OPINION
ROBINSON, District Judge.
The Government has moved for additional modification of a subpoena commanding the production of documents, from files in the Department of Justice, for discovery incidental to a civil case pending in the District Court for the Southern District of New York,1 to which the Government is not a party. The motion proposes the elimination from the production requirement of documents as to which a claim of executive privilege is made, and the modification of an order directing submission for in camera inspection of documents as to which the Government asserts a privilege.2
The New York action was brought by two West German entities, Carl Zeiss Stiftung (Stiftung) and Zeiss Ikon A. G. (Ikon), against an East German enterprise, V. E. B. Carl Zeiss, Jena (Zeiss Jena), and four of its American representatives, among whom are Ercona Corporation (Ercona) and Steelmasters, Inc. (Steelmasters),3 to resolve questions stemming from a contest as to the owner-, ship of' the internationally famous “Zeiss” trademarks and trade names and exclusive right to use them in the United States.4 In an earlier suit brought in this Court by Ercona and Steelmasters against the Attorney General and other Government officials, it had been held that the Attorney General was not vested with ownership of the trademarks in consequence of transactions emanating from purported wartime seizures.5 Claims pressed by the plaintiffs in the pending action are resisted on the basis of findings made in the older proceeding which, it is asserted, they are precluded by principles of estoppel'and laches from relitigating; and it is in an effort to support these contentions that Zeiss Jena, Steelmasters and Ercona (the claimants) obtained the subpoena in question.
Since the plaintiffs were not parties to the first case, the estoppel is predicated upon the contention that they cooperated and participated in the Government’s activities therein. The laches defense is rested upon allegations that the plaintiffs were aware of adverse uses [323]*323of the trademarks but nonetheless failed to assert their claims in the earlier suit. The subpoena embraces documents bearing on the nature and extent of the relationship between the plaintiffs and the Government prior to and during the period the Government was involved in the. litigation.
Additionally, the complaint in the New York action alleges that Stiftung, and not Zeiss Jena, has been recognized by the United States as the only producer of genuine Zeiss goods. In support of this position, it points to a sale by the Government to a Stiftung subsidiary of the capital stock of Carl Zeiss, Inc. (Zeiss New York),6 a New York distributor of Zeiss products, and alleges that, the Government refused to negotiate with Ercona, or to offer the stock for sale at public auction, because of a determination by the Attorney General that sale to the Stiftung affiliate was in the public interest. To enable discovery with a view to challenging .these claims, the subpoena also includes documents relating to the sale transaction for such light as they may shed on the then relationship between the Government and the plaintiffs.
The Government has already produced an assortment of approximately 4,500 documents pertaining to a variety of activities and events. These comprise all but 49 of the documents the subpoena requires, and as to these a claim of executive privilege is asserted and supported by an affidavit made by the Attorney General. The affidavit states that the' documents withheld consist in’ intra-de-partmental memoranda and inter-departmental communications containing opinions, recommendations and deliberations pertaining to decisions the Department was required to make as to litigation and other matters, and, recites the Attorney General’s conclusion, following personal examination, that their production would be contrary to the public interest.
The Government’s present motion is hotly contested, but implicit in the claimants’ position is the'realization that production must be restricted to materials “not privileged:” 7 All parties recognize, too, that privilege for this purpose exists or not according to common acceptations in the law of evidence.8 Immunity from production based on privilege is neither broader nor narrower than it would be in the normal trial context.9
In advocating its’contentions, the Government has alluded to traditional limitations on judicial authority inherent in the doctrine of separation of powers, and has pointed out that- the documents sought grew out of its internal operations. In the view the Court takes of the matter, however, there is no occasion for investigation into the constitutional dimensions of executive privilege,10 or the scope of protection derived solely from the intra-governmental character [324]*324of the materials withheld.11 What is decided, and all that needs to be decided, is that, as documents integral to an appropriate exercise of the executive’s de-cisional and policy-making functions, they are immune from the disclosure the claimants seek.
