1. As respects the amount in controversy, the District Court has
jurisdiction of a suit where the requisite value is involved as to
each of several plaintiffs though not involved as to others. P.
297 U. S.
241.
2. A motion to dismiss the whole case because the amount in
controversy as to some of the plaintiffs is too small should be
overruled.
Id.
3. There is equitable jurisdiction to enjoin collection of an
allegedly unconstitutional state tax where the taxpayer, if he
pays, is afforded no clear remedy of restitution. P.
297 U. S.
242.
4. Liberty of the press is a fundamental right protected against
state aggression by the due process clause of the Fourteenth
Amendment. P.
297 U. S.
242.
5. The fact that, as regards the Federal Government, the
protection of this right is not left to the due process clause of
the Fifth Amendment, but is guaranteed
in specie by the
First Amendment, is not a sufficient reason for excluding it from
the due process clause of the Fourteenth Amendment. P.
297 U. S.
243.
6. A corporation is a "person" within the meaning of the due
process and equal protection clauses of the Fourteenth Amendment.
P.
297 U. S.
244.
7. A State license tax (La.Act No. 23, July 12, 1934) imposed on
the owners of newspapers for the privilege of selling or charging
for the advertising therein, and measured by a percent. of the
gross receipts from such advertisements, but applicable only to
newspapers enjoying a circulation of more than 20,000 copies per
week,
held unconstitutional. P.
297 U. S.
244.
8. From the history of the subject, it is plain that the English
rule restricting freedom of the press to immunity from censorship
before publication was not accepted by the American colonists, and
that the First Amendment was aimed at any form of previous
restraint upon printed publications or their circulation, including
restraint by taxation of newspapers and their advertising, which
were well known and odious methods still used in England when the
First Amendment was adopted. P.
297 U. S.
245.
Page 297 U. S. 234
9. The predominant purpose of the grant of immunity was to
preserve an untrammeled press as a vital source of public
information. P.
297 U. S.
250.
10. Construction of a constitutional provision phrased in terms
of the common law is not determined by rules of the common law
which had been rejected in this country as unsuited to local civil
or political conditions. P.
297 U. S.
248.
It is not intended in this case to suggest that the owners of
newspapers are immune from any of the ordinary forms of taxation
for support of Government. The tax in question is not an ordinary
form of tax, but one single in kind, with a long history of hostile
misuse against the freedom of the press. The manner of its use in
this case is, in itself, suspicious; it is not measured or limited
by the volume of advertisements, but by the extent of the
circulation of the publication in which the advertisements are
carried, with the plain purpose of penalizing the publishers and
curtailing the circulation of a selected group of newspapers.
10 F. Supp. 161, affirmed.
APPEAL from a decree permanently enjoining the enforcement of a
state tax on newspapers.
Page 297 U. S. 240
MR. JUSTICE SUTHERLAND delivered the opinion of the Court.
This suit was brought by appellees, nine publishers of
newspapers in the State of Louisiana, to enjoin the enforcement
against them of the provisions of § 1 of the act of the
legislature of Louisiana known as Act No. 23, passed and approved
July 12, 1934, as follows:
"That every person, firm, association, or corporation, domestic
or foreign, engaged in the business of selling, or making any
charge for, advertising or for advertisements, whether printed or
published, or to be printed or published, in any newspaper,
magazine, periodical or publication whatever having a circulation
of more than 20,000 copies per week, or displayed and exhibited, or
to be displayed and exhibited by means of moving pictures, in the
State of Louisiana, shall, in addition to all other taxes and
licenses levied and assessed in this State, pay a license tax for
the privilege of engaging in such business in this State of two
percent. (2%) of the gross receipts of such business."
The nine publishers who brought the suit publish thirteen
newspapers, and these thirteen publications are the
Page 297 U. S. 241
only ones within the State of Louisiana having each a
circulation of more than 20,000 copies per week, although the lower
court finds there are four other daily newspapers each having a
circulation of "slightly less than 20,000 copies per week" which
are in competition with those published by appellees both as to
circulation and as to advertising. In addition, there are 120
weekly newspapers published in the state, also in competition, to a
greater or less degree, with the newspapers of appellees. The
revenue derived from appellees' newspapers comes almost entirely
from regular subscribers or purchasers thereof and from payments
received for the insertion of advertisements therein.
