We must decide if an IRS summons to an attorney for information regarding fees paid by his clients is protected by the attorney-client privilege, or violates the Sixth Amendment right to counsel or the Fifth Amendment right to due process.
BACKGROUND
Stephen and Galene Tornay were the subject of an investigation by the Internal Revenue Service to determine their federal tax liability for tax years 1978 through 1983. The IRS sought to establish tax liability on a net worth, net expenditure basis. It issued summonses to three Oregon attorneys, whom the Tornays had retained in connection with a 1983 criminal conviction, for information regarding fees paid. When the attorneys complied with the summonses, the Tornays discharged them.
The Tornays also retained Seattle attorney Robert Wayne, their present counsel. In 1984, the IRS issued a summons to Wayne for records of financial transactions with the Tornays for the years 1977 through 1984. The IRS withdrew the summons after the Tornаys filed a petition to quash.
Later, the IRS issued a second summons to Wayne requesting only the financial records for 1983. The summons complied with the notice and procedure required by 26 U.S.C. § 7609(a).
Wayne failed to comply with the summons and continues to do so. The Tornays petitioned to quash pursuant to 26 U.S.C. § 7609(b)(2). In response, the IRS sought enforcement to the extent that the summons “sought information concerning the date, amount and form of legal fees paid to and trust funds deposited with Wayne by the Tornays during 1983.” The Tornays insist that they will discharge Wayne if he is forced to comply with the summons.
After an evidentiary hearing, Magistrate Sweigert issued recommended findings of fact and conclusions of law. He concluded *1426 that the information was not a confidential communication protected by the attorney-client privilege, and that enforcement of the summons did not violate the Tornays’ Sixth Amendment right to counsel. Judge Rоthstein adopted the magistrate’s findings and conclusions, and denied the petition to quash.
The Tornays appeal, challenging only the conclusions of law. They allege: (1) the attorney-client privilege protects the records sought by the IRS, and (2) enforcement of the summons violates their Sixth Amendment right to counsel and Fifth Amendment right to due process. We affirm.
DISCUSSION
I. Attorney-Client Privilege
Denial of a petition to quash an IRS summons is reviewed under the clearly erroneous stаndard.
Ponsford v. United States,
The party asserting an evidentiary privilege has the burden to demonstrate that the privilege applies to the information in question.
U.S. v. Hirsch,
Federal Rule of Evidence 501 provides: “[T]he privilege of a witness ... shall be governed by the principles of the common law as they may be interpreted by the courts of the United States in light of reason and experience.” Accordingly, federal common law governs whether the information sought by the IRS is protected by the attorney-client privilege.
United States v. Hodge and Zweig,
The purpose of the attorney-client privilege is to encourage full disclosure to attorneys so they are able to render effective legal assistance. 8 J. Wigmоre,
Evidence
§§ 2291-92 (McNaughton rev. 1961). Because “the privilege has the effect of withholding relevant information from the fact-finder, it applies only where necessary to achieve its purpose. Accordingly, it protects only those disclosures—necessary to obtain informed legal advice—which might not have been made absent the privilege.”
Fisher v. United States,
We have said repeatedly, as the Tor-nays concede, that fee information generally is not privileged.
1
See, e.g., In re Grand Jury Supoenas (Hirsch),
The Tornays argue that, in light of an exception to this rule, the privilege is applicable to information concerning fees paid to Wayne. The genesis of their argument is
Baird v. Koerner,
Baird involved several clients who directed their attorney to tеnder anonymously to the IRS delinquent tax payments and interest. The IRS issued a summons requiring counsel to identify his clients. We concluded that disclosure of the clients’ identity was protected by the attorney-client privilege:
“If the identification of the client conveys information which ordinarily would be conceded to be part of the usual privileged communication between attorney and client, then the privilege should ex *1427 tend to such identification in the absence of other factors.” 2
Id. at 632. The privilege applied because identifying the clients would be tantamount to conveying a privileged communication in which the clients disclosed their delinquent tax liabilities.
Seventeen years after Baird, our court cited it for this proposition:
“A client’s identity and the nature of that client’s fee arrangements may be privileged where the person invoking the privilege can show that a strong probability exists that disclosure of such information would implicate that client in the very criminal activity for which legal advice was sought.”
