Interstate Circuit, Inc. v. City of Dallas
Opinion of the Court
delivered the opinion of the Court.
Appellants are an exhibitor and the distributor of a motion picture named “Viva Maria,” which, pursuant to a city ordinance, the Motion Picture Classification Board of the appellee City of Dallas classified as “not suitable for young persons.” A county court upheld the Board’s determination and enjoined exhibition of the film without acceptance by appellants of the requirements imposed by the restricted classification. The Texas Court of Civil Appeals affirmed,
That ordinance, adopted in 1965, may be summarized as follows.
The ordinance requires the exhibitor, before any initial showing of a film, to file with the Board a proposed classification of the film together with a summary of its
If a majority of the Board is dissatisfied with the proposed classification, the exhibitor is required to project the film before at least five members of the Board at the earliest practicable time. At the showing, the exhibitor may also present testimony or other support for his proposed classification. Within two days the Board must issue its classification order. Should the exhibitor disagree, he must file within two days
The ordinance is enforced primarily by a misdemeanor penalty: an exhibitor is subject to a fine of up to $200 if he exhibits a film that is classified “not suitable for young persons” without advertisements clearly stating its classification or without the classification being clearly posted, exhibits on the same program a suitable and a not suitable film, knowingly admits a youth under age 16 to view the film without his guardian or spouse accompanying him,
The same penalty is applicable to a youth who obtains admission to a not suitable film by falsely giving his age as 16 years or over, and to any person who sells or gives to a youth under 16 a ticket to a not suitable film, or makes any false statements to enable such a youth to gain admission.
Other means of enforcement, as against the exhibitor, are provided. Repeated violations of the ordinance, or persistent failure “to use reasonable diligence to determine whether those seeking admittance to the exhibition of a film classified 'not suitable for young persons’ are below the age of sixteen,” may be the basis for revoca
The substantive standards governing classification are as follows:
“ 'Not suitable for young persons’ means:
“(1) Describing or portraying brutality, criminal violence or depravity in such a manner as to be, in the judgment of the Board, likely to incite or encourage crime or delinquency on the part of young persons; or
“(2) Describing or portraying nudity beyond the customary limits of candor in the community, or sexual promiscuity or extra-marital or abnormal sexual relations in such a manner as to be, in the judgment of the Board, likely to incite or encourage delinquency or sexual promiscuity on the part of young persons or to appeal to their prurient interest.
“A film shall be considered 'likely to incite or encourage’ crime delinquency or sexual promiscuity on the part of young persons, if, in the judgment of the Board, there is a substantial probability that it will create the impression on young persons that such conduct is profitable, desirable, acceptable, respectable, praiseworthy or commonly accepted.*682 A film shall be considered as appealing to ‘prurient interest’ of young persons, if in the judgment of the Board, its calculated or dominant effect on young persons is substantially to arouse sexual desire. In determining whether a film is ‘not suitable for young persons,’ the Board shall consider the film as a whole, rather than isolated portions, and shall determine whether its harmful effects outweigh artistic or educational values such film may have for young persons.”
Appellants attack those standards as unconstitutionally-vague. We agree. Motion pictures are, of course, protected by the First Amendment, Joseph Burstyn, Inc. v. Wilson, 343 U. S. 496 (1952), and thus we start with the premise that “[precision of regulation must be the touchstone,” NAACP v. Button, 371 U. S. 415, 438 (1963). And while it is true that this Court refused to strike down, against a broad and generalized attack, a prior restraint requirement that motion pictures be submitted to censors in advance of exhibition, Times Film Corp. v. City of Chicago, 365 U. S. 43 (1961), there has been no retreat in this area from rigorous insistence upon procedural safeguards and judicial superintendence of the censor’s action. See Freedman v. Maryland, 380 U. S. 51 (1965).
In Winters v. New York, 333 U. S. 507 (1948), this Court struck down as vague and indefinite a statutory standard interpreted by the state court to be “criminal news or stories of deeds of bloodshed or lust, so massed as to become vehicles for inciting violent and depraved crimes . . . .” Id., at 518. In Joseph Burstyn, Inc. v. Wilson,, supra, the Court dealt with a film licensing standard of “sacrilegious,” which was found to have such an all-inclusive definition as to result in “substantially unbridled censorship.” 343 U. S., at 502. Following
The vice of vagueness is particularly pronounced where expression is sought to be subjected to licensing. It may be unlikely that what Dallas does in respect to the licensing of motion pictures would have a significant effect
Of course, as the Court said in Joseph Burstyn, Inc. v. Wilson, 343 U. S., at 502, “[i]t does not follow that the Constitution requires absolute freedom to exhibit every motion picture of every kind at all times and all places.” What does follow at the least, as the cases above illustrate, is that the restrictions imposed cannot be so vague as to set “the censor . . . adrift upon a boundless sea ...,” id., at 504. In short, as Justice Frankfurter said, “legislation must not be so vague, the language so loose, ás to leave to those who have to apply it too wide a discretion . . . ,” Kingsley Int'l Pictures Corp. v. Regents, 360 U. S., at 694 (concurring in result), one reason being
The dangers inherent in vagueness are strikingly illustrated in these cases. Five members of the Board viewed “Viva Maria.” Eight members voted to classify it as “not suitable for young persons,” the ninth member not voting. The Board gave no reasons for its determination.