The act requires everyone subject to the tax to file a sworn
report every three months showing the amount and the gross receipts
from the business described in § 1. The resulting tax must be
paid when the report is filed. Failure to file the report or pay
the tax as thus provided constitutes a misdemeanor and subjects the
offender to a fine not exceeding $500, or imprisonment not
exceeding six months, or both, for each violation. Any corporation
violating the act subjects itself to the payment of $50 to be
recovered by suit. All of the appellees are corporations. The lower
court entered a decree for appellees and granted a permanent
injunction. 10 F. Supp. 161.
First. Appellant assails the federal jurisdiction of
the court below on the ground that the matter in controversy does
not exceed the sum or value of $3,000, as required by par. 1 of
§ 24 of the Judicial Code. The case arises under the Federal
Constitution, and the bill alleges, and the record shows, that the
requisite amount is involved in respect of each of six of the nine
appellees. This is enough to sustain the jurisdiction of the
district court. The motion was to dismiss the bill -- that is to
say, the bill in its entirety -- and in that form it was properly
denied. No motion to dismiss was made or considered
Page 297 U. S. 242
by the lower court as to the three appellees in respect of whom
the Jurisdictional amount was insufficient, and that question,
therefore, is not before us.
The Rio
Grande, 19 Wall. 178,
86 U. S. 189;
Gibson v. Shufelt, 122 U. S. 27,
122 U. S.
32.
Second. The objection also is made that the bill does
not make a case for equitable relief. But the objection is clearly
without merit. As pointed out in
Ohio Oil Co. v. Conway,
279 U. S. 813,
279 U. S. 815,
the laws of Louisiana afford no remedy whereby restitution of taxes
and property exacted may be enforced, even where payment has been
made under both protest and compulsion. It is true that the present
act contains a provision (§ 5) to the effect that, where it is
established to the satisfaction of the Supervisor of Public
Accounts of the state that any payment has been made under the act
which was "not due and collectible," the Supervisor is authorized
to refund the amount out of any funds on hand collected by virtue
of the act and not remitted to the state treasurer according to
law. It seems clear that this refers only to a payment not due and
collectible within the terms of the act, and does not authorize a
refund on the ground that the act is invalid. Moreover, the act
allows the Supervisor to make remittances immediately to the state
treasurer of taxes paid under the act, and requires him to do so
not later than the 30th day after the last day of the preceding
quarter, in which event the right to a refund, if not sooner
exercised, would be lost. Whether an aggrieved taxpayer may obtain
relief under § 5 is, at best, a matter of speculation. In no
view can it properly be said that there exists a plain, adequate
and complete remedy at law.
Davis v. Wakelee, 156 U.
S. 680,
156 U. S. 688;
Union Pacific R. Co. v. Weld County, 247 U.
S. 282,
247 U. S.
285.
Third. The validity of the act is assailed as violating
the Federal Constitution in two particulars -- (1) that it abridges
the freedom of the press in contravention of the due process clause
contained in § 1 of the Fourteenth
Page 297 U. S. 243
Amendment; (2) that it denies appellees the equal protection of
the laws in contravention of the same Amendment.
1. The first point presents a question of the utmost gravity and
importance, for, if well made, it goes to the heart of the natural
right of the members of an organized society, united for their
common good, to impart and acquire information about their common
interests. The First Amendment to the Federal Constitution provides
that "Congress shall make no law . . . abridging the freedom of
speech, or of the press. . . ." While this provision is not a
restraint upon the powers of the states, the states are precluded
from abridging the freedom of speech or of the press by force of
the due process clause of the Fourteenth Amendment.
In the case of
Hurtado v. California, 110 U.
S. 516, this Court held that the term "due process of
law" does not require presentment or indictment by a grand jury as
a prerequisite to prosecution by a state for a criminal offense.
And the important point of that conclusion here is that it was
deduced from the fact that the Fifth Amendment, which contains the
due process of law clause in its national aspect, also required an
indictment as a prerequisite to a prosecution for crime under
federal law, and it was thought that, since no part of the
amendment could be regarded as superfluous, the term "due process
of law" did not,
ex vi termini, include presentment or
indictment by a grand jury in any case, and that the due process of
law clause of the Fourteenth Amendment should be interpreted as
having been used in the same sense, and as having no greater
extent. But in
Powell v. Alabama, 287 U. S.
