McPHAUL v. UNITED STATES.
No. 33.
Supreme Court of the United States
Argued October 13, 1960. Decided November 14, 1960.
364 U.S. 372
Daniel M. Friedman argued the cause for the United States. With him on the brief were Solicitor General Rankin, Assistant Attorney General Yeagley, Kevin T. Maroney, George B. Searls and Lee B. Anderson.
We here review petitioner‘s conviction under
The relevant evidence was as follows. Having knowledge that the Civil Rights Congress had been declared a subversive organization by the Attorney General—indeed, having itself earlier found that organization to be a subversive one—and having reason to believe that petitioner
Upon the opening of the hearings before the Subcommittee at Detroit on February 26, 1952, the chairman made a public statement, saying, among other things, that earlier Committee hearings had “disclosed a concentration of Communist effort in certain defense areas of the country,” consisting in part of keeping “the national organization of the Communist Party and the international Communist movemеnt fully advised of industrial potentialities” in such areas, and that “[t]here is no area of greater importance to the Nation as a whole, both in time of peace and in time of war, than the general area of Detroit,” and he concluded with the statement that: “The purpose of this investigation is to determine first, whether there has been Communist activity in this vital defense area, and if so, the nature, extent, character and objects thereof.”
Accompanied by counsel, petitioner appeared before the Subcommittee at the time and place commanded by the subpoena, and the following colloquy occurred:
“Mr. WOOD [the chairman]: Mr. McPhaul, the committee has heretofore served upon you a sub-
poena duces tecum, to produce certain records and documents. Are you prepared to respond to that subpoena? . . .
“Mr. WOOD: . . . Will you answer my question, Mr. McPhaul. Are you prepared to produce the documents and papers that have been called upon fоr you to produce under the subpoena?
“Mr. MCPHAUL: Mr. Wood, I refuse to answer this or any question which deals with the possession or custody of the books and records called for in the subpoena. I claim my privilege under the fifth amendment of the Constitution.
“Mr. TAVENNER [Committee counsel]: I would like to ask the witness if he has any other reason for refusing to produce the documents called for in the subpoena?
“Mr. WOOD: In order to complete the record, Mr. McPhaul is it in response to this subpoena that has just been read that you now decline, for the reason you have stated, to produce the documents and books and records therein called for?
“Mr. MCPHAUL: I have stated the reasons, for the record.
“Mr. WOOD: Is it in response to this subpoena that you refuse to answer?
“Mr. MCPHAUL: That is my answer that I have just given.
“Mr. WOOD: To this subpoena?
“Mr. MCPHAUL: To that subpoena; yes.”
“Mr. TAVENNER: The question is as to whether or not you are refusing to produce the records directed to be produced under the subpoena?
“Mr. MCPHAUL: My answer to that is, I refuse to answer this or any questions which deal with possession or custody of the books and records called for in this subpoena. I claim my privilege under the fifth amendment of the United States Constitution.
“Mr. TAVENNER: My question to you was not answered by that statement, in my judgment. My question was whether or not you are refusing to produce the records which you were directed to produce under this subpoena?
“Mr. MCPHAUL: I have answered it in this statement.
“Mr. TAVENNER: No sir. You have stated that you refuse to answer any questions pertaining to them. I have not asked you a question that pertains to them. I have asked you to produce the records. Now, will you produce them?
“Mr. MCPHAUL: I will not.”
