OPINION
This case presents our first consideration of the issuance of pretrial subpoenas duces tecum, pursuant to Rule 17(c) of the Superior Court Rules of Criminal Procedure. The State of Rhode Island (state) has appealed an order denying its motion for the disclosure of evidence obtained by the defendants, Edward D. DiPrete and Dennis L. DiPrete, following the granting by the trial justice of the ex parte application of the defendants for issuance of pretrial subpoenas duces tecum pursuant to Rule 17(c). In addition, the state has challenged the trial justice’s denial of its motion to inspect the documents acquired by the defendants under the Rule 17(c) subpoenas and of its request to ascertain the subject matter of the ex parte communications between the trial justice and defense counsel in seeking the subpoenas. For the reasons stated herein, we sustain the state’s appeal and reverse the judgment of the Superior Court. A summary of the facts relevant to the issues raised in this appeal follows.
Facts and Procedural History
On March 29, 1994, defendants were charged by indictment with multiple counts of extortion, bribery, racketeering, and conspiracy.
State v. DiPrete,
Prior to trial, defendants had filed a motion for remedial sanctions, alleging that the state had improperly withheld certain exculpatory evidence. On October 21,1996, at the hearing on defendants’ motion for sanctions, defense counsel, R. Robert Popeo, made reference to pretrial subpoenas duces tecum secured by defendants pursuant to an ex parte order. Three days later, in a letter to the Office of the Superior Court Clerk, the state sought copies of any ex parte orders entered at defendants’ request, along with a list of the dates of any ex parte conferences between the trial justice and the defense. In response, defendants telefaxed to the Office of the Attorney General a copy of an ex parte letter written to the trial justice by defense counsel, Richard Egbert, and a copy of an ex parte order signed by the trial justice. The order authorized defense counsel to issue pretrial subpoenas for the production of documentary evidence, pursuant to Rule 17(c).
The court addressed the ex parte order for the issuance of the pretrial subpoenas duces tecum at a hearing on October 25, 1996. On October 28,1996, the state filed a motion for “Documents, Transcripts, Records, Correspondence, and Other Materials” in respect to the ex parte communications between defendants and the court and for any documentary evidence obtained as a result of the pretrial subpoenas duces tecum. On November 20, 1996, the trial justice denied the state’s motion to compel, after determining that defendants’ ex parte application for the subpoenas and the court’s issuance of those subpoenas were proper, and after concluding that defendants’ acquisition of any pertinent documents from third parties, pursuant to the Rule 17(c) subpoenas, was irrelevant to the issue of the state’s alleged discovery violations. The state subsequently filed the instant appeal, pursuant to G.L.1956 § 9-24-32.
Rule 17(c) Subpoenas
On appeal, the state contended that the trial justice erred by entertaining defendants’ ex parte application for pretrial subpoenas duces tecum and by issuing a sealed ex parte order authorizing the issuance of such subpoenas. The state argued that Rule 17(e) does not authorize ex parte motions for the issuance of subpoenas that compel the pretrial production of documents. The state further asserted that the trial justice improperly denied the state access to documentary evidence procured by defendants pursuant to the Rule 17(c) subpoenas. Rule 17 governs the issuance both of trial subpoenas ad testi-ficandum and of subpoenas duces tecum. Specifically, Rule 17 subsections (a) and (b) concern subpoenas that compel the attendance of witnesses at trial, whereas Rule 17(e) addresses subpoenas that compel the production of documentary evidence and objects.
Rule 17(c) provides:
“17. Subpoena. — * * *
(c) For Production of Documentary Evidence and of Objects. A subpoena may also command the person to whom it is directed to produce the books, papers, documents, or tangible things designated therein. The court on motion made promptly may quash or modify the subpoena if compliance would be unreasonable or oppressive. The court may direct that books, papers, documents or objects designated in the subpoena be produced before the court at a time prior to the trial or prior to the time when they are to beoffered in evidence and may upon their production permit the books, papers, documents or objects or portions thereof to be inspected by the parties and their attorneys.”
Because we have not addressed this issue previously and because the Rhode Island rule is essentially identical to the Federal rule, we are guided by the United States Supreme Court’s interpretation of Rule 17(c) in its seminal ease,
Bowman Dairy Co. v. United States,
“not only [as] to documents and other materials belonging to the defendant, but also to those belonging to others which had been obtained by seizure or process.
“[Thus,] Rule 16 deals with documents and other materials that are in the possession of the Government and provides how they may be made available to the defendant for his information. * * * [Under Rule 16] * * * the court could order such materials made available to the defendant for inspection and copying or photographing.
“But if such materials or any part of them are not put in evidence by the Government, the defendant may subpoena them under Rule 17(c) and use them himself. * * * There may be documents and other materials in the possession of the Government not subject to Rule 16. No good reason appears to us why they may not be reached by subpoena under Rule 17(c) as long as they are evidentiary. * * * The court may control the use of Rule 17(c) * * * by its power to rule on motions to quash or modify.