I
“Executive privilege is a phrase of release from requirements common to private citizens or organizations” 12 — an exemption essential to discharge of highly important executive responsibilities. While it is agreed that the privilege extends to all military13 and diplomatic14 secrets, its recognition is not confined to data qualifying as such. Whatever its boundaries as to other types of claims not involving state secrets, it is well established that the privilege obtains with respect to intra-governmental documents •reflecting advisory opinions, recommendations and deliberations comprising part of a process by which governmental decisions and policies are formulated.15
This privilege, as do all evidentiary privileges, effects an adjustment between important but competing interests. There is, on the one hand, the public concern in revelations facilitating the just resolution of legal disputes, and, on the other, occasional but compelling public needs for confidentiality. In striking the balance in favor of nondisclosure of intra-governmental advisory and deliberative communications, the privilege subserves a preponderating policy of frank expression and discussion among those upon whom rests the responsibility for making the determinations that enable government to operate,16 and thus achieves an objective akin [325]*325to those attained by other privileges more ancient and commonplace in character.17 Nowhere is the public interest more vitally involved than in the fidelity of the sovereign’s decision- and policy-making resources.18
The Attorney General is charged with the duty of rendering all legal services essential to the operations of the Executive Branch.19 He also carries the burden of litigation to which the United States or any of its agencies is a party.20 These responsibilities are discharged through the Department of Justice, and the Department’s legal business embraces the requirements and activities of various governmental agencies.
Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI
OPINION
ROBINSON, District Judge.
The Government has moved for additional modification of a subpoena commanding the production of documents, from files in the Department of Justice, for discovery incidental to a civil case pending in the District Court for the Southern District of New York,1 to which the Government is not a party. The motion proposes the elimination from the production requirement of documents as to which a claim of executive privilege is made, and the modification of an order directing submission for in camera inspection of documents as to which the Government asserts a privilege.2
The New York action was brought by two West German entities, Carl Zeiss Stiftung (Stiftung) and Zeiss Ikon A. G. (Ikon), against an East German enterprise, V. E. B. Carl Zeiss, Jena (Zeiss Jena), and four of its American representatives, among whom are Ercona Corporation (Ercona) and Steelmasters, Inc. (Steelmasters),3 to resolve questions stemming from a contest as to the owner-, ship of' the internationally famous “Zeiss” trademarks and trade names and exclusive right to use them in the United States.4 In an earlier suit brought in this Court by Ercona and Steelmasters against the Attorney General and other Government officials, it had been held that the Attorney General was not vested with ownership of the trademarks in consequence of transactions emanating from purported wartime seizures.5 Claims pressed by the plaintiffs in the pending action are resisted on the basis of findings made in the older proceeding which, it is asserted, they are precluded by principles of estoppel'and laches from relitigating; and it is in an effort to support these contentions that Zeiss Jena, Steelmasters and Ercona (the claimants) obtained the subpoena in question.
Since the plaintiffs were not parties to the first case, the estoppel is predicated upon the contention that they cooperated and participated in the Government’s activities therein. The laches defense is rested upon allegations that the plaintiffs were aware of adverse uses [323]*323of the trademarks but nonetheless failed to assert their claims in the earlier suit. The subpoena embraces documents bearing on the nature and extent of the relationship between the plaintiffs and the Government prior to and during the period the Government was involved in the. litigation.
Additionally, the complaint in the New York action alleges that Stiftung, and not Zeiss Jena, has been recognized by the United States as the only producer of genuine Zeiss goods. In support of this position, it points to a sale by the Government to a Stiftung subsidiary of the capital stock of Carl Zeiss, Inc. (Zeiss New York),6 a New York distributor of Zeiss products, and alleges that, the Government refused to negotiate with Ercona, or to offer the stock for sale at public auction, because of a determination by the Attorney General that sale to the Stiftung affiliate was in the public interest. To enable discovery with a view to challenging .these claims, the subpoena also includes documents relating to the sale transaction for such light as they may shed on the then relationship between the Government and the plaintiffs.
The Government has already produced an assortment of approximately 4,500 documents pertaining to a variety of activities and events. These comprise all but 49 of the documents the subpoena requires, and as to these a claim of executive privilege is asserted and supported by an affidavit made by the Attorney General. The affidavit states that the' documents withheld consist in’ intra-de-partmental memoranda and inter-departmental communications containing opinions, recommendations and deliberations pertaining to decisions the Department was required to make as to litigation and other matters, and, recites the Attorney General’s conclusion, following personal examination, that their production would be contrary to the public interest.
