Pierce v. United States
Dissenting Opinion
dissenting, delivered the following opinion in which
What is called “distributing literature” is a means commonly used by the Socialist Party to increase its membership and otherwise to advance the cause it advocates. To this end the national organization with headquarters at Chicago publishes such “literature” from time to time and sends sample copies to the local organizations. These, when they approve, purchase copies and call upon members to volunteer for service in making the distribution locally. Sometime before July 11, .1917, a local of the Socialist Party at Albany, New York, received from the national organization sample copies of a four-page leaflet entitled “The Price We Pay,” written by Irwin St. John Tucker, an Episcopal clergyman and a man of sufficient prominence to have been included in the 1916-1917 edition of “Who’s Who in America.” The proposal to distribute this leaflet came up for action at a meeting of the Albany local held on July 11, 1917. A member who was a lawyer called attention to the fact, that the question whether it was legal to distribute this' leaflet was involved in a case pending in Baltimore in the District Court of the United States; and it was voted “not to distribute ‘The Price We Pay’ until we know if it is legal.” The case referred to was an indictment under the Selective Draft Act for conspiracy to obstruct recruiting by means of distributing the leaflet. Shortly after the July 11th meeting it became known that District Judge Rose had directed an acquittal in that case; and at the next meet
District Judge Rose in directing an acquittal had said of the leaflet in the Baltimore case:
“I do not think there is anything to go to the jury in this case.
“You may have your own opinions about that circular; I have very strong individual opinions about it, and as to the wisdom and fairness of what is said there; but so far as I can see it is principally a circular intended to induce people to subscribe to Socialist newspapers and to get recruits for'the Socialist Party. I do not think that we ought bo attempt to prosecute people for that kind of thing. It may be very unwise in its effect, and it may be unpatriotic at that particular time and place, but it would be going very far indeed, further, I think than any law that I know of would justify, to hold that there has been made out any case here even tending to show that there was an attempt to persuade men not to obey the law.”
In New York a different view was taken; and an indictment in- six-counts was found against the four distributors. Two of the counts were eliminated at the trial. On the other four there were convictions, and on each a sentence of fine and imprisonment. But one of' the four counts was abandoned by the Government in this court. There remain for consideration count three, which charges a violation of § 3 of the Espionage Act by making false reports and false statements, with the,intent “to interfere' with the operation and success of the military find naval forces”; and counts two and six, also,involving § 3 of the Espionage Act, the one for conspiring, the other for at
In considering the several counts it is important to note that three classes of offences are included in § 3 of the Espionage Act, and that the essentials of liability under them differ materially. The first class, under which count three is drawn, is the offence of making or conveying false statements or reports with intent to interfere with the operations or success of the military and naval forces. The second, involved in counts two and six is that of attempting to cause insubordination, disloyalty, mutiny, or refusal of duty. With the third, that of obstructing the recruiting and enlistment service, we have, since the abandonment of the first count, no concern here. Although the uttering or publishing of the words charged be admitted, there necessarily arises in every case — whether the offence charged be of the first class or of the second— the question whether the words were 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 evil that Congress has a right to prevent,” Schenck v. United States, 249 U. S. 47, 52; and also the question whether the act of uttering or publishing was done willfully, that is, with the intent to produce the result which thé Congress sought to prevent. But in cases of the first' class three additional elements of the crime must be established, namely:
(1) The statement or report must be of something capable of being proved false in fact. The expression of an opinion, for instance, whether sound or unsound, might conceivably afford a sufficient basis for the charge of attempting to cause insubordination, disloyalty or refusal of duty, or for the charge of obstructing recruiting; but, because an opinion, is not capable of being proved,
(2) The statement or report must be proved to be false.
(3) The statement or report must be known by the defendant to be false when made or conveyed.
In the case at bar the alleged offence consists wholly in distributing leaflets which had been written and published by others. The fact of distribution is admitted. But every other element of the two classes of crime charged must be established in order to. justify conviction. With unimportant exceptions to be discussed later, the only evidence introduced to establish the several elements of both of the crimes charged is the leaflet itself; and the leaflet is unaffected by extraneous evidence which might give to words used therein special meaning or effect. In order to determine whether the leaflet furnishes any evidence to establish any of the above enumerated elements of the offences charged, the whole leaflet must necessarily be; read. It is as follows:
"THE PRICE WE PAY.
By Irwin St. John Tucker.
I.
“Conscription is upon us: the draft law is a fact!
Into your homes the recruiting officers are coming. They will take your sons of military age and impress them into the army;
Stand them up in long rows, break them into squads and platoons, teach them to deploy and wheel;
Guns will be put into their hands; they will be taught not to think, only to obey without questioning.
Then they will be shipped thru the submarine zone by the hundreds of thousands to the bloody quagmire of Europe..
