The United States appeals from the district court’s order quashing, on fifth amendment grounds, a portion of a grand jury subpoena directing appellee to produce specified records and papers held by him in an individual capacity.
1
The district court, relying on
Boyd v. United States,
I
In March 1984, on application of the assistant United States Attorney, the federal grand jury sitting in the Eastern District of Virginia issued a subpoena duces tecum to appellee, who is a target of the grand jury’s investigation into certain alleged narcotics, tax and currency violations. The subpoena required appellee to produce specified “personal records” for the period extending from January 1,1975 to the date of the subpoena’s issuance. Included within the scope of the subpoena were “records of purchases, trades, sales, receipts, gifts and distributions of controlled substances.” 2 *836 On April 10,1984, appellee filed a motion to quash that portion of the subpoena requiring him to produce documents held by him in an individual capacity. He argued, first, that the subpoena was overbroad, and irrelevant to the grand jury’s investigation, *837 and, second, that the compelled production of personal records violated his fifth amendment right not to incriminate himself.
Following a hearing on April 13, 1984, the district court granted the motion to quash “to the extent that the subpoena calls for the production of personal records of appellee.” 3 The court directed counsel for appellee to submit for the court’s in camera inspection a list of the documents that were asserted to be “personal.” At the same time, at the government’s request, the court granted appellee immunity for the act of producing the documents. 4
After reviewing the submitted description, the district court concluded that the documents were “clearly personal,” and therefore were protected by the fifth amendment. The court ordered the in camera submission sealed until further order of the court, 5 and the United States noticed an appeal from this order. 6
II
The government contends that the district court should be reversed because the fifth amendment does not protect appellee from the subpoena of his personal documents. Specifically, the United States argues that no fifth amendment privilege attaches to the contents of pre-existing documents of any kind. Although the government admits that subpoenaed documents constitute “testimonial evidence,” it contends that the fifth amendment does not come into play because the individual’s voluntary choice, not governmental compulsion, results in the incriminating documentary “testimony.” Since the incriminating testimony is not itself compelled, so the argument goes, there is no constitutional right that prevents its disclosure to the government, even though the disclosure is unquestionably the result of government compulsion.
In line with this view, the government contends that the fifth amendment places no limits on governmental intrusion into an individual’s private affairs, other than a narrow proscription against the extortion of testimony. Cf. 8 Wigmore, Evidence § 2263 (McNaughton rev. 1961) (privilege “directed at the employment of legal process to extract from the person’s own lips an admission of guilt”). An individual’s “right to privacy” is thus left protected in a constitutional sense only by the conditional limits set by the fourth amendment. 7 *838 Because we believe that the government’s argument is inconsistent with the longstanding holding of the Supreme Court, first enunciated in Boyd, we affirm the order of the district court quashing the subpoena on fifth amendment grounds.
Boyd v. United States,
It is not the breaking of his doors and the rummaging of his drawers that constitutes the essence of the offense; but it is the invasion of his indefeasible right of personal security, personal liberty and private property, where that right has never been forfeited by his conviction of some public offense; it is the invasion of this sacred right which underlies and constitutes the essence of Lord Camden’s judgment. Breaking into a house and opening boxes and drawers are circumstances of aggravation; but any forcible and compulsory extortion of a man’s own testimony or of his private papers to be used as evidence to convict him of crime ... is within the condemnation of that judgment. In this regard the Fourth and Fifth Amendments run almost into each other.
Id.
at 630,
A contrary reading of the Constitution,
Boyd
noted, might “suit the purposes of despotic power,” but it conflicted with “the pure atmosphere of political liberty and personal freedom” enjoyed in this country.
Id.
at 632,
Later Supreme Court decisions have reaffirmed Boyd’s essential holding.
See, e.g., Bellis v. United States,
No later decision of the Supreme Court has held to the contrary on the point directly in issue. The government here relies on dicta in several recent decisions of the Court to support its view. The dicta are assuredly there, but none of these decisions has overruled Boyd.
The Supreme Court’s decision in
Fisher v. United States,
Ill
Among other things, the fifth amendment evinces “our respect for the inviolability of the human personality and
*840
of the right of each individual ‘to a private enclave where he may lead a private life.’ ”
Murphy v. Waterfront Commission,
AFFIRMED.
Notes
. Our jurisdiction is based on 18 U.S.C. § 3731.
. Item J of the grand jury subpoena required appellee to produce records of sole proprietor-
*836
ships. Appellee did not assert a fifth amendment privilege as to these documents and fully complied with Item J.
Cf. United States v. Doe,
— U.S. —,
I. Personal records of [appellee] for the period January 1, 1975 through present (unless a different period is specified elsewhere *):
A. 1975 income tax returns
B. Records of real estate transactions, in-
cluding but not limited to:
1. Sales contracts/purchase agreements
2. Financial statements
3. Settlement sheets
4. Deeds
5. Deeds of trust
6. Mortgages/promissory notes
C. Bank records, savings and loan records, credit union records, including but not limited to:
1. Checking account statements, cancelled checks, deposit tickets, debit memos, credit memos
2. Savings accounts statements, withdrawal slips, deposit tickets, debit memos, credit memos, interest statements
3. Retained copies of cashier’s checks, money orders, wire transfers
4. Certificates of deposit and money market certificates, statements of account
D. Records of loans received/made, including but not limited to:
1. Applications
2. Financial statements
3. Notes
4. Security agreements/collateral agreements
5. Repayment records
6. Interest statements
E. Records of brokerage accounts, including but not limited to:
1. Applications
2. Financial statements
3. Monthly/quarterly statements 4. Purchase orders, purchase confirmation slips
5. Sell orders, sales confirmation slips
6. Cash receipts
7. Receipts of securities delivered or received
8. Stocks
9. Dividend statements
10. Interest statements
11. Capital gains losses statements
* F. Records of all gifts ever received or
made in excess of $200.
