Daniel B. Sims appeals from his convictions after a trial to the bench on thirteen counts of mail fraud in violation of 18 *1240 U.S.C. § 1341. This appeal presents the issue of whether an exception to the confidential marital communications privilege should be adopted for confidential spousal communications arising out of joint criminal activity. We find that the district court properly applied such an exception; and, finding no other error, we affirm.
I.
Both Sims and his wife, Denise Sims participated in a scheme to defraud insurance companies through use of the mails. The couple submitted insurance claims for deliberately set fires that damaged their home and place of business, for staged burglaries, for staged automobile accidents, and for non-existent personal injuries.
Denise Sims testified under the Federal Witness Protection Plan and in exchange for the dismissal of the charges that had been brought against her in the joint indictment under which appellant was being tried. Defendant had previously objected to her testimony insofar as it would relate to confidential marital communications. In ruling on this objection, the district court stated:
the Supreme Court of the United States, in Trammel, ... implied at the very minimum that confidential communications do not occur when a husband and wife plan a crime. That is not a confidential marital communication. That is merely one criminal talking to another criminal, or potential criminal talking to another criminal. To hold otherwise would be to frustrate the administration of justice without a good legal reason to do so. That is to say, the protection of the marital relationship, and the ability of one spouse to communicate privately with the other.
Consequently, my ruling is that, there being no doubt about the adverse portion, because counsel for both sides agree on that, my ruling is that testimony from this witness that is about to appear that relates to the planning of a crime, or the discussion of joint crimes between husband and wife, is not such a conversation as falls within the marital communication privilege.
During the course of her testimony, Denise Sims testified to the content of verbal statements made by appellant solely in Denise Sims’ presence about the crimes in question. Appellant challenges the admission of this testimony.
II.
There are two types of marital privilege. One privilege is the privilege against adverse spousal testimony. In
Trammel v. United States,
Another privilege is that which protects confidential marital communications. It is this latter privilege that defendant in the instant case attempts to assert. The Court in
Trammel
specifically noted that this privilege regarding
confidential
marital communications was distinct from the privilege against adverse spousal testimony, which was not present in that case. It observed that the holdings of
Wolfle v. United States,
A number of circuits have developed a “joint participants” exception that has been applied to one or both of the marital privileges.
See United States v. Broome,
The Seventh Circuit was the first circuit to recognize expressly the joint participants exception. It did so in
United States v. Van Drunen,
In expressly adopting the joint participants exception, the
Van Drunen
court applied the exception to the privilege against adverse spousal testimony.
See also United States v. Clark,
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The Seventh Circuit has recently reaffirmed its adoption of the joint participants exception as applied to the privilege against adverse spousal testimony.
See United States v. Clark,
Several other circuits have adopted the joint participants exception. In
United States v. Mendoza,
The Third Circuit has adopted the joint participants exception in the context of the confidential marital communications privilege,
United States v. Ammar,
In
United States v. Ammar,
Most recently, the Fourth Circuit has joined these circuits in applying the exception to the confidential marital communications privilege.
See United States v. Broome,
We now join these circuits in adopting the joint participants exception as applied to confidential marital communications. In so holding, we recognize the unique intimacy of marital communications. Any exception to the marital communications privilege
results in intrusion upon an individual’s privacy greater than that occurring in any of the other protected relationships. Out of concern for this unique intimacy ... the future crime or tort exception should not be applied to the marital privilege so as to withdraw protection from communications concerning activity which is not on its face unlawful. It follows that a mere statement of a spouse’s criminal plans should not be outside the privilege. On the other hand, conduct sought by one spouse that is unambiguously illegal would seem outside the area of desired husband-wife intimacy, so that the admission of related communications would be unlikely to hinder favored discussion. For example, open solicitation of a wife’s assistance in forging an instrument, in contrast to asking her help in transporting her husband, should be held outside the marital privilege.
Note, The Future Crime or Tort Exception to Communications Privileges, 77 Harv.L.Kev. 730, 734 (1964) (emphasis added). Consequently, we limit the exception to permit admission of only those conversations that pertain to patently illegal activity. By narrowly construing the exception, we are attempting to protect the privacy of marriage and encourage open and frank marital communications. Only where spouses engage in conversations regarding joint ongoing or future patently illegal activity does the public’s interest in discovering the truth about criminal activity outweigh the public’s interest in protecting the privacy of marriage.
In the instant case, the trial court was careful to admit only those confidential marital communications that concerned joint patently illegal activity. We hold that the admission of this evidence was proper under the joint participants exception to the confidential marital communications privilege. 3
*1244 Appellant also argues that even if the testimony itself was admissible, the criminality of the subject of the conversation should have been established by evidence other than the spouse’s testimony. Our requirement that the conversations relate to patently illegal activity directly addresses appellant’s concern that a spouse could testify to privileged confidential communication merely by asserting that the activities discussed were criminal in nature.
Appellant also argues that the district court erred in failing to ascertain, prior to the introduction of his wife’s testimony, the circumstances under which she was persuaded to testify. We agree that this procedure is preferred. In light of the fact that this case was tried to the court and that the trial judge later determined that Denise Sims testified voluntarily, we hold that the trial court did not commit reversible error by failing to conduct a pretrial hearing on the voluntariness of Denise Sims’ testimony.
III.
Appellant’s arguments that he was denied his sixth amendment right to counsel of his choice, that he was denied his right to trial by an impartial jury, and that he was placed in double jeopardy are without merit. Accordingly, the conviction is AFFIRMED.
Notes
. The court stated that it was following the Seventh Circuit and the Second Circuit in adopting the exception.
Id.
at 1380-81 (citing
United States v. Kahn,
. The Fifth Circuit recently declined to consider "whether a ‘joint crimes’ exception, applied in
Mendoza
to the confidential marital communications privilege, might limit the adverse spousal testimony rule in
Trammel." See United States v. Archer,
. The government argues that the public’s interest in protecting the privacy of marriage is particularly weak in this case because the Simses have had numerous domestic quarrels and each has had extra-marital relations. We do not believe that courts can or should "assess the social
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worthiness of particular marriages or the need of particular marriages for the protection of the privilege.”
Appeal of Malfitano,
