This is an appeal from a judgment of contempt of the grand jury upon the refusal of James R. Coson to produce corporate records in response to grand jury subpoena. We affirm.
The district court findings, which are supported by the record, establish all the facts necessary to support the conviction. The federal grand jury in Fresno, California, has been investigating possible criminal violation of the internal revenue laws by Co-son, Fresno Brass Works, Catalina Brass Company, Inc., and others. Coson was duly served with a valid subpoena describing the demanded records, more than two weeks before his scheduled appearance before the grand jury. He refused to produce the records, was cited into the District Court, persisted in his refusal, and was found in contempt.
Coson has been consistent in his refusal to produce the records of the corporations, now defunct, of which he was owner and managing agent. In
United States v. Coson,
Coson also argues that service of the subpoena by an agent of I.R.S. was defective because the agent was “a real party in interest.” The fact that the agent works for the Government, or even that he is working on some phases of the pending investigation does not make him a real party in interest. Such an agent is specifically authorized to serve subpoenas. 26 U.S.C. § 7608(b)(2)(A).
Coson claims Fifth Amendment protection for the subpoenaed records. Corporate business records are not so protected. Bel
lis v. United States,
Substantial brief space was occupied with an interesting speculation about the potential evils of grand jury investigations that might produce evidence which might improperly find its way into the hands of governmental agencies for use in future hypothetical civil litigation. It is sufficient to observe that this point can be argued when and if a timely motion to suppress evidence is made in a civil case.
A district court in a factual situation somewhat comparable to that of this case refused a protective order that was sought to prohibit I.R.S. agents from reviewing records that had been subpoenaed by the grand jury.
In Re Grand Jury Investigation William H. Pflaumer & Sons, Inc.,
Finally, Coson relies upon
United States v. Alter,
The wiretap cases present special problems in statutory and Fourth Amendment construction, and are not particularly instructive when employed in a general attack on grand jury subpoenas at large. More instructive are such cases as
United States v. Calandra,
The judgment of contempt is affirmed. The balance of the stay of execution granted in the district court will permit Coson to purge himself of his contempt or surrender to the marshal as he chooses. The mandate will issue now.