So far as “judicial superintendence”
Thus, we are left merely with the film and directed to the words of the ordinance. The term “sexual promiscuity” is not there defined
Vagueness and the attendant evils we have earlier described, see supra, at 683-685, are not rendered less objectionable because the regulation of expression is one of classification rather than direct suppression. Cf. Bantam
“It is . . . essential that legislation aimed at protecting children from allegedly harmful expression — no less than legislation enacted with respect to adults — be clearly drawn and that the standards adopted be reasonably precise so that those who are governed by the law and those that administer it will understand its meaning and application.” People v. Kahan, 15 N. Y. 2d 311, 313, 206 N. E. 2d 333, 335 (1965) (concurring opinion).20
The vices — the lack of guidance to those who seek to adjust their conduct and to those who seek to administer
It is not our province to draft legislation. Suffice it to say that we have recognized that some believe “motion pictures possess a greater capacity for evil, particularly among the youth of a community, than other modes of expression,” Joseph Burstyn, Inc. v. Wilson, supra, at 502, and we have indicated more generally that because of its strong and abiding interest in youth, a State may regulate the dissemination to juveniles of, and their access to, material objectionable as to them, but which a State clearly could not regulate as to adults. Ginsberg v. New York, ante, p. 629,
It is so ordered.
APPENDIX TO OPINION OF THE COURT.
Chapter 46A of the 1960 Revised Code of Civil and Criminal Ordinances of the City of Dallas, as amended, provides:
Section 46A-1. Definition of Terms:
(a) “Film” means any motion picture film or series of films, whether full length or short subject, but does not include newsreels portraying actual current events or pictorial news of the day.
(b) “Exhibit” means to project a film at any motion picture theatre or other public place within the City of Dallas to which tickets are sold for admission.
(c) “Exhibitor” means any person, firm or corporation which exhibits a film.
(d) “Young person” means any person who has not attained his sixteenth birthday.
(e) “Board” means the Dallas Motion Picture Classification Board established by Section 46A-2 of this ordinance.
(f) “Not suitable for young persons” means:
(1) Describing or portraying brutality, criminal violence or depravity in such a manner as to be, in the judg
(2) Describing or portraying nudity beyond the customary limits of candor in the community, or sexual promiscuity or extra-marital or abnormal sexual relations in such a manner as to be, in the judgment of the Board, likely to incite or encourage delinquency or sexual promiscuity on the part of young persons or to appeal to their prurient interest.
A film shall be considered “likely to incite or encourage” crime delinquency or sexual promiscuity on the part of young persons, if, in the judgment of the Board, there is a substantial probability that it will create the impression on young persons that such conduct is profitable, desirable, acceptable, respectable, praiseworthy or commonly accepted. A film shall be considered as appealing to “prurient interest” of young persons, if in the judgment of the Board, its calculated or dominant effect on young persons is substantially to arouse sexual desire. In determining whether a film is “not suitable for young persons,” the Board shall consider the films as a whole, rather than isolated portions, and shall determine whether its harmful effects outweigh artistic or educational values such film may have for young persons.
(g) “Classify” means to determine whether a film is:
(1) Suitable for young persons, or;
(2) Not suitable for young persons.
(h) “Advertisement” means any commercial promotional material initiated by an exhibitor designed to bring a film to public attention or to increase the sale of tickets to exhibitions of same, whether by newspaper, billboard, motion picture, television, radio, or other media within or originating within the City of Dallas.
(i) “Initial exhibition” means the first exhibition of any film within the City of Dallas.
(k) “File” means to deliver to the City Secretary for safekeeping as a public record of the City of Dallas.
(l) “Classification order” means any written determination by a majority of the Board classifying a film, or granting or refusing an application for change of classification.
(m) The term “Board” as used and applied in subsection (a) of Section 46A-7 shall include the City of Dallas when attempting to enforce this ordinance and the City Attorney of the City of Dallas when representing the Board or the City of Dallas.
Section 46A-2. Establishment of Board:
There is hereby created a Board to be known as the Dallas Motion Picture Classification Board which shall be composed of a Chairman and Eight Members to be appointed by the Mayor and City Council of the City of Dallas, whose terms shall be the same as members of the City Council. Such members shall serve without pay and shall adopt such rules and regulations as they deem best governing their action, proceeding and deliberations and time and place of meeting. These rules and regulations shall be subject to approval of the City Council. If a vacancy occurs upon the Board by death, resignation or otherwise, the governing body of the City of Dallas shall appoint a member to fill such vacancy for the unexpired term.
