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Stromberg v. California

 
US Supreme Court: Stromberg v. California

283 U.S. 359 (1931), argued 15 April 1931, decided 18 May 1931 by vote of 7 to 2; Hughes for the Court, Butler and McReynolds in dissent. Yetta Stromberg's summer job teaching at a youth camp for working‐class children in rural California led to a court challenge of the previously unenforced 1919 state law that prohibited public use or display of a red flag. The legislature had determined that the presence of red fabric demonstrated opposition to organized government and invited anarchy and sedition.

During the summer of 1929, the Pioneer Summer Camp, maintained by a conference of organizations, some of them communist in ideology, became the target of the Better American Federation (BAF), a group determined to rid California of “dangerous” dissent. The BAF convinced the San Bernardino County sheriff to search the camp, where his men discovered the red flag and arrested Stromberg and other staff members.

After Stromberg's conviction she appealed to the Supreme Court where her attorneys argued that the California statutes prohibited a symbol of a legally constituted party that had received fifty thousand votes in the previous election. Stromberg's lawyers based much of their argument on Justice Oliver Wendell Holmes's clear and present danger test that maintained that the circumstances of the act must be considered in testing the law.

Seven members of the Court voted to overturn Stromberg's conviction. In the majority opinion Chief Justice Charles Evans Hughes followed the reasoning of the Holmes doctrine and concluded that the red flag ban was too vague and could be used to interfere with constitutionally based political and partisan opposition to those in power. Therefore, the majority declared the California Red Flag Law unconstitutional because it violated the liberty protected by the Fourteenth Amendment. The legislature repealed the statute in 1933.

Hughes's Stromberg opinion is considered a milestone in First Amendment constitutional law, for it was the first ruling in which a Court majority extended the Fourteenth Amendment to include a protection of First Amendment substance—in this case symbolic speech—from state encroachment.

See also First Amendment; Speech and the Press.

— Carol E. Jenson

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US Government Guide: Stromberg v. California
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283 U.S. 359 (1931)
Vote: 7–2
For the Court: Hughes
Dissenting: Butler and McReynolds

Yetta Stromberg was a 19-year-old counselor at a summer camp for children in California. She was also an active member of the Young Communist League. Stromberg taught the children about communist ideas and praised the communist government of the Soviet Union. In teaching one of her lessons, Stromberg had the children make a replica of the red flag of the U.S.S.R. She and the children raised the banner and recited a pledge of allegiance to it.

The sheriff of San Bernardino County arrested Yetta Stromberg for teaching activities that violated a 1919 state law prohibiting the display of a red flag “as an emblem of opposition to organized government.” After her conviction under the California law, Stromberg appealed to the U.S. Supreme Court.

The Issue

Stromberg argued that the state of California had denied her right to freedom of speech guaranteed by the 1st and 14th Amendments to the U.S. Constitution. California attorneys claimed that the state law used to convict Stromberg was within the state's power to maintain order and safety.

Opinion of the Court

Chief Justice Charles Evans Hughes, writing for the Court, overturned the conviction of Yetta Stromberg. The California “red flag law” was declared unconstitutional because it violated “the conception of liberty under the due process clause of the Fourteenth Amendment [which] embraces the right of free speech [in the First Amendment].”

Significance

The Stromberg case was one of the Court's early uses of the 14th Amendment to incorporate the 1st Amendment's right to free speech—that is, to protect this right from infringement by a state government. The 14th Amendment states, “No State shall … deprive any person of life, liberty, or property, without due process of law.”

In addition, in Stromberg the Court for the first time protected the substance of symbolic speech (a flag display) against state government restriction.

See also Freedom of speech and press; Gitlow v. New York; Incorporation doctrine; Near v. Minnesota

Sources

  • Paul L. Murphy, The Meaning of Freedom of Speech (Westport, Conn.: Greenwood, 1972).
  • Rodney Smolla, Free Speech in an Open Society (New York: Knopf, 1992)
Wikipedia: Stromberg v. California
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Stromburg v. California
Seal of the United States Supreme Court.svg
Supreme Court of the United States
Argued April 15, 1931
Decided May 18, 1931
Full case name Yetta Stromberg v. People of State of California
Citations 283 U.S. 359 (more)
51 S. Ct. 532; 75 L. Ed. 1117; 1931 U.S. LEXIS 152; 73 A.L.R. 1484
Prior history Appeal from the District Court of Appeal of California, Fourth Appellate District
Holding
States cannot infringe on the First Amendment right to freedom of speech and expression.
Court membership
Case opinions
Majority Hughes, joined by Holmes, Van Devanter, Brandeis, Sutherland, Stone, Roberts
Concur/dissent McReynolds
Dissent Butler
Laws applied
U.S. Const. amends. I, XIV

