Thе Petition for Rehearing filed on behalf of Appellee (U.S.A.) is denied and the Court having been polled at the request of one of the members of the Court and a majority of the Circuit Judges who are in regular active service not having voted in favor of it, (Rule 35 Federal Rules of Appellate Procedure; Local Fifth Circuit Rule 12) the Petition for Rehearing En Banc is also denied.
Before BROWN, Chief Judge, and WISDOM, GEWIN, BELL, THORN-BERRY, COLEMAN, GOLDBERG, AINSWORTH, GODBOLD, DYER, SIMPSON, MORGAN, CLARK, RONEY and GEE, Circuit Judges.
SIMPSON, Circuit Judge, joined by BROWN, Chief Judge, and BELL, AINSWORTH, DYER, RONEY and GEE, Circuit Judges, dissenting:
With deference, we here enter our vigorous dissent from the full court’s failure, by a narrow 8 — 7 vote, to grant the Petition of the United States for Rehearing en Banc. Our dissent is dictated by two basic reasons.
In the first place, the panel opinion departs radically from prior decisions denying to bank customers the standing to challenge subpoenas of bank records of their accounts. We disagree with the panel holding that such a result is either required or supported by California Bankers Association v. Shultz, 1974,
Secondly, if the presence of standing on the part of the depositor is assumed arguendo, and the merits of the panel decision are considered, we disagree that the process involved here was so infirm as to dictate reversal оf the district court. Finding the process faulty, the panel reverses without determining whether the alleged error is of such a nature as to require reversal. The implication is that faulty process per se is reversible error. We do not at all agree that the process below was faulty, but assuming that it was, prejudice to the appellant from such defect was not shown to have resulted and hence reversal is not indiсated.
The following facts emerge from the panel opinion and from the briefs of the parties before the panel and the petition for rehearing en banc of the United States.
The appellant Miller and four others were indicted for conspiracy to defraud the United States in connection with the manufacture and possession of non-tax-paid distilled spirits, 18 U.S.C. § 371 and 26 U.S.C. § 5601 et seq., and correspоnding related substantive offenses. Miller was the hub of the conspiracy, its source of necessary operating funds, its guiding intelligence and the director of its operations. At a second trial, following a mistrial, he was convicted by a jury of conspiracy and of the three substantive charges for which he was tried. Concurrent three year confinement sentences were imposed on him. Miller’s conviction is reversed for retrial by the panel decision.
*590 The alleged trial error with which we are concerned on the Petition of the United States for Rehearing en Banc is the admission into evidence of microfilm copies of Miller’s bank checks kept pursuant to the record-keeping provisions of the Bank Secrecy Act and obtained by grand jury subpoenas duces tecum directed to two banks at which he conducted banking business. On appeal, Miller challenged the legality of the subpoenas as not issued under the direction of the court, because no return was made on them, and because they were returnable to a date when the grand jury was not scheduled to be in session. 1 The two banks allowed inspection by revenue agents on the bank premises; the bank representatives were then relieved оf any obligation to appear before the U. S. Attorney or before the grand jury.
The panel accorded to Miller the requisite standing to complain of the claimed illegality of the subpoenas duces tecum, and held that the subpoenas were fatally defective. The bank’s waiver of defects was held not to bind the depositor Miller because of his protected interest in bank records kept pursuant to the Bank Secrecy Act and pertaining to his account.
The panel’s grounds for this decision are unclear. Language in the opinion indicates both that the panel considered Miller to have an ownership interest and a cognizable privacy interest.
2
But the new interest is recognized in the customer in order to prevent the copying requirements of the Bank Secrecy Act from bеing used as a means of circumventing the protection accorded an individual’s “private papers” by the Fourth Amendment. See Boyd v. United States, 1886,
Ruling
sub silentio
that a depositor has standing to challenge a grand jury subpoena of bank records of his account,
4
the panel renounces earlier case law and accords to a depositor rights that he never enjoyed prior to passage of the Bank Secrecy Act. With unanimity the earlier cases denied to a depositor the standing to challenge IRS subpoenas of bank records pertaining to his banking transactions, including microfilm copies of checks. See Harris v. United States, 9 Cir. 1969,
While we have not located any case in which a depositor claimed a cognizable privacy interest sufficient to confer standing under Katz v. United States, 1967,
will be viewed by various employees at the bank where it is cashed or deposited, at the clearing house through which it must pass, аnd at his own bank to which it will eventually return.