Into that seething, heaving swamp of torn flesh and
Agonies of torture will rend their flesh from their sinews, will crack their bones and dissolve their lungs; every pang will be multiplied in its passage to you.
Black death will be a guest at every American fireside. Mothers and fathers and sisters, wives and sweethearts will knów the weight of that awful vacancy left by the bullet which finds its mark.
And still the recruiting officers will come; seizing age .after age, mounting up to the elder*ones and taking the younger ones as they grow to soldier size;
And still the toll of death will grow,
Let them come! Let death and desolation make barren every Home! Let the agony of war crack every parent’s heart! Let the horrors and miseries of the world-downfall swamp the happiness of every hearthstone!
Then perhaps you will believe what we have been telling you! For war is the price of your stupidity, you who have rejected Socialism!
II-
“Yesterday I saw moving pictures of the Battle of the Somme. A company of Highlanders was shown, young and handsome in their kilts and brass helmets and bright plaids.
They laughed, and joked as they stood on the screen in their ranks at ease, waiting the command to advance..
The camera shows rank after rank, standing strong and erect, smoking and chaffing with one another;
Then it shows a sign: ‘Less than 20 per cent, of these soldiers were alive at the close of the day.’
• Only one in five remained of all those laddies, when sunset came, the rest were crumpled masses of carrion under their torn plaids. • ,
Many a highland home will wail and croon for many a
I saw a regiment of Germans charging downhill against machine gunfire. They melted away like snowflakes falling into hot water.
The hospital camps were shown, with hundreds and thousands of wounded men in all stages of pain and suffering, herded like animals, milling around like cattle in the slaughter pens.
All the horror and agony of war were exhibited; and at the end a flag was thrown on the screen and a proclamation said: ‘Enlist for your Country!’ The applause was very thin and scattering; and as we went out, most of the men shook their heads and said:
‘That’s a hell of a poor recruiting scheme!’
' For the men of this land have been fed full with horror during the past three years; and tho the call for volunteers has become wild, frantic, desperate; tho the posters scream from every billboard, and tho parades and red' fire inflame the atmosphere in every town;
The manhood of America gazes at that seething, heaving swamp of bloody carrion in Europe, and say ‘Must we — be that! ’
You cannot avoid it; you are being dragged, whipped, lashed, hurled into it; Your flesh and brains and entrails must be crushed out of you and poured into that mass of festering decay;
It is the price you pay for your stupidity — you who have rejected Socialism.
III.
“Food prices go up like skyrockets; and show no sign of bursting and coming down.
Wheat, corn, potatoes, are far above the Civil War mark; eggs, butter, meat — all these things are almost beyond a poor family’s reach.
Starvation begins to stare us in the face — and we, people of the richest and most productive land on earth are told to starve ourselves yet further because our allies must be fed.
Submarines áre steadily sending to the fishes millions of tons of food stuffs; and still we build more ships, and send more food, and more and more is sunk;
Frantically we grub in the earth and sow and tend and reap; and then as frantically load the food in ships, and then as frantically sink with them—
We, the 'civilized nations’ of the world!
While the children of the poor clamor for their bread and the well .to do shake their heads and wonder what on earth the poor folks are doing;
The poor folks are growling and muttering with savage side-long glances, and are rolling up their sleeves.
For the price they pay for their stupidity is getting beyond their power to pay!
IV.
"Frightful reports are being made of the ravages of venereal diseases in the army training camps, and in the ■barracks where the girl munition workers live.
One of the great nations lost more men thru loathsome immoral diseases than on the firing line, during the first 18 months of the war.
Back from the Mexican border our boys come, spreading the curse of the great Black Plague among hundreds of thousands of homes; blasting the lives of innocent women and unborn babes,
Over in Europe ten millions of women are deprived of their husbands, and fifty millions of babies can never be;
Future generations of families are made impossible; blackness and desolation instead of happiness and love will reign where the homes of the future should be;
And all because you believed the silly lie, that 'Socialism would destroy the home!’
Pound on, guns of the embattled host; wreck yet more homes, kill yet more husbands and fathers, rob yet more maidens of their sweethearts, yet more babies of their fathers;
That is the price the world pays for believing the monstrous, damnable, outrageous lie that Socialism would destroy the home!
Now the homes of the world are being destroyed; every one of them would have been saved by Socialism. But you would not believe. Now pay the price!
V.
''This war, you say, is all caused by the Kaiser; and we are fighting for democracy against autocracy. Once dethrone the Kaiser and there will be permanent peace.
That is what they said about Napoleon. And in the century since Napoleon was overthrown there has been more and greater wars than the world ever saw before.
There were wars before Germany ever existed; before Rome ruled; before Egypt dominated the ages.
■War has been universal; and the cause of war is always the same. Somebody wanted something somebody else possessed and they fought over the ownership of it.
