This is an appeal by Harold Manner and the Metabolic Research Foundation (of which Manner is president) from an order of the district judge made under authority of 28 U.S.C. § 1826 holding the appellants in civil contempt for refusing to obey a grand jury subpoena commanding them to produce “any and all documents concerning or related to persons seeking referral or treatment from” either of the appellants, and directing that Manner be imprisoned until he obeys the subpoena. (Manner has been admitted to bail pending disposition of this appeal; no sanction was imposed on Metabolic Research Foundation for its contempt.) The grand jury is investigating alleged fraudulent sale of products such as laetrile in violation of federal law, and the appellants are targets of the investigation.
An initial question that we are obligated to consider although it has. not been raised is whether the district judge’s contempt order is appealable. Although much criticized, the rule of
Doyle v. London Guarantee & Accident Co.,
Fortunately, the logic of
Doyle
has not been pressed quite so far. In
Cobbledick v. United States,
The only thing that makes the passage less than conclusive authority for the ap-pealability of the contempt judgment in the present case is that, in the two cases the Court cited for the proposition that a judgment of contempt for disobeying a grand jury subpoena is appealable, the appellant had sought a writ of habeas corpus under 28 U.S.C. § 2241(c)(1) (“in custody under ... the authority of the United States”), and was appealing from the denial of the writ as well as from the judgment of civil contempt. See
Wilson v. United States,
From these materials an argument could be constructed that the rule of Doyle v. United States applies to grand jury witnesses and thus bars appeals by them from orders of civil contempt unless they seek and are denied habeas corpus, such denial being an unproblematic final decision for purposes of 28 U.S.C. § 1291. But it would be a feeble argument. The language and legislative history of section 1826(b)— all but the citation to Giancana — suggest that Congress assumed that civil contempt orders were appealable by recalcitrant grand jury witnesses whether or not they bothered to ask for habeas corpus; and since the final-judgment rule of 28 U.S.C. § 1291 is not constitutionally compelled, any assumption on which Congress built section 1826(b) supersedes any contrary implications of Doyle. More important, it would be the quintessence of pointless formality to require a witness adjudged in civil contempt to file a habeas corpus petition, certain to be denied, as a condition precedent to appealing to us, and a formality with which Congress could not have wanted the appellate process to be encumbered; Congress ordained maximum expedition of the process, by requiring that the appeal be decided within 30 days after the notice of appeal is filed.
We conclude that we have jurisdiction of this appeal, and come to the merits, which require us to decide whether the district judge in ordering production struck a reasonable balance between the grand jury’s need for the documents sought and the burden on the witness of producing them. See, e.g.,
In re Petroleum Products Antitrust Litigation,
The appellants do not claim that production of the documents sought would be burdensome in the usual sense of costly. Rather, by calling the persons who pay for the referral and other services rendered by the Foundation “members,” and by describ
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ing the treatments that the Foundation promotes — which involve the ingestion of laetrile and vitamins to treat cancer and other diseases — as medically “unorthodox,” the Foundation seeks to wrap itself in the mantle of cases such as
NAACP v. Alabama,
As an aside, we note that while we have expedited the appeal in order to be able to decide it within 30 days of the filing of the notice of appeal, as required by 28 U.S.C. § 1826(b), we agree with the other circuits that have considered the question that where, as in this case, the appellants are free on bond (Manner) or not a natural person (the Foundation), the 30-day limitation is not jurisdictional, its basic objective being to minimize the time during which a recalcitrant witness is languishing in jail awaiting the decision of his appeal. See, e.g.,
In re Rosahn,
The judgment of contempt is AFFIRMED.
