SUPREME COURT OF UNITED STATES
American Communications Ass'n, C.I.O.
Vs.
Douds. United Steel Workers of America V. National Labor
Relations Board.
08.05.1950
See 339 U.S. 990, 70 S.Ct. 1017.
[Syllabus
from pages 382-384 intentionally omitted]
Mr.
Victor Rabinowitz, New York City, for appellant American Communications Ass'n.
Mr.
Thomas E. Harris, Washington, D.C., for petitioners United Steelworkers.
Mr.
Philip B. Perlman, Sol. Gen., Washington, D.C., for appellee National Labor
Relations
Board.
Mr.
Chief Justice VINSON delivered the opinion of the Court.
These
cases present for decision the constitutionality of § 9(h) of the Labor
Management Relations Act of 1947.1
This section, commonly referred to as the non-Communist affidavit provision,
reads as follows: 'No investigation shall be made by the (National Labor
Relations) Board of any question affecting commerce concerning the
representation of employees, raised by a labor organization under subsection
(c) of this section, no petition under section 9(e)(1) shall be entertained,
and no complaint shall be issued pursuant to a charge made by a labor
organization under subsection (b) of section 10, unless there is on file with
the Board an affidavit executed contemporaneously or within the preceding
twelvemonth period by each officer of such labor organization and the officers
of any national or international labor organization of which it is an affiliate
or constituent unit that he is not a member of the Communist Party or affiliated
with such party, and that he does not believe in, and is not a member of or
supports any organization that believes in or teaches, the overthrow of the
United States Government by force or by any illegal or unconstitutional
methods. The provisions of section 35 A of the Criminal Code shall be
applicable in respect to such affidavits.'
In No.
10, the constitutional issue was raised by a suit to restrain the Board from
holding a representation election in a bargaining unit in which appellant union
was the employee representative, without permitting its name to appear on the
ballot, and, should the election be held, to restrain the Board from announcing
the results or certifying the victor, until a hearing was granted to appellant.
A hearing had been denied because of the noncompliance with s 9(h). The
complaint alleged that this requirement was unconstitutional. Appellee's motion
to dismiss the complaint was granted by the statutory three-judge court,
Wholesale and Warehouse Workers Union, Local 65 v. Douds, D.C. 1948, 79 F.Supp. 563, with one judge dissenting.
Since the constitutional issues were properly raised and substantial, we noted
probable jurisdiction.
No. 13
is the outcome of an unfair labor practice complaint filed with the Board by
petitioner unions. The Board found that Inland Steel Company had violated the
Labor Relations Act in refusing to bargain on the subject of pensions. 77 N.L.R.B. 1 (1948). But the Board postponed
the effective date of its order compelling the company to bargain, pending the
unions' compliance with § 9(h). Both sides appealed: the company urged that the
Act had been misinterpreted; the unions contended that § 9(h) was
unconstitutional and therefore an invalid condition of a Board order. When the
court below upheld the Board on both counts, Inland Steel Co. v. N.L.R.B., 7
Cir., 1948, 170 F.2d 247, with one judge dissenting as
to § 9(h), both sides filed petitions for certiorari. We denied the petition
pertaining to the pension issue, 1949, 336 U.S. 960, 69 S.Ct. 887, but granted the petition directed
at the affidavit requirement, 1949, 335 U.S. 910, 69 S.Ct. 480, because of the manifest importance
of the constitutional issues involved.
The
constitutional justification for the National Labor Relations Act was the power
of Congress to protect interstate commerce by removing obstructions to the free
flow of commerce. National Labor Relations Board v. Jones & Laughlin Steel
Corp., [1937] USSC 80; 1937, 301 U.S. 1, 57 S.Ct. 615, 81 L.Ed. 893, 108 A.L.R. 1352.
That Act was designed to
remove obstructions caused by strikes and other forms of industrial unrest,
which Congress found were attributable to the inequality of bargaining power
between unorganized employees and their employers. It did so by strengthening
employee groups, by restraining certain employer practices, and by encouraging
the processes of collective bargaining.
When
the Labor-Management Relations Act was passed twelve years later, it was the
view of Congress that additional impediments to the free flow of commerce made
amendment of the original Act desirable. It was stated in the findings and
declaration of policy that:
'Experience
has further demonstrated that certain practices by some labor organizations,
their officers, and members have the intent or the necessary effect of
burdening or obstructing commerce by preventing the free flow a goods in such
commerce through strikes and other forms of industrial unrest or through
concerted activities which impair the interest of the public in the free flow
of such commerce. The elimination of such practices is a necessary condition to
the assurance of the rights herein guaranteed.'2
One such obstruction, which it was the
purpose of § 9(h) of the Act to remove, was the so-called 'political strike.'
Substantial amounts of evidence were presented to various committees of
Congress, including the committees immediately concerned with labor
legislation, that Communist leaders of labor unions had in the past and would
continue in the future to subordinate legitimate trade union objectives to
obstructive strikes when dictated by Party leaders, often in support of the
policies of a foreign government. And other evidence supports the view that
some union leaders who hold to a belief in violent overthrow of the Government
for reasons other than loyalty to the Communist Party likewise regard strikes
and other forms of direct action designed to serve ultimate revolutionary goals
as the primary objectives of labor unions which they control.3 At the committee hearings, the
incident most fully developed was a strike at the Milwaukee plant of the
Allis-Chalmers Manufacturing Company in 1941, when that plant was producing
vital materials for the national defense program. A full hearing was given not
only to company officials, but also to leaders of the international and local
unions involved. Congress heard testimony that the strike had been called
solely in obedience to Party orders for the purpose of starting the
'snowballing of strikes' in defense plants.4
No useful purpose would be served by
setting out at length the evidence before Congress relating to the problem of
political strikes, nor can we attempt to assess the validity of each item of
evidence. It is sufficient to say that Congress had a great mass of material
before it which tended to show that Communists and others proscribed by the
statute had infiltrated union organizations not to support and further trade union
objectives, including the advocacy of change by democratic methods, but to make
them a device by which commerce and industry might be disrupted when the
dictates of political policy required such action.
II.
The unions contend that the necessary
effect of § 9(h) is to make it impossible for persons who cannot sign the oath
to be officers of labor unions. They urge that such a statute violates
fundamental rights guaranteed by the First Amendment: the right of union officers to hold
what political views they choose and to associate with what political groups
they will, and the right of unions to choose their officers without
interference from government.5 The Board has argued, on the other hand, that § 9(h) presents no First
Amendment problem because its
sole sanction is the withdrawal from noncomplying unions of the 'privilege' of using
its facilities.
Neither contention states the problem
with complete accuracy. It cannot be denied that the practical effect of denial
of access to the Board and the denial of a place on the ballot in
representation proceedings is not merely to withhold benefits granted by the
Government but to impose upon noncomplying unions a number of restrictions
which would not exist if the Board had not been established.6 The statute does not, however,
specifically forbid persons who do not sign the affidavit from holding
positions of union leadership nor require their discharge from office. The fact
is that § 9(h) may well make it difficult for unions to remain effective if
their officers do not sign the affidavits. How difficult depends upon the
circumstances of the industry the strength of the union and its organizational
discipline. We are, therefore, neither free to treat § 9(h) as if it merely withdraws
a privilege gratuitously granted by the Government, nor able to consider it a
licensing statute prohibiting those persons who do not sign the affidavit from
holding union office. The practicalities of the situation place the
proscriptions of § 9(h) somewhere between those two extremes. The difficult
question that emerges is whether, consistently with the First Amendment, Congress, by statute, may exert
these pressures upon labor unions to deny positions of leadership to certain
persons who are identified by particular beliefs and political affiliations.
III.
There can be no doubt that Congress
may, under its constitutional power to regulate commerce among the serveal
States, attempt to prevent political strikes and other kinds of direct action
designed to burden and interrupt the free flow of commerce. We think it is
clear, in addition, that the remedy provided by § 9(h) bears reasonable
relation to the evil which the statute was designed to reach. Congress could
rationally find that the Communist Party is not like other political parties in
its utilization of positions of union leadership as means by which to bring
about strikes and other obstructions of commerce for purposes of political
advantage, and that many persons who believe in overthrow of the Government by
force and violence are also likely to resort to such tactics when, as officers,
they formulate union policy.
The fact that the statute identifies
persons by their political affiliations and beliefs, which are circumstances
ordinarily irrelevant to permissible subjects of government action, does not
lead to the conclusion that such circumstances are never relevant. In re
Summers[1945] USSC 145; ,
1945, 325 U.S. 561, 65
S.Ct. 1307, 89 L.Ed. 1795; Hamilton v. Regents of University of
California, [1934] USSC 165; 1934, 293 U.S. 245,
55 S.Ct. 197, 79
L.Ed. 343. We have held that
aliens may be barred from certain occupations bacause of a reasonable relation
between that classification and the apprehended evil, State of Ohio ex rel.
Clarke, Ohio v. Deckebach, [1927] USSC 118; 1927, 274 U.S. 392, 47 S.Ct. 630, 71 L.Ed. 1115;
Pearl Assurance Co. v. Harrington, 1941, 313 U.S. 549, 61 S.Ct. 1120, 85 L.Ed. 1514, even though the Constitution forbids arbitrary banning of aliens
from the pursuit of lawful occupations. Truax v. Raich, [1915] USSC 229; 1915, 239 U.S. 33, 36 S.Ct. 7, 60 L.Ed. 131, L.R.A.1916D, 545, Ann.Cas.1917B,
283; Takahashi v. Fish and Game Commission, [1948] USSC 82; 1948, 334 U.S. 410, 68 S.Ct. 1138, 92 L.Ed. 1478. Even distinctions based solely on
ancestry, which we declared 'are by their very nature odious to a free people,'
have been upheld under the unusual circumstances of wartime. Hirabayashi v.
United States, 1943, 320 U.S. 81, 63 S.Ct. 1375, 1385, 87 L.Ed. 1774.7 If accidents of birth and ancestry
under some circumstances justify an inference concerning future conduct, it can
hardly be doubted that voluntary affiliations and beliefs justify a similar
inference when drawn by the legislature on the basis of its investigations.
This principle may be illustrated by
reference to statutes denying positions of public importance to groups of
persons identified by their business affiliations. One federal statute,8 for example, provides that no partner
or employee of a firm primarily engaged in underwriting securities may be a
director of a national bank. This Court noted that the statute is directed 'to
the probability or likelihood, based on the experience of the 1920's that a
bank director interested in the underwriting business may use his influence in
the bank to involve it or its customers in securities which his underwriting
(firm) has in its portfolio or has committed itself to take.' Board of Governors
v. Agnew, [1947] USSC 1; 1947,
329 U.S. 441, 447[1947]
USSC 1; , 67 S.Ct. 411, 414[1947] USSC 1; , 91 L.Ed. 408. It was designed 'to remove tempting
opportunities from the management and personnel of member banks.' Id., 329 U.S.
at page 449, 67 S.Ct. at page 415. There was no showing, nor was one required,
that all employees of underwriting firms would engage in such conduct. Because
of their business connections, carrying as they do certain loyalties, interests
and disciplines, those persons were thought to pose a continuing threat of
participation in the harmful activities described above. Political affiliations
of the kind here involved, no less than business affiliations, provide rational
ground for the legislative judgment that those persons proscribed by § 9(h)
would be subject to 'tempting opportunities' to commit acts deemed harmful to
the national economy. In this respect, § 9(h) is not unlike a host of other
statutes which prohibit specified groups of persons from holding positions of
power and public interest because, in the legislative judgment, they threaten
to abuse the trust that is a necessary concomitant of the power of office.
If no
more were involved than possible loss of position, the foregoing would dispose
of the case. But the more difficult problem here arises because, in drawing
lines on the basis of beliefs and political affiliations, though it may be
granted that the proscriptions of the statute bear a reasonable relation to the
apprehended evil, congress has undeniably discouraged the lawful exercise of
political freedoms as well. Stated otherwise, the problem is this: Communists,
we may assume, carry on legitimate political activities. Beliefs are inviolate.
Cantwell v. Connecticut, [1940] USSC 84; 1940, 310 U.S. 296, 303[1940] USSC 84; , 60 S.Ct. 900, 903[1940] USSC 84; , 84 L.Ed. 1213, 128 A.L.R. 1352. Congress might reasonably find, however, that
Communists, unlike members of other political parties, and persons who believe
in overthrow of the Government by force, unlike persons of other beliefs,
represent a continuing danger of disruptive political strikes when they hold
positions of union leadership. By exerting pressures on unions to deny office
to Communists and others identified therein, § 9(h) undoubtedly lessens the
threat to interstate commerce, but it has the further necessary effect of
discouraging the exercise of political rights protected by the First
Amendment. Men who hold union
offices often have little choice but to renounce Communism or give up their
offices. Unions which wish to do so are discouraged from electing Communists to
office. To the grave and difficult problem thus presented we must now turn our
attention.
IV.
The unions contend that once it is
determined that this is a free speech case the 'clear and present danger' test
must apply. See Schenck v. United States, 1919, 249 U.S. 47, 39 S.Ct. 247, 279,
63 L.Ed. 470. But they disagree as to how it should be applied. Appellant in
No. 10 would require that joining the Communist Party or the expression of
belief in overthrow of the Government by force be shown to be a clear and
present danger of some substantive evil, since those are the doctrines affected
by the statute. Petitioner in No. 13, on the other hand, would require a
showing that political strikes, the substantive evil involved, are a clear and
present danger to the security of the Nation or threaten widespread industrial
unrest.
This confusion suggests that the
attempt to apply the term, 'clear and present danger,' as a mechanical test in
every case touching First Amendment freedoms, without regard to the context of its application, mistakes the
form in which an idea was cast for the substance of the idea. The provisions of
the Constitution, said Mr. Justice Holmes, 'are not mathematical formulas
having their essence in their form; they are organic, living institutions
transplanted from English soil. The(ir) significance is vital, not formal; it
is to be gathered not simply by taking the words and a dictionary, but by
considering their origin and the line of their growth.' Gompers v. United
States, [1914] USSC 151; 1914,
233 U.S. 604, 610[1914]
USSC 151; , 34 S.Ct. 693, 695[1914] USSC 151; , 58 L.Ed. 1115. Still less should this Court's
interpretations of the Constitution be reduced to the status of mathematical
formulas. It is the considerations that gave birth to the phrase, 'clear and
present danger,' not the phrase itself, that are vital in our decision of
questions involving liberties protected by the First Amendment.
Although
the First Amendment
provides that Congress shall make no law abridging the freedom of speech, press
or assembly, it has long been established that those freedoms themselves are
dependent upon the power of constitutional government to survive. If it is to
survive it must have power to protect itself against unlawful conduct and,
under some circumstances, against incitements to commit unlawful acts. Freedom
of speech thus does not comprehend the right to speak on any subject at any
time. The important question that came to this Court immediately after the First
World War was not whether, but how far, the First Amendment permits the
suppression of speech which advocates conduct inimical to the public welfare.9 Some thought speech having a
reasonable tendency to lead to such conduct might be punished. Justice Holmes
and Brandeis took a different view. They thought that the greater danger to a
democracy lies in the suppression of public discussion; that ideas and
doctrines thought harmful or dangerous are best fought with words. Only,
therefore, when force is very likely to follow an utterance before there is a
chance for counter-argument to have effect may that utterance be punished or
prevented.10 Thus, 'the
necessity which is essential to a valid restriction does not exist unless
speech would produce, or is intended to produce, a clear and imminent danger of
some substantive evil which the state (or Congress) constitutionally may seek
to prevent * * *.' Mr. Justice Brandeis, concurring in Whitney v. California, [1927]
USSC 129; 274 U.S. 357, 373[1927] USSC 129; , 47 S.Ct. 641, 647[1927] USSC 129; , 71 L.Ed. 1095. By this means they sought to convey
the philosophy that, under the First Amendment, the public has a right to every man's views and every
man the right to speak them. Government may cut him off only when his views are
no longer merely views but threaten, clearly and imminently, to ripen into
conduct against which the public has a right to protect itself.