This war began over commercial routes and ports and rights; and underneath all the talk about democracy versus autocracy, you hear a continual note, and undercurrent, a subdued refrain;
Commercial war preceded this war; it gave rise to this war; it now gives point and meaning to this war;
And as soon as the guns are stilled and the dead are buried, commercial forces will prepare for the next bloody struggle over routes and ports and rights, coal mines ard railroads;
For these are the essence of this, as of all other wars!
This, you say, is a war for the rights of small nations and the first land sighted when you sail across the Atlantic is the nation of Ireland, which has suffered from England for three centuries more than what Germany has. inflicted upon Belgium for three years.
But go to it! Believe everything you are told — you always have and doubtless always will, believe them.
Only do retain this much reason; when you have paid the price, the last and uttermost price; and have not received what you were told you were fighting for — namely Democracy-
Then remember that the price you paid was not the purchase price for justice, but the penalty price for your stupidity!
VI.
“We are beholding the spectacle of whole natioris working as one person for the accomplishment of a single end — namely killing.
Every man, every woman, every child, must ‘do his bit’ in the service of destruction.
We have been telling you for, lo, these many years that the whole nation ccmld be mobilized and every man, woman and child induced to do his bit for the service of humanity but you have laughed at us.
Now you call every person traitor, slacker, pro-enemy who will not go crazy on the subject of killing; and you
Why would you not believe us when we told you that it was possible to cooperate for the saving of life?
Why were you not interested when we begged you to work all together to build; instead to destroy? To preserve, instead of to murder?
Why did you ridicule us and call us impractical dreamers when we prophesied a world-state of fellowworkers, each man creating for the benefit of all the world, and the whole world creating for the benefit of each man?
Those idle taunts, those thoughtless jeers, that refusal to listen, to be fair-minded — you are paying for them now.
— Lo, the price you pay! Lo, the price your children will pay. Lo, the agony, the death, the blood, the unforgettable sorrow,—
The price of your stupidity!
For this war — as every one who thinks or knows anything will say, whenever truth-telling becomes safe and possible again, — This war is to determine the question, whether the chambers of commerce of the allied nations or of the Central Empires., have the superior right to exploit undeveloped countries.
It is to determine whether interest, dividends and profits shall be paid to investors speaking German or those speaking English and French,
Our entry into it was determined by the certainty that if the allies do not win, J. P. Morgan’s loans to the allies will be repudiated, and those American investors who bit on his promises would be hooked.
Socialism-would have settled that question; it would determine that to every producer'shall be given all the value of what he produces; so that nothing would b.e left over fo.\ exploiters or investors.
Until the question of surplus profits is settled that way, wars will continue; each war being the prelude to a still vaster and greater outburst of hell;
. Until the world becomes weary of paying the stupendous price for its own folly;
Until those who are sent out to maim and murder one another for the profit of bankers and investors determine to have and to hold what they have fought for;
Until money is no more sacred than human blood;
Until human life refuses to sacrifice itself for private gain;
Until by the explosion of millions of tons of dynamite the stupidity of the human race is blown away, and Socialism is known for what it is, the salvation of the human race;
Until then — you will keep on paying the price!
IF THIS INTERESTS YOU, PASS IT ON.
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First: From this leaflet, which is divided into six
(a) Two sentences are culled from the first chapter. They follow immediately after the words: “Conscription is upon us; the draft law is a fact” — and a third sentence culled follows a little later. They are:
“Into your homes the recruiting officers are coming. They will take your sons of military age and impress them into the army. . . . And still the recruiting officers will come; seizing age after age, mounting up to the elder ones and taking the younger ones as they grow to soldier size.”
To prove the alleged falsity of these statements the Government gravely called as a witness a major in the regular army with 28 years’ experience, who has been assigned since July 5, 1917, to recruiting work. He testified that “recruiting ” has to do with the volunteer service and has nothing to do with the drafting system and that the word impress has no place in the recruiting service. Thé subject of his testimony was a matter not of fact but of law; and as a statement of law it was erro-_ neous. That “recruiting is gaining fresh supplies for the forces, as well by draft as otherwise ” had been assumed by the Circuit Court of Appeals for that circuit in Masses Publishing Co. v. Patten, 246 Fed. Rep. 24 (decided eleven days before this testimony was given), and was later expressly held by this court in Schenck v. United States, 249 U. S. 47, 53. The third of the sentences charged as. false was obviously neither a statement nor a report, but a prediction; and it was later verified.
(Jo) The fourth sentence set forth in the third count as a false statement was culled from the third chapter of the leaflet and is this:
“The Attorney General of the United States is so busy sending to prison men who do not stand up when the Star Spangled Banner is played, that he has not time to protect the food supply from gamblers.”
