The district court has denied the petition of Royal G. Bouschor for an order (a) discharging an earlier ex parte order which granted the government’s application for the enforcement of an Internal Revenue Service summons served upon Bouschor and (b) quashing that summons.
The appellant is a Duluth lawyer. For over twenty years he has represented the taxpayer A. G. O’Brien, proprietor of a plumbing and heating company. Until the present case developed, however, he had done no tax work, for this client. N. A. Stillman, a certified public accountant of Duluth in partnership with Oscar Oase, was employed by O’Brien in 1955 “principally for the purpose of taking care of his federal and state income tax matters”. Stillman prepared O’Brien’s federal and state returns for the taxable-calendar years 1955-1959 inclusive. In so doing Stillman reviewed O’Brien’s books and records and prepared work sheets.
The chronology is pertinent:
a. Internal Revenue Agent Kaufer audited O’Brien’s income tax returns for 1953-1955 inclusive. He conferred with the taxpayer in December 1955 and examined some canceled checks and bank statements. He also saw Stillman and reviewed the work papers on several occasions. He did not otherwise probe beyond the work papers themselves. As a result of the Kaufer audit tax deficiencies and penalties were assessed for 1953 and 1954. These were paid. The adjustment for 1954 resulted in an over-assessment for 1955 and a refund.
b. Internal Revenue Agent Falconer audited the O’Brien returns for 1956-1959 inclusive. He discussed these with the taxpayer but saw no files or records. He also discussed the returns several times with Stillman and Oase and they even gave him an office in which to work. He reviewed the work papers for those years and saw these papers on three or four occasions. He also saw withholding and employment tax records, checked the social security breakdown and saw the check register for at least some of the years. He proposed no deficiency for 1956 but did propose one for 1957. It was paid. He did not complete his audit for 1958 and 1959 because, while he was still working on it in November 1960, the file was transferred to the Intelligence Division which concerns itself with situations of suspected fraud.
c. In the fall of 1960 O’Brien consulted Bouschor concerning his federal income tax matters. Bouschor in turn consulted Stillman and Oase.
d. On December 5, 1960, Bouschor wrote these accountants stating that the taxpayer had instructed him to ask them to send him all O’Brien papers and records. O’Brien also had instructed the accountants to this effect. Stillman and Oase promptly complied with the request and delivered to Bouschor the documents they possessed and the work papers they had prepared. These have been in Bouschor’s possession continuously since that time except for one occasion in early 1961 when Oase had them for a day or two as he was preparing O’Brien’s 1960 returns, and except for their being in the possession of Bousehor’s own attorneys. Oase looked at these papers a number of times in Bouschor’s office.
e. Special Agent Kosowski conducted the continuing audit by the Intelligence Division. In February 1961 he conferred with Oase and asked for the work papers. Oase told him they had been turned over to Bouschor, that he did not know if he would get them back, and that if he did he would furnish them.
f. In June 1961 Kosowski served on the appellant Bouschor a summons to produce all work papers and other material which he had received from Oase or Stillman relating to O’Brien’s federal in *454 come tax liability for 1954 through 1959. This was stated to be pursuant to the authority of § 7602 of the Internal Revenue Code of 1954, 26 U.S.C.A. § 7602. Bouschor appeared in response to that summons and was accompanied by Oase and by attorneys representing O’Brien and Bouschor. He had the papers with him but stated that he was not going to comply with the request in the summons because the papers were privileged, because they had already been examined, because it would violate the Fifth Amendment’s privilege against self-incrimination on the part of O’Brien, and because it would violate the Fourth Amendment’s guaranty against unreasonable searches and seizures.
g. This action was then instituted. The United States attorney filed an application for the enforcement of the summons and the district court issued its ex parte order commanding Bouschor to comply. Before the return date Bouschor filed his petition to discharge that order and to quash the summons. A hearing followed. Bouschor’s petition was denied and he was directed to produce the materials specified in the earlier ex parte order.
The district court found, p. 542 of 200 F.Supp., that the documents in question were records of the taxpayer of the kind required by § 6001 of the 1954 Code. 1 It held that their examination was authorized under § 7602; that this authority to examine was not violative of either the Fourth or the Fifth Amendments; that the taxpayer could be lawfully compelled to surrender records for examination ; and that their transfer to his attorney did not give rise to the attorney-client privilege.
