Thе BLACK PANTHER PARTY, et al., Appellants, v. William French SMITH, Attorney General of the United States, et al.
No. 80-1302
United States Court of Appeals, District of Columbia Circuit.
Argued Feb. 13, 1981. Decided July 8, 1981.
661 F.2d 1243
Larry L. Gregg, Atty., Dept. of Justice, Washington, D. C., with whom Alice Daniel, Asst. Atty. Gen., Washington, D. C., at the time the brief was filed, Thomas S. Martin, Acting Asst. Atty. Gen., Washington, D. C., at the time the brief was filed, and Barbara H. Herwig and R. Joseph Sher, Attys., Dept. of Justice, Washington, D. C., were on the brief, for all appellees except George C. Moore and William C. Sullivan.
William L. Stauffer, Jr., Washington, D. C., for appellee George C. Moore.
Bennett Boskey, Washington, D. C., entered an appearance for appellee Edward Levi.
Before WRIGHT, MACKINNON, and GINSBURG, Circuit Judges.
Opinion for the court filed by Circuit Judge J. SKELLY WRIGHT.
Opinion concurring in part and dissenting in part filed by Circuit Judge MACKINNON.
J. SKELLY WRIGHT, Circuit Judge:
In this appeal we confront a number of issues relating to pretrial procedure, including the important question whether civil litigants may refuse to respond to interrogatories on the ground of constitutional privilege. The case began when the Black Panther Party (the Party), Huey P. Newton, and other individuals sued the United States and various government officials, alleging that they had unlawfully conspired to destroy the Party.1 After presiding over several years of bitterly fought discovery battles, the District Court granted a government motion to dismiss the Party‘s action.2 It reasoned that dismissal was appropriate because the Party had: (1) unjustifiably claimed a First Amendment privilege and refused to answer several interrogatories that would have required it to reveal the names of Party members whose names were not known to the public; (2) failed to clarify answers to interrogatories that the District Court believed to be inconsistent or evasive; and (3) disobeyed a discovery order requiring individual Party officers to respond to interrogatories originally served on the Party itself.3 The District
The Party, Newton, and the other plaintiffs now challenge these dismissals. They also appeal the District Court‘s decision to award to appellees the costs and attorney fees incurred in bringing the motion to dismiss,6 the decision to grant summary judgment in favor of government officials who held office after 1973,7 and the decision to deny a motion for an extension of time in which to file for class action certification.8 For the reasons stated below, we reverse the dismissals, the decision to award attorney fees and costs, and the decision to grant summary judgment. We affirm the denial of the motion for an extension of time in which to file for class certification. The case is remanded for further proceedings consistent with our decision.
I. BACKGROUND
A. The Complaint
Plaintiffs-appellants are the Party, Newton, the Party‘s founder, and various other Party members and supporters.9 In December 1976 they filed a complaint seeking declaratory and injunctive relief on behalf of themselves and two classes: all individuals who had been or continued to be members of the Party, and all individuals who had provided political or financial assistance to the Party.10 The Party and Newton also sought money damages.11 Defendants-appellees are the United States and various government officials, including past and present Directors of the Central Intelligence Agency and the Federal Bureau of Investigation, Attorneys General, Secretaries of the Treasury, Postmasters General, and Commissioners of the Internal Revenue Service.12 Present officials were sued in their official and individual capacities.
Past government officials were sued only in their individual capacities.13
In their complaint appellants alleged that since 1968 the appellees and other unknown government employees had engaged in a continuing conspiraсy to destroy the Black Panther Party, in violation of the Constitution and various statutes.14 They stated that they first learned of the existence of this conspiracy in 1976, when the Senate Select Committee to Study Government Operations with Respect to Intelligence Activities published a report entitled Intelligence Activities and the Rights of Americans, S.Rep. No. 755, 94th Cong., 2d Sess., Books II and III (Senate Report).15 According to appellants, this report reveals that the FBI formed a special counterintelligence program called COINTELPRO primarily to “expose, disrupt, misdirect, discredit or otherwise neutralize the activities of black nationalists.”16 Appellants suggested that through this program the FBI orchestrated efforts to undermine the Party.17
Appellants conceded that they lacked specific details about the nature and scope of the conspiracy against the Party; they stated that they hoped to obtain further infor-
At the conclusion of their complaint appellants asked the District Court to enter a declaratory judgment finding that appellees had violated their constitutional and statu-
B. Proceedings Below
Discovery battles and other pretrial disputes consumed almost three years.26 On May 26, 1977 the District Court denied appellees’ motions to dismiss and directed the action to proceed to discovery. It also denied appellants’ motion for an extension of time in which to move for class action certification, invoking Local Rule 1-13(b), Rules of the United States District Court for the District of Columbia.27 Local Rule 1-13(b) provides that motions for class action certification must be made within 90 days of the filing of the complaint.28 Appellants filed a request for production of documents during the same month. They withdrew this request shortly thereafter in favor of a second request.29 Later, after appellees complained about the breadth of the second request and moved for a protective order,
appellants filed a superseding third request.30 At the same time the parties agreed that discovery would take place in “waves.” During the initial wave they planned to limit their discovery to requests for documents and interrogatories; they would have an opportunity to take depositions during subsequent waves.31
In July 1977, before initiating any discovery, the government officials who had held office after 1973 moved for summary judgment on the ground that they could not have been involved in any of the acts alleged. They filed affidavits setting forth the dates on which they assumed office and disclaiming any knowledge of or participation in a conspiracy against appellants.32 Appellants responded with an affidavit of counsel under
Appellees served 244 interrogatories on the Party on January 31, 1978. Three months later they served 82 interrogatories on Huey Newton.36 On June 12, 1978 appellees moved to dismiss the Party and Newton under
provided on July 27, 1978.37 The Party‘s answers, which were prepared by one of its officers, Joan Kelley, were more than 100 pages in length.38 It refused to answer several interrogatories that would have required it to reveal the names of Party members whose identities were not known to the public, claiming that the information was privileged under the First Amendment.39 It also objected to a number of interrogatories on the ground that they were unduly burdensome.40 When the information requested in an interrogatory could be obtained from the Party‘s newspaper, The Black Panther, the responses simply referred appellees to that publication.41 Newton‘s answers were 22 pages in length.42 He asserted the Fifth Amendment privilege against self-incrimination with respect to 32 of the interrogatories, claiming that they would have required him to disclose information concerning events that were the subject of pending criminal prosecutions or criminal and civil investigations.43
See generally Docket of Proceedings, JA 1-15. None of Moore‘s requests is at issue here.
The next day appellees renewed their earlier motion under
many of the events referred to in the complaint. Finally, they contended that many of the Party‘s responses were incomplete, evasive, or inconsistent.45 Appellants objected to the filing of this motion as a motion for sanctions, contending that it should have been filed as a motion to compel.46
In November 1978 the District Court stated that it would consider appellees’ motion to dismiss first, because that motion was “potentially dispositive” of the case. Consideration of appellants’ motion to compel discovery was indefinitely postponed.47 Shortly thereafter the court heard argument on the question whether appellees were entitled to file a motion for sanctions, or whether they were first required to file a motion to compel discovery. It agreed with appellants, and ruled that the motion to dismiss should have been filed as a motion to compel discovery under
The Party responded to appellees’ motion to compel with two lengthy memoranda, large portions of which endeavored to explain the apparent inconsistencies in the
On August 6, 1979 the District Court issued an order and an accompanying memorandum in which it granted appellees’ motion to compel further responses by the Party and Newton.54 It ruled that the Party must answer the interrogatories with respect to which it had claimed a First Amendment privilege, reasoning that “[p]laintiff cannot assert this privilege and at the same time proceed with this lawsuit, withholding information vital to the defense of the parties sued.”55 The court also held that the Party must supplement responses to 44 interrogatories that appellees had alleged to be inconsistent or evasive.56 The District Court further ruled that each of the Party‘s officers should provide supplemental responses to 107 interrogatories. It conceded that Joan Kelley, the Party, and its attorneys had made “a good faith effort to provide full and complete an-
swers,” but reasoned that such an order was nonetheless appropriate because of “1) the scarcity of records, 2) the time lapse between the alleged occurrences and the present and 3) the scattering and possible unavailability of many witnesses.”57 Finally, the court ruled that where the Party did not provide specific information, but simply referred to The Black Panther, it should provide supplemental responses based upon a full and complete review of that publication.58
As for Newton, the court held that he must answer the 32 interrogatories with respect to which he had claimed a Fifth Amendment privilege. The court stated:
[D]efendants contend that the withheld information is vital to their defense, many times to the point of telling them what exactly they are accused of doing. Therefore, if plaintiff Newton is to proceed with this lawsuit * * * he must answer * * *. This Court is not compelling plaintiff Newton to waive any privileges he may have, but is merely leaving the choice to Mr. Newton, as a plaintiff, whether he wishes to continue to press claims relating to these interrogatories.
Joint Appendix (JA) 856. The court also ordered Newton to supplement his answers to five other interrogatories.59
new representative, JoNina Abron, who, in conjunction with Joan Kelley, reviewed the interrogatories to determine whether additional information might be available. Past and present members were contacted. Abron also called a meeting of the Party‘s Central Committee, which is its governing body; at this meeting each of the 107 interrogatories was again reviewed.65
Huey Newton complied with that portion of the August 6 order which required him to supplement his responses to five interrogatories. He maintained his claim of Fifth Amendment privilege with respect to 30 interrogatories, however.66
Several weeks after the supplemental responses were filed appellees moved to dismiss the Party and Newton under
In some instances not only do [the supplemental answers] fail to clarify previous answers, they create further confusion. In other instances they either completely ignore the inconsistencies the Party was directed to address or they introduce new information inconsistent with that already given in this case and with information given under oath by * * * Huey Newton. * * *
JA 1132. Finally, the court stated that the Party had ignored that portion of the order which required its officers to respond to a list of interrogatories.70
The court also found that Newton had failed to comply with the August 6 order by continuing to claim a Fifth Amendment privilege.71 The court then stated that imposition of the sanction of dismissal was appropriate because the Party and Newton had displayed “conscious disregard” for its order.72 It also stated that the Party and Newton should pay the reasonable expenses incurred by appellees in bringing their motion to dismiss. Under
Although appellees’ motion to dismiss referred only to Newton and the Party, the court‘s January 25 order and the supporting memorandum referred simply to “plaintiffs.”74 Appellants therefore filed a motion for clarification, in which they asked whether the order was intended to dismiss the entire case against all plaintiffs, including those individuals not covered by appellees’ motion, or whether the order was restricted to Newton and the Party.75 On February 13, 1980 the District Court resolved this ambiguity by entering an amended order in which it stated that all named plaintiffs were dismissed.76
II. STANDARDS GOVERNING IMPOSITION OF THE SANCTION OF DISMISSAL
We will begin by describing, in general terms, the legal standards that govern imposition of the sanction of dismissal under
In Internat‘l Union, UAW v. National Right to Work Legal Defense & Education Foundation, Inc. (National Right to Work), 590 F.2d 1139, 1152 (D.C.Cir.1979), we stated: “The validity of the sanctions imposed under [
Even when the underlying discovery order is valid, the District Courts should exercise their discretion to impose the extreme sanction of dismissal in rare circumstances. Ordinarily that sanction is appropriate only when a party has dis-
played callous disregard for its discovery obligations, or when it has exhibited extreme bad faith. See, e.g., National Hockey League v. Metropolitan Hockey Club, 427 U.S. 639, 96 S.Ct. 2778, 49 L.Ed.2d 747 (1976).83 The extent to which the other party‘s preparation for trial has been prejudiced is a relevant consideration. If less drastic sanctions will be equally effective, they should be employed; dismissal should be used as a last resort. See Marshall v. Segona, 621 F.2d 763, 768 (5th Cir. 1980). It is instructive to consider the facts of Morton v. Harris, 628 F.2d 438 (5th Cir. 1980), a case cited by defendants, in which a District Court decision imposing the sanction of dismissal was approved. Morton refused to provide his income tax returns even after the court ordered him to do so. He implied first that he had the documents, then asserted that he had lost them, and finally produced copies of a few of the documents that had been in his possession throughout. The District Court displayed a remarkable degree of patience; before the final dismissal, it dismissed Morton once without prejudice, and then reinstated him so that he would have another opportunity to pursue his claims.84
III. DISMISSAL OF THE BLACK PANTHER PARTY
Having outlined the standards governing imposition of the sanction of dismissal, we can proceed to consider the reasons supplied by the District Court for its actions in this case. As we have already explained, the District Court based its decision to dismiss the Party on three grounds: (1) the Party‘s failure to obey that portion of the August 6 order which required all officers to respond individually to a list of 107 interrogatories served on the Party; (2) the Party‘s failure to clarify answers the court believed to be inconsistent or evasive; and (3) the Party‘s failure to obey that portion of the August 6 order which required it to disclose the identities of Party members whose names were not known to the public.