The Government’s present motion is hotly contested, but implicit in the claimants’ position is the'realization that production must be restricted to materials “not privileged:” 7 All parties recognize, too, that privilege for this purpose exists or not according to common acceptations in the law of evidence.8 Immunity from production based on privilege is neither broader nor narrower than it would be in the normal trial context.9
In advocating its’contentions, the Government has alluded to traditional limitations on judicial authority inherent in the doctrine of separation of powers, and has pointed out that- the documents sought grew out of its internal operations. In the view the Court takes of the matter, however, there is no occasion for investigation into the constitutional dimensions of executive privilege,10 or the scope of protection derived solely from the intra-governmental character [324]*324of the materials withheld.11 What is decided, and all that needs to be decided, is that, as documents integral to an appropriate exercise of the executive’s de-cisional and policy-making functions, they are immune from the disclosure the claimants seek.
I
“Executive privilege is a phrase of release from requirements common to private citizens or organizations” 12 — an exemption essential to discharge of highly important executive responsibilities. While it is agreed that the privilege extends to all military13 and diplomatic14 secrets, its recognition is not confined to data qualifying as such. Whatever its boundaries as to other types of claims not involving state secrets, it is well established that the privilege obtains with respect to intra-governmental documents •reflecting advisory opinions, recommendations and deliberations comprising part of a process by which governmental decisions and policies are formulated.15
This privilege, as do all evidentiary privileges, effects an adjustment between important but competing interests. There is, on the one hand, the public concern in revelations facilitating the just resolution of legal disputes, and, on the other, occasional but compelling public needs for confidentiality. In striking the balance in favor of nondisclosure of intra-governmental advisory and deliberative communications, the privilege subserves a preponderating policy of frank expression and discussion among those upon whom rests the responsibility for making the determinations that enable government to operate,16 and thus achieves an objective akin [325]*325to those attained by other privileges more ancient and commonplace in character.17 Nowhere is the public interest more vitally involved than in the fidelity of the sovereign’s decision- and policy-making resources.18
The Attorney General is charged with the duty of rendering all legal services essential to the operations of the Executive Branch.19 He also carries the burden of litigation to which the United States or any of its agencies is a party.20 These responsibilities are discharged through the Department of Justice, and the Department’s legal business embraces the requirements and activities of various governmental agencies. It is evident that the Department, to function adequately, must depend heavily upon candid exchanges of ideas, not only among its own staff but also, particularly because of the institutional nature of its decisions, with other agencies whose interests are involved.
To the extent that such communications may later be scrutinized by others, the communicative process itself becomes embarrassed. Without adequate assurance against disclosure, clients would tell lawyers considerably less than they do; unless the lawyer’s thoughts were inviolate, “much of what is now put down in writing would remain unwritten.” 21 Freedom of communication vital to fulfillment of the aims of wholesome relationships is obtained only by removing the specter of compelled disclosure. And while no clear separation can be made between the United States as a client-litigant and the Department as its legal representative, government, no less than the citizen, needs open but protected channels for the kind of plain talk that is essential to the quality of its functioning.
As important as are these considerations, the cases, analyzed critically, demonstrate that the immunity of intragovernmental opinions and deliberations also rests upon another policy of equal vitality and scope. The judiciary, the courts declare, is not authorized “to probe the mental processes” of an executive or administrative officer.22 This salutary rule forecloses investigation into the methods by which a decision is reached,23 the matters considered,24 the [326]*326contributing influences,25 ór the role played by the work of others 26—results demanded by exigencies of the most imperative character. No judge could tolerate an inquisition into the elements comprising his decision27—indeed, “[s]uch an examination of a judge would be destructive of judicial responsibility” 28—and by the same token “the integrity of the administrative process must be equally respected.”29 Identically potent reasons dictate that protection no less extensive be afforded the processes by which the Attorney General’s responsibilities for decisional and policy formulations, legal or otherwise, are discharged.30
Inextricably intertwined, both in
'purpose and objective, are these two principles. The rule immunizing intragovernmental advice safeguards free expression by eliminating the possibility of outside examination as an inhibiting factor, but expressions assisting the reaching of a decision are part of the decision-making process.31 Similarly, the so-called “mental process rule” impresses the stamp of secrecy more directly upon the decision than upon the advice, but it extends to all phases of the decision-making process, of which the advice is a part.32 Each rule complements the other, and in combination they operate to preserve the integrity of the deliberative process itself. It is evident that to demand pre-decision data is at once to probe and imperil that process.
