The plaintiffs, Daniel and Eunice Le-Clair, brought this
Bivens
suit for damages alleging that the defendants Lawrence Hart and Thomas Larson, both special agents of the Internal Revenue Service (“IRS”), violated their Fourth Amendment rights by making an unreasonable seizure of certain documents during the execution of a search warrant. The defendants moved for summary judgment on the defense of qualified immunity. The district court denied the motion, and the defendants immediately appealed the denial under the Supreme Court’s recent holding in
Mitchell v. Forsyth,
— U.S. -,
I.
In
Mitchell,
the Supreme Court noted that “the appealable issue is a purely legal one: whether the facts alleged ... support a claim of violation of clearly established law.”
In the fall of 1982, the LeClairs were among the subjects of two unrelated federal investigations. The Susie Q Fish Company, which the LeClairs owned, was one of the targets of a United States Fish and Wildlife Service (“F & WS”) investigation into purported violations of fish and game laws. On November 8, 1982, F & WS special agent Richard Elliott obtained a warrant to search the LeClairs’ residence for “documents evidencing the purchase, sale, and catch of fish in 1981 and 1982.”
In January of 1982, the Criminal Investigation Division of the IRS had started an investigation of the LeClairs for the tax years 1977 through 1980. Agent Lawrence Hart handled the investigation, which included an administrative summons requiring the Susie Q Fish Company to produce all of its corporate records from 1977 through 1981. Following an unsuccessful challenge by the LeClairs, the requested records were made available to Hart.
Hart learned of the impending F & WS search of the LeClairs’ home and on November 9, 1982, Hart asked Elliott if Hart and another IRS agent, Thomas Larson, could accompany the F & WS team that searched the LeClairs’ home. Elliott consented to the IRS agents joining the search team as observers, with the understanding that they would not be permitted to take an active part in the search and would in fact have no authorization to do any searching. Prior to this contact with Hart and Larson on the eve of the search, Elliott had no idea that the IRS desired to participate in the search.
On November 10, 1982, F & WS special agent Edward Nichols and agents Gus Ernst and Tom Edwards of the Wisconsin Department of Natural Resources were assigned to search the LeClairs’ residence. At about 6:00 a.m. the three agents arrived at the LeClairs’ home, accompanied by Hart and Larson in a separate car. Nichols, Ernst, and Edwards knocked on the door and were admitted by Mrs. LeClair. About five minutes later, Ernst brought Hart and Larson into the residence. Hart and Larson were not wearing badges and did not identify themselves to the LeClairs as IRS agents.
Hart, Larson, and Ernst spent most of the three-hour search with Mrs. LeClair in a basement room the LeClairs used as an office, while Nichols and Edwards remained upstairs with Mr. LeClair. Hart, Larson, and Ernst all took an active part in a thorough search of records, documents, and other items in the basement office. Mrs. LeClair received the impression that Hart was in charge of the search and that Ernst was assisting Hart. Hart searched a greater area than any of the other agents.
During his search, Hart dictated verbatim into a tape recorder certain documents that he reviewed and considered important. Larson took copious handwritten notes. The tapes and notes were used by Hart to prepare a report to his IRS superiors, which listed items Hart felt were of interest to the IRS. The report and Larson’s notes describe numerous financial records pertaining to the period 1977-1980. Hart dictated items not covered by the search warrant.
The LeClairs were indicted for income tax evasion and filed a motion to suppress the evidence seized at the November 10, 1982 search, claiming that IRS agents Hart and Larson had illegally seized evidence in the LeClairs' basement office by making handwritten and tape-recorded copies of documents not included in the warrant. The presiding magistrate agreed that Hart and Larson had illegally seized the documents that were not within the scope of the warrant, but the motion to suppress was denied because the magistrate concluded that the IRS had not used any of the information obtained on November 10, 1982, to support the indictment against the LeClairs. Following the magistrate’s decision, the LeClairs each pled guilty to criminal tax evasion.
On January 9,1985, the LeClairs brought this suit for damages against Hart and
*694
Larson
1
pursuant to the Supreme Court’s doctrine enunciated in
Bivens v. Six Unknown Federal Narcotics Agents,
II.
Prior to the Supreme Court’s decision in
Mitchell v. Forsyth,
the circuits were split on the issue of the appealability before final judgment of orders denying qualified immunity.
See Mitchell,
[A] district court’s denial of a claim of qualified immunity, to the extent that it turns on an issue of law, is an appealable “final decision” within the meaning of 28 U.S.C. § 1291 notwithstanding the absence of a final judgment.