But the question with which we are
here faced is not the same one that Justices Holmes and Brandeis found
convenient to consider in terms of clear and present danger. Government's
interest here is not in preventing the dissemination of Communist doctrine or
the holding of particular beliefs because it is feared that unlawful action
will result therefrom it free speech is practiced. Its interest is in
protecting the free flow of commerce from what Congress considers to be
substantial evils of conduct that are not the products of speech at all.
Section 9(h), in other words, does not interfere with speech because Congress
fears the consequences of speech; it regulates harmful conduct which Congress
has determined is carried on by persons who may be identified by their political
affiliations and beliefs. The Board does not contend that political strikes,
the substantive evil at which § 9(h) is aimed, are the present or impending
products of advocacy of the doctrines of Communism or the expression of belief
in overthrow of the Government by force. On the contrary, it points out that
such strikes are called by persons who, so Congress has found, have the will
and power to do so without advocacy or persuasion that seeks acceptance in the
competition of the market.11 Speech may be fought with speech. Falsehoods and fallacies must be
exposed, not suppressed, unless there is not sufficient time to avert the evil
consequences of noxious doctrine by argument and education. That is the command
of the First Amendment.
But force may and must be met with force. Section 9(h) is designed to protect
the public not against what Communists and others identified therein advocate
or believe, but against what Congress has concluded they have done and are
likely to do again.
The contention of petitioner in No. 13
that this Court must find that political strikes create a clear and present
danger to the security of the Nation or of widespread industrial strife in
order to sustain § 9(h) similarly misconceives the purpose that phrase was
intended to serve. In that view, not the relative certainty that evil conduct
will result from speech in the immediate future, but the extent and gravity of
the substantive evil must be measured by the 'test' laid down in the Schenck
case. But there the Court said that: 'The question in every case is whether the
words used are used in such circumstances and are of such a nature as to create
a clear and present danger that they will bring about the substantive evils
that Congress has a right to prevent.' Schenck v. United States, supra, 249
U.S. at page 52, 39 S.Ct. at page 249, 63 L.Ed. 470. (Emphasis supplied.)
So far as the Schenck case itself is
concerned, imminent danger of any substantive evil that Congress may prevent
justifies the restriction of speech. Since that time this Court has decided
that however great the likelihood that a substantive evil will result,
restrictions on speech and press cannot be sustained unless the evil itself is
'substantial' and 'relatively serious,' Brandeis, J., concurring in Whitney v.
California, supra, 274 U.S. at pages 374, 377, 47 S.Ct. at pages 647, 649[1927]
USSC 129; , 71 L.Ed. 1095, or sometimes 'extremely serious,'
Bridges v. California, 1941, 314 U.S. 252, 263, 62 S.Ct. 190, 194, 86 L.Ed.
192, 159 A.L.R. 1346. And it follows therefrom that even harmful conduct cannot
justify restrictions upon speech unless substantial interests of society are at
stake. But in suggesting that the substantive evil must be serious and
substantial, it was never the intention of this Court to lay down an absolutist
test measured in terms of danger to the Nation. When the effect of a statute or
ordinance upon the exercise of First Amendment freedoms is relatively small and the public interest to
be protected is substantial, it is obvious that a rigid test requiring a
showing of imminent danger to the security of the Nation is an absurdity. We
recently dismissed for want of substantiality an appeal in which a church group
contended that its First Amendment rights were violated by a municipal zoning
ordinance preventing the building of churches in certain residential areas.
Corporation of Presiding Bishop of Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints
v. Porterville, 1949, 338 U.S. 805, 70 S.Ct. 78. And
recent cases in this Court involving contempt by publication likewise have no
meaning if imminent danger of national peril is the criterion.12
On the contrary, however, the right of
the public to be protected from evils of conduct, even though First
Amendment rights of persons or
groups are thereby in some manner infringed, has received frequent and
consistent recognition by this Court. We have noted that the blaring sound
truck invades the privacy of the home and may drown out others who wish to be
heard. Kovacs v. Cooper, [1949] USSC 22; 1949, 336 U.S. 77, 69 S.Ct. 448. The unauthorized parade through city streets by a
religious or political group disrupts traffic and may prevent the discharge of
the most essential obligations of local government. Cox v. New Hampshire, [1941]
USSC 78; 1941, 312 U.S.
569, 574[1941] USSC 78; , 61 S.Ct. 762, 765[1941] USSC 78; , 85 L.Ed. 1049, 133 A.L.R. 1396. The exercise of particular First
Amendment rights may fly in the face of the public interest in the health of
children, Prince v. Massachusetts, [1944] USSC 52; 1944, 321 U.S. 158, 64 S.Ct. 438, 88 L.Ed. 645, or
of the whole community, Jacobson v. Massachusetts, [1905] USSC 38; 1905, 197 U.S. 11, 25 S.Ct. 358, 49 L.Ed. 643, 3 Ann.Cas. 765, and it may be offensive to the moral
standards of the community, Reynolds v. United States, [1878] USSC 141; 1878, 98 U.S. 145, 25 L.Ed. 244; Davis v. Beason, [1890] USSC
39; 1890, 133 U.S. 333, 10 S.Ct. 299, 33 L.Ed. 637. And Government's obligation to
provide an efficient public service, United Public Workers v. Mitchell, [1947]
USSC 23; 1947, 330 U.S.
75, 67 S.Ct. 556, 91 L.Ed. 754, and its interest in the character of
members of the bar, In re Summers[1945] USSC 145; , 325 U.S. 561, 65 S.Ct. 1307, 89 L.Ed. 1795 (1945), sometimes admit of limitations upon rights set
out in the First Amendment. And see Giboney v. Empire Storage & Ice Co., [1949]
USSC 39; 1949, 336 U.S.
490, 499—501[1949] USSC
39; , 69 S.Ct. 684, 689—690. We have never held that
such freedoms are absolute. The reason is plain. As Chief Justice Hughes put
it, 'Civil liberties, as guaranteed by the Constitution, imply the existence of
an organized society maintaining public order without which liberty itself
would be lost in the excesses of unrestrained abuses.' Cox v. New Hampshire,
supra, 312 U.S. at page 574, 61 S.Ct. at page 765[1941] USSC 78; , 85 L.Ed. 1049, 133 A.L.R. 1396.
When
particular conduct is regulated in the interest of public order, and the
regulation results in an indirect, conditional, partial abridgment of speech,
the duty of the courts is to determine which of these two conflicting interests
demands the greater protection under the particular circumstances presented.
The high place in which the right to speak, think, and assemble as you will was
held by the Framers of the Bill of Rights and is held today by those who value
liberty both as a means and an end indicates the solicitude with which we must
view any assertion of personal freedoms. We must recognize, moreover, that
regulation of 'conduct' has all too frequently been employed by public
authority as a cloak to hide censorship of unpopular ideas. We have been
reminded that 'It is not often in this country that we now meet with direct and
candid efforts to stop speaking or publication as such. Modern inroads on these
rights come from associating the speaking with some other factor which the
state may regulate so as to bring the whole within official control.'13
On the other hand, legitimate attempts
to protect the public, not from the remote possible effects of noxious
ideologies, but from present excesses of direct, active conduct are not
presumptively bad because they interfere with and, in some of its
manifestations, restrain the exercise of First Amendment rights. Reynolds v. United States,
supra; Prince v. Massachusetts, supra; Cox v. New Hampshire, supra; Giboney v.
Empire Storage & Ice Co., supra. In essence, the problem is one of weighing
the probable effects of the statute upon the free exercise of the right of
speech and assembly against the congressional determination that political strikes
are evils of conduct which cause substantial harm to interstate commerce and
that Communists and others identified by § 9(h) pose continuing threats to that
public interest when in positions of union leadership. We must, therefore,
undertake the 'delicate and difficult task * * * to weigh the circumstances and
to appraise the substantiality of the reasons advanced in support of the
regulation of the free enjoyment of the rights.' Schneider v. State, [1939]
USSC 134; 1939, 308 U.S.
147, 161[1939] USSC 134; , 60 S.Ct. 146, 151[1939] USSC 134; , 84 L.Ed. 155.
V.
The
'reasons advanced in support of the regulation' are of considerable weight, as
even the oppenents of § 9(h) agreed. They are far from being '(m) ere
legislative preferences or beliefs respecting matters of public convenience
(which) may well support regulation directed at other personal activities, but
be insufficient to justify such as disminishes the exercise of rights so vital
to the maintenance of democratic institutions.'14 It should be emphasized that Congress, not the
courts, is primarily charged with determination of the need for regulation of
activities affecting interstate commerce. This Court must, if such regulation
unduly infringes personal freedoms, declare the statute invalid under the First
Amendment's command that the
opportunities for free public discussion be maintained. But insofar as the
problem is one of drawing inferences concerning the need for regulation of
particular forms of conduct from conflicting evidence, this Court is in no
position to substitute its judgment as to the necessity or desirability of the
statute for that of Congress. Cf. United Public Workers v. Mitchell, supra, 330
U.S. at pages 95, 102, 67 S.Ct. at pages 565, 570[1947] USSC 23; , 91 L.Ed. 754. In Bridges v. California, supra, we
said that even restrictions on particular kinds of utterances, if enacted by a
legislature after appraisal of the need, come to this Court 'encased in the
armor wrought by prior legislative deliberation.' 314 U.S. at page 261, 62
S.Ct. at page 193[1941] USSC 148; , 86 L.Ed. 192,
159 A.L.R. 1346. Compare Gitlow v. New York, [1925] USSC 174; 1925, 268 U.S. 652, 45 S.Ct. 625, 69 L.Ed. 1138. The deference due legislative
determination of the need for restriction upon particular forms of conduct has
found repeated expression in this Court's opinions.
When
compared with ordinances and regulations dealing with littering of the streets
or disturbance of householders by itinerant preachers, the relative
significance and complexity of the problem of political strikes and how to deal
with their leaders becomes at once apparent. It must be remembered that § 9(h)
is not an isolated statute dealing with a subject divorced from the problems of
labor peace generally. It is a part of some very complex machinery set up by
the Federal Government for the purpose of encouraging the peaceful settlement
of labor disputes. Under the statutory scheme, unions which become collective
bargaining representatives for groups of employees often represent not only
members of the union but nonunion workers or members of other unions as well.
Because of the necessity to have strong unions to bargain on equal terms with
strong employers, individual employees are required by law to sacrifice rights
which, in some cases, are valuable to them. See J. I. Case Co. v. National
Labor Relations Board, [1944] USSC 39; 1944, 321 U.S. 332, 64 S.Ct. 576, 88 L.Ed. 762. The
loss of individual rights for the greater benefit of the group results in a
tremendous increase in the power of the representative of the group—the union.
But power is never without responsibility. And when authority derives in part
from Government's thumb on the scales, the exercise of that power by private
persons becomes closely akin, in some respects, to its exercise by Government
itself. See Graham v. Brotherhood of Locomotive Firemen, [1949] USSC 114; 1949, 338 U.S. 232, 70 S.Ct. 14; Steele v. Louisville & N.R. Co.,
[1944] USSC 136; 1944,
323 U.S. 192, 65 S.Ct.
226, 89 L.Ed. 173; Tunstall v. Brotherhood of
Locomotive Firemen, [1944] USSC 137; 1944, 323 U.S. 210,
65 S.Ct. 235, 89
L.Ed. 187; Wallace Corp. v.
National Labor Relations Board, [1945] USSC 49; 1944, 323 U.S. 248, 255[1945] USSC 49; , 65 S.Ct. 238, 241[1945] USSC 49; , 89 L.Ed. 216; Railway Mail Association v. Corsi, [1945] USSC
124; 1945, 326 U.S. 88, 94[1945] USSC 124; , 65 S.Ct. 1483, 1487, 89 L.Ed. 2072.
We do
not suggest that labor unions which utilize the facilities of the National
Labor Relations Board become Government agencies or may be regulated as such.
But it is plain that when Congress cothes the bargaining representative 'with
powers comparable to those possessed by a legislative body both to create and
restrict the rights of those whom it represents,'15 the public interest in the good faith
exercise of that power is very great.
What of the effects of § 9(h) upon the
rights of speech and assembly of those proscribed by its terms? The statute
does not prevent or punish by criminal sanctions the making of a speech, the
affiliation with any organization, or the holding of any belief. But as we have
noted, the fact that no direct restraint or punishment is imposed upon speech
or assembly does not determine the free speech question. Under some circumstances,
indirect 'discouragements' undoubtedly have the same coercive effect upon the
exercise of First Amendment rights as imprisonment, fines, injunctions or taxes. A requirement that
adherents of particular religious faiths or political parties wear identifying
arm-bands, for example, is obviously of this nature.
But we have here no statute which is
either frankly aimed at the suppression of dangerous ideas16 nor one which, although ostensibly
aimed at the regulation of conduct, may actually 'be made the instrument of
arbitrary suppression of free expression of views.' Hague v. Committee for
Industrial Organization, [1939] USSC 117; 1939, 307 U.S. 496, 516[1939] USSC 117; , 59 S.Ct. 954, 964[1939] USSC 117; , 83 L.Ed. 1423.17 There are here involved none of the elements of
censorship or prohibition of the dissemination of information that were present
in the cases mainly relied upon by those attacking the statute.18 The 'discouragements' of § 9(h)
proceed not against the groups or beliefs identified therein, but only against
the combination of those affiliations or beliefs with occupancy of a position
of great power over the economy of the country. Congress has concluded that
substantial harm, in the form of direct, positive action, may be expected from
that combination. In this legislation, Congress did not restrain the activities
of the Communist Party as a political organization; nor did it attempt to
stifle beliefs. Compare West Virginia State Board of Education v. Barnette, [1943]
USSC 130; 1943, 319 U.S.
624, 63 S.Ct. 1178, 87 L.Ed. 1628, 147 A.L.R. 674.19 Section 9(h) touches only a relative handful
of persons, leaving the great majority of persons of the identified
affiliations and beliefs completely free from restraint. And it leaves those
few who are affected free to maintain their affiliations and beliefs subject
only to possible loss of positions which Congress has concluded are being
abused to the injury of the public by members of the described groups.
We have previously had occasion to
consider other statutes and regulations in which the interests involved were,
in large measure, like those now being considered. In United Public Workers v.
Mitchell, supra, we upheld a statute which provided that employees of the
Federal Government could not participate in partisan political activities,
concededly a First Amendment right, if they would retain their positions. The decision was not put
upon the ground that government employment is a privilege to be conferred or
withheld at will. For it was recognized that Congress may not 'enact a
regulation providing that no Republican, Jew or Negro shall be appointed to
federal office, or that no federal employee shall attend Mass or take any
active part in missionary work.' 330 U.S. at page 100, 67 S.Ct. at page 569[1947]
USSC 23; , 91 L.Ed. 754. But the rational connection between
the prohibitions of the statute and its objects, the limited scope of the
abridgment of First Amendment rights, and the large public interest in the
efficiency of government service, which Congress had found necessitated the
statute, led us to the conclusion that the statute may stand consistently with
the First Amendment.
