This is an appeal from a final order of the district court in which the appellant, Ray M. Vargas, was cited for contempt of court and ordered confined. His confinement was stayed pending resolution of this appeal. Mr. Vargas, an attorney, was cited for contempt for refusing to produce the files of his client, Sangre de Cristo, Community Mental Health Service, Inc., to the grand jury. The grand jury is investigating fraud involving federal government grants of which Mr. Vargas’ client is a recipient. The government has asserted that appellant Vargas is himself a target of the grand jury investigation in connection with allegedly false or excessive billings to his client.
The matter was before us previously when both the attorney and the client challenged the subpoena.
See In re Grand Jury Proceedings (Vargas),
*943
Appellant raises two arguments on appeal. First, he argues that, as an attorney, the production of his client files before the grand jury violates his fifth amendment privilege under
Fisher v. United States,
The primary focus of appellant’s first argument is that compulsory surrender of the client’s files would be an incriminating act since his possession of those files would form a significant link in the government’s proof of fraudulent billings for work actually or purportedly done by him for the client.
The general principle is established in
Fisher v. United States,
[t]he 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. 3
The
Fisher
court qualified this principle by stating that although the act of production had its own communicative aspects, it was doubtful that an admission of the existence and possession of certain papers rose to the level of “testimony” protected by the fifth amendment.
Id.
at 411,
We must also view the general principle of
Fisher
in light of the Court’s opinion in
Bellis v. United States,
The Court in
Bellis
did indicate that “[a] different case might be presented if petitioner had been ordered to produce files containing work which he had personally performed on behalf of his clients, even if these files might for some purposes be viewed as those of the partnership.”
While the Court in
Beilis
was dealing with documents relating to the internal management of the law firm, its repeated emphasis was on the absence of an ownership interest, and the representative capacity in which the petitioner in that case held the property.
See id.
at 88-90,
Whereas the partner in
Beilis
held documents in a representative capacity for the partnership, the attorney in this case holds the client file in a representative capacity for the client. Any ownership rights which inure in the file belong to the client who has presumably paid for the professional services and preparations made by the attorney. In this regard, we find client files to be indistinguishable, in principle from the kinds of files which the court found not subject to the fifth amendment privilege in
Beilis.
So far as we can determine, it is a general principle of law that client files belong to the client and indeed the court may order them surrendered to the client or another attorney on the request of the client subject only to the attorney’s right to be protected in receiving compensation from the client for work done.
See, e.g.,
Restatement (Second) of Agency § 464(b) (1957) and Restatement of Security § 62(b) (1941).
See also Prichard v. Fulmer,
Indeed, if the analysis of an expectation of privacy plays any part in the Court’s analysis in
Bellis,
it could hardly be said that the attorney has an expectation of privacy in the client’s files at least against a claim of the client for production or surrender of those files. This is not to say that an attorney has no privacy interest in his work product. Rather, whatever privacy interests an attorney may have, they are limited to those established under the work-product immunity doctrine of
Hickman v. Taylor,
Hickman,
however, is expressly limited to those matters relating to the lawyer’s mental processees developed explicitly for litigation.
We can find no way to distinguish in principle records which are held by a lawyer for his client from records held by a lawyer for his small partnership. Both hold such records in a representative capacity for another individual or collective entity and as such are not in possession of the documents in a purely personal capacity.
See United States v. White,
[I]n Beilis ... the Supreme Court made it clear that, in evaluating a fifth amendment claim, the critical factor was not the size of the organization the records of which were being subpoenaed, but rather the nature of the capacity — either personal or representational — with respect to the privilege which was claimed.
Since the client files are held by Mr. Vargas in a representational capacity, the assertion of the fifth amendment privilege in this case must fail. We limit our holding today to the situation where, as here, the client has directed the attorney to turn the client file over to the grand jury pursuant to the subpoena.
