Lead Opinion
Opinion by Judge Graber; Dissent by Judge Reinhardt.
OPINION
Plаintiffs Andersen and LaMantia, on behalf of themselves and the members of
FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY
Plaintiffs are leaders of IGP, an organization that distributes “educational, political, religious and philosophical materials in the form of books and CDs, much of which is critical of the United States’ financial and taxing policies.” Plaintiffs and other IGP leaders are currently under investigation
Between February 28, 2001, and September 25, 2001, the government executed eight search warrants on Plaintiffs’ residences and on IGP offices across the country. The warrants sought a broad range of financial records. The warrants also sought material under the heading “[IGP] related records/ evidence,” including
applications for membership, membership cards, membership agreements, confidentiality agreements, promotional literature (letters, flyers, brochures, videotapes and audiоtapes), scripts used during telephone solicitations, newspaper advertisements, lists of names or addresses or telephone numbers (or other identifying data) of members, prospective members or Qualified Retailers, records reflecting attendance at [IGP] seminars, videotapes/audiotapes of [IGP] leaders/members at [IGP] seminars, and audiotapes of [IGP programs].
On September 28, 2001, Plaintiffs filed this action in federal district court, alleging claims of (1) conspiracy to violatе Plaintiffs’ First and Fourth Amendment rights and the First Amendment rights of members and associates of IGP and (2) “willful, wanton and malicious violations” of Plaintiffs’ individual Fourth Amendment rights.
At the same time, Plaintiffs filed a motion for a temporary restraining order and a preliminary injunction. They sought to prohibit the United States from
(a) conducting any further searches and seizures or otherwise seeking or acquiring indicia of association with plaintiffs and/or IGP’s members and/or associates; and (b) any use or dissemination to any person, entity or agency whatsоever of any membership and/or associates’ identities or information already obtained during the searches and seizures at issue
Plaintiffs also sought a permanent injunction ordering the return of all IGP-related property that had been seized pursuant to the warrants.
The district court denied the request for a temporary restraining order and, later, denied Plaintiffs’ motion for a preliminary injunction. Plaintiffs timely filed a notice of appeal.
As a threshold matter, we must decide whether we have jurisdiction to review the district court’s denial of the preliminary injunction.
[1] The denial of a preliminary injunction is one of the few kinds of ap-pealable interlocutory orders. 28 U.S.C. § 1292(a)(1). However, here, Plaintiffs’ motion sought relief typically provided by Federal Rule of Criminal Procedure 41(e). Although styled as an action for an “injunction,” perhaps because of the general rule noted above, the motion in substance sought the return of property that had been seized pursuant to a warrant. Rule 41(e) controls the procedure for obtaining that form of relief. The distinction between injunction proceedings in general and Rule 41(e) motions in particular is important, because the denial of a motion under Rule 41(e) usually is not appealable. DiBella v. United States,
The substance of the motion, not its form, controls its disposition. See Prudential Real Estate Affiliates, Inc. v. PPR Realty, Inc.,
The Supreme Court has held that the courts of appeal have jurisdiction to review decisions on Rule 41(e) motions “[o]nly if the motion is solely for return of property and is in no way tied to a criminal prosecution in esse against the movant.” DiBella,
This rule reflects the careful balancing between two competing interests: On the one hand, appellate courts should act to prevent the deprivation of seized property that is sorely needed when those deprived have no other avenues for relief. On the other hand, the appeal of a lower court’s decision denying a return of property can add uncertainty and delay to an ongoing parallel criminal proceeding, especially if the legality of*808 the search is the critical issue in the criminal trial.
Bridges v. United States (In re 3021 6th Ave. N.),
In this case, Plaintiffs’ motion seeks the return of the seized property but also asks for significant additional relief. And, there is an ongoing criminal investigation that targets Plaintiffs. In the circumstances, Plaintiffs fail both parts of DiBella’s test, and they therefore cannot establish the exception to the general rule that motions like theirs are unappealable.
