of
the corporations; it is well established that such artificial entities are not
protected by the Fifth Amendment. Bellis, supra. Petitioner instead relies
solely upon the argument that his act of producing the documents has independent
testimonial significance, which would incriminate him individually, and that the
Fifth Amendment prohibits Government compulsion of that act. The bases for this
argument are extrapolated from the decisions of this Court in Fisher, supra, and
Doe, supra.
In Fisher,
the Court was presented with the question whether an attorney may resist a
subpoena demanding that he produce tax records which had been entrusted to him
by his client. The records in question had been prepared by the client's
accountants. In analyzing the Fifth Amendment claim forwarded by the attorney,
the Court considered whether the client-taxpayer would have had a valid Fifth
Amendment claim had he retained the records and the subpoena been issued to him.
After explaining that the Fifth Amendment prohibits "compelling a person to give
'testimony' that incriminates him," 425 U.S., at 409, the Court rejected the
argument that the contents of the records were protected. The Court, however,
went on to observe:
"The act of producing evidence in response to a subpoena nevertheless has
communicative aspects of its own, wholly aside from the contents of the papers
produced. Compliance with the subpoena tacitly concedes the existence of the
papers demanded and their possession or control by the taxpayer. It also would
indicate the taxpayer's belief that the papers are those described in the
subpoena. Curcio v. United States, 354 U.S. 118, 125 (1957). The elements of
compulsion are clearly present, but the more difficult issues are whether the
tacit averments of the taxpayer are both 'testimonial' and 'incriminating' for
purposes of applying the Fifth Amendment. These questions perhaps do not lend
themselves to categorical answers; their resolution may instead depend on the
facts and circumstances of particular cases or classes thereof." Id., at 410.
The Court concluded that under the "facts and circumstances" there presented,
the act of producing the accountants' papers would not "involve testimonial
self-incrimination." Id., at 411. n3
n3 After observing that the
papers in question had been prepared by the taxpayer's accountants, the Court
noted: "The existence and location of the papers are a foregone conclusion and
the taxpayer adds little or nothing to the sum total of the Government's
information by conceding that he in fact has the papers." 425 U.S., at 411. Nor
would the taxpayer's production of the papers serve to authenticate or vouch for
the accuracy of the accountants' work. Id., at 413.
Eight years later, in United States v. Doe, supra, the Court revisited the
question, this time in the context of a claim by a sole proprietor that the
compelled production of business records would run afoul of the Fifth Amendment.
After rejecting the contention that the contents of the records were themselves
protected, the Court proceeded to address whether respondent's act of producing
the records would constitute protected testimonial incrimination. The Court
concluded that respondent had established a valid Fifth Amendment claim. It
deferred to the lower courts, which had found that enforcing the subpoenas at
issue would provide the Government valuable information: By producing the
records, respondent would admit that the records existed, were in his
possession, and were authentic. 465 U.S., at 613, n. 11.
Had petitioner conducted his business as a sole proprietorship, Doe would
require that he be provided the opportunity to show that his act of production
would entail testimonial self-incrimination. But petitioner has operated his
business through the corporate form, and we have long recognized that, for
purposes of the Fifth Amendment, corporations and other collective entities are
treated differently from individuals. This doctrine -- known as the collective
entity rule -- has a lengthy and distinguished pedigree.
The rule was first articulated by the Court in the case of Hale v. Henkel, 201
U.S. 43 (1906). Hale, a corporate officer, had been served with a subpoena
ordering him to produce corporate records and to testify concerning certain
corporate transactions. Although Hale was protected by personal immunity, he
sought to resist the demand for the records by interposing a Fifth Amendment
privilege on behalf of the corporation. The Court rejected that argument: "[W]e
are of the opinion that there is a clear distinction . . . between an individual
and a corporation, and . . . the latter has no right to refuse to submit its
books and papers for an examination at the suit of the State." Id., at 74. The
Court explained that the corporation "is a creature of the State," ibid., with
powers limited by the State. As such, the State may, in the exercise of its
right to oversee the corporation, demand the production of corporate records.
Id., at 75.
The ruling in Hale represented a limitation on the prior holding in Boyd v.
United States, 116 U.S. 616 (1886), which involved a court order directing
partners to produce an invoice received by the partnership. The partners had
produced the invoice, but steadfastly maintained that the court order ran afoul
of the Fifth Amendment. This Court agreed. After concluding that the order
transgressed the Fourth Amendment, the Court declared: "[A] compulsory
production of the private books and papers of the owner of goods sought to be
forfeited . . . is compelling him to be a witness against himself, within the
meaning of the Fifth Amendment to the Constitution . . . ." Id., at 634-635
(emphasis added). Hale carved an exception out of Boyd by establishing that
corporate books and records are not "private papers" protected by the Fifth
Amendment.
Although Hale settled that a corporation has no Fifth Amendment privilege, the
Court did not address whether a corporate officer could resist a subpoena for
corporate records by invoking his personal privilege -- Hale had been protected
by immunity. In Wilson v. United States, 221 U.S. 361 (1911), the Court answered
that question in the negative. There, a grand jury investigating Wilson had
issued a subpoena to a corporation demanding the production of corporate
letterpress copybooks, which Wilson, the corporation's president, possessed.