To prove the falsity of this statement the Government called the United States Attorney for that district who testified that no federal law makes it a crime not to stand up when the “Star Spangled Banner ” is played and that he has no knowledge of any one being prosecuted for failure to do so. The presiding judge supplemented this testimony by a ruling that the Attorney General, like every officer of the Government, is presumed to do his duty and not to violate his duty and that this presumption should obtain unless evidence to the contrary was adduced. The Regulations of the Army (No. 378, Edition of 1913, p. 88) provide that if the National Anthem is played in any place those present, whether in uniform or in civilian clothes, shall stand until the last note of the anthem: The regulation is expressly limited in its operation to those belonging to the military service, although the practice was commonly observed by civilians throughout the war.
(c) The remaining sentence, set forth in count three as a false statement, was culled from the sixth chapter of the leaflet and is this:
“Our entry into it was determined by the certainty that if the allies do not win, J. P. Morgan’s loans to the allies will be repudiated, and those American investors who bit on his promises would be hooked.”
To prove the falsity of this statement the Government introduced the address made by the President to Congress on April 2, 1917, which preceded the adoption of the Joint Resolution of April 6, 1917, declaring that a state of war exists between the United States and the Imperial German Government (c. 1, 40 Stat. 1); This so-called statement of fact — which is alleged to be false — is merely a conclusion or a deduction from facts. True it is the kind of conclusion which courts call a conclusion of fact, as distinguished from a conclusion of law; and which is sometimes spoken of as a finding of ultimate fact as distinguished from an evidentiary fact. JBut, in its essence it is the expression of a judgment — like the
“There is no exact standard of absolute truth by which to prove the assertion false and a fraud. We mean by that to say that the claim of complainants cannot be the subject of proof as of an ordinary fact; it cannot be proved as a fact to be a fraud or false pretense or promise, nor can it properly be said that those who assume to heal bodily ills or infirmities by a resort to this method of cure are guilty of obtaining money under false pretenses, such as are intended in the statutes, which evidently do not assume to deal with mere matters of opinion upon subjects which are not capable of proof as to their falsity.”
The cause of a war — as of most human action — is not single. War is ordinarily the result of many cooperating causes, many different conditions, acts and motives. Historians rarely agree in their judgment as to what was the determining factor in a particular war, even when they write under circumstances where detachment and the availability of evidence from all sources minimize both prejudice and other sources of error. For individuals, and . classes of individuals, attach significance to those things which are significant to them. And, as the contributing causes cannot be subjected, like a chemical combination in a test tube, to qualitative and quantitative analysis so as to weigh and value the various elements, the historians differ necessarily in their judgments. One finds the determining cause of war in a great man, another in an idea, a belief, an economic necessity, a trade advantage, a sinister machination, or an accident. It is for this reason largely that men seek to interpret anew in each age, and often with each new generation,’ the important events in the world’s history.
That all who voted for the Joint Resolution of April 6,
The presiding judge ruled that expressions of opinion were riot punishable as false statements under the act; but he left it to the jury to determine whether the five sentences in question were statements of facts or expressions of opinion. As this determination was to be made from the reading of the leaflet unaffected by any extrinsic evidence the question was one for the court. To hold that a jury may make punishable statements of conclusions or of opinion, like those here involved, by declaring them to be statements of facts and to be false would practically deny members of small political parties freedom cf criticism and of discussion in times when feelings run high and the questions involved are deemed fundamental.
Second: But, even if the passages from the leaflet set forth in the third count Could be deemed false statements within the meaning of the act, the convictions thereon were unjustified because evidence was wholly lacking to prove any one of the other essential elements of the crime charged. Thus there was not a particle of evidence that the defendants knew that the statements were false. They were mere distributors of the leaflet. It had been prepared by a man of some prominence. It had been published by the national organization. Not one of the defendants was an officer even of the local organization. One of them, at least, was absent from the meetings at which the proposal to distribute the leaflet was discussed. There is no evidence that the truthfulness of the statements contained in the leaflet had ever been questioned before this indictment was found. The statement mainly relied upon to sustain the conviction — that concerning the effect of our large loans to the Allies — was merely a repetition of what had been declared with great solemnity and earnestness in the Senate and in the House while the Joint Resolution was under discussion. The fact that the President had set forth in his noble address worthy grounds for our entry into the war, was not evidence that these defendants knew to be false the charge that base motives had also been operative. The assertion that the great financial interests, exercise a potent, subtle and sinister influence in the important decisions of our Government had often been made by men high in authority. Mr. Wilson, himself a historian, said before he was President and repeated in the New Freedom that: “The masters of the Government of the United States are the combined capitalists and manufacturers of the United
Nor was there a particle of evidence that these statements were made with intent to interfere with the operation or success of the military and naval forces. So far as there is any evidence bearing on the matter of intent, it is directly to the contrary. The fact that the local refused to distribute the pamphlet until Judge Rose had directed a verdict of acquittal in the Baltimore case shows that its members desired to do only that which the law permitted. The tenor of the leaflet itself shows that the intent of the writer and of the publishers was to advance the cause of Socialism; and each defendant testified that this was his only purpose in distributing the pamphlet. Furthermore, the nature of the words used and the circumstances under which they were used showed affirmatively that they did not “create a clear and present danger,” that thereby the operations or success of our military and naval forces would be interfered with.