As for the first criterion, in addition to demanding the return of their property, Plaintiffs seek to enjoin the IRS from conducting any future searches or seizures. Further, they seek to enjoin the IRS from using the material that already was seized. By asking for exclusion of evidence and by seeking to prevent any further searches, the complaint seeks relief beyond “solely” the rеturn of property.
[5] As for the second criterion, an ongoing grand jury investigation constitutes a “ ‘criminal prosecution in esse’” under DiBella. DeMassa I, 14R F.2d at 1291 (Ferguson, J., dissenting) (quoting DiBella,
Indeed, DeMassa I directly controls this case.
DeMassa I clearly contemplates that grand jury proceedings constitute criminal proceedings for the purpose of determining appealability. This interpretation is consistent with DiBella, which held that “the mere circumstance of a pre-indictment motion does not transmute the ensuing evidentiary ruling into an independent proceeding begetting finality even for purposes of appealability. Presentations before a ... grand jury are parts of the federal prosecutorial system leading to a criminal trial.” DiBella,
Plaintiffs ask for an exception to the rule of nonappealability on the ground that
We recognize that First Amendment rights may be chilled when the government seizes information about the members of an organization. NAACP v. Alabama,
First, the Court’s logic in DiBella retains its efficacy in this context. The Court gave two reasons for refusing to create an exception to the general finality rule: The Court was concerned with impeding the criminal justice process, including the Sixth Amendment right to a speedy trial,
Second, the bar against an interlocutory appeal means only that review on the merits is postponed, not foreclosed. Plaintiffs can obtain appellate review on the merits of their claims when the district court has taken final action, either in the context of a criminal conviction or otherwise.
Third, we note by way of analogy the Supreme Court’s application of a procedural bar even in the face of substantial First Amendment claims. In United States v. American Friends Service Committee,
We express no opinion on whether the Anti-Injunction Act would bar Plaintiffs’ suit on the merits; it is not clear whether it would or would not. See Church of Scientology v. United States,
Although the dissent emphasizes the compelling nature of First Amendment claims, our jurisdiction is bounded by the clear rule in DiBella, as interpreted by this court in DeMassa. We are not free to ignore those precedents defining our jurisdiction simply because the subject matter of the underlying complaint tempts us to do so. That is true even in the Younger abstention context, on which the dissent relies by analogy. See Younger v. Harris,
CONCLUSION
Plaintiffs’ motion for a preliminary injunction was, in substance, a motion for return of property under Federal Rule of Criminal Procedure 41(e), but it sought additional relief and was tied to an ongoing grand jury investigation. Therefore, the district court’s order denying the injunction is not a final, appealable order, and we lack jurisdiction to review it.
APPEAL DISMISSED.
Notes
. At oral argument, the parties agreed that we should assume for the purpose of decision that there is a grand jury investigation in progress. Although the government makes no factual representations on this issue, we so assume. See Fed.R.Crim.P. 6(e) (providing for secrecy of grand jury proceedings).
. For jurisdictional purposes, we are obliged to determine the finality of a decision on appeal. Regula v. Delta Family-Care Disability Survivorship Plan,
. The dissent relies on two brief passages in DiBella,
. In DeMassa I, we held that we lacked jurisdiction to review the Fourth Amendment claims of a lawyer whose offices had been searched and whose files had been seized. Because that lawyer was the target of an ongoing grand jury investigation, we concluded that DiBella controlled, and we had no jurisdiction.
The clients in DeMassa II were named plaintiffs in the action. By contrast, the IGP is not a plaintiff, nor are any individual members named as plaintiffs except Andersen and LaMantia. Andersen and LaMantia purportedly assert rights on the membership’s behalf. Without jurisdiction over any of Andersen’s or LaMantia’s claims, however, we cannot assert jurisdiction over the membership's potential derivative claims, even if Andersen and La-Mantia otherwise wоuld be entitled to bring such claims in a representative capacity.
. Subject to certain statutory exceptions not applicable here, the Anti-Injunction Act provides that "no suit for the purpose of restraining the assessment or collection of any tax shall be maintained in any court by any person, whether or not such person is the person against whom such tax was assessed." 26 U.S.C. § 7421(a).
