SUPREME COURT OF UNITED STATES
Associated Press
Vs.
National Labor Relations Board.
12.04.1937
Messrs.
John W. Davis and William C. Cannon, both of New York City, for petitioner.
[Argument
of Counsel from pages 104-116 intentionally omitted]
Messrs.
Charles E. Wyzanski, Jr., of Boston, Mass., and Charles Fahy, of Washington,
D.C., for respondent.
[Argument
of Counsel from Pages 117-121 intentionally omitted]
Mr.
Justice ROBERTS delivered the opinion of the Court.
In this
case we are to decide whether the National Labor Relations Act,1
as applied to the petitioner by an order of the National Labor Relations Board,
exceeds the power of Congress to regulate commerce pursuant to article 1, § 8,
abridges the freedom of the press guaranteed by the First
Amendment, and denies trial by jury in violation of the Seventh Amendment
of the Constitution.
In
October, 1935, the petitioner discharged Morris Watson, an employee in its New
York office. The American Newspaper Guild, a labor organization, filed a charge
with the Board alleging that Watson's discharge was in violation of section 7
of the National Labor Relations Act (29 U.S.C.A. § 157) which confers on
employees the right to organize, to form, join, or assist labor organizations
to bargain collectively through representatives of their own choosing and to
engage in concerted activities for the purpose of collective bargaining or
other mutual aid or protection; that the petitioner had engaged in unfair labor
practices contrary to subsections (1) and (3) of section 8 (29 U.S.C.A. §
158(1, 3) by interfering with, restraining, or coercing Watson in the exercise
of the rights guaranteed him by section 7 and by discriminating against him in
respect of his tenure of employment and discouraging his membership in a labor
organization. The Board served a complaint upon the petitioner charging unfair
labor practices affecting commerce within the meaning of the statute. The
petitioner answered admitting Watson's discharge, but denying that it was due
to his joining or assisting the Guild or engaging in union activities, and
denying, on constitutional grounds, the validity of the act and the
jurisdiction of the Board.
At a
hearing before a trial examiner the petitioner appeared specially and moved to
dismiss the complaint on constitutional grounds. The motion was overruled on
all grounds except upon the question whether the proceeding was within the
federal commerce power. Counsel thereupon withdrew from the hearing and the
matter was further heard without the participation of the petitioner or its
counsel. After receiving voluminous evidence as to the character of the
petitioner's business, the examiner overruled the contention that interstate
commerce was not involved and proceeded to hear the merits. At the close of the
hearing he recommended that on order be entered against the petitioner. Notice
of the filing of this report and of hearing thereon by the Board was given the
petitioner but it failed to appear. Based upon the examiner's report the Board
made findings of fact, stated its conclusions of law, and entered an order that
the Associated Press cease and desist from discouraging membership in the
American Newspaper Guild or any other labor organization of its employees, by
discharging, threatening to discharge, or refusing to reinstate any of them for
joining the Guild or any other labor organization of its employees, and from
discriminating against any employee in respect of hire of tenure of employment
or any term or condition of employment for joining the Guild or any other such
organization, and from interfering with, restraining, or coercing its employees
in the exercise of the rights guaranteed in section 7 of the act. It further
enjoined the Associated Press to offer Watson reinstatement to his former
position without prejudice to any rights and privileges previously enjoyed by
him; to make him whole for any loss of pay suffered by reason of his discharge;
to post notices in its New York office stating it would cease and desist from
the enjoined practices, and to keep such notices posted for thirty days.2
The
petitioner refused to comply with the order, and the Board, pursuant to section
10(e) of the act (29 U.S.C.A. § 160(e), petitioned the Circuit Court of Appeals
for enforcement. The petitioner answered again setting up its contentions with
respect to the constitutionality of the act as applied to it. After argument,
the court made a decree enforcing the order.3
In its
answer to the Board's petition for enforcement the petitioner did not challenge
the Board's findings of fact and no error is assigned in this court to the
action of the Circuit Court of Appeals in adopting them. We, therefore, accept
as established that the Associated Press did not, as claimed in its answer
before the Board, discharge Watson because of unsatisfactory service, but, on
the contrary, as found by the Board, discharged him for his activities in
connection with the Newspaper Guild. It follows that section 8, subsections (1)
and (3), authorize the order and the only issues open here are those involving
the power of Congress under the Constitution
to empower the Board to make it in the circumstances.