Following receipt of the Subcommittee‘s report of these occurrences, the House certified the matter to the United States Attorney for the Eastern District of Michigan for initiation of contempt proceedings against petitioner, and he was indicted on July 29, 1954. After denial of his motion to dismiss the indictment,3 petitioner entered a
Petitioner offered no evidence, but moved for a directed verdict of acquittal substantially on the grounds asserted in his motion to dismiss the indictment (see note 3) and on the further grounds that the Government had failed to adduce any evidence sufficient to show that the records called for by the subpoena were in existence and in petitioner‘s possession or control at the time he was served with the subpoena or that they were pertinent to the Subcommittee‘s inquiry. The motion was denied, and thereupon petitioner requested the court to charge the jury, in substance, that unless they found from the evidence and beyond a reasonable doubt that the records called for by the subpoena were in existence and in petitioner‘s custody or сontrol at the time the subpoena was served upon him, they should find him not guilty. The court refused that
The jury found petitioner guilty, and he was fined the sum of $500 and sentenced to imprisonment for a period of nine months. The Court of Appeals affirmed, 272 F. 2d 627, and we granted certiorari, 362 U. S. 917.
Petitioner‘s principal contentions here are that there was no evidence showing that the records called for by the subpoena were in existence or, if it may be said that there was, that those records were in petitioner‘s possession or subject to his control, and the trial court therefore should have sustained his motion fоr a directed verdict of acquittal or, at the minimum, should have submitted those matters to the jury for resolution.
It is of course true that “[a] court will not imprison a witness for failure to produce documents which he does not have, unless he is responsible for their unavailability, cf. Jurney v. MacCracken, [294 U. S. 125], or is impeding justice by not explaining what happened to them, United States v. Goldstein, 105 F. 2d 150 (1939),” United States v. Bryan, 339 U. S. 323, 330-331. But, so far as the record shows, petitioner has never claimed—either before the Subcommittee, the District Court, or the Court of Appeals, and he does not claim here—that the rеcords called for by the subpoena did not exist or that they were not in his possession or subject to his control. Rather, his claim, first raised at his contempt trial more than two years after his appearance before the Subcommittee, is that the Government failed to show that he could have produced the records before the Subcommittee,
We think the Court‘s decision in United States v. Bryan, 339 U. S. 323, is highly relevant to these questions.5 For it is as true here as it was there, that “if [petitioner] had legitimate reasons for failing to produce the records of the association, a decent respect for the House of Representatives, by whose authority the subpoenas issued, would have required that [he] state [his] reasons for noncompliance upon the return of the writ.” Id., at 332. Such a statement would have given the Subcommittee an opportunity to avoid the blocking of its inquiry by taking other appropriate steps to obtain the records. “To deny the Committee the opportunity to consider the objection or remedy it is in itself a contempt of its authority and an obstruction of its processes. See Bevan v. Krieger, 289 U. S. 459, 464-465 (1933).” His failure to make any such statement was “a patent evasion of the duty of one summoned to produce papers before a congressional committee [, and] cannot be condoned.” Id., at 333.
The Government‘s proof at the trial thus established a prima facie case of willful failure to comply with the subpoena. The evidence of the Subcommittee‘s reasonable basis for believing that the petitioner could produce the records in question, coupled with the evidencе of his failure even to suggest to the Subcommittee his inability to produce those records, clearly supported an inference that he could have produced them. The burden then shifted to the petitioner to present some evidence to explain or justify his refusal. Morrison v. California, 291 U. S. 82, 88-89. But he elected not to present any evidence. In these circumstances, there was no factual issue, respecting the existence of the records or his ability to produce them, for resolution by the jury.
Inasmuch as petitioner neither advised the Subcommittee that he was unable to produce the reсords nor attempted to introduce any evidence at his contempt trial of his inability to produce them, we hold that the trial court was justified in concluding and in charging the jury that the records called for by the subpoena were in existence and under petitioner‘s control at the time the subpoena was served upon him.
Petitioner next contends that the evidence was not sufficient to show that the records called for by the subpoena were pertinent to the inquiry. In the first place, petitioner made no objection to the subpoena before the Subcommittee on the ground of pertinency, see Barenblatt v. United States, 360 U. S. 109, 123, but we need not
Finally, petitioner contends that the subpoena was so broad as to constitute an unreasonable search and seizure in violation of the Fourth Amendment of the Constitution. “[A]dequacy or exсess in the breadth of the subpoena are matters variable in relation to the nature, purposes and scope of the inquiry,” Oklahoma Press Publishing Co. v. Walling, supra, at 209. The Subcommittee‘s inquiry here was a relatively broad one—whether “there has been Communist activity in this vital defense area [Detroit], and if so, the nature, extent, character and objects thereof“—and the permissible scope of materials that could reasonably be sought was necessarily equally broad.
