Oklahoma Stat.Ann., 1950, Tit. 51, §§37.1-37.8 (1952
Supp.), requires each state officer and employee, as a condition of
his employment, to take a "loyalty oath," stating,
inter
alia, that he is not, and has not been for the preceding five
years, a member of any organization listed by the Attorney General
of the United States as "communist front" or "subversive." As
construed by the Supreme Court of Oklahoma, it excludes persons
from state employment solely on the basis of membership in such
organizations, regardless of their knowledge concerning the
activities and purposes of the organizations to which they had
belonged.
Held: As thus construed, the Act violates the Due
Process Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment. Pp.
344 U. S.
184-192.
(a) The Due Process Clause does not permit a state, in
attempting to bar disloyal persons from its employment on the basis
of organizational membership, to classify innocent with knowing
association.
Adler v. Board of Education, 342 U.
S. 485;
Gerende v. Board of Supervisors,
341 U. S. 56; and
Garner v. Board of Public Works, 341 U.
S. 716, distinguished. Pp.
344 U. S.
188-191.
(b) The protection of the Due Process Clause extends to a public
servant whose exclusion pursuant to a statue is patently arbitrary
or discriminatory.
Adler v. Board of Education,
342 U. S. 485, and
United Public Workers v. Mitchell, 330 U. S.
75, distinguished. Pp.
344 U. S.
191-192.
205 Okla. 301,
237 P.2d 131,
reversed.
The Supreme Court of Oklahoma affirmed the judgment of a trial
court sustaining the constitutionality of Okla.Stat.Ann., 1950,
Tit. 51, §§ 37.1-37.8 (1952 Supp.), and enjoining payment
of salaries to state employees who had refused to subscribe to the
"loyalty oath" required by that Act.
205 Okla. 301,
237 P.2d 131.
On appeal to this Court,
reversed, p.
344 U. S.
192.
Page 344 U. S. 184
MR. JUSTICE CLARK delivered the opinion of the Court.
This is an appeal from a decision of the Supreme Court of
Oklahoma upholding the validity of a loyalty oath [
Footnote 1] prescribed by Oklahoma statute
for all state officers and
Page 344 U. S. 185
employees. Okl.Stat.1951, Tit. 51, §§ 37.1-37.8.
Appellants, employed by the state as members of the faculty and
staff of Oklahoma Agricultural and Mechanical College, failed,
within the thirty days permitted, to take the oath required by the
Act. Appellee Updegraff, as a citizen and taxpayer, thereupon
brought this suit in the District Court of Oklahoma County to
enjoin the necessary state officials from paying further
compensation to employees who had not subscribed to the oath. The
appellants, who were permitted to intervene, attacked the validity
of the Act on the grounds, among others, that it was a bill of
attainder; an
ex post facto law; impaired the obligation
of their contracts with the State, and violated the Due Process
Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment. They also sought a mandatory
injunction directing the state officers to pay
Page 344 U. S. 186
their salaries regardless of their failure to take the oath.
Their objections centered largely on the following clauses of the
oath:
". . . That I am not affiliated directly or indirectly . . .
with any foreign political agency, party, organization or
Government, or with any agency, party, organization, association,
or group whatever which has been officially determined by the
United States Attorney General or other authorized agency of the
United States to be a communist front or subversive organization; .
. . that I will take up arms in the defense of the United States in
time of War, or National Emergency, if necessary; that within the
five (5) years immediately preceding the taking of this oath (or
affirmation) I have not been a member of . . . any agency, party,
organization, association, or group whatever which has been
officially determined by the United States Attorney General or
other authorized public agency of the United States to be a
communist front or subversive organization. . . ."
The court upheld the Act and enjoined the state officers from
making further salary payments to appellants. The Supreme Court of
Oklahoma affirmed
sub nom. Board of Regents v. Updegraff,
(1951). [
Footnote 2] We noted
probable jurisdiction because of the public importance of this type
of legislation and the recurring serious constitutional questions
which it presents.