As we explain below, we conclude that the three reasons supplied by the District Court do not support the decision to dismiss the Party.87 (1) That portion of the August 6 order which required each of the Party‘s officers to respond to 107 interrogatories
was not valid. Thus under National Right to Work, supra, the Party‘s failure to obey this requirement does not justify imposition of sanctions. (2) That portion of the August 6 order which required the Party to explain allegedly inconsistent or evasive answers probably was valid. We find, however, that the Party‘s supplemental responses adequately explained any apparent inconsistencies or evasiveness. The District Court‘s decision to impose the sanction of dismissal cannot be justified on this ground. (3) We cannot determine on the basis of the record as it now stands whether that portion of the August 6 order which required the Party to divulge the identities of members not known to the public was valid. If it was not, then the Party‘s failure to comply could not justify imposition of sаnctions.
We set forth the legal principles that the District Court should have applied in determining whether the claim of privilege was proper, and remand so that it may reconsider this question. On remand, if the District Court concludes that the claim of privilege should have been upheld, then the Party should be reinstated and given another opportunity to pursue its claims. If the court concludes that the claim of privilege was properly denied, it may enter a new order compelling the Party to respond. If the Party then refuses to comply, the court may consider imposing sanctions.
A. Requiring Each Party Officer to Respond to Interrogatories
In its August 6 order the District Court stated that each Party officer should respond under oath to a list of 107 interrogatories originally served on the Party. In
Under
covery under
The District Court‘s August 6 order requiring each of the Party‘s officers to respond was not consistent with the scheme set forth in the Rules. The original responses to the 107 interrogatories were prepared by Joan Kelley.93 In many of her answers she stated that only limited information could be provided because records were not available.94 In other answers Kelley referred to the Senate Report describing the FBI‘s counterintelligence activities.95 And in several others, where the government had asked questions designed to obtain admissions from the Party that it had engaged in unlawful activities, she simply stated that it possessed no information.96 The District Court was apparently concerned that this lack of information would hinder preparation of the defendants’ case; it stated that an order requiring all officers to respond was appropriate because records were unavailable and witnesses were scattered, and because many of the events com-
Nothing in the Rules, however, gave the District Court discretion to order all officers to respond simply because it believed that the original responses prepared by the Party‘s designee did not contain sufficient information.
duct a more complete search for information. Then, if it concluded that the representative‘s response to this order was inadequate, it might have had power under
Appellees suggest that the District Court‘s order was authorized by
[11] Because we do not believe the District Court properly ordered the Party‘s officers to respond to the 107 interrogatories, the Party‘s failure to obey this order cannot support imposition of the sanction of dismissal. But even if the underlying discovery order was valid, we would not be able to find that the failure to obey supports dismissal. The Party did not refuse to provide any more information. Its new representative, JoNina Abron, submitted a comprehensive set of supplemental responses totalling more than 50 pages. Moreover, appellants’ refusal to comply with the
court‘s order was based on a colorable legal claim. The Party‘s behavior could not be said to constitute the sort of inexcusable intransigence that would justify imposing the extreme sanction of dismissal. Cf. Morton v. Harris, supra.102 It is also relevant to note that appellees are not prejudiced by the Party‘s failure to comply with the terms of the August 6 order. See Marshall v. Segona, supra. Again, JoNina Abron‘s supplemental responses are quite detailed. Moreover, appellees would have had an opportunity to depose Party officers during later stages of discovery. Indeed, because the Party refused to comply, a potentially confusing situation was avoided. The purpose of serving interrogatories on the Party was to obtain admissions. But if each of the officers had responded, it would have been unclear whether they were speaking for themselves or their organization.103
Another reason supplied by the District Court to justify dismissal is its finding that the Party failed adequately to clarify 44 responses to interrogatories that the court considered to be inconsistent or evasive. We are unable to conclude that the portion of the August 6 order requiring clarification or additional information was invalid.104 We find, however, that the District Court erred when it ruled that the supplemental responses did not provide sufficient clarification. In our view, the explanation provided by the Party was adequate. Dismissal could not be justified on the ground that the Party failed to comply with this portion of the August 6 order.
As the Party points out in its brief, the interrogatories to which further responses were directed on the ground that the original answers were inconsistent or evasive can actually be divided into five categories.105 First, there were interrogatories with respect to which the Party had claimed a First Amendment privilege.106 Second, there were interrogatories that the Party objected to on grounds of burdensomeness.107 Third, there were interrogatories to which the Party responded by referring appellees to its newspaper.108 Fourth, there
See also Independent Productions Corp. v. Loew‘s Incorporated, 283 F.2d 730 (2d Cir. 1960) (court erred in dismissing action with prejudice on basis of its inherent power; complete adherence to the clearly delineated procedures of
were interrogatories which sought further information concerning allegations in the Party‘s complaint, and to which the Party responded that it would be relying on discovery received from appellees.109 Finally, there were interrogatories the responses to which appellees disputed as a matter of fact because they believed them to be inconsistent with other evidence.110 Thus the court‘s description of each of the 44 responses as “inconsistent or evasive” may be somewhat broad.
The Party‘s responses to the interrogatories that fall within the first four categories clearly do not support dismissal at this stage. As we have already seen, the responses involving a claim of First Amendment privilege were not only included in the list of 44 inconsistent and evasive answers, but were also made the subject of a separate portion of the August 6 order; we show infra that it is unclear on the basis of the record as it now stands whether the claim of privilege was properly denied. Dismissal cannot be justified on the ground that the Party has refused to disclose its membership list until after the District Court has reconsidered the privilege question.111 As for the interrogatories that the Party objected to on grounds of burden-
The District Court did not rely on these categories.
claims as part of a conscious effort to conceal relevant information. A decision to dismiss could not be justified on this ground.
The category of interrogatories to which appellees objected on the ground that the original responses were inconsistent with other evidence requires only slightly more attention. Having examined the Party‘s responses to each of the interrogatories that fall within this category, we cannot conclude that the portion of the District Court‘s August 6 order requiring clarification constituted an abuse of discretion; although many of the contradictions pointed to by appellees involve relatively insignificant issues, we believe that such an order was warranted. We do conclude, however, that the Party adequately explained the apparent inconsistencies in its supplemental responses and in the memoranda supporting its opposition to appellees’ motions.115 The District Court‘s finding to the contrary is
We will not discuss each of the disputed answers here. Instead, we will simply describe several responses that seemed to present particularly troublesome contradictions. One example concerns allegedly inconsistent statements made regarding the size and composition of the Party‘s governing body, the Central Committee. In one of its original responses to appellees’ interrogatories the Party stated that “the Party is and always has been governed by a fifteen-member body known as the Central Committee.”116 The Party also listed the names of 22 past and present Committee members whose identities were known to the public.117 The government challenged the accuracy of these statements. It pointed to responses to interrogatories made by Huey Newton in which Newton confirmed that the Central Committee was a 15-member body but named only eight past and present members whose identities were publicly known.118 It also noted that in an unrelated criminal trial Newton testified that when he left the United States in 1974 the Central Committee consisted of himself and
Elaine Brown, and that when he returned to this country in 1977 Elaine Brown left the Party and the Committee dissolved.119 Finally, the government notes that in an unrelated civil case Elaine Brown responded to interrogatories by identifying a total of 10 Committee members. Brown did not explain whether she intended to identify all members of the Committee or only the past and present members whose names were publicly known.120
The Party‘s explanation is complex, but fully coherent. In one set of supplemental responses it clarified its first answer by stating that
the Central Committee has always consisted of approximately fifteen members. This number has fluctuated slightly. At times, there have been more than fifteen people on the Central Committee, and at other times there have been fewer than fifteen people. At present, for example, there are twelve members of the Central Committee.121
As for the testimony of Newton in the unrelated criminal trial, the Party explained that when he said the Central Committee consisted only of him and Elaine Brown in 1974, and that it subsequently dissolved, he intended to refer to a central core within the Committee. According to the Party, this core consisted of the Committee members with whom Newton, as Party leader, was most likely to confer before making major decisions.122 This expla-
nation is plausible: the Party suggested that such a central core existed in its original responses.123 The Party also stated that when Elaine Brown identified 10 Committee members she probably intended to identify only those past and present members whose names were already known to the public. It further explained that the Party identified 22 past and present members, whereas Newton and Brown identified only eight and 10 respectively, because it realized that, over time, more names had become public.124Another dispute involves an effort by appellees to obtain evidence establishing that the Party was committed to violence.125 In its interrogatory the government asked the Party to provide a list of its rules and by-laws. The Party provided a list,126 but appellees claimed that the response was evasive because it failed to include two items known as the “8 Points of Attention” and the “3 Main Rules of Discipline,” which had been included in Party publications.127 According to the government, these two items contained rules suggesting that the Party was a violent organization.128 The Party explained that the “8 Points of Attention” and the “3 Main Rules of Disci
A third example also involves an effort to obtain an admission that the Party was a violent organization. Appellees asked whether Party members were required or encouraged to carry firearms. The Party responded by stating, “Within the limits of the law and the Constitution, the right to bear arms and defend one‘s home and property was not discouraged.”130 Appellees argued that this answer was evasive. The Party supplemented its response by stating that, although Party members were not required to carry or train with firearms, “the atmosphere of harassment by law enforcement officers was such that members were encouraged to carry firearms.” It also noted that under Party rules members were forbidden to carry weapons while intoxicated, or to use weapons unnecessarily.131 We
A final example involves two interrogatories in which appellees asked whether Party members were encouraged to give the Party a portion of the proceeds whenever goods were “taken without an exchange of consideration.”132 The Party denied this allegation. Appellees argued that this answer was inconsistent with information contained in a House Committee on Internal Security Report, Gun-Barrel Politics: The Black Panther Party 1966-1971, 92d Cong., 1st Sess. 55 (1971), as well as with the “8 Points of Attention” and the “3 Main Rules of Discipline.”133 The Party responded by pointing out that the House Committee Report discounted the reliability of the source on which the allegation was based; it also noted that other statements by the Party and the “8 Points” and the “3 Main Rules” themselves supported the Party‘s denial.134 Again, we believe the response, as supplemented, is adequate.
