John and Jane Doe appeal from a decision of the United States District Court for the Southern District of New York, Broder-ick, J., allowing them to intervene but denying their motion to quash a subpoena duces tecum directed to their administrative assistant Richard Roe. Doe and Roe are pseudonyms used to preserve the anonymity of the principals involved and the secrecy of the underlying grand jury proceedings. The district court simultaneously granted the government’s motion to compel compliance with the subpoena but stayed that portion of its order pending resolution of this expedited appeal. The Does argue, as they did below, that the subpoena violates their rights under the Fourth and Fifth Amendments. We affirmed the judgment of the district court on October 2, 1987, with a notation that an opinion would follow.
BACKGROUND
The Does, husband and wife, are respectively presidents of at least two corporations. They carry on their business and personal affairs from a suite of offices where their administrative assistant Roe also works. Although Roe is paid by a Doe-controlled corporation and his duties include corporate matters, he also looks after the Does’ personal checking accounts. In connection with the latter he writes checks for the Does’ signatures, keeps check registers, reconciles monthly statements, prepares deposits and maintains a separate ledger book for each account. The checkbooks, registers and ledgers are kept in a file cabinet in his office within the Does’ suite; cancelled checks and past statements are filed in a credenza in the hallway outside of his office. 1 The Does’ own offices are located elsewhere within the suite.
A grand jury is investigating allegations that the Does diverted corporate funds to personal use while falsifying records to conceal the diversion and evade federal taxation. In the course of its investigation the grand jury issued a subpoena duces tecum on February 26, 1987, dirеcting Roe to appear and bring any documents relating to such transactions. The subpoena, redacted to eliminate identifiable references to the Does, directed Roe to produce:
*1130 Any documents of any description relating or referring in any way to expenditures by [Doe-controlled corporations], a) for or on behalf of [the Does] personally, or b) for the provision of goods or services for [the Does’ home] and its surrounding grounds.
J.App. at 76.
In his first appearance before the grand jury on March 24, 1987, Roe brought no documents but testified about the nature and scope of his work for the Does, including his role with respect to their personal checking accounts. The grand jury issued a second, more detailed subpoena duces tecum on May 29, 1987, requesting four specific categories of documents “within [Roe’s] custody or control (joint or exclusive).” These were set forth in a rider attached to the May 29 subpoena as follows:
1) Any and all books, records or documents of any kind in your custody or control (joint or exclusive) relating or referring in any way to [a specified checking account], including, but not limited to, monthly statements, cancelled checks, check stubs оr check register, deposit tickets, debit memoranda, credit memoranda, reconciliations, ledgers or journals.
2) Any and all books, records or documents of any kind in your custody or control (joint or exclusive) relating or referring in any way to [a second specified checking account], including, but not limited to, monthly statements, cancelled checks, check stubs or check register, deрosit tickets, debit memoranda, credit memoranda, reconciliations, ledgers or journals.
3) Any and all books, records or documents of any kind in your custody or control (joint or exclusive) relating or referring in any way to expenditures for construction, renovation, furnishing, goods or services, or operating expenses of any kind at [the Does’ home] and the surrounding grounds in [city, state].
4) Any and all books, reсords or documents of any kind in your custody or control (joint or exclusive) relating or referring in any way to charge accounts in the name of, or known by you to be utilized by, [one of the Does].
J.App. at 145. Roe again appeared before the grand jury on June 9 and 16, 1987. He testified under immunity, see J.App. at 72, but once more brought no documents. When the government went to the district court seeking to compel Rоe to comply with the second subpoena, the Does intervened.
The grounds on which the Does resisted the motion to compel are essentially the same as those they urge on appeal. First and principally, they contend that the subpoena circumvents their Fifth Amendment rights because it effectively compels the production of documents within their constructive possession dеspite its nominal direction to Roe. Second, they argue that the subpoena violates the Fourth Amendment because it requires Roe to conduct a warrantless search of their office suite at the government’s instance. We reject both contentions.
I. Jurisdiction
Because denial of a motion to quash a subpoena
duces tecum
is ordinarily not an appealable final order within the meaning of 28 U.S.C. § 1291 (1982), a brief discussion of our appellate jurisdiction is in order. As a rulе, denial of a motion to quash becomes appealable only after the person served with the subpoena refuses to comply and has been held in contempt.
See Cobbledick v. United States,
II. The Fifth Amendment Claim
The Fifth Amendment proscribes the compulsion of self-incriminating testimonial communications.
See In re N.D.N. Y. Grand Jury Subpoena #86-0351-S,
It follows that material owned by one person may, at least under some circumstances, be subpoenaed from a third party non-owner in possession without impinging on the Fifth Amendment rights of the owner.
See, e.g., Fisher,
The Does seek to distinguish their case, however, on the theory that the records sought here were in their office suite and therefore in their “constructive possession.” They contend that the subpoena thus actually compels them personally despite its nominal direction to their assistant Roe. They rely for this analysis on a statement in
Couch
that, when an owner’s documents are subpoenaed in the hаnds of a third party, “situations may well arise where constructive possession is so clear or the relinquishment of possession is so temporary and insignificant as to leave the personal compulsions on the accused substantially intact.”