Such is the nature of the Government’s claim of privilege, formally asserted in its behalf by the Attorney Gen- ■ eral, whose affidavit not only so defines the documents retained as to bring them well within th,e scope of the privilege, but also incorporates his assessment, upon personal consideration, of the consequences of their production. With the privilege thus properly invoked,33 and [327]*327the generally 'meritorious charactér of the claim apparent from the affidavit, the question remaining is whether, in the circumstances of the case, it should now be honored. . .
II
To restate the Government’s claim and its justifications is not to say that nondisclosure is to follow in all instances where the conditions prerequisite to invoking -the privilege are found to exist. Nor is it to suggest that the interests it protects cannot be outweighed in particular situations by a sufficiently strong showing of necessity for examination. The exigencies of this case do not require holdings so broad. Accepting here the teaching of some of the decisions that the privilege is qualified,34 and by weighing the detrimental effects of disclosure against the necessity for production shown, the claimants’ demonstration is anemic to the point that no delineation of the outer limits of the privilege is called for.
The starting point is the Attorney General’s affidavit describing the general character of the documents in dispute and expressing his view as to the harm consequent upon their exposure. . Without impinging upon' judicial responsibility in the slightest degree35 the Court can and should weigh, in the gravest manner possible, his considered judgment as to the impact of the production sbught upon,the public intereát.36 And examination of the factual contents of the affidavit serves further to illumine the decisional course to .be taken.
Approximately 4,500 documents have already been furnished .the claimants; those which have not been total only 49. While the issue at bar is not to be resolved by numbers alone, the sharp contrast between the data that have been produced and those that have not is quite revealing. The claimants have had access to all of the Government’s communications with outsiders, as well as to nearly all intra-governmental materials, and the items withheld are all internal papers. Thus there could remain no unseen document primarily attesting the Government’s relations with third persons. More importantly, what are retained are ■ intra-departmental memoranda and interdepartmental communications composed wholly of opinions, recommendations and deliberations relating to legal and other determinations.37 There is an obvious distinction, in terms of necessity for inspection, between documents of this character and those which contain facts.38
While examination of the contested papers is not to be denied simply because they are secondary rather than primary sources, the size and diversification of the production already made raises great doubt as to what additional informational tendencies they could have. The only hint in that direction is furnished by the [328]*328claimants’ argument that the materials furnished contain references to materials which the Government has not yet brought forward. But any inference that what the Government retains are the documents so referred to is far too tenuous to meet the standard of necessity for disclosure. The Attorney General’s affidavit states that a full response to the subpoena has been made save for the 49 items. It does not appear that these items have any other character than that stated in the affidavit, and with the content there described, they could not be those to which reference is made. It would also seem highly improbable that the Government would have in the past divulged to outsiders the existence of the very materials the. secrecy of which it now so vigorously seeks to protect. If there are documents to which the references that concern the claimants can relate, the far more likely explanation is that they are obtainable only elsewhere, if at all.
The claimants’ presentation is also devoid of a showing that the papers already furnished have not supplied the great bulk of the information for which the claimants earlier professed a need. Nothing appears that would make illogical the assumption that, the number and diversification of these documents considered, fresh non-governmental sources of information were indicated by exploration of which, through deposition or otherwise, additional information could be developed. There is nothing beyond sheer speculation to even hint that the information the retained communications drew upon as the basis for the opinions and recommendations expressed does not appear or is not discoverable from the mass of data the claimants now possess. Necessity for production is sharply reduced where an available alternative for obtaining the desired evidence has not been explored.39
At stake in this litigation are not only those governmental processes by which the Nation’s legal affairs receive attention in privacy, but also, as the Attorney General’s affidavit makes plain, those by which its high level policies are confidentially considered and determined. The plaintiffs in the New York action allege, and the claimants deny, that the Government’s decision and activities respecting the sale of the stock of Zeiss New York were dictated by a consistent policy of recognizing the Federal Republic of Germany as the only lawful German government and refusing to recognize the existence of a state in the Soviet Zone. Notwithstanding that this controversy generates, as a prime reason, the claimants’ demand for access to the documents retained, and assuming even that they reflect information bearing on the issue, a license to probe the Government’s nonpublic files on so delicate a matter is not to be lightly conferred.40 Despite the Government’s disavowal of the involvement of diplomatic secrets,41 enough danger is indicated from what appears to inveigh seriously upon the production call.