The gravamen of the third count is the charge of wilfully conveying in time of war false statements with the intent to interfere, with the operation and success of our military or naval forces. One who did that would be called a traitor to his country. The defendants, humble members of the Socialist Party, performed as distributors of the leaflet what would ordinarily be deemed merely a menial service. To hold them guilty under the third
Third: To sustain a conviction on the second or on the sixth count it is necessary to prove that by cooperating to distribute the leaflet the defendants conspired or attempted wilfully to “cause insubordination, disloyalty, mutiny, or refusal of duty, in the military or naval forces.” No° evidence of intent so to do was introduced unless it-be found in the leaflet itself. What has been said in respect to the third count as to the total lack of evidence of evil intent is equally applicable here.
A verdict should have been directed for the defendants on these counts also because the leaflet was not distributed-/ under such circumstances, nor was it of such a nature, as to create a clear and present danger of causing either insubordination, disloyalty, mutiny or refusal of .duty in the military or-naval forces. The leaflet contains lurid and perhaps exaggerated pictures of the horrors of war. Its arguments as to the causes of this war may appear to us shallow and grossly unfair. The remedy proposed may seem to us worse than the evil which, it is argued, will be thereby removed. But the leaflet, far from counselling disobedience to law, points to the hopelessness of protest, under the existing system, pictures the irresistible power of the military arm of the Government, and indicates that acquiescence is a necessity. Insubordination, disloyalty, mutiny and refusal of duty in the military or naval forces áre very serious crimes. It is not conceivable that any man of ordinary intelligence and normal judgment would be induced by anything in the leaflet to commit them and thereby risk the severe punishment prescribed for such offences. Certainly there was no clear and present danger that such would be the result.
The fundamental right of free men to strive for better conditions through new legislation and new institutions will not be preserved, if efforts to secure it by argument to fellow citizens may be construed as criminal incitement to disobey the existing law — merely, because the argument presented seems to those exercising judicial power to be unfair in its portrayal of existing evils, mistaken in its assumptions, unsound in reasoning or intemperate ir. language. No objections more serious than these can, in my opinion, reasonably be made to the arguments presented in “The Price We Pay.”
On May 20, 1918, c. 79, 40 Stat. 557, Congress, by joint resolution, extended the draft to- males who had since June 5, 1917, attained the age of twenty-one and authorized the President to extend it to those
See 55 Cong. Rec. 253, 254, 344, 354, 357, 407.
Discussion in the Senate April 4, 1917:
“ . . . there is no doubt in any mind but the enormous amount of money loaned to the allies in this country has been instrumental in bringing about a public sentiment in favor of our country taking a course that would make every bond worth a hundred cents on the dollar and making the payment of every debt certain and sure.” (55 Cong. Rec. p. 213.)
Discussion in the House April 5, 1917.
“Since the loan of $500,000,000 was made by Morgan to the allies their efforts have been persistent to land our soldiers in the French trenches.” (55 Cong. Rec. p. 342.)
“Already we have loaned the allies, through our banking system, up to December 31, 1916, the enormous sum of $2,325,900,000 in formal loans. Other huge sums have been loaned and millions have been added Since that date. ‘Where your treasures are, there will be your heart also.’ That is one of the reasons why we are about to enter this war. No wonder the Morgans and the munition makers desire war. . . . Our financiers desire that Uncle Sam underwrite these and other huge loans and fight to defend their financial interests, that theie may be no final loss.” (55 Cong. Rec. p. 362.)
“I believe that all Americans, except that limited although influential class which is willing to go on shedding other men’s blood to protect its investments and add to its accursed profits, have abhorred the thought of war.” (55 Cong. Rec. p. 386)
“Likewise, Mr. Chairman, the J. Fierpont Morgans and their associates, who have floated war loans, running into millions which they now want the United States to guarantee by entering the European war. . . (55 Cong. Rec. p. 372.)
■ “These war germs are both epidemic and contagious. They are in the air/ but somehow or other they multiply fastest in the fumes around the munition factories. You will not find many in our climate.*269 They also multiply pretty fast in Wall Street and other monej - centers. I am opposed to declaring war to save the speculators.” ( 55 Cong. Rec. p. 376.)
Page 57. Then follows: “It is written over every intimate page of the records of Congress, it is written all through the history of conferences at the White House, that the suggestions of economic policy in this country have come from one source, not many sources.”
Opinion of the Court
delivered the opinion of the court.