45,
287 U. S. 65,
287 U. S. 68, we
held that, in the light of subsequent decisions, the sweeping
language of the
Hurtado case could not be accepted without
qualification. We concluded that certain fundamental rights,
safeguarded by the first eight amendments against federal action,
were also safeguarded
Page 297 U. S. 244
against state action by the due process of law clause of the
Fourteenth Amendment, and among them, the fundamental right of the
accused to the aid of counsel in a criminal prosecution.
That freedom of speech and of the press are rights of the same
fundamental character, safeguarded by the due process of law clause
of the Fourteenth Amendment against abridgement by state
legislation, has likewise been settled by a series of decisions of
this Court beginning with
Gitlow v. New York, 268 U.
S. 652,
268 U. S. 666,
and ending with
Near v. Minnesota, 283 U.
S. 697,
283 U. S. 707.
The word "liberty" contained in that amendment embraces not only
the right of a person to be free from physical restraint, but the
right to be free in the enjoyment of all his faculties as well.
Allgeyer v. Louisiana, 165 U. S. 578,
165 U. S.
589.
Appellant contends that the Fourteenth Amendment does not apply
to corporations; but this is only partly true. A corporation, we
have held, is not a "citizen" within the meaning of the privileges
and immunities clause.
Paul v.
Virginia, 8 Wall. 168. But a corporation is a
"person" within the meaning of the equal protection and due process
of law clauses, which are the clauses involved here.
Covington
& Lexington Turnpike Co. v. Sandford, 164 U.
S. 578,
164 U. S. 592;
Smyth v. Ames, 169 U. S. 466,
169 U. S.
522.
The tax imposed is designated a "license tax for the privilege
of engaging in such business" -- that is to say, the business of
selling, or making any charge for, advertising. As applied to
appellees, it is a tax of two percent. on the gross receipts
derived from advertisements carried in their newspapers when, and
only when, the newspapers of each enjoy a circulation of more than
20,000 copies per week. It thus operates as a restraint in a double
sense. First, its effect is to curtail the amount of revenue
realized from advertising, and, second, its direct
Page 297 U. S. 245
tendency is to restrict circulation. This is plain enough when
we consider that, if it were increased to a high degree, as it
could be if valid (
Magnano Co. v. Hamilton, 292 U. S.
40,
292 U. S. 45,
and cases cited), it well might result in destroying both
advertising and circulation.
A determination of the question whether the tax is valid in
respect of the point now under review requires an examination of
the history and circumstances which antedated and attended the
adoption of the abridgement clause of the First Amendment, since
that clause expresses one of those "fundamental principles of
liberty and justice which lie at the base of all our civil and
political institutions" (
Hebert v. Louisiana, 272 U.
S. 312,
272 U. S.
316), and, as such, is embodied in the concept "due
process of law" (
Twining v. New Jersey, 211 U. S.
78,
211 U. S. 99),
and, therefore, protected against hostile state invasion by the due
process clause of the Fourteenth Amendment.
Cf. Powell v.
Alabama, supra, pp.
287 U. S. 67-68.
The history is a long one, but, for present purposes, it may be
greatly abbreviated.
For more than a century prior to the adoption of the amendment
-- and, indeed, for many years thereafter -- history discloses a
persistent effort on the part of the British government to prevent
or abridge the free expression of any opinion which seemed to
criticize or exhibit in an unfavorable light, however truly, the
agencies and operations of the government. The struggle between the
proponents of measures to that end and those who asserted the right
of free expression was continuous and unceasing. As early as 1644,
John Milton, in an "Appeal for the Liberty of Unlicensed Printing,"
assailed an act of Parliament which had just been passed providing
for censorship of the press previous to publication. He vigorously
defended the right of every man to make public his honest views
"without previous censure", and declared the impossibility of
finding any man base enough to accept
Page 297 U. S. 246
the office of censor and at the same time good enough to be
allowed to perform its duties. Collett, History of the Taxes on
Knowledge, vol. I, pp. 6. The act expired by its own terms in 1695.
