This action is for triple damages for alleged violation of the Elkins Act, 49 U.S.C.A. § 41(3). Plaintiff United States contends Baltimore & Ohio Railroad favored General Motors Corpora* tion with a rebate of the partial cost oi defendant’s plant site and water facilities in connection with the construction of its assembly plant adjacent to tha railroad’s lines at Wilsmere, Delaware
The transaction was presented to two Federal Grand Juries under criminal provisions of the Elkins Act, once in 1951 and again in 1952. The first jury indicted B & 0 and the second returned a “no true bill” in GM’s favor. Thereafter, this suit against GM alone for civil penalties was begun. The statute of limitations has run on further criminal proceedings against defendant.
In preparation for trial, defendant filed a FR 34 motion, Fed.Rules Civ.Proc. 28 U.S.C.A., here considered, asking for an order directing the United States Attorney to produce for inspection and copying the transcripts of the 1951-52 Grand Jury hearings. No reported case has been cited or found in which a defendant has requested in a civil action production of such transcripts under FR 34.
Discovery under the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure, while of extensive scope, is not without its limits. It must be
in ancillary civil actions, reasons for production can not be more compelling, Generally, they are much less cogent, Protection of the grand jury process it
I do not find in the present action for civil penalties any justification for ordering production for inspection and copying the transcripts of the Grand Jury’s meetings. It is argued the Department of Justice will have the transcripts of the Grand Jury available and may use them, and such, it is suggested, will be á tactical advantage the discovery rules were designed to eliminate. But defendant, here, has other discovery techniques at its disposal through which most of the information sought and clues to other possible sources may be obtained. The announced intent to use the transcript as an impeachment tool appears to me improper and demonstrates how disclosure could seriously impair the grand jury system, the freedom and effectiveness of' its inquiry and deliberation. If a precedent is set that evidence before a grand jury may at some future time be disclosed to the probing examination of civil litigants in preparation of the trial of their cause not alone in a collateral matter but, as in the case at bar, in directly related matters where the inquisitorial examination of the grand jury and a civil litigant’s discovery in preparation for trial encompass the same subject matter and include an identity of events, such precedent would tend to restrict the free function of the grand jury.
My beliefs coincide with those expressed by Judge Learned Hand in U. S. v. Garsson, D.C.,
Notes
. I am informed the precise question was raised in United States v. Morgan Stanley & Co., D.C.S.D.N.Y.,
. In United States v. Byoir, D.C.,
. United States v. Papaioanu, D.C.Del.,
Goodman v. United States, 9 Cir.,
“Grand juries have been aptly characterized as ‘the voice of the community accusing its members.’ In re Kittle, C. C.,
United States v. White, D.C.N.J.,
“Grand jury proceedings are traditionally secret. The veil has not been lightly lifted. A presumption exists that the grand jury proceedings were regular, U. S. v. Proctor & Gamble Co., D.C.Mass., 1942,