First.
Does the statute, as applied to the petitioner, exceed the power of Congress to
regulate interstate commerce? The solution of this issue depends upon the
nature of the petitioner's activities, and Watson's relation to them. The
findings of the Board in this aspect are unchallenged and the question becomes,
therefore, solely one of law to be answered in the light of the uncontradicted
facts.
The
Associated Press is a membership corporation under the laws of New York which
does not operate for profit, but is a co-operative organization whose members
are representatives of newspapers. It has about 1,350 members in the United
States and practically all the newspapers represented in its membership are
conducted for profit. Its business is the collection of news from members and
from other sources throughout the United States and foreign countries and the
compilation, formulation, and distribution thereof to its members. In the
process the news in prepared for members' use by editing, rewriting, selecting,
or discarding the information received in whole or in part. The product is
transmitted to member newspapers and also to foreign agencies pursuant to
mutual exchange agreements. The service is not sold, but the entire cost is
apportioned amongst the members by assessment.
Petitioner
maintains its principal office in New York City, but has also division points
scattered over the United States, each of which is charged with the duty of
collecting information from a defined territory and preparing and distributing
it to newspapers within the assigned area and to other division points for use
within their respective areas. Each member newspaper forwards news deemed
important to the divisional headquarters of its area. In addition, employees of
the petitioner obtain news which is transmitted to the appropriate division
headquarters to be edited and forwarded to members within the area represented
by that headquarters and to other divisions for distribution to member
newspapers within their respective areas. The means of communication commonly
used in receiving and transmitting news consists of wires leased from telegraph
and telephone companies, but messenger service, the wireless, and the mail are
also employed. Each division point is connected with every other by telegraph
wires for exchange of news. Regional circuits supplement these primary
circuits. All these lines of communication are utilized throughout the
twenty-four hours of every day.
Consideration
of the relation of Watson's activities to interstate commerce may be confined
to the operations of the New York office where he was employed. This office is
the headquarters of the Eastern Division and, through it operates the
petitioner's foreign service, with offices, staffs, and correspondents
throughout the world. News received in New York from foreign parts, from
newspaper members within the Eastern Division, and from other division points,
is edited by employees acting under the direction of supervising editors and,
in its edited form, is transmitted throughout the division and to the
headquarters of other divisions. The distributees of any given item are selected
by those employed for the purpose in accordance with their judgment as to the
usefulness of that item to the members or the divisions to which it is
transmitted. Thus the New York office receives and dispatches news from and to
all parts of the world in addition to that from New York state and other
Northeastern and Middle Atlantic states which comprise the Eastern Division.
The work of the office is divided into two departments known as the Traffic
Department and the News Department. All those employed in the actual receipt
and transmission of news are in the Traffic Department; all others, including
editorial employees, are grouped in the News Department. Watson at the time of
his discharge was in the latter class, whose duty is to receive, rewrite, and
file for transmission news coming into the office. An executive news editor,
assisted by supervising editors and editorial employees, has general charge of
the revision of news received from so-called filing editors who are in
immediate charge of the telegraph wires connecting with the sources and
destination of news. These filing editors supervise the news as it goes out
from New York City; they determine what news, from the total copy delivered to
them, is to be sent over the wires of which they have charge to the area
reached by those wires and they have charge of rewriting such copy as it comes
from the other editors as may be appropriate for use in their respective
circuits and the delivery of the selected and rewritten news to teletype
operators for transmission over their wires. The function of editors and
editorial employees such as Watson is to determine the news value of items
received and speedily and accurately to rewrite the copy delivered to them, so
that the rewritten matter shall be delivered to the various filing editors who
are responsible for its transmission, if appropriate, to the areas reached by
their circuits.
Upon
the basis of these facts the Board concluded that the Associated Press was
engaged in interstate commerce; that Watson's services bore a direct relation
to petitioner's interstate commerce activities; and that labor disputes between
petitioner and employees of his class and labor disturbances or strikes
affecting that class of employees tend to hinder and impede interstate
commerce. These conclusions are challenged by the petitioner.
