Opinion for the Court filed by Circuit Judge SENTELLE.
In this case, appellant Walter Dobbs challenges a district court decision enforcing a subpoena against him. Because appellant has complied with the subpoena, there is no live controversy before this Court, and we find the appeal to be moot.
I. Background
In the course of investigating Gold River Savings Bank, the Office of Thrift Supervision of the Department of the Treasury (“OTS”) issued a subpoena duces tecum against appellant Dobbs, requiring him to provide certain documents and to appear for a deposition in Fair Oaks, California. Dobbs filed a motion with OTS to quash the subpoena, but OTS denied the motion. Dobbs then provided to OTS the documents requested under the subpoena, and agreed to be deposed in Fair Oaks.
OTS later notified Dobbs’s counsel that the deposition would be held in San Francisco, California, rather than in Fair Oaks. When Dobbs objected to this change, OTS sought enforcement of the subpoena in the United States District Court for the District of Columbia. The district court rejected Dobbs’s arguments that the court lacked both subject matter and in person-am jurisdiction, and granted OTS’s petition to enforce the subpoena. Following this proceeding, Dobbs complied with the OTS subpoena. Dobbs now appeals the district court’s enforcement decision to this Court.
II. Discussion
A subpoena is not an appealable final order.
See Cobbledick v. United States,
Appellant Dobbs is appealing such an enforcement decision in the present case. However, between the time of the district court decision and this appeal, Dobbs complied with the subpoena, appearing for the requested deposition in San Francisco, California. Numerous courts have held that an appeal from enforcement of a subpoena becomes moot once the party has complied with the subpoena.
See, e.g., United States v. Patmon,
Dobbs argues that the case before us is not moot because he remains subject to the subpoena. According to Dobbs, this means that OTS may seek future enforcement of the subpoena at any time. Appellant’s speculative concern about future government action that may never even occur is insufficient to create a concrete present controversy. Moreover, because Dobbs will have an opportunity to challenge the subpoena should OTS seek future enforcement, his case fails to meet the exception from the mootness doctrine for cases “capable of repetition yet evading review.”
See EEOC v. St. Regis Paper Co.-Kraft Div.,
Dobbs argues, in addition, that a live controversy remains regarding the use of the testimony obtained through the subpoena. Even though he has provided testimony to OTS, he argues that this Court could grant relief from the subpoena by sealing the deposition record against future use. Specifically, Dobbs fears that Fifth Amendment claims he made during the deposition will be used to support an adverse inference against him in a future administrative proceeding under section 8(e) of the Federal Deposit Insurance Act. 12 U.S.C. § 1818(e).
Again, however, Dobbs is seeking this Court’s protection from future OTS action that may never occur. The Seventh Circuit dealt with a similar case in
United States v. Kis,
This case would present a different issue were Dobbs requesting the government to return documents he had provided, rather than merely to seal his testimony. This Court held in
FTC v. Browning,
The Third Circuit has extended this reasoning, allowing materials to be sealed against future use without considering the issue of custody. For example, in
Gluck v. United States,
The Third Circuit relied on its earlier decision in
United States v. Friedman,
[i]f the taxpayers were to prevail in their contention that all summonses were illegal because they were issued solely to gather evidence for use in a criminal prosecution, then the records acquired from Friedman would have been obtained unlawfully. Such a ruling could affect the possible use of these records in any subsequent criminal or civil proceeding brought against the taxpayers.
Friedman,
However, neither Gluck nor Friedman explains why enforcement of an administrative subpoena should differ from the enforcement of a litigation subpoena. In the litigation context, the party subject to a subpoena may either refuse to comply, and subsequently appeal the ensuing contempt order, or may comply, and raise the issue as an error on appeal from the final action. There is no indication why this process does not apply in the administrative context. If information is wrongly obtained through an administrative subpoena and used in a subsequent civil or criminal proceeding, the subpoenaed party remains free to challenge the use of the information in the appeal from that proceeding.
In contrast, appellant’s present claim requires this Court to take action upon the purely speculative assumption that the agency will pursue future use of the subpoenaed testimony. In the case of records, a party may challenge a subpoena in an effort to retrieve records the government obtained through the subpoena. In such a case, there remains a live controversy over the custody of the records. However, a party cannot retrieve testimony once it is given; the party can only ask that the testimony be sealed against future use. In that event, such a challenge would be ripe only at the time when that future use is a real, not a speculative, possibility.
See Baldridge,
Because appellant seeks only to seal his testimony against future use, we find that his appeal became moot upon his compliance with the district court’s order enforcing the subpoena.
Cf. United States v. Kersting,
III. Conclusion
Because there is no live controversy before this Court, we can provide no legal relief to the parties at this time. We therefore dismiss 1 this appeal as moot.
It is so ordered.
Notes
. As neither party has requested it, we do not vacate the district court’s judgment.
Cf. United States v. Munsingwear,