Wilson refused to produce the books, arguing that the Fifth Amendment prohibited
compulsory production of personally incriminating books that he held and
controlled. The Court rejected this argument, observing first that the records
sought were not private or personal, but rather belonged to the corporation. The
Court continued:
"[Wilson]
held the corporate books subject to the corporate duty. If the corporation were
guilty of misconduct, he could not withhold its books to save it; and if he were
implicated in the violations of law, he could not withhold the books to protect
himself from the effect of their disclosures. The [State's] reserved power of
visitation would seriously be embarrassed, if not wholly defeated in its
effective exercise, if guilty officers could refuse inspection of the records
and papers of the corporation. No personal privilege to which they are entitled
requires such a conclusion. . . . [T]he visitatorial power which exists with
respect to the corporation of necessity reaches the corporate books without
regard to the conduct of the custodian." Id., at 384-385.
". . . When [Wilson] became president of the corporation and as such held and
used its books for the transaction of its business committed to his charge, he
was at all times subject to its direction, and the books continuously remained
under its control. If another took his place his custody would yield. He could
assert no personal right to retain the corporate books against any demand of
government which the corporation was bound to recognize." Id., at 385.
In a companion case, Dreier v. United States, 221 U.S. 394 (1911), the Court
applied the holding in Wilson to a Fifth Amendment attack on a subpoena
addressed to the corporate custodian. Although the subpoena in Wilson had been
addressed to the corporation, the Court found the distinction irrelevant:
"Dreier was not entitled to refuse the production of the corporate records. By
virtue of the fact that they were the documents of the corporation in his
custody, and not his private papers, he was under the obligation to produce them
when called for by proper process." 221 U.S., at 400.
The next significant step in the development of the collective entity rule
occurred in United States v. White, 322 U.S. 694 (1944), in which the Court held
that a labor union is a collective entity unprotected by the Fifth Amendment.
There, a grand jury had issued a subpoena addressed to a union requiring the
production of certain union records. White, an assistant supervisor of the
union, appeared before the grand jury and declined to produce the documents
"'upon the ground that they might tend to incriminate [the union], myself as an
officer thereof, or individually.'" Id., at 696.
We upheld an order of contempt against White, reasoning first that the Fifth
Amendment privilege applies only to natural individuals and protects only
private papers. Representatives of a "collective group" act as agents "[a]nd the
official records and documents of the organization that are held by them in a
representative rather than in a personal capacity cannot be the subject of the
personal privilege against self-incrimination, even though production of the
papers might tend to incriminate them personally." Id., at 699. With this
principle in mind, the Court turned to whether a union is a collective group:
"The test . . . is 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. If so, the privilege cannot be invoked on
behalf of the organization or its representatives in their official capacity.
Labor unions -- national or local, incorporated or unincorporated -- clearly
meet that test." Id., at 701.
In applying
the collective entity rule to unincorporated associations such as unions, the
Court jettisoned reliance on the visitatorial powers of the State over
corporations owing their existence to the State -- one of the bases for earlier
decisions. See id., at 700-701.
The frontiers of the collective entity rule were expanded even further in Bellis
v. United States, 417 U.S. 85 (1974), in which the Court ruled that a partner in
a small partnership could not properly refuse to produce partnership records.
Bellis, one of the members of a three-person law firm that had previously been
dissolved, was served with a subpoena directing him to produce partnership
records he possessed. The District Court held Bellis in contempt when he refused
to produce the partnership's financial books and records. We upheld the contempt
order. After rehearsing prior precedent involving corporations and
unincorporated associations, the Court examined the partnership form and
observed that it had many of the incidents found relevant in prior collective
entity decisions. The Court suggested that the test articulated in White, supra,
for determining the applicability of the Fifth Amendment to organizations was
"not particularly helpful in the broad range of cases." 417 U.S., at 100. The
Court rejected the notion that the "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." Ibid. Bellis held the
partnership's financial records in "a representative capacity," id., at 101, and
therefore, "his personal privilege against compulsory self-incrimination is
inapplicable." Ibid.
The plain mandate of these decisions is that without regard to whether the
subpoena is addressed to the corporation, or as here, to the individual in his
capacity as a custodian, see Dreier, supra; Bellis, supra, a corporate custodian
such as petitioner may not resist a subpoena for corporate records on Fifth
Amendment grounds. Petitioner argues, however, that this rule falls in the wake
of Fisher v. United States, 425 U.S. 391 (1976), and United States v. Doe, 465
U.S. 605 (1984). In essence, petitioner's argument is as follows: In response to
Boyd v. United States, 116 U.S. 616 (1886), with its privacy rationale shielding
personal books and records, the Court developed the collective entity rule,
which declares simply that corporate records are not private and therefore are
not protected by the Fifth Amendment. The collective entity decisions were
concerned with the contents of the documents subpoenaed, however, and not with
the act of production. In Fisher and Doe, the Court moved away from the
privacy-based collective entity rule, replacing it with a compelled-testimony
standard under which the contents of business documents are never privileged but
the act of producing the documents may be. Under this new regime, the act of
production privilege is available without regard to the entity whose records are
being sought. See In re Grand Jury Matter (Brown), 768 F. 2d 525, 528 (CA3 1985)
(en banc) ("[Fisher and Doe] make the significant factor, for the privilege
against self-incrimination, neither the nature of entity which owns the
documents, nor the contents of documents, but rather the communicative or
noncommunicative nature of the arguably incriminating disclosures sought to be
compelled").
To be sure, the holding in Fisher -- later reaffirmed in Doe -- embarked upon a
new course of Fifth Amendment analysis. See Fisher, supra, at 409. We cannot
agree, however, that it rendered the collective entity rule obsolete. The agency
rationale undergirding the collective entity decisions, in which custodians
asserted that production of entity records would incriminate them personally,
survives. From Wilson forward, the Court has consistently recognized that the
custodian of corporate or entity records holds those documents in a
representative rather than a personal capacity. Artificial entities such as
corporations may act only through their agents, Bellis, supra, at 90, and a
custodian's assumption of his representative capacity leads to certain
obligations, including the duty to produce corporate records on proper demand by
the Government. Under those circumstances, the custodian's act of production is
not deemed a personal act, but rather an act of the corporation. Any claim of
Fifth Amendment privilege asserted by the agent would be tantamount to a claim
of privilege by the corporation -- which of course possesses no such privilege.