Page 344 U. S. 187
The District Court of Oklahoma County, in holding the Act valid,
concluded that the appellants were compelled to take the oath as
written; that the appellants
"and each of them, did not take and subscribe to the oath as
provided in Section 2 of the Act and willfully refused to take that
oath and by reason thereof the Board of Regents is enjoined from
paying them, and their employment is terminated."
In affirming, the Supreme Court of Oklahoma held that the phrase
of the oath
"any foreign political agency, party, organization or
Government, or with any agency, party, organization, association,
or group whatever which has been officially determined by the
United States Attorney General or other authorized agency of the
United States to be a communist front or subversive
organization"
actually
"refers to a list or lists of such organizations in existence at
the time of the passage of the act which had been prepared by the
Attorney General [of the United States] under Governmental
directive. Such list or lists are, in effect, made a part of the
oath by reference."
On this point, the opinion continues:
"There is no requirement in the act that an oath be taken of
nonmembership in organizations not on the list of the Attorney
General of the United States at the time of the passage of this
act."
We read this part of the highest state court's decision as
limiting the organizations proscribed by the Act to those
designated on the list or lists of the Attorney General which had
been issued prior to the effective date of the Act. Although this
interpretation discarded clear language of the oath as surplusage,
the court denied the appellants' petition for rehearing, which
included a plea that refusal of the court to permit appellants to
take the oath as so interpreted was violative of due process.
The purpose of the Act, we are told, "was to make loyalty a
qualification to hold public office or be employed by the State."
205 Okl. at page 305, 237 P.2d at page 136.
Page 344 U. S. 188
During periods of international stress, the extent of
legislation with such objectives accentuates our traditional
concern about the relation of government to the individual in a
free society. The perennial problem of defining that relationship
becomes acute when disloyalty is screened by ideological patterns
and techniques of disguise that make it difficult to identify.
Democratic government is not powerless to meet this threat, but it
must do so without infringing the freedoms that are the ultimate
values of all democratic living. In the adoption of such means as
it believes effective, the legislature is therefore confronted with
the problem of balancing its interest in national security with the
often conflicting constitutional rights of the individual.
In a series of cases coming here in recent years, we have had
occasion to consider legislation aimed at safeguarding the public
service from disloyalty.
Garner v. Board of Public Works,
341 U. S. 716
(1951);
Adler v. Board of Education, 342 U.
S. 485 (1952);
Gerende v. Board of Supervisors,
341 U. S. 56
(1951). It is in the context of these decisions that we determine
the validity of the oath before us.
Garner involved a Los Angeles ordinance requiring all
city employees to swear that they did not advocate the overthrow of
the government by unlawful means or belong to organizations with
such objectives. The ordinance implemented an earlier charter
amendment which disqualified from municipal employment all persons
unable to take such an oath truthfully. One of the attacks made on
the oath in that case was that it violated due process because its
negation was not limited to organizations known by the employee to
be within the proscribed class. This argument was rejected because
we felt justified in assuming that scienter was implicit in each
clause of the oath.
Page 344 U. S. 189
Adler also indicated the importance of determining
whether a rule of exclusion based on association applies to
innocent, as well as knowing, activity. New York had sought to bar
from employment in the public schools persons who advocate, or
belong to organizations which advocate, the overthrow of the
government by unlawful means. The Feinberg Law directed the New
York Board of Regents to make a listing, after notice and hearing,
of organizations of the type described. Under § 3022 of the
statute, the Regents provided by regulation that membership in a
listed organization should be
prima facie evidence of
disqualification for office in the New York public schools. In
upholding this legislation, we expressly noted that the New York
courts had construed the statute to require knowledge of
organizational purpose before the regulation could apply. 342 U.S.
at
342 U. S. 494.
Cf. American Communications Ass'n v. Douds, 339 U.
S. 382 (1950).
The oath in
Gerende was required of candidates for
public office who sought places on a Maryland ballot. On oral
argument in that case, the Maryland Attorney General assured us
that he would advise the proper state authorities to accept, as
complying with the statute, an affidavit stating that the affiant
was not engaged in an attempt to overthrow the government by force
or violence or knowingly a member of an organization engaged in
such an attempt. Because we read an earlier Maryland Court of
Appeals' decision as interpreting the statute so that such an
affidavit would satisfy its requirements, we affirmed on the basis
of this assurance.