Similarly,
in Re Summers, supra, we upheld the refusal of a state supreme court to admit
to membership of its bar an otherwise qualified person on the sole ground that
he had conscientious scruples against war and would not use force to prevent
wrong under any circumstances. Since he could not, so the justices of the state
court found, swear in good faith to uphold the state constitution, which requires service in the
militia in time of war, we held that refusal to permit him to practice law did
not violate the First Amendment, as its commands are incorporated in the Due
Process Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment. Again, the relation between the
obligations of membership in the bar and service required by the state in time
of war, the limited effect of the state's holding upon speech and assembly, and
the strong interest which every state court has in the persons who become
officers of the court were thought sufficient to justify the state action. See
also Hamilton v. Regents of University of California, supra.
It is contended that the principle
that statutes touching First Amendment freedoms must be narrowly drawn dictates that a statute
aimed at political strikes should make the calling of such strikes unlawful but
should not attempt to bring about the removal of union officers, with its
attendant effect upon First Amendment rights. We think, however, that the
legislative judgment that interstate commerce must be protected from a
continuing threat of such strikes is a permissible one in this case. The fact
that the injury to interstate commerce would be an accomplished fact before any
sanctions could be applied, the possibility that a large number of such strikes
might be called at a time of external or internal crisis, and the practical
difficulties which would be encountered in detecting illegal activities of this
kind are factors which are persuasive that Congress should not be powerless to
remove the threat, not limited to punishing the act. We recently said that
'nothing in the Constitution prevents Congress from acting in time to prevent
potential injury to the national economy from becoming a reality.' North
American Co. v. Securities & Exchange Commission, [1946] USSC 70; 1946, 327 U.S. 686, 711[1946] USSC 70; , 66 S.Ct. 785, 799[1946] USSC 70; , 90 L.Ed. 945. While this statement may be subject
to some qualification, it indicates the wide scope of congressional power to
keep from the channels of commerce that which would hinder and obstruct such
commerce.
VI.
Previous
discussion has considered the constitutional questions raised by § 9(h) as they
apply alike to members of the Communist Party and affiliated organizations and
to persons who believe in overthrow of the Government by force. The breadth of
the provision concerning belief in overthrow of the Government by force would
raise additional questions, however, if it were read very literally to include
all persons who might, under any conceivable circumstances, subscribe to that
belief.
But
we see no reason to construe the statute so broadly. It is within the power and
is the duty of this Court to construe a statute so as to avoid the danger of
unconstitutionality if it may be done in consonance with the legislative
purpose. United States v. Congress of Industrial Organizations, [1948]
USSC 96; 1948, 335 U.S.
106, 120 121[1948] USSC
96; , 68 S.Ct. 1349, 1356; United States v. Delaware
& Hudson Co., [1909] USSC 120; 1909, 213 U.S. 366,
407—408[1909] USSC 120; ,
29 S.Ct. 527, 535[1909]
USSC 120; , 53 L.Ed. 836. In enacting § 9(h), Congress had as
its objective the protection of interstate commerce from direct interference,
not any intent to disturb or proscribe beliefs as such. Its manifest purpose
was to bring within the terms of the statute only those persons whose beliefs
strongly indicate a will to engage in political strikes and other forms of
direct action when, as officers, they direct union activities. The
congressional purpose is therefore served if we construe the clause, 'that he
does not believe in, and is not a member of or supports any organization that
believes in or teaches, the overthrow of the United States Government by force
or by any illegal or unconstitutional methods,' to apply to persons and
organizations who believe in violent overthrow of the Government as it
presently exists under the Constitution as an objective, not merely a prophecy. Congress might
well find that such persons—those who believe that the present form of the
Government of the United States should be changed by force or other illegal
methods—would carry that objective into their conduct of union affairs by
calling political strikes designed to weaken and divide the American people,
whether they consider actual overthrow of the Government to be near or distant.
It is to those persons that § 9(h) is intended to apply, and only to them. We
hold, therefore, that the belief identified in § 9(h) is a belief in the
objective of overthrow by force or by any illegal or unconstitutional methods
of the Government of the United States as it now exists under the Constitution
and laws thereof.
As thus construed, we think that the 'belief'
provision of the oath presents no different problem from that present in that
part of the section having to do with membership in the Communist Party. Of
course we agree that one may not be imprisoned or executed because he holds
particular beliefs. But to attack the straw man of 'thought control' is to
ignore the fact that the sole effect of the statute upon one who believes in
overthrow of the Government by force and violence—and does not deny his
belief—is that he may be forced to relinquish his position as a union leader.
That fact was crucial in our discussion of the statute as it relates to
membership in the Communist Party. To quote, with pertinent substitutions, an
apt statement of that principle, post, 339 U.S. 434, 70 S.Ct. 702: 'The Act does not suppress or outlaw
the (belief in overthrow of the Government), nor prohibit it or (those who hold
that belief) from engaging in any above-board activity * * *. No individual is
forbidden to be or to become a philosophical (believer in overthrow of
Government) or a full-fledged member of (a group which holds that belief). No
one is penalized for writing or speaking in favor of (such a belief) or its
philosophy. Also, the Act does not require or forbid anything whatever to any
person merely because he is (a believer in overthrow of the Government by
force). It applies only to one who becomes an officer of a labor union.'
If
the principle that one may under no circumstances be required to state his
beliefs on any subject nor suffer the loss of any right or privilege because of
his beliefs be a valid one, its application in other possible situations
becomes relevant. Suppose, for example, that a federal statute provides that no
person may become a member of the Secret Service force assigned to protect the
President unless he swears that he does not believe in assassination of the
President. Is this beyond the power of Congress, whatever the need revealed by its
investigations? An affirmative answer hardly commends itself to reason unless,
indeed, the Bill of Rights has been converted into a 'suicide pact.'
Terminiello v. Chicago, [1949] USSC 77; 1949, 337 U.S. 1, 37[1949] USSC 77; , 69 S.Ct. 894, 910, dissenting opinion. Yet the example chosen is
far-fetched only because of the manifest absurdity of reliance upon an oath in
such a situation. One can have no doubt that the screening process in the
selection of persons to occupy such positions probes far deeper than mere
oath-taking can possibly do.
To
hold that such an oath is permissible, on the other hand, is to admit that the
circumstances under which one is asked to state his belief and the consequences
which flow from his refusal to do so or his disclosure of a particular belief
make a difference. The reason for the difference has been pointed out at some
length above. First, the loss of a particular position is not the loss of life
or liberty. We have noted that the distinction is one of degree, and it is for
this reason that the effect of the statute in proscribing beliefs—like its
effect in restraining speech or freedom of association—must be carefully weighed
by the courts in determining whether the balance struck by Congress comports
with the dictates of the Constitution. But it is inaccurate to speak of § 9(h) as 'punishing'
or 'forbidding' the holding of beliefs, any more than it punishes or forbids
membership in the Communist Party.
Second, the public interest at stake
in ascertaining one's beliefs cannot automatically be assigned at zero without
consideration of the circumstances of the inquiry. If it is admitted that
beliefs are springs to action, it becomes highly relevant whether the person
who is asked whether he believes in overthrow of the Government by force is a
general with five hundred thousand men at his command or a village constable.
To argue that because the latter may not be asked his beliefs the former must
necessarily be exempt is to make a fetish of beliefs. The answer to the
implication that if this statute is upheld 'then the power of govenment over
beliefs is as unlimited as its power over conduct and the way is open to force
disclosure of attitudes on all manner of social, economic, moral and political
issues,' post, 339 U.S. 438, 70 S.Ct. 704, is
that that result does not follow 'while this Court sits.'20 The circumstances giving rise to the
inquiry, then, are likewise factors to be weighed by the courts, giving due
weigh, of course, to the congressional judgment concerning the need. In short,
the problem of balancing the conflicting individual and national interests
involved is no different from the problem presented by proscriptions based upon
political affiliations.
Insofar as a distinction between
beliefs and political affiliations is based upon absence of any 'overt act' in
the former case, it is relevant, if at all, in connection with problems of
proof. In proving that one swore falsely that he is not a Communist, the act of
joining the Party is crucial. Proof that one lied in swearing that he does not
believe in overthrow of the Government by force, on the other hand, must
consist in proof of his mental state. To that extent they differ.
To state the difference, however, is
but to recognize that while objective facts may be proved directly, the state
of a man's mind must be inferred from the things he says or does. Of course we
agree that the courts cannot 'ascertain the thought that has had no outward
manifestation.' But courts and juries every day pass upon knowledge, belief and
intent—the state of men's minds having before them no more than evidence of
their words and conduct, from which, in ordinary human experience, mental
condition may be inferred. See 2 Wigmore, Evidence (3d ed.) §§ 244, 256 et seq.
False swearing in signing the affidavit must, as in other cases where mental
state is in issue, be proved by the outward manifestations of state of mind. In
the absence of such manifestations, which are as much 'overt acts' as the act
of joining the Communist Party, there can be no successful prosecution for
false swearing.21
Considering the circumstances
surrounding the problem—the deference due the congressional judgment concerning
the need for regulation of conduct affecting interstate commerce and the effect
of the statute upon rights of speech, assembly and belief—we conclude that § 9(h)
of the National Labor Relations Act, as amended by the Labor Management
Relations Act, 1947, does not unduly infringe freedoms protected by the First
Amendment. Those who, so
Congress has found, would subvert the public interest cannot escape all regulation
because, at the same time, they carry on legitimate political activities. Cf.
Valentine v. Chrestensen, [1942] USSC 80; 1942, 316 U.S. 52, 62 S.Ct. 920, 86 L.Ed. 1262. To
encourage unions to displace them from positions of great power over the national
economy, while at the same time leaving free the outlets by which they may
pursue legitimate political activities of persuasion and advocacy, does not
seem to us to contravene the purposes of the First Amendment. That Amendment
requires that one be permitted to believe what he will. It requires that one be
permitted to advocate what he will unless there is a clear and present danger
that a substantial public evil will result therefrom. It does not require that
he be permitted to be the keeper of the arsenal.
VII.
There
remain two contentions which merit discussion. One is that § 9(h) is
unconstitutionally vague. The other is that it violates the mandate of Art. I,
§ 9 of the Constitution
that 'No Bill of Attainder or ex post facto Law shall be passed.'
The argument as to vagueness stresses
the breadth of such terms as 'affiliated,' 'supports' and 'illegal or
unconstitutional methods.' There is little doubt that imagination can conjure hypothetical
cases in which the meaning of these terms will be in nice question. The
applicable standard, however, is not one of wholly consistent academic
definition of abstract terms. It is, rather, the practical criterion of fair
notice to those to whom the statute is directed. The particular context is all
important.
The only criminal punishment specified
is the application of § 35(A) of the Criminal Code, 18 U.S.C. § 1001, 18
U.S.C.A. § 1001, which covers only those false statements made 'knowingly and
willfully.' The question in any criminal prosecution involving a non-Communist
affidavit must therefore be whether the affiant acted in good faith or
knowingly lied concerning his affiliations, beliefs, support of organizations,
etc. And since the constitutional vice in a vague or indefinite statute is the
injustice to the accused in placing him on trial for an offense, the nature of
which he is given no fair warning, the fact that punishment is restricted to
acts done with knowledge that they contravene the statute makes this objection
untenable. As this Court pointed out in United States v. Ragen, [1942]
USSC 33; 1942, 314 U.S.
513, 524[1942] USSC 33; , 62 S.Ct. 374, 379[1942] USSC 33; , 86 L.Ed. 383, 'A mind intent upon willful evasion
is inconsistent with surprised innocence.' Cf. Omaechevarria v. Idaho, [1918]
USSC 69; 1918, 246 U.S.
343, 38 S.Ct. 323, 62 L.Ed. 763; Hygrade Provision Co. v. Sherman, [1925]
USSC 9; 1925, 266 U.S.
497, 45 S.Ct. 141, 69 L.Ed. 402; Screws v. United States, [1945]
USSC 89; 1945, 325 U.S.
91, 65 S.Ct. 1031, 89 L.Ed. 1495, 162 A.L.R. 1330. Without
considering, therefore, whether in other circumstances the words used in § 9(h)
would render a statute unconstitutionally vague and indefinite, we think that
the fact that under § 35A of the Criminal Code no honest, untainted
interpretation of those words is punishable removes the possibility of
constitutional infirmity.
44
The
unions' argument as to bill of attainder cites the familiar cases, United
States v. Lovett, [1946] USSC 104; 1946, 328 U.S. 303,
66 S.Ct. 1073, 90
L.Ed. 1252; Ex parte Garland, [1866]
USSC 33; 1867, 4 Wall.
333, 18 L.Ed. 366; Cummings v. Missouri, [1866]
USSC 23; 1866, 4 Wall.
277, 18 L.Ed. 356. Those cases and this also, according
to the argument, involve the proscription of certain occupations to a group
classified according to belief and loyalty. But there is a decisive
distinction: in the previous decisions the individuals involved were in fact
being punished for past actions; whereas in this case they are subject to
possible loss of position only because there is substantial ground for the
congressional judgment that their beliefs and loyalties will be transformed
into future conduct. Of course, the history of the past conduct is the
foundation for the judgment as to what the future conduct is likely to be; but
that does not alter the conclusion that § 9(h) is intended to prevent future
action rather than to punish past action.
This
distinction is emphasized by the fact that members of those groups identified
in § 9(h) are free to serve as union officers if at any time they renounce the
allegiances which constituted a bar to signing the affidavit in the past. Past
conduct, actual or threatened by their previous adherence to affiliations and
beliefs mentioned in § 9(h), is not a bar to resumption of the position. In the
cases relied upon by the unions on the other hand, this Court has emphasized
that, since the basis of disqualification was past action or loyalty, nothing
that those persons proscribed by its terms could ever do would change the
result. See United States v. Lovett, supra, 328 U.S. at page 314, 66 S.Ct. at
page 1078[1946] USSC 104;
, 90 L.Ed. 1252; Cummings
v. Missouri, supra, 4 Wall. at page 327[1866] USSC 23; , 18 L.Ed. 356. Here the intention is to forestall
future dangerous acts; there is no one who may not by a voluntary alteration of
the loyalties which impel him to action, become eligible to sign the affidavit.
We cannot conclude that this section is a bill of attainder.
In their
argument on this point, the unions seek some advantage from references to
English history pertinent to a religious test oath. That experience is written
into our Constitution in
the following provision of Article VI' 'The Senators and Representatives before
mentioned, and the Members of the several State Legislatures, and all executive
and judicial Officers, both of the United States and of the several States,
shall be bound by Oath or Affirmation, to support this Constitution; but no
religious Test shall ever be required as a Qualification to any Office or
public Trust under the United States.' It is obvious that not all oaths were
abolished; the mere fact that § 9(h) is in oath form hardly rises to the
stature of a constitutional objection. All that was forbidden was a 'religious
Test.' We do not think that the oath here involved can rightly be taken as
falling within that category.
Clearly the Constitution permits the requirement of oaths by
officeholders to uphold the Constitution itself. The obvious implication is
that those unwilling to take such an oath are to be barred from public office.
For the President, a specific oath was set forth in the Constitution itself. Art.
II, § 1. And Congress has detailed an oath for other federal officers.22 Obviously the Framers of the Constitution thought that the exaction of an
affirmation of minimal loyalty to the Government was worth the price of
whatever deprivation of individual freedom of conscience was involved. All that
we need hold here is that the casting of § 9(h) into the mold of an oath does
not invalidate it, if it is otherwise constitutional.