The Wilson Court declared: "[B]y virtue of their character and the rules of law
applicable to them, the books and papers are held subject to examination by the
demanding authority, the custodian has no privilege to refuse production
although their contents tend to criminate him. In assuming their custody he has
accepted the incident obligation to permit inspection." 221 U.S., at 382.
"Nothing more is demanded than that the appellant should perform the obligations
pertaining to his custody and should produce the books which he holds in his
official capacity in accordance with the requirements of the subpoena." Id., at
386.
This theme was echoed in White:
"But 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. In their official capacity,
therefore, they have no privilege against self-incrimination. And the official
records and documents of the organization that are held by them in a
representative rather than in a personal capacity cannot be the subject of the
personal privilege against self-incrimination, even though production of the
papers might tend to incriminate them personally." 322 U.S., at 699. n4
n4 See also Bellis v. United
States, 417 U.S. 85, 88 (1974) ("[A]n 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"); Essgee Co. of China v. United States, 262 U.S. 151, 158 (1923)
("[T]he cases of Hale v. Henkel, 201 U.S. 43, Wilson v. United States, 221 U.S.
361, and Wheeler v. United States, 226 U.S. 478, show clearly that an officer of
a corporation in whose custody are its books and papers is given no right to
object to the production of the corporate records because they may disclose his
guilt. He does not hold them in his private capacity and is not, therefore,
protected against their production or against a writ requiring him as agent of
the corporation to produce them").
In Dreier, 221 U.S. 394
(1911), and Bellis, 417 U.S. 85 (1974), the subpoenas were addressed to the
custodians and demanded that they produce the records sought. In both cases, the
custodian's act of producing the documents would "tacitly admi[t] their
existence and their location in the hands of their possessor," Fisher, supra, at
411-412. Nevertheless, the Court rejected the Fifth Amendment claims advanced by
the custodians. Although the Court did not focus on the testimonial aspect of
the act of production, we do not think such a focus would have affected the
results reached. "It is well settled that no privilege can be claimed by the
custodian of corporate records . . . ." Bellis, supra, at 100.
Indeed, the opinion in Fisher -- upon which petitioner places primary reliance
n5 -- indicates that the custodian of corporate records may not interpose a
Fifth Amendment objection to the compelled production of corporate records, even
though the act of production may prove personally incriminating. The Fisher
Court cited the collective entity decisions with approval and offered those
decisions to support the conclusion that the production of the accountant's
workpapers would "not . . . involve testimonial self-incrimination." 425 U.S.,
at 411. The Court observed: "This Court has . . . time and again allowed
subpoenas against the custodian of corporate documents or those belonging to
other collective entities such as unions and partnerships and those of bankrupt
businesses over claims that the documents will incriminate the custodian despite
the fact that producing the documents tacitly admits their existence and their
location in the hands of their possessor." Id., at 411-412. The Court later
noted that "in Wilson, Dreier, White, Bellis, and In re Harris, [221 U.S. 274
(1911)], the custodian of corporate, union, or partnership books or those of a
bankrupt business was ordered to respond to a subpoena for the business' books
even though doing so involved a 'representation that the documents produced are
those demanded by the subpoena,' Curcio v. United States, 354 U.S., at 125."
Id., at 413 (citations omitted). In a footnote, the Court explained: "In these
cases compliance with the subpoena is required even though the books have been
kept by the person subpoenaed and his producing them would itself be sufficient
authentication to permit their introduction against him." Id., at 413, n. 14.
The Court thus reaffirmed the obligation of a corporate custodian to comply with
a subpoena addressed to him.
n5 Petitioner also offers United
States v. Doe, 465 U.S. 605 (1984), as support for his position, but that
decision is plainly inapposite. The Doe opinion begins by explaining that the
question presented for review is "whether, and to what extent, the Fifth
Amendment privilege against compelled self-incrimination applies to the business
records of a sole proprietorship." Id., at 606 (emphasis added). A sole
proprietor does not hold records in a representative capacity. Thus, the absence
of any discussion of the collective entity rule can in no way be thought a
suggestion that the status of the holder of the records is irrelevant.
That point was reiterated by JUSTICE BRENNAN in his concurrence in Fisher. Id.,
at 429 (concurring in judgment). Although JUSTICE BRENNAN disagreed with the
majority as to its use of the collective entity cases to support the proposition
that the act of production is not testimonial, he nonetheless acknowledged that
a custodian may not resist a subpoena on the ground that the act of production
would be incriminating. "Nothing in the language of [the collective entity]
cases, either expressly or impliedly, indicates that the act of production with
respect to the records of business entities is insufficiently testimonial for
purposes of the Fifth Amendment. At most, those issues, though considered, were
disposed of on the ground, not that production was insufficiently testimonial,
but that one in control of the records of an artificial organization undertakes
an obligation with respect to those records foreclosing any exercise of his
privilege." Id., at 429-430; see also id., at 430, n. 9. Thus, whether one
concludes -- as did the Court -- that a custodian's production of corporate
records is deemed not to constitute testimonial self-incrimination, or instead
that a custodian waives the right to exercise the privilege, the lesson of
Fisher is clear: A custodian may not resist a subpoena for corporate records on
Fifth Amendment grounds.
