*763 OPINION AND ORDER
This is аn action seeking declaratory and injunctive relief, as well as damages, brought under the provisions of Section 1983 of Title 42, United States Code, and Sections 1331 and 1343 of Title 28, United States Code. The Plaintiffs are eighteen private schools which have been duly licensed or accredited by the Commonwealth Department of Education tо operate in Puerto Rico, and a professional organization which assembles over one hundred private schools of all educational levels throughout Puerto Rico. The Defendant is the Secretary of the Department of Consumer Affairs of the Commonwealth of Puerto Rico.
This case presents the same factual background involved in
His Excellency Bishop Ricardo Suriñach, etc.
v.
Carmen T. Pesquera de Busquéis,
Section 3 of the Act, 3 L.P.R.A. 341b, expressly directs the Department to protect the rights of consumers, curb inflationary tendencies and establish a pricе control system over goods and services. Section 6 of the enabling statute, 3 L.P.R.A. 341e, empowers the agency to issue subpoenas to compel the appearance of witnesses and production of documents and/or information, to inspect records, inventories, documents and physical facilities of persоns or entities subject to the provisions of the Act, and to perform all other acts necessary and convenient for the most effective achievement of the purposes of the Act. (Subsections 6(h), (v), (w) and (x)). The administrative faculties of the Department are more specifically delineated in Section 14(a), 3 L.P.R.A. 341m, which enablеs the Department to engage in all types of studies and investigations on matters affecting consumers. In furtherance of these faculties, the Secretary of the Department is given the authority to, inter alia, request all necessary and relevant information and inspect records, inventories, documents and physical facilities of entities under the Agency’s jurisdiction; approve all necessary and reasonable rules and regulations and receive testimony and evidence related to consumer-related matters.
Plaintiffs contend that the purpose of Defendant’s inquiry is for price fixing of private education in alleged violation of the Due Process Clause оf the Fourteenth Amendment, insofar as such price fixing deprivates private schools of their property right of conducting their affairs. Plaintiffs further argue that Defendant’s actions have the purpose of provoking the standardization of private education and interfering with the liberty of parents and guardians to select and direct thе education of their children. In the second cause of action of the complaint it is asserted that Defendant’s action constitutes an invasion of Plaintiffs’ privacy rights under the First, Fourth, Fifth, Ninth and Fourteenth Amendments to the Constitution of the United States.
Our only duty in this case is to determine whether the investigation undertaken by *764 the Defendant is violative of any сonstitutionally protected right of those required to respond to the questionnaire. To that inquiry we will now address ourselves.
Plaintiffs question the power of the Defendant to regulate the costs of private education in Puerto Rico. Concerning this argument, it is the view of this Court that, as the matter now stands no concrete controversy is prеsented to us for adjudication.
O’Shea v. Littleton,
In order to satisfy thе threshold requirement imposed by Art. Ill of the Constitution, those who seek to invoke the power of federal courts must demonstrate that the injury or threat of injury must be both “real and immediate”, not “conjectural” or “hypothetical.”
Golden v. Zwickler,
As we stated in
His Excellency Bishop Ricardo Suriñach, etc. v. Carmen T. Pesquera de Busquéis,
supra, “the absence of an immediatе possibility of actual regulation counsels against our entertaining issues which may be affected by future events of an uncertain nature.” See,
United Public Workers of America v. Mitchell,
We therefore conclude that no case or controversy has been presented to us regarding Plaintiffs’ allegations of price fixing. We are thus constitutionally prevented from entertaining those claims. O’Shea v. Littleton, supra.
We will now consider the second issue presented by the first cause of action, wherein Plaintiffs allege a threat to the liberty of parents to direct the educational upbringing of their children by reason of governmental “standardization” of private education.
The tensions between individual liberty and governmental attempts to achieve homogeneity in the educational context have been presented to the United States Supreme Court in controversies disputing the validity of State statutes that forbade the teaching of foreign languages before the eighth grade,
Meyer v. Nebraska,
The dangers repudiated in those decisions are nowhere apparent from the record in this сase. Unlike in
Pierce,
and contrary to the arguments of Plaintiffs, the
*765
status quo
presents no imminence of destruction of the right of private schools to exist and to operate.