Stromberg v. California, 283 U.S. 359 (1931)[1] was a United States Supreme Court case in which the Court ruled 7-2 that a 1919 California statute banning red flags was unconstitutional because it violated the Fourteenth Amendment. This decision is considered a landmark in the history of First Amendment constitutional law, as it was one of the first cases where the Court extended the Fourteenth Amendment to include a protection of the substance of the First Amendment, in this case symbolic speech, from state infringement.

Contents

Prior History

The Better American Federation (BAF), a group whose goal was to clear the State of California from what they deemed to be dangerous dissent, targeted the Pioneer Summer Camp (PSC) in the summer of 1929. The youth camp for working-class children was maintained by a number of different groups and organizations, some of which were either openly communist or had expressed sympathy for the communist goals. California had a state law, enacted in 1919, that prohibited public display of a red flag.[1] The BAF persuaded a local sheriff to search the Pioneer Summer Camp. The resultant search turned up a red flag; the sheriff then arrested Yetta Stromberg, a summer teacher at the camp, along with several other employees.

Stromberg was a nineteen-year-old member of the Young Communist League, an international organization affiliated with the Communist Party. In the state trials, the charge brought up against her was in relation to a daily ceremony that took place at the camp where she worked as a teacher. During the ceremony, Stromberg supervised and directed the youth in raising a red flag, and in pledging allegiance to “the workers’ red flag, and to the cause for which it stands, one aim throughout our lives, freedom for the working class.” Stromberg was also found to have owned a number of books and other printed materials advocating violence and armed uprisings, though she testified that none of such materials were employed in her teaching of the children.

Stromberg was tried and convicted in state court. She appealed the conviction to the Supreme Court on the grounds that the California statute in question outlawed the symbol of a legally recognized party. Stromberg’s attorneys cited Holmes’ concept of the “Clear and Present Danger” test,[2] asserting that the circumstances of the act must be considered as part of the decision.

U.S. Supreme Court Proceedings

The Court had to consider whether the 1919 California Red Flag Law was unconstitutional under the Fourteenth Amendment. In a 7-2 decision, Chief Justice Hughes followed the logic of the Holmes doctrine introduced in Schenck, and concluded on 18 May 1931 that the broad red flag ban was too vague, and could be used to disrupt the constitutionally-protected opposition by citizenry to those in power. The California legislature repealed the law in 1933.

Opinions

Justice Charles Evans Hughes

In his majority opinion, Chief Justice Charles Evans Hughes considered whether any of the three clauses of the California law,[1] were, as the applicant alleged, a violation of her constitutionally-protected rights. The Court had previously established in a series of cases that the right of free speech is essential to liberty, and is protected by the Due Process Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment.[3] The opinion noted, however, that this protection did not extend to forms of expression which may incite violence, crime, or the overthrow of organized government by unlawful means. The Court found little reason to question the validity of the second and third clauses of the statute as they pertain to such prohibited forms of expression, and concentrated instead on the first clause.

The first clause prohibited individuals to display “a red flag, banner or badge or any flag, badge, banner, or device of any color or form whatever in any public place or in any meeting place or public assembly,” even when such a red flag did not represent a symbol of opposition to organized government (clause 2) or as a stimulus to anarchistic action (clause 3).

Upon examining the vagueness of the statute, the Court concluded that a law so indefinite as to permit the punishment of peaceful and orderly opposition exercised in accordance with legal means and constitutional imitations was “repugnant to the guarantee of liberty contained in the Fourteenth Amendment.” In thus finding the first clause of the statute invalid, the Court set aside the conviction of the appellant, as the conviction appeared to have rested exclusively on that first clause. The Court did not proceed to rule on the constitutionality of the second and third clauses of the statute.

Justice James C. McReynolds

Associate Justice James C. McReynolds dissented from the Court’s opinion.