We assumed in
Garner that, if our interpretation of the
oath as containing an implicit
scienter requirement was
correct, Los Angeles would give the petitioners who had refused to
sign the oath an opportunity to take it as interpreted and resume
their employment. But here, with our decision in
Garner
before it, the Oklahoma Supreme
Page 344 U. S. 190
Court refused to extend to appellants an opportunity to take the
oath. In addition, a petition for rehearing which urged that
failure to permit appellants to take the oath as interpreted
deprived them of due process was denied. This must be viewed as a
holding that knowledge is not a factor under the Oklahoma statute.
We are thus brought to the question touched on in
Garner,
Adler, and
Gerende: whether the due process clause
permits a state, in attempting to bar disloyal individuals from its
employ, to exclude persons solely on the basis of organizational
membership, regardless of their knowledge concerning the
organizations to which they had belonged. For, under the statute
before us, the fact of membership alone disqualifies. If the rule
be expressed as a presumption of disloyalty, it is a conclusive
one.
But membership may be innocent. A state servant may have joined
a proscribed organization unaware of its activities and purposes.
In recent years, many completely loyal persons have severed
organizational ties after learning for the first time of the
character of groups to which they had belonged.
"They had joined, [but] did not know what it was; they were
good, fine young men and women, loyal Americans, but they had been
trapped into it -- because one of the great weaknesses of all
Americans, whether adult or youth, is to join something. [
Footnote 3]"
At the time of affiliation, a group itself may be innocent, only
later coming under the influence of those who would turn it toward
illegitimate ends. Conversely, an organization formerly subversive,
and therefore designated as such, may have subsequently freed
itself from the influences which originally led to its listing.
There can be do dispute about the consequences visited upon a
person excluded from public employment on disloyalty
Page 344 U. S. 191
grounds. In the view of the community, the stain is a deep one;
indeed, it has become a badge of infamy. Especially is this so in
time of cold war and hot emotions, when "each man begins to eye his
neighbor as a possible enemy." [
Footnote 4] Yet, under the Oklahoma Act, the fact of
association alone determines disloyalty and disqualification; it
matters not whether association existed innocently or knowingly. To
thus inhibit individual freedom of movement is to stifle the flow
of democratic expression and controversy at one of its chief
sources. We hold that the distinction observed between the case at
bar and
Garner, Adler and
Gerende is decisive.
Indiscriminate classification of innocent with knowing activity
must fall as an assertion of arbitrary power. The oath offends due
process.
But appellee insists that
Adler and
United Public
Workers v. Mitchell, 330 U. S. 75
(1447), are
contra. We are referred to our statement in
Adler that persons seeking employment in the New York
public schools have
"no right to work for the State in the school system on their
own terms.
United Public Workers v. Mitchell. . . . They
may work for the school system upon the reasonable terms laid down
by the proper authorities of New York."
342 U.S. at
342 U. S. 492.
To draw from this language the facile generalization that there is
no constitutionally protected right to public employment is to
obscure the issue. For, in
United Public Workers, though
we held that the Federal Government, through the Hatch Act, could
properly bar its employees from certain types of political activity
thought inimical to the interests of the Civil Service, we cast
this holding into perspective by emphasizing that Congress could
not
"enact a regulation providing that no Republican, Jew or Negro
shall be appointed to federal
Page 344 U. S. 192
office, or that no federal employee shall attend Mass or take
any active part in missionary work."
330 U.S. at
330 U. S. 100.
See also In re Summers, 325 U. S. 561,
325 U. S. 571,
(1945). We need not pause to consider whether an abstract right to
public employment exists. It is sufficient to say that
constitutional protection does extend to the public servant whose
exclusion pursuant to a statute is patently arbitrary or
discriminatory.
Because of this disposition, we do not pass on the serious
questions raised as to whether the Act, in proscribing those
"communist front or subversive organizations" designated as such on
lists of the Attorney General of the United States, gave fair
notice to those affected, in view of the fact that those listings
have never included a designation of "communist fronts," and have
in some cases designated organizations without classifying them.