Petitioner also attempts to extract support for his contention from Curcio v.
United States, 354 U.S. 118 (1957). But rather than bolstering petitioner's
argument, we think Curcio substantiates the Government's position. Curcio had
been served with two subpoenas addressed to him in his capacity as
secretary-treasurer of a local union, which was under investigation. One
subpoena required that he produce union books, the other that he testify. Curcio
appeared before the grand jury, stated that the books were not in his
possession, and refused to answer any questions as to their whereabouts. Curcio
was held in contempt for refusing to answer the questions propounded.
We reversed the contempt citation, rejecting the Government's argument "that the
representative duty which required the production of union records in the White
case requires the giving of oral testimony by the custodian." Id., at 123.
Petitioner asserts that our Curcio decision stands for the proposition that
although the contents of a collective entity's records are unprivileged, a
representative of a collective entity cannot be required to provide testimony
about those records. It follows, according to petitioner, that because Fisher
recognizes that the act of production is potentially testimonial, such an act
may not be compelled if it would tend to incriminate the representative
personally. We find this reading of Curcio flawed.
The Curcio Court made clear that with respect to a custodian of a collective
entity's records, the line drawn was between oral testimony and other forms of
incrimination. "A custodian, by assuming the duties of his office, undertakes
the obligation to produce the books of which he is custodian in response to a
rightful exercise of the State's visitorial powers. But he cannot lawfully be
compelled, in the absence of a grant of adequate immunity from prosecution, to
condemn himself by his own oral testimony." 354 U.S., at 123-124 (emphasis
added). n6
n6 See also 354 U.S., at 124-125
("There is no hint in [the collective entity] decisions that a custodian of
corporate or association books waives his constitutional privilege as to oral
testimony by assuming the duties of his office. By accepting custodianship of
records he 'has voluntarily assumed a duty which overrides his claim of
privilege' only with respect to the production of the records themselves. Wilson
v. United States, 221 U.S. 361, 380") (emphasis in original).
In distinguishing those cases in which a corporate officer was required to
produce corporate records and merely identify them by oral testimony, the Court
showed that it understood the testimonial nature of the act of production: "The
custodian's act of producing books or records in response to a subpoena duces
tecum is itself a representation that the documents produced are those demanded
by the subpoena. Requiring the custodian to identify or authenticate the
documents for admission in evidence merely makes explicit what is implicit in
the production itself." Id., at 125. In the face of this recognition, the Court
nonetheless noted: "In this case petitioner might have been proceeded against
for his failure to produce the records demanded by the subpoena duces tecum." n7
Id., at 127, n. 7. As JUSTICE BRENNAN later observed in his concurrence in
Fisher: "The Court in Curcio, however, apparently did not note any
self-incrimination problem [with the testimonial significance of the act of
production] because of the undertaking by the custodian with respect to the
documents." 425 U.S., at 430, n. 9. n8
n7 The dissent's suggestion that
we have extracted from Curcio a distinction between oral testimony and act of
production testimony that is nowhere found in the Curcio opinion, see post, at
126, simply ignores this part of Curcio. Similarly, the dissent pays mere
lipservice to the agency rationale supporting an unbroken chain of collective
entity decisions. We have consistently held that for Fifth Amendment purposes a
corporate custodian acts in a representative capacity when he produces corporate
documents under the compulsion of a subpoena. The dissent's failure to recognize
this principle and its suggestion that petitioner was not called upon to act in
his capacity as an agent of the corporations cannot be squared with our previous
decisions.
n8 Doubtless, the compelled production of the records at issue in the subsequent
Bellis decision would have had testimonial implications; the Court nonetheless
upheld the contempt order. Bellis v. United States, 417 U.S. 85 (1974).
We note further that recognizing a Fifth Amendment privilege on behalf of the
records custodians of collective entities would have a detrimental impact on the
Government's efforts to prosecute "white-collar crime," one of the most serious
problems confronting law enforcement authorities. n9 "The greater portion of
evidence of wrongdoing by an organization or its representatives is usually
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."
White, 322 U.S., at 700. If custodians could assert a privilege, authorities
would be stymied not only in their enforcement efforts against those individuals
but also in their prosecutions of organizations. In Bellis, the Court observed:
"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." 417
U.S., at 90.
n9 White-collar crime is "the
most serious and all-pervasive crime problem in America today." Conyers,
Corporate and White-Collar Crime: A View by the Chairman of the House
Subcommittee on Crime, 17 Am. Crim. L. Rev. 287, 288 (1980). Although this
statement was made in 1980, there is no reason to think the problem has
diminished in the meantime.
Petitioner suggests, however, that these concerns can be minimized by the simple
expedient of either granting the custodian statutory immunity as to the act of
production, 18 U. S. C. §§ 6002, 6003, or addressing the subpoena to the
corporation and allowing it to chose an agent to produce the records who can do
so without incriminating himself. We think neither proposal satisfactorily
addresses these concerns. Taking the last first, it is no doubt true that if a
subpoena is addressed to a corporation, the corporation "must find some means by
which to comply because no Fifth Amendment defense is available to it." In re
Sealed Case, 266 U.S. App. D. C. 30, 44, n. 9, 832 F. 2d 1268, 1282, n. 9
(1987). The means most commonly used to comply is the appointment of an
alternate custodian. See, e. g., In re Two Grand Jury Subpoenae Duces Tecum, 769
F. 2d 52, 57 (CA2 1985); United States v. Lang, 792 F. 2d 1235, 1240-1241 (CA4),
cert. denied, 479 U.S. 985 (1986); In re Grand Jury No. 86-3 (Will Roberts
Corp.), 816 F. 2d 569, 573 (CA11 1987). But petitioner insists he cannot be
required to aid the appointed custodian in his search for the demanded records,
for any statement to the surrogate would itself be testimonial and
incriminating. If this is correct, then petitioner's "solution" is a chimera. In
situations such as this -- where the corporate custodian is likely the only
person with knowledge about the demanded documents -- the appointment of a
surrogate will simply not ensure that the documents sought will ever reach the
grand jury room; the appointed custodian will essentially be sent on an unguided
search.