The basic fallacy in the claimants’ approach results from the fact that they endeavor to exploit what they consider to be weaknesses in the Government’s case without making any real case of their own. At best, the only position they can sustain is that, notwithstanding the strong showing made by the Government, there remains a speculative possibility that something to which they may legitimately be entitled is withheld. It is not, however, incumbent upon the Government to negative all the possible uses production of the retained documents might serve; the requirement is that the claimants make a showing of necessity [329]*329sufficient to outweigh the adverse effects the production would engender.42 Here the Government has not only established the conditions that make proper the presentation of a claim of privilege, but has also demonstrated in a highly convincing manner that further disclosures would only result in an invasion of important interests, causing dire public consequences without any apparent discovery benefit to the claimants.
Indeed, the claimants renounce any interest in examining the documents in dispute for possible leads to admissible evidence. They unequivocally represent, on the contrary, that what they seek for evidentiary use are the documents themselves—as elements of the deliberative process by which the Government’s litigation course in the earlier case evolved and its decision on the stock sale was reached.43 Such a use would clearly violate the established rule, previously discussed,44 forbidding investigation into the processes by which decisions and policies are formulated. Although more usually applied in cases where an effort is made to challenge the determination itself, the proscription obtains with equal force where the decision is to be used only as a link in an evidentiary chain.45 “[T]he cerebrations and mental processes of government officials, leading to admittedly proper exercises of power, can never be a factor in a judicial proceeding and, therefore, need not be disclosed.” 46
Here, unlike the situation in some cases, no charge of governmental misconduct47 or perversion of governmental power48 is advanced. Since the Government is not a party to the New York action, no problem of an unfair litigating advantage is presented 49 All that is involved is a collision between what the claimants feel they need to see and what the Government conceives it must defend from outside scrutiny. Upon a consideration of all of the circumstances, it is clear that the interests the privilege is designed to protect greatly outweigh any need for production the claimants are able to advance.
[330]*330III
The claimants argue strenuously that the documents in question should be submitted to the Court with a view to its determination through in camera inspection as to whether their production should be compelled. The Government, with equal vigor, contends that such a procedure would in the circumstances be unnecessary and improper, and urges that the privilege be sustained without further ado. The Court now addresses this issue,50 remaining advertent to what has already been said that would have important bearing upon its resolution.
United States v. Reynolds51 sets the guidelines by which the feasibility of in camera inspection is to be determined. In suits arising under the Federal Tort Claims Act from the death of three civilians in the crash of a military aircraft engaged in testing secret electronic equipment, a motion was made for production of the Air Force’s report on the official investigation of the crash and the statements of surviving crew members made in connection therewith. Upon the Government’s claim of privilege, production was ordered for in camera examination to ascertain whether the documents contained privileged material. This action was held to be erroneous. Admonishing that
“The court itself must determine whether the circumstances are appropriate for the claim of privilege, and yet do so without forcing a disclosure of the very thing the privilege is designed to protect.” 52
and after analogizing the privilege against self-incrimination, the Court elucidated:
“Judicial control over the evidence in a case cannot be abdicated to the caprice of executive officers. Yet we will not go so far as to say that the court may automatically require a complete disclosure to the judge before the claim of privilege will be accepted in any case. It may be possible to satisfy the court, from all the circumstances of the case, that there is a reasonable danger that compulsion of the evidence will expose military matters which, in the interest of national security, should hot be divulged. When this is the case, [331]*331the occasion for the privilege is appropriate, and the court should not jeopardize the security which the privilege is meant to protect by insisting upon an examination of the evidence, even by the judge alone, in chambers. * * 53
“On the record before the trial court it appeared that this accident occurred to a military plane which had gone aloft to test secret electronic equipment. Certainly there was a reasonable danger that the accident investigation report would contain references to the secret electronic equipment which was the primary concern of the mission. * * *54