We conclude that § 9(h) of the
National Labor Relations Act, as amended by the Labor-Management Relations Act,
1947, as herein construed, is compatible with the Federal Constitution and may stand. The judgments of the
courts below are therefore affirmed.
Affirmed.
Mr. Justice DOUGLAS, Mr. Justice CLARK
and Mr. Justice MINTON took no part in the consideration or decision of these
cases.
Mr. Justice FRANKFURTER, concurring in
the Court's opinion except as to Part VII.
'Scarcely any political question
arises in the United States,' observed the perceptive de Tocqueville as early
as 1835, 'that is not resolved, sooner or later, into a judicial question.' 1
Democracy in America 280 (Bradley ed. 1948). And so it was to be expected that
the conflict of political ideas now dividing the world more pervasively than
any since this nation was founded would give rise to controversies for
adjudication by this Court. 'The judicial Power' with which alone this Court is
invested comes into operation only as to issues that the long tradition of our
history has made appropriate for disposition by judges. When such questions are
properly here they are to be disposed of within those strict confines of legal
reasoning which laymen too often deem invidiously technical. This restriction
to justiciable issues to be disposed of in the unrhetorical manner of
opinion-writing reflects respect by the judiciary for its very limited, however
great, function in the proper distribution of authority in our political scheme
so as to avoid autocratic rule. No doubt issues like those now before us cannot
be completely severed from the political and emotional context out of which
they emerge. For that very reason adjudication touching such matters should not
go one whit beyond the immediate issues requiring decision, and what is said in
support of the adjudication should insulate the Court as far as is rationally
possible from the political conflict beneath the legal issues.
The central problem presented by the
enactment now challenged is the power of Congress, as part of its comprehensive
scheme for industrial peace, to keep Communists out of controlling positions in
labor unions as a condition to utilizing the opportunities afforded by the
National Labor Relations Act, as amended by the Labor Management Relations Act
1947.1 Wrapped up in this
problem are two great concerns of our democratic society the right of
association for economic and social betterment and the right of association for
political purposes. It is too late in the day to deny to Congress the power to
promote industrial peace in all the far-flung range of interstate commerce. To
that end, Congress may take appropriate measures to protect interstate commerce
against disruptive conduct not fairly related to industrial betterment within
our democratic framework. It is one thing to forbid heretical political thought
merely as heretical thought. It is quite a different thing for Congress to
restrict attempts to bring about another scheme of society, not through appeal
to reason and the use of the ballot as democracy has been pursued throughout
our history, but through an associated effort to disrupt industry.
Thus stated, it would make undue
inroads upon the policy-making power of Congress to deny it the right to
protect the industrial peace of the country by excluding from leadership in
trade unions which seek to avail themselves of the machinery of the Labor
Management Relations Act those who are united for action against our democratic
process. This is so not because Congress in affording a facility can subject it
to any condition it pleases. It cannot. Congress may withhold all sorts of
facilities for a better life but if it affords them it cannot make them available
in an obviously arbitrary way or exact surrender of freedoms unrelated to the
purpose of the facilities. Congress surely can provide for certain clearly
relevant qualifications of responsibility on the part of leaders of trade
unions invoking the machinery of the Labor Management Relations Act. The
essential question now is whether Congress may determine that membership of
union officers in the Communist Party creates such an obvious hazard to the
peace-promoting purposes of the Act that access to the machinery of the Act may
be denied unions which prefer their freedom to have officers who are Communists
to their opportunities under the Act.
When we are dealing with conflicting
freedoms, as we are on the issues before us, we are dealing with large concepts
that too readily lend themselves to explosive rhetoric. We are also dealing
with matters as to which diffent nuances in phrasing the same conclusion lead
to different emphasis and thereby eventually may lead to different conclusions
in slightly different situations. From my point of view these are issues as to
which it would be desirable for the members of the Court to write full length
individual opinions. The Court's business in our time being what it is
precludes this. It must suffice for me to say that the judgment of Congress
that trade unions which are guided by officers who are committed by ties of
membership to the Communist Party must forego the advantages of the Labor
Management Relations Act is reasonably related to the accomplishment of the
purposes which Congress constitutionally had a right to pursue. To deny that
that is a judgment which Congress may, as a matter of experience enforce even
though it involves the indicated restrictions upon freedom would be to make
naivete a requirement in judges. Since the Court's opinion, in the main,
expresses the point of view which I have very inadequately sketched, I join it
except as qualified in what follows.
Congress was concerned with what it
justifiably deemed to be the disorganizing purposes of Communists who hold
positions of official power in labor unions, or, at the least, what it might
well deem their lack of disinterested devotion to the basic tenets of the
American trade union movement because of a higher loyalty to a potentially
conflicting cause. But Congress did not choose merely to limit the freedom of
labor unions which seek the advantages of the Labor Management Relations Act to
be led by officers who are not willing to disavow membership in the Communist
Party. The scope of its legislation was much more extensive.
Legislation, in order to effectuate
its purposes, may deal with radiations beyond the immediate incidence of a
mischief. If a particular mischief is within the scope of congressional power,
wide discretion must be allowed to Congress for dealing with it effectively. It
is not the business of this Court to restrict Congress to narrowly in defining
the extent or the nature of remedies. How to curb an evil, what remedies will
be effective, the reach of a particular evil and therefore the appropriate
scope of a remedy against it—all these are in the main matters of legislative
policy not open to judicial condemnation. There are, of course, some specific
restrictions in devising remedies. No matter what its notions of policy may be,
the Eighth Amendment, for
example, bars Congress from inflicting 'cruel and unusual punishments.' I do
not suppose it is even arguable that Congress could ask for a disclosure of how
union officers cast their ballots at the last presidential election even though
the secret ballot is a relatively recent institution. See Wigmore, The
Australian Ballot System 3, 15, 22 (1889). So also Congress must keep within
the contours of the 'due process' requirement of the Fifth Amendment, vague as
they are. In order to curb a mischief Congress cannot be so indefinite in its
requirements that effort to meet them raises hazards unfair to those who seek
obedience or involves surrender of freedoms which exceeds what may fairly be
exacted. These restrictions on the broad scope of legislative discretion are
merely the law's application of the homely saws that one should not throw out
the baby with the bath or burn the house in order to roast the pig.
In my view Congress has cast its net
too indiscriminately in some of the provisions of § 9(h). To ask avowal that
one 'does not believe in, and is not a member of on supports any organization
that believes in * * * the overthrow of the United States Government * * * by
any illegal or unconstitutional methods' is to ask assurances from men
regarding matters that open the door too wide to mere speculation or
uncertainty. It is asking more than rightfully may be asked of ordinary men to
take oath that a method is not 'unconstitutional' or 'illegal' when
constitutionality or legality is frequently determined by this Court by the
chance of a single vote.2
It does not meet the difficulty to suggest that the hazard of a prosecution for
perjury is not great since the convictions for perjury must be founded on
willful falsity. To suggest that a judge might not be justified in allowing a
case to go to a jury, or that a jury would not be justified in convicting, or
that, on the possible happening of these events, an appellate court would be
compelled to reverse, or, finally, that resort could be had to this Court for
review on a petition for certiorari, affords safeguards too tenuous to
neutralize the danger. See Musser v. Utah, [1948] USSC 20; 333 U.S. 95, 68 S.Ct. 397, 92 L.Ed. 562. The hazards that were found to be
fatal to the legislation under review in Winters v. New York, [1948]
USSC 41; 333 U.S. 507, 68 S.Ct. 665, 92 L.Ed. 840, appear trivial by comparison with
what is here involved.
It is
not merely the hazard of prosecution for perjury that is dependent on a correct
determination as to the implications of a man's belief or the belief of others
with whom he may be associated in an organization concerned with political and
social issues. It should not be assumed that oaths will be lightly taken;
fastidiously scrupulous regard for them should be encouraged. Therefore, it
becomes most relevant whether an oath which Congress asks men to take may or
may not be thought to touch matters that may not be subjected to compulsory
avowal of belief or disbelief. In the uncertainty of the reach of § 9(h), one
may withhold an oath because of conscientious scruples that it covers beliefs
whose disclosure Congress could not in terms exact. If a man has scruples about
taking an oath because of uncertainty as to whether it encompasses some beliefs
that are inviolate, the surrender of abstention is invited by the ambiguity of
the congressional exaction. As Mr. Justice JACKSON'S opinion indicates, probing
into men's thoughts trenches on those aspects of individual freedom which we
rightly regard as the most cherished aspects of Western civilization. The
cardinal article of faith of our civilization is the inviolate character of the
individual. A man can be regarded as an individual and not as a function of the
state only if he is protected to the largest possible extent in his thoughts
and in his beliefs as the citadel of his person. Entry into that citadel can be
justified, if at all, only if strictly confined so that the belief that a man
is asked to reveal is so defined as to leave no fair room for doubt that he is
not asked to disclose what he has a right to withhold.
No
one could believe more strongly than I do that every rational indulgence should
be made in favor of the constitutionality of an enactment by Congress. I deem
it my duty to go to the farthest possible limits in so construing legislation
as to avoid a finding that Congress has exceeded the limits of its powers. See,
e.g., United States v. Lovett, [1946] USSC 104; 328 U.S. 303, 318, 329[1946] USSC 104; , 66 S.Ct. 1073,
1080, 1085[1946] USSC 104;
, 90 L.Ed. 1252; Shapiro
v. United States, [1948] USSC 104; 335 U.S. 1, 36[1948]
USSC 104; , 68 S.Ct. 1375, 1393, 92 L.Ed. 1787; United States v. C.I.O., [1948]
USSC 96; 335 U.S. 106, 124, 129[1948] USSC 96; , 68 S.Ct. 1349, 1358[1948] USSC 96; , 1360, 92 L.Ed. 1849.
If I
possibly could, to avoid questions of unconstitutionality I would construe the
requirements of § 9(h) to be restricted to disavowal of actual membership in
the Communist Party, or in an organization that is in fact a controlled cover
for that Party or of active belief, as a matter of present policy, in the overthrow
of the Government of the United States by force. But what Congress has written
does not permit such a gloss nor deletion of what it has written. See Yu Cong
Eng v. Trinidad, [1926] USSC 171; 271 U.S. 500, 46
S.Ct. 619, 70 L.Ed. 1059. I cannot deem it within the righful
authority of Congress to probe into opinions that involve only an argumentative
demostration of some coincidental parallelism of belief with some of the
beliefs of those who direct the policy of the Communist Party, though without
any allegiance to it. To require oaths as to matters that open up such
possibilities invades the inner life of men whose compassionate thought or
doctrinaire hopes may be as far removed from any dangerous kinship with the
Communist creed as were those of the founders of the present orthodox political
parties in this country.
The
offensive provisions of § 9(h) leave unaffected, however, the valid portions of
the section. In § 16, Congress has made express provision for such severance.
Since the judgments below were based in part on what I deem unconstitutional
requirements I cannot affirm but would remand to give opportunity to obey
merely the valid portions of § 9(h).
Mr.
Justice JACKSON, concurring and dissenting, each in part.
If
the statute before us required labor union officers to forswear membership in
the Republican Party, the Democratic Party or the Socialist Party, I suppose
all agree that it would be unconstitutional. But why, if it is valid as to the
Communist Party?
The
answer, for me, is in the decisive differences between the Communist Party and
every other party of any importance in the long experience of the United States
with party government. In order that today's decision may not be useful as a
precedent for suppression of any political opposition compatible with our free
institutions, I limit concurrence to grounds and distinctions explicitly set
forth herein, without which I should regard this Act as unconstitutional.
To
state controlling criteria definitively is both important and difficult,
because those Communist Party activities visible to the public closely resemble
those of any other party. Parties, whether in office or out are often
irresponsible in their use and abuse of freedoms of speech and press. They all
make scapegoats of unpopular persons or classes and make promises of dubious
sincerity or feasibility in order to win votes. All parties, when in
opposition, strive to discredit and embarrass the Government of the day by
spreading exaggerations and untruths and by inciting prejudiced or unreasoning
discontent, not even hesitating to injure the Nation's prestige among the
family of nations. The Communist Party, at least outwardly, only exaggerates
these well-worn political techniques and many persons are thus led to think of
it as just another more radical political party. If it were nothing but that, I
think this legislation would be unconstitutional. There are, however,
contradictions between what meets the eye and what is covertly done, which, in
my view of the issues, provide a rational basis upon which Congress reasonably
could have concluded1
that the Communist Party is something different in fact from any other
substantial party we have known, and hence may consitutionally be treated as
something different in law.
I.
From information before its several
Committees and from facts of general knowledge, Congress could rationally
conclude that, behind its political party facade, the Communist Party is a
conspiratorial and revolutionary junta, organized to reach ends and to use methods
which are incompatible with our constitutional system. A rough and compressed
grouping of this data2
would permit Congress to draw these important conclusions as to its
distinguishing characteristics.
1. The goal of the Communist Party is
to seize powers of government by and for a minority rather than to acquire
power through the vote of a free electorate. It seeks not merely a change of
administration, or of Congress, or reform legislation within the constitutional
framework. Its program is not merely so socialize property more rapidly and
extensively than the other parties are doing. While the difference between
other parties in these matters is largely as to pace, the Communist Party's
difference is one of direction.
The Communist program only begins with
seizure of government, which then becomes a means to impose upon society an
organization on principles fundamentally opposed to those presupposed by our Constitution. It purposes forcibly to recast our
whole social and politial structure after the Muscovite model of police-state
dictatorship. It rejects the entire religious and cultural heritage of Western
civilization, as well as the American economic and political systems. This
Communist movement is a belated counter-revolution to the American Revolution,
designed to undo the Declaration of Independence, the Constitution, and our
Bill of Rights, and overturn our system of free, representative
self-government.
Goals so extreme and offensive to
American tradition and aspiration obviously could not be attained or approached
through order or with tranquility. If, by their better organization and
discipline, they were successful, more candid Communists admit that it would be
to an accompaniment of violence, but at the same time they disclaim responsibility
by blaming the violence upon those who engage in resistance or reprisal. It
matters little by whom the first blow would be struck; no one can doubt that an
era of violence and oppression, confiscations and liquidations would be
concurrent with a regime of Communism.
Such goals set up a cleavage among us
too fundamental to be composed by democratic processes. Our constitutional
scheme of elections will not settle issues between large groups when the price
of losing is to suffer extinction. When dissensions cut too deeply, men will
fight, even hopelessly, before they will submit.3 And this is the kind of struggle projected by the
Communist Party and inherent in its program.
2. The Communist Party alone among
American parties past or present is dominated and controlled by a foreign
government. It is a satrap party which, to the threat of civil disorder, adds
the threat of betrayal into alien hands.
The chain of command from the Kremlin
to the American party is stoutly denied and usually invisible, but it was
unmistakably disclosed by the American Communist Party somersaulting in
synchronism with shifts in the Kremlin's foreign policy. Before Munich, Soviet
policy was anti-German—'anti-fascist'—and the Communists in this country were
likewise. However, when Salin concluded a nonaggression pact with Hitler and
Nazi Germany and the Soviet Union became partners in the war, the Communists
here did everything within their power to retard and embarrass the United
States' policy of rendering aid short of war to victims of aggression by that
evil partnership. When those partners again fell out and Russian policy once
more became anti-German, the Communists in this country made an abrupt and
fierce reversal and were unconscionable in their demands that American
soldiers, whose equipment they had delayed and sabotaged, be sacrificed in a
premature second front to spare Russia. American Communists, like Communists
elsewhere in the world, placed Moscow's demand above every patriotic interest.