Plaintiffs in error were jointly indicted October 2, 1917, in the United States District Court for the Northern District of New York, upon six counts, of which the 4th and 5th were struck out by agreement at the trial and the 1st is now abandoned by the Government.
The 2d count charged that throughout the period from
The 3d count charged that during the same period and on August 26, 1917, the United States being at war, etc.,
The 6th count charged that at the same place, during the same period and on August 27, 1917, while the United States was at war, etc., defendants willfully and feloniously attempted to cause insubordination, disloyalty, mutiny, and refusal of duty in the military and naval service of the United States by means of the publication, circulation, and distribution of “The Price We Pay ” to certain persons named and others to the grand jurors unknown.
A general demurrer was overruled, whereupon defendants pleaded not guilty and were put on trial together, with the result that Pierce, Creo, and Zeilman were found guilty upon the 1st, 2d, 3d and 6th counts, and Nelson upon the 3d count only. Each defendant was separately sentenced to a term of imprisonment upon each count on which he had been found guilty; the several sentences of Pierce, Creo, and Zeilman, however, to run concurrently.
The present direct writ of error was sued out under § 238, Judicial Code, because of contentions that the Selective Draft Act and the Espionage Act were unconstitutional. These have since been set at rest. Selective Draft Law Cases, 245 U. S. 366; Schenck v. United States, 249 U. S. 47, 51; Frohwerk v. United States, 249 U. S. 204; Debs v. United States, 249 U. S. 211, 215. But our jurisdiction continues for the purpose of disposing of other questions raised in the record. Brolan v. United States, 236 U. S. 216.
What we have recited of the 2d count shows a sufficiently definite averment of a conspiracy and overt acts under the provisions of Title I of the Espionage Act.
As to the second point: Averments that defendants unlawfully, willfully, or feloniously committed the forbidden acts fairly import an unlawful motive; the, 3rd count specifically avers such a motive; the conspiracy charged in the 2d and the willful attempt charged in the 6th necessarily involve unlawful motives.
The third and fourth objections point to no infirmity in the averments of the indictment. Whether the statements contained in the pamphlet had a natural tendency to produce the forbidden consequences, as alleged, was a question to be determined not upon demurrer but by the jury at the trial. There was no error in overruling the demurrer.
Upon the trial, defendants’ counsel moved that the jury be directed to acquit the defendants, upon the ground that the evidence was not sufficient to sustain a conviction. Under the exceptions taken to the refusal of this motion it is urged that there was no proof (a) of conspiracy, (b) of criminal purpose or intent, (c) of the falsity of the statements contained in the pamphlet cir
The pamphlet — “The Price We Pay ” — was a highly colored and sensational document, issued by the national office of the Socialist Party at Chicago, Illinois, and fairly to be construed as a protest against the further prosecution-of the war by the United States. It contained much in the way of denunciation of war in general, the pending war in particular; something in the way of assertion that under Socialism' things would be better; little or nothing in the way of fact or argument to support the assertion. It is too long to be quoted in full. The following extracts will suffice; those indicated by italics being the same that were set forth in the body of the 3d count:
“Conscription is upon us; the draft law is a fact!
“Into , your homes the recruiting officers are coming, they will take your sons of military age and impress them into the army;
“Stand them up in long rows, break them into squads and platoons, teach them to deploy and wheel;
“Guns will be put into their hands; they will be taught not to think, only to obey without- questioning.
. “Then they wall be shipped thru the submarine zone by the hundreds of thousands to the bloody quagmire of Europe.
“Into that seething, heaving swamp of torn flesh and floating entrails they will be plunged, in regiments, divisions and armies; screaming as they go.
“Agonies of torture will rend their flesh from their sinews, will crack their bones and dissolve their lungs; every pang will be multiplied in its passage to you.
*246 “Black death will be a guest at every American fireside. Mothers and fathers and sisters, wives and sweethearts will know the weight of that awful vacancy left by the bullet which finds its mark.
“And still the recruiting officers will come; seising age after age, mounting up to the elder ones and taking the younger ones as they grow to soldier size;
“And still the toll of death will grow.
* * * * * ‡ $
“The manhood of America gazes at that seething, heaving swamp of bloody carrion in Europe, and say ‘Must we — be that! ’
“You cannot avoid it; you are being dragged, whipped, lashed, hurled into it; Your flesh and brains and entrails-must be crushed out of you and poured into that mass of festering decay;
“It is the price you pay for your stupidity — you who have rejected Socialism.
* / * * * * * * *
“Food prices go up like skyrockets; and show no sign of bursting and coming down.
********
“The Attorney General of the United States is so busy sending to prison men who do not stand up when, the Star Spangled Banner is played, that he has no time to protect the food supply from gamblers.
*,*******
“This war began over commercial routes and ports and rights; and underneath all the talk about democracy versus autocracy, you hear a continual note, and undercurrent, a subdued refrain;
“‘Get ready for the commercial war that will follow this war.’