This problem is eliminated if the Government grants the subpoenaed custodian
statutory immunity for the testimonial aspects of his act of production. But
that "solution" also entails a significant drawback. All of the evidence
obtained under a grant of immunity to the custodian may of course be used freely
against the corporation, but if the Government has any thought of prosecuting
the custodian, a grant of act of production immunity can have serious
consequences. Testimony obtained pursuant to a grant of statutory use immunity
may be used neither directly nor derivatively. 18 U. S. C. § 6002; Kastigar v.
United States, 406 U.S. 441 (1972). And "[o]ne raising a claim under [the
federal immunity] statute need only show that he testified under a grant of
immunity in order to shift to the government the heavy burden of proving that
all of the evidence it proposes to use was derived from legitimate independent
sources." Id., at 461-462. Even in cases where the Government does not employ
the immunized testimony for any purpose -- direct or derivative -- against the
witness, the Government's inability to meet the "heavy burden" it bears may
result in the preclusion of crucial evidence that was obtained legitimately. n10
n10 The dissent asserts that
recognition of an act of production privilege on behalf of corporate custodians
will not seriously undermine law enforcement efforts directed against those
custodians because only the custodian's act of production need be immunized. See
post, at 130. But the burden of proving an independent source that a grant of
immunity places on the Government could, in our view, have just such a
deleterious effect on law enforcement efforts.
Although a corporate custodian is not entitled to resist a subpoena on the
ground that his act of production will be personally incriminating, we do think
certain consequences flow from the fact that the custodian's act of production
is one in his representative rather than personal capacity. Because the
custodian acts as a representative, the act is deemed one of the corporation and
not the individual. Therefore, the Government concedes, as it must, that it may
make no evidentiary use of the "individual act" against the individual. For
example, in a criminal prosecution against the custodian, the Government may not
introduce into evidence before the jury the fact that the subpoena was served
upon and the corporation's documents were delivered by one particular
individual, the custodian. The Government has the right, however, to use the
corporation's act of production against the custodian. The Government may offer
testimony -- for example, from the process server who delivered the subpoena and
from the individual who received the records -- establishing that the
corporation produced the records subpoenaed. The jury may draw from the
corporation's act of production the conclusion that the records in question are
authentic corporate records, which the corporation possessed, and which it
produced in response to the subpoena. And if the defendant held a prominent
position within the corporation that produced the records, the jury may, just as
it would had someone else produced the documents, reasonably infer that he had
possession of the documents or knowledge of their contents. Because the jury is
not told that the defendant produced the records, any nexus between the
defendant and the documents results solely from the corporation's act of
production and other evidence in the case. n11
n11 We reject the suggestion that
the limitation on the evidentiary use of the custodian's act of production is
the equivalent of constructive use immunity barred under our decision in Doe,
465 U.S., at 616-617. Rather, the limitation is a necessary concomitant of the
notion that a corporate custodian acts as an agent and not an individual when he
produces corporate records in response to a subpoena addressed to him in his
representative capacity.
We leave open the question whether the agency rationale supports compelling a
custodian to produce corporate records when the custodian is able to establish,
by showing for example that he is the sole employee and officer of the
corporation, that the jury would inevitably conclude that he produced the
records.
Consistent with our precedent, the United States Court of Appeals for the Fifth
Circuit ruled that petitioner could not resist the subpoena for corporate
documents on the ground that the act of production might tend to incriminate
him. The judgment is therefore
Affirmed.
JUSTICE
KENNEDY, with whom JUSTICE BRENNAN, JUSTICE MARSHALL, and JUSTICE SCALIA join,
dissenting.
Our long course of decisions concerning artificial entities and the Fifth
Amendment served us well. It illuminated two of the critical foundations for the
constitutional guarantee against self-incrimination: first, that it is an
explicit right of a natural person, protecting the realm of human thought and
expression; second, that it is confined to governmental compulsion.
It is regrettable that the very line of cases which at last matured to teach
these principles is now invoked to curtail them, for the Court rules that a
natural person forfeits the privilege in a criminal investigation directed
against him and that the Government may use compulsion to elicit testimonial
assertions from a person who faces the threat of criminal proceedings. A case
that might have served as the paradigmatic expression of the purposes served by
the Fifth Amendment instead is used to obscure them.
The Court today denies an individual his Fifth Amendment privilege against
self-incrimination in order to vindicate the rule that a collective entity which
employs him has no such privilege itself. To reach this ironic conclusion, the
majority must blur an analytic clarity in Fifth Amendment doctrine that has
taken almost a century to emerge. After holding that corporate employment strips
the individual of his privilege, the Court then attempts to restore some measure
of protection by its judicial creation of a new zone of immunity in some vaguely
defined circumstances. This exercise admits what the Court denied in the first
place, namely, that compelled compliance with the subpoena implicates the Fifth
Amendment self-incrimination privilege.