United States v. Hodge & Zweig,
The Tomays argue that the fee information sought by the IRS falls within the Baird exception. They read Hodge & Zweig’s statement of Baird to mean that disclosure of fee information which may be used to implicate the client is protected by the privilege. They say the fees were paid to represent them in the IRS investigation, fee information will implicate them in that investigation, and the IRS intends to rely upon the information as an essential element in its cаse.
The government argues that Baird has been narrowly construed, and is not applicable here. Amici Curiae Washington State Trial Lawyers Association and Washington State Bar Association suggest that Ninth Circuit authority is split as to the extent and breadth of Baird. We agree with the government.
Our court, in several decisions, has cited
Baird
for the proposition enunciated in
Hodge & Zweig. See, e.g., In re Grand Jury Subpoenas Duces Tecum (Lahodny),
In Lawson, the court applied Baird to protect the identity of an undisclosed client who had arranged to pay the legal fees for two admitted conspirators. With little discussion, the court assumed thаt the unnamed client sought legal advice regarding possible implication with the conspirators, and concluded that Baird was applicable.
Our court’s reliance on the Hodge & Zweig statement of Baird is curious. In Hodge & Zweig, the IRS sought information regarding the nature of fees paid by a client. The client was alleged to be part of a conspiracy which paid the legal fees of co-conspirators who were apprehended. The court stated that Baird would apply because disclosing the nature of the payments could implicate the client as a co-conspirator. Then it concluded, however, that the information was not privileged because the client sought legal representation in furtherance of the conspiracy. We view Hodge & Zweig’s statement of Éaird as dictum, and give it no precedential weight.
Nevertheless,
Lawson
and
Hodge & Zweig
illustrate the narrow scope of
Baird.
In both, the government sought more than information about fees paid. It sought the identity of clients who had allegedly paid legal fees for the defense of alleged conspirators. Information regarding the fee arrangement was not deemed a confidential communication merely because it implicated the unidentified client. The crucial factor was the exceptional circumstances by which disclosure of the fee arrangement would be tantamount to revealing the unnamed clients’ involvement in the conspir
*1428
acy, clearly a privileged, confidential communication.
Hodge & Zweig,
Hodge & Zweig
has been criticized as misstating the
Baird
rule.
See Hirsch,
A careful reading of
Baird,
and close examination of subsequent cases, indicates that
Baird
applies only when it is shown that, because of exceptional circumstances, disclosure of the client’s identity or the existence of a fee arrangement would reveal information that is tantamount to a cоnfidential professional communication.
4
See Hirsch,
Thus, Baird and its progeny do not apply here. The Tornays' identity was known to the IRS. The agency sought only the amount, date and form of the payments to Wayne, not information regarding a fee arrangement as in Lawson and Hodge & Zweig. The Tornays have not demonstrated the existence of exceptional circumstances that would make disclosure tantamount to revealing a confidential communication.
Nor will thе Tornays be implicated by the existence of a fee arrangement with Wayne. They will be implicated, if at all, by their expenditures, a portion of which were coincidentally for Wayne’s legal services. The information sought by the IRS is not protected by the attorney-client privilege.
Our conclusion is consistent with other decisions involving similar or virtually indistinguishable circumstances.
See In re Osterhoudt,
The Tornays arguе that the privilege must be applied because the IRS summons has interfered with the attorney-client relationship. They say the primary reason for discharging their Oregon attorneys was their compliance with the IRS summonses. They presented two experienced defense lawyers who testified that: (1) a client is less forthcoming if he knows that his attorney might be called as a witness against him, and (2) a subpoena to a lawyer hinders the development of a defense because it distracts the lawyer.
We apply the attorney-client privilege only when necessary to effectuate its limited purpose of encouraging complete disclosure by the client.
See United States v. Osborn,
We do not believe that clients, knowing that their attorney may be compelled to testify аbout the amount, date, and form of fees paid, would be inhibited from disclosing fully information needed for effective legal representation. Nor do we accept a generalization that clients feel less free to disclose once it becomes apparent that their attorney’s testimony may cause adverse re- *1429 suits. The Tornays’ voluntary discharge of their Oregon attorneys does not show that disclosure of fee informаtion established a barrier to the free flow of information, nor does the possibility that an attorney may be required to expend time and resources to comply with a summons.
