The Smith Act, as amended, 18 U.S.C. § 2385, which
prohibits the knowing advocacy of the overthrow of the Government
of the United States by force and violence, supersedes the
enforceability of the Pennsylvania Sedition Act, which proscribes
the same conduct. Pp.
350 U. S.
498-510.
1. The scheme of federal regulation is so pervasive as to make
reasonable the inference that the Congress left no room for the
States to supplement it. Pp.
350 U. S.
502-504.
2. The federal statutes touch a field in which the federal
interest is so dominant that the federal system must be assumed to
preclude enforcement of state laws on the same subject. Pp.
350 U. S.
504-505.
3. Enforcement of state sedition acts presents a serious danger
of conflict with the administration of the federal program. Pp.
350 U. S.
505-510.
377 Pa. 58, 104 A.2d 133, affirmed.
Page 350 U. S. 498
MR. CHIEF JUSTICE WARREN delivered the opinion of the Court.
The respondent Steve Nelson, an acknowledged member of the
Communist Party, was convicted in the Court of Quarter Sessions of
Allegheny County, Pennsylvania, of a violation of the Pennsylvania
Sedition Act [
Footnote 1] and
sentenced to imprisonment for twenty years and to a fine of $10,000
and to costs of prosecution in the sum of $13,000. The Superior
Court affirmed the conviction. 172 Pa.Super. 125, 92 A.2d 431. The
Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, recognizing but not reaching many
alleged serious trial errors and conduct of the trial court
infringing upon respondent's right to due process of law, [
Footnote 2] decided
Page 350 U. S. 499
the case on the narrow issue of supersession of the state law by
the Federal Smith Act. [
Footnote
3] In its opinion, the court stated: '
"And, while the Pennsylvania statute proscribes sedition against
either the Government of the United States or the Government of
Pennsylvania, it is only alleged sedition against the United States
with which the instant case is concerned. Out of all the voluminous
testimony, we have not found, nor has anyone pointed to, a single
word indicating a seditious act or even utterance directed against
the Government of Pennsylvania. [
Footnote 4]"
The precise holding of the court, and all that is before us for
review, is that the Smith Act of 1940, [
Footnote 5] as amended in 1948, [
Footnote 6] which prohibits the knowing advocacy of the
overthrow of the Government of the United States by force and
violence, supersedes the enforceability of the Pennsylvania
Sedition Act, which proscribes the same conduct.
Many State Attorneys General and the Solicitor General of the
United States appeared as
amici curiae for petitioner, and
several briefs were filed on behalf of the respondent. Because of
the important question of federal-state relationship involved, we
granted certiorari. 348 U.S. 814.
Page 350 U. S. 500
It should be said at the outset that the decision in this case
does not affect the right of States to enforce their sedition laws
at times when the Federal Government has not occupied the field and
is not protecting the entire country from seditious conduct. The
distinction between the two situations was clearly recognized by
the court below. [
Footnote 7]
Nor does it limit the jurisdiction of the States where the
Constitution and Congress have specifically given them concurrent
jurisdiction, as was done under the Eighteenth Amendment and the
Volstead Act.
United States v. Lanza, 260 U.
S. 377. Neither does it limit the right of the State to
protect itself at any time against sabotage or attempted violence
of all kinds. [
Footnote 8] Nor
does it prevent the State from prosecuting where the same act
constitutes both a federal offense and a state offense under the
police power, as was done in
Fox v. Ohio, 5
How. 410, and
Gilbert v. Minnesota, 254 U.
