ORDER REGARDING FIFTH AMENDMENT RIGHTS OF CORPORATE ENTITIES
Defendants Center for Medical Progress (“CMP”) and Biomax Procurement Services (“Biomax”) (collectively, “defendants”) seek to assert Fifth Amendment rights in response to plaintiff National Abortion Federation’s (“NAF”) discovery requests. At issue is whether corporate entities may assert Fifth Amendment rights against self-incrimination on the basis that their opponent has alleged that they are sham “alter ego” corporations that have no existence separate from an individual or individuals. Although defendants do not themselves contend that they are alter egos, they argue that NAF’s allegations conclusively establish that they may invoke the Fifth Amendment. I heard argument on this issue on September 18, 2015.
This is not a close question. Defendants would have me adopt NAF’s allegations in the Complaint that defendants are alter ego corporations to conclude that they may invoke the Fifth Amendment, while at the
BACKGROUND
CMP is registered with the Registry of Charitable Trusts of the Office of the California Attorney General. See Dkt. No. 113-2. All corporations, associations, and trustees holding assets for charitable purposes or doing business in California are required to register with the Registry of Charitable Trusts. Id. at 2. On its registration form, CMP listed three directors: defendant Daleiden, defendant Newman, and Albin Rhomberg, who is not a party to this litigation. Id. at 3. It described its primary activity as “monitor[ing] and reporting] on medical ethics and advances.” Id. It continued, “[t]he Center will receive monetary donations from the public to support its work.” Id. CMP listed the date it first received assets as March 29, 2013. Id. The registration was received by the Registry of Charitable Trusts on April 30, 2013. Id. at 2.
CMP is incorporated as a “Nonprofit Public Benefit Corporation” in California. See Id. at 5. It again expressed its purpose as “to monitor and report on medical ethics and advances.” Id. The articles of incorporation state that Nichole Surkala is CMP’s agent for service of process. Id. Daleiden is recorded as the incorporator. Id. In order to obtain tax-exempt status in California, he certified, among other things, that “[n]o substantial part of the activities of this corporation shall consist of carrying on propaganda, or otherwise attempting to influence legislation, and this corporation shall not participate or intervene in any political campaign.” Id.
CMP has bylaws that affirm that it is a nonprofit public benefit corporation. Id. at 7. It states that it is nonpartisan and that no substantial part of its activities consists of attempting to influence legislation. Id. The bylaws also include corporate formalities such as instructions on who may be a Director and how to fill vacancies, when and where meetings shall be held, how the Board may take actions, and how officers shall be compensated. Id. at 7-11. CMP stated that most of its intellectual property would be available for free online. Dkt. No. 113-4 at 33.
CMP filed for tax exempt status with the Internal Revenue Service (“IRS”) in April of 2013. Id. at 1. Daleiden is listed as the organization’s contact on the application. Id. at 4. This form asserts that CMP is a corporation organized for charitable purposes. Id. at 5. It lists Daleiden as CEO, earning $30,000 in annual compensation, Rhomberg as CFO with no compensation, and Newman as Secretary with no compensation. Id. Again, CMP indicated that it was not involved in political campaigns and did not seek to influence legislation. Id. at 8. It stated that it has intellectual property in the form of copyrights, and included information about its financial data. Id. at 9,12-15. The IRS approved CMP’s application for tax exempt status on December 30, 2013. Dkt. No. 113-5.
The front page of CMP’s website requests citizens to “take action” by “sign[ing] our petition [to] ask your representative for Congress to investigate the
Biomax is listed as a limited liability company with the California Secretary of State. Dkt. No. 113-10.
DISCUSSION
I. CORPORATE ENTITIES MAY NOT ASSERT THE FIFTH AMENDMENT, EVEN IF THEY ARE ALTER EGOS
In resolving whether Biomax and CMP may invoke the Fifth Amendment, I need not consider whether they are (or appear to be) alter egos of Daleiden or others. Case law is dispositive that the corporate defendants may not assert Fifth Amendment rights, regardless of whether they are alter egos of individuals who may be incriminated.
Under the collective entity rule, courts “have long recognized that, for the purposes of the Fifth Amendment, corporations. and other collective entities are treated differently from individuals.” Braswell v. United States,
In Wilson v. United States, the court held that the Fifth Amendment does not protect corporate records even when they were personally incriminating.
In United States v. Doe, the court held that the owner of a sole proprietorship could not be compelled to produce the proprietorship’s business records because the act of production would be incriminating.
In Bellis v. United States, one of three partners in a law firm was served with a subpoena directing him to produce partnership records.
The leading case discussed by the parties, Braswell v. United States, was decided in 1988. The petitioner operated two active corporations that maintained their status with the State of Mississippi, filed corporate tax returns, and kept corporate books and records throughout the lawsuit.
Braswell did not argue that his corporations could assert the Fifth Amendment, and the court noted the baselessness of any such argument. Id. at 102,
The court discussed the prior decisions that developed the collective entity doctrine in detail. It distinguished Doe by stressing that “petitioner has operated his business through the corporate form.” Id. at 104,
In all of these cases, the individual asserting Fifth Amendment rights could have made a plausible argument that he was the alter ego of the collective entity, or at least exhibited some of the characteristics considered in an alter ego analysis. And as NAF points out, many lower courts have interpreted Supreme Court precedent to prohibit a corporate entity from asserting Fifth Amendment protections on the basis that it is an alter ego of an individual. See, e.g., United States v. Rosenstein,
From this long line of case law, it is clear that the records of a collective entity may not be protected by the Fifth Amendment. Although an individual custodian’s act of producing records may implicate that person’s Fifth Amendment rights in certain limited circumstances, the contents of the records are never privileged.