C. Claim of First Amendment Privilege: A Balancing Test
We have already held that the Party justifiably refused to obey the portion of the August 6 order requiring each of its officers to respond to 107 interrogatories, and that it adequately complied with the portion of the order requiring it to clarify 44 of its original responses. Thus the only reason supplied by the District Court to support dismissal that remains for our consideration is its finding that the Party unjustifiably claimed a First Amendment privilege.
In the three interrogatories with respect to which the Party continues to claim a First Amendment privilege appellees requested the names of all Party officers, the names of the leaders of local Party affiliates, and any documents reflecting the belief that appellees had conspired to destroy the Party.135 The Party responded in part, providing the names of 59 Party officers136 and 68 publicly known local leaders.137 It also provided the requested documents. Although it deleted from these materials all names of members not publicly known, it listed the names of 600 members whose identities were public.138
The Party claims that the identities of its leaders and members who are not known to the public are privileged under the First Amendment; it suggests that if the names of these individuals are released, they will be harassed and their rights of expression and association will be infringed. The Party goes on to contend that because of this privilege the August 6 discovery order requiring it to disclose the names could not be justified. Thus its failure to obey provides no support for the decision to dismiss. The Party is clearly correct when it states that District Courts may not order disclosure of privileged information.
Membership lists of groups engaged in political expression clearly deserve some First Amendment protection. The Supreme Court recognized this need in NAACP v. Alabama, 357 U.S. 449, 78 S.Ct. 1163, 2 L.Ed.2d 1488 (1958), which held that Alabama could not force the NAACP to reveal its membership list. The Court stated, “It is hardly a novel perception that compelled disclosure of affiliation with groups engaged in advocacy may constitute [an] effective * * * restraint on freedom of association * * *” Id. at 462, 78 S.Ct. at 1171.140 Privacy is particularly important where the group‘s cause is unpopular; once the participants lose their anonymity, intimidation and suppression may follow. And privacy is important where the government itself is being criticized, for in this circumstance it has a special incentive to suppress opposition. First National Bank of Boston v. Bellotti, 435 U.S. 765, 777 n.11, 98 S.Ct. 1407, 1416, 55 L.Ed.2d 707 (1978).
Appellees suggest that even if the Party‘s membership list would ordinarily be entitled to some First Amendment protection, it automatically waived whatever constitutional rights it possessed when it filed this lawsuit. The logic behind this automatic waiver rule may, at first glance, seem appealing. After all, plaintiffs are “voluntary” litigants; they have created the situation that threatens their constitutional rights. This reasoning has led at least one court to adopt a waiver rule. See Independent Productions Corp. v. Loew‘s, Incorporated, 22 F.R.D. 266 (S.D.N.Y.1958).141 But in our view, the appeal of this logic is superficial only. Ordinarily, plaintiffs file suits because they believe the courts provide the best, if not the only, means to protect their rights. To say they must waive those rights when they come into court would make any judicial protection meaningless.142 Here, for example, the
In our view, a balancing inquiry should be conducted to determine whether a claim of privilege should be upheld. Before granting a motion to compel discovery and forcing a plaintiff to choose between disclosure and sanctions, the plaintiff‘s First Amendment claim should be measured against the defendant‘s need for the information sought. If the former outweighs the latter, then the claim of privilege should be upheld. In this way the interests of both parties can be protected. Use of balancing tests to determine whether compelled disclosure is necessary is well established in the First Amendment context. In NAACP v. Alabama, supra, 357 U.S. at 463, 78 S.Ct. at 1172, the Supreme Court stated that disclosure of membership lists by the defendant NAACP and the accompanying abridgement of its freedom of association would be appropriate only if the state could demonstrate a compelling interest in disclosure. A balancing test was also used by this court in National Right to Work, supra, where we held that the defendant, the National Right to Work Legal Defense and Educational Fund, could be forced to disclose its contributors only after a detailed inquiry into the other party‘s need for the information.144 Balancing tests are also used to determine whether reporters must disclose their confidential sources to civil litigants. See, e.g., Zerilli v. Smith, 656 F.2d 705 (D.C.Cir. 1981); Carey v. Hume, 492 F.2d 631 (D.C.Cir.), cert. dismissed, 417 U.S. 938, 94 S.Ct. 2654, 41 L.Ed.2d 661 (1974).145 To be sure, these cases do not involve attempts by plaintiffs to claim a First Amendment privilege. But nothing in the language of the opinions suggests that the proper approach varies depending on whether the plaintiff or the defendant is seeking constitutional protection.146
In fact, a balancing approach has been adopted in cases very similar to this
Id. at 192. The court then balanced the plaintiff‘s interest in protecting the names of the association‘s members against the state‘s need for the information and ruled against disclosure.147 Similarly, in Hastings v. North East Independent School District, 615 F.2d 628 (5th Cir. 1980), the Fifth Circuit reversed a District Court order dismissing a plaintiff teachers organization when it refused to release the names of its members who were not publicly known. The court stated that on remand the District Court should weigh the defendant‘s need for the names of the members against the plaintiff‘s constitutional interests before ordering disclosure or imposing additional sanctions.To require them to forfeit that which they seek to protect in order that they might receive federal assurance that they were indeed entitled to it initially would be an abdication by the federal court of not only its federal stature, but its judicial robes as well.
The language of N.A.A.C.P. v. Alabama, supra, is much too strong to permit this result. * * * [W]e cannot agree with the trial court‘s distinction of that case on the basis that the N.A.A.C.P. was the defendant there. * * *
Balancing one party‘s First Amendment interests against another party‘s need for disclosure to determine whether a claim of privilege should be upheld or whether discovery should be ordered requires a detailed and painstaking analysis. The need for First Amendment protection should be carefully scrutinized. See NAACP v. Alabama, supra, 357 U.S. at 460-462, 78 S.Ct. at 1170-1171; National Right to Work, supra, 590 F.2d at 1152. The argument in favor of upholding the claim of privilege will ordinarily grow stronger as the danger to rights of expression and association increases. We emphasize, however, that the litigant seeking protection need not prove
The interest in disclosure should also be carefully examined. Several factors are relevant in conducting this examination. First, courts must consider the relevance of the information sought. The interest in disclosure will be relatively weak unless the information goes to “the heart of the matter,” that is, unless it is crucial to the party‘s case. See Zerilli v. Smith, supra, 656 F.2d at 713; National Right to Work, supra, 590 F.2d at 1153; Carey v. Hume, supra, 492 F.2d at 636.149 Mere speculation that information might be useful will not suffice; litigants seeking to compel discovery must describe the information they hope to obtain and its importance to their case with a reasonable degree of specificity. See Cervantes v. Time, Inc., 464 F.2d 986, 994 (8th Cir. 1972). Second, courts must determine whether the litigants seeking disclosure have pursued alternative sources. Even when the information sought is crucial to a litigant‘s case, disclosure should be compelled only after the litigant has shown that he has exhausted every reasonable alternative source of information. National Right to Work, supra, 590 F.2d at 1153.150 Because of the preferred position of First Amendment rights, “compelled disclosure * * * [is] normally the end, and not the beginning, of the inquiry.” Zerilli v. Smith, supra, 656 F.2d at 713 (quoting Carey v. Hume, supra, 492 F.2d at 638). Infringement of First Amendment interests must be kept to a minimum.
On the basis of our review of the record, we cannot conclude that the District Court properly applied these principles in deciding that the claim of privilege should be denied and that disclosure should be ordered. In its August 6 order it stated: “Plaintiff cannot assert this privilege and at the same time proceed with this lawsuit, withholding information vital to the defense of the parties sued.”151 Later, in its order dismissing the Party, it stated: “These may well be the individuals able to
These statements might be interpreted as suggesting that the District Court intended to apply a balancing approach. Clearly, however, they do not reflect the careful analysis that is necessary before an order compelling disclosure should be made. The court never specifically addressed the question whether the Party‘s fears of harassment and interference with First Amendment rights were substantial.153 As for the
have obtained helpful information from the Party members whose identities had been disclosed.156
We remand so that the District Court may reconsider its decision to order disclosure in light of the principles we have outlined above. If appellees cannot show that their need for the undisclosed identities is substantial, and the court concludes that the claim of privilege should have been upheld, the Party should be reinstated. If, on the other hand, the court decides that the claim of privilege was properly denied, then it may enter a new order requiring the Party to respond. If the Party fails to comply with this order, sanctions may be appropriate. We point out, however, that sanctions should be carefully tailored to preserve to the greatest extent possible the First Amendment values at stake. Again, dismissal should be used only as a last resort.