The Chairman and all Members of the Board shall be good, moral, law-abiding citizens of the City of Dallas, and shall be chosen so far as reasonably practicable in such a manner that they will represent a cross section of the community. Insofar as practicable, the members appointed to the Board shall be persons educated and ex
Section 46A-3. Classification Procedure:
(a) Before any initial exhibition, the exhibitor shall file a proposed classification of the film to be exhibited, stating the title of the film and the name of the producer, and giving a summary of the plot and such other information as the Board may by rule require, together with the classification proposed by the exhibitor. The Board shall examine such proposed classification, and if it approves same, shall mark it “approved” and file it as its own classification order. If the Board fails to act, that is, either file a classification order or hold a hearing within five (5) days after such proposed classification is filed, the proposed classification shall be considered approved.
(b) If upon examination of .the proposed classification a majority of the Board is not satisfied that it is proper, the Chairman shall direct the exhibitor to project the film before any five (5) or more members of the Board, at a suitably equipped place and at a specified time, which shall be the earliest time practicable with due regard to the availability of the film. The exhibitor, or his designated representative, may at such time make such statement to the Board in support of his proposed classification and present such testimony as he may desire. Within two (2) days, the Board shall make and file its classification of the film in question.
(c) Any initial or subsequent exhibitor may file an application for a change in the classification of any film previously classified. No exhibitor shall be allowed to file more than one (1) application for change of classification of the same film. Such application shall contain a sworn statement of the grounds upon which the appli
(d) Upon filing by the Board of any classification order, the City Secretary shall immediately issue and mail a notice of classification to the exhibitor involved and to any other exhibitor who shall request such notice.
(e) A classification shall be binding on any subsequent exhibitor unless and until he obtains a change of classification in the manner above provided.
Section 46A-4. Offenses:
(a) It shall be unlawful for any exhibitor or his employee:
(1) To exhibit any film which has not been classified as provided in this ordinance.
(2) To exhibit any film classified “not suitable for young persons” if any current advertisement of such film by such exhibitor fails to state clearly the classification of such film.
(3) To exhibit any film classified “not suitable for young persons” without keeping such classification posted
(4) Knowingly to sell or give to any young person a ticket to any film classified “not suitable for young persons.”
(5) Knowingly to permit any young person to view the exhibition of any film classified “not suitable for young persons.”
(6) To exhibit any film classified “not suitable for young persons” or any scene or scenes from such a film, or from an unclassified film, whether moving or still, in the same theatre and on the same program with a film classified “suitable for young persons”; provided that any advertising preview or trailer containing a scene or scenes from an unclassified film or a film classified “not suitable for young persons” may be shown at any time if same has been separately classified as “suitable for young persons” under the provisions of Section 46A-3 of this ordinance.
(7) To make any false or willfully misleading statement in any proposed classification, application for change of classification, or any other proceeding before the Board.'
(8) To exhibit any film classified “not suitable for young persons” without having in force the license hereinafter provided.
(b) It shall be unlawful for any young person:
(1) To give his age falsely as sixteen (16) years of age or over, for the purpose of gaining admittance to an exhibition of a film classified “not suitable for young persons.”
(2) To enter or remain in the viewing room of any theatre where a film classified “not suitable for young persons” is being exhibited.
(c) It shall be unlawful for any person:
(1) To sell or give any young person a ticket to an exhibition of a film classified “not suitable for young persons.”
(2) To make any false or willfully misleading statement in an application for change of classification or in any proceeding before the Board.
(3) To make any false statements for the purpose of enabling any young person to gain admittance to the exhibition of a film classified as “not suitable for young persons.”
(d) To the extent that any prosecution or other proceeding under this ordinance, involves the entering, purchasing of a ticket, or viewing by a young person of a film classified “not suitable for young persons,” it shall be a valid defense that such young person was accompanied by his parent or legally appointed guardian, husband or wife, throughout the viewing of such film.
Section 46A-5. License:
Every exhibitor holding a motion picture theatre or motion picture show license issued pursuant to Chapter 46 of the 1960 Revised Code of Civil and Criminal Ordinances of the City of Dallas shall be entitled to issuance of a license by the City Secretary to exhibit films classified “not suitable for young persons.”
Section 46A-6. Revocation or suspension of license:
Whenever the City Attorney or any person acting under his direction, or any ten (10) citizens of the City of Dallas, shall file a sworn complaint with the City Secretary stating that any exhibitor has repeatedly violated the provisions of this ordinance, or that any
The City Council likewise, after notice and hearing, may revoke or suspend the license of any exhibitor who has refused or unreasonably failed to produce or delayed the submission of a film for review, when requested by the Board.
