*659 Pursuant to S. C. Code Ann. § 12-7-2280 (1976), respondent served appellants Reeves and Simons, the sole partners of Simons Appliance Center, with a Summons to Produce their books and records of their partnership for the tax years 1976, 1977,1978. Appellants refused to produce the records, alleging that Article I, Section 12 of the S. C. Constitution and the Fifth Amendment to the U. S. Constitution afforded them protection against the production of the records. Subsequently, respondent petitioned the circuit court for an Order of enforcement pursuant to S. C. Code Ann. § 12-7-2290 (1976). The circuit court granted the requested relief. We affirm.
The sole issue presented to us in this appeal is whether Reeves and Simons may refuse to produce the records of Simons Appliance Center because the records might incriminate them. We conclude they may not.
Even though a South Carolina partnership lacks the legal capacity to sue, we nevertheless recognize that it is an entity, separate and distinct from the persons who compose it.
Mar-vil Properties v. Fripp Island Development Corp.,
273 S. C. 619,
Although we have never addressed the present issue, the U. S. Supreme Court entertained this precise issue in
Bellis v. United States,
The Supreme Court confirmed its
Bellis
holding in
Fisher v. United States,
*660 ... [N]either a partnership nor the individual partners are shielded from compelled production of partnership records on self-incrimination grounds.425 U. S. at 408 ,96 S.Ct. at 1580 , 48 L. Ed. (2d) at 54.
Appellants rely on
United States v. Slutksy,
Therefore, we find that by the Beilis and Fisher decisions, the U. S. Supreme Court has settled the present issue insofar as the protection afforded by the Fifth Amendment to the U. S. Constitution.
Appellants argue that even if the Fifth Amendment fails to protect them, Article I, Section 12 of the S. C. Constitution does. They allege the S. C. clause provides greater protection than the comparable section of the U. S. Constitution. We disagree. The pertinent language of the Fifth Amendment is: “No person... shall be compelled in any criminal case to be a witness against himself____” The comparable language of the S. C. Constitution provides: “... nor shall any person be compelled in any criminal case to be a witness against himself.” This Court commented on that clause of our Constitition
In Re Hearing Before Joint Legislative Committee,
187 S. C. 1,
Indeed, in our view the effect of the present constitutional provision is practically the same as that of the Constitution of 1868, and was probably adopted because of its conformity to the language of the amendment to the Federal Constitution.
Therefore, we hold that neither the U. S. Constitution nor the S. C. Constitution protects the appellants from producing the partnership records. Accordingly, we affirm.
*661 Affirmed.