“Commercial war preceded this war; it gave rise to this war; it now gives point and meaning to this war;
********
*247 “This, you say, is a war for the rights of small nations and the first land sighted when you sail across the Atlantic is the nation of Ireland, which has suffered from England for three centuries more than what Germany has inflicted upon Belgium for three years.
“But go to it! Believe everything you are told — you always have, and doubtless always will, believe them.
“For this war — as every one who thinks or knows anything will say, whenever truth-telling becomes safe and possible again, — This war is to determine the question, whether, the chambers of commerce of the allied nations or of the Central Empires have the superior right to exploit undeveloped countries.
“It is to determine whether interest, dividends and profits shall be paid to investors speaking German or those speaking English and French.
“Our entry into it was determined by the certainty that if the allies do not win, J. P. Morgan's loans to the allies will be repudiated, and those American investors who bit on his promises would be hooked.”
These expressions were interspersed with suggestions that the war was the result of the rejection of Socialism, and that Socialism was the “salvation of the human race.”
It was in evidence that defendants were members of the Socialist Party — a party “organized in locals throughout the country” — and affiliated with a local -branch in the City of Albany. There was evidence, that at a meeting of that branch, held July 11, 1917, at which Pierce was present, the question of distributing “The Price We Pay ” was brought up, sample copies obtained from the national organization at .Chicago having been produced for examination and consideration; that the pamphlet was discússed1, as well as the question of ordering a large number of copies from the national organization for distribution; it was stated that criminal proceed
There was evidence that in some instances a leaflet entitled “Protect Your Rights,” and bearing the Chicago address of the national office of the Socialist Party, was folded between the pages of the pamphlet.. The leaflet was a fervid appeal to the reader to join the Socialist Party, upon the ground that it was the only organization that was opposing the war. It declared among other things: “This organization has opposed war and conscription. It is still opposed to war and conscription. . . . Do you want to help in this struggle? .' . . The party needs you now as it never needed you before. You
It was shown without dispute that defendants distributed the pamphlet — “The Price We Pay ” — with full understanding of its contents; and this of itself furnished a ground for attributing to them an intent to bring about, and for finding that they attempted to bring about, any and all such consequences as reasonably might be anticipated from its distribution. If its probable effect was at all disputable, at least the jury fairly might believe that, under the circumstances existing, it would have a tendency to cause insubordination, disloyalty, and refusal of duty in the military and naval forces of the United States; that it amounted to an obstruction of. the recruiting and enlistment sendee; and that it was intended to interfere with the success of our military and naval forces in the war in which the United States was then engaged. Evidently it was intended, as the jury found, to interfere with the conscription and recruitment sendees; to cause men eligible for the service to evade the draft; to bring home to them, and especially to their parents, sisters, wives, and sweethearts, a sense of impending personal loss, calculated to discourage the young men frorq entering the service; to arouse suspicion as to whether the chief law officer of the. Government was not more concerned in enforcing the strictness of military discipline than in protecting the people against improper speculation in their food supply; and to produce a belief that our
What interpretation ought to be placed upon the pamphlet, what would be the probable effect of distributing it in the mode adopted, and what were defendants’ motives in doing this, were questions for the jury, not the court, to decide. Defendants took the witness-stand and severally testified, in effect, that their sole purpose was to gain converts for Socialism, not to interfere with the operation or success of the naval or military forces of the United States. But their evidence was far from conclusive, and the jury very reasonably might .find — as evidently they did — that the protestations of innocence were insincere, and that the real purpose of defendants — indeed, the real object of the pamphlet — was to hamper the Government in the prosecution of the war.
Whether the printed words would in fact produce as a proximate result a material interference with the recruiting or enlistment service, or the operation or success of the forces of the United States, was a question for the jury to decide in vievf of all the circumstances of the time and considering the place a^d manner of distribution. Schenck v. United States, 249 U. S. 47, 52; Frohwerk v. United States, 249 U. S. 204, 208; Debs v. United States, 249 U. S. 211, 215.
. Concert of action on the part of Pierce, Creo, and Zeilman clearly, appeared, and, taken in connection with the nature of the pamphlet and their knowledge of its contents, furnished abundant evidence of a conspiracy and overt acts to sustain their conviction upon the second coünt.