The majority's apparent reasoning is that collective entities have no privilege
and so their employees must have none either. The Court holds that a corporate
agent must incriminate himself even when he is named in the subpoena and is a
target of the investigation, and even when it is conceded that compliance
requires compelled, personal, testimonial, incriminating assertions. I disagree
with that conclusion; find no precedent for it; maintain that if there is a
likelihood of personal self-incrimination the narrow use immunity permitted by
statute can be granted without frustrating the investigation of collective
entities; and submit that basic Fifth Amendment principles should not be avoided
and manipulated, which is the necessary effect of this decision.
I
There is some common ground in this case. All accept the longstanding rule that
labor unions, corporations, partnerships, and other collective entities have no
Fifth Amendment self-incrimination privilege; that a natural person cannot
assert such a privilege on their behalf; and that the contents of business
records prepared without compulsion can be used to incriminate even a natural
person without implicating Fifth Amendment concerns. Further, all appear to
concede or at least submit the case to us on the assumption that the act of
producing the subpoenaed documents will effect personal incrimination of Randy
Braswell, the individual to whom the subpoena is directed.
The petitioner's assertion of the Fifth Amendment privilege against the forced
production of documents is based not on any contention that their contents will
incriminate him but instead upon the unchallenged premise that the act of
production will do so. When the case is presented on this assumption, there
exists no historical or logical relation between the so-called collective entity
rule and the individual's claim of privilege. A brief review of the foundational
elements of the Self-Incrimination Clause and of our cases respecting collective
entities is a necessary starting point.
A
In Boyd v. United States, 116 U.S. 616 (1886), we held that the compelled
disclosure of the contents of "private papers" (which in Boyd was a business
invoice), id., at 622, was prohibited not only by the Fifth Amendment but by the
Fourth Amendment as well. The decision in Boyd generated nearly a century of
doctrinal ambiguity as we explored its rationale and sought to define its
protection for the contents of business records under the Fifth Amendment.
That effort was not always successful. As we recently recognized, Boyd's
reasoning is in many respects inconsistent with our present understanding of the
Fourth and Fifth Amendments, and "[s]everal of Boyd's express or implicit
declarations have not stood the test of time." Fisher v. United States, 425 U.S.
391, 407 (1976). Its essential premise was rejected four years ago, when we held
that the contents of business records produced by subpoena are not privileged
under the Fifth Amendment, absent some showing that the documents were prepared
under compulsion. United States v. Doe, 465 U.S. 605, 610-611, n. 8 (1984) (Doe
I). Our holding followed from a straightforward reading of the Fifth Amendment
privilege. We held that unless the Government has somehow compelled the
preparation of a business document, nothing in the Fifth Amendment prohibits the
use of the writing in a criminal investigation or prosecution. Id., at 610-612.
A subpoena does not, however, seek to compel creation of a document; it compels
its production. We recognized this distinction in Fisher, holding that the act
of producing documents itself may communicate information separate from
the documents' contents and that such communication, in some circumstances, is
compelled testimony. An individual who produces documents may be asserting that
they satisfy the general description in the subpoena, or that they were in his
possession or under his control. Those assertions can convey information about
that individual's knowledge and state of mind as effectively as spoken
statements, and the Fifth Amendment protects individuals from having such
assertions compelled by their own acts.
This is well-settled law, or so I had assumed. In Doe I, for example, when we
reviewed a claim of Fifth Amendment privilege asserted by a sole proprietor in
response to a Government subpoena for his business records, our opinion
announced two principal holdings. First, we unequivocally rejected the notion,
derived from Boyd, that any protection attached to their contents. 465 U.S., at
612. Second, in reliance on the findings of the District Court that production
would be testimonial and self-incriminating, we upheld the claim that the act of
producing these documents was privileged. Id., at 613-614. Our second holding
did not depend on who owned the papers, how they were created, or what they
said; instead, we rested on the fact that "the act of producing the documents
would involve testimonial self-incrimination." Id., at 613. That principle ought
to be sufficient to resolve the case before us.
The majority does not challenge the assumption that compliance with the subpoena
here would require acts of testimonial self-incrimination from Braswell; indeed,
the Government itself made this assumption in submitting its argument. Tr. of
Oral Arg. 26, 36. The question presented, therefore, is whether an individual
may be compelled, simply by virtue of his status as a corporate custodian, to
perform a testimonial act which will incriminate him personally. The majority
relies entirely on the collective entity rule in holding that such compulsion is
constitutional.
B
The collective entity rule provides no support for the majority's holding. The
rule, as the majority chooses to call it, actually comprises three distinct
propositions, none of which is relevant to the claim in this case. First, since
Hale v. Henkel, 201 U.S. 43 (1906), it has been understood that a corporation
has no Fifth Amendment privilege and cannot resist compelled production of its
documents on grounds that it will be incriminated by their release. Second, our
subsequent opinions show the collective entity principle is not confined to
corporations, and we apply it as well to labor unions, United States v. White,
322 U.S. 694 (1944), and partnerships, Bellis v. United States, 417 U.S. 85
(1974). Finally, in Wilson v. United States, 221 U.S. 361 (1911), we extended
the rule beyond the collective entity itself and rejected an assertion of
privilege by a corporate custodian who had claimed that the disclosure of the
contents of subpoenaed corporate documents would incriminate him. Id., at 363.
In none of the collective entity cases cited by the majority, and in none that I
have found, were we presented with a claim that the custodian would be
incriminated by the act of production, in contrast to the contents of the
documents.
The distinction is central. Our holding in Wilson was premised squarely on the
fact that the custodian's claim rested on the potential for incrimination in the
documents' contents, and we reasoned that the State's visitatorial powers over
corporations included the authority to inspect corporate books. We compared the
issue to that presented by cases involving public papers, explaining that
"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 demanding authority,
the custodian has no privilege to refuse production although their contents tend
to criminate him." Id., at 382. Our decision in Wilson and in later collective
entity cases reflected, I believe, the Court's understandable unease with
drawing too close a connection between an individual and an artificial entity.