IV. DISMISSAL OF HUEY NEWTON: THE FIFTH AMENDMENT PRIVILEGE
Huey Newton claimed the Fifth Amendment privilege against self-incrimination and refused to answer a number of interrogatories that would have required him to disclose information relating to matters that were the subject of pending criminal prosecutions or pending criminal and civil investigations.157 In its August 6 order the District Court ruled that Newton must either answer the interrogatories with respect to which he had asserted the Fifth Amendment privilege or face dismissal. When Newton continued to rely on the privilege, he was dismissed. We cannot determine on the basis of the record as it now stands whether the District Court‘s August 6 decision denying Newton‘s claim of privilege and compelling disclosure was valid. We remand so that the District Court may reconsider its decision to order disclosure in
Just as appellees argued that an automatic waiver rule should be applied in the First Amendment context, so also they contend that such a rule should be applied in the Fifth Amendment context. Again, we disagree. In Griffin v. California, 380 U.S. 609, 85 S.Ct. 1229, 14 L.Ed.2d 106 (1965), the Supremе Court recognized that penalizing assertion of the Fifth Amendment privilege effectively destroys the privilege. Thus it held that the judiciary may not impose sanctions that make assertion of the privilege “costly.” See also Spevack v. Klein, 385 U.S. 511, 87 S.Ct. 625, 17 L.Ed.2d 574 (1967); Garrity v. New Jersey, 385 U.S. 493, 87 S.Ct. 616, 17 L.Ed.2d 562 (1967).158 Requiring a plaintiff to choose between proceeding with his lawsuit and claiming the privilege clearly imposes a substantial cost. This cost cannot be justified on the sole ground that the plaintiff chose to initiate the suit and thus can be characterized as a voluntary litigant. Again, an individual “voluntarily” becomes a plaintiff only because he believes the courts provide the best means of protecting his rights.159 Indeed, as we noted in the First Amendment context, an automatic waiver rule raises serious due process questions; the plaintiff is in effect deprived of his day in court.160 Our conclusion that a per se waiver rule cannot be justified is supported by decisions in other circuits. See Campbell v. Gerrans, 592 F.2d 1054 (9th Cir. 1979) (proper exercise of Fifth Amendment rights by plaintiff in discovery stage of civil case can never justify automatic dismissal); Wehling v. Columbia Broadcasting System, supra note 142; Thomas v. United States, 531 F.2d 746 (5th Cir. 1976) (there are “constitutional limitations upon the power of courts, even in aid of their own valid processes, to dismiss an action without affording a party the opportunity for a hearing on the merits of his cause“).161
In our view, a balancing approach is
Use of a balancing test is not unprecedented in the Fifth Amendment context.163 In fact, in Wehling v. Columbia Broadcasting System, supra, the Fifth Circuit explicitly adopted a balancing analysis to determine whether a plaintiff could invoke the Fifth Amendment and refuse to answer interrogatories.164 In that case the plaintiff brought a libel action after the defendant had broadcast a radio program in which it was alleged that the plaintiff had abused federal loan programs. The plaintiff invoked the Fifth Amendment at a deposition in response to questions about the loans. The lower court dismissed. The Fifth Circuit reversed, holding that the plaintiff‘s assertion of the privilege could not justify automatic dismissal. It stated that “a civil plaintiff has no absolute right to both his silence and his lawsuit. Neither, however, does the civil defendant have an absolute right to have the action dismissed anytime a plaintiff invokes his constitutional privilege.” 608 F.2d at 1088. It went on to hold that by measuring the relative weights of the competing interests the courts could afford better protection to both parties. The court emphasized that in conducting this balance dismissal should be the last rather than the first step.
Id. The Fifth Circuit then applied the balancing test to the facts before it. It recognized that the information sought by the defendants went to the heart of their case. But it decided that the balance tipped toward the plaintiff, and that all discovery should be stayed for three years until the statute of limitations on the potential criminal prosecutions had run.When plaintiff‘s silence is constitutionally guaranteed, dismissal is appropriate only where other, less burdensome, remedies would be an ineffective means of preventing unfairness to defendant.
On the basis of our review of the
First, the court never considered whether there was a serious threat to Newton‘s Fifth Amendment rights. The record as it now stands strongly suggests that Newton properly invoked the privilege against self-incrimination. Although appellees make several arguments in an attempt to show that Newton‘s invocation of the Fifth Amendment should not be respected, these arguments lack merit.166 Appellees contend, first, that Newton‘s claims involve no more than “imaginary hazards of incrimination.”167 But Newton declined to answer the interrogatories in question precisely because they would have required him to disclose information about incidents that are the subject of pending criminal prosecutions or pending criminal and civil investigations.168 Newton concedes that the civil investigation has now been completed. However, that investigation did not termi
On the other side of the balance, appellees have not made the detailed showing of need that would justify an order forcing a party to choose between disclosure and dismissal. Appellees have contended that the information is crucial “to the point of telling them what exactly they are accused of doing.”170 But the record does not now provide much support for this contention. In fact, as appellants emphasize, the Fifth Amendment claims seem to relate only to a small portion of the lawsuit; the interrogatories Newton refused to answer pertained primarily to allegations contained in three subparagraphs of the complaint.171 It may
We remand so that the District Court may reconsider its decision to deny the claim of Fifth Amendment privilege and to force Newton to choose between disclosure and dismissal in light of the balancing test we have just described. In conducting this balancing inquiry the court should consider whether an order delaying Newton‘s obligation to respond until the danger of criminal prosecution has passed would unduly prejudice appellees. If it finds that such an order would be appropriate, then Newton should be reinstated and given another opportunity to pursue his claims. Even if the court finds that appellees need the information in question immediately, complete dismissal should be a last resort; the court might consider, for example, dismissing only that portion of Newton‘s suit that relates to the withheld information.174
V. DISMISSAL OF OTHER INDIVIDUAL PLAINTIFFS AND AWARD OF COSTS AND ATTORNEY FEES
Appellants also challenge two District Court orders closely related to the decisions to dismiss the Party and Newton: (1) the order dismissing all other plaintiffs, and (2) the order requiring the Party and Newton to pay the expenses incurred by appellees in bringing their motion for sanctions.
A. Dismissal of Other Individual Plaintiffs
In their motion for sanctions appellees did not seek dismissal of any of the plaintiffs other than the Party and Newton. In its order granting the motion the District Court referred only to “plaintiffs.”175 Thus, as we explained above, plaintiffs filed a motion for clarification, asking whether the court intended to dismiss only the Party and Newton, or whether it also intended to dismiss the other individual plaintiffs.176 The court responded by filing an amended order and final judgment in which it stated that “defendants’ motion to dismiss is here-
The District Court failed to set forth any findings of fact or law supporting its determination that the other plaintiffs should be dismissed. However, appellees have offered two theories that they believe support this determination. First, they suggest that the claims of the other plaintiffs were contingent upon the claims of the Party and Newton. Thus, when the Party and Newton were dismissed, dismissal of the remaining plaintiffs was appropriate. But the other plaintiffs’ claims are not contingent upon the claims of the Party and Newton. The complaint alleges that the defendants engaged in a continuing conspiracy against the Party, its members, and its supporters.178 There is no reason why the other plaintiffs, as Party members and supporters, could not continue to litigate this claim, even though the Party and Newton are out of the case.
The second theory offered by appellees is that, although the District Court used the word “dismissal,” it actually intended to grant a motion for summary judgment against all the other plaintiffs that appellees had filed roughly one year earlier. In this motion appellees claimed that summary judgment was appropriate because the other plaintiffs, unlike the Party and Newton, had only requested declaratory and injunctive relief. Appellees argued that there was no evidence showing any continuing harm, and that therefore equitable relief was unwarranted. Appellants responded to this motion by stating that their complaint did allege the possibility of continuing harm, and by filing an affidavit of counsel pursuant to
Becausе appellees’ efforts to salvage the amended order are unavailing, the other plaintiffs should be reinstated. They should be given an opportunity to pursue their claims even if the court determines on remand that the Party and Newton were properly dismissed. If we have misinterpreted the order, that is, if the court did in fact intend to grant the motion for summary judgment, it may simply enter a new order explicitly stating that the motion is granted. We would point out, however, that summary judgment may be premature. There appears to be considerable merit to appellants’ argument that a continuance is appropriate under
B. Award of Attorney Fees and Costs
In addition to dismissing all appellants, the District Court, acting pursuant to
VI. OTHER ISSUES
Appellants raise several other issues not directly related to the decision to dismiss and award costs. In particular, they challenge the District Court‘s decisions to: (1) grant partial summary judgment in favor of all individual defendants who held office after 1973; (2) deny appellants’ motion for an extension of time in which to file for class certification; and (3) postpone consideration of appellants’ motion to compel discovery until after consideration of appellees’ motion to compel. Appellees contend that we may not reach these issues since the notice of appeal filed by appellants pursuant to
The Supreme Court has rejected a strict construction of
A. Summary Judgment in Favor of Individual Defendants Who Held Office After 1973
In July 1977 each of the individual appellees who took office after January 1974 moved for summary judgment on the ground that they were not in office at the times of the acts alleged. They filed affidavits setting forth the dates on which they assumed office and disclaiming any knowledge of or participation in a conspiracy against the appellants.185 Appellants re
It stated that the post-1973 appellees’ affidavits evidenced a lack of involvement in the acts alleged, and that the affidavits were substantiated by the recency of the terms of office. Moreover, appellants had failed to respond with evidentiary submissions of their own. The court recognized that appellants had filed an affidavit of counsel pursuant to
We reverse on the ground that appellants had not yet been given sufficient time to take discovery. When the motion was granted, discovery was still in the first “wave.” In fact, appellants had received appellees’ first response to their request for documents only three months earlier. The materials they received were highly disorganized.190 Moreover, only three days before the order granting summary judgment was entered, appellants received an entirely new batch of documents.191 Because appellants believed appellees’ response was inadequate, they later decided to file a motion to compel discovery.192 Under the circumstances, the District Court should have denied or at least postponed its decision on the motion for summary judgment. A central purpose of
Although we conclude that appellants should be given an opportunity to take further discovery, we are not convinced, on the basis of the record as it now stands, that they will be able to uncover any evidence implicating the post-1973 appellees. Almost all of the activities described in the complaint were alleged to have occurred before 1974. In fact, the FBI‘s operations under COINTELPRO were disbanded in 1971. The complaint does refer to two recent events: it alleges that the FBI continues to take the license plate numbers of all persons who visit Elaine Brown, and it states that in 1976 the government allocated funds “to pay off informants аnd provacateurs [sic].”194 But these actions are not necessarily unlawful. It is also true that former Attorney General Edward Levi, former Postmaster General Benjamin Bailar, and former Acting IRS Commissioner William Williams concede that they participated in investigations of the Party.195 There is no indication that their conduct was illegal, however. Under the circumstances, the District Court might consider establishing an expedited discovery schedule with respect to the claims against the post-1973 government officials. By expedi-
B. Motion for Extension of Time in Which to File for Class Certification
On March 11, 1977 appellants filed a motion for an extension of time in which to move for class certification.196 Appellees opposed that motion on the ground that under Local Rule 1-13(b) of the Rules of the District Court for the District of Columbia motions for class action certification must be filed within 90 days of the time the complaint is filed.197 Here, the complaint was filed on December 1, 1976. Thus the time for moving to certify a class had expired 11 days prior. According to appellees, since the time for moving to certify a class had expired, motions for extensions of time in which to file for certification were also precluded. The District Court agreed, and refused to grant an extension.198 We affirm.
Appellants failed to offer any compelling reasons why the local rule should not be followed. In their motion appellants argued, first, that “[r]esearch into the facts which will determine the extent of the alleged class is extremely time-consuming and is still underway.”199 But ongoing research need not have precluded a timely motion for class certification. At least as a preliminary matter, the definition of the proposed class that was provided in the complaint would have been sufficient for purposes of a motion for class action certification. Second, appellants argue that a motion was not yet appropriate because the complaint had not yet been served on appel-
C. Decision to Delay Consideration of Appellants’ Motion to Compel Production of Documents by Appellees
Appellants claim that the District Court abused its discretion when it decided to postpone consideration of their motion to compel production of documents by appellees. As a result of this postponement, appellants argue, the District Court decided the motions to compel further responses to interrogatories and to dismiss without considering appellees’ misbehavior. Appellants suggest that, particularly where the court was deciding whether dismissal of their case was appropriate, the conduct of appellees was relevant. Appellees respond by
VII. CONCLUSION
We reverse the District Court‘s order dismissing the Black Panther Party and Huey Newton. The case is remanded so that the court may reconsider its decision to deny their claims of constitutional privilege in light of the legal principles outlined in this opinion. If the court decides that the claims of privilege should have been upheld, both the Party and Newton should be reinstated. We also reverse the dismissal of the other named plaintiffs. Regardless of the court‘s decision regarding the Party and Newton, these individuals should be reinstated and given another opportunity to pursue their claims. We reverse the decision to award expenses to appellees: because we conclude that the dismissals were inappropriate, the basis for that award has evaporated. And we reverse the District Court‘s decision to award summary judgment in favor of the individual appellees who held office after 1973, since we do not find that appellants have had sufficient opportunity to take discovery. We affirm the District Court‘s decision to deny appellants’ motion for an extension of time in which to file for class certification. The individual appellants may not press claims on behalf of the classes described in their complaint.