Some prospective clients, arguably, may decide not to retain counsel for legal services if they could be implicated by expenditures for those services. This is not, however, a sufficient justification to invoke the privilege. The privilege is not to immunize а client from liability stemming from expenditures for legal services. Its purpose is only to encourage persons who choose to be represented by counsel, despite the consequences of that choice, to confer candidly and openly with their attorney. The district court was correct in ruling that the attorney-client privilege was inapplicable. It did not abuse its discretion by denying the petition to quash.
II. Constitutional Challenges
The district court ruled that enforcement of the summons does not violate the Tornays’ Sixth Amendment right to counsel.
Whether enforcement of the summons violates constitutional rights is a question of law, and reviewed de novo.
United States v. McConney,
The Sixth Amendment guarantees that “[i]n all criminal prosecutions, the accused shall enjoy the right ... to have the Assistance of Counsel for his defence.” Its purpose is to assure aid at trial, “when the accused [is] confronted with both the intricaciеs of the law and the advocacy of the public prosecutor.”
United States v. Gouveia,
Here, the magistrate found, and the Tor-nays concede, that no judicial proceeding had been initiated, whether by way of formal charge, preliminary hearing, indictment, information, or arraignment. Sixth Amendment jurisprudence requires us to hold that enforcement of the summons does not violate the Tornays’ right to counsel.
The Tornays recognize the limited nature of the right to counsel, but argue that the Sixth Amendment proscribes activity which may interfere with their future right to counsel. They say that unless the subpoena is quashed, their attorney will be disqualified on account of his testimony, and they will have lost the ability to have counsel of their choosing and the benefit of continuity of representation.
We do not agree that compelling an attorney to disclose fee information, before adversarial judicial proceedings have been initiated, violates the right to counsel.
Accord United States v. (Under Seal),
Their argument presumes that compliance with the summons leads inevitably to testimony against the client which will cause the attorney to be disqualified. The argument is faulty because it presumes too much.
The Tornays’ have not been indicted, nor is there any indication that they will be. Their Sixth Amendment right may never attach, and they may never be faced with the “prosecutorial forcеs of organized society, and immersed in the intricacies of sub
*1430
stantive and procedural criminal law.”
Kirby v. Illinois,
Of course, enforcement of the summons does not mean that Mr. Wayne will actually testify. The Tornays overlook the possibility that the government may not use the information, or that the information may be presented without Wayne’s testimony, or that his testimony may be inadmissible if it would violate the Tornays’ right to counsel.
Doe,
The Tornays have focused their Sixth amendment challenge prematurely on enforcement of the subpoena. We perceive the fundamental question to be whether the right to counsel is violated when an attorney is disqualified on account of testimony compelled by the government at a criminal prosecution. Justiciability limitations prevent us from deciding this question now.
See Doe,
The Tornays and Amici argue that Sixth Amendment rights attach before indictment when the government engages in abusive and pernicious tactics to disqualify defense counsel. We concede the possibility that summonses and subpoenas may be issued to defense counsel for improper purposes.
See Salas,
The record before us does not, however, suggest abuse or improper purpose by the IRS. The summonses were one aspect of the IRS’s attempt to determine the Tor-nays’ total expenditures. Its persistent efforts were necessary because the Tornays were the only other source of fee information. This is nоt the appropriate opportunity to consider their argument.
The Tornays and Amici argue that summonses to attorneys should be enforced only when the need of the IRS outweighs the taxpayer’s need for continuity of counsel.
Perhaps the Sixth Amendment requires that the government’s need for information be balanced against the defendant’s right to counsel when a criminal defendant’s attorney faces certain disqualification on account of testimony compelled by the government. We are not, however, faced *1431 with that question today, and are unwilling to impose such a test when the government seeks merely to enforce a summons. 7
We have refused to burden government investigations with the requirement to show “need” as a prerequisite for enforcing a subpoena.