By lineage and composition the
Communist Party will remain peculiarly susceptible to this alien control. The
entire apparatus of Communism—its grievances, program, propaganda and
vocabulary were evolved for Eastern and Central Europe, whose social and
political conditions bear no semblance to our own. However gifted may have been
the Communist Party's founders and leaders—Marx, Engels, Lenin and Stalin—not
one of them ever lived in America, experienced our conditions, or imbibed the
spirit of our institutions.
The Communist Party is not native to this
country and its beginnings here were not an effort of Americans to answer
American problems. Nor is it the response to a quest by American political
leaders for lessons from European experiences. As a consequence, the leaders of
the American Communist Party have been otherwise insignificant personalities,
without personal political followings or aptitudes for our political methods,
adapted by training only to boring their way into the labor movement, minority
groups and coteries of naive and confused liberals, whose organizations they
have captured and discredited and among whom they lie in wait for further
orders.
The Old World may be rich in lessons which
our statesmen could consult with advantage. But it is one thing to learn from
or support, a foreign power because that policy serves American interests, and
another thing to support American policies because they will serve foreign
interests.4 In each
country where the Communists have seized control, they have so denationalized
its foreign policy as to make it a satellite and vassal of the Soviet Union and
enforced a domestic policy in complete conformity with the Soviet pattern,
tolerating no deviation in deference to any people's separate history,
tradition or national interests.
3. Violent and undemocratic means are
the calculated and indispensable methods to attain the Communist Party's goal.
It would be incredible naivete to expect the American branch of this movement
to forego the only methods by which a Communist Party has anywhere come into
power. In not one of the countries it now dominates was the Communist Party
chosen by a free or contestible election; in not one can it be evicted by any
election. The international police state has crept over Eastern Europe by
deception, coercion, coup d'etat, terrorism and assassination. Not only has it
overpowered its critics and opponents; it has usually liquidated them. The
American Communist Party has copied the organizational structure and its
leaders have been schooled in the same technique and from the same tutors.
The American Communists have imported
the totalitarian organization's disciplines and techniques, notwithstanding the
fact that this country offers them and other discontented elements a way to
peaceful revolution by ballot.5 If they can persuade enough citizens, they may not only name new
officials and inaugurate new policies, but, by amendment of the Constitution, they can abolish the Bill of Rights
and set up an absolute government by legal methods. They are given liberties of
speech, press and assembly to enable them to present to the people their
proposals and propaganda for peaceful and lawful changes, however extreme. But
instead of resting their case upon persuasion and any appeal inherent in their
ideas and principles, the Communist Party adopts the techniques of a secret
cabal—false names, forged passports, code messages, clandestine meetings. To
these it adds occasional terroristic and threatening methods, such as picketing
courts and juries, political strikes and sabotage.
This cabalism and terrorism is
understandable in the light of what they want to accomplish and what they have
to overcome. The Communist program does not presently, nor in foreseeable
future elections, commend itself to enough American voters to be a substantial
political force. Unless the Communist Party can obtain some powerful leverage
on the population, it is doomed to remain a negligible factor in the United
States. Hence, conspiracy, violence, intimidation and the coup d'etat are all
that keep hope alive in the communist breast.
4. The Communist Party has sought to
gain this leverage and hold on the American population by acquiring control of
the labor movement. All political parties have wooed labor and its leaders. But
what other parties seek is principally the vote of labor. The Communist Party,
on the other hand, is not primarily interested in labor's vote, for it does not
expect to win by votes. It strives for control of labor's coercive power—the
strike, the sit-down, the slowdown, sabotage, or other means of producing
industrial paralysis. Congress has legalized the strike as labor's weapon for
improving its own lot. But where Communists have labor control, the strike can
be and sometimes is perverted to a party weapon. In 1940 and 1941, undisclosed
Communists used their labor offices to sabotage this Nation's effort to rebuild
its own defenses. Disguised as leaders of free American labor, they were in
truth secret partisans of Stalin, who, in partnership with Hitler, was
overrunning Europe, sending honest labor leaders to concentration camps, and
reducing labor to slavery in every land either of them was able to occupy. No
other important political party in our history has attempted to use the strike
to nullify a foreign or a domestic policy adopted by those chosen under our
representative system.
This labor leverage, however, usually
can be obtained only by concealing the Communist tie from the union membership.
Whatever grievances American workmen may have with American employers, they are
too intelligent and informed to seek a remedy through a Communist Party which
defends Soviet conscription of labor, forced labor camps and the police state.
Hence the resort to concealment, and hence the resentment of laws to compel
disclosure of Communist Party ties. The membership is not likely to entrust its
bargaining power, its records, and its treasury to such hands. When it does,
the union finds itself a more or less helpless captive of the Communist Party.
Its officers cease to be interested in correcting grievances but seek to worsen
and exploit them; they care less for winning strikes than that they be long,
bitter and disruptive. They always follow the Communist Party line, without
even knowing its source or its objectives. The most promising course of the
Communist Party has been the undercover capture of the coercive power of
strategic labor unions as a leverage to magnify its power over the American
people.
5. Every member of the Communist Party
is an agent to execute the Communist program. What constitutes a party? Major
political parties in the United States have never been closely knit or secret
organizations. Any one who usually votes the party ticket is reckoned a member,
although he has not applied for or been admitted to membership, pays no dues
has taken no pledge, and is free to vote, speak and act as he wills. Followers
are held together by rather casual acceptance of general principles, the influence
of leaders, and sometimes by the cohesive power of patronage. Membership in the
party carries with it little assurance that the member understands or believes
in its principles and none at all that he will take orders from its leaders.
One may quarrel with the party and bolt its candidates and return again as much
a member as those who were regular. And it is often a source of grief to those
who have labored long in the vineyard that late arrivals are taken into the
party councils from other parties without scrutiny. Of course, when party
organization is of this character, there is little ground for inference that
all members are committed to party plans or that they are agents for their
execution.
Membership in the Communist Party is
totally different. The Party is a secret conclave. Members are admitted only
upon acceptance as reliable and after indoctrination in its policies, to which
the member is fully committed. They are provided with cards or credentials,
usually issued under false names so that the identification can only be made by
officers of the Party who hold the code. Moreover, each pledges unconditional
obedience to party authority. Adherents are known by secret or code names. They
constitute 'cells' in the factory, the office, the political society, or the
labor union. For any deviation from the party line they are purged and
excluded.
Inferences from membership in such an
organization are justifiably different from those to be drawn from membership
in the usual type of political party. Individuals who assume such obligations
are chargeable, on ordinary conspiracy principles, with responsibility for and
participation in all that makes up the Party's program. The conspiracy
principle has traditionally been employed to protect society against all
'ganging up' or concerted action in violation of its laws. No term passes that
this Court does not sustain convictions based on that doctrine for violations
of the antitrust laws or other statutes.6 However, there has recently entered the dialectic of
politics a cliche used to condemn application of the conspiracy principle to
Communists. 'Guilt by association' is an epithet frequently used and little
explained, except that it is generally accompanied by another slogan, 'guilt is
personal.' Of course it is; but personal guilt may be incurred by joining a
conspiracy. That act of association makes one responsible for the acts of
others committed in pursuance of the association. It is wholly a question of
the sufficiency of evidence of association to imply conspiracy. There is
certainly sufficient evidence that all members owe allegiance to every detail
of the Communist Party program and have assumed a duty actively to help execute
it, so that Congress could, on familiar conspiracy principles, charge each
member with responsibility for the goals and means of the Party.
Such then is the background which
Congress could reasonably find as a basis for exerting its constitutional
powers, and which the judiciary cannot disregard in testing them. On this
hypothesis we may revert to consideration of the contention of
unconstitutionality of this oath insofar as it requires disclosure of Communist
Party membership or affiliation.
II.
I cannot believe that Congress has
less power to protect a labor union from Communist Party domination than it has
from employer domination. This Court has uncompromisingly upheld power of
Congress to disestablish labor unions where they are company-dominated and to
eradicate employer influence, even when exerted only through spoken or written
words which any person not the employer would be free to utter.7
Congress has conferred upon labor
unions important rights and powers in matters that affect industry, transport,
communications, and commerce. And Congress has not now denied any union full
self-government nor prohibited any union from choosing Communist officers. It
seeks to protect the union from doing so unknowingly. And if members
deliberately choose to put the union in the hands of Communist officers,
Congress withdraws the privileges it has conferred on the assumption that they
will be devoted to the welfare of their members. It would be strange indeed if
it were constitutionally powerless to protect these delegated functions from
abuse and misappropriation to the service of the Communist Party and the Soviet
Union. Our Constitution
is not a covenant of nonresistance toward organized efforts at disruption and
betrayal, either of labor or of the country.
Counsel stress that this is a
civil-rights or a free-speech or a free-press case. But it is important to note
what this Act does not do. The Act does not suppress or outlaw the Communist Party,
nor prohibit it or its members from engaging in any aboveboard activity normal
in party struggles under our political system. It may continue to nominate
candidates, hold meetings, conduct campaigns and issue propaganda, just as
other parties may. No individual is forbidden to be or to become a
philosophical Communist or a full-fledged member of the Party. No one is
penalized for writing or speaking in favor of the Party or its philosophy.
Also, the Act does not require or forbid anything whatever to any person merely
because he is a member of, or is affiliated with, the Communist Party. It
applies only to one who becomes an officer of a labor union.
I am aware that the oath is resented
by many labor leaders of unquestioned loyalty and above suspicion of Communist
connections, indeed by some who have themselves taken bold and difficult steps
to rid the labor movement of Communists. I suppose no one likes to be compelled
to exonerate himself from connections he has never acquired. I have sometimes
wondered why I must file papers showing I did not steal my car before I can get
a license for it. But experience shows there are thieves among automobile
drivers, and that there are Communists among labor leaders. The public welfare,
in identifying both, outweighs any affront to individual dignity.
In weighing claims that any particular
activity is above the reach of law, we have a high responsibility to do so in
the light of present-day actualities, not nostalgic idealizations valid for a
simpler age. Our own world, organized for liberty, has been forced into deadly
competition with another world, organized for power. We are faced with a
lawless and ruthless effort to infiltrate and disintegrate our society. In
cases involving efforts of Congress to deal with this struggle we are clearly
called upon to apply the longstanding rule that an appointive Judiciary should
strike down no act produced by the democratic processes of our representative
system unless unconstitutionality is clear and certain.
I conclude that we cannot deny
Congress power to take these measures under the Commerce Clause to require
labor union officers to disclose their membership in or affiliation with the
Communist Party.
III.
Congress has, however, required an
additional disclaimer, which in my view does encounter serious constitutional
objections. A union officer must also swear that 'he does not believe in * * *
the overthrow of the United States Government by force or by any illegal or
unconstitutional methods.'8
If Congress has power to condition any
right or privilege of an American citizen9 upon disclosure and disavowal of belief on any subject,
it is obviously this one. But the serious issue is whether Congress has power
to proscribe any opinion or belief which has not manifested itself in any overt
act. While the forepart of the oath requires disclosure and disavowal of
relationships which depend on overt acts of membership or affiliation, the
afterpart demands revelation and denial of mere beliefs or opinions, even
though they may never have matured into any act whatever or even been given
utterance. In fact, the oath requires one to form and express a conviction on
an abstract proposition which many good citizens, if they have thought of it at
all, have considered too academic and remote to bother about.
That this difference is decisive on
the question of power becomes unmistakable when we consider measures of
enforcement. The only sanction prescribed, and probably the only one possible
in dealing with a false affidavit, is punishment for perjury. If one is accused
of falsely stating that he was not a member of, or affiliated with, the
Communist Party, his conviction would depend upon proof of visible and knowable
overt acts or courses of conduct sufficient to establish that relationship. But
if one is accused of falsely swearing that he did not believe something that he
really did believe, the trial must revolve around the conjecture as to whether
he candidly exposed his state of mind.
The law sometimes does inquire as to
mental state, but only so far as I recall when it is incidental to, and
determines the quality of, some overt act in question. From its circumstances,
courts sometimes must decide whether an act was committed intentionally or
whether its results were intended, or whether the action taken was in malice,
or after deliberation, or with knowledge of certain facts. But in such cases
the law pries into the mind only to determine the nature and culpability of an
act, as a mitigating or aggravating circumstance, and I know of no situation in
which a citizen may incur civil or criminal liability or disability because a
court infers an evil mental state where no act at all has occurred.10 Our trial processes are clumsy and
unsatisfying for inferring cogitations which are incidental to actions, but
they do not even pretend to ascertain the thought that has had no outward
manifestation. Attempts of the courts to fathom modern political meditations of
an accused would be as futile and mischievous as the efforts in the infamous
heresy trials of old to fathom religious beliefs.
Our Constitution explicitly precludes punishment of
the malignant mental state alone as treason, most serious of all political
crimes, of which the mental state of adherence to the enemy is an essential
part. It requires a duly witnessed overt act of aid and comfort to the enemy.
Cramer v. United States, [1945] USSC 78; 325 U.S. 1, 65 S.Ct. 918, 89
L.Ed. 1441. It is true that in
England of olden times men were tried for treason for mental indiscretions such
as imagining the death of the king. But our Constitution was intended to end
such prosecutions. Only in the darkest periods of human history has any Western
government concerned itself with mere belief, however eccentric or mischievous,
when it has not matured into overt action; and if that practice survives
anywhere, it is in the Communist countries whose philosophies we loathe.
How
far we must revert toward these discredited systems if we are to sustain this
oath is made vivid by the Court's reasoning that the Act applies only to those
'whose beliefs strongly indicate a will to engage in political strikes * * *.'
Since Congress has never outlawed the political strike itself, the Court must
be holding that Congress may root out mere ideas which, even if acted upon,
would not result in crime. It is a strange paradox if one may be forbidden to
have an idea in mind that he is free to put into execution. But apart from
this, efforts to weed erroneous beliefs from the minds of men have always been
supported by the argument which the Court invokes today, that beliefs are
springs to action, that evil thoughts tend to become forbidden deeds. Probably
so. But if power to forbid acts includes power to forbid contemplating them,
then the power of government over beliefs is as unlimited as its power over
conduct and the way is open to force disclosure of attitudes on all manner of
social, economic, moral and political issues.
These
suggestions may be discounted as fanciful and farfetched. But we must not
forget that in our country are evangelists and zealots of many different
political, economic and religious persuasions whose fanatical conviction is
that all thought is divinely classified into two kinds—that which is their own
and that which is false and dangerous. Communists are not the only faction
which would put us all in mental strait jackets. Indeed all ideological
struggles, religious or political, are primarily battles for dominance over the
minds of people. It is not to be supposed that the age-old readiness to try to
convert minds by pressure or suppression, instead of reason and persuasion, is
extinct. Our protection against all kinds of fanatics and extremists, none of
whom can be trusted with unlimited power over others, lies not in their
forbearance but in the limitations of our Constitution.