Although we believe this action should go forward, we admonish all parties to do their utmost to ensure that this suit proceeds
Affirmed in part, reversed in part, and remanded with instructions.
MacKINNON, Circuit Judge (concurring in part and dissenting in part).
The Black Panther Party and its co-plaintiffs seek $100 million in compensatory and punitive damages from a number of former and present United States officials and employees who, beginning in 1967, allegedly participated in a covert action program (code named COINTELPRO) designed to destroy the Black Panther Party. COINTELPRO was started in the wake of the “long hot summer of 1967,” when internal violence in the United States reached epidemic proportions and law enforcement agencies and national guard units throughout the nation were severely taxed to combat mass violence, arson, wholesale looting and constant threats to law and order—particularly in the large cities. At that time the Director of the Federal Bureau of Investigation labelled the Black Panther Party “the greatest threat” to the internal security of the United States. S.Rep.No. 755, 94th Cong., 2d Sess., Book III, 187 (1976).
Following an investigation, by a Select Committee, Senator Church, Chairman, the Committee Report in 1976 revealed the details of several COINTELPRO programs, including one that was directed at the Black Panther Party and that allegedly violated the constitutional rights of the Party and its members. Id. at 187-223. The report does not constitute evidence.
Following the release of the Committee Report, this lawsuit was started on December 1, 1976.1 Since that date, the parties have engaged in a series of extensive discovery efforts that have brought the case to
I. REQUIRING PARTY OFFICERS TO RESPOND INDIVIDUALLY
My principal disagreement with the majority opinion is over its decision that past and present individual Party officers can not now be ordered to respond to interrogatories, particularly about acts in which they might have personally participated and have personal knowledge. In my judgment the district court did not abuse its discretion when it ordered these individuals to respond under oath to certain interrogatories—particularly those that the designated representative of the Party had refused to fairly or fully answer on the grounds that she lacked the information, that she did not know where the information could be obtained, that she was not aware of any such information, that she did not know of any documents containing the requested information, or that the information had been lost or destroyed.3
In my view the district court has an inherent power to supervise the discovery process and need not justify every exercise of its supervisory power by resort to some specific provision of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure. The question instead should be whether the court acted reasonably under the circumstances and not contrary to some specific provision of the Rules.4 The district court here, in ordering Party officers to answer defendants’ interrogatories individually after the Party‘s representative submitted woefully inadequate responses, acted well within its discretion, and in accordance with the Federal Rules.
In my view the majority errs when it maintains, Maj. op. at 1254-1255, that the district court has power to order individual responses, if at all, only under
It remains, then, to inquire into the specific circumstances that led the district court to compel individual responses in this case. First, it is obvious from the record and the responses that were made to the defendant‘s initial interrogatories by Joan Kelley, the Party‘s designated surrogate for that purpose, that she was unable to furnish much of the information called for by the interrogatories. She did not have firsthand knowledge of much of the information concerning the Party that she was requested and selected to furnish. She did not join the Party until 1969, after it had allegedly engaged in 1967 in many of the violent acts of the kind which caused the formation of COINTELPRO, and she did not become a member of the Party‘s Central Committee until 1971 (JA 730-732). The inadequacy of Kelley as a surrogate for the Party was also made plain by her disingenuous responses to some of the critical interrogatories inquiring about illegal acts: she responded that the Party has no record of any such activity. See Responses to Interrogatories 79, 80, 88, 89, 91, 101, 102, 103, 104 in the Appendix to this opinion. Law breakers rarely go out of their way to document their crimes, but Party officers and others in authority undoubtedly have firsthand knowledge of such acts, if they did take place. As the district court noted, records were scarce, much time had elapsed since the alleged occurrences, witnesses were scattered, and “defendants [were] forced to rely on memories.” App. 852. Moreover, Kelley reported that some people she contacted in preparing her responses would not “talk about their former connection with the Party.” App. 731.
An explanation for this reticence may be found in the testimony of Party co-founder
II. THE CLAIM OF FIRST AMENDMENT PRIVILEGE AS TO INFORMATION CONCERNING UNDISCLOSED PARTY OFFICERS AND AUTHORIZED SPOKESMEN
I also dissent to the extent that the majority holds that the district court violated the Party‘s First Amendment privileges in ordering disclosure of the names of all undisclosed Party officers and local party leaders. I agree that the names of ordinary members need not be disclosed, absent a showing of a special need with respect to the knowledge of particular individuals, but Party officers and authorized spokesmen are in a different category. As to thеse undisclosed individuals, the defendants’ need for the information in their possession outweighs the Party‘s claim of constitutional privilege. The district court balanced the appropriate factors, albeit not as explicitly as some might desire, and arrived at the correct result. Its order to compel responses was in this respect valid, even if dismissal was too severe a sanction for flouting it.
As the majority relates, determining whether discovery can be compelled over a claim of constitutional privilege requires an assessment of the substantiality of the claim of privilege, the relevance of the information sought, and the availability of alternative sources. I question, at the outset, whether the district court‘s order compelling discovery should not be upheld simply on the basis that the Party failed to make a substantial showing of privilege. In fact, the Party made no showing at all. It “claims that [its associational] freedoms [under the First Amendment] might be endangered if the names of its leaders ... not known to the public are disclosed,” Maj. op. at note 153, and “alleges that its members have been harassed before, and suggests this harassment may continue.” Id. (emphasis added). Of course, if they are breaking the law, some legitimate acts of law enforcement that they characterize as “harassment” may be justified. Yet, despite its opportunities to do so, the Party has made no evidentiary showing to rebut the defendants’ explanation that investigation of the Party ceased years ago. This case is thus a far cry from NAACP v. Alabama, 357 U.S. 449, 78 S.Ct. 1163, 2 L.Ed.2d 1488 (1958), in which an “uncontroverted showing” of past reprisals against persons disclosed to be affiliated with the NAACP permitted the Supreme Court to conclude that compelled disclosure of the NAACP‘s membership in Alabama would have unwarranted adverse consequences for the individuals involved. Id. at 462-63, 78 S.Ct. at 1171-1172.
NAACP v. Alabama is also distinguishable on other grounds. Justice Harlan‘s opinion upheld the First Amendment right of the NAACP to refuse to disclose the names of its general rank and file members in Alabama to state authorities who were resisting the civil rights campaign by the NAACP in that state. And the civil rights campaign was legal. What is critical in the Alabama decision to this case is that while the NAACP withheld the names, it furnished the “total number” of its ordinary members in Alabama. It also furnished “the names of all its directors and officers.” 357 U.S. 465, 78 S.Ct. at 1173. NAACP is thus not authority for the Black Panthers withholding names of the Party‘s officers and authorized spokesmen.
According to the allegations, this case is much closer to Zimmerman than to NAACP. Plaintiffs’ pleadings contend that the Black Panther Party was at all times practically an eleemosynary organization devoted to good works among the poor and needy and was greatly wronged by the acts of defendants. On the other hand, the defendants, judging from their interrogatories and statutory responsibilities, are contending that the Black Panther Party, during the years in question, was engaged, among other crimes, in a conspiracy to cause civil disorder in violation of
Plaintiffs also contend that Carey v. Hume, 492 F.2d 631 (D.C.Cir.), petition for cert. dismissed, 417 U.S. 938 (1974), supports their claim of a First Amendment privilege to withhold the names of secret officers and spokesmen. However, as we noted in International Union v. National Right to Work, 590 F.2d 1139 (D.C.Cir.1978), our ruling in Carey v. Hume recognized that the First Amendment interests implicated by compelled disclosure of the confidential source of a newsman may sometimes be outweighed by a civil litigant‘s need for information in a lawsuit. The Party‘s First Amendment claim is similarly outweighed here.
The preconditions for compelling disclosure established in Carey were simply that the party seeking disclosure has made reasonable attempts to obtain the information elsewhere, and that the information sought goes to the heart of the lawsuit, 492 F.2d at 636-39 and cases cited. These require
Nor does our Right to Work decision, supra, support the Party‘s insistence on secrecy. In that case we held that the district court had acted prematurely in ordering the Right to Work Foundation to disclose the names of its contributors, but the identity of the companies whose officers or employees were members of the Foundation‘s Right to Work Advisory Council had already been publicly disclosed. 590 F.2d at 1145. Those council members are the equivalent of the officers and spokesmen of the Black Panther Party. Right to Work thus recognized no First Amendment right in concealing the identity of an organization‘s officers and spokesmen. Moreover, we recognized in Right to Work that
At some point, the additional burden on a litigant in seeking out alternative sources of discovery may justify compelling disclosure of essential information from one asserting a constitutional privilege.
Id. at 1153. The government‘s evident prejudice from yet further delay justifies disclosure now. Thus, in my view, Right to Work, far from justifying continuing concealment, is additional authority for compelled disclosure.
The Black Panther Party filed a further response on October 2, 1979, to 107 interrogatories as ordered by the Court on August 6, 1979. However, the Party still continued to claim that it had a First Amendment privilege to refuse to disclose the identities of certain Central Committee members, local leaders and certain individual party members who were not already publicly known. The Party stated its position as follows:
The Party, and its officers, continue to object to the disclosure of information for which the Party has claimed a First Amendment privilege. Specifically, the Party continues to refuse to disclose the identities of Central Committee members whose names have not been previously disclosed (interrogatory 21); the identities of local leaders of the Party‘s affiliates (interrogatory 33); and the names of individual party members not already publicly known which were deleted from the weekly reports from Party affiliates which were provided to defendants (interrogatory 61).
(JA at 874). As stated above the plaintiffs have no First Amendment privilege to refuse to disclose the identity of Central Committee members or local leaders. Whether the privilege extends to individual party members will depend on the prominence of the Party member, his authority and upon his Party activities. There is no general right to compel responses from “individual party members,” but if a showing were made that individual members were in possession of relevant knowledge they could be compelled to answer interrogatories or to testify by deposition. It must not be forgotten that the suit is brought for the members in the name of their Party.
