In Re Grand Jury Investigation and Isadore H. Bellis, A Witness. Appeal of Isadore H. Bellis, 483 F.2d 961, 3rd Cir. (1973)
In Re Grand Jury Investigation and Isadore H. Bellis, A Witness. Appeal of Isadore H. Bellis, 483 F.2d 961, 3rd Cir. (1973)
In Re Grand Jury Investigation and Isadore H. Bellis, A Witness. Appeal of Isadore H. Bellis, 483 F.2d 961, 3rd Cir. (1973)
2d 961
The district court found appellant in civil contempt and entered an appropriate
order. Appellant appeals that order.
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Whether
a partner of a three-man law partnership in the process of winding up after
dissolution may invoke his Fifth Amendment privilege against compulsory selfincrimination to prevent the production, pursuant to a Grand Jury Subpoena Duces
Tecum, of financial books and records of the partnership in his possession.
Appellant Bellis was served with a Federal Grand Jury Subpoena directing him
to appear and testify 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." Appellant appeared and refused to produce the documents or answer
any questions in connection therewith, asserting his rights under the First,
Fourth, Fifth and Sixth Amendments to the United States Constitution.
Thereupon, the United States filed a motion in the district court to compel the
appellant to produce the books and records described in the subpoena. The
issue is limited, at least at this stage, to the production of documents.
A hearing was held before the district court on the government's contempt
motion. The appellant confined his claim to his Fifth Amendment privilege.
The district court ruled, inter alia, that since the documents were partnership
papers, they were not subject to appellant's personal privilege. He thereupon
ordered appellant to comply with the subpoena. The court excluded from its
order, "any individual client files containing any advice or confidential
relationships between the attorney and attorney and client."
The appellant reappeared before the Grand Jury and on the advice of counsel
repeated his refusal to produce the subpoenaed records, inter alia, on the same
constitutional grounds. Thereupon the Government orally moved before the
district court in the presence of appellant's counsel for a contempt order. Such
an order was entered and this appeal followed.
Fortunately, the facts material to our disposition of this case are not in dispute.
The subpoenaed documents are the partnership records of a three-man law
partnership for the years 1968 and 1969. The partnership also had about six
additional employees. Appellant was the senior partner and personally
supervised the work of the bookkeeper. The partnership was dissolved in the
latter part of 1969 and is still in the process of being wound up. After formal
dissolution, the partnership records remained in the office of the partnership
pending the winding up. However, at the time the subpoena was served, they
were in the appellant's possession.
recognizable juridical existence apart from its members. We say this because
the privilege has always been regarded as personal in the sense that it applies
only to an individual's words or personal papers. United States v. White, 322
U.S. 694, 64 S. Ct. 1248, 88 L.Ed. 1542 (1944). Since the subpoena and
implementing order only directed the production of records of a partnership,
certainly a separate legal entity, it follows that their production would constitute
no encroachment on the appellant's privilege with respect to his personal
records.
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We think the district court correctly decided that the appellant was not entitled
to assert a personal privilege with respect to the partnership records in his
possession despite the modest size of the partnership entity.
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