It happens that the belief in
overthrow of representative government by force and violence which Congress
conditionally proscribes is one that I agree is erroneous. But 'if there is any
principle of the Constitution that more imperatively calls for attachment than any other it is the
principle of free thought—not free thought for those who agree with us but
freedom for the thought that we hate.' Holmes, J., dissenting in United States
v. Schwimmer, [1929] USSC 103; 279 U.S. 644,
654—655[1929] USSC 103; ,
49 S.Ct. 448, 451[1929]
USSC 103; , 73 L.Ed. 889. Moreover, in judging the power to
deny a privilege to think otherwise, we cannot ignore the fact that our own
Government originated in revolution and is legitimate only if overthrow by
force may sometimes be justified. That circumstances sometimes justify it is
not Communist doctrine but an old American belief.11
The men who led the struggle forcibly
to overthrow lawfully constituted British authority found moral support by
asserting a natural law under which their revolution was justified, and they
broadly proclaimed these beliefs in the document basic to our freedom. Such
sentiments have also been given ardent and rather extravagant expression by
Americans of undoubted patriotism.12 Most of these utterances were directed against a tyranny which left no
way to change by suffrage. It seems to me a perversion of their meaning to
quote them, as the Communists often do, to sanction violent attacks upon a
representative government which does afford such means. But while I think
Congress may make it a crime to take one overt step to use or to incite violence
or force against our Government, I do not see how in the light of our history,
a mere belief that one has a natural right under some circumstances to do so
can subject an American citizen to prejudice any more than possession of any
other erroneous belief. Can we say that men of our time must not even think
about the propositions on which our own Revolution was justified? Or may they
think, provided they reach only one conclusion—and that the opposite of Mr.
Jefferson's?
While the Governments, State and
Federal, have expansive powers to curtail action, and some small powers to
curtail speech or writing, I think neither has any power, on any pretext,
directly or indirectly to attempt foreclosure of any line of thought. Our
forefathers found the evils of free thinking more to be endured than the evils
of inquest or suppression. They gave the status of almost absolute individual
rights to the outward means of expressing belief. I cannot believe that they
left open a way for legislation to embarrass or impede the mere intellectual
processes by which those expressions of belief are examined and formulated.
This is not only because individual thinking presents no danger to society, but
because thoughtful, bold and independent minds are essential to wise and
considered self-government.
Progress generally begins in
skepticism about accepted truths. Intellectual freedom means the right to
re-examine much that has been long taken for granted. A free man must be a
reasoning man, and he must dare to doubt what a legislative or electoral
majority may most passionately assert. The danger that citizens will think
wrongly is serious, but less dangerous than atrophy from not thinking at all.
Our Constitution relies
on our electorate's complete ideological freedom to nourish independent and
responsible intelligence and preserve our democracy from that submissiveness,
timidity and herd-mindedness of the masses which would foster a tyranny of
mediocrity. The priceless heritage of our society is the unrestricted
constitutional right of each member to think as he will. Thought control is a
copyright of totalitarianism, and we have no claim to it. It is not the
function of our Government to keep the citizen from falling into error; it is
the function of the citizen to keep the Government from falling into error. We could
justify any censorship only when the censors are better shielded against error
than the censored.
The idea that a Constitution should protect individual
nonconformity is essentially American and is the last thing in the world that
Communists will tolerate. Nothing exceeds the bitterness of their demands for
freedom for themselves in this country except the bitterness of their
intolerance of freedom for others where they are in power.13 An exaction of some profession of
belief or nonbelief is precisely what the Communists would enact—each
individual must adopt the ideas that are common to the ruling group. Their
whole philosophy is to minimize man as an individual and to increase the power
of man acting in the mass. If any single characteristic distinguishes our
democracy from Communism it is our recognition of the individual as a
personality rather than as a soulless part in the jigsaw puzzle that is the
collectivist state.
I adhere to views I have heretofore
expressed, whether the Court agreed, West Virginia State Board of Education v.
Barnette, [1943] USSC 130;
319 U.S. 624, 63
S.Ct. 1178, 87 L.Ed. 1628, 147 A.L.R. 674, or disagreed, see
dissenting opinion in United States v. Ballard, [1944] USSC 72; 322 U.S. 78, 92[1944] USSC 72; , 64 S.Ct. 882, 889[1944] USSC 72; , 88 L.Ed. 1148, that our Constitution excludes both general and local
governments from the realm of opinions and ideas, beliefs and doubts, heresy
and orthodoxy, political, religious or scientific. The right to speak out, or
to publish, also is protected when it does not clearly and presently threaten
some injury to society which the Government has a right to protect. Separate
opinion, Thomas v. Collins, [1945] USSC 32; 323 U.S. 516, 65 S.Ct. 315, 89
L.Ed. 430. But I have protested
the degradation of these constitutional liberties to immunize and approve mob
movements, whether those mobs be religious or political, radical or
conservative, liberal or illiberal, Douglas v. City of Jeannette, [1943]
USSC 86; 319 U.S. 157, 63 S.Ct. 882, 87 L.Ed. 1324, 146 A.L.R. 81; Terminiello v.
Chicago, [1949] USSC 77; 337
U.S. 1, 13[1949] USSC 77; , 69 S.Ct. 894, 899, or to authorize pressure groups
to use amplifying devices to drown out the natural voice and destroy the peace
of other individuals. Saia v. People of New York, [1948] USSC 80; 334 U.S. 558, 68 S.Ct. 1148, 92 L.Ed. 1574; Kovacs v. Cooper, [1949] USSC
22; 336 U.S. 77, 69 S.Ct. 448. And I have pointed out that men
cannot enjoy their right to personal freedom if fanatical masses, whatever
their mission, can strangle individual thoughts and invade personal privacy.
Martin v. Struthers, [1943] USSC 90; 319 U.S. 141,
dissent at page 166[1943] USSC 90; , 63 S.Ct. 862,
at page 882[1943] USSC 90;
, 87 L.Ed. 1313. A
catalogue of rights was placed in our Constitution, in my view, to protect the
individual in his individuality, and neither statutes which put those rights at
the mercy of officials nor judicial decisions which put them at the mercy of
the mob are consistent with its text or its spirit.
I
think that under our system, it is time enough for the law to lay hold of the
citizen when he acts illegally, or in some rare circumstances when his thoughts
are given illegal utterance. I think we must let his mind alone.14
IV.
The task of this Court to maintain a
balance between liberty and authority is never done, because new conditions
today upset the equilibriums of yesterday. The seesaw between freedom and power
makes up most of the history of governments, which, as Bryce points out, on a
long view consists of repeating a painful cycle from anarchy to tyranny and
back again. The Court's day-to-day task is to reject as false, claims in the
name of civil liberty which, if granted, would paralyze or impair authority to
defend existence of our society, and to reject as false, claims in the name of
security which would undermine our freedoms and open the way to oppression.
These are the competing considerations involved in judging any measures which
government may take to suppress or disadvantage its opponents and critics.
I conclude that today's task can only
be discharged by holding that all parts of this oath which require disclosure
of overt acts of affiliation or membership in the Communist Party are within
the competence of Congress to enact and that any parts of it that call for a
disclosure of belief unconnected with any overt act are beyond its power.15
Mr. Justice BLACK, dissenting.
We have said that 'Freedom to think is
absolute of its own nature; the most tyrannical government is powerless to
control the inward workings of the mind.'1 But people can be, and in less democratic countries have
been, made to suffer for their admitted or conjectured thoughts. Blackstone
recalls that Dionysius is 'recorded to have executed a subject barely for
dreaming that he had killed him; which was held sufficient proof that he had
thought thereof in his waking hours.'2 Such a result, while too barbaric to be tolerated in our
nation, is not illogical if a government can tamper in the realm of thought and
penalize 'belief' on the ground that it might lead to illegal conduct.
Individual freedom and governmental thought-probing cannot live together. As
the Court admits even today, under the First Amendment 'Beliefs are inviolate.'
Today's decision rejects that
fundamental principle. The Court admits, as it must, that the 'proscriptions'
of § 9(h) of the National Labor Relations Act as amended by the Taft-Hartley
Act rest on 'beliefs and political affiliations,' and that 'Congress has
undeniably discouraged the lawful exercise of political freedoms' which are
'protected by the First Amendment.' These inescapable facts should compel a holding that § 9(h) conflicts
with the First Amendment.
Crucial to the Court's contrary
holding is the premise that congressional power to regulate trade and traffic
includes power to proscribe 'beliefs and political affiliations.' No case cited
by the Court provides the least vestige of support for thus holding that the
Commerce Clause restricts the right to think. On the contrary, the First
Amendment was added after
adoption of the Constitution for the express purpose of barring Congress from
using previously granted powers to abridge belief or its expression. Freedom to
think is inevitably abridged when beliefs are penalized by imposition of civil
disabilities.
Since § 9(h) was passed to exclude
certain beliefs from one arena of the national economy, it was quite natural to
utilize the test oath as a weapon. History attests the efficacy of that
instrument for inflicting penalties and disabilities on obnoxious minorities.
It was one of the major devices used against the Huguenots in France, and
against 'heretics' during the Spanish Inquisition. It helped English rulers
identify and outlaw Catholics, Quakers, Baptists, and Congregationalists—groups
considered dangerous for political as well as religious reasons.3 And wherever the test oath was in
vogue, spies and informers found rewards far more tempting than truth.4 Painful awareness of the evils of
thought espionage made such oaths 'an abomination to the founders of this
nation,' In re Summers[1945] USSC 145; , 325 U.S. 561, 576[1945] USSC 145; , 65 S.Ct. 1307, 1315, 89 L.Ed. 1795, dissenting opinion. Whether religious, political, or
both, test oaths are implacable foes of free thought. By approving their
imposition, this Court has injected compromise into a field where the First
Amendment forbids compromise.
The Court assures us that today's
encroachment on liberty is just a small one, that this particular statutory
provision 'touches only a relative, a handful of persons, leaving the great
majority of persons of the identified affiliations and beliefs completely free
from restraint.' But not the least of the virtues of the First Amendment is its protection of each member of
the smallest and most unorthodox minority. Centuries of experience testify that
laws aimed at one political or religious group, however rational these laws may
be in their beginnings, generate hatreds and prejudices which rapidly spread
beyond control. Too often it is fear which inspires such passions, and nothing
is more reckless or contagious. In the resulting hysteria, popular indignation
tars with the same brush all those who have ever been associated with any
member of the group under attack or who hold a view which, though supported by
revered Americans as essential to democracy, has been adopted by that group for
its own purposes.
Under such circumstances, restrictions
imposed on proscribed groups are seldom static,5 even though the rate of expansion may not move in
geometric progression from discrimination to arm-band to ghetto and worse. Thus
I cannot regard the Court's holding as one which merely bars Communists from
holding union office and nothing more. For its reasoning would apply just as
forcibly to statutes barring Communists and their suspected sympathizers from
election to political office, mere membership in unions, and in fact from
getting or holding any jobs whereby they could earn a living.
The Court finds comfort in its
assurance that we need not fear too much legislative restriction of political
belief or association 'while this Court sits.' That expression, while
felicitous, has no validity in this particular constitutional field. For it
springs from the assumption that individual mental freedom can be constitutionally
abridged whenever any majority of this Court finds a satisfactory legislative
reason. Never before has this Court held that the Government could for any
reason attaint persons for their political beliefs or affiliations. It does so
today.
Today the 'political affiliation'
happens to be the Communist Party: testimony of an ex-Communist that some
Communist union officers had called 'political strikes' is held sufficient to
uphold a law coercing union members not to elect any Communist as an officer.
Under this reasoning, affiliations with other political parties could be
proscribed just as validly. Of course there is no practical possibility that
either major political party would turn this weapon on the other, even though
members of one party were accused of 'political lockouts' a few years ago and
members of the other are now charged with fostering a 'welfare state' alien to
our system. But with minor parties the possibility is not wholly fanciful. One,
for instance, advocates socialism;6 another allegedly follows the Communist 'line'; still another is
repeatedly charged with a desire and purpose to deprive Negroes of equal job
opportunities. Under today's opinion Congress could validly bar all members of
these parties from officership in unions or industrial corporations; the only
showing required would be testimony that some members in such positions had, by
attempts to further their party's purposes, unjustifiably fostered industrial
strife which hampered interstate commerce.
It is indicated, although the opinion
is not thus limited and is based on threats to commerce rather than to national
security, that members of the Communist Party or its 'affiliates' can be
individually attainted without danger to others because there is some evidence
that as a group they act in obedience to the commands of a foreign power. This
was the precise reason given in Sixteenth-Century England for attainting all
Catholics unless they subscribed to test oaths wholly incompatible with their
religion.7 Yet in the
hour of crisis, an overwhelming majority of the English Catholics thus
persecuted rallied loyally to defend their homeland against Spain and its
Catholic troops.8 And in
our own country Jefferson and his followers were earnestly accused of
subversive allgiance to France.9 At the time, imposition of civil disability on all members of his political
party must have seemed at least as desirable as does § 9(h) today. For at
stake, so many believed, was the survival of a newly-founded nation, not merely
a few potential interruptions of commerce by strikes 'political' rather than
economic in origin.
These experiences underline the wisdom
of the basic constitutional precept that penalties should be imposed only for a
person's own conduct, not for his beliefs or for the conduct of others with
whom he may associate. Guilt should not be imputed solely from association or
affiliation with political parties or any other organization, however much we
abhor the ideas which they advocate. Schneiderman v. United States, [1943]
USSC 144; 320 U.S. 118, 136—139[1943] USSC 144; , 63 S.Ct. 1333, 1342[1943] USSC 144; , 1343, 87 L.Ed. 1796.10 Like anyone else, individual
Communists who commit overt acts in violation of valid laws can and should be
punished. But the postulate of the First Amendment is that our free institutions can be
maintained without proscribing or penalizing political belief, speech, press,
assembly, or party affiliation.11 This is a far bolder philosophy than despotic rulers can afford to
follow. It is the heart of the system on which our freedom depends.
Fears of alien ideologies have
frequently agitated the nation and inspired legislation aimed at suppressing advocacy
of those ideologies.12 At
such times the fog of public excitement obscures the ancient landmarks set up
in our Bill of Rights. Yet then, of all times, should this Court adhere most
closely to the course they mark. This was done in De Jonge v. Oregon, [1937]
USSC 3; 299 U.S. 353, 365[1937] USSC 3; , 57 S.Ct. 255, 260[1937] USSC 3; , 81 L.Ed. 278, where the Court struck down a state
statute making it a crime to participate in a meeting conducted by Communists.
It had been stipulated that the Communist Party advocated violent overthrow of
the Government. Speaking through Chief Justice Hughes, a unanimous Court calmly
announced time-honored principles that should govern this Court today: 'The
greater the importance of safeguarding the community from incitements to the
overthrow of our institutions by force and violence, the more imperative is the
need to preserve inviolate the constitutional rights of free speech, free press
and free assembly in order to maintain the opportunity for free political discussion,
to the end that government may be responsive to the will of the people and that
changes, if desired, may be obtained by peaceful means. Therein lies the
security of the Republic, the very foundation of constitutinal government.'
61
Stat. 136, 146, 29 U.S.C. (Supp. III), § 141, § 159(h), 29 U.S.C.A. § 141, §
159(h), amending the National Labor Relations Act of 1935, 49 Stat. 449, 29
U.S.C. § 151 et seq., 29 U.S.C.A. § 151 et seq.
29
U.S.C. (Supp. III) § 151, 29 U.S.C.A. § 151.
A
detailed description of the aims and tactics of the Socialist Workers Party,
for example, may be found in the transcript of record in Dunne v. United
States, 1943, 320 U.S. 790,
64 S.Ct. 205, 88
L.Ed. 476, certiorari denied. We
cite the record as evidence only and express no opinion whatever on the merits
of the case. See record, pp. 267—271, 273—274, 330—332, 439, 475, 491—492,
495—496, 535, 606, 683—688, 693, 737, 804—805.