Justice McReynolds argued in his dissent that the Court has, at many times in the past, applied the rule that it may not review any question arising from a state court ruling unless it is shown that the question was determined in the state court or at least duly presented for such a determination. In this specific instance, no such challenges appeared to have been brought.

Further, when the case was considered by the Court of Appeals, it held that since the petitioner was charged with violation of all the clauses of the statutes and thus convicted, the conviction could not be reversed even if one of the clauses was found to be invalid. McReynolds agreed with this determination and suggested that the judgment should be affirmed.

Justice Pierce Butler

Justice Butler wrote a detailed dissent in this matter, addressing several different issues.

Basis of conviction

The Court, in the majority opinion, held the first clause of the California statute to be invalid, and as it found that the conviction may have depended exclusively upon that clause, it reversed the state court. Justice Butler, however, believed that the record affirmatively showed that the petitioner was not convicted for violation of the first clause. Prior to the trial of this case, the California Supreme Court had already deemed invalid a city ordinance that would make unlawful the public display of a red flag, emblem, etc.[4] Thus, under that decision, the California state courts were already directed to hold invalid the first clause of the statute, as it construed peaceable opposition to organized government.

Further, the effect of the instructions given to the jury was to inform them that the defendant had the unlimited right to advocate changes in the government, so long as such advocacy was peaceful; the jury was further informed that any organization peaceably advocating changes in the government could adopt any flag and it was not possible to make that unlawful.

Procedural challenges

The record does not show that the defendant separately challenged in the trial court the validity of the first clause.

The defendant’s counsel likewise failed to object to state’s instructions, and testified before the Court of Appeals that he was satisfied that the instructions were correct.

The Court of Appeals found the second and third provisions of section 403a of the California Penal Code to be in compliance with the state and federal Constitutions’ guarantees of freedom of speech. They did, however, state that the constitutionality of the first clause was “questionable,” taking particular issue with the phrase “of opposition to organized government.” The Court of Appeals suggested that this phrase could be eliminated from the section without introducing material changes to its purpose.

Justice Pierce argued that due consideration makes it clear that the defendant did not claim that the jury could have found her guilty of violating the first clause of the statute; that the Court of Appeals did not rule on the question of whether such a first-clause conviction would be constitutional; and lastly, that the validity of the first clause was mentioned in the concurring opinion only upon the question of whether the second and third clauses must be found invalid if the first clause was to be found unconstitutional.

Court’s role

Justice Butler believed that in this case, the Court was not called upon to decide whether the display of flag constituted constitutionally-protected speech, nor to decide whether such speech was protected by the Fourteenth Amendment, nor whether the real or imagined anarchy that could follow a successful opposition to organized government creates a sufficiently compelling reason to prohibit such activities. It appears (though he does not specify it in his dissent) that he viewed the matter as that of procedural challenges, rather than a case of broad protections of freedom of speech.

Research Resources

See also

References

  1. ^ a b 1919 California Penal Code, § 403a: "Any person who displays a red flag, banner or badge or any flag, badge, banner, or device of any color or form whatever in any public place or in any meeting place or public assembly, or from or on any house, building or window as a sign, symbol or emblem of opposition to organized government or as an invitation or stimulus to anarchistic action or as an aid to propaganda that is of a seditious character is guilty of a felony."
  2. ^ See Schenck v. United States, 249 U.S. 47 (1919).
  3. ^ See Gitlow v. New York, 268 U.S. 652, 666; Whitney v. California, 274 U.S. 357, 362 , 371 S., 373; Fiske v. Kansas, 274 U.S. 380, 382 .
  4. ^ See In re Hartman, 182 Cal. 447, 188 P. 548.

Further reading

  • Gossett, John S. (2003). "Stromberg v. California". in Parker, Richard A. (ed.). Free Speech on Trial: Communication Perspectives on Landmark Supreme Court Decisions. Tuscaloosa, AL: University of Alabama Press. pp. 52–68. ISBN 081731301X. 

External links

  • ^ Text of Stromberg v. California, 283 U.S. 359 (1931) is available from:  · Enfacto · Findlaw

 
 

 

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US Supreme Court. The Oxford Companion to the Supreme Court of the United States. Copyright © 1992, 2005 by Oxford University Press. All rights reserved.  Read more
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