Section
2(6) of the act defines the term 'commerce' as meaning 'trade, traffic,
commerce, transportation, or communication among the several States, * * * or
between any foreign country and any State. * * *' Subsection (7) provides: 'The
term 'affecting commerce' means in commerce, or burdening or obstructing
commerce or the free flow of commerce.' (29 U.S.C.A. § 152(6, 7.)
The
Associated Press is engaged in interstate commerce within the definition of the
statute and the meaning of article 1, section 8, of the Constitution.
It is an instrumentality set up by constituent members who are engaged in a
commercial business for profit, and as such instrumentality acts as an exchange
or clearing house of news as between the respective members and as a supplier
to members of news gathered through its own domestic and foreign activities.
These operations involve the constant use of channels of interstate and foreign
communication. They amount to commercial intercourse and such intercourse is
commerce within the meaning of the Constitution.4
Interstate communication of a business nature, whatever the means of such
communication, is interstate commerce regulable by Congress under the Constitution.5
This conclusion is unaffected by the fact that the petitioner does not sell
news and does not operate for profit,6
or that technically the title to the news remains in the petitioner during
interstate transmission.7
Petitioner being so engaged in interstate commerce the Congress may adopt
appropriate regulations of its activities for the protection and advancement
and for the insurance of the safety of such commerce.
The
National Labor Relations Act seeks to protect the employees' right of
collective bargaining the prohibits acts of the employer discriminating against
employees for union activities and advocacy of such bargaining by denominating
them unfair practices to be abated in accordance with the terms of the act. As
is shown in the opinion in Virginia Ry. Co. v. System Federation No. 40[1937] USSC 72; , 300 U.S. 515, 57 S.Ct. 592, 81 L.Ed. 789, the experience under the Railway
Labor Act (45 U.S.C.A. § 151 et seq.) has demonstrated the efficacy of such
legislation in preventing industrial strikes and obviating interference with
the flow of interstate commerce. The petitioner, however, insists that
editorial employees such as Watson are remote from any interstate activity and
their employment and tenure can have no direct or intimate relation with the
course of interstate commerce. We think, however, it is obvious that strikes or
labor disturbances amongst this class of employees would have as direct an
effect upon the activities of the petitioner as similar disturbances amongst
those who operate the teletype machines or as a strike amongst the employees of
telegraph lines over which petitioner's messages travel.
In
Texas & N.O.R. Co. v. Brotherhood of Railway & Steamship Clerks, [1930] USSC 113; 281 U.S. 548, 570[1930] USSC 113; , 50 S.Ct. 427, 433[1930] USSC 113; , 74 L.Ed. 1034, we held a statute protecting the rights
of collective bargaining by railway employees was within the competence of
Congress under the commerce clause and that its provisions extended to clerks
who had no direct contact with the actual facilities of railway transportation.
We there said:
'Exercising
this authority, Congress may facilitate the amicable settlements of disputes
which threaten the service of the necessary agencies of interstate
transportation. In shaping its legislation to this end, Congress was entitled
to take cognizance of actual conditions and to address itself to practicable
measures. The legality of collective action on the part of employees in order
to safeguard their proper interests is not to be disputed. It has long been
recognized that employees are entitled to organize for the purpose of securing
the redress of grievances and to promote agreements with employers relating to
rates of pay and conditions of work. American Steel Foundries v. Tri-City
Central Trades Council, [1921] USSC 188; 257 U.S. 184, 209[1921] USSC 188; , 42 S.Ct. 72, 66 L.Ed. 189, 27 A.L.R. 360.
Congress was not required to
ignore this right of the employees but could safeguard it and seek to make
their appropriate collective action an instrument of peace rather than of
strife.'
In
Virginian Railway Co. v. System Federation No. 40[1937] USSC 72; , 300 U.S. 515, 57 S.Ct. 592, 81 L.Ed. 789, we have held an amendment of the
Railway Labor Act, in all material respects analogous to the statute here under
consideration, applicable to so-called backshop employees of railroads despite
the contention that their employment is remote from interstate transportation.
