United States v. Doe Co., No. 19-10187 (9th Cir. 2020)
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This case arose from a federal grand jury investigation of the acquisition of one company by another company. The grand jury issued two indictments and subpoenas to a third company, Doe Company ("the Company"), and to Pat Roe, a former officer at the acquired company and a current partner at the Company. The Company appealed the district court's denial of the Company's motion to quash and order of compliance by both the Company and by Pat Roe. After the Company declined to produce the documents, the district court held the Company in contempt.
The Ninth Circuit held that it lacked appellate jurisdiction to review the district court's enforcement order directed to Roe. The panel clarified under Perlman v. United States, 247 U.S. 7 (1918), that in seeking interlocutory review of a court order enforcing a grand jury subpoena, an appellant must assert a claim of evidentiary privilege or some other legal claim specifically protecting against disclosure to the grand jury. Because the Company makes no such claim, the panel held that it did not have jurisdiction under Perlman and dismissed in part.
After determining that it had jurisdiction to review the district court's enforcement orders directed to the Company and holding the Company in contempt, the panel held that, taken together, the district court's findings adequately support its determination that it had in personam jurisdiction over the Company. Furthermore, service of process on the Company was proper where it was fair, reasonable, and just to imply the authority of the General Counsel to receive service on behalf of the Company. Accordingly, the panel affirmed in part.
Court Description: Grand Jury Subpoenas. In two appeals arising from a federal grand jury investigation into the acquisition of one company by another, the panel (1) dismissed for lack of appellate jurisdiction the Doe Company’s appeal seeking review of the district court’s order enforcing Doe Company partner Pat Roe’s compliance with a grand jury subpoena, and (2) affirmed the district court’s orders enforcing the Doe Company’s compliance with a grand jury subpoena and holding the Doe Company in contempt for failure to produce the subpoenaed documents in its possession. Dismissing for lack of jurisdiction the Doe Company’s interlocutory appeal from the enforcement order against Roe, the panel clarified that under Perlman v. United States, 247 U.S. 7 (1918), this court may entertain interlocutory appeals from orders enforcing grand jury subpoenas only when they require production of materials that are claimed to be privileged or otherwise legally protected from disclosure. Because the Doe Company made no such claim, this court lacks jurisdiction under Perlman. The panel noted that the Doe Company has not sought a writ of mandamus and that review is unavailable under the general collateral order doctrine. The panel affirmed the district court’s orders denying the Doe Company’s motions to quash a grand jury subpoena and 4 IN RE GRAND JURY INVESTIGATION holding the Doe Company, which is based outside of the United States, in contempt. The panel held that, taken together, the district court’s findings adequately support its determination that it had in personam jurisdiction over the Doe Company. The panel also held that it was fair, reasonable and just to imply that an individual—who was identified as the General Counsel for a firm in which the Doe Company retained a significant ownership interest and who stated that he could accept service for the Doe Company— had authority to receive, at a United States address, service on behalf of the Doe Company.
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