III. THE CLAIM OF A FIFTH AMENDMENT SELF-INCRIMINATION PRIVILEGE BY PLAINTIFF HUEY P. NEWTON
Plaintiff Huey P. Newton was co-founder of the Black Panther Party. Throughout the early violent period in the Party‘s activities he exercised a controlling position in the activities of the Party and its members,
On August 6, 1979 the district court ordered Newton to answer 37 interrogatories over his claim that the answers thereto would implicate his Fifth Amendment privilege against self-incrimination. (JA 856-57.)7 He still claims this privilege with respect to 30 interrogatories. (JA 991.)8 For the future, it should be noted that Newton as an official of the Black Panther Party cannot assert his personal privilege to resist production of documents of the association in his custody which might incriminate him personally. United States v. White, 322 U.S. 694, 699-700, 64 S.Ct. 1248, 1251, 88 L.Ed. 1542 (1944); Wilson v. United States, 221 U.S. 361, 384-385, 31 S.Ct. 538, 545-546, 55 L.Ed. 771 (1911). Cf. George Campbell Painting Corp. v. Reid, 392 U.S. 286, 88 S.Ct. 1978, 20 L.Ed.2d 1094 (1968). Thus Newton might not be able to claim any personal privilege with respect to those interrogatories that call for the production of association documents. See Interrogatories Nos. 91, 92, 99, 101, 102, 103, 104.
In a great many instances, where the testimony is relevant, courts at the pretrial discovery stage have dismissed civil lawsuits with prejudice when a plaintiff claims the Fifth Amendment9 privilege against self-incrimination and thereby denies the civil defendant use of the incriminating testimony. The rationale relied upon by the courts in such cases has not been uniform. In Lyons v. Johnson, 415 F.2d 540 (9th Cir. 1969) the court after several preliminary comments ruled that in any event the Fifth Amendment could not be used to block all discovery. The court in Tomko v. Lees, 24 Fed.R.Serv.2d 407 (W.D.Pa.1977) denied a claim of self-incrimination by a plaintiff who sued police under
It would be uneven justice to permit plaintiffs to invoke the [court‘s] powers [to seek redress] and, at the same time, permit plaintiffs to fend off questions, the answers to which may constitute a valid defense or materially aid the defense.
(quoting Independent Productions Corp. v. Loew‘s, Inc., 22 F.R.D. at 276). In an earlier case in the Eastern District of Pennsylvania involving a claim of privilege against self-incrimination the court cited Lyons v. Johnson, supra, and reasoned that since the plaintiff was a voluntary litigant he could not refuse to answer 50 questions. Penn Communications Specialties, Inc. v. Hess, 65 F.R.D. 510, 511 (E.D.Pa.1975).
An antitrust action in the Southern District of New York reached the same conclusion. Therein the court ruled that since the witness was the sole stockholder and prime mover of the corporation plaintiffs, his refusal to testify about his Communist Party connections, which testimony was relevant and material to the specific defense of the defendant, amounted to a refusal by the plaintiff corporation and constituted a waiver of its privilege to bring the action. Independent Productions, Inc. v. Loew‘s, Inc., 22 F.R.D. 266, 277-78 (S.D.N.Y.1958).
Several courts have also characterized their rulings as prohibiting a plaintiff from using the privilege against self-incrimination as both a sword and a shield:
Plain justice dictates the view that, regardless of plaintiff‘s intention, plaintiffs must be deemed to have waived their assumed privilege by bringing this action. Moore, Federal Rules and Official Forms, 164 (1956).
This view strikes home. Plaintiffs in this civil action have initiated the action and forced defendants into court. If plaintiffs had not brought the action, they would not have been called on to testify. Even now, plaintiffs need not testify if they discontinue the action. They have freedom and reasonable choice of action. They cannot use this asserted privilege as both a sword and a shield. Defendants ought not be denied a possible defense because plaintiffs seek to invoke an alleged privilege. Id. at 276, 277, quoted in Bramble v. Kleindienst, 357 F.Supp. 1028 (D.Colo.1973).
The opinion in Christenson v. Christenson, 281 Minn. 507, 162 N.W.2d 194 (1968) by Justice Nelson aptly poses the question and supplies the answer.
The question is rather whether plaintiff should be permitted to withhold information [under a claim of self-incrimination] which must relieve defendant of liability and at the same time be permitted to prosecute her claim. The risk that plaintiff might thereby succeed in an unmeritorious claim would seem to be so substantial that she must either divulge the information or abandon her claim.
The New York Court of Appeals in Laverne v. Incorp. Village of Laurel Hollow, 18 N.Y.2d 635, 272 N.Y.S.2d 780, 219 N.E.2d 294 (1966), also relied upon this rationale.
The privilege against self-incrimination was intended to be used solely as a shield, and thus a plaintiff cannot use it as a sword to harass a defendant and to effectively thwart any attempt by defendant as a pretrial discovery proceeding to obtain information relevant to the cause of action alleged, and possible defenses thereto. (See, also, Franklin v. Franklin, 365 Mo. 442, 283 S.W.2d 483; Hazlett v. Bullis, 12 A.D.2d 784, 209 N.Y.S.2d 601 [2 Dept 1961]).
Judge Doyle in the Western District of Wisconsin reasoned similarly in Kisting v. Westchester Fire Ins. Co., 290 F.Supp. 141-49 (W.D.Wis.1968). This was a civil action on a fire insurance policy where the insurance company alleged arson by the insured as an affirmative defense.
Plaintiff‘s next contention is that the privilege against self-incrimination justifies Kisting‘s refusal to answer the questions involved. Plaintiffs thus seek to utilize the privilege not only as a shield, but also as a sword. This they cannot do.
In an analogous situation the Supreme Court in a denaturalization proceeding ruled that when the subject of the action took the stand and tеstified in her own behalf she waived the right to invoke on cross examination the privilege against self-incrimination regarding matters made relevant by her testimony on direct examination. Brown v. United States, 356 U.S. 148, 154-56, 78 S.Ct. 622, 626-627, 2 L.Ed.2d 589 (1958).
Three recent cases discuss other factors. The Fifth Circuit in Wehling v. CBS, 608 F.2d 1084 (5th Cir. 1979), ruled that plaintiffs during discovery should have been allowed temporarily to claim the Fifth Amendment privilege without suffering immediate dismissal of their action. It based such decision on the conclusion that the dismissal was unwarranted absent an inquiry as to whether deferring the plaintiffs’ action would allow the applicable statutes of limitation to lapse without prejudice to the defendant. In Newton‘s case, as explained elsewhere, further delay will prejudice defendants and expiration of the statutes of limitations might never occur. Even if the statute might run as to some offenses, the defendant‘s absence from the relevant jurisdiction might have tolled the running of the statute for such a long period of time as to cause an unreasonable delay in obtaining vital evidence.
The second case is Campbell v. Gerrans, 592 F.2d 1054 (9th Cir. 1979) where a Fifth Amendment claim of privilege was upheld against “highly questionable” interrogatories which were considered to be harassing and as not going to the heart of the defense. The interrogatories here go to the very heart of the defendants’ defenses and do not constitute harassment.
Finally, the Sixth Circuit in United States v. U. S. Currency, 626 F.2d 11, 14-15 (6th Cir. 1980), suggested that the district court should consider three alternatives: (1) rely on alternative sources for the information that a litigant seeks to protect with his claim of Fifth Amendment privilege; (2) grant the litigant immunity as to his testimony; (3) stay the proceedings until criminal proceedings and statutes of limitation have run their course. It is not practicable in this case to apply any of these alternatives. Newton and the other officers have exclusive knowledge of some of the facts because they were involved personally. As to the second suggestion, it would be unthinkable to grant plaintiffs immunity from prosecution on the crimes alleged against them in the congressional hearings. See, H.Rep.No.92-470, 92d Cong., 1st Sess. (1971). The magnitude and number of the alleged offenses compel prosecution, not immunity, particularly with respect to Newton and he is the principal subject that we are considering here. It would be a gross miscarriage of the judicial process to permit an alleged criminal to obtain immunity from prosecution as a result of his bringing a civil suit for damages against the officials charged with his prosecution. Such law would breed many civil suits. And granting more limited immunity, considering the breadth of the alleged criminal activities, could lead to endless litigation.
As for allowing the statute of limitations to run, as suggested above, that would be of
In sum, while filing a lawsuit may not automatically waive one‘s privilege against self-incrimination, the plaintiff in a civil suit does not have an absolute privilege for all time. In this case that time has passed since defendants would be greatly prejudiced by further delay in obtaining relevant testimony. The defendants have a constitutional due process right to all relevant testimony and that right must now be recognized. See generally Garner v. United States, 424 U.S. 648, 655, 96 S.Ct. 1178, 1182, 47 L.Ed.2d 370 (1976).
I thus respectfully dissent to the extent of the variation between the foregoing views and those expressed in Judge Wright‘s opinion. The strength of that opinion is minimized by its failure to respond to the First and Fifth Amendment discussion set out above. In any event the eventual outcome of the discovery in this case must follow the principles set forth above if plaintiffs persist in their recalcitrant conduct.
APPENDIX
There follows a sampling of the interrogatories and responses that indicate the Party representative failed to answer adequately. The comments that follow the responses point out the inadequacies of the responses and indicate why the officers and authorized spokesmen of the Party should now be required to respond to each of these interrogatories. In my judgment, the comments are not altered by the subsequent responses that the Party made to some interrogatories.
Interrogatory 25:
Identify all officers and other persons who were or now are authorized to speak on behalf of the Black Panther Party.
Response:
The scope of the interrogatory certainly makes it excessively burdensome and, therefore, objectionable. It is impossible for the Party to identify everyone who has been authorized to speak for the Party, an organization that has been in existence for twelve years, and had affiliates in over 40 cities throughout the United States at various times. Party members could have been authorized to speak on one or numerous occasions. At various times, numerous persons have been authorized to speak on a broad range of issues and policies; others only to a specific audience or group, in response to a specific request or need to do so. The Party has not maintained a listing of these persons. However, we can state, that members of the Central Committee are generally authorized to speak on behalf of the Party, although there have been exceptions to this proposition. The following is a representative listing of leading Party members and the approximate periods for which such an authorization existed:
- Huey P. Newton ... 1966 to the present
- Bobby Seale ... 1966 to 1974
- Elaine Brown ... 1971 to 1977
- Ericka Huggins ... 1972 to the present
- David DuBois ... 1972 to the present
- David Hilliard ... 1969 to 1974
- Eldridge Cleaver ... 1967 to 1971
Interrogatory 30:
Describe in detail the nature of the affiliation between the Black Panther Party of Oakland, California, and each affiliate identified in answer to interrogatory 26.
Response:
Each “affiliate” which was listed as a Black Panther Party office or center functioned as a local office of a single entity. Each affiliate provided those social services as needed by the Black and poor communities of the area in which it was located. These affiliates subscribed to the principles and theories of government outlined in the 10 Point Program and Platform of the Black Panther Party, the Party‘s basic operating guide. (App. 107).
This is another interrogatory that would havе special reference to discovery of facts concerning the extent of a conspiracy. Each of the officers of the Party should be required to respond to this inquiry because the Party had far-flung operations that might be better testified to by the numerous Party officers and spokesmen throughout the country.
Interrogatory 32:
For each affiliate identified in answer to interrogatory 26, identify all present and former offices, posts and other positions of responsibility of the affiliate.
Response:
Each local affiliate had a local “central staff” which was composed of the members in the area who supervised and coordinated the activities and services of that area. See the response to Interrogatory 18 for more details in the central staff‘s functions.
(App. 108).