The foregoing suffices to disprove Plaintiffs’ claims of governmental transgression of protected parental and educational liberties. To the extent that Plaintiffs base their challenge on unspecified and uncertain eventualities, the first cause of action also fails to present an actionable controversy, in light of the principles summarized hereinbefore.
At this juncture, we are called upon to decide whether the administrative probe in question here constitutes an invasion of constitutionally protected rights of privacy. The importance of this question compels us to undertake a careful analysis of the various factors involved.
There is no right of “privacy” as such in the constitution. Hence, the judicially recognized “zones of privacy” emanate from specific and substantive constitutional guarantees.
Paul v. Davis,
If “the right of privacy means anything, it is the right of the
individual
... to be free from unwarranted governmental intrusion into matters . . . fundamentally affecting a person.”
Eisenstadt v. Baird,
The foregoing does not mean that corporations or other entities which do not possess human individuality do not enjoy privacy rights. See
Grosjean v. American Press Co.,
Against this general background, the portent of the relevant court decisions is that informational probes by the government are objectionable when they unduly transgress specific constitutional guarantees. See,
Elrod v. Burns,
Plaintiffs in this сase invoke the right of privacy without expounding in a specific fashion the guarantees at stake. Rather, their privacy claims are brought “under the First Amendment, the Fourth and Fifth Amendment, the Bill of Rights, the Ninth Amendment and the Fourteenth Amendment of the Constitution of the United States.”
It goes without saying that no governmental attempts to “control men’s minds”, “the moral сontent of a person’s thoughts” or to inhibit the exercise of legitimate expressive or associational rights in violation of the First Amendment are apparent from the requested disclosure presented by this record.
Stanley v. Georgia,
Primo,
the privilege against self-incrimination is not applicable to corporations,
Hale v. Henkel,
As to the Fourth Amendment claim, it must be pointed out that, except for limitations concerning breadth and relevancy, the Fourth Amendment does not оrdinarily restrict an administrative subpoena for records or an administrative requirement of reports.
Oklahoma Press Pub. Co. v. Walling,
The remaining question is whether the investigation sought to be invalidated here is violative of the Fourteenth Amendment’s concept of personal liberty аnd the restrictions upon state action embodied in that provision.
Whalen v. Roe,
supra,
Upon examining the questionnaire in question here, we find that the same does not present a sufficiently specific and direct detriment to the Plaintiffs as would give rise to an actionable claim under the Constitution. The informational disclosure sought by the Defendant cannot be characterized as inimical to any protected interests of secrecy. The queries concerning physical, library and laboratory facilities, number of students and teachers, services and scholarships provided are matters over which the States have traditionally possessed a legitimate interest.
Pierce v. Society of Sisters,
supra,
*768
The scope of the administrative inquiry conducted here does not exceed the bounds of traditional and well recognized administrative powers of factual ascertainment.
8
United States v. Morton Salt Co.,
supra;
Endicott Johnson Corp. v. Perkins,
supra;
Bergman v. Stein,
The Complaint filed in this case is hereby DISMISSED on the aforementioned grounds. The Clerk of the Court shall enter Judgment aсcordingly.
IT IS SO ORDERED.
Notes
. In the answer to the Complaint, the Defendant has denied that the purpose of the inquiry is to limit the fees to be charged for private education.
. Suriñach, supra, n. '9.
. In
Pierce,
“no question [was] raised concerning the power of the State reasonably to regulate all schools, to inspect, supervise and examine them, their teachers and pupils.”
. In
Whalen v. Roe,
. The allegations of Paragraph 8 of the Comрlaint, which asserts a violation of the religious clauses of the First Amendment have already been considered by us in Suriñach v. Pesquera, supra.
. We must also point out that the actions of the Defendant do not resemble most of the administrative or’ official quests which typically present colorable Fourth Amendment claims. See, e. g.
Marshall v. Barlow’s Inc.,
. State actions which affeсt in some way individual liberty or privacy will not be struck down simply because they are deemed unnecessary, in the absence of a clear transgression of constitutional guarantees.
Whalen v. Roe,
supra,
. The decision to investigate or not is not for us to review.
Union Mechling Corp. v. United States,
. As we have pointed out hereinbefore, we are not concerned with actual governmental regulation in the economic field.