“It was not intended by Rule 16 to give a limited right of discovery, and then by Rule 17 to give a right of discovery in the broadest terms. Rule 17 provided for the usual subpoena ad testificandum and duces tecum, which may be issued by the clerk, with the provision that the court may direct the materials designated in the subpoena duces tecum to be produced at a specified time and place for inspection by the defendant. Rule 17(c) was not intended to provide an additional means of discovery. Its chief innovation was to expedite the trial by providing a time and place before trial for the inspection of the subpoenaed materials.” Bowman,341 U.S. at 219-20 ,71 S.Ct. at 678-79 ,95 L.Ed. at 884-85 .
The essential holdings of
Bowman
in respect to Rule 17(c) subpoenas were summarized and applied in
United States v. Nixon,
“[I]n order to require production [under Rule 17(e) ] prior to trial, the moving party must show: (1) that the documents are evidentiary and relevant; (2) that they are not otherwise procurable reasonably in advance of trial by exercise of due diligence; (3) that the party cannot properly prepare for trial without such production and inspection in advance of trial and that the failure to obtain such inspection may tend unreasonably to delay the trial; and (4) that the application is made in good faith and is not intended as a general ‘fishing expedition.’
ii * * *
“Enforcement of a pretrial subpoena duces tecum must necessarily be committed to the sound discretion of the trial court since the necessity for the subpoena most often turns upon a determination of factual issues.”
It is clear that Rule 17(c) provides that, unlike a trial subpoena ad testificandum, a subpoena duces tecum may be made returnable prior to trial. Although the rule does not set forth the procedure for securing the issu-
Without the judicial intervention so obviously contemplated by the Supreme Court’s holding in
Nixon,
Rule 17(c) would lend itself to discovery of the most sweeping sort, in direct contravention of the Court’s pronouncement that Rule 17 was never intended “to give a right of discovery in the broadest terms.”
Bowman,
One commentator has observed that, although Rule 17(c) “does not clearly require it,” the filing of a motion for the issuance of a subpoena duces tecum returnable prior to trial is “an orderly and desirable procedure and one frequently followed.” 2 Charles Alan Wright,
Federal Practice and Procedure:
Criminal 2d § 274 at 155 (1982). Several courts have recognized the filing of a motion as the appropriate method for securing issuance of a pretrial subpoena duces tecum.
See, e.g., United States v. Beckford,
We recognize that in some measure “[t]he Court may control the use of Rule 17(c) * * * by its power to rule on motions to quash or modify.”
Bowman,
Three explicit provisions in the rule— the filing of a motion to quash or modify a subpoena duces tecum, the pretrial produc
There are, however, two cases in which courts have held that Rule 17(c) allows for the issuance of pretrial subpoenas duces te-cum upon ex parte application. In the first,
Jenkins,
the court permitted an ex parte application for issuance of pretrial subpoenas duces tecum under Rule 17(c) without notice to the opposing party, but also required that any documents produced thereby prior to trial be brought before the court, not delivered directly to the defendants.
“Rule 17(e) provides that if the court determines that documents may be produced before the court prior to trial, the court may allow the documents ‘to be inspected by the parties and their attorneys.’ Fed. R.Crim.P. 17(c). Rule 17(c) makes no provision for allowing only one party access to the documents.” Id. at 1394.
Thus, Jenkins is distinguishable insofar as the documents in the case before us were returned by third parties directly to defendants without court supervision, thereby allowing only defendants access to the documents in advance of trial.
Similarly, in
Reyes,
the court held that Rule 17(c) permitted an ex parte motion for the issuance of a subpoena duces tecum with a pretrial return date.
We further note that two of the eases cited by defendants in support of their position,
United States v. Hang,
After careful consideration of the purposes of Rule 17(c), we are of the opinion that the rule contemplates an adversarial process in which an opposing party is afforded notice and an opportunity to challenge a motion for issuance of a pretrial subpoena duces tecum. Such a process is essential to ensure that Rule 17(c) is not used as a discovery device.
See, e.g., Hart,
Consequently, we hold that the trial justice erred when he entertained defendants’ ex parte motion for the issuance of pretrial subpoenas duces tecum without notice to the state and when he issued the sealed ex parte order that authorized the
In holding that ex parte applications for a pretrial subpoena duces tecum are generally impermissible under Rule 17(c), we recognize that ex parte process for issuance of such a subpoena may be warranted in certain extraordinary circumstances, such as a ease where identification of the source of evidence might imperil the source or the integrity of the evidence or where a fundamental privacy right or constitutional interest of a defendant might be implicated. Because no such circumstances are present in this case, we need not address the putative use of an ex parte application in such exceptional instances.
We decline to consider at this time the state’s contention that the trial justice erred in determining that the content of the documents obtained by the defendants, pursuant to the Rule 17(c) subpoenas, was irrelevant to the court’s resolution of the defendants’ motion to impose sanctions on the state for alleged discovery violations.
In conclusion, we sustain the state’s appeal and reverse the judgment of the Superior Court, to which we remand the papers in this case.