These
decisions foreclose the petitioner's contention that Watson's employment had no
relation to interstate commerce and could not be subjected to the regulatory
provisions of the National Labor Relations Act.
Second.
Does the statute, as applied to the petitioner, abridge the freedom of speech or
of the press safeguarded by the First Amendment? We hold that it does not. It is insisted that the
Associated Press is in substance the press itself, that the membership consists
solely of persons who own and operate newspapers, that the news is gathered
solely for publication in the newspapers of members. Stress is laid upon the
facts that this membership consists of persons of every conceivable political,
economic, and religious view, that the one thing upon which the members are
united is that the Associated Press shall be wholly free from partisan activity
or the expression of opinions, that it shall limit its function to reporting
events without bias in order that the citizens of our country, if given the
facts, may be able to form their own opinions respecting them. The conclusion
which the petitioner draws is that whatever may be the case with respect to
employees in its mechanical departments it must have absolute and unrestricted
freedom to employ and to discharge those who, like Watson, edit the news, that
there must not be the slightest opportunity for any bias or prejudice
personally entertained by an editorial employee to color or to distort what he
writes, and that the Associated Press cannot be free to furnish unbiased and
impartial news reports unless it is equally free to determine for itself the
partiality or bias of editorial employees. So it is said that any regulation
protective of union activities, or the right collectively to bargain on the
part of such employees, is necessarily an invalid invasion of the freedom of
the press.
We think the contention not only has
no relevance to the circumstances of the instant case but is an unsound
generalization. The ostensible reason for Watson's discharge, as embodied in
the records of the petitioner, is 'solely on the grounds of his work not being
on a basis for which he has shown capability.' The petitioner did not assert
and does not now claim that he had shown bias in the past. It does not claim
that by reason of his connection with the union he will be likely, as the
petitioner honestly believes, to show bias in the future. The actual reason for
his discharge, as shown by the unattacked finding of the Board, was his Guild
activity and his agitation for collective bargaining. The statute does not
preclude a discharge on the ostensible grounds for the petitioner's action; it
forbids discharge for what has been found to be the real motive of the
petitioner. These considerations answer the suggestion that if the petitioner
believed its policy of impartiality was likely to be subverted by Watson's
continued service, Congress was without power to interdict his discharge. No
such question is here for decision. Neither before the Board, nor in the court
below nor here has the petitioner professed such belief. It seeks to bar all
regulation by contending that regulation in a situation not presented would be
invalid. Courts deal with cases upon the basis of the facts disclosed, never
with nonexistent and assumed circumstances.
The act does not compel the petitioner
to employ any one; it does not require that the petitioner retain in its employ
an incompetent editor or one who fails faithfully to edit the news to reflect
the facts without bias or prejudice. The act permits a discharge for any reason
other than union activity or agitation for collective bargaining with
employees. The restroration of Watson to his former position in no sense
guarantees his continuance in petitioner's employ. The petitioner is at
liberty, whenever occasion may arise, to exercise its undoubted right to sever
his relationship for any cause that seems to it proper save only as a
punishment for, or discouragement of, such activities as the act declares
permissible.
The business of the Associated Press
is not immune from regulation because it is an agency of the press. The
publisher of a newspaper has no special immunity from the application of
general laws. He has no special privilege to invade the rights and liberties of
others. He must answer for libel.8 He may be punished for contempt of court.9 He is subject to the anti-trust laws.10 Like others he must pay equitable and
nondiscriminatory taxes on his business.11 The regulation here in question has no relation whatever
to the impartial distribution of news. The order of the Board in nowise
circumscribes the full freedom and liberty of the petitioner to publish the
news as it desires it published or to enforce policies of its own choosing with
respect to the editing and rewriting of news for publication, and the
petitioner is free at any time to discharge Watson or any editorial employee
who fails to comply with the policies it may adopt.
Third. The contentions that the act
deprives the petitioner of property without due process, that the order of the
Board deprives petitioner of the right to trial by jury, and that the act is
invalid on its face because it seeks to regulate both interstate and intrastate
commerce, are sufficiently answered in the opinion in Texas & N.O.R. Co. v.