Section 46A-7. Judicial Review:
(a) Within two (2) days after the filing of any classification by the Board, other than an order approving the classification proposed by an exhibitor,' any exhibitor may file a notice of non-acceptance of the Board’s classification, stating his intention to exhibit the film in question under a different classification. Thereupon it shall be the duty of the Board to do the following:
(I) Within three (3) days thereafter to make application to a District Court of Dallas County, Texas, for a temporary and a permanent injunction to enjoin such
(2) To have said application for temporary injunction set for hearing within five (5) days after the filing thereof. In the event the defendant-exhibitor appears at or before the time of the hearing of such temporary injunction, waives the notice otherwise provided by the Texas Rules of Civil Procedure, and requests that at the time set for such hearing the Court proceed to hear the case under the Texas Rules of Civil Procedure for permanent injunction on its merits, the Board shall be required to waive its application for temporary injunction and shall join in such request. In the event the defendant-exhibitor does not waive notice and/or does not request an early hearing on the Board’s application for permanent injunction, it shall nevertheless be the duty of the board to obtain the earliest possible setting for such hearing under the provisions of State law and the Texas Rules of Civil Procedure.
(3) If the injunction is granted by the trial court and the defendant-exhibitor appeals to the Court of Civil Appeals, the Board shall waive any and all statutory notices and times as provided for in the Texas State Statutes and Texas Rules of Civil Procedure,, and shall within five (5) days after receiving a copy of appealing exhibitor’s brief, file its reply brief, if required, and be prepared to submit the case upon oral submission or take any other reasonable action requested by the appealing exhibitor to expedite the submission of the case to the Court of Civil. Appeals, and shall upon request of the appealing exhibitor, jointly with such exhibitor, request the Court of Civil Appeals to advance the cause upon the docket and to give it a preferential setting the same as is afforded an appeal from a temporary injunction or other preferential matters.
(5) If the District Court denies the Board’s application for injunction, and the Board elects to appeal, the Board shall be required to waive all periods of time allowed it by the Texas Rules of Civil Procedure and if a motion for a new trial is required, shall file said motion within two (2) days after the signing of the judgment, (or on the following Monday if said period ends on a Saturday or Sunday, or on the day following if the period ends on a Legal Holiday), shall not amend said motion and shall obtain a hearing on such motion within five (5) days time. If no motion for new trial is required as a prerequisite to an appeal under the Texas Rules of Civil Procedure, the Board shall not file such a motion. Within ten (10) days after the judgment is signed by the District Court denying such injunction or within ten (10) days after the order overruling the Board’s motion for new trial is signed, if such motion is required, the Board shall complete all steps neces
(6) If the Court of Civil Appeals reverses the trial court after the trial court has granted an injunction, or if the Court of Civil Appeals refuses to reverse the trial court after that court has failed to grant an injunction, then if the Board desires to appeal from the decision of the Court of Civil Appeals by writ of error to the Supreme Court of the State of Texas, it must file its motion for rehearing within two (2) days of rendition of the decision of the Court of Civil Appeals (or on the following Monday, if said period ends on a Saturday or Sunday, or on the day following if the period ends on a Legal Holiday), and shall file its application for writ of error within ten (10) days after the Court of Civil Appeals’ order overruling such motion for rehearing, and failure to do so shall waive all rights to appeal from the decision of the Court of Civil Appeals. At the time of filing the application for writ of error, the Board shall also request the Supreme Court to give the case a preferential setting and advance the same on the docket.
(b) The filing of such notice of non-acceptance shall not suspend or set aside the Board’s order, but such order shall be suspended at the end of ten (10) days after the filing of such notice unless an injunction is issued within such period.
(c) Failure of any exhibitor to file the notice of nonacceptance within two (2) days as required in Subdivision (1) of this Section 46A-7, shall constitute acceptance
Section 46A-8. Public Nuisances:
The following acts are declared to be public nuisances:
(a) Any violation of Subdivisions (1), (2), (3), or (6), of Subdivision (a) of Section 46A-4 of this ordinance.
(b) Any exhibition of a film classified as “not suitable for young persons” at which more than three (3) young persons are admitted.
(c) Any exhibition of a film classified as “not suitable for young persons” by an exhibitor who fails to use reasonable diligence to determine whether persons admitted to such exhibitions, are persons under the age of sixteen (16) years.
(d) Any exhibition of a film classified as “not suitable for young persons” by an exhibitor who has been convicted of as many as three (3) violations of Subdivisions (4) or (5) of Subdivision (a) of Section 46A-4 of this ordinance in connection with the exhibition of the same film.