This response is woefully inadequate. It fails to name names. The Party officers should be required to identify “present and former officers” to the extent of their ability.
Interrogatory 33:
For each office, post and position of responsibility identified in answer to the preceding interrogatory, identify each person who has held or holds the office, post or position of responsibility and the dates of their respective terms of office.
Response:
Plaintiff objects that this request is unduly burdensome. A central file of such information does not exist and this information, to the extent that it is available at all, must be obtained from issues of the Black Panther Party newspaper which is publicly available. Reconstruction of such names for a period of ten years and for over forty cities is impossible from the records kept by plaintiff.
(App. 108). The Party officers were undoubtedly in possession of such information and to the extent that they still recall it they should be required to disclose it rather than permit the party to completely hide behind the claim that the question is “unduly burdensome.” It may also prove to be unduly incriminating and hence essential to the defense.
Interrogatory 46:
Identify all chapters which continued to function after the revocation of their chapter by the national organization and state whether such former chapters currently are functioning.
Response:
Plaintiff does not have information on this subject.
Interrogatory 47:
For each affiliate identified in answer to interrogatory 41, state whether the property and business or other offices either now or formerly occupied by the affiliates was owned or leased by the national organization.
Response:
Plaintiff does not have records or information on these properties.
(App. 115).
The officers and spokesmen should have a recollection of this information. It would disclose material evidence as to the relationship between the Party and its affiliates for whose acts the Party must be held responsible.
Interrogatory 48:
For each affiliate‘s property or office where the answer to the preceding interrogatory was negative, was the property owned or leased by Stronghold Consolidated Productions, Inc.?
Response:
See responses to Interrogatories 46 and 47.
(App. 116).
Some of the Party officers and spokesmen should recall whether the property was owned or leased by Stronghold Consolidated Functions, Inc. and they may be required to furnish this information.
Interrogatory 51:
Identify all documents which reflect criticism from the national organization to any Black Panther Party affiliate as a result of the affiliate‘s lack of militancy, aggressiveness, or failure to confront police or other officials.
Response:
Plaintiff does not have knowledge of any such documents.
(App. 116).
Even if the plaintiff does not have knowledge of any such documents the question goes directly to the direction and control of the national organization and as to the type of organizatiоn that was being conducted. The officers who ran the Party and its spokesmen should have detailed information about this and they may be required to disclose it to the extent that it is within their knowledge.
Interrogatory 54:
Identify (by docket number, court, and parties) all civil and criminal actions (Federal and State) in which the Black Panther Party, its officers and members, or any Party affiliate was a party, other than actions involving marital, child support, or personal debt issues.
(App. 117). The party‘s response was lengthy and is not repeated. It stated that this interrogatory was overly burdensome and that court records are as available to the defendants as to the plaintiffs. Claim was also made that the defendants had extensive records regarding criminal actions, and three actions were specifically referred to. However, as to any other information known to the Party officers and spokesmen, they may be required to disclose it. While the defendants might know about some criminal actions involving the Party, they may not know that some criminal prosecutions that have been brought involve members of the Black Panther Party--particularly since the Party has indicated that it has some secret officers and members. Undisclosed crimes then may extend beyond those that the government was able to discover previously. Consequently, to the extent that Party officers and authorized spokesmen have such information, they may be required to disclose it.
Interrogatory 58:
Describe in detail the purposes, aims, goals, and actions of The Emergency Conference to Defend the Right of the Black Panther Party to Exist held on or about March 7-8, 1970, in Chicago, Illinois.
Plaintiff has no knowledge or documents with regard to this Conference which was not held or sponsored by the Party.
(App. 119-120).
Since the Party has claimed it has “no knowledge or documents with regard to this conference” which was allegedly not held or sponsored by the Party, if any of the officers or spokesmen have any information in connection with it, they may be required to disclose it.
Interrogatory 59:
Identify all other Conferences, ad hoc organizations, programs, and conventions (by title, date, and location) with purposes, aims, goals, and actions similar to the Chicago conference referenced in the preceding interrogatory.
Response:
Plaintiff has no knowledge or documents with regard to such conferences, organizations, programs or conventions and none were held or sponsored by the Party.
Interrogatory 60:
Identify all documents distributed at or generated as a result of the Chicago conference and the conferences, ad hoc organizations, programs, and conventions identified in answer to the preceding interrogatory which discuss, mention, or in any way refer to nation-wide harrassment of repression against the Party.
Response:
See responses to Interrogatories 58 and 59.
(App. 120).
Since the Party claims not to have any information concerning these matters it is proper to ask the Party officers and former spokesmen to respond to such interrogatories to the extent of their ability.
Interrogatory 67:
With regard to those documents identified in answer to interrogatories 62 and 63 which are not retained by the national office, identify which persons or organization (including affiliates) might have the documents.
Response:
Plaintiffs are not aware of any other organization or affiliate that might be in possession of these documents with the exception of the defendants.
(App. 122-123). Since the Party claims it is not able to furnish this information it is perfectly proper to ask those who controlled of the party and directed its operation to furnish such information as they may have in connection therewith.
Interrogatory 70:
Provide the present address of Bobby Seale.
Response:
Plaintiff does not have the present address of Bobby Seale.
(App. 123).
Since the plaintiff claims not to have this information it is perfectly proper to make the Party officers respond to this inquiry. They well might know the present address of the named individual. A recent newspaper story reported he was in Seattle.
Interrogatory 72:
Did Party members ever give the Party, or its officers, a percentage of moneys and/or goods which had been taken without an exchange of consideration?
Response:
No.
(App. 124).
This interrogatory is aimed directly at Party “officers” and to transactions between them and the Party. It requests information that the officers are peculiarly equipped to supply if any exists. Each Party officer may be required to respond to this interrogatory.
Interrogatory 73:
Identify all documents which reflect the receipt of such a percentage by the Party or its officers, including but not limited to documents which either commend or criticize members in connection with the receipt of such a percentage or the failure to pay a percentage.
Response:
There are no such documents.
(App. 124).
Same position as the comment to Interrogatory 72.
Interrogatory 75:
Were Party members or officers required by any formal or informal rule or encouraged to obtain, carry, and/or train with firearms?
Response:
Within the limits of the law and the Constitution, the right to bear arms and defend one‘s home and property was not discouraged.
(App. 124).
The response of the plaintiff hedges its answer. To the extent that it existed Party officers and spokesmen would have individual knowledge of the information here requested and they should be required to state whether such activity was “required by any formal or informal rule or encouraged.” If it was encouraged, they would be the most likely ones to encourage such activity--hence they may have a peculiar ability to respond to this interrogatory.
Interrogatory 79:
For each year beginning in 1966, identify which offices of the Black Panther Party or its affiliates have had revolvers, rifles, machine guns, shotguns, other firearms, hand grenades, bazookas, M-79 grenade launchers, dynamite, and/or plastic explosives stored in that office.
Response:
Plaintiff has no records or other means of identifying which offices or affiliates, if any, have had such materials stored.
(App. 125-126).
This reply is not responsive to the question. The interrogatory seeks information that was directly related to the activities of Party officers and they should be required to respond to the extent of their individual knowledge.
Interrogatory 80:
Identify (by make or type, model and, where appropriate, serial number) all revolvers, rifles, machine guns, shotguns, other firearms, hand grenades, bazookas, M-79 grenade launchers, dynamite and plastic explosives which have been stored at any time in an office of the Black Panther Party or any affiliate for each year beginning with 1966.
Response:
See response to Interrogatory 79.
(App. 126).
This reply is not responsive and the individual officers and spokesmen may be required to respond thereto. The question is directed at information that is material to determining the character of the organization being investigated and the knowledge of the officers of the activities of the organization is material and relevant.
Interrogatory 88:
In addition to the article appearing in the March 21, 1970 issue of “The Black Panther“, identify all documents originated by the Party, its officers, or any affiliate which reflect statements, suggestions, orders, or policy that American troops in Vietnam should kill their officers, General Abrams and/or his staff.
Response:
No such documents exist. If there was any statement on this general subject it would have appeared in the “Black Panther“. However, the article of March 21, 1970, and any other similar article, are rhetorical in the idiom of the Black and poor community and reflect the Party‘s disagreement with the United States Government‘s participation in the war in Vietnam.
(App. 128).
The Party‘s claim that such statements were “rhetorical” is in effect an admission of their existence. Since this information is vital to determining the true character of the Party and inquires specifically as to any acts by “officers,” all officers may be required to personally respond to this interrogatory.
Interrogatory 89:
Identify all documents originated by the Party, its officers, or any affiliate which reflect statements, suggestiоns, orders, or policy that members or others should kill police officers.
No such documents exist. While defendants may believe that such documents exist, this again reflects defendants failure to understand that statements of the Party are frequently to be understood rhetorically and not literally.
(App. 128).
The claim that no such documents exist is implicitly contradicted by the statement that defendants do not understand rhetorical statements. Thus the Party officers who were directing the activities of the Party may be compelled to respond to the interrogatory.
Interrogatory 91:
In addition to the statement by Party Chief of Staff David Hilliard reported in the November 22, 1969 issue of “The Black Panther,” identify all documents originated by the Party, its officers, or any affiliate which reflect statements, suggestions, orders, or policy that members or others should kill Richard Nixon, Lyndon Johnson, or other officials of government.
Response:
No such documents exist. The November 22, 1969 article and any similar comments are rhetorical indications of our disagreement with the repressive and illegal activities of such government officials. See responses for Interrogatories 88-90.
(App. 129).
Same comment as to Interrogatory 89.
Interrogatory 101:
Identify all documents which discuss, refer to, plan, or in any way mention the following:
- the theft of approximately 1000 pounds of dynamite from Quick Supply in Ankeny, Iowa on or about May 5, 1970;
- the acquisition, storage, handling, or use of any dynamite, including but not limited to dynamite taken from Quick Supply or 2 1/2” by 16” dynamite, by members of the Omaha, Nebraska or Des Moines, Iowa Chapters or National Committees to Combat Facism;
- the bombing of the Des Moines, Iowa Police Department on or about May 13, 1970;
- the bombing of the Ames, Iowa Police Department on or about May 22, 1970;
- the bombing of the Chamber of Commerce building in Des Moines, Iowa on or about June 13, 1970;
- the burglary of the Holm gun shop in Des Moines, Iowa on or about June 13, 1970;
- the placement of an explosive boobytrap device beneath a freeway bridge in Des Moines, Iowa on or about June 21, 1970;
- the bombing of the Drake University science hall in Des Moines, Iowa on or about June 29, 1970;
- the bombing of the North Assembly police station in Omaha, Nebraska on or about June 11, 1970;
- the bombing of Components Concept Corporation in Omaha, Nebraska on or about July 2, 1970;
- the placement of a boobytrapped toolbox in Des Moines, Iowa on or about August 1, 1970; and/or
- the killing, by way of boobytrapped suitcase, of police officer Larry Minard at 2367 Ohio Street in Omaha, Nebraska on or about August 17, 1970.
Response:
Plaintiff is not aware of any such documents.
(App. 133-134).