Nor need we consider the significance of the differing standards
employed in the preparation of those lists and their limited
evidentiary use under the Federal Loyalty Program.
Reversed.
MR. JUSTICE JACKSON, not having heard the argument, took no part
in the consideration or decision of this case.
MR. JUSTICE BURTON concurs in the result.
[
Footnote 1]
"I, _____ _____, do solemnly swear (or affirm) that I will
support and defend the Constitution of the United States and the
Constitution of the State of Oklahoma against all enemies, foreign
and domestic; that I will bear true faith and allegiance to the
Constitution of the United States and the Constitution of the State
of Oklahoma; that I take this obligation freely, without any mental
reservation or purpose of evasion; and that I will well and
faithfully discharge the duties upon which I am about to
enter."
"And I do further swear (or affirm) that I do not advocate, nor
am I a member of any party or organization, political or otherwise,
that now advocates the overthrow of the Government of the United
States or of the State of Oklahoma by force or violence or other
unlawful means; that I am not affiliated directly or indirectly
with the Communist Party, the Third Communist International, with
any foreign political agency, party, organization or Government, or
with any agency, party, organization, association, or group
whatever which has been officially determined by the United States
Attorney General or other authorized agency of the United States to
be a communist front or subversive organization; nor do I advocate
revolution, teach or justify a program of sabotage, force or
violence, sedition or treason, against the Government of the United
States or of this State; nor do I advocate directly or indirectly,
teach or justify by any means whatsoever, the overthrow of the
Government of the United States or of this State, or change in the
form of Government thereof, by force or any unlawful means; that I
will take up arms in the defense of the United States in time of
War, or National Emergency, if necessary; that within the five (5)
years immediately preceding the taking of this oath (or
affirmation), I have not been a member of the Communist Party, the
Third Communist International, or of any agency, party,
organization, association, or group whatever which has been
officially determined by the United States Attorney General or
other authorized public agency of the United States to be a
communist front or subversive organization, or of any party or
organization, political or otherwise, that advocated the overthrow
of the Government of the United States or of the State of Oklahoma
by force or violence or other unlawful means;"
"And I do further swear (or affirm) that during such time as I
am"
______________________________________________________________________
(Here put name of office, or, if an employee,) insert "An
employee
______________________________________________________________________
of" followed by the complete designation of the employing
officer,
______________________________________________________________________
office, agency, authority, commission, department or
institution.
"I will not advocate and that I will not become a member of any
party or organization, political or otherwise, that advocates the
overthrow of the Government of the United States or of the State of
Oklahoma by force or violence or other unlawful means."
[
Footnote 2]
The state officials named as defendants in Updegraff's suit took
the position in the state courts that the statute was
unconstitutional. Following a policy of the Oklahoma Attorney
General not to appeal from adverse decisions of the state supreme
court, these defendants are here only because they were made
appellees by the appellant-intervenors. They have chosen in their
brief merely to restate, without argument, their position in the
court below.
[
Footnote 3]
Testimony of J. Edgar Hoover, Hearings before House Committee on
Un-American Activities on H.R. 1884 and H.R. 2122, 80th Cong., 1st
Sess. 46.
[
Footnote 4]
Address by Judge Learned Hand at the 86th Convocation of the
University of the State of New York, delivered October 24, 1952, at
Albany, New York.
MR. JUSTICE BLACK, concurring.
I concur in all the Court says in condemnation of Oklahoma's
test oath. I agree that the State Act prescribing that test oath is
fatally offensive to the due process guarantee of the United States
Constitution.
History indicates that individual liberty is intermittently
subjected to extraordinary perils. Even countries dedicated to
government by the people are not free from such cyclical dangers.