“In each case the showing of necessity which is made will determine how far the court should probe in satisfying itself that the occasion for invoking the privilege is appropriate. Where there is a strong showing of necessity, the claim of privilege should not be lightly accepted, but even the most compelling necessity cannot overcome the claim of privilege if the court is ultimately satisfied that military secrets are at stake. A fortiori, where necessity is dubious, a formal claim of privilege, made under the circumstances of this case, will have to prevail.” 55
The Court concluded that since “necessity was greatly minimized by an available alternative” through pursuit of .which the desired evidence might have been acquired “without forcing a showdown on the claim of privilege,” the “dubious showing of necessity” had to succumb to the formal claim of privilege.56
As Reynolds holds, a court may not properly require an in camera inspection as a matter of course before accepting a claim of executive privilege. And neither Reynolds nor succeeding decisions can be read to support a contention that such an examination is to follow automatically in cases where no military or diplomatic secrets are involved. On the contrary, they make it clear that an in camera examination should be afforded only where a suitable occasion therefor sufficiently appears.57
While an in camera inspection is, just to that extent, a contraction of the privilege, courts should not hesitate to make a private examination of disputed materials upon a reasonable showing that it can serve a purpose truly useful to a party actually or potentially entitled to some discovery, for in no other way can judicial responsibility be discharged. But the policy considerations supporting the privilege require a showing of such a degree of necessity as would justify an inquiry into the validity of the claim. Such an inspection should not be directed without a definite showing of “facts indicating reasonable cause for requiring such a submission.” 58
In camera inspection in executive privilege cases is appropriate where it appears with reasonable clarity that the party seeking production is entitled to access to some of the materials demanded.59 Examination in this type of situation enables the separation of what should be disclosed from what should not be revealed. Again, it may be that the balance between competing needs for con[332]*332fidentiality and disclosure cannot be made without analysis of the disputed data.60 Here the inspection enables the weighing to be done in the privacy of the judge’s chambers. In each situation, however, a need, actual or potential, for production adequately appears, and the examination affords the means for fulfilling that need.61
That no such occasion is presented in this case is amply demonstrated, without plowing old ground, by brief reference to previous discussion. The claimants have not shown that they are or could be entitled to the documents the Government still retains. The Government, on the other hand, has made a substantial showing that everything that is withheld falls well within the scope and protection of the privilege, and it satisfactorily appears that the balance on disclosure or secrecy is dacidedly in its favor. It is clear, too, that the claimants’ projected investigation into the Government’s decisional and deliberative processes is legally impermissible, and the circumstances rather plainly suggest that they have alternatives they might utilize to obtain that to which they may be entitled. Here inspection can satisfy no need for separation, for there appears nothing to separate; nor any need for balancing, with apparently nothing here to be weighed.
The claimants, however, contend for an in camera inspection for purposes of verifying that the content of the documents withheld is what the Government says it is. But to require examination here for that reason alone would mean not only an utter disregard for the affidavit of an . executive with Cabinet status,62 but also “the creation of an absolute right for judicial examination and determination of all evidence whose discovery the executive deemed contrary to the public interest.” 63 The necessity the moving party must show is considerably more than a demand that someone other than his adversary look at the materials in question to make certain that statements as to their character are accurate.
In resolving the issue as to in camera inspection, the teachings of Reynolds must not be forgotten. The ultimate question is whether, in the circumstances of the case, the occasion for assertion of the privilege is appropriate. In camera inspection is not an end in itself, but only a method that may in given instances be indispensible to decision of that question. The court may be able to satisfy itself, without conducting an examination, that the privilege is sufficiently well founded, and if it does, divulgence even in camera is both unnecessary and improper. And the extent the court should investigate to satisfy itself in that regard depends on the caliber of the showing of necessity. Already, without actual examination of the documents, the Court has probed every facet of the Government’s claim of privilege and has found it to be appropriately invoked, and the claimants’ show[333]*333ing of necessity is far too negligible to require or justify more.64
The Government’s motion for modification will be granted. Counsel for the Government will present a suitable order.