S. 325, relied upon by petitioner as authority herein.
In neither of those cases did the state statute impinge on
Page 350 U. S. 501
federal jurisdiction. In the
Fox case, the federal
offense was counterfeiting. The state offense was defrauding the
person to whom the spurious money was passed. In the
Gilbert case this Court, in upholding the enforcement of a
state statute, proscribing conduct which would "interfere with or
discourage the enlistment of men in the military or naval forces of
the United States or of the State of Minnesota," treated it not as
an act relating to
"the raising of armies for the national defense, nor to rules
and regulations for the government of those under arms [a
constitutionally exclusive federal power]. It [was] simply a local
police measure. . . . [
Footnote
9]"
Where, as in the instant case, Congress has not stated
specifically whether a federal statute has occupied a field in
which the States are otherwise free to legislate, [
Footnote 10] different
Page 350 U. S. 502
criteria have furnished touchstones for decision. Thus,
"[t]his Court, in considering the validity of state laws in the
light of . . . federal laws touching the same subject, has made use
of the following expressions: conflicting; contrary to; occupying
the field; repugnance; difference; irreconcilability;
inconsistency; violation; curtailment, and interference. But none
of these expressions provides an infallible constitutional test or
an exclusive constitutional yardstick. In the final analysis, there
can be no one crystal clear distinctly marked formula."
Hines v. Davidowitz, 312 U. S. 52,
312 U. S. 67.
And see Rice v. Santa Fe Elevator Corp., 331 U.
S. 218,
331 U. S.
230-231. In this case, we think that each of several
tests of supersession is met.
First,
"[t]he scheme of federal regulation [is] so pervasive as to make
reasonable the inference that Congress left no room for the States
to supplement it."
Rice v. Santa Fe Elevator Corp., 331 U.S. at
331 U. S. 230.
The Congress determined in 1940 that it was necessary for it to
reenter the field of anti-subversive legislation, which had been
abandoned by it in 1921. In that year, it enacted the Smith Act,
which proscribes advocacy of the overthrow of any government --
federal, state or local -- by force and violence and organization
of and knowing membership in a group which so advocates. [
Footnote 11] Conspiracy to commit
any of these acts is punishable under the general criminal
conspiracy provisions in 18 U.S.C. § 371. The Internal
Security Act of 1950 is aimed more directly at Communist
organizations. [
Footnote 12]
It distinguishes between "Communist
Page 350 U. S. 503
action organizations" and "Communist front organizations,"
[
Footnote 13] requiring such
organizations to register and to file annual reports with the
Attorney General giving complete details as to their officers and
funds. [
Footnote 14] Members
of Communist action organizations who have not been registered by
their organization must register as individuals. [
Footnote 15] Failure to register in
accordance with the requirements of Sections 786-787 is punishable
by a fine of not more than $10,000 for an offending organization
and by a fine of not more than $10,000 or imprisonment for not more
than five years or both for an individual offender -- each day of
failure to register constituting a separate offense. [
Footnote 16] And the Act imposes
certain sanctions upon both "action" and "front" organizations and
their members. [
Footnote 17]
The Communist Control Act of 1954 declares
"that the Communist Party of the United States, although
purportedly a political party, is, in fact, an instrumentality of a
conspiracy to overthrow the Government of the United States,"
and that
"its role as the agency of a hostile foreign power renders its
existence a clear present and continuing danger to the security of
the United States. [
Footnote
18]"
It also contains a legislative finding that the Communist Party
is a "Communist action organization" within the meaning of the
Internal Security Act of 1950, and provides that "knowing" members
of the Communist Party are "subject to all the provisions and
penalties" of that Act. [
Footnote 19] It furthermore sets up a new classification
of "Communist-infiltrated organizations," [
Footnote 20]
Page 350 U. S. 504
and provides for the imposition of sanctions against them.
We examine these Acts only to determine the congressional plan.
Looking to all of them in the aggregate, the conclusion is
inescapable that Congress has intended to occupy the field of
sedition. Taken as a whole, they evince a congressional plan which
makes it reasonable to determine that no room has been left for the
States to supplement it. Therefore, a state sedition statute is
superseded regardless of whether it purports to supplement the
federal law. As was said by Mr. Justice Holmes in
Charleston
& Western Carolina R. Co. v. Varnville Furniture Co.,
237 U. S. 597,
237 U. S.
604:
"When Congress has taken the particular subject matter in hand,
coincidence is as ineffective as opposition, and a state law is not
to be declared a help because it attempts to go farther than
Congress has seen fit to go."