1. Three government’s concessions. We are met at the outset with certain concessions on the part of the government. The first is that the “summons in question was intended to obtain nothing from him [Bouschor] except the work papers, etc., prepared by the accountants, Stillman & Oase” and that it “did not direct appellant to produce the personal records of the taxpayer, O’Brien, which the accountants turned over to appellant”. The second is “that Section 6001 does not apply to the work papers of an accountant who prepares a taxpayer’s return, and that the reason upon which the District Court based its order of enforcement is incorrect”. The third is that the record establishes “rightful indefinite possession” of the work papers in Bouschor. These concessions obviously tend to simplify the issues.
2. The finality of the district court’s order. We are also met at the outset with the government’s claim that the order from which the appeal is taken “is probably interlocutory and nonappealable” under 28 U.S.C. § 1291. Because this suggestion goes to jurisdiction, it must be disposed of first.
The government’s argument here is that we are concerned with “a contempt proceeding ab initio”; that this is indicated by the language of § 7604(b) of the 1954 Code which authorizes application to a district judge “for an attachment * * * as for a contempt”; that punishment is authorized by the statute for “contempt of the summons itself, rather than contempt of any subsequent court order”; that this differentiation is justified by the legislative history, particularly as it has to do with the enactment of § 7604(b)'s original predecessor which was part of § 14 of the Revenue Act of June 30, 1864, 13 Stat. 226, and with the amendment of that section by § 9 of the Act of July 13, 1866, 14 Stat. 101, and as that history is disclosed in 65 Congressional Globe, 2440-41 and 2660-61, and in 66 Congressional Globe 2997; that if the enforcement of an Internal Revenue summons under § 7604(b) is no more than a step in a single contempt proceeding, the only final and appealable order is the one which imposes punish *455 ment; that an order which merely compels compliance is interlocutory and not appealable; and that a rule of nonappealability is consistent with the need for speed in the assessment and collection of federal taxes.
Whether the order is final and hence appealable depends, it seems, on whether it corresponds with the type of order held appealable in Ellis v. I.C.C., 1915,
This question of appealability has been presented to this court at least twice in the past although the formal opinions do not disclose that the legislative history was urged here in support of the government’s position. Over thirty years ago, in Brownson v. United States, 8 Cir., 1929,
All other courts of appeals which have touched upon the question appear, with one exception, to be in accord. O’Connor v. O’Connell, 1 Cir., 1958,
The Seventh Circuit holds otherwise. That court first announced its position in Jarecki v. Whetstone, 1951,
The government urges the Seventh Circuit cases upon us and suggests that we reconsider the reasoning in Brownson v. United States, supra. At this late date and with the last Seventh Circuit case *456 now pending in the Supreme Court, we are disinclined to do this. We reaffirm the conclusions this court reached in both Brownson and Sale and hold that the district court’s order here is a final one and is appealable.
3. The attorney-client privilege. Bouschor’s first point on the merits is that the work papers in question were privileged communications between him and his client O’Brien and that the attorney-client privilege is applicable to prevent their review by the Service.
We think the point is not well taken. We note that, concededly, (a) the (work papers were prepared by the accountants and not by the taxpayer; (b) they were in existence prior to Bouschor’s appearance in the ease as attorney for the taxpayer; and (c) they had already been reviewed by agents Kaufer and Falconer. Under these circumstances we feel it is: unnecessary to decide whether, in connection with an Internal Revenue Service investigation, the privilege is one to be determined under federal law, as the government suggests, citing Falsone v. United States, supra, 5 Cir.,
a. Clearly if the work papers were the property of the accountants in the sense that they were owned by them and not by the taxpayer or Bouschor, no claim of privilege could prevail. This court specifically so held in Sale v. United States, supra, p. 686 of 228 F.2d, where an attorney having possession of an accountant’s work papers was asserting the privilege. In accord are In re Fahey, supra, 6 Cir.,
b. In any event, in order for the privilege to be invoked, the communication must have been one between attorney and client and it must have been made in confidence. These are two among several essentials described in 8 Wigmore, Evidence, § 2292 (McNaughton Rev. 1961). More specifically,
“[I]f an unprivileged document exists before there exists an attorney-client relationship the mere delivery of the document to an attorney does not create a privilege * * *
"One of the essentials of a privileged communication is that it be confidential.” Brown v. St. Paul City Ry., supra, pp. 33-34 of 241 Minn., p. 700 of 62 N.W.2d;
Grant v. United States, 1913,
4. The Fourth Amendment and § 7605 (b). Bousehor’s argument is that he is O’Brien’s agent; that the Service had many opportunities to review the work papers; that agents Kaufer and Falconer in fact had examined those papers or most of them; that the government failed to sustain its burden under § 7605(b) of the 1954 Code, 26 U.S.C.A. § 7605(b) 3 of 'proving the necessity of a further examination; that the notice required by this statute was not given O’Brien; and that an unnecessary examination is an unreasonable search within the proscription of the Fourth Amendment.