The first years of our Republic marked such a period. Enforcement
of the Alien and
Page 344 U. S. 193
Sedition Laws by zealous patriots who feared ideas made it
highly dangerous for people to think, speak, or write critically
about government, its agents, or its policies, either foreign or
domestic. Our constitutional liberties survived the ordeal of this
regrettable period because there were influential men and powerful
organized groups bold enough to champion the undiluted right of
individuals to publish and argue for their beliefs however
unorthodox or loathsome. Today however, few individuals and
organizations of power and influence argue that unpopular advocacy
has this same wholly unqualified immunity from governmental
interference. For this and other reasons, the present period of
fear seems more ominously dangerous to speech and press than was
that of the Alien and Sedition Laws. Suppressive laws and practices
are the fashion. The Oklahoma oath statute is but one manifestation
of a national network of laws aimed at coercing and controlling the
minds of men. Test oaths are notorious tools of tyranny. When used
to shackle the mind, they are, or at least they should be,
unspeakably odious to a free people. Test oaths are made still more
dangerous when combined with bills of attainder which, like this
Oklahoma statute, impose pains and penalties for past lawful
associations and utterances.
Governments need and have ample power to punish treasonable
acts. But it does not follow that they must have a further power to
punish thought and speech, as distinguished from acts. Our own free
society should never forget that laws which stigmatize and penalize
thought and speech of the unorthodox have a way of reaching,
ensnaring and silencing many more people than at first intended. We
must have freedom of speech for all or we will, in the long run,
have it for none but the cringing and the craven. And I cannot too
often repeat my belief that the right to speak on matters of public
concern must be wholly free or eventually be wholly lost.
Page 344 U. S. 194
It seems self-evident that all speech criticizing government
rulers and challenging current beliefs may be dangerous to the
status quo. With full knowledge of this danger, the
Framers rested our First Amendment on the premise that the
slightest suppression of thought, speech, press, or public assembly
is still more dangerous. This means that individuals are guaranteed
an undiluted and unequivocal right to express themselves on
questions of current public interest. It means that Americans
discuss such questions as of right and not on sufferance of
legislatures, courts or any other governmental agencies. It means
that courts are without power to appraise and penalize utterances
upon their notion that these utterances are dangerous. In my view,
this uncompromising interpretation of the Bill of Rights is the one
that must prevail if its freedoms are to be saved. Tyrannical
totalitarian governments cannot safely allow their people to speak
with complete freedom. I believe with the Framers that our free
Government can.
MR. JUSTICE DOUGLAS concurs in this opinion.
MR. JUSTICE FRANKFURTER, whom MR. JUSTICE DOUGLAS joins,
concurring.
The times being what they are, it is appropriate to add a word
by way of emphasis to the Court's opinion, which I join.
The case concerns the power of a State to exact from teachers in
one of its colleges an oath that they are not, and for the five
years immediately preceding the taking of the oath have not been,
members of any organization listed by the Attorney General of the
United States, prior to the passage of the statute, as "subversive"
or "Communist-front." Since the affiliation which must thus be
forsworn may well have been for reasons or for purposes as innocent
as membership in a club of
Page 344 U. S. 195
one of the established political parties, to require such an
oath, on pain of a teacher's loss of his position in case of
refusal to take the oath, penalizes a teacher for exercising a
right of association peculiarly characteristic of our people.
See Arthur M. Schlesinger, Sr., Biography of a Nation of
Joiners, 50 Am.Hist.Rev. 1 (1944), reprinted in Schlesinger, Paths
To The Present 23. Such joining is an exercise of the rights of
free speech and free inquiry. By limiting the power of the States
to interfere with freedom of speech and freedom of inquiry and
freedom of association, the Fourteenth Amendment protects all
persons, no matter what their calling. But, in view of the nature
of the teacher's relation to the effective exercise of the rights
which are safeguarded by the Bill of Rights and by the Fourteenth
Amendment, inhibition of freedom of thought, and of action upon
thought, in the case of teachers brings the safeguards of those
amendments vividly into operation. Such unwarranted inhibition upon
the free spirit of teachers affects not only those who, like the
appellants, are immediately before the Court. It has an
unmistakeable tendency to chill that free play of the spirit which
all teachers ought especially to cultivate and practice; it makes
for caution and timidity in their associations by potential
teachers.