See
hearings before House Committee on Education and Labor on Bills to Amend and
Repeal the National Labor Relations Act, 80th Cong., 1st Sess. 3611—3615.
The First
Amendment provides: 'Congress
shall make no law * * * abridging the freedom of speech, or of the press; or
the right of the people peaceably to assemble, and to petition the Government
for a redress of grievances.'
For example, a union whose officers do
not file an affidavit in compliance with § 9(h) may not enter into a union shop
contract with an employer, as it was free to do before passage of the National
Labor Relations Act. A noncomplying union is excluded from the ballot in
representation proceedings. If another union is certified, the noncomplying
union incurs the disabilities of §§ 8(b)(4)(C) and 303(a)(3), as it would not
have done prior to 1935. Similarly, certain strikes and boycotts are prohibited
to noncomplying unions by §§ 8(b)(4)(B), 8(b)(4)(C), and 8(b)(4)(D) of the Act.
See also Luria v. United States, [1913]
USSC 246; 1913, 231 U.S.
9, 34 S.Ct. 10, 58 L.Ed. 101; Mackenzie v. Hare, [1915]
USSC 265; 1915, 239 U.S.
299, 36 S.Ct. 106, 60 L.Ed. 297, Ann.Cas.1916E, 645; Lapides v.
Clark, 1949, 85 U.S.App.D.C. 101, 176 F.2d 619.
Sections
30 and 32 of the Banking Act of 1933, 48 Stat. 162, 193, 194, as amended, 49
Stat. 684, 709, 12 U.S.C. §§ 77, 78, 12 U.S.C.A. §§ 77, 78.
See
Schenck v. United States, 1919, 249 U.S. 47, 39 S.Ct. 247, 63 L.Ed. 470;
Frohwerk v. United States, [1919] USSC 74; 1919, 249 U.S. 204, 39 S.Ct. 249, 63 L.Ed. 561;
Debs v. United States, [1919] USSC 73; 1919, 249 U.S. 211, 39 S.Ct. 252, 63 L.Ed. 566;
Abrams v. United States, [1919] USSC 206; 1919, 250 U.S. 616, 40 S.Ct. 17, 63 L.Ed. 1173;
Schaefer v. United States, [1917] USSC 18; 1920, 251 U.S. 466, 40 S.Ct. 259, 64 L.Ed. 360;
Pierce v. United States, [1920] USSC 58; 1920, 252 U.S. 239, 40 S.Ct. 205, 64 L.Ed. 542;
Gitlow v. New York, [1925] USSC 174; 1925, 268 U.S. 652,
45 S.Ct. 625, 69
L.Ed. 1138.
'* *
* no danger flowing from speech can be deemed clear and present, unless the
incidence of the evil apprehended is so imminent that it may befall before
there is opportunity for full discussion. If there be time to expose through
discussion the falsehood and fallacies, to avert the evil by the processes of
education, the remedy to be applied is more speech, not enforced silence.' Mr.
Justice Brandeis, concurring in Whitney v. California, [1927] USSC 129; 1927, 274 U.S. 357, 377[1927] USSC 129; , 47 S.Ct. 641, 649[1927] USSC 129; , 71 L.Ed. 1095.
See
Mr. Justice Holmes, dissenting in Abrams v. United States, [1919] USSC
206; 1919, 250 U.S. 616, 630[1919] USSC 206; , 40 S.Ct. 17, 22[1919] USSC 206; , 63 L.Ed. 1173.
Bridges
v. California, [1941] USSC 148; 1941, 314 U.S. 252,
62 S.Ct. 190, 86
L.Ed. 192, 159 A.L.R. 1346;
Pennekamp v. Florida, [1946] USSC 101; 1946, 328 U.S. 331, 66 S.Ct. 1029, 90 L.Ed. 1295; Craig v. Harney, [1947] USSC 124; 1947, 331 U.S. 367, 67S.Ct. [1947] USSC 124; 1249, 91 L.Ed. 1546.
Mr.
Justice Jackson, concurring in Thomas v. Collins, [1945] USSC 32; 1945, 323 U.S. 516, 547[1945] USSC 32; , 65 S.Ct. 315, 330[1945] USSC 32; , 89 L.Ed. 430.
Schneider
v. State, [1939] USSC 134;
1939, 308 U.S. 147, 161,
60 S.Ct. 146, 151.
Steele
v. Louisville & N.R. Co., [1944] USSC 136; 1944, 323 U.S. 192, 202[1944] USSC 136; , 65 S.Ct. 226, 232[1944] USSC 136; , 89 L.Ed. 173.
Cf.
cases cited in note 9, supra, and Whitney v. California, [1927] USSC 129; 1927, 274 U.S. 357, 47 S.Ct. 641, 71 L.Ed. 1095; Fiske v. Kansas, [1927] USSC
114; 1927, 274 U.S. 380, 47 S.Ct. 655, 71 L.Ed. 1108; Stromberg v. California, [1931]
USSC 132; 1931, 283 U.S.
359, 51 S.Ct. 532, 75 L.Ed. 1117, 73 A.L.R. 1484; Near v. Minnesota, [1931]
USSC 154; 1931, 283 U.S.
697, 51 S.Ct. 625, 75 L.Ed. 1357; De Jonge v. Oregon, [1937]
USSC 3; 1937, 299 U.S.
353, 57 S.Ct. 255, 81 L.Ed. 278; Herndon v. Lowry, [1937] USSC
86; 1937, 301 U.S. 242, 57 S.Ct. 732, 81 L.Ed. 1066.
Cf.
Grosjean v. American Press Co., [1936] USSC 33; 1936, 297 U.S. 233, 56 S.Ct. 444, 80 L.Ed. 660;
Thomas v. Collins, [1945] USSC 32; 1945, 323 U.S. 516,
65 S.Ct. 315, 89
L.Ed. 430.
In
Cox v. New Hampshire, [1941] USSC 78; 1941, 312 U.S. 569,
61 S.Ct. 762, 85
L.Ed. 1049, 133 A.L.R.
1396, Mr. Chief Justice Hughes,
speaking for an unanimous Court, stated the considerations thought controlling
in a number of these cases: 'In Lovell v. Griffin, [1938] USSC 81; 303 U.S. 444, 58 S.Ct. 666, 82 L.Ed. 949, the ordinance prohibited the
distribution of literature of any kind at any time, at any place, and in any
manner without a permit from the city manager, thus striking at the very
foundation of the freedom of the press by subjecting it to license and
censorship. In Hague v. Committee for Industrial Organization, supra [1939]
USSC 117; (307 U.S. 496, 59 S.Ct. 954, 83 L.Ed. 1423) the ordinance dealt with the exercise
of the right of assembly for the purpose of communicating views; it did not
make comfort or convenience in the use of streets the standard of official
action but enabled the local official absolutely to refuse a permit on his mere
opinion that such refusal would prevent 'tiots, disturbances or disorderly assemblage'.
The ordinance thus created, as the record disclosed, an instrument of arbitrary
suppression of opinions on public questions. The court said that 'uncontrolled
official suppression of the privilege cannot be made a substitute for the duty
to maintain order in connection with the exercise of the right'. In Schneider
v. State, [1939] USSC 134;
308 U.S. 147, at page 163[1939]
USSC 134; , 60 S.Ct. 146, at page 151[1939] USSC 134; , 84 L.Ed. 155, the ordinance was directed at
canvassing and banned unlicensed communication of any views, or the advocacy of
any cause, from door to door, subject only to the power of a police officer to
determine as a censor what literature might be distributed and who might
distribute it. In Cantwell v. Connecticut, [1940] USSC 84; 310 U.S. 296, at page 305[1940] USSC 84; , 60 S.Ct. 900, at page 904[1940] USSC 84; , 84 L.Ed. 1213, 128 A.L.R. 1352, the statute dealt with the
solicitation of funds for religious causes and authorized an official to
determine whether the cause was a religious one and to refuse a permit if he
determined it was not, thus establishing a censorship of religion.' 312 U.S. at
pages 577—578, 61 S.Ct. at page 766.
In
the Barnette case, the Court was careful to point out that the sole interest of
the State was in securing uniformity of belief by compelling utterance of a
prescribed pledge, and that refusal to comply with the State order resulted in
punishment for both parent and child: 'The freedom asserted by these appellees
does not bring them into collision with rights asserted by any other
individual. It is such conflicts which most frequently require intervention of
the State to determine whether the rights of one end and those of another
begin. But the refusal of these persons to participate in the ceremony does not
interfere with or deny rights of others to do so. Nor is there any question in
this case that their behavior is peaceable and orderly. The sole conflict is
between authority and rights of the individual. The State asserts power to
condition access to public education on making a prescribed sign and profession
and at the same time to coerce attendance by punishing both parent and child.
The latter stand on a right of self-determination in matters that touch
individual opinion and personal attitude.' 319 U.S. at pages 630 631, 63 S.Ct.
at page 1181.
Panhandle
Oil Co. v. State of Mississippi ex rel. Knox, [1928] USSC 107; 1928, 277 U.S. 218, 223[1928] USSC 107; , 48 S.Ct. 451, 453[1928] USSC 107; , 72 L.Ed. 857, 56 A.L.R. 583, dissenting opinion. The words of Mr.
Justice Holmes, while written concerning a very different problem, are well
worth rereading in this connection:
'It
seems to me that the State Court was right. I should say plainly right, but for
the effect of certain dicta of Chief Justice Marshall which culminated in or
rather were founded upon his often quoted proposition that the power to tax is
the power to destroy. In those days it was not recognized as it is today that
most of the distinctions of the law are distinctions of degree. If the States
had any power it was assumed that they had all power, and that the necessary
alternative was to deny it altogether. But this Court which so often has
defeated the attempt to tax in certain ways can defeat an attempt to
discriminate or otherwise go too far without wholly abolishing the power to
tax. The power to tax is not the power to destroy while this Court sits. The
power to fix rates is the power to destroy if unlimited, but this Court while
it endeavors to prevent confiscation does not prevent the fixing of rates. A
tax is not an unconstitutional regulation in every case where an absolute
prohibition of sales would be one. People of State of New York ex rel. Hatch v.
Reardon, [1907] USSC 10; 204
U.S. 152, 162[1907] USSC
10; , 27 S.Ct. 188, (191)[1907] USSC 10; , 51 L.Ed. 415, (9 Ann.Cas. 736.)'
While it is true that state of mind is
ordinarily relevant only when it is incidental to, and determines the quality
of, some overt act, but cf. Hamilton v. Regents of University of California, [1934]
USSC 165; 1934, 293 U.S.
245, 55 S.Ct. 197, 79 L.Ed. 343; In re Summers[1945] USSC 145; , 1945, 325 U.S. 561, 65 S.Ct. 1307, 89 L.Ed. 1795, the fact must not be overlooked that
mental state in such cases is a distinct issue, 2 Wigmore, Evidence (3d ed.) §§
244, 266, of which the 'overt act' may or may not be any proof. For example,
the physical facts surrounding a death by shooting may be as consistent with a
finding of accident as of murder. Wilfullness, malice and premeditation must
therefore be proved by evidence wholly apart from the act of shooting.
23
Stat. 22, 5 U.S.C. § 16, 5 U.S.C.A. § 16.
Section
9(h) requires each officer of a union seeking to invoke the machinery of Labor
Management Relations Act to submit an affidavit 'that he is not a member of the
Communist Party or affiliated with such party, and that he does not believe in,
and is not a member of or supports any organization that believes in or
teaches, the overthrow of the United States Government by force or by any illegal
or unconstitutional methods.' 61 Stat. 146, 29 U.S.C.Supp. III § 159(h), 29
U.S.C.A. § 159(h). The provisions of what is now 18 U.S.C. § 1001, 18 U.S.C.A.
§ 1001, formerly § 35(A) of the Criminal Code, are made applicable in respect
to such affidavits.
As to
the dubious scope of the term 'affiliated' in the statute, see Bridges v.
Wixon, [1945] USSC 118; 326
U.S. 135, 65 S.Ct. 1443, 89 L.Ed. 2103.
Of
course, it is not for any member of this Court to express or to act upon any
opinion he may have as to the wisdom, effectiveness or need of this
legislation. Our 'inquiries, where the legislative judgment is drawn in
question, must be restricted to the issue whether any state of facts either
known or which could reasonably be assumed affords support for it.' United
States v. Carolene Products Co., [1938] USSC 104; 304 U.S. 144, 154[1938] USSC 104;
, 58 S.Ct. 778, 784[1938]
USSC 104; , 82 L.Ed.
1234.
It is
unnecessary to set out a comprehensive compendium of the materials which
Congress may or could have considered, or to review the voluminous evidence
before its several Committees, much of which is already referred to in the
Court's opinion. Most of this information would be of doubtful admissibility or
credibility in a judicial proceeding. Its persuasiveness, validity and
credibility for legislative purposes are for Congress, see n. 1, supra. I
intimate no opinion as to its sufficiency for purposes of a criminal trial. An
introduction to the literature on the subject may be found in: Cohen and Fuchs,
Communism's Challenge and the Constitution, 34 Cornell L.Q. 182; Moore, The Communist Party of the U.S.A., 39
Am.Pol.Sci.Rev. 31; Timasheff,
The Schneiderman Case—Its Political Aspects, 12 Ford.L.Rev. 209; Note, 32
Geo.Wash.L.Rev. 403, 411—418;
Emerson & Helfeld, Loyalty Among Government Employees, 58 Yale L.J.
1, 61—64; Donovan & Jones,
Program For a Democratic Counter Attack to Communist Penetration of Government
Service, 58 Yale L.J. 1211,
1215—1222; and see Notes, 48 Col.L.Rev. 253; 96 U. of Pa.L.Rev. 381; 1 Stanford L.Rev. 85; 23 Notre
Dame Law 577; 34 Va.L.Rev. 439, 450.
See
also Mills, The New Men of Power (1948) 186—200; Levenstein, Labor Today and
Tomorrow (1945) 159—177; Teller, Management Functions Under Collective
Bargaining (1947) 401—410; Smith, Spotlight On Labor Unions (1946) 40—43,
63—67, 79—82; Taft, Economics and Problems of Labor (1948) 499—501, 722;
Saposs, Left Wing Unionism (1926) 48—65; Foster, From Bryan to Stalin (1937)
275—277; Gitlow, I Confess (1940) 334—395; The Communist in Labor Relations
Today (Research Institute of America, New York, March 28, 1946); Baldwin, Union
Administration and Civil Liberties, 248 Annals 54, 59; Labor Abroad, Dec. 1947, No. 5 (U.S. Dept. of
Labor, Bureau of Labor Statistics): 3; Labor of Labor Statistics) 3; Labor
Labor, Bureau of Labor Statistics) 1—3; Postwar Labor Movement in Italy, 68
Monthly Labor Review, (U.S. Dept. of Labor, Bureau of Labor Statistics) 49. For
the story of American political parties see Binkley, American Political Parties
(1945 2d Ed.); 2 Bryce, the American Commonwealth (2d Ed. rev. 1890); and on
the Communist Party, in addition to materials above cited, Odegard and Helms,
American Politics (1938) 795—797.
Such
is the view of students of Western society, with outlook so opposed as Lord
Balfour and Harold Laski. Balfour wrote: 'Our alternating Cabinets, though
belonging to different parties, have never differed about the foundation of
society, and it is evident that our whole political machinery presupposes a
people so fundamentally at one that they can afford to bicker; and so sure of
their own moderation that they are not dangerously disturbed by the
never-ending din of political conflict. May it always be so.' Preface to the
World's Classics edition of Bagshot's English Constitution, p. xxiii.