The defendants might have a more compelling argument if the requested documents appeared to be personal in nature; however, even this argument would likely be unpersuasive. See Wilson,
Defendants seek to distinguish all of this case law on the bare fact that here, the plaintiff, and not the defendant resisting discovery, raised the alter ego theory. This fact is immaterial. The reasoning of the cases above did not focus on who asserted the alter ego theory.
The collective entity rule recognizes the importance of allowing government investigations of and accountability for collective entities, and that corporate assertion of Fifth Amendment rights would allow those who use the corporate form to escape liability for crime. This purpose would be frustrated if the rule did not apply where an entity was fraudulent or otherwise an “alter ego.” As the Court wrote in Beilis:
In view of the inescapable fact that an artificial entity can only act to produce its records through its individual officers or agents, recognition of the individual’s claim of privilege with respect to the financial records of the organization would substantially undermine the unchallenged rule that the organization itself is not entitled to claim any Fifth Amendment privilege, and largely frustrate legitimate governmental regulation of such organizations.
This reasoning may apply here as well. To obtain tax exempt status as a nonprofit public benefit corporation, CMP asserted that it was not incorporated for the purpose of carrying on propaganda or attempting to influence legislation. NAF asserts a colorable argument that the corporate defendants have violated, and continue to violate, numerous California laws and that their purpose was to smear NAF and its members, ostensibly for the
For the reasons set forth above, the corporate defendants’ arguments that they should be treated as alter egos do not impact my Fifth Amendment analysis.
II. NAF’S ALLEGATION IN THE COMPLAINT THAT DEFENDANTS ARE SHAM CORPORATIONS IS NOT A JUDICIAL ADMISSION
The crux of defendants’ argument is that because NAF alleged in the Complaint that CMP and Biomax are alter egos of the corporate entities, this issue is conclusively established for the purposes of the Fifth Amendment and renders the above body of case law inapplicable. As discussed, this argument has no bearing on the collective entity doctrine. But it is also important to clarify that defendants’ argument relies on a flawed interpretation of the judicial admissions doctrine.
The purpose of the doctrine of judicial admissions is to “act[ ] as a substitute for evidence in that it does away with the need for evidence in regard to the subject matter of the judicial admission.” State Farm Mut. Auto. Ins. Co. v. Worthington,
A judicial admission by NAF that CMP and Biomax are sham corporations and alter egos of the individual defendants would not have the effect that defendants claim it would. The corporate defendants have asserted the Fifth Amendment in this case; it is their burden to establish that they may do so. See United States v. Brown,
Defendants cite American Title Insurance Co. v. Lacelaw Corp. for the principle that “stipulations and admissions in the pleadings are generally binding on the parties and the Court.”
Trial courts have discretion to accept or reject a judicial admission. Singer v. State Farm Mut. Auto. Ins. Co.,
For these reasons, NAF’s allegations in the Complaint that CMP and Biomax are alter egos do not serve as a judicial admission binding on me for the purposes of whether those entities may assert Fifth Amendment rights.
III. THE “BRASWELL EXCEPTION” IS INAPPOSITE
The parties spend a substantial amount of time discussing whether a potential exception identified in Braswell would apply in this case. I briefly address this issue in the interests of future clarity. In a footnote, the Braswell court stated that “[w]e leave open the.question whether the agency rationale supports compelling a custodian to produce corporate records when the custodian is able to establish, by showing for example that he is the sole employee and officer of the corporation, that the jury would inevitably conclude that he produced the records.” Braswell,
This footnote is not applicable in this case. As discussed above, Braswell discussed the Fifth Amendment rights of a
Although defendants contend that this is “a clear example of a situation in which a jury would inevitably conclude that [the corporate officer] produced the records,” see Dkt. No. 103 at 6, they ignore the fact that the corporate defendants, and not specific corporate officers, have been served with the discovery requests. Defendants also improperly assume that Daleiden is the corporate officer who will produce the records. There are other Board members, and according to the Complaint other individuals who represented that they worked with CMP and Biomax who could presumably produce the corporate records. Compl. ¶¶ 18-20 (Dkt. No. 1). Defendants have not cited any cases where all employees of a multiple-person corporation successfully asserted the Fifth Amendment and the corporation did not have to respond to lawful subpoenas or other requests for production. To the extent that defendants assert that there is no corporate custodian who could produce the records, they are foreclosed by the precedent described above. See In re Two Grand Jury Subpoenae Duces Tecum,
In addition, Daleiden would be not be protected by the Braswell exception if he were compelled to produce the information. Daleiden is not the “sole employee and officer of the corporation.” Braswell,
Finally, and dispositively, there is “no authority showing that any court, let alone a controlling court, has actually applied the potential Braswell exception.” United States v. Milligan,
Biomax and CMP do not have any Fifth Amendment rights and may not invoke the Fifth Amendment in this case.
IT IS SO ORDERED.
Notes
. This Order shall not be construed to conflict with the discovery stay currently imposed by the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals pending defendants' Petition for Writ of Mandamus.
. The parties dispute whether the determination of a corporation as an "alter ego” is factual in nature. Although this point is moot, many courts treat this question as one of fact. Duggan v. Hobbs,
. I briefly note that NAF alleged that CMP and Biomax were alter egos presumably for the purpose of liability and piercing the corporate veil. This is an entirely separate issue
. I am not persuaded by defendants’ argument at the hearing that NAF raised the Fifth Amendment issue by requesting production of certain documents. Although NAF’s discovery requests led to the corporate assertions of the Fifth Amendment, and NAF would benefit from corporate treatment in this context, this is not the same as NAF raising the issue or bearing the burden of establishing its truth or falsity.