The question presented by the government petition, which this Court by a оne-vote margin declines to consider en banc, is whether the intervening statutory requirement of the Bank Secrecy Act of 1970 that banks compile and retain records of transactions with their customers, including microfilming, held constitutional in California Bankers, conferred standing upon depositors where it was not previously recognized. 6 Our position is that standing was not so conferred.
The fact that the United States by statute now requires banks to microfilm checks and other records of deаlings with customers makes such records no more the property of the customer than they were when the banks microfilmed voluntarily. As the Supreme Court noted in
California Bankers,
the bank is not a disinterested bystander, but is a party to the transaction.
Nor is it any more reasonable now than heretofore to have a “reasonable expectation of privacy”. Indeed it is less reasonable, because the records are now required to be maintained by statute, whereas prior to the passage of the Act microfilms were kept at the business discretion of banks, and custоmers were not informed of the practices of their own bank, or of other banks involved in the collecting process. See Harris, supra. Any one of the checks in the instant case might as easily have been endorsed by the payee to a third party. The privacy *592 which is alleged to exist actually rests not in the expected confidentiality of communications with one’s bank but in the belief that a party tо a check will remain anonymous because viewers of the instrument will not know who he is, attach significance to the transaction, or remember its details. 7 We consider it an anomaly that a statute designed to grant greater government access to bank records results here in a restriction on government access to such records. The result reached stands the statutory scheme on its head.
The Supreme Court decision in California Bankers doеs not compel a different result. The precise issue before the panel of this Court was there reserved for decision. See n. 6, supra. But the Supreme Court noted expressly that:
We decided long ago that an Internal Revenue summons directed to a third-party bank was not a violation of the Fourth Amendment rights of either the bank or the person under investigation by the taxing authorities. See First National Bank v. United States,267 U.S. 576 ,45 S.Ct. 231 ,69 L.Ed. 796 (1925), aff’g295 F. 142 (S.D.Ala.1924); Donaldson v. United States,400 U.S. 517 , 522,91 S.Ct. 534 , 538,27 L.Ed.2d 580 (1971). “[I]t is difficult to see how the summoning of a third party, аnd the records of a third party, can violate the rights of taxpayer, even if a criminal prosecution is contemplated or in progress.” Donaldson v. United States, supra, at 537,91 S.Ct. at 545 (Douglas, J., concurring).416 U.S. at 53 ,94 S.Ct. at 1513 ,39 L.Ed.2d at 835 . 8
Although the Court recognized that the bank acts under compulsion of the statute in taking checks and making the microfilms, “it is equally clear that in doing so
it neither searches nor seizes records in which the depositor has a Fourth Amendment right.”
Going to our second оbjection to the panel holding, and assuming that appellant Miller had standing to challenge the validity of the subpoenas, we do not agree that they were defective. And even if the subpoenas were defective, no prejudice is shown such as to require their suppression. This court at a minimum should remand for hearing and determination by the district court as to whether the government was preparing in good faith for presentment of pertinent records to the grand jury or was merely on a “fishing expedition”.
The process referred to by the Supreme Court in
California Bankers
is
*593
“existing”
legal process.
The Miller panel’s finding of defectiveness apparently stems from three circumstances: (1) the delay of nineteen days between the issuе date of the subpoenas and the scheduled grand jury meeting, (2) the lack of a return on the process, and (3) the fact that the U. S. Attorney, rather than the court or the grand jury, initiated the process. 11 We are persuaded nonetheless that the subpoenas were not faulty so long as the U. S. Attorney was preparing in good faith for the grand jury session. Morton Salt, infra.
The panel finds merit in Miller’s objection that the subpoenas werе not issued at the direction of the court or at the instance of the grand jury, but solely at the discretion of the U. S. Attorney.
12
There is no basis for valid objection to this practice. It is entirely normal and usual, has been repeatedly upheld, is necessary to the efficient investigation of crime by conserving a grand jury’s time, and is authorized by F.R.Crim.P. 17(a). See United States v. Culver (D.Md.1963)
United States v. Morton Salt Co. (D.Minn.1962),
The Miller panel opinion also relies on the circumstances that no grand jury was in session when the subpoenas issued and that no returns were made of service thereon.
We stated in United States v. Hedge, 5 Cir. 1972,
The U. S. Attorney is the guiding arm of the grand jury, concerned with the orderly presentation of information before that body. It is customary practice in the courts for documents and witnesses to be subpoenaed in advance to eliminate unnecessary material, allow for the orderly presentation of evidence, and save the time of grand jurors.
