Attorney Richard Sindel of Sindel & Sin-del, P.C., appeals a district court order requiring him to disclose information about two clients, intervenors John Doe and Jane Doe, on Internal Revenue Service Form 8300. These forms, which are used to report cash transactions in excess of $10,000 pursuant to 26 U.S.C. § 60501, request the name, address, tax identification number, and other information about each payor and each person on whose behalf payment is made. Sin-del argues that completion of the forms would violate his own ethical duties and the First, Fifth, and Sixth Amendment rights of his clients. After considering the circumstances surrounding each client, we affirm the district court order with respect to John Doe and reverse it with respect to Jane Doe.
I.
During 1990 and 1991, Sindel received a cash payment of $53,160 for John Doe and two cash payments of $10,000 each for Jane Doe for legal services rendered. Sindel reported each of these transactions using the August, 1988, version of IRS Form 8300, but omitted any identifying information regarding the payors or the persons on whose behalf payments were made. In an attachment to each form, Sindel claimed that disclosure would “violate ethical duties owed said client, and constitutional and/or attorney-client privileges that the reporting attorney is entitled or required to invoke,” and that the client had not authorized release of the information. At the request of the IRS, Sindel later withdrew the two forms report
After filing these forms, Sindel was served with an IRS summons requesting the missing information. The government then brought an enforcement action, and the district court ordered Sindel to show cause why the summons should not be enforced. The district court divided the ensuing proceedings into two parts, one held in open court and the other an ex-parte hearing held in camera. During the in-camera portion of the proceedings, Sindel presented evidence regarding his clients’ special circumstances. The district court ordered enforcement of the summons, but stayed its order pending this appeal.
II.
In order, if possible, to avoid deciding constitutional questions not essential to disposition of the case, Harmon v. Brucker,
The Missouri Rules of Professional Conduct appear on their face to extend somewhat broader protection to client identify and
III.
As we do not believe that the information regarding payments on behalf of John Doe. is protected from disclosure to the IRS by the federal common law of attorney-client privilege or the Missouri Rules of Professional Conduct, we necessarily undertake a consideration of Sindel’s constitutional claims.
A.
Sindel first argues that application of 26 U.S.C. § 60501 to an attorney violates the client’s Sixth Amendment right to counsel by inhibiting the ability to retain counsel, discouraging communication between attorney and client, forcing the attorney to act as an agent for the government, and disqualifying counsel of choice. As the Second Circuit accurately points out in Goldberger & Dubin,
B.
Sindel next claims that requiring him to complete the Forms 8300 would violate his clients’ Fifth Amendment privilege against self-incrimination. This guarantee, however, applies only to compulsion of the individual holding the privilege, not to other methods of obtaining potentially incriminating information. Couch v. United States,
C.
Sindel’s final constitutional claim is that completion of Form 8300 constitutes “compelled speech” and thus violates both his
IV.
For the foregoing reasons, we vacate the district court’s order with respect to Jane Doe and affirm the order with respect to John Doe.