Brotherhood of Railway & Steamship Clerks, supra, and in National Labor
Relations Board v. Jones & Laughlin Steel Corporation, [1937] USSC
80; 301 U.S. 1, 57 S.Ct. 615, 81 L.Ed. —-, decided this day, and
need no further discussion here.
The
judgment of the Circuit Court of Appeals is affirmed.
Mr.
Justice SUTHERLAND.
Mr.
Justice VAN DEVANTER, Mr. Justice McREYNOLDS, Mr. Justice BUTLER, and I think
the judgment below should be reversed.
One
of the points made in the court below, and assigned as error here is that the
statute involved, as applied, abridges the freedom of the press in violation of
the First Amendment.
The Associated Press is engaged in
collecting, editing, and distributing news to its members, publishers of some
1300 newspapers throughout the United States. These newspapers represent many
diverse policies and many differences in point of view. It, obviously, is
essential that the news furnished should not only be without suppression, but
that it should be, as far as possible, free from color, bias, or distortion.
Such is the long-established policy of the Associated Press. If the
Congressional act here involved, upon its face or in its present application,
abridges the freedom of petitioner to carry its policy into effect, the act to
that extent falls under the condemnation of the First Amendment. We shall confine ourselves to that
question, the gravity of which is evident; but we do not mean thereby to record
our assent to all that has been said with regard to other questions in the
case.
The first ten amendments to the Constitution safeguard the fundamental rights
therein mentioned from every form of unpermitted federal legislation. The due
process clause of the Fifth Amendment protects the person against deprivation
of life, liberty, or property except by due process of law. 'Liberty' is a word
of wide meaning, and, without more, would have included the various liberties
guaranteed by the First Amendment. De Jonge v. Oregon, [1937] USSC 3; 299 U.S. 353, 57 S.Ct. 255, 81 L.Ed. 278, January 4, 1937, and cases cited;
Grosjean v. American Press Co., [1936] USSC 33; 297 U.S. 233, 243-245[1936] USSC 33; , 56 S.Ct. 444,
446, 447[1936] USSC 33; ,
80 L.Ed. 660; Near v.
Minnesota, [1931] USSC 154;
283 U.S. 697, 707[1931]
USSC 154; , 51 S.Ct. 625, 627[1931] USSC 154; , 75 L.Ed. 1357; Pierce v. Society of Sisters, [1925]
USSC 168; 268 U.S. 510, 534, 535[1925] USSC 168; , 45 S.Ct. 571, 573[1925] USSC 168; , 69 L.Ed. 1070, 39 A.L.R. 468.
But
the framers of the Bill of Rights, regarding certain liberties as so vital that
legislative denial of them should be specifically foreclosed, provided by the First
Amendment: 'Congress shall make
no law respecting an establishment of religion, or prohibiting the free
exercise thereof; or 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.'
The difference between the two
amendments is an emphatic one and readily apparent. Deprivation of a liberty
not embraced by the First Amendment, as for example the liberty of contract, is qualified by the phrase
'without due process of law'; but those liberties enumerated in the First
Amendment are guaranteed without qualification, the object and effect of which
is to put them in a category apart and make them incapable of abridgment by any
process of law. That this is inflexibly true of the clause in respect of
religion and religious liberty cannot be doubted; and it is true of the other
clauses save as they may be subject in some degree to rare and extreme
exigencies such as, for example, a state of war. Legislation which contravenes
the liberties of the First Amendment might not contravene liberties of another
kind falling only within the terms of the Fifth Amendment. Thus, we have held
that the governmental power of taxation, one of the least limitable of the
powers, may not be exerted so as to abridge the freedom of the press (Grosjean
v. American Press Co., supra), albeit the same tax might be entirely valid if
challenged under the 'liberty' guaranty of the Fifth Amendment, apart from
those liberties embraced by the First. Compare Louisville & Nashville R.
Co. v. Mottley, [1911] USSC 31; 219 U.S. 467,
482, 483[1911] USSC 31; ,
31 S.Ct. 265, 55
L.Ed. 297, 34
L.R.A.(N.S.) 671.