Dissenting Opinion
dissenting:
The majority asserts that it merely applies the clear rule of DiBella and DeMas-sa to the case at hand. The rule is hardly clear and in my view is not applicable to claims of serious, imminent, and irreparable violations of First Amendment rights. Accordingly, I dissent.
The majority treats the appellants’ motion as simply a “functional” 41(e) motion that, under the law of our circuit, is tied to an ongoing criminal proceeding and thus is unappealable. In so doing, the majority fails to consider adequately the nature and importance of the subject matter of the appellants’ motion. The appellants seek to enjoin the government from seizing and making use of their membership lists— lists of the names and other identifying information regarding all current and prospective members of the Institute for Global Prosperity (IGP).
Membership lists have a long and unique history in our constitutional jurisprudence, and the seizure of such items implicates the rights of freedom of association and freedom of speech under the First Amendment. In NAACP v. Alabama,
The concern for the protection of the right of free association, and the ability to maintain one’s privacy in that association, is especially present in political, economic,
Here, the appellants, who head a tax protester organization, assert their rights to association and freedom of speech— rights that we must be particularly vigilant to proteсt against unwarranted governmental intrusion. They allege that those rights are currently being violated, that there will be additional violations in the near future, and that the government’s actions, if unreviewed by this court, will have an immediate and serious chilling effect upon the organization and its members. The only question addressed in the, majority opinion, and in this dissent, is whether we have the ability to consider appellants’ constitutional claims now, or whether they must await appellate review for an indefinite period of time, perhaps for a significant number of years, by which time the irreparable damage that is attendant on the alleged First Amendment violation -will likely have been done. The majority concludes that “later” — no matter how much later — is good enough. I disagree.
As stated by the majority, DiBella and DeMassa together stand for the proposition that a motion for the return of property is generally not appealable on an interlocutory basis if it is tied to a “criminal prosecution in esse against the movant.” DiBella v. United States,
The majority asserts that its decision is compelled by DiBella, as interpreted by. DeMassa. 1 disagree. Neither DiBella nor DeMassa addressed the First Amendment, and neither case involved membership lists. Nor did the petitioner in either case seek an injunction to prevent the further seizure of First Amendment materials, as do the appellants here. To the contrary, both DiBella and DeMassa involved petitioners who instituted collateral civil proceedings to assert violations of their Fourth Amendmеnt rights resulting from searches and seizures of drugs and related materials and stolen property, as well as a gun and devices used in a robbery. See DiBella,
DiBella and DeMassa do not set forth an absolute rule prohibiting all interlocutory appeals in cases involving criminal proceedings. In DiBella, the Court stated that Congress intended such appeals should be permitted where the harm of “error unreviewеd before the judgment is definitive and complete [is] greater than the disruption caused by immediate appeal.” Id. (internal citation omitted). The Court also stated that “immediate appeal has been allowed from an order recognized as collateral to the principal litigation ... when the practical effect of the order will be irreparable by any subsequent appeal.” Id. at 126,
In this case, the “criminal proceeding” is the beginning of a grand jury investigation.
The Supreme Court has held that when the government seizes material that is protected by the First Amendment, courts must provide increased oversight to ensure that First Amendment rights are not harmed. See New York v. P.J. Video,
In the related Younger abstention context, the Supreme Court has held that the exercise of federal jurisdiction may be appropriate if a violation of First Amendment rights is alleged, even though under normal circumstances it would not be. See Dombrowski v. Pfister,
United States v. American Friends Service Committee,
Appellants have alleged that their First Amendment associational rights, and those of IGP’s members, have been and are currently being chilled by the government’s continuing possession of IGP’s membership lists. In my view, the importance of this claim — and the need to resolve it expeditiously — outweighs any theoretical disruption to the grand jury proceedings that may be occasioned by an immediate appeal. I would hold that this is the kind of claim contemplated by DiBella’s exceptions, and therefore that we have jurisdiction to review it. I respectfully dissent from the majority’s decision to dismiss the appeal.
.. As the majority states, under Ninth Circuit law, a criminal proceeding is in esse once a grand jury investigation has begun. DeMas-sa,
. In World Famous Drinking Emporium v. City of Tempe,