Second, the federal statutes
"touch a field in which the federal interest is so dominant that
the federal system [must] be assumed to preclude enforcement of
state laws on the same subject."
Rice v. Santa Fe Elevator Corp., 331 U.S. at
331 U. S. 230,
citing
Hines v. Davidowitz, supra. [
Footnote 21] Congress has devised an
all-embracing program for resistance to the various forms of
totalitarian aggression. Our external defenses have been
strengthened, and a plan to
Page 350 U. S. 505
protect against internal subversion has been made by it. It has
appropriated vast sums, not only for our own protection, but also
to strengthen freedom throughout the world. It has charged the
Federal Bureau of Investigation and the Central Intelligence Agency
with responsibility for intelligence concerning Communist seditious
activities against our Government, and has denominated such
activities as part of a world conspiracy. It accordingly proscribed
sedition against all government in the nation -- national, state
and local. Congress declared that these steps were taken
"to provide for the common defense, to preserve the sovereignty
of the United States as an independent nation, and to guarantee to
each State a republican form of government. . . . [
Footnote 22]"
Congress having thus treated seditious conduct as a matter of
vital national concern, it is in no sense a local enforcement
problem. As was said in the court below:
"Sedition against the United States is not a local offense. It
is a crime against the
Nation. As such, it should be
prosecuted and punished in the Federal courts, where this defendant
has, in fact, been prosecuted and convicted and is now under
sentence. [
Footnote 23] It
is not only important, but vital, that such prosecutions should be
exclusively within the control of the Federal Government. . . .
[
Footnote 24]"
Third, enforcement of state sedition acts presents a
serious danger of conflict with the administration of the federal
program. Since 1939, in order to avoid a hampering of uniform
enforcement of its program by sporadic local prosecutions, the
Federal Government has urged
Page 350 U. S. 506
local authorities not to intervene in such matters, but to turn
over to the federal authorities immediately and unevaluated all
information concerning subversive activities. The President made
such a request on September 6, 1939, when he placed the Federal
Bureau of Investigation in charge of investigation in this
field:
"The Attorney General has been requested by me to instruct the
Federal Bureau of Investigation of the Department of Justice to
take charge of investigative work in matters relating to espionage,
sabotage, and violations of the neutrality regulations."
"This task must be conducted in a comprehensive and effective
manner on a national basis, and all information must be carefully
sifted out and correlated in order to avoid confusion and
irresponsibility."
"To this end, I request all police officers, sheriffs, and all
other law enforcement officers in the United States promptly to
turn over to the nearest representative of the Federal Bureau of
Investigation any information obtained by them relating to
espionage, counterespionage, sabotage, subversive activities and
violations of the neutrality laws. [
Footnote 25]"
And, in addressing the Federal-State Conference on Law
Enforcement Problems of National Defense, held on August 5 and 6,
1940, only a few weeks after the passage of the Smith Act, the
Director of the Federal Bureau of Investigation said:
"The fact must not be overlooked that meeting the spy, the
saboteur and the subverter is a problem that must be handled on a
nationwide basis. An isolated incident in the middle west may be of
little significance, but, when fitted into a national pattern
Page 350 U. S. 507
of similar incidents, it may lead to an important revelation of
subversive activity. It is for this reason that the President
requested all of our citizens and law enforcing agencies to report
directly to the Federal Bureau of Investigation any complaints or
information dealing with espionage, sabotage or subversive
activities. In such matters, time is of the essence. It is
unfortunate that, in a few States, efforts have been made by
individuals not fully acquainted with the far-flung ramifications
of this problem to interject superstructures of agencies between
local law enforcement and the FBI to sift what might be vital
information, thus delaying its immediate reference to the FBI. This
cannot be if our internal security is to be best served. This is no
time for red tape or amateur handling of such vital matters. There
must be a direct and free flow of contact between the local law
enforcement agencies and the FBI. The job of meeting the spy or
saboteur is one for experienced men of law enforcement. [
Footnote 26]"
Moreover, the Pennsylvania Statute presents a peculiar danger of
interference with the federal program. For, as the court below
observed:
"Unlike the Smith Act, which can be administered only by federal
officers acting in their official capacities, indictment for
sedition under the Pennsylvania statute can be initiated upon an
information made by a private individual. The opportunity thus
present for the indulgence of personal spite and hatred or for
furthering some selfish advantage or ambition need only be
mentioned to be appreciated. Defense of the Nation by law, no less
than by arms, should be a public, and not a private, undertaking.