Section 46A-9. Injunctions:
Whenever the Board has probable cause to believe that any exhibitor has committed any of the acts declared in Section 46A-8 above to be a public nuisance, the Board shall have the duty to make application to a court of competent jurisdiction for an injunction restraining the commission of such acts.
Section 46A-10. Exemption to State Law:
Nothing in this ordinance shall be construed to regulate public exhibitions pre-empted by Article 527 of the Penal Code of the State of Texas, as amended.
Should any section, subsection, sentence, provision, clause or phrase be held to be invalid for any reason, such holding shall not render invalid any other section, subsection, sentence, provision, clause or phrase of this ordinance, and the same are deemed severable for this purpose.
SECTION 2. That any person who shall violate any provisions of this ordinance shall be guilty of a misdemeanor and upon conviction thereof shall be subject to a fine not to exceed Two Hundred Dollars ($200.00) and each offense shall be deemed to be a separate violation and punishable as a separate offense, and each day that a film is exhibited which has not been classified according to this ordinance shall be a separate offense.
SECTION 3. That Ordinance No. 10963 heretofore enacted by the City Council of the City of Dallas on April 5, 1965, be and the same is hereby in all things repealed and held for naught, and this ordinance is enacted in lieu thereof.
SECTION 4. The fact that Ordinance No. 10963 previously passed by the City Council of the City of Dallas has been declared to be unenforceable in the Courts by the Federal District Court, creates an urgency and an emergency in the preservation of the public peace, comfort and general welfare and requires that this ordinance shall take effect immediately from and after its passage, and it is accordingly so ordained.
402 S. W. 2d 770 (1966). Tbe Texas Supreme Court denied discretionary review and therefore tbe appeal is from tbe judgment of tbe Court of Civil Appeals. 28 U. S. C. § 1257 (2).
The ordinance is set forth in an Appendix to this opinion. Tbe parties disagree as to the meaning of certain of its provisions that have not been authoritatively interpreted by courts of the. State. The differences are not material to our decision, however, and the summary of the ordinance in the text above should not be taken as acceptance by us of any .of the parties’ conflicting interpretations, nor as expressing any view on the validity of provisions of the ordinance not challenged here.
The two-day period is apparently part of an attempt to assure prompt final determination. The ordinance also provides that “any initial or subsequent exhibitor” may seek reclassification of a film previously classified.
Appellants assert that, despite the seemingly clear words of the suspension provision, exhibitors in practice have not been free to show films without a not suitable notification while a court challenge is pending, even though an injunction has not issued within the 10-day period. See n. 2, supra.
Appellee says that youths under 16 years of age accompanied throughout the showing of the picture by a guardian (parent) or spouse, may attend not suitable films. Appellants read the ordinance as making the existence of such accompaniment solely a matter of defense should a criminal prosecution ensue. See n. 2, supra.
See n. 6, supra. It appears that a parent who purchases a ticket to a not suitable film and gives it to his child is subject to the
In related litigation, the provision for revocation of the special license was held unconstitutional as violative of Butler v. Michigan, 352 U. S. 380 (1957), by District Judge Hughes, 249 F. Supp. 19, 25 (D. C. N. D. Tex., 1965), and that ruling was not challenged on appeal. See Interstate Circuit, Inc. v. City of Dallas, 366 F. 2d 590, 593, n. 5 (C. A. 5th Cir. 1966).
See also Teitel Film Corp. v. Cusack, ante, p. 139.
There are numerous state cases to the same effect. See, e. g. Police Commissioner v. Siegel Enterprises, Inc., 223 Md. 110, 162 A. 2d 727, cert. denied, 364 U. S. 909 (1960) (“violent bloodshed, lust or immorality or which, for a child below the age of eighteen, are obscene, lewd, lascivious, filthy, indecent or disgusting and so presented as reasonably to tend to incite such a child to violence or depraved or immoral acts”); People v. Kahan, 15 N. Y. 2d 311, 206 N. E. 2d 333 (1965); People v. Bookcase, Inc., 14 N. Y. 2d 409, 201 N. E. 2d 14 (1964) (“descriptions of illicit sex or sexual immorality”); Hallmark Productions, Inc. v. Carroll, 384 Pa. 348, 121 A. 2d 584 (1956) (“sacrilegious, obscene, indecent, or immoral, or such as tend ... to debase or corrupt morals”). In Paramount Film Distributing Corp. v. City of Chicago, 172 F. Supp. 69 (D. C. N. D. Ill. 1959), it was alternatively held that the standard “tends toward creating a harmful impression on the minds of children” was indefinite; that provision had no further legislative or judicial definition and is therefore unlike the statute in Ginsberg v. New York, ante, at 643, where the phrase “harmful to minors” is specifically and narrowly defined in accordance with tests this Court has set forth for judging obscenity.
See also Amsterdam, Note, The Void-for-Vagueness Doctrine in the Supreme Court, 109 U. Pa. L. Rev. 67, 90 (1960); Klein, Film Censorship: The American and British Experience, 12 Vill. L. Rev. 419, 428 (1967).