We think the short answer, so far as § 7605(b) is concerned, is that Bouschor is not the person protected by the statute and that the work papers are not its subject. The section relates to a taxpayer and to a taxpayer’s books of account. It does not refer to a third person other than the taxpayer or to work papers prepared by accountants. The restrictions imposed by § 7605(b) therefore have no application to Bouschor and the papers the special agent desires to examine. In Hubner v. Tucker, 9 Cir., 1957,
“As to the first question, the learned trial judge was correct in holding that § 7605(b) did not apply here. It was held that the ‘taxpayer’ referred to in that section is the one whose return is under investigation.” (footnote omitted)
In Application of Magnus, 2 Cir., 1962,
“The examination which IRS seeks is of third parties and not a further examination of the taxpayer. The inspection desired is of corporate *458 books and accounting firm papers and not of the taxpayer’s books. Under these circumstances, the taxpayers have no standing to quash the summonses which call neither for their further appearance or examination nor for further production of their books.”
Compare In re Magnus, Mabee & Reynard, Inc., 2 Cir., 1962,
“We have reviewed the many cases cited by both parties. Because of the special circumstances of each case, they are not particularly helpful. Where the statute is clear, it is frequently unwise to try to construe it in accordance with language, used in opinions in other cases, which applies most pertinently only to the facts of those cases.”
The Fourth Amendment argument, we feel, must fall with that relating to the attorney-client privilege. Of course, a lawyer may assert a constitutional privilege on behalf of his client in a proceeding of this kind when the client is a party, Brody v. United States, 1 Cir., 1957,
5,
The Fifth Amendment.
Bouschor claims the right to assert on behalf of O’Brien the Amendment’s protection against self-incrimination. He cites Application of House, supra, N.D.Cal., 1956,
On this point we agree with Boccuto and disagree with House. We realize that the Fifth Amendment’s provision against self-incrimination “must be accorded liberal construction in favor of the right it was intended to secure”. Hoffman v. United States, 1951,
We note also, for what it may be worth, that Bouschor knew that the appearance of a Special Agent indicated that O’Brien’s returns were being investigated for fraud, that it was Bouschor who, as he pleaded, “directed said client to cause to be turned over to him all work papers” and that in consequence thereof the papers were delivered. This, although proper and necessary or at least desirable for Bouschor’s representation of his client, cannot in itself serve to thwart investigation by the Internal Revenue Service. Compare Schwimmer v. United States, 8 Cir., 1956,
We therefore conclude that, although its reasoning in certain respects is concededly inapplicable on the agreed facts, the district court’s denial of Bouschor’s petition for an order discharging the earlier ex parte order and quashing the subpoena was correct.
Affirmed.
Notes
. “Every person liable for any tax imposed by this title, or for the collection thereof, shall keep such records, render such statements, make such returns, and comply with such rules and regulations as the Secretary or his delegate may from time to time prescribe. * * * ”
. 595.02. “Every person of sufficient understanding, including a party, may testify in any action -or proceeding, civil or criminal, in court or before any person who has authority to receive evidence, except as follows: * * *
“(2) An attorney cannot, without the consent of his client, be examined as to any communication made by the client to him or his advice given thereon in the course of professional duty; nor can any employee of such attorney be examined as to such communication or advice, without the client’s consent; * *
. § 7605(b). “No taxpayer shall be subject to unnecessary examination or investigations, and only one inspection of a taxpayer’s books of account shall be made for each taxable year unless the taxpiayer requests otherwise or unless the Secretary or his delegate, after investigation, notifies the taxpayer in writing that an additional inspection is necessary.”