13
See United States v. Johns-Manville Corp., E.D.Pa.1962,
The grand jury in the instant case did in fact meet nineteen days after the subpoenas duces tecum were issued. There should be no suspicion of prosecutoriаl bad faith on the sole basis of production being sought at a time prior to the date when the grand jury was to meet. We do not read Miller’s allegations of a “fishing expedition” to urge that the records were not sought on behalf of the grand jury for an investigation by that body. If they are to be so construed, a remand is in order for a hearing as to whether the U. S. Attorney was or was not preparing in good faith to presеnt relevant matters to the grand jury.
Finally, even if it is held that the process was defective because the grand jury was not in session, we indicated in Hedge, supra, that a showing of prejudice was necessary before corrective action should be ordered. It is impossible to read prejudice as present ipso facto on the basis of the grand jury being out of session, or the failure to endorse a return on the process.
For the foregoing reasons, we dissent from the failure of the court to consider this case en banc. This decision, now permitted to stand, will impose severe handicaps to the orderly conduct of official business by U. S. Attorneys throughout this Circuit.
Notes
. The subpoenas issued at the request of the United States Attorney on January 23, 1973 and ordered production of the bank records before the grand jury on January 24. The grand jury did not meet, however, until February 12.
. We note in this connection the panel’s reliance upon Boyd v. United States, 1886,
. [The government]
may not cavalierly circumvent Boyd's precious protection by first requiring a third party bank to cоpy all of its depositors’ personal checks and then, with an improper invocation of legal process, calling upon the bank to allow inspection and reproduction of those copies.
500 F.2d at 757 .
. The panel opinion glides over the standing issue. At a minimum a more detailed explanation of the panel’s reasons for its action should be accorded to the United States.
. The reсords in the cases cited in the text encompassed books, papers, records, memos, and included signature cards, ledger sheets, deposit slips, credit files, applications for loans, financial statements, loan ledger sheets, memos relating to secured or unsecured commercial and personal loans, microfilms of checks and of debit memos charged to an account.
. It shоuld be pointed out that this precise issue was expressly reserved by the Supreme Court:
Claims of depositors against the compulsion by lawful process of bank records involving the depositors’ own transactions must wait until such process issues.
. Of course, the customer may reasonably expect that the bank will not release information pertaining to his affairs indiscriminately, to any chance person off the street making inquiries. This expectation may rest upon contract or fiduciary concepts, and may even be enforceable against the bank under state law. Fear of suit or the desire to retain or increase deposits may well impel a bank to contest a faulty subpoena, to give notice to the depositor that records of his account are sought, and to protect thе customer’s interests otherwise to the extent legally permissible. None of this however would suffice to protect a customer from a lawfully issued subpoena directed to a bank nor would it give him standing to contest it. See McMann v. Securities and Exchange Commission, 2 Cir. 1937,
. Cf. Couch v. United States, 1973,
. The Supreme Court’s concern as to limiting access to records “by existing legal process” alluded to by the panel opinion,
. Mr. Justice Powell, in his concurring opinion joined by Mr. Justice Blackmun, expressed concern over the potential for abuse should the regulation’s reporting requirements be significantly extended.
the legislative scheme permits access to this information without invocation of the judicial process. In such instances, the importаnt responsibility for balancing societal and individual interests is left to unre-viewed executive discretion, rather than the scrutiny of a neutral magistrate.
. See the statement,
Surely a purported grand jury subpoena, issued not by the court or by the grand jury, but by the United States Attorney’s office, for a date when no grand jury was in session, and which in effect compelled broad disclosure of Miller’s financial records to the government, does not constitute sufficient “legal process” within the meaning of the majority opinion.
This
ad hominem
statement, together with a footnote (n. 6, at p. 758 of 500 F.2d) and accompanying text, revisiting Mr. Justice Powell’s
caveat
(
. Miller argues on brief that the subpoenas did not issue under an order of court, an apparent basis in part for the court’s decision. We assume in this dissent that Miller’s complaint — that the subpoenas did not issue when the grand jury was in session — inсludes a claim of defectiveness because not issued at the grand jury’s request.
. In
Morton Salt,
supra, an impounding order was issued by the court on January 25, 1960, after the subpoena was issued. The trial court held that the right of government counsel to inspect the documents before presenting them to the grand jury fell within the scope of F.R.Crim.P. 17(c).