The ordinance does not require the Board to give reasons for its action. Compare ACLU v. City of Chicago, 13 Ill. App. 2d 278, 286, 141 N. E. 2d 56, 60 (1957):
“[T]he censoring authority, in refusing to issue a permit for showing the film, should be obliged to specify reasons for so doing .... The trial court, as well as the reviewing court, would then have a record, in addition to the film itself, on which to decide whether the ban should be approved. . . . Without such procedure, the courts become, not only the final tribunal to pass upon films, but the only tribunal to assume the responsibilities of the censoring authority.”
Accord, Zenith Int’l Film Corp. v. City of Chicago, 291 F. 2d 785 (C. A. 7th Cir. 1961). See also Note, 71 Harv. L. Rev. 326, 338 (1957).
Bantam Books, Inc. v. Sullivan, 372 U. S. 58, 70 (1963). See Freedman v. Maryland, supra.
In response to a request that he make findings, the trial judge stated: “I decline. I have so many irons for a little fellow. I have taken on more than I can do, trying to decide a big case here, and I have got others at home and here and in Hill County where I have been helping out, and I do not have time to do it. I decline.”
Appellants also contend here that, in addition to its vagueness, the ordinance is invalid because it authorizes the restraint of films
A concurring justice of that court, with whom the author of the majority opinion agreed, specifically rejected the view that obscenity standards were relevant at all in determining the limits of the ordinance. But nothing in that opinion clarifies the standards adopted. 402 S. W. 2d, at 777-779.
Appellee adopted an amendment to the ordinance in March 1966, which is not involved here. It defines “sexual promiscuity” as “indiscriminate sexual intimacies beyond the customary limits of candor in the community, and said term as defined herein shall include, but not be limited to sexual intercourse as that term is defined.”
An alternative to “likely to incite” because the portrayal might “create the impression . . . [the] conduct is profitable, desirable,” etc., is set forth in the ordinance. That is if the manner of presentation is “likely ... to appeal to their [young persons’] prurient interest.” That alternative, however, was not relied upon by the Board members who testified, nor by the appellate court.
In Bantam Books, the Commission there charged with reviewing material “manifestly tending to the corruption of the youth” (372 U. S., at 59) had no direct regulatory or suppressing functions, although its informal sanctions were found to achieve the same result. The Court held that “system of informal censorship” {id,., at 71) to violate the Fourteenth Amendment. One important factor in that decision was the Commission’s “vague and uninformative” mandate, which the Commission in practice had “done nothing to make . . . more precise.” Ibid. See also I. Carmen, Movies, Censorship, and the Law, passim (1966); Klein, Film Censorship: The American and British Experience, 12 Vill. L. Rev. 419, 455 (1967); Note, 71 Harv. L. Rev. 326, 342 (1957).
See also, e. g., Katzev v. County of Los Angeles, 52 Cal. 2d 360, 341 P. 2d 310 (1959) (magazine sales to minors under age 18); People v. Bookcase, Inc., supra, n. 10 (book sales to minors under age 18); Police Commissioner v. Siegel Enterprises, Inc., supra, n. 10 (sale of certain publications to those under 18); Paramount Film Distributing Corp. v. City of Chicago, supra, n. 10 (special license for films deemed objectionable for those under age 21).
On age classification with regard to viewing motion pictures, see generally I. Carmen, Movies, Censorship, and the Law 247-260 (1966); Note, 69 Yale L. J. 141 (1959).
Appellants also assert that the city ordinance violates the teachings of Freedman v. Maryland, supra, because it does not secure prompt state appellate review. The assurance of a “prompt final judicial decision” (380 U. S., at 59) is made here, we think, by the guaranty of a speedy determination in the trial court (in this case nine days after the Board's classification). See Teitel Film Corp. v Cusack, ante, p. 139. Nor is Freedman violated by the requirement that the exhibitor file a notice of nonacceptance of the Board’s classification. To be sure, it is emphasized in Freedman that “only a procedure requiring a judicial determination suffices to impose a valid final restraint” (380 U. S., at 58), and here if the exhibitor chooses not to file the notice of nonacceptance, the Board’s determination is final without judicial approval. But we are not constrained to view that procedure as invalid in the absence of a showing that it has any significantly greater effect than would the exhibitor’s decision not to contest in court the Board’s suit for a temporary injunction. The ordinance provides that the Board has the burden of going to court to seek a temporary injunction, once
Finally, appellant United Artists contends the ordinance unconstitutionally infringes upon its rights by not providing for participation by a distributor, who might wish to contest where an exhibitor would not. Of course the distributor must be permitted to challenge the classification, cf. Bantam Books, Inc. v. Sullivan, 372 U. S. 58, 64, n. 6 (1963), but the appellee assures us he may (see n. 2, supra), and United Artists was permitted to intervene in the trial court.