It is not reasonable to suppose that the Subcommittee knew precisely what books and records were kept by the Civil Rights Congress, and therefore the subpoena could only “specif[y] . . . with reasonable particularity, the subjects to which the documents . . . relate,” Brown v. United States, 276 U. S. 134, 143. The call of the subpoena for “all records, correspondence and memoranda” of the Civil Rights Congress relating to the three specified subjects describes them “with all of the particularity the nature of the inquiry and the [Subcommittee‘s] situation would permit,” Oklahoma Press Publishing Co. v. Walling, supra, at 210, n. 48. “[T]he description сontained in the subpoena was sufficient to enable [petitioner] to know what particular documents were required and to select them accordingly,” Brown v. United States, supra, at 143. If petitioner was in doubt as to what records were required by the subpoena, or found it unduly burdensome, or found it to call for records unrelated to the inquiry, he could and should have so advised the Subcommittee, where the defect, if any, “could easily have been remedied,” United States v. Bryan, supra, at 333. This subpoena was
Under thеse circumstances, we cannot say that the breadth of the subpoena was such as to violate the Fourth Amendment.
Affirmed.
Dissenting opinion of MR. JUSTICE DOUGLAS, with whom THE CHIEF JUSTICE, MR. JUSTICE BLACK and MR. JUSTICE BRENNAN concur, announced by MR. JUSTICE BLACK.
Today‘s decision marks such a departure from the accepted procedure designed to protect accused people from public passion and overbearing officials that I dissent.
The Act under which petitioner goes to prison permits conviction only if he “willfully makes default” as a witness before a congressiоnal Committee.
“If you find from the evidence in this case, and beyond a reasonable doubt, that the defendant appeared before the said subcommittee, and then refused or failed to make any explanation with respect to the existence of the records designated in the subpoena, or with respect to whether or not such records were under his possession or control, I charge you that you may not consider the questions of whether the records and documents designated in the subpoena were actually in existence or under the possession or control of the defendant, because if the defendant had legitimate reasons for failing to produce the said records, he should have stated his rеasons for non-compliance with the subpoena when he appeared before the said subcommittee.
“I also charge you that the defendant is not excused from compliance with or producing the records designated in the subpoena merely because he is not designated as an officer or agent of the Civil Rights Congress therein; and neither is the defendant excused from such compliance with the said subpoena merely because of any lack of proof of any conneсtion between the defendant and the Civil Rights Congress.”
This theory, now sustained by the Court, permits conviction without any evidence of any “willful” default. The presumption of innocence, deep in our criminal law, has been one of our most important safeguards against oppression. So far as I can find, this is the first instance where we have dispensed with it. We do so today by shifting the burden to a witness to show that he is not an officer or agent of the organization in question and that he is not able to produce the documents, without requiring
Failure of a defendant to explain why he does not produce documents may be sufficient under the cases, where it has first been shown that he has a connection with them. See United States v. Fleischman, supra, 360-363; Nilva v. United States, 352 U. S. 385, 392. But failure to explain, where no proof of the defendant‘s connection with the documents is shown, is like taking his action in standing mute as a confession of guilt. Once that was the rule. See In re Smith, 13 F. 25, 26-27; Beale, Criminal Plead-
Today we take a step backward. We allow a man to go to prison for doing no more, so far as this record reveals, than challenging the right of a Committee to ask him to produce documents. The Congress had the right to get these documents from someone. But, when it сomes to criminal prosecutions, the Government must turn square corners. If Congress desires to have the judiciary adjudge a man guilty for failure to produce documents, the prosecution should be required to prove that the man whom we send to prison had the power to produce them.