The Supreme Court itself has provided little guidance, defining the idea less in terms of what it is than of what it is not.
Couch
itself mentioned constructive possession only as a distinguishable situation while holding that the transfer of documents to attorneys in that case did
not
qualify.
See
Courts have rarely held constructive possession analysis applicable, even in situations where strong arguments could be made that such possession was retained.
*1132
For example, the Ninth Circuit rejеcted the analysis where a suspended police chief sought to resist a subpoena
duces tecum
issued to the acting chief for papers in the custody and possession of the police department.
See In re Grand Jury Subpoena (Maltby),
In
In re Grand Jury Empanelled February 14, 1978 (Colucci),
In
Horowitz,
we declined to use the
Couch
exception to shield personal tax records in the actual possession of an accountant who had complete access to them.
We are aware of only one case that has relied on
Couch
to allow an owner of documents to invoke Fifth Amendment rights to quash a subpoena directed to a third party. In
In re Grand Jury Subpoena (Kent),
[the owner] never delivered possession, custody, or control of his records to [the comptroller] or anyone else. [The comptroller] was never delegated the exclusive responsibility for preparation and custody of the subpoenaed records.
Id. (emphasis added). Under the circumstances, the court held that to honor the subpoena on the comptroller would effectively compel the proprietor. Id. at 969.
The interpretation of “constructive possession” implicit in these cases squares with Judge Friendly’s observation that “it seems highly unlikely that [the
Couch
Court] was viewing the term as broadly as courts hаve done in other contexts.”
Horowitz,
This conclusion finds support in Roe’s grand jury testimony that he alone maintained the records and kept them within or immediately outside of his own office. To the extent possible short of removing the books from the premises, Roe had virtually exclusive responsibility for them. Even if responsibility for these duties were less completely committed to Roe, the Does’ relatively minimal contact with the documents would tip the scales against them. Roe’s grand jury testimony leaves the unmistakable impression that the Does had no more than occasional and casual contact with the materials in question. Indeed, they may never have seen the separate ledger books that Rоe maintained for each of their checking accounts. See J.App. at 119-22. Roe’s subsequent affidavit about his duties, though artfully drafted, does not counter this impression. It is simply impossible to reconcile with Roe’s testimony the Does’ contention that they merely afforded Roe “access” to the documents, Br. of Appellants at 20, or that they did no more than “allo[w] [Roe] to use some of those documents under their direct supervision,” id. at 21. The mere presence of the documents within the Does’ office suite does not place them within their constructive possession to the extent necessary to leave compulsion upon them “substantially intact” in the sense contemplated by Couch. Whatever the degree and nature of “constructive possession” necessary to turn a subpoena duces tecum on an employee into compulsion of the employer, we are satisfied that the facts of this case do not amount to an infringement of the Does’ Fifth Amendment rights.
The Does cite us to language extolling the personal integrity interests protected by the Fifth Amendment in arguing that our analysis should defer to the “private” nature of the papers and offices in issue. But the operative facts hеre revolve around Roe’s relation to the documents and the concomitant lack of compulsion on the Does. Even if “there are certain documents no person ought to be compelled to produce at the Government’s request,”
Fisher,
III. The Fourth Amendment Claim
The Does argue that the subpoena to Roe violates the Fourth Amendment because it requires him to conduct a search of their offices to find responsive dоcuments. This argument is meritless.
Appellants are correct in observing that possible Fourth Amendment defects in a subpoena must be analyzed on a case-by-case basis,
see United States v. Lartey,
The record before us furthermore gives no hint that any unusual circumstance in this case should change our reading of the subpoena. We have already observed that Roe had sufficient custody of, and knew where to find, at least some material responsive to the second subpoena. If he did not know the location of other documents, then ipso facto they can hardly have been within his custody or control and hence were not within the scope of the subpoena. 2 It defies common sense to contend that he should not be compelled to produce documents concededly within the scope of the subpoena because there are other non-responsive documents in the suite or because non-resрonsive and responsive materials are “commingled” in the office. Despite appellants’ indignant protestations to the contrary, we see nothing in the record to suggest that Roe would have to examine material not within his custody or control to determine what is within the scope of the second subpoena.
CONCLUSION
We have considered appellants’ other contentions and find them to be without merit. The order appealed frоm is affirmed in all respects.
Notes
. For purposes of this opinion we refer to the location of the documents in the present tense. Counsel for appellants have apparently secured these materials and they are no longer in the office. However, it is conceded on all sides that the relevant state of affairs concerning the location, custody and possession of the documents is that which existed when Roe was served with the subpoena,
see Couch v. United States,
. We note that the first subpoena was much more general than the second. Our analysis is restricted to the more specific second subpoena that is the subject of the district court’s decision. To the extent that appellants characterize "the subpoena” as requiring a search, it is conceivable that they are thinking of the first one. That subpoena is, of course, not before this Court.