No
one can read the long history which records the stern and often bloody
struggles by which these cardinal rights were secured, without realizing how
necessary it is to preserve them against any infringement, however slight. For,
as Mr. Justice Bradley said in Boyd v. United States, [1886] USSC 48; 116 U.S. 616, 635[1886] USSC 48; , 6 S.Ct. 524, 535[1886] USSC 48; , 29 L.Ed. 746, 'illegitimate and unconstitutional
practices get their first footing in that way, namely, by silent approaches and
slight deviations from legal modes of procedure. * * * It is the duty of courts
to be watchful for the constitutional rights of the citizen, and against any
stealthy encroachments thereon. Their motto should be obsta principiis.'
'Experience should teach us,' it was said in another case, 'to be most on our
guard to protect liberty when the government's purposes are beneficent. Men
born to freedom are naturally alert to repel invasion of their liberty by
evil-minded rulers. The greatest dangers to liberty lurk in insidious
encroachment by men of zeal, well-meaning but without understanding.' Olmstead
v. United States (dissent), 277 U.S. 471, 479, 48 S.Ct. 570, 572, 72 L.Ed. 953, 66 A.L.R. 387. A little water,
trickling here and there through a dam, is a small matter in itself; but it may
be a sinister menace to the security of the dam, which those living in the
valley below will do well to heed.
The
destruction or abridgment of a free press—which constitutes one of the most
dependable avenues through which information of public and governmental
activities may be transmitted to the people—would be an event so evil in its
consequences that the least approach toward that end should be halted at the
threshold.
The
grants of the Constitution
always are to be read in the light of the restrictions. Thus, the exercise of
the power to make laws on the subject of bankruptcies, the exercise of the war
powers, of the power to tax, of the power to exclude aliens, or of the power to
regulate commerce, is each subject to the qualified restrictions of the Fifth
Amendment (Louisville Joint Stock Land Bank v. Radford, 295 U.S. 555, 589, 55 S.Ct. 854, 863, 79 L.Ed. 1593, 97 A.L.R. 1106); as each, also, is
subject, so far as appropriate, to the unqualified restrictions of the First.
Congress has no power to regulate the relations of private employer and
employee as an end in itself, but only if that be an appropriate and legitimate
means to a constitutional end, which here is the regulation of interstate
commerce. Assuming that the statute upon its face satisfies this test, does the
present application of it satisfy the requirement that the freedom of the press
shall not be abridged?
Freedom
is not a mere intellectual abstraction; and it is not merely a word to adorn an
oration upon occasions of patriotic rejoicing. It is an intensely practical
reality, capable of concrete enjoyment in a multitude of ways day by day. When
applied to the press, the term freedom is not to be narrowly confined; and it
obviously means more than publication and circulation. If freedom of the press
does not include the right to adopt and pursue a policy without governmental
restriction, it is a misnomer to call it freedom. And we may as well deny at
once the right of the press freely to adopt a policy and pursue it, as to
concede that right and deny the liberty to exercise an uncensored judgment in
respect of the employment and discharge of the agents through whom the policy
is to be effectuated.
In a
matter of such concern, the judgment of Congress—or, still less, the judgment
of an administrative censor—cannot, under the Constitution, be substituted for that of the press
management in respect of the employment or discharge of employees engaged in
editorial work. The good which might come to interstate commerce or the benefit
which might result to a special group, however large, must give way to that
higher good of all the people so plainly contemplated by the imperative
requirement that 'Congress shall make no law * * * abridging the freedom * * *
of the press.'
The present case illustrates the
necessity for the enforcement of these principles. The board found, in effect,
that the actual reason for Watson's discharge was his activity as a member of a
labor organization in the furtherance of its aims. Accepting this as a true
statement of the reason for the discharge, let us consider the question from
the standpoint of that finding; although, as already indicated, we are of
opinion that the constitutional immunity of the press does not permit any
legislative restriction of the authority of a publisher, acting upon his own
judgment, to discharge any one engaged in the editorial service. Such a
restriction of itself would be an abridgment of the freedom of the press no
less than a law restricting the constitutional liberty of one to speak would be
an abridgment of the freedom of speech.
