United States v. Premises Known As 281 Syosset Woodbury Road

71 F.3d 1067
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Second Circuit
DecidedDecember 13, 1995
DocketNo. 34, Docket 94-6308
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 71 F.3d 1067 (United States v. Premises Known As 281 Syosset Woodbury Road) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
United States v. Premises Known As 281 Syosset Woodbury Road, 71 F.3d 1067 (2d Cir. 1995).

Opinion

CALABRESI, Circuit Judge:

The wife of a convicted drug dealer seeks to distance herself from her husband’s activities by asserting an innocent owner defense in a forfeiture proceeding against the family home. At the same time, she asserts the right to protect the harmony and intimacy of her marriage by invoking the testimonial privileges that allow a husband and wife to limit their testimony against each other. Her claims are ultimately unsuccessful, but they force us to explore the justifications for the common law marital privileges as they operate in the context of one kind of modern family.

BACKGROUND

This ease grows out of the drug trafficking activities of John Rosario Camiola, who in 1990 pleaded guilty to, among other things, possession of cocaine with intent to distribute.2 In his plea agreement, Mr. Camiola agreed to cooperate with the federal government’s investigation of other drug traffickers, and further agreed to surrender all of his assets acquired as a result of illegal drug trafficking. -The plea agreement also provided that the parties would litigate the appropriateness of the forfeiture of a parcel of real property located at 281 Syosset Road and held in the name of Mr. Camiola’s wife, Lydia Camiola. The government subsequently initiated civil forfeiture proceedings against the property, claiming that Mr. Camiola had conducted meetings relating to drug trafficking in the house and had stored drugs on the premises, both in violation of 21 U.S.C. § 881(a)(7), and further that Mr. Camiola had offered the property as a thing of value in exchange for drugs, in violation of 21 U.S.C. § 881(a)(6).

Mrs. Camiola asserted a defense of innocent ownership, pursuant to 21 U.S.C. § 881(a)(7), claiming that she had not known of her husband’s illegal activities between his release from prison in 1987 and his second arrest in 1990. During three days of depositions, and in an effort to establish that she had not known of his continued involvement in drug trafficking, Mrs. Camiola testified regarding conversations she had had with [1069]*1069her husband prior to his arrest. When the government questioned her about conversations between her and her husband that took place immediately following his arrest, Mrs. Camiola’s lawyer advised her to assert “marital privilege” and to refuse to answer. Ms. Camiola did so, and the government asked the Magistrate Judge to compel her testimony.

After conducting two hearings on the applicability of the marital privileges, Magistrate Judge Stephen Gold determined that the privilege against adverse spousal testimony did not apply in this ease, but — according to the District Court — concluded that the privilege protecting confidential marital communications was on point. Seemingly on this basis, he held that Mrs. Camiola could not be required to testify concerning conversations that she had with her husband after his arrest. The government appealed to the District Court, which reversed the decision of the Magistrate Judge and ordered Mrs. Ca-miola to testify. See United States v. 281 Syosset Woodbury Rd., 862 F.Supp. 847, 848 (E.D.N.Y.1994).

The District Court first addressed the privilege against adverse spousal testimony. The court found that the Magistrate Judge did not err when he determined that this privilege is available only in a criminal context. Id. at 851-52. The District Court also affirmed the Magistrate Judge’s conclusion that the adverse spousal testimony privilege should not be extended to “quasi-criminal” civil forfeiture proceedings. Id. at 852-53. The District Court noted that the Magistrate Judge’s decision on the application of this privilege in a forfeiture proceeding was particularly “sound” because “the privilege which the Claimant seeks to invoke ... is not a constitutionally protected right designed to protect her from the punitive aspects of a civil forfeiture proceeding....” Id. at 853 (emphasis in original).

Next, the District Court considered the application of the privilege protecting confidential marital communications, which operates much like other confidentiality rules— e.g., the attorney/elient privilege. As such, it allows either spouse to compel the non-disclosure of the substance of confidential communications between the two. In reversing the Magistrate Judge, the District Court held that the confidential communications privilege is unavailable to any spouse who asserts an innocent owner defense in a forfeiture proceeding arising out of the other spouse’s activities. Id. at 854. The court analogized the assertion of the innocent owner defense to a medical malpractice suit in which the doctor-patient privilege is deemed inapplicable because the patient, by making the confidential relationship the subject of a lawsuit, has, in effect, waived the privilege. Id. at 854-55.

The District Court concluded, moreover, that Mrs. Camiola had also, and more specifically, waived the confidential communications privilege with respect to the post-arrest marital conversations by voluntarily testifying about the pre-arrest conversations that she had had with her husband. Id. at 855-56. The District Court found that allowing Mrs. Camiola to reveal selectively the contents of confidential conversations would handicap the government’s case so severely as to be unfair. Id. at 856-58.

Even if Mrs. Camiola had not waived her confidential communications privilege, the District Court indicated that the joint crime exception — which allows a willing witness to violate the confidence of her or his spouse when the partners have jointly planned or participated in criminal activity, see United States v. Estes, 793 F.2d 465 (2d Cir.1986) was applicable here because the testimony that Mrs. Camiola had started to present when her attorney advised her to invoke the marital privileges indicated that she had been planning to engage in a drug sale organized by her husband in order to finance his defense. See 281 Syosset Woodbury Rd., 862 F.Supp. at 858-59.

Finally, the District Court addressed the government’s argument that if Mrs. Camiola were permitted to invoke either of the marital privileges, the trier of fact should be able to draw adverse inferences from her decision not to testify. The court concluded that “because a claimant would not be asserting a marital privilege in order to protect him or herself in a civil forfeiture action — and because an adverse inference may be drawn in [1070]*1070the Fifth Amendment context [in a civil trial] — there is no reason why an adverse inference could not be drawn from the invocation” of a marital privilege in a civil forfeiture proceeding. Id. at 860.

DISCUSSION

The common law rules of testimonial privilege recognize two distinct marital privileges. The adverse spousal testimony privilege permits an individual to refuse to testify in a criminal proceeding against her or his spouse. This privilege rests on the notion that a husband and wife should be able to trust each other completely, and that marriage is a sanctuary. The privilege is described as being “broadly aimed at protecting marital harmony.”

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Bluebook (online)
71 F.3d 1067, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-premises-known-as-281-syosset-woodbury-road-ca2-1995.