Laski commented: 'In an interesting
passage (citing the above) Lord Balfour has drawn attention to the fact that the
success of the British Constitution in the Nineteenth Century—it is worth adding the general success of
representative government was built upon an agreement between parties in the
state upon fundamental principles. There was, that is, a kindred outlook upon
large issues; and since fighting was confined to matters of comparative detail,
men were prepared to let reason have its sway in the realm of conflict. For it
is significant that in the one realm where depth of feeling was
passionate—Irish home rule—events moved rapidly to the test of the sword; and
the settlement made was effected by violence and not by reason.' Laski, Liberty
in the Modern State, 238.
If we substitute the Civil War for
Irish home rule, these statements become as applicable to the United States as
they are to England.
To compare attacks against Thomas
Jefferson with attacks against the Communist leaders—as Communists generally do
(e.g. Dennis, Let the People Know (1947) 13)—would be meaningful only if his
character and motives were comparable to those of the Communist leaders. When
we consider that Jefferson was the author of Virginia's Statute of Religious
Liberty, the war Governor of Virginia, risked his life to sign the Declaration
of Independence, was Secretary of State in President Washington's Cabinet and
became President of the United States through the influence of Alexander
Hamilton, it seems sacrilegious to liken Jefferson's motives in supporting
certain phases of French policy with Communist allegiance to the Kremlin.
Changes as decisive as those wrought
by most revolutions resulted from the election of Jefferson in 1800, Jackson in
1828, Lincoln in 1860, and Roosevelt in 1932.
I have taken pains to point out that
the whole doctrine of conspiracy and its abuse presents a danger to the fair
administration of justice. Concurring opinion, Krulewitch v. United States, [1949]
USSC 33; 336 U.S. 440, 445, 69 S.Ct. 716, 719.
See
cases collected in Thomas v. Collins, [1945] USSC 32; 323 U.S. 516, 548[1945] USSC 32; , 65 S.Ct. 315, 330[1945] USSC 32; , 89 L.Ed. 430.
The
Act lays down other requirements for the oath which do not require extended
discussion, as, for example, the clause 'is not a member of or supports any organization
that believes in or teaches, the overthrow of the United States Government by
force.' For reasons set forth in parts I and II, Congress would undoubtedly
have power to require disclosure of membership in an organization which had the
characteristics of the Communist Party or other characteristics of similar
gravity. As drawn, this clause might, however, apply to membership in a mere
philosophical or discussion group.
This
part of the oath was obviously intended to disclose persons not members of or
affiliated with the Communist Party but who were a part of the undertow of the
Communist movement. It was probably suggested by the long-standing requirement
of somewhat similar oaths in immigration and naturalization matters. There is,
however, no analogy between what Congress may require of aliens as a condition
of admission or of citizenship and what it may require of a citizen.
See
Holmes, The Common Law, Lectures II, III and IV, pp. 65—68, 132, et seq.
Nothing
is more pernicious than the idea that every radical measure is 'Communistic' or
every liberal-minded person a 'Communist.' One of the tragedies of our time is
the confusion between reform and Communish—a confusion to which both the
friends and enemies of reform have contributed, the one by failing to take a
clear stand against Communists and Communism and the other by characterizing
even the most moderate suggestion of reform as 'Communistic' and its advocates
as 'Communists.' Unquestioning idolatry of the status quo has never been an
American characteristic.
A
surprising catalogue of statements could be compiled. The following are
selected from Mencken, A New Dictionary of Quotations, under the rubric
'Revolution': 'Whenever any government becomes destructive of these ends (life,
liberty and the pursuit of happiness) it is the right of the people to alter or
abolish it, and to institute a new government, laying its foundations on such
principles, and organizing its powers in such form, as to them shall seem most
likely to effect their safety and happiness.' Thomas Jefferson, The Declaration
of Independence, July 4, 1776. 'The community hath an indubitable, inalienable,
and indefeasible right to reform, alter or abolish government, in such manner
as shall be by that community judged most conducive to the public weal.' The
Pennsylvania Declaration of Rights, 1776. 'It is an observation of one of the
profoundest inquirers into human affairs that a revolution of government is the
strongest proof that can be given by a people of their virtue and good sense.'
John Adams, Diary, 1786. 'What country can preserve its liberties if their
rulers are not warned from time to time that their people preserve the spirit
of resistance? Let them take arms.' Thomas Jefferson, Letter to W. S. Smith,
Nov. 13, 1787. 'An oppressed people are authorized whenever they can to rise
and break their fetters.' Henry Clay, Speech in the House of Representatives,
March 4, 1818. 'Any people anywhere, being inclined and having the power, have
the right to rise up and shake off the existing government and form a new one
that suits them better.' Abraham Lincoln, Speech in the House of Representatives,
1848. 'All men recognize the right of revolution: that is, the right to refuse
allegiance to, and to resist, the government when its tyranny or its
inefficiency are great and unendurable.' H. D. Thoreau, An Essay on Civil
Disobedience, 1849. 'This country, with its institutions, belongs to the people
who inhabit it. Whenever they shall grow weary of the existing government they
can exercise their constitutional right of amending it, or their revolutionary
right to dismember or overthrow it.' Abraham Lincoln, Inaugural Address, March
4, 1861. 'Whenever the ends of Government are perverted, and public liberty
manifestly endangered, and all other means of redress are ineffectual, the
People may, and of a right ought to reform the old, or establish a new government;
the doctrine of non-resistance against arbitrary power and oppression is
absurd, slavish and destructive of the good and happiness of mankind.'
Declaration of Rights of Maryland, 1867. 'The right of revolution is an
inherent one. When people are oppressed by their government, it is a natural
right they enjoy to relieve themselves of the oppression, if they are strong
enough, either by withdrawal from it, or by overthrowing it and substituting a
government more acceptable.' U.S. Grant, Personal Memoirs, I, 1885.
Quotations
of similar statements could be multiplied indefinitely. Of course, these
quotations are out of their context and out of their times. And despite their
abstract theories about revolt, it should also be noted that Adams, Jefferson,
Lincoln and Grant were uncompromising in putting down any show of rebellion
toward the Government they headed.
The
revolutionary origin of our own Government has inclined Americans to value
revolution as a means to liberty and loosely to think that all revolutionists are
liberals. The fact is, however, that violent revolutions are rare which do more
i the long run than to overthrow one tyranny to make way for another. The cycle
from revolt to reaction has taken less than a score of bloody years in the
great revolutions. The Puritan Commonwealth under Cromwell led but to the
Restoration; the French by revolution escaped from the reign of Louis XVI to
the dictatorship of Napoleon; the Russians overthrew the Czar and won the
dictatorship of Lenin and Stalin; the Germans deposed the Kaiser and fell
victims of a dictatorship by Hitler. I am convinced that force and violence do
not serve the cause of liberty as well as nonviolence. See Fischer, Gandi and
Stalin, passim.
But
the sentiments I have quoted have strong appeal to the impetuous and are deeply
imbedded in American tradition.
Prime
Minister Atlee recently stated: 'I constantly get hypocritical resolutions
protesting against alleged infringements of freedom in this country. I get
protests because we keep out from places where secret work is carried on people
who cannot be trusted. This from Communists who know that their fellows in
Communist countries carry on a constant purge and ruthlessly remove from office
anyone who shows the slightest sign of deviating from what their rulers
consider to be orthodoxy. It is sickening hypocrisy.' London Times, Weekly
Edition, July 6, 1949.
The
Court appears to recognize and compound the constitutional weakness of this
statute and, to save this part of the oath from unconstitutionality, declines
to read the text 'very literally.' It renders the Act to call for disclaimer of
belief in forcible overthrow only as an objective but not as a prophecy. And
furthermore, one is allowed to believe in forcible overthrow, even as an
objective, so long as the belief does not relate to the Government 'as it now
exists.' I think we do not make an Act constitutional by making it vague but
only compound its invalidity. Cf. Winters v. New York, [1948] USSC 41; 333 U.S. 507, 68 S.Ct. 665, 92 L.Ed. 840.
This
conclusion, if it prevailed, would require decision of the effect of partial
invalidity on the whole and the applicability of the severability clause. As it
does not prevail, discussion of the question would be academic.
Dissenting
opinion in Jones v. Opelika, [1942] USSC 132; 316 U.S. 584, 618[1942] USSC 132;
, 62 S.Ct. 1231, 1249,
86 L.Ed. 1691, 141 A.L.R. 514,
adopted as the Court's opinion in [1943] USSC 88; 319 U.S. 103, 63 S.Ct. 890, 87
L.Ed. 1290. See also Cantwell v.
Connecticut, [1940] USSC 84; 310 U.S. 296, 303[1940]
USSC 84; , 60 S.Ct. 900, 903[1940] USSC 84; , 84 L.Ed. 1213, 128 A.L.R. 1352.
4
Blackstone, Commentaries 79 (6th ed. Dublin 1775).
The
increasing restrictions and punishment imposed on these groups are shown by the
following examples. In 1558 Parliment prescribed an oath, which no
conscientious Catholic could take, for all judges, ecclesiastical ministers,
those receiving pay from the Queen, and those taking university degrees; four
years later the oath was extended to schoolmasters, lawyers, sheriffs, and
court officers. In 1593 all Protestants were required to attend Anglican
services and forbidden to hold nonconformist religious meetings. And Catholics
convicted of failing to attend Anglican services regularly were restricted to
within five miles of their dwellings. In 1609 such Catholics were barred even
from serving as executors, guardians, physicians, or apothecaries, and their
right to prosecute suits in court was practically abolished; it was also made
treason to be converted or convert anyone else to Catholicism. Between 1661 and
1677, Parliament outlawed attendance at any non-Anglican religious services,
and required those holding civil, military, or municipal office to subscribe to
an oath which effectively barred Catholics and non-Anglican Protestants.
Punishment for violations of these and the many similar statutes ranged from
fines and imprisonment to exile and death. See, e.g., 1 Eliz. c. 1; 5 Eliz. c.
1; 35 Eliz. cc. 1, 2; 3 Jac. I cc. 4, 5; 7 Jac. I cc. 2, 6; 13 Car. II Stat. 2,
c. 1; 13 & 14 Car. II cc. 1, 4, 33; 22 Car. II c. 1; 25 Car. II c. 2; 30
Car. II Stat. 2.
As
for the political motivations and objectives of these statutes, see, e.g., the
declaration of purpose in 35 Eliz. c. 2, quoted in note 7 infra.
Under
the Stuart monarchs in England it was standard practice to give an informer one-third
of the fines collected from his victim. E.g., 3 Jac. I c. 5. And a few were
sufficiently daring and unscrupulous to obtain the more satisfying reward of
fame. A notorious example took place in England during the reign of Charles II:
'The
political atmosphere was electric. * * * Thus it is not strange that when Titus
Oates, an Anglican clergyman who had been reconciled the year before to Rome,
came forward in August, 1678, to denounce a vast Jesuit conspiracy against the
King's life and the Protestant religion, his tale of wild lies met with a
degree of credence that later ages would perhaps have refused to it. * * * The
Pope, he declared, had commanded, and the Jesuits undertaken, a conquest of the
kingdom; * * * In all the arrangements he had been, he said, a trusted emissary
* * *. Over a hundred conspirators, mostly Jesuits, were mentioned by name * *
*. Oates was examined at the Council Board. The King caught him lying, but the
extent and gravity of his charges demanded investigation; * * * In one
important point Oates' story was confirmed. * * * There was no 'plot' in Oates'
sense; but there was quite enough of plotting to cost men their heads under the
English law of treason * * *.' 5 Cambridge Modern History, 220 221.
See
note 3 supra. And see the comment on such legislation in II Hallam, The Constitutional
History of England 473 (London, 1829): 'It is the natural consequence of
restrictive laws to aggravate the disaffection which has served as their
pretext; and thus to create a necessity for a legislature that will not retrace
its steps, to pass still onward in the course of severity.'
Proscriptions
based on affiliation with the Socialist Party are not unprecedented. In 1920
the New York Assembly, upon allegations that the party was disloyal, suspended
five legislators elected on the Socialist ticket. The vigorous protests of a
Bar Association committee headed by Charles Evans Hughes, later Chief Justice
of this Court, were of no avail. See John Lord O'Brian, Loyalty Tests and Guilt
by Association, 61 Harv.L.Rev. 592, 593.
35
Eliz. c. 2, for example, was aimed at 'sundry wicked and seditious Persons, who
terming themselves Catholicks, and being indeed Spies and Intelligencers, * * *
and hiding their most destable and devilish Purposes under a false Pretext of
Religion and Conscience, do secretly wander and shift from Place to Place
within this Realm, to corrupt and seduce her Majesty's Subjects, and to stir
them to Sedition and Rebellion.'
As is
evidenced by the statute quoted in note 7 supra, the test oaths, the drastic
restrictions and the punishment imposed on Catholics were 'based on the
assumption that all Catholics were politically hostile to the Queen, and were
at one with Allen and the Jesuits in seeking her deposition and the conquest of
the country by Spain. The patriotic action of the Catholics at home through the
crisis of the Spanish Armada proved the weakness of this assumption. In the
hour of peril the English Catholics placed loyalty to their Queen and country
before all other considerations. * * * The injustice of imputing treachery to
the whole Catholic population was proved beyond question.' 3 Cambridge Modern
History 351.
Castigating
Jefferson and his followers as 'jacobins,' a 'French faction' guilty of
'subversion,' Fisher Ames warned: '(T)he jacobins have at last made their own
discipline perfect: they are trained, officered, regimented and formed to
subordination, in a manner that our militia have never yet equalled. * * *
(A)nd it is as certain as any future event can be, that they will take arms
against the laws as soon as they dare. * * *' Ames, Laocoon, printed in Works
of Fisher Ames 94, 101, 106 (Boston, 1809).
And
see, e.g., John Lord O'Brian, Loyalty Tests and Guilt by Association, 61
Harv.L.Rev. 592. That article
quotes the following from a Memorial submitted to the New York Assembly by a
special committee of the Bar Association of the City of New York protesting the
suspension of five Socialist legislators: 'it is of the essence of the
institutions of liberty that it be recognized that guilt is personal and cannot
be attributed to the holding of opinion or to mere intent in the absence of
overt acts. * * *' O'Brian points out that this Memorial was 'largely written
by' Charles Evans Hughes. Id. at 594.
'If
there be any among us who would wish to dissolve this Union, or to change its
republican form, let them stand, undisturbed, as monuments of the safety with
which error of opinion may be tolerated where reason is left free to combat it.
I know, indeed, that some honest men fear that a republican government cannot
be strong; that this Government is not strong enough. But would the honest
patriot, in the full tide of successful experiment abandon a Government which has
so far kept us free and firm, on the theoretic and visionary fear that this
Government, the world's best hope, may by possibility want energy to preserve
itself?' Thomas Jefferson, First Inaugural Address, March 4, 1801. This
address, along with other writings on freedoms guaranteed by the First
Amendment, is reprinted in
Jones, Primer of Intellectual Freedom 142 (Harvard University Press, 1949).
For discussion of early American
models, the Alien and Sedition Acts, see Bowers, Jefferson and Hamilton, 1925,
c. XVI, 'Hysterics,' and c. XVII, 'The Reign of Terror'; 1 Morison, Life of
Otis, c. VIII, 'A System of Terror.'