For many years there has been
contention between labor and capital. Labor has become highly organized in a
wide effort to secure and preserve its rights. The daily news with respect to
labor disputes is now of vast proportions; and clearly a considerable part of
petitioner's editorial service must be devoted to that subject. Such news is
not only of great public interest; but an unbiased version of it is of the
utmost public concern. To give a group of employers on the one hand, or a labor
organization on the other, power of control over such a service is obviously to
endanger the fairness and accuracy of the service. Strong sympathy for or
strong prejudice against a given cause or the efforts made to advance it has
too often led to suppression or coloration of unwelcome facts. It would seem to
be an exercise of only reasonable prudence for an association engaged in part
in supplying the public with fair and accurate factual information with respect
to the contests between labor and capital, to see that those whose activities
include that service are free from either extreme sympathy or extreme prejudice
one way or the other. And it would be no answer to say that dealing with news
of this character constitutes only a part of the duties of the editorial force.
The interest of a juror, for example, in the result which excludes him from
sitting in a case, may be small and the adverse effect upon his verdict by no
means certain. Nevertheless, the party affected cannot be called upon to assume
the hazard. In the present case, by a parity of reasoning, the hope of benefit
to a cherished cause which may bias the editorial employee is a contingency the
risk of which the press in the exercise of its unchallengable freedom under the
Constitution may take or
decline to take, without being subject to any form of legislative coercion.
What, then, are the facts here
involved? Morris Watson was employed by petitioner first in 1928 as a reporter
and rewrite editor in petitioner's Chicago office. In 1930, he was transferred
to the New York office, and there served as editorial employee until his
discharge on October 18, 1935. One of his duties was to rewrite and supervise
the news received at the New York office and determine what portion of it
should be sent to points outside. As the court already has pointed out, he had
authority to determine the news value of items received and was required to
speedily and accurately rewrite the copy delivered to him.
In November, 1933, Watson was
instrumental in organizing the Associated Press Unit of the New York Newspaper
Guild, a labor organization, constituting a part of the American Newspaper
Guild; and he was, from the beginning, recognized as the outstanding union
representative of the press associations. He served successively as chairman of
the Associated Press Unit and as treasurer and secretary of the New York Guild,
and at the time of his discharge was vice president for wiring services of the
American Guild. His guild activities were immediately objected to by
petitioner; and thereafter, on numerous occasions, these activities were
objected to by petitioner's executives and inducements were held out to him to
abandon them. The findings of the board disclose that Watson continued in
various ways to promote the interests of the guild; and there is no doubt that
his sympathies were strongly enlisted in support of the guild's policies,
whether they clashed with the policies of petitioner or not. We do not question
his right to assume and maintain that attitude. But, if petitioner concluded,
as it well could have done, that its policy to preserve its news service free
from color, bias, or distortion was likely to be subverted by Watson's
retention, what power has Congress to interfere in the face of the First
Amendment?
And that question may not be
determined by considering Watson only; for the power to compel his continuance
in the service includes the power to compel the continuance of all guild
members engaged in editorial work, with the result that the application of the
statute here made, if carried to the logical extreme, would give opportunity
for the guild to exercise a high degree of control over the character of the
news service. Due regard for the constitutional guaranty requires that the publisher
or agency of the publisher of news shall be free from restraint in respect of
employment in the editorial force. And we are dealing here not with guild
members employed in the mechanical or purely clerical work of the press, but
with those engaged as Watson was in its editorial work and having the power
thereby to affect the execution of its policies.
An illustration may be helpful: The
right to belong to a labor union is entitled to the shield of the law, but no
more so than the right not to belong. Neither can be proscribed. So much must
be true, or we do not live in a free land. Let us suppose the passage of a
statute of like character with that under review, having the same objective,
but to be effected by forbidding the discharge of employees on the ground not
that they are but that they are not members of a labor association. Let us
suppose further that a labor association is engaged in publishing an interstate-circulated
journal devoted to furthering the interests of labor, and that members of its
editorial staff, resigning their membership in the association, transfer their
allegiance from the cause of the workingman to that of the employer. Can it be
doubted that an order requiring the reinstatement of an editorial writer who
had been discharged under these circumstances would abridge the freedom of the
press guaranteed by the First Amendment?