On a more practical level, the Court was also unwilling to draw too close a
connection between the custodian and the contents of business documents over
which he had temporary control but which belonged to his employer, often were
prepared by others, and in all events were prepared voluntarily. This last
factor became the focus of our analysis in Fisher, where we made clear that the
applicability of the Fifth Amendment privilege depends on compulsion. Fisher put
to rest the notion that a privilege may be claimed with respect to the contents
of business records that were voluntarily prepared.
The act of producing documents stands on an altogether different footing. While
a custodian has no necessary relation to the contents of documents within his
control, the act of production is inescapably his own. Production is the precise
act compelled by the subpoena, and obedience, in some cases, will require the
custodian's own testimonial assertions. That was the basis of our recognition of
the privilege in Doe I. The entity possessing the documents in Doe I was, as the
majority points out, a sole proprietorship, not a corporation, partnership, or
labor union. But the potential for self-incrimination inheres in the act
demanded of the individual, and as a consequence the nature of the entity is
irrelevant to determining whether there is ground for the privilege.
A holding that the privilege against self-incrimination applies in the context
of this case is required by the precedents, and not, as the Government and the
majority suggest, inconsistent with them. The collective entity rule established
in Hale v. Henkel, and extended in White and Bellis, remains valid. It also
continues to be the rule, as we held in Wilson, that custodians of a collective
entity are not permitted to claim a personal privilege with respect to the
contents of entity records, although that rule now derives not from the
unprotected status of collective entities but from the more rational principle,
established by Fisher and Doe I and now recognized, that no one may claim a
privilege with respect to the contents of business records not created by
compulsion.
The question before us is not the existence of the collective entity rule, but
whether it contains any principle which overrides the personal Fifth Amendment
privilege of someone compelled to give incriminating testimony. Our precedents
establish a firm basis for assertion of the privilege. Randy Braswell, like the
respondent in Doe I, is being asked to draw upon his personal knowledge to
identify and to deliver documents which are responsive to the Government's
subpoena. Once the Government concedes there are testimonial consequences
implicit in the act of production, it cannot escape the conclusion that
compliance with the subpoena is indisputably Braswell's own act. To suggest
otherwise "is to confuse metaphor with reality." Pacific Gas & Electric Co. v.
Public Utilities Comm'n of California, 475 U.S. 1, 33 (1986) (REHNQUIST, J.,
dissenting).
C
The testimonial act demanded of petitioner in this case must be analyzed under
the same principles applicable to other forms of compelled testimony. In Curcio
v. United States, 354 U.S. 118 (1957), we reviewed a judgment holding a union
custodian in criminal contempt for failing to give oral testimony regarding the
location and possession of books and records he had been ordered to produce.
White had already established that a labor union was as much a collective entity
for Fifth Amendment purposes as a corporation, and the Government argued in
Curcio that the custodian could not claim a personal privilege because he was
performing only a "representative duty" on behalf of the collective entity to
which he belonged. Brief for United States in Curcio v. United States, O. T.
1956, No. 260, p. 17. We rejected that argument and reversed the judgment below.
We stated:
"[F]orcing the custodian to testify orally as to the whereabouts of nonproduced
records requires him to disclose the contents of his own mind. He might be
compelled to convict himself out of his own mouth. That is contrary to the
spirit and letter of the Fifth Amendment." Curcio, supra, at 128.
We confront the same Fifth Amendment claim here. The majority is able to
distinguish Curcio only by giving much apparent weight to the words "out of his
own mouth," reading Curcio to stand for the proposition that the Constitution
treats oral testimony differently than it does other forms of assertion. There
is no basis in the text or history of the Fifth Amendment for such a
distinction. The Self-Incrimination Clause speaks of compelled "testimony," and
has always been understood to apply to testimony in all its forms. Doe v. United
States, post, at 209-210, n. 8 (Doe II). Physical acts will constitute testimony
if they probe the state of mind, memory, perception, or cognition of the
witness. The Court should not retreat from the plain implications of this rule
and hold that such testimony may be compelled, even when self-incriminating,
simply because it is not spoken.
The distinction established by Curcio, supra, is not, of course, between oral
and other forms of testimony; rather it is between a subpoena which compels a
person to "disclose the contents of his own mind," through words or actions, and
one which does not. Id., at 128. A custodian who is incriminated simply by the
contents of the documents he has physically transmitted has not been compelled
to disclose his memory or perception or cognition. A custodian who is
incriminated by the personal knowledge he communicates in locating and selecting
the document demanded in a Government subpoena has been compelled to testify in
the most elemental, constitutional sense.
D
Recognition of the privilege here would also avoid adoption of the majority's
metaphysical progression, which, I respectfully submit, is flawed. Beginning
from ordinary principles of agency, the majority proceeds to the conclusion that
when a corporate employee, or an employee of a labor union or partnership,
complies with a subpoena for production of documents, his act is necessarily and
solely the act of the entity. That premise, of course, is at odds with the
principle under which oral testimony in Curcio properly was deemed privileged.
Since the custodian in Curcio had been asked to provide testimony on the union's
behalf and not his own, the Government argued, as it again argues here, that the
attempted compulsion was constitutionally permissible because Curcio was
performing only a representative duty. We held, however, that testimony of that
sort may not be divorced from the person who speaks it. The questions the
Government wished to ask would have required Curcio to disclose his own
knowledge, and as a matter of law his responses could not be alienated from him
and attributed to the labor union. In similar fashion, the act demanded of
Braswell requires a personal disclosure of individual knowledge, a fact which
cannot be dismissed by labeling him a mere agent.