* G. Records of all inheritances ever received
H. Records of purchases and sales of assets or expenditures in excess of $200, including but not limited to:
I. Payment records
2. Invoices, statements
3. Titles, lease agreements
4. Importation and duty records
5. Appraisals, certificates of authenticity
6. Contracts, purchase agreements, bills of sale
7. Insurance and annuity policies
I. Records of credit cards, including but
not limited to:
1. Monthly statements
2. Charge receipts
J. Records of businesses (sole proprietor-ships), including but not limited to:
1. Cash disbursement records
2. Cash receipts records
3. Client/customer name, address and
telephone records
4. Inventory records
5. Employment records, employees names and address records, Forms W-2, payroll records, payroll tax records and returns
6. Invoices
7. Receipts
8. Shipping and delivery records
9. Lease agreement
10. Bank records (see I.C.)
11. Loan records (see I.D.)
12. Records of purchases of business assets and business expenditures (see I.H.)
13. Credit card records (see I.I.)
14. Records of sales of business assets
K. Records of payments of legal fees, retainers and monies deposited with lawyers and/or law firms, including but not limited to records of: payees, addresses of payees, amounts and dates of payments.
L. Records of purchases, trades, sales, receipts, gifts and distributions of controlled substances as defined by Title 21, United States Code, Sections 811 and 812, for the period January 1, 1970 through the present, including but not limited to:
A. Documents reflecting the names, addresses and telphone [sic] numbers of customers, sellers, traders, suppliers, importers, dis-tributers [sic], transporters, drivers, storers and all other persons and/or entities involved in the acquisition, transportation, storage, disposal, advertising, promotion, sale and gifts of controlled substances.
B. Documents reflecting expenses of acquisition, transportation, storage, disposal, advertising, promotion, sale and gifts of controlled substances.
(Emphasis in original.)
. The district court rejected appellee’s contentions concerning the relevance and overbreadth of the subpoena. That finding is not challenged on appeal.
. The application of the United States was submitted pursuant to 18 U.S.C. §§ 6002 & 6003. The immunity order stated that “the fact of [appellee’s] compliance with the aforedescribed subpoena may not be used against [appellee] in any criminal case, except in a prosecution for perjury, false statements or failing to comply with this Court’s ORDER OF IMMUNITY.”
. The district court noted that "many of the documents consist of checks, vouchers or documents, the original or copies of which are in the hands of third parties.” The court thought it “ironic” that the government could subpoena these documents from the relevant third parties, but held that no waiver of appellee’s fifth amendment right occurred when the documents were released to those individuals. We agree.
. Appellee contends that the United States should have appealed from the earlier April 13 order and that its failure to do so resulted in the untimely filing of the notice of appeal. The April 13 order, however, did not determine which documents were "personal” but merely directed appellee to submit to the court a list of documents that were asserted to be personal. Not until the April 19 order did the government know whether any documents were to be considered privileged. We therefore hold that the April 19 order was the proper final order from which to appeal.
. The fourth amendment places few constraints on the government’s subpoena power. Notably, there is no requirement that the government have "probable cause” before subpoenaing documents or any other items.
See Oklahoma Press Publishing Co. v. Walling,
The substantive limits placed on government by the due process clause also unconditionally protect, in a few instances, the privacy of the individual.
See, e.g., Griswold v. Connecticut,
. The statute pursuant to which the order was entered provided that the failure of the individual to produce the records designated by the government’s motion resulted in the allegations stated in the motion being taken as true.
See Boyd,
. In an effort to distinguish the unreasonable search at issue in
Boyd
from searches for contraband, which the common law regarded as “reasonable,” the Court noted that in the latter situation the government possessed a superior property right in the items searched for. In
Warden v. Hayden,
. The "owner" of the document subpoenaed in
Boyd
was a partnership, E.A. Boyd & Sons. In
Beilis v. United States,
. The minimal fourth amendment constraints placed on the government’s subpoena power,
see supra
note 7, have always been assessed in conjunction with the fifth amendment’s traditional protection of the individual’s private papers. In
Dionisio,
for instance, the Supreme Court rejected a fourth amendment challenge to a grand jury subpoena, but noted that the fifth amendment prevented the government from requiring a person to produce incriminating private books and records.
See
Under the view advocated by the government in this case, a grand jury could subpoena an individual’s personal diary on the bare ground that it was in some way “relevant” to a broad-based investigation being conducted by the grand jury. If this were allowed, a grand jury subpoena would indeed have become a "talisman that dissolves all constitutional protections.”
Dionisio,
. The government has also argued, in the alternative, that the documents subpoenaed here are not sufficiently "private" to merit the protection of the fifth amendment. Private financial and commercial records, it contends, should not be privileged, even if intimate personal papers are found to be.
We decline, however, to engage in a case-by-case content-based determination of the privacy interest attendant to a given document. The proper line, we feel, has been drawn—whether the documents are held in an individual or representative capacity. Documents held in a representative capacity clearly reflect no privacy expectation on the part of the representative. See Beilis,417 U.S. at 91-92 ,94 S.Ct. at 2184-2185 (unlike personal records, “a substantial claim of privacy or confidentiality cannot often be maintained with respect to the financial records of an organized collective entity”). See also United States v. Davis,636 F.2d 1028 at 1043 (5th Cir.1981) (refusing to alter fifth amendment protection depending on whether documents are “business-related or more inherently personal in content”). Cf. Boyd (fifth amendment protects against production of invoice).