And if that view of the amendment may
be affirmed in the case of a publication issued for the purpose of advancing a
particular cause, how can it be denied in the case of a press association
organized to gather and edit the news fairly and without bias or distortion for
the use of all causes? To hold that the press association must await a concrete
instance of misinterpretation of the news before it can act is to compel it to
emperiment with a doubt when it regards certainty as essential.
The concclusion that the First
Amendment is here infringed does
not challenge the right of employees to organize, to bargain collectively with
their employers about wages and other matters respecting employment, or to
refuse to work except upon conditions they are willing to accept. Nor, the
First Amendment aside, does it challenge the act in so far as it is an
allowable regulation of interstate commerce. All affirmations in respect of
these matters may be fully conceded without prejudice to our very definite view
that the application of the act here has resulted in an unconstitutional
abridgment of the freedom of the press.
Do the people of this land—in the
providence of God, favored, as they sometimes boast, above all others in the
plenitude of their liberties—desire to preserve those so carefully protected by
the First Amendment: liberty
of religious worship, freedom of speech and of the press, and the right as
freemen peaceably to assemble and petition their government for a redress of
grievances? If so, let them withstand all beginnings of encroachment. For the
saddest epitaph which can be carved in memory of a vanished liberty is that it
was lost because its possessors failed to stretch forth a saving hand while yet
there was time.
July 5, 1935, c. 372, 49 Stat. 449,
U.S.C.Supp. I, tit. 29, § 151 et seq. (29 U.S.C.A. § 151 et seq.). The terms of
the act, the procedure thereunder, and the relief which may be granted pursuant
thereto are set forth in the opinion in National Labor Relations Board v. Jones
& Laughlin Steel Corporation, [1937] USSC 80; 301 U.S. 1, 57 S.Ct. 615, 81
L.Ed. —-.
1 N.L.R.B. 788.
85 F.(2d) 56.
Gibbons
v. Ogden, [1824] USSC 18;
9 Wheat. 1, 189[1824]
USSC 18; , 6 L.Ed. 23.
Pensacola
Telegraph Co. v. Western Union Telegraph Co., [1877] USSC 167; 96 U.S. 1, 9, 10[1877] USSC 167; , 24 L.Ed. 708; Federal Radio Commission v. Nelson
Bros. Bond & Mtg. Co., [1933] USSC 93; 289 U.S. 266, 279[1933] USSC 93;
, 53 S.Ct. 627, 633[1933]
USSC 93; , 77 L.Ed. 1166; International Textbook Co. v. Pigg, [1910]
USSC 96; 217 U.S. 91, 107[1910] USSC 96; , 30 S.Ct. 481, 54 L.Ed. 678, 27 L.R.A.(N.S.) 493, 18 Ann.Cas. 1103; Indiana Farmer's Guide Publishing
Co. v. Prairie Farmer Publishing Co., [1934] USSC 170; 293 U.S. 268, 276[1934] USSC 170; , 55 S.Ct. 182, 184[1934] USSC 170; , 79 L.Ed. 356.
United
States v. Hill, [1919] USSC 32; 248 U.S. 420, 39
S.Ct. 143, 63 L.Ed. 337; United States v. Simpson, [1920]
USSC 95; 252 U.S. 465, 40 S.Ct. 364, 64 L.Ed. 665, 10 A.L.R. 510.
The
Pipe Line Cases[1914] USSC 225; , 234 U.S. 548,
560[1914] USSC 225; , 34
S.Ct. 956, 58 L.Ed. 1459.
Robertson
v. Baldwin, [1897] USSC 20;
165 U.S. 275, 281[1897]
USSC 20; , 17 S.Ct. 326, 41 L.Ed. 715.
Toledo
Newspaper Co. v. United States, [1918] USSC 156; 247 U.S. 402, 38 S.Ct. 560, 62
L.Ed. 1186.
Indiana
Farmer's Guide Publishing Co. v. Prairie Farmer Publishing Co., supra.
Grosjean
v. American Press Co., [1936] USSC 33; 297 U.S. 233, 250[1936] USSC 33;
, 56 S.Ct. 444, 449[1936]
USSC 33; , 80 L.Ed. 660.