Concurring Opinion
concurring in No. 47, ante, p. 629, and dissenting in Nos. 56 and 64.
These cases usher the Court into a new phase of the intractable obscenity problem: may a State prevent the dissemination of obscene or other obnoxious material to juveniles upon standards less stringent than those which would govern its distribution to adults?
In No. 47, the Ginsberg case, the Court upholds a New York statute applicable only to juveniles which, as construed by the state courts, in effect embodies in diluted form the “adult” obscenity standards established by Roth v. United States, 354 U. S. 476, and the prevailing opinion in Memoirs v. Massachusetts, 383 U. S. 413. In Nos. 56 and 64, the Interstate Circuit and United Artists cases, the Court, strikes down on-the', ground of vagueness a similar Dallas ordinance, not couched, however, entirely in obscenity terms. In none of these cases does the Court pass judgment on the particular material condemned by the state courts.
As the Court enters this new area of obscenity law it is well to take stock of where we are at present in this constitutional field. The subject of obscenity has produced a variety of views among the members of the Court unmatched in any other course of constitutional
There are also differences among us as to how our appellate process should work in reviewing obscenity determinations. One view is that we should simply examine the proceedings below to ascertain whether the lower federal or state courts have made a genuine effort to apply the Roth-Memoirs-Ginzburg tests, and that if such is the case, their determinations that the questioned
The upshot of all this divergence in viewpoint is that anyone who undertakes to examine the Court’s decisions since Both which have held particular material obscene or not obscene would find himself in utter bewilderment.
I believe that no improvement in this chaotic state of affairs is likely to come until it is recognized that this whole problem is primarily one of state concern, and
I come now to the cases at hand. In No. 47, Ginsberg, I concur in the judgment and join the opinion of the Court, fully preserving, however, the views repeatedly expressed in my earlier opinions in this field.
In Nos. 56 and 64, the Interstate Circuit and United Artists cases, I respectfully dissent. I do not agree that the Dallas ordinance can be struck down, as the Court now holds, on the score of vagueness. The ambiguities about which the Court expresses concern are essentially two.
These seem to me entirely inadequate grounds on which to strike down the ordinance. It must be granted, of course, that people may differ as to the application of these standards; but the central lesson of this Court’s efforts in this area is that under all verbal formulae, including even this Court’s own definition of obscenity, reasonable men can, and ordinarily do, differ as to the proper assessment of challenged materials. The truth is that the Court has demanded greater precision of language from the City of Dallas than the Court can itself give, or even than can sensibly be expected in this area of the law.
The Court has not always asked so much.
Although the Court finds it unnecessary to pass judgment upon the materials involved in these cases, I consider it preferable to face that question. Upon the premises set forth in my Roth and Memoirs opinions, and reiterated here, I would hold that in condemning these materials New York and the City of Dallas have acted within constitutional limits.
I would affirm the judgments in all three cases.
In the following 13 obscenity cases from the date Roth was decided, in which signed opinions were written for a decision or judgment of the Court, there has been a total of 55 separate opinions among the Justices. Kingsley Books, Inc. v. Brown, 354 U. S. 436 (four opinions); Roth v. United States, supra (four opinions); Kingsley Int’l Pictures Corp. v. Regents, 360 U. S. 684 (six opinions); Smith v. California, 361 U. S. 147 (five opinions); Times Film Corp. v. Chicago, 365 U. S. 43 (three opinions); Marcus v. Search Warrant, 367 U. S. 717 (two opinions); Manual Enterprises v. Day, 370 U. S. 478 (three opinions); Bantam Books, Inc. v. Sullivan, 372 U. S. 58 (four opinions); Jacobellis v. Ohio, 378 U. S. 184 (six opinions); A Quantity of Books v. Kansas, 378 U. S. 205 (four opinions); Memoirs v. Massachusetts, supra (five opinions); Ginzburg v. United States, 383 U. S. 463 (five opinions); Mishkin v. New York, 383 U. S. 502 (four opinions).
See Roth v. United States, supra, at 508 (dissenting opinion); Jacobellis v. Ohio, supra, at 196 (separate opinion); Ginzburg v. United States, supra, at 476, 482 (dissenting opinions).
Roth stated the test to be “whether to the average person, applying contemporary community standards, the dominant theme of the material taken as a whole appeals to prurient interest.”. 354 U. S., at 489 (note omitted).
Memoirs elaborated the Roth test as follows: “it must be established that (a) the dominant theme of the material taken as a whole appeals to a prurient interest in sex; (b) the material is patently offensive because it affronts contemporary community standards relating to the description or representation of sexual matters; and (c) the material is utterly without redeeming social value.” 383 U. S., at 418.