Since the awareness of the Party representative is somewhat limited, those with firsthand knowledge going back beyond her time with the Party may be required to respond. If such documents exist, many of the officers might have personally prepared them. The specificity of this interrogatory and Kelley‘s statement that she is not “aware” of any such documents fully justifies requiring each Party officer to respond to this interrogatory.
Interrogatory 102:
Identify all documents which discuss, refer to, plan, or in any way mention the use of explosive devices by Party or Party affiliate members.
Plaintiff has no such documents which plan the use of explosive devices by the Party or affiliates. However, mention of such devices has been made from time to time in various articles printed in the “Black Panther” newspaper.
(App. 134-135).
The response that the plaintiff has no such documents is not a complete answer to the question or the request to “identify all documents.” Each officer and spokesman may be required to respond to this inquiry because of the importance of the information and because it well might have been that the officers prepared such documents in the first place and might have an excellent recollection thereof.
Interrogatory 103:
Identify all documents which discuss, refer to, plan, or in any way mention hijacking airplanes by Party or Party affiliate members.
Response:
Plaintiff hаs no such documents which plan hijacking airplanes by the Party or affiliates. However, mention of such activity has been made in articles which have appeared in the “Black Panther” newspaper.
(App. 135). The comment made as to Interrogatory 102 is equally applicable here.
Interrogatory 104:
Identify all documents which discuss, refer to, plan, or in any way mention ambushes of or gun battles with police or other law enforcement officers by Party or Party affiliate members.
Response:
Plaintiff has no such documents except for issues of the “Black Panther” which report on police or other government agency activities against the Party or affiliates.
(App. 135). Same comment as to Interrogatory 102, supra.
Marc FELDMAN, Appellant,
v.
William C. GARDNER, et al.
Edward J. HICKEY, Jr., Appellant,
v.
DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA COURT OF APPEALS, et al.
Nos. 78-2235, 79-1233.
United States Court of Appeals, District of Columbia Circuit.
Argued Sept. 21, 1979.
Decided July 23, 1981.
As Amended Sept. 28, and Oct. 27, 1981.
Notes
Obviously the district court lacks power to act contrary to the rules. What I maintain is simply that absent specific guidance the district court has power to act reasonably. This does not render the rules “superfluous“; it merely recognizes that in some areas the Rules do not provide specific guidance and that in these areas the district court has power to advance the Rules’ general policies favoring fairness and expedition.
[I]t has been a Party policy since 1966 that “... when any conversation transpires between a Party member and myself its already understood that nothing will be told unless I give instruction,” even if it concerns a crime.9 [Transcript, page 146.]
Within 90 days after the filing of a complaint in a case sought to be maintained as a class action, the plaintiff shall move for a certification under
Rule 23(c)(1), Federal Rules of Civil Procedure , that the case may be maintained as a class action. * * *
Should it appear from the affidavits of a party opposing the motion that he cannot for reasons stated present by affidavit facts essential to justify his opposition, the court may refuse the application for judgment or may order a continuance to permit affidavits to be obtained or depositions to be taken or discovery to be had or may make such other order as is just.
In her affidavit Kelley denied that the Party had intentionally destroyed any records. She conceded that some documents had been “inadvertently thrown away over time.” Affidavit of Joan Kelley, JA 731.
JA 851.The posture of this case at this point in discovery is unusual in several respects. First, plaintiffs have either lost or destroyed virtually all of the relevant documents. Secondly, plaintiffs waited several years after the alleged actions complained of began taking place to file this lawsuit. Third, plaintiffs are asking for injunctive relief from officials presently in office, but are requesting damages from past officials.
The dissenting opinion levels a broad attack against the analysis employed in Part III-A, arguing that, although the scheme set forth in the Rules governs the actions of the parties, it does not circumscribe the power of the District Court. According to the dissent, the District Court has inherent authority to supervise the discovery process. This authority would include the power to enter any orders it believes are reasonable under the circumstances. Thus, in this case, because the order requiring each of the Party‘s officers to respond to a list of interrogatories constituted reasonable intervention, it should be affirmed. Dissenting opinion, Part I. We disagree. In our view, the court does not have the power to depart from the Rules and intervene in the discovery process at will. Such power would be inconsistent with one of the general policies underlying the Rules—that the conduct of discovery is to be left to the parties themselves, except when they ask for the assistance of the court. Moreover, if the court did possess such broad authority, the scheme set forth in the Rules, which carefully delineates the actions available to the parties and the court in specific instances during discovery, would be rendered superfluous.
In fact, the Supreme Court has criticized reliance on “inherent power” as a basis for imposing sanctions during the discovery process. In Societe Internationale v. Rogers, 357 U.S. 197, 207, 78 S.Ct. 1087, 1093, 2 L.Ed.2d 1255 (1958), the Court disapproved a lower court‘s attempt to predicate dismissal of a complaint on its inherent power.
In our opinion, whether a court has power to dismiss a complaint because of noncompliance with a production order depends exclusively upon
- Speak politely.
- Pay fairly for what you buy.
- Return everything you borrow.
- Pay for anything you damage.
- Do not hit or swear at people.
- Do not damage property or crops of the poor, oppressed masses.
- Do not take liberties with women.
- If we ever have to take captives, do not ill treat them.
- Obey orders in all your actions.
- Do not take a single needle or piece of thread from the “poor and oppressed” masses.
- Turn in everything captured from the attacking enemy.
Id. See also note 161 infra (listing cases that uphold waiver rule with respect to claim of Fifth Amendment privilege). But see generally Part II supra (rejecting waiver in Fifth Amendment context).It would be uneven justice to permit plaintiffs to invoke the powers of this court for the purpose of seeking redress and, at the same time, to permit plaintiffs to fend off questions, the answers to which may constitute a valid defense or materially aid the defense.
On the surface, Anderson v. Nixon, 444 F.Supp. 1195 (D.D.C.1978), which was cited by the District Court, see JA 853, 1134, appears to adopt an automatic waiver rule. In that case a plaintiff newspaper columnist refused to reveal confidential sources to the defendant, claiming a First Amendment privilege. The court ordered disclosure after stating that a balancing approach was “unrealistic” when the person claiming the privilege had initiated the lawsuit. Id. at 1199. Despite this language, it appears that the court did in fact balance the plaintiff‘s First Amendment rights against the defendant‘s need for disclosure. It ordered disclosure only after finding that extensive discovery had already taken place, that alternative sources had been exhausted, and that the information sought went to the heart of the case.
Moore‘s Federal Practice, also cited by the District Court, see JA 1134, might also be interpreted as advocating a waiver rule; in discussing whether parties may claim a constitutional privilege during discovery it uses the terminology of waiver. In fact, however, Moore would find “waiver” only where the information with respect to which a privilege has been asserted is basic to the case. See 4 J. Moore, Federal Practice ¶ 26.60[6] at 252 (1979).
424 U.S. at 64, 96 S.Ct. at 656 (footnotes omitted).We have long recognized that significant encroachments on First Amendment rights of the sort that compelled disclosure imposes cannot be justified by a mere showing of some legitimate governmental interest. Since NAACP v. Alabama we have required that the subordinating interests of the State must survive exacting scrutiny. We have also insisted that there be a “relevant correlation” or “substantial relation” between the governmental interests and the information required to be disclosed. * * *
In Buckley v. Valeo, supra note 144, 424 U.S. at 72-73, 96 S.Ct. at 660, the Supreme Court discussed the circumstances under which a minor party could avoid a statutory requirement that it disclose its membership list. Recognizing that strict requirements of proof of harassment would impose a heavy burden, it stated:
Id. at 74, 96 S.Ct. at 661.Minor parties must be allowed sufficient flexibility in the proof of injury to assure a fair consideration of their claim. The evidence offered need show only a reasonable probability that the compelled disclosure of a party‘s contributors’ names will subject them to threats, harassment, or reprisals from either Government officials or private parties. * * *
Appellees do contend that they need the information in order to find out “what exactly they are accused of doing.” See Memorandum and Order of January 25, 1980 at JA 1134. But it is unclear why this need would justify overriding the Party‘s First Amendment interests. It may be true that appellants do not describe their claims with perfect specificity. But they have repeatedly stated that they hope to develop their claims after an opportunity to take discovery. Aрpellants have provided enough information in their complaint and responses to interrogatories to enable appellees to proceed with preparation of their defense. With respect to the allegation that the government conducted unlawful armed raids, for example, appellants have provided a great deal of specific information: they have listed 39 raids, five incidents of arson or bombing of Party offices, violent deaths of 15 Party members, five injuries, and 105 arrests. See JA 156-158, 895, 963, 965-967, 1047-1049, 1112. See also appellants’ brief at Appendix A (detailing specific information provided by Party that substantiates allegations made in complaint).
To further support their claim of need appellees also suggest that unidentified Party officers could “provide testimony with respect to the Party‘s alleged political and social purposes” and “with respect to whether there really was any ‘immediacy and reality’ to plaintiffs’ claim of threatened harm so as to justify imposition of equitable relief * * *.” Appellees’ brief at 45 n.65. But they fail to explain why this information could not be obtained from the Party officers who have already been named. See also
Newton also objected to Interrogatories 43 and 44, which asked him to describe his participation in the shooting of Kathleen Smith and the beating of Preston Collins. Newton asserted the Fifth Amendment privilege against self-incrimination on the ground that this incident was the subject of a pending criminal prosecution against him. He later answered these interrogatories when the charges against him were dismissed. See Plaintiff Huey P. Newton‘s Further Supplemental Responses to Interrogatories as Ordered by This Court on August 6, 1979 at JA 991-992.
If an automatic waiver rule were applied, the civil rights of any individuals vulnerable to criminal prosecution would be routinely denied.
For example, no one would be able to bring suit for police brutality if on deposition he were required to elect between incriminating himself with regard to the incident out of which the claims arose, and suffering dismissal.
Note, Plaintiff as Deponent: Invoking the Fifth Amendment,
Several of the above cited opinions relied on Lyons v. Johnson, 415 F.2d 540 (9th Cir. 1969), cert. denied, 397 U.S. 1027, 90 S.Ct. 1273, 25 L.Ed.2d 538 (1970). In that case the Ninth Circuit approved dismissal of a plaintiff who invoked the Fifth Amendment in response to questions asked at a deposition. It stated that the “scales of justice would hardly remain equal * * * if a party can assert a claim against another and then be able to block all discovery attempts against him by asserting a Fifth Amendment privilege to any interrogation whatsoever upon his claim.” Id. at 542. When it decided Campbell v. Gerrans, however, the Ninth Circuit expressly limited the holding of Lyons v. Johnson to situations in which the Fifth Amendment had not been properly invoked. Campbell v. Gerrans, 592 F.2d 1054, 1057 (9th Cir. 1979). In Johnson v. Lyons the court had suggested that there was no real danger of self-incrimination.
We do not find, however, that the letter can be treated as a formal designation of issues pursuant toThe parties are encouraged to agree as to the contents of the appendix. In the absence of agreement, the appellant shall, not later than 10 days after the date on which the record is filed, serve on the appellee a designation of the parts of the record which he intends to include in the appendix and a statement of the issues which he intends to present for review. * * *