The Constitution of the United States does not render the United
States or the States impotent to guard their governments against
destruction by enemies from within. It does not preclude measures
of self-protection against anticipated overt acts of violence.
Solid threats to our kind of government -- manifestations of
purposes that reject argument and the free ballot as the means for
bringing about changes and promoting progress -- may be met by
preventive measures before such threats reach fruition. However, in
considering the constitutionality of legislation like the statute
before us, it is necessary to
Page 344 U. S. 196
keep steadfastly in mind what it is that is to be secured. Only
thus will it be evident why the Court has found that the Oklahoma
law violates those fundamental principles of liberty "which lie at
the base of all our civil and political institutions" and, as such,
are imbedded in the due process of law which no State may offend.
Hebert v. State of Louisiana, 272 U.
S. 312,
272 U. S.
316.
That our democracy ultimately rests on public opinion is a
platitude of speech, but not a commonplace in action. Public
opinion is the ultimate reliance of our society only if it be
disciplined and responsible. It can be disciplined and responsible
only if habits of open-mindedness and of critical inquiry are
acquired in the formative years of our citizens. The process of
education has naturally enough been the basis of hope for the
perdurance of our democracy on the part of all our great leaders,
from Thomas Jefferson onwards.
To regard teachers -- in our entire educational system, from the
primary grades to the university -- as the priests of our democracy
is therefore not to indulge in hyperbole. It is the special task of
teachers to foster those habits of open-mindedness and critical
inquiry which alone make for responsible citizens, who, in turn,
make possible an enlightened and effective public opinion. Teachers
must fulfill their function by precept and practice, by the very
atmosphere which they generate; they must be exemplars of
open-mindedness and free inquiry. They cannot carry out their noble
task if the conditions for the practice of a responsible and
critical mind are denied to them. They must have the freedom of
responsible inquiry, by thought and action, into the meaning of
social and economic ideas, into the checkered history of social and
economic dogma. They must be free to sift evanescent doctrine,
qualified by time and circumstance, from that restless, enduring
process of extending the bounds of understanding and wisdom, to
assure which the freedoms
Page 344 U. S. 197
of thought, of speech, of inquiry, of worship are guaranteed by
the Constitution of the United States against infraction by
national or State government.
The functions of educational institutions in our national life
and the conditions under which alone they can adequately perform
them are at the basis of these limitations upon State and national
power. These functions and the essential conditions for their
effective discharge have been well described by a leading
educator:
"Now, a university is a place that is established and will
function for the benefit of society, provided it is a center of
independent thought. It is a center of independent thought and
criticism that is created in the interest of the progress of
society, and the one reason that we know that every totalitarian
government must fail is that no totalitarian government is prepared
to face the consequences of creating free universities."
"It is important for this purpose to attract into the
institution men of the greatest capacity, and to encourage them to
exercise their independent judgment."
"Education is a kind of continuing dialogue, and a dialogue
assumes, in the nature of the case, different points of view."
"The civilization which I work and which, I am sure, every
American is working toward could be called a civilization of the
dialogue, where, instead of shooting one another when you differ,
you reason things out together."
"In this dialogue, then, you cannot assume that you are going to
have everybody thinking the same way or feeling the same way. It
would be unprogressive if that happened. The hope of eventual
development would be gone. More than that, of course it would be
very boring."
"A university, then, is a kind of continuing Socratic
conversation on the highest level for the very best people you can
think of, you can bring together, about the most important
questions, and the thing that you must do to the uttermost possible
limits is
Page 344 U. S. 198
to guarantee those men the freedom to think and to express
themselves."
"Now, the limits on this freedom, the limits on this freedom
cannot be merely prejudice, because, although our prejudices might
be perfectly satisfactory, the prejudices of our successors, or of
those who are in a position to bring pressure to bear on the
institution, might be subversive in the real sense, subverting the
American doctrine of free thought and free speech."
Statement of Robert M. Hutchins, Associate Director of the Ford
Foundation, November 25, 1952, in Hearings before the House Select
Committee to Investigate Tax-exempt Foundations and Comparable
Organizations, pursuant to H.Res. 561, 82d Cong., 2d Sess.