It was never renewed, and the liberty of the press thus became, as
pointed out by Wickwar (The Struggle for the Freedom of the Press,
p. 15), merely "a right or liberty to publish
without a
license what formerly could be published only
with one."
But mere exemption from previous censorship was soon recognized as
too narrow a view of the liberty of the press.
In 1712, in response to a message from Queen Anne (Hansard's
Parliamentary History of England, vol. 6, p. 1063), Parliament
imposed a tax upon all newspapers and upon advertisements. Collett,
vol. I, pp. 8-10. That the main purpose of these taxes was to
suppress the publication of comments and criticisms objectionable
to the Crown does not admit of doubt. Stewart, Lennox and the Taxes
on Knowledge, 15 Scottish Historical Review, 322-327. There
followed more than a century of resistance to, and evasion of, the
taxes, and of agitation for their repeal. In the article last
referred to (p. 326), which was written in 1918, it was pointed out
that these taxes constituted one of the factors that aroused the
American colonists to protest against taxation for the purposes of
the home government, and that the revolution really began when, in
1765, that government sent stamps for newspaper duties to the
American colonies.
These duties were quite commonly characterized as "taxes on
knowledge," a phrase used for the purpose of describing the effect
of the exactions and at the same time condemning them. That the
taxes had, and were intended to have, the effect of curtailing the
circulation of newspapers, and particularly the cheaper ones whose
readers were generally found among the masses of the people, went
almost without question, even on the part of
Page 297 U. S. 247
those who defended the act. May (Constitutional History of
England, 7th ed., vol. 2, p. 245), after discussing the control by
"previous censure," says:
". . . a new restraint was devised in the form of a stamp duty
on newspapers and advertisements -- avowedly for the purpose of
repressing libels. This policy, being found effectual in limiting
the circulation of cheap papers, was improved upon in the two
following reigns, and continued in high esteem until our own
time."
Collett (vol. I, p. 14), says,
"Any man who carried on printing or publishing for a livelihood
was actually at the mercy of the Commissioners of Stamps, when they
chose to exert their powers."
Citations of similar import might be multiplied many times, but
the foregoing is enough to demonstrate beyond peradventure that, in
the adoption of the English newspaper stamp tax and the tax on
advertisements, revenue was of subordinate concern, and that the
dominant and controlling aim was to prevent, or curtail the
opportunity for, the acquisition of knowledge by the people in
respect of their governmental affairs. It is idle to suppose that
so many of the best men of England would for a century of time have
waged, as they did, stubborn and often precarious warfare against
these taxes if a mere matter of taxation had been involved. The aim
of the struggle was not to relieve taxpayers from a burden, but to
establish and preserve the right of the English people to full
information in respect of the doings or misdoings of their
government. Upon the correctness of this conclusion the very
characterization of the exactions as "taxes on knowledge" sheds a
flood of corroborative light. In the ultimate, an informed and
enlightened public opinion was the thing at stake, for, as Erskine,
in his great speech in defense of Paine, has said, "The liberty of
opinion keeps governments themselves in due subjection to their
Page 297 U. S. 248
duties." Erskine's Speeches, High's ed. vol. I, p. 525.
See May's Constitutional History of England, 7th ed., vol.
2, pp. 238-245.
In 1785, only four years before Congress had proposed the First
Amendment, the Massachusetts legislature, following the English
example, imposed a stamp tax on all newspapers and magazines. The
following year, an advertisement tax was imposed. Both taxes met
with such violent opposition that the former was repealed in 1786,
and the latter in 1788. Duniway, Freedom of the Press in
Massachusetts, pp. 136-137.
The framers of the First Amendment were familiar with the
English struggle, which then had continued for nearly eighty years
and was destined to go on for another sixty-five years, at the end
of which time it culminated in a lasting abandonment of the
obnoxious taxes. The framers were likewise familiar with the then
recent Massachusetts episode, and while that occurrence did much to
bring about the adoption of the amendment (
see
Pennsylvania and the Federal Constitution, 1888, p. 181), the
predominant influence must have come from the English experience.