Appellant’s second assertion that these files are protected under the work-product immunity doctrine must likewise fail. As we have noted, the
Hickman
doctrine protects only that which was prepared in preparation for litigation. The work-product privilege does not apply to documents subpoenaed by a grand jury where such documents were not prepared for the client in anticipation of litigation.
In re Grand Jury Subpoena Duces Tecum,
*946 Prior to our decision in Vargas I, and subsequent thereto, appellant asserted before the trial judge his claim of work-product privilege. In both instances the trial court found the privilege inapplicable. The trial court made no finding that the work performed by Mr. Vargas for his client was in preparation of litigation. Although the trial court’s findings were not explicit, they must stand inasmuch as appellant has not demonstrated that the trial court’s findings were clearly erroneous or that the trial court employed an erroneous legal standard.
In view of the fact that the client has waived the attorney-client privilege, and that the only other privileges asserted by appellant are precluded as we have indicated, the decision of the trial court is affirmed.
On Rehearing
Petitioner, Ray M. Vargas, requests that this panel rehear the case of In re Grand Jury Proceedings (Vargas) (“Vargas II”) No. 84-1058 (10th Cir. Feb. 8, 1984). The petition for rehearing and the Government’s response have been carefully considered. The petition for rehearing before this panel is granted. No member of the panel nor judge on regular active service on the court has requested that the court be polled on rehearing in banc. See Rule 35, Federal Rules of Appellate Procedure. Therefore, the suggestion for rehearing in banc is denied. Additionally, since the trial court has issued a stay of enforcement of the order of confinement pending petitioner’s application to the Supreme Court of the United States for writ of certiorari, that part of the petition requesting recall and stay of the trial court’s mandate is moot.
We affirm the decision of Vargas II with the following addendum.
Since the filing of this petition the Supreme Court has decided
United States v. Doe,
_ U.S. _,
Petitioner requests that this court direct its attention to other clients who could be impacted by the subpoena and who have not waived the attorney-client privilege. In
Vargas I, In re Grand Jury Proceedings (Vargas),
As this court has held, “[t]he determination of whether the government shows a prima facie foundation ... lies in the sound discretion of the trial court.”
In re September 1975 Grand Jury Term,
AFFIRMED.
Notes
. Section 1826(b) provides:
§ 1826. Recalcitrant Witnesses
(b) No person confined pursuant to subsection (a) of this section shall be admitted to bail pending the determination of an appeal taken by him from the order for his confinement if it appears that the appeal is frivolous or taken for delay. Any appeal from an order of confinement under this section shall be disposed of as soon as practicable, but not later than thirty days from the filing of such appeal.
*943
28 U.S.C. § 1826(b) (1976) (emphasis supplied). This circuit has held this 30-day rule to be mandatory and it cannot be extended by this court.
In re Berry,
. Mr. Vargas initially claimed production of his client files was protected by the attorney-client privilege. However, since his client, Sangre de Cristo, has now waived the attorney-client privilege, Mr. Vargas does not raise it on this appeal. We, therefore, need not decide the applicability of the crime or fraud exception to the attorney-client privilege in this case.
See Vargas I,
.
. Judge Friendly, concurring in the Second Circuit’s decision that the fifth amendment privilege was not available to a doctor’s production, pursuant to subpoena, of patient files he was required to keep by law, expressed the concern that the Supreme Court has left unanswerable the question of “how a person can be ordered consistently with the language of the self-incrimination clause to produce ... [documents before a grand jury] under circumstances when he cannot be required to testify about such dealings. ...”
In re Dr. Doe,
. Judge Knapp, in denying the government’s motion to compel the defendant’s production of third-party documents in his possession, aptly described the role of the federal courts in discerning the present state of the law surrounding the fifth amendment privilege as that of a tea leaves reader.
See United States v. Karp,
. The retaining lien enables the attorney to retain a client’s records or other property that has come into the attorney’s possession until the client pays for all of the legal fees owing to the attorney.
See, e.g., In re Southwest Restaurant Sys., Inc.,