The heart of the matter, as everyone knows, is that the Government does not see
Braswell as a mere agent at all; and the majority's theory is difficult to
square with what will often be the Government's actual practice. The subpoena in
this case was not directed to Worldwide Machinery Sales, Inc., or Worldwide
Purchasing, Inc. It was directed to "Randy Braswell, President[,] Worldwide
Machinery Sales, Inc.[,] Worldwide Purchasing, Inc." and informed him that "[y]ou
are hereby commanded" to provide the specified documents. App. 6. The Government
explained at oral argument that it often chooses to designate an individual
recipient, rather than the corporation generally, when it serves a subpoena
because "[we] want the right to make that individual comply with the subpoena."
Tr. of Oral Arg. 43. This is not the language of agency. By issuing a subpoena
which the Government insists is "directed to petitioner personally," Brief for
United States 6 (filed Aug. 14, 1987), it has forfeited any claim that it is
simply making a demand on a corporation that, in turn, will have to find a
physical agent to perform its duty. What the Government seeks instead is the
right to choose any corporate agent as a target of its subpoena and compel that
individual to disclose certain information by his own actions.
The majority gives the corporate agent fiction a weight it simply cannot bear.
In a peculiar attempt to mitigate the force of its own holding, it impinges upon
its own analysis by concluding that, while the Government may compel a named
individual to produce records, in any later proceeding against the person it
cannot divulge that he performed the act. But if that is so, it is because the
Fifth Amendment protects the person without regard to his status as a corporate
employee; and once this be admitted, the necessary support for the majority's
case has collapsed.
Perhaps the Court makes this concession out of some vague sense of fairness, but
the source of its authority to do so remains unexplained. It cannot rest on the
Fifth Amendment, for the privilege against self-incrimination does not permit
balancing the convenience of the Government against the rights of a witness, and
the majority has in any case determined that the Fifth Amendment is
inapplicable. If Braswell by his actions reveals information about his state of
mind that is relevant to a jury in a criminal proceeding, there are no
grounds of which I am aware for declaring the information inadmissible, unless
it be the Fifth Amendment.
In Doe I we declined expressly to do what the Court does today. Noting that
there might well be testimonial assertions attendant upon the production of
documents, we rejected the argument that compelled production necessarily
carried with it a grant of constructive immunity. We held that immunity may be
granted only by appropriate statutory proceedings. The Government must make a
formal request for statutory use immunity under 18 U. S. C. §§ 6002, 6003 if it
seeks access to records in exchange for its agreement not to use testimonial
acts against the individual. 465 U.S., at 614-617. Rather than beginning the
practice of establishing new judicially created evidentiary rules, conferring
upon individuals some partial use immunity to avoid results the Court finds
constitutionally intolerable, I submit our precedents require the Government to
use the only mechanism yet sanctioned for compelling testimony that is
privileged: a request for immunity as provided by statute.
II
The majority's abiding concern is that if a corporate officer who is the target
of a subpoena is allowed to assert the privilege, it will impede the
Government's power to investigate corporations, unions, and partnerships, to
uncover and prosecute white-collar crimes, and otherwise to enforce its
visitatorial powers. There are at least two answers to this. The first, and most
fundamental, is that the text of the Fifth Amendment does not authorize
exceptions premised on such rationales. Second, even if it were proper to invent
such exceptions, the dangers prophesied by the majority are overstated.
Recognition of the right to assert a privilege does not mean it will exist in
many cases. In many instances, the production of documents may implicate no
testimonial assertions at all. In Fisher, for example, we held that the specific
acts required by the subpoena before us "would not itself involve testimonial
self-incrimination" because, in that case, "the existence and location of the
papers [were] a foregone conclusion and the taxpayer adds little or nothing to
the sum total of the Government's information by conceding that he in fact has
the papers." 425 U.S., at 411. Whether a particular act is testimonial and
self-incriminating is largely a factual issue to be decided in each case. Doe
II, post, p. 201. In the case before us, the Government has made its
submission on the assumption that the subpoena would result in incriminating
testimony. The existence of a privilege in future cases, however, is not an
automatic result.
Further, to the extent testimonial assertions are being compelled, use immunity
can be granted without impeding the investigation. Where the privilege is
applicable, immunity will be needed for only one individual, and solely with
respect to evidence derived from the act of production itself. The Government
would not be denied access to the records it seeks, it would be free to use the
contents of the records against everyone, and it would be free to use any
testimonial act implicit in production against all but the custodian it selects.
In appropriate cases the Government will be able to establish authenticity,
possession, and control by means other than compelling assertions about them
from a suspect.
In one sense the case before us may not be a particularly sympathetic one.
Braswell was the sole stockholder of the corporation and ran it himself. Perhaps
that is why the Court suggests he waived his Fifth Amendment self-incrimination
rights by using the corporate form. One does not always, however, have the
choice of his or her employer, much less the choice of the business enterprise
through which the employer conducts its business. Though the Court here hints at
a waiver, nothing in Fifth Amendment jurisprudence indicates that the acceptance
of employment should be deemed a waiver of a specific protection that is as
basic a part of our constitutional heritage as is the privilege against
self-incrimination.
The law is not captive to its own fictions. Yet, in the matter before us the
Court employs the fiction that personal incrimination of the employee is neither
sought by the Government nor cognizable by the law. That is a regrettable
holding, for the conclusion is factually unsound, unnecessary for legitimate
regulation, and a violation of the Self-Incrimination Clause of the Fifth
Amendment of the Constitution. For these reasons, I dissent.