It is impossible to concede that, by the words "freedom of the
press," the framers of the amendment intended to adopt merely the
narrow view then reflected by the law of England that such freedom
consisted only in immunity from previous censorship, for this abuse
had then permanently disappeared from English practice. It is
equally impossible to believe that it was not intended to bring
within the reach of these words such modes of restraint as were
embodied in the two forms of taxation already described. Such
belief must be rejected in the face of the then well known purpose
of the exactions and the general adverse sentiment of the colonies
in respect of them. Undoubtedly, the range of a constitutional
provision phrased in terms of the common law sometimes may be fixed
by recourse to the applicable rules of that
Page 297 U. S. 249
law. But the doctrine which justifies such recourse, like other
canons of construction, must yield to more compelling reasons
whenever they exist.
Cf. Continental Illinois Nat. Bank v.
Chicago, R.I. & P. Ry. Co., 294 U.
S. 648,
294 U. S.
668-669. And, obviously, it is subject to the
qualification that the common law rule invoked shall be one not
rejected by our ancestors as unsuited to their civil or political
conditions.
Murray's lessee v. Hoboken
Land & Improvement Co., 18 How. 272,
59 U. S.
276-277;
Waring v.
Clarke, 5 How. 441,
46 U. S.
454-457;
Powell v. Alabama, supra, pp.
287 U. S.
60-65.
In the light of all that has now been said, it is evident that
the restricted rules of the English law in respect of the freedom
of the press in force when the Constitution was adopted were never
accepted by the American colonists, and that, by the First
Amendment, it was meant to preclude the national government, and,
by the Fourteenth Amendment, to preclude the states, from adopting
any form of previous restraint upon printed publications, or their
circulation, including that which had theretofore been effected by
these two well known and odious methods.
This court had occasion in
Near v. Minnesota, supra at
pp.
283 U. S. 713
et seq., to discuss at some length the subject in its
general aspect. The conclusion there stated is that the object of
the constitutional provisions was to prevent previous restraints on
publication, and the court was careful not to limit the protection
of the right to any particular way of abridging it. Liberty of the
press within the meaning of the constitutional provision, it was
broadly said (p.
283 U. S.
716), meant "principally, although not exclusively,
immunity from previous restraints or [from] censorship."
Judge Cooley has laid down the test to be applied --
"The evils to be prevented were not the censorship of the press
merely, but any action of the government by
Page 297 U. S. 250
means of which it might prevent such free and general discussion
of public matters as seems absolutely essential to prepare the
people for an intelligent exercise of their rights as
citizens."
2 Cooley's Constitutional Limitations, 8th ed., p. 886.
It is not intended by anything we have said to suggest that the
owners of newspapers are immune from any of the ordinary forms of
taxation for support of the government. But this is not an ordinary
form of tax, but one single in kind, with a long history of hostile
misuse against the freedom of the press.
The predominant purpose of the grant of immunity here invoked
was to preserve an untrammeled press as a vital source of public
information. The newspapers, magazines and other journals of the
country, it is safe to say, have shed and continue to shed, more
light on the public and business affairs of the nation than any
other instrumentality of publicity, and, since informed public
opinion is the most potent of all restraints upon misgovernment,
the suppression or abridgement of the publicity afforded by a free
press cannot be regarded otherwise than with grave concern. The tax
here involved is bad not because it takes money from the pockets of
the appellees. If that were all, a wholly different question would
be presented. It is bad because, in the light of its history and of
its present setting, it is seen to be a deliberate and calculated
device in the guise of a tax to limit the circulation of
information to which the public is entitled in virtue of the
constitutional guaranties. A free press stands as one of the great
interpreters between the government and the people. To allow it to
be fettered is to fetter ourselves.
In view of the persistent search for new subjects of taxation,
it is not without significance that, with the single exception of
the Louisiana statute, so far as we can discover, no state during
the one hundred fifty years of our
Page 297 U. S. 251
national existence has undertaken to impose tax like that now in
question.
The form in which the tax is imposed is, in itself, suspicious.
It is not measured or limited by the volume of advertisements. It
is measured alone by the extent of the circulation of the
publication in which the advertisements are carried, with the plain
purpose of penalizing the publishers and curtailing the circulation
of a selected group of newspapers.
2. Having reached the conclusion that the act imposing the tax
in question is unconstitutional under the due process of law clause
because it abridges the freedom of the press, we deem it
unnecessary to consider the further ground assigned that it also
constitutes a denial of the equal protection of the laws.
Decree affirmed.