MEMORANDUM AND ORDER
Presently before the Court is a motion to quash a grand jury subpoena duces tecum served upon Home Unity Savings and Loan Association (“Home Unity”). The subpoena requests the production by a Home Unity employee of 11 categories of banking and financial records for any accounts of two married depositors (“depositors”) for a period of several years. By agreement with the Government, the return date of the subpoena was extended to permit disposition of this motion.
Home Unity resists compliance with the subpoena on four grounds: (1) that the subpoena was issued without a showing of probable cause; (2) that there is no showing that the subpoenaed records are relevant to a legitimate grand jury investigation; (3) that the subpoena was issued without notice having been given to the depositors, so that they might assert any valid privileges against production of the documents; and (4) that Section 612 of the Pennsylvania Savings Association Code of 1967, 7 P.S. § 6020-92 (Supp.1976), does not authorize disclosure of this information to the grand jury and that violation of Section 6020-92 could subject Home Unity to civil liability. We will address the arguments in that order.
A subpoena duces tecum issued to obtain records is subject to no more stringent Fourth Amendment requirements than is the ordinary subpoena.
United States v. Miller,
While probable cause need not be established to enforce a grand jury subpoena, in this circuit the Government must show: (1) the grand jury’s jurisdiction; (2) the relevancy of the subpoenaed materials to an investigation within that jurisdiction; and (3) the absence of an unrelated purpose.
In the Matter of Grand Jury Impaneled January 21, 1975 (Freedman),
Home Unity’s third contention is that the Government’s failure to provide notice to the depositors of this subpoena makes its enforcement improper. Home Unity has notified the depositors of the service of this subpoena.
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However, the argument appears to be that it is the Government’s obligation to provide a bank depositor with the opportunity, through notice of any subpoena upon the banking institution, to attempt to intervene and raise any privileges, whether established by the Constitution, statutes or the common law, which might bar production of the desired records.
3
We reject at the outset any suggestion of a banker-depositor privilege which would prevent the Government from obtaining or using information against a depositor obtained from the bank without
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the depositor’s permission. Federal courts do not recognize any such privilege.
United States v. Prevatt,
Section 612 of the Pennsylvania Savings Association Code of 1967, 7 P.S. § 6020-92 (Supp.1976),
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regulates to whom savings and loan associations and building and loan associations organized in Pennsylvania may divulge the contents of record books and accounts. While the statute specifically limits the parties to whom disclosure is permitted by association personnel, we do not believe that it was intended to, or can, thwart a proper federal grand jury investigation. On its face, the statute might raise an expectation on the part of the depositors that Home Unity would not disclose their account records to a federal grand jury. However, the law at times permits the frustration of actual expectations of privacy. The real question, in terms of the principles announced in
Katz v. United States,
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The only remaining question is whether it would be “unreasonable or oppressive,” Fed.R.Crim.P. 17(c), to require Home Unity to comply with this subpoena, as compliance would necessitate the violation of 7 P.S. § 6020-92 (Supp.1976) and possibly subject Home Unity to a civil suit brought by the depositors. While this Court does not take lightly the responsibility for ordering the violation of any statute, neither does the Court believe that a state statute can insulate otherwise obtainable evidence from a proper federal grand jury investigation.
Cf. United States v. Shaffer,
Home Unity’s motion to quash the subpoena will be denied.
An appropriate Order will be entered.
Notes
. Home Unity has cited both the Fourth Amendment to the United States Constitution and Article 1, Section 8 of the Pennsylvania Constitution. The latter provision states: “The people shall be secure in their persons, houses, papers and possessions from unreasonable searches and seizures, and no warrant to search any place or to seize any person or things shall issue without describing them as nearly as may be, nor without probable cause, supported by oath or affirmation subscribed to by the affiant.” As it relates to this motion, the protection provided by the state provision is identical to that of the Fourth Amendment.
See Commonwealth v. White,
. The depositors have taken no action to intervene, or otherwise be heard, in this proceeding.
. Due to our disposition of the merits of this argument, we need not address the question of whether Home Unity has standing to raise the issue of notice.
. 7 P.S. § 6020-92 (Supp.1976) provides:
(a) Record books and accounts of associations are private and confidential and the contents thereof may not be divulged by any officer, director or employe of the association except to:
(1) Authorized employes of the Department of Banking,
(2) Authorized employes of the Department of Revenue of the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania,
(3) Authorized representatives of the Federal Home Loan Bank Board,
(4) Members of the Savings Association Board during hearing before the board who shall have the right to inspect the records of the association.
(b) An association shall upon request furnish to any member information regarding his own account. The department shall by a regulation or ruling in any specific case, establish procedures for communication by one member of an association with other members of the same association, provided, that it determines that the request is made for legitimate purposes and can be complied with in such manner as not to disclose the investments of any members in the association. Any such communications shall be subject to the terms and conditions including payment of costs prescribed by the department.
