The district court allowed the defendant’s motion to dismiss for failure to state a claim and the plaintiffs appealed. Fed.R.Civ.Pro. 12(b)(6). Given this posture of the case, we accept as true all material allegations in the complaint.
Robinson v. Stanley Home Prods. Co.,
In evaluating this complaint, the district court relied on one further fact, that the Commissioner demanded this financial information only after he was given cause to suspect the patrolmen’s integrity; their names were apparently found on a list in the possession of a man known to be involved in organized crime. While the reasons behind the Commissioner’s order are relevant, the court erred in considering them, for they are not set out in the complaint, and this was a motion to dismiss for failure to state a claim.
2
See Costen v. Pauline’s Sportswear, Inc.,
The plaintiffs attack the financial questionnaire as an invasion of their privacy. In appealing to a broad constitutional “right of privacy”, the plaintiffs seek a shelter of more limited parameters than the commodious label suggests. The Supreme Court in its occasions to deal with the concept of privacy has seemed to refer to autonomy.
See, e. g., Roe v. Wade,
This is not to say that there is no constitutional right to guard one’s secrets. But the officers in the instant case do not claim that their financial affairs will be broadcast to the public, or even to other government agencies.
3
There is little doubt that the Internal Revenue Service acted constitutionally in demanding the information supplied on the plaintiffs’ tax returns. And society’s interest in an honest police force is as strong as its interest in a self-reporting tax system.
4
Assuming for argument’s sake that this sort of privacy deserves a special constitutional solicitude, the interests on the Commissioner’s side outbalance a patrolman’s right to withhold financial information.
Cf. Kelley v. Johnson,
Freedom from disclosure is also protected by more specific guarantees of the constitution. But these plaintiffs do not claim that disclosure is being used to punish or deter their exercise of other constitutional rights.
Cf. NAACP v. Alabama,
Appellants’ second claim is that due process was violated when the Commissioner himself held a hearing to suspend the
*547
patrolmen for disobeying his order. This, they believe, was an unlawful combination of functions, conducive to bias. Any
per se
rule seems foreclosed by
Withrow v. Larkin,
Affirmed.
Notes
. The questionnaire is attached to, and we treat it as part of, the complaint. See
Mengel Co. v. Nashville Paper Prods. & Specialty Workers Union No. 153,
. Undisputed facts outside the complaint may of course be considered if the motion to dismiss is treated as one for summary judgment. 5 Wright & Miller, Federal Practice and Procedure § 1366 (1969). But this route was not followed by the court below, nor was it suggested by the defendants on appeal.
Cf. T. M. T. Trailer Ferry, Inc. v. Union de Tronquistas de Puerto Rico, Local 901,
. The Supreme Court has said that a complaint should not be dismissed “unless it appears beyond doubt that the plaintiff can prove no set of facts in support of his claim which would entitle him to relief.”
Conley v. Gibson,
. Even in the absence of any basis for suspicion on the part of the Commissioner, a requirement that police officers reveal their finances to the Commissioner serves the public interest in an honest force.