We have jurisdiction solely to review the narrow question of law presented by this appeal: did the alleged conduct of IRS agents Hart and Larson on November 10, 1982, amount to an unreasonable seizure. We further note that defendants Hart and Larson are covered by qualified immunity unless their alleged actions on November 10, 1982, violated clearly established law at the time that Hart and Larson acted. See
Mitchell,
The principal argument put forth by Hart and Larson is that a “seizure” takes place only when “the owner is forcibly deprived of possession of the item in question,” and thus they did not seize the Le-Clairs’ documents because they did not physically remove them from the basement office. This position is clearly untenable in light of the Supreme Court’s decision in
Berger v. New York,
Following
Berger,
it has been clear that the Fourth Amendment embraces more than just the forced physical removal of tangible objects, as the defendants would have us decide. Indeed,
Berger
stands for the proposition that the government may seize intangible items such as the information contained in the financial documents which the IRS agents copied. Although the Supreme Court has never passed upon the precise type of recording which is involved in this case, the lower courts have encountered no difficulty in finding seizures in cases involving analogous circumstances.
See, e.g., United States v. Marbury,
The defendants fail to cite a single case which uses their narrow definition of seizure in a context analogous to this case. We reject the defendants’ argument that the Supreme Court has adopted their definition of “seizure.” The cases cited by the defendants fail to support their argument, or even create any uncertainty in the law following Berger. 4
The defendants cite
United States v. Jacobsen,
We do not find anything in
Jacobsen
to support the defendants’ position. The Supreme Court in
Jacobsen
did not overrule
Berger
and had no occasion to consider the definition of a seizure in a context analogous to Hart and Larson’s actions. The Court was discussing a package containing drugs, a tangible physical item, and thus the Court had no occasion to discuss the definition of seizures in the context of intangible property. Even if the Court can be said to have somehow linked seizures to
*696
property interests, it is well established that “[t]he right to exclude others is generally ‘one of the most essential sticks in the bundle of rights that are commonly characterized as property.’ ”
Ruckelshaus v. Monsanto Co.,
In the face of the clear line of precedent following
Berger
and, more significantly, the
Berger
opinion itself, Hart and Larson cannot seriously argue that their alleged conduct in copying the financial documents found in the LeClairs’ basement office was not a seizure. Nor can they argue that the LeClairs’ Fourth Amendment rights were not clearly established on November 10, 1982. The
Berger
opinion preceded the defendants’ actions by fifteen years, and several lower court opinions had clearly held that analogous conduct amounted to a seizure. The more recent cases, although decided subsequent to the 1982 incident and thus irrelevant for determining the state of clearly established law in 1982, are nonetheless telling in that they treat the issue of whether the type of conduct challenged here amounted to a seizure as a closed one not worthy of discussion.
See Mitchell,
This is not a case like
Mitchell
where a legitimate question existed as to the legality of the defendants' conduct at the time they acted.
See
The district court was correct in deciding that the alleged conduct of Hart and Larson amounted to a seizure under clearly established law at the time when they copied the LeClairs’ financial documents.
5
The Fourth Amendment only prohibits unreasonable seizures, but the defendants apparently do not contest that the plaintiffs have sufficiently alleged that certain of the seized documents were outside the scope of the warrant and thus unreasonable.
See Marron v. United States,
Although we decline to grant the defendants’ summary judgment motion, we reiterate that our holding is a narrow one. Although the defendants have attempted throughout their briefs to base their arguments on their own version of the facts, our holding is necessarily limited to a decision of law based solely upon the plaintiffs’ factual allegations. We have neither considered nor attempted to resolve any of the factual disputes. Nor do we express any opinion as to what effect any variation between the facts alleged and those established at trial will have on the defendants’ qualified immunity defense. We also have found it unnecessary to consider the Le- *697 Clairs’ additional claim that Hart and Larson conducted an illegal search on November 10, 1982. We hold merely that Hart and Larson are not entitled to qualified immunity at this point in the proceedings. Having settled that issue, discovery may begin and both parties may proceed to trial to establish whether the LeClairs are entitled to recover damages from Hart and Larson. The decision of the district court is Affirmed.
Notes
. The LeClairs also sued IRS Acting Group Manager Douglas Gastorf, who allegedly authorized the search. The district court granted the summary judgment motion of Gastorf on the theory that Gastorf's involvement in the search was too inconsequential. The LeClairs did not appeal from this decision of the district court.
. The LeClairs also contend that the defendants conducted an illegal search. The district court found it unnecessary to consider this issue, and so do we.
. The defendants' only response to the clear import of
Berger
is the curious argument that three members of the Court dissented from the majority’s conclusion that recording a conversation was a seizure. The obvious response is that six members of the Court took the position that the recordings were seizures. Even more curious is the defendants’ assertion that our circuit, in
United States v. Williams,
. In particular, we reject the defendants' argument that a "seizure” for purposes of the Fourth Amendment is the same as a "taking” for purposes of the Fifth Amendment. The defendants cite no authority for this argument, and we are aware of none.
. We do not make any distinction between the various forms of copying, such as copying by hand, reading the document verbatim into a tape recorder, and copying on a machine. Neither party has cited any cases which attached any significance to the method of copying used by the defendant, and since what the defendant is actually seizing is the information and not the paper and ink itself, we place no significance on the method of copying chosen by the defendants.
