OPINION OF THE COURT
Emanuel Liebman and the law firm of Liebman & Flaster appeal from a district court order
I.
Facts and Procedural History
The appellants, who specialize in tax law, investigate and evaluate real estate partnerships for clients who want to invest for tax purposes. At least for the period at issue here, the firm charged fees only to those clients who invested. Liebman & Flaster concedes that each of these clients was advised that the fee was deductible as a legal expense. Brief for Appellants at 7. The IRS contends, however, that the fеes are not legal fees but brokerage charges, and are therefore not deductible. When the IRS discovered that some investors had deducted fees paid to Liebman & Flaster, the agency sоught to ascertain the names of others who might have done the same by various cross-matching methods. This information is not readily available to the IRS from the returns of the other investors because taxpayers who deduct legal fees are not required to identify the recipients. Frustrated in its effort to find the other taxpayers, the IRS sought a John Doe summons to compel the law firm to identify clients who had paid fees in connection with real estate partnerships.
The IRS petitioned the district court under Section 7609(f) of the Internal Revenue Code, which permits service of a John Doe summons upon a showing that it rеlates to an “ascertainable group or class of persons” when there is “a reasonable basis for believing” that these persons have failed to comply with a tax code provision and the information sought is “not readily available from other sources.” The summons requested “books, records, papers, billing ledgers and any other data which contains, reflects, or evidences the names, addresses and/or social security numbers of clients who paid fees in connection with the acquisition of real estate partnership interests in 1978, 1979 and/or 1980.” App. at 12a.
Liebman and his firm objected that enforcement of the summons would violate the attorney-client privilege. The district court rejected the claim and granted the enforcement order, although it permitted the attorneys to produce a list of names rather than their records. See App. at 147a.
This appeal was taken from the district court’s order.
II.
Discussion
The sole issue before us is whether the attorney-client privilege protects the identi
It is well established that “absent unusual circumstances the identity of the client does not come within the attorney-client privilege.” Gannet v. First National State Bank of New Jersey,
In Markowitz, we approvingly referred to cases affirming that the attorney-client privilege applies to the identity of a client in such a situation. We stated.
In Colton v. United States,306 F.2d 633 (2d Cir.1962), cert. denied,371 U.S. 951 ,83 S.Ct. 505 ,9 L.Ed.2d 499 (1963) the court found the privilege warranted where “the substance of a disclosurе has already been revealed but not its source.” Id. at 637. Similarly, in United States v. Pape,144 F.2d 778 (2d Cir.), cert. denied,323 U.S. 752 ,65 S.Ct. 86 ,89 L.Ed. 602 (1944) the court observed that there may be “situations in which so much has already appeared of the actual communications between an аttorney and a client, that the disclosure of the client will result in a breach of the privilege.” Id. at 783.
Markowitz,
In this case, appellants argue persuasively that protected confidences would be revealed by disclosing the clients’ identities. If the summons merely requested the names of clients who paid fees, the information would not be protected by the attorney-client privilege. However, the summons is more specific. The affidavit of the IRS agent supporting the request for the summons not only identifies the subject matter of the attorney-client communication, but also describes its substance. That is, the affidavit does more than identify the communications as relating to the deductibility of legal fees paid to Liebman & Flaster in connection with the acquisition of a real estate partnership interest, App. at 116a-121a. It goes on to reveal the content of the communication, namely that “taxpayers ... were advised by Liebman & Flaster that the fee was deductible - for income tax purposes.” App. at 117a. Thus, this case falls within the situation where “so much of the actual communication had already been established, that to disclose the client’s name would disclose the essence of a confidential communication____” See United States v. Jeffers,
The fact that the district court’s enforcement order limited appellants’ obligations to producing a list of names rather than their records does not alter the scope of the information sought, since the IRS has averred, and Liebman & Flaster have acknowledged, that the clients who paid fees for such advice were told they were deductible. Because the IRS request was limited to the group of persons who paid for specific investment advice, the IRS would automatically identify those who were told they could make the questionable deductions.
This construction of the privilege is unduly narrow. As we stressed in Markowitz, “it is the previously revealed confidence, not the fact of potential criminal prоsecution, which accounts for the privilege.” Markowitz,
Its purpose is to encourage full and frank communication between attorneys and their clients and thereby promote broader public interests in the observance of law and administration of justice.
All legal communications entered into with the expectation of privacy are privileged -whatever the initial purpose of the consultation.
Nor do we see any basis for holding that the communication itself is not within the scope of the privilege. At issue is not the mere disclosure of the act of retaining a lawyer, a fact not normally privileged, but the disclosure of a substantial confidential communication. See Osterhoudt,
If appellants were required to identify their clients as requested, thаt identity, when combined with the substance of the communication as to deductibility that is already known, would provide all there is to know about a confidential communication between the taxpayer-сlient and the attorney. Disclosure of the identity of the client would breach the attorney-client privilege to which that communication is entitled.
Notes
. Appeal No. 83-5766 is from the district court's oral order denying a timely motion for reconsideration. Appeal No. 83-5842 is from the district court’s subsequent written order denying the same motion. We consider the appeals as consolidated.
. The Fifth Circuit, in In re Grand Jury Proceedings (Pavlick),
. A legal communication is protected even if the consultation included advice that would be unprotected if rendered by a nonlawyer. See NLRB v. Harvey,
. The IRS contends that the taxpayers waived their attorney-client privilege because they deducted the fees. Since the mere deduction of the fee did not disclose the substance of the communication, it could not constitute a waiver of the privileged substance of the advice received. See Colton v. United States,