The validity of the conviction upon the third count (the only one that includes Nelson),depends upon whether there was lawful evidence of the falsity of the statements contained in the pamphlet and tending to shoy that,
There being substantial evidence in support of the charges, the court would have erred if it had peremptorily directed an acquittal upon any of the . counts. The
It is suggested that the clause of § 3 — “Whoever, when-the United States is at war, shall willfully make or convey false reports or false statements with intent to interfere with the operation or success of the military or naval forces of the United States or to promote the success of its enemies” — cannot be construed to cover statements that on their face, to the common understanding, do not purport to convey anything new, but only to interpret or comment on matters pretended to be facts of public knowledge; and that however false the statements and with whatever evil purpose circulated, they- are not punishable if accompanied with a pretense of commenting upon them as matters of public concern. We cannot accept such a construction; it unduly restricts the natural meaning of the clause, leaves littleTor it to operate upon, and disregards the context and the circumstances, under which the statute was-passed. In effect, it would allow the professed advocate of disloyalty to escape responsibility for statements however audaciously false, so long as he did but reiterate, what, had been said before; while his ignorant dupes, believing his statements and thereby persuaded to obstruct the recruiting or enlistment service, would be punishable by fine or imprisonment under the same section.
Other assignments of error pointing to rulings upon evidence and instructions given or refused to be given to the jury are sufficiently disposed of by what we have said.-
The conceded insufficiency of the first Count of the indictment does not warrant a reversal, since the sentences imposed upon Pierce, Creo, and Zeilman did not exceed that which lawfully might have been imposed under the second, third, or sixth counts, so that the concurrent sentence under the first cc mt adds nothing to their punish
Judgments affirmed.
Extract from Act of June 15, 1917, c. 30, 40 Stat. 217, 219.
See. 3. Whoever, when the United States is at war, shall willfully make or convey false reports or false statements with intent to interfere with the operation or success of the military or naval forces of the United States or to promote the success of its enemies and whoever, when the United States is at war, shall willfully cause or attempt to cause insubordination, disloyalty, mutiny, or refusal of duty, in the military or naval forces of the United States, or shall willfully obstruct the recruiting or enlistment service of the United States, to the injury of the service or of the United States, shall be punished by a fine of not more than $10,000 or imprisonment for not more than twenty years, or both.
Sec. 4. If two or more persons conspire to violate the provisions of sections two or three of this title, and one or more of such persons does any act to effect the object of the conspiracy, each of the parties to such conspiracy shall be punished as in said sections provided in the case of the doing of the act the accomplishment of which is the object of such conspiracy. Except as above provided conspiracies to commit offenses under this title shall be punished as provided by section thirty-seven of the Act to codify, revise, and amend the penal laws of the United States approved March fourth, nineteen hundred and nine.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- Pierce Et Al. v. United States
- Cited By
- 160 cases
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- Syllabus
- The decision in another case of a constitutional question which formed the jurisdictional basis for a direct writ of error previously sued out under Jud. Code, § 238, does not divest this court of its jurisdiction to determine the other questions raised in the record. P. 242. In order to constitute a conspiracy, within § 4 of the Espionage Act, to commit a substantive offense defined in § 3, it is not essential that the conspirators shall have agreed in advance upon the precise method of violating the law; and, while the averment of the conspiracy cannot be aided by the allegations of overt acts and the . conspiracy is not punishable unless such acts were committed, they need not be in themselves criminal, still less constitute the very crime which is the object of the conspiracy. P. 243. Averments in such an indictment that defendants unlawfully, wilfully or feloniously committed the forbidden acts import an unlawful motive. P. 244. Whether statements contained in a pamphlet circulated by defendants tended to produce the consequences forbidden by the Espionage Act, (§ 3), as alleged, held a matter to be determined by the jury, and not by the court on demurrer to the indictment. Id. Evidence in the case examined and held sufficient to warrant the jury’s finding that defendants, in violation of the Espionage Act, conspired to commit, and committed, the offense of attempting to cause insubordination and disloyalty and refusal of duty in the military and naval forces, and made and conveyed false statements with intent to interfere with the operation and success of those forces, in the war with Germany, by circulating pamphlets and other printed matter tending in the circumstances to produce those results. P. 245. The fact that defendants distributed such pamphlets with a full understanding of their contents furnished of itself a ground for attributing to them an intent, and for finding that they attempted, to bring about any and all such consequences as reasonably might be anticipated from their distribution. P. 249. In a prosecution for circulating false statements with intent to interfere with the operation and success of the military and naval forces, in violation of the Espionage Act, § 3, where the falsity of the statements in question appears plainly, as a matter of common knowledge and public fact, other evidence on that subject is not needed in order to sustain a verdict of guilty. P. 250. In such cases it is for the jury to determine whether the statements circulated should be taken literally or in an innocent, figurative sense, in view of the class and character of the people among whom the statements were circulated. P. 251. To circulate such false statements recklessly, without effort to ascertain ’ the truth, is equivalent to circulating them with knowledge of their falsity. Id. The fact that the statements in-question do not, to the common understanding, purport to convey anything new but only to interpret or comment on matters pretended to be facts of public knowledge, does not remove them from the purview of § 3 of the Espionage Act. P. 252. The insufficiency of one of several counts of an indictment upon which concurrent sentences have been imposed does not necessitate reversal where the other counts sustain the total punishment inflicted. Id.