See In re Grand Jury Proceeding (Schofield),
Our decision in
Schofield,
and thе status of IRS summonses persuade us that it would be inappropriate to adopt the balancing test suggested. Summonses are enforced only after the government has established the threshold requirements of
United States v. Powell,
The Tomays argue that enforcement of the subpoena violates the Due Process clause of the Fifth Amendment. It is uncertain whether, and if so to what extent, the due process clause expands the constitutional protections of the Sixth Amendment right to counsel.
Compare Dillon v. United States,
The fairness concerns of due process are not implicated here. We have said: “Merely requiring a defendant’s lawyer to testify does not alone constitute a material interference with his function as an advocate or operate to deprive the accused of a fair trial.”
United States v. Freeman,
*1432 CONCLUSION
The information sought by the IRS is not protected by the attorney-client privilege. Enforcement of the summons does not violate the Sixth Amendment right to counsel because that right has not attached. Enforcement will not result in deprivation of due process. The district court was correct in denying the petition to quash. The judgment is AFFIRMED.
Notes
. Although the IRS sought information regarding fees and trust funds, we do not understand the Tornays to contest the summons to the extent that it requests trust fund information. Furthermore, the Tornays do not contend that the IRS failed to establish the threshold requirements for enforcement of the summons.
See United States v. Powell,
.
"Such factors are (a) the commencing of litigation on behalf of the client where he voluntarily subjects himself to the jurisdiction of the court; (b) an identification relating to an employment by some third person, not the client nor his agent; (c) an employment of an attorney with respect to
future
criminal or fraudulent transactions; (d) the attorney himself being a defendant in a criminal matter."
Baird,
. In light of our narrow application of Baird, we do not believe that citations to and criticism of the Hodge & Zweig formulation indicаte conflict among our decisions. Moreover, the appropriate forum for resolving intra-circuit conflicts is the limited en banc court. See Ninth Cir.R. 12; Fed.R.App.Proc. 35(b).
. We reiterate that although the privilege may be applicable, it cannot be used "as a cloak for illegal or fraudulent behavior, [for] it is well established that the privilege does not apply where legal representation was secured in furtherance of intended, or presеnt, continuing illegality."
Hodge & Zweig,
. Here, the magistrate stated that the Tornays had not established that Wayne would be disqualified, even if he should testify. An attorney may testify while representing a client where:
"(1) the testimony relates to an uncontested issue;
(2) The testimony relates to the nature and value of legal services rendered in the case;
(3) disqualification of the lawyer would work a substantial hardship on the client."
Model Rules of Professional Conduct, Rule 3.7; see Washington Rules of Professional Conduct, Rule 3.7.
We recognize that the right to counsel of choice is the focus of much attention in light of thе Comprehensive Forfeiture Act of 1984, ch. 3, Pub.L. No. 98-473, §§ 301
et seq.,
98 Stat. 1976 (codified at 18 U.S.C. § 1963 (Supp.1987); 21 U.S.C. §§ 848, 853 (Supp.1987).
See, e.g., United States v. Harvey,
Those concerns are not present here. The Tornays do not face criminal charges. The IRS seeks information on expenditures made from 1978 through 1983, and funds on deposit. Only attorneys who accepted fees or trust funds during that period would be subject to a summons. Even disqualification of the Oregon attorneys and Wayne would, leave the Tornays with a vast selection of capable counsel. This is not a case where a criminal defendant would be deprived completely of retained defense counsel.
. Amicus Curiae National Association of Criminal Defense Lawyers argue that to remedy a potential Sixth Amendment violation at trial is "unsound and inadequate.” They presume that dismissal is the only remedy, and that it imposes too high a societal cost. We are not persuaded. If the Sixth Amendment is violated because an attorney will be disqualified on account of testimony compelled by the government, an appropriate remedy may be to bar the attorney’s testimony.
. We do not read
Salas,
.
Powell
requires that the IRS show: 1) the ivestigation is being conducted for a legitimate purpose; 2) the information is relevant to the investigation; 3) the information is not already in the IRS’s possession; and 4) administrative steps required by the Internal Revenue code have been followed.
.The magistrate found that the IRS had established "a special need because it is clear that the information sought is not available from any other source with the exception of the petitioners themselves.”