The Ginzburg “test” is difficult to state with any precision. The Court held that “in close cases evidence of pandering may be
See, e. g., Jacobellis v. Ohio, supra, at 193-195 (opinion of Brennan, J.).
See id., at 197 (concurring opinion of Stewart, J.).
See Roth v. United States, supra, at 496 (concurring and dissenting opinion); Memoirs v. Massachusetts, supra, at 455 (dissenting opinion).
See Jacobellis v. Ohio, supra, at 202 (dissenting opinion).
See Jacobellis, at 190 (opinion of Brennan, J.); Roth v. United States, supra, at 497-498 (concurring and dissenting opinion); Kingsley Int’l Pictures Corp. v. Regents, supra, at 708 (concurring in result).
See, e. g., Keney v. New York, 388 U. S. 440; Friedman v. New York, 388 U. S. 441; Ratner v. California, 388 U. S. 442; Cobert v. New York, 388 U. S. 443; Sheperd v. New York, 388 U. S. 444; Avansino v. New York, 388 U. S. 446; Aday v. United States, 388 U. S. 447; Corinth Publications, Inc. v. Wesberry, 388 U. S. 448; Books, Inc. v. United States, 388 U. S. 449; Rosenbloom v. Virginia, 388 U. S. 450; A Quantity of Copies of Books v. Kansas, 388 U. S. 452; Mazes v. Ohio, 388 U. S. 453; Schackman v. California, 388 U. S. 454; Landau v. Fording, 388 U. S. 456; Potomac News Co. v. United States, 389 U. S. 47; Conner v. City of Hammond, 389 U. S. 48; Central Magazine Sales, Ltd. v. United States, 389 U. S. 50; Chance v. California, 389 U. S. 89.
The Court emphasizes at greater length the failure of the Board and the Texas courts to proffer any clarification of the ordinance. This compels examination of the ordinance’s terms, but it does
The Court acknowledges that the city has since adopted a definition of sexual promiscuity, but it expresses no views as to the definition’s adequacy.
It is pertinent to note that a majority of the Court did not hold that the New York statute at issue in Kingsley Int’l Pictures Corp. v. Regents, supra, was impermissibly vague. The statute forbade the exhibition of a film “which portrays acts of sexual immorality ... or .. . presents such acts as desirable, acceptable or proper patterns of behavior.” Id., at 685. It appears that only the opinion of Mr. Justice Clark, concurring in the result, upon which the Court now relies so heavily, described this standard as vague. Indeed, Mr. Justice Frankfurter said in his separate opinion that the “Court does not strike the law down because of vagueness ....’’ Id., at
The statute involved in Both now provides in part that it is a criminal offense to import or transport in interstate commerce any “obscene, lewd, lascivious, or filthy book, pamphlet, picture, motion-picture film, paper, letter, writing, print, or other matter of indecent character ....’’ 18 U. S. C. § 1462. Similarly, § 1461 provides that it is a criminal offense to mail any “obscene, lewd, lascivious, indecent, filthy or vile” article. See also §§ 1463, 1464, 1465. Although each of these sections makes profuse use of the disjunctive, no definitions of any of these descriptive terms are provided.
The Court went on to say that it “is argued that because juries may reach different conclusions as to the same material, the statutes must be held to be insufficiently precise to satisfy due process requirements. But, it is common experience that different juries may reach different results under any criminal statute. That is one of the consequences we accept under our jury system.” 354 U. S., at 492, n. 30. Precisely similar reasoning should be applicable to boards like that created by the Dallas ordinance, although the cost of differences in result is here measured (at least initially) by film classifications, and not by lengthy terms of imprisonment.
It is difficult to see how the Court could suppose that its Memoirs formula offers more precise warnings to film makers than does the Dallas ordinance. Surely the Court cannot now believe that “redeeming social value,” “patent offensiveness,” and “prurient interest” are, particularly as modified so as to apply to children, terms of common understanding and clarity. Moreover, one wonders whether the pandering rationale adopted in Ginzburg v. United, States, supra, is thought to give more “guidance to those who seek to adjust their conduct” than does the Dallas ordinance. It is difficult to imagine any standard more vague, or more overbroad, than the “new subjectivity” created by the Court’s search for the “leer of the sensualist.” See Magrath, The Obscenity Cases: Grapes of Roth, 1966 Sup. Ct. Rev. 7, 61.
Concurring Opinion
concurring.
As I indicated in my dissenting opinion in Ginsberg v. New York, ante, p. 650, if we assume arguendo that the censorship of obscene publications, whether for children or for adults, is in the area of substantive due proc
My approach to these problems is, of course, quite different. I reach the result the Court reaches for the reasons stated in my dissenting opinions in Ginsberg and other cases and therefore concur in reversing the present judgment.
Reference
- Cited By
- 354 cases
- Status
- Published