It is
Page 350 U. S. 508
important that punitive sanctions for sedition
against the
United States be such as have been promulgated by the central
governmental authority and administered under the supervision and
review of that authority's judiciary. If that be done, sedition
will be detected and punished no less, wherever it may be found,
and the right of the individual to speak freely and without fear,
even in criticism of the government, will, at the same time, be
protected. [
Footnote
27]"
In his brief, the Solicitor General states that forty-two States
plus Alaska and Hawaii have statutes which, in some form, prohibit
advocacy of the violent overthrow of established government. These
statutes are entitled anti-sedition statutes, criminal anarchy
laws, criminal syndicalist laws, etc. Although all of them are
primarily directed against the overthrow of the United States
Government, they are in no sense uniform. And our attention has not
been called to any case where the prosecution has been successfully
directed against an attempt to destroy state or local government.
Some of these Acts are studiously drawn, and purport to protect
fundamental rights by appropriate definitions, standards of proof,
and orderly procedures in keeping with the avowed congressional
purpose "to protect freedom from those who would destroy it,
without infringing upon the freedom of all our people." Others are
vague, and are almost wholly without such safeguards. Some even
purport to punish mere membership in subversive organizations,
which the federal statutes do not punish where federal registration
requirements have been fulfilled. [
Footnote 28]
Page 350 U. S. 509
When we were confronted with a like situation in the field of
labor-management relations, Mr. Justice Jackson wrote:
"A multiplicity of tribunals and a diversity of procedures are
quite as apt to produce incompatible or conflicting adjudications
as are different rules of substantive law. [
Footnote 29]"
Should the States be permitted to exercise a concurrent
jurisdiction in this area, federal enforcement would encounter not
only the difficulties mentioned by Mr. Justice Jackson, but the
added conflict engendered by different criteria of substantive
offenses.
Since we find that Congress has occupied the field to the
exclusion of parallel state legislation, that the dominant interest
of the Federal Government precludes state intervention, and that
administration of state Acts would conflict with the operation of
the federal plan, we are convinced that the decision of the Supreme
Court of Pennsylvania is unassailable.
We are not unmindful of the risk of compounding punishments
which would be created by finding concurrent state power. In our
view of the case, we do not reach the question whether double or
multiple punishment for the same overt acts directed against the
United States has constitutional sanction. [
Footnote 30] Without compelling
Page 350 U. S. 510
indication to the contrary, we will not assume that Congress
intended to permit the possibility of double punishment.
Cf.
18 U. S. Moore,
5 Wheat. 1,
18 U. S. 31,
18 U. S. 75;
Jerome v. United States, 318 U. S. 101,
318 U. S.
105.
The judgment of the Supreme Court of Pennsylvania is
Affirmed.
[For dissenting opinion of MR. JUSTICE REED, joined by MR.
JUSTICE BURTON and MR. JUSTICE MINTON,
see post, p.
350 U. S.
512.]
|
350
U.S. 497app|
APPENDIX
Pennsylvania Penal Code § 207
The word "sedition," as used in this section, shall mean:
Any writing, publication, printing, cut, cartoon, utterance, or
conduct, either individually or in connection or combination with
any other person, the intent of which is:
(a) To make or cause to be made any outbreak or demonstration of
violence against this State or against the United States.
(b) To encourage any person to take any measures or engage in
any conduct with a view of overthrowing or destroying or attempting
to overthrow or destroy, by any force or show or threat of force,
the Government of this State or of the United States.
(c) To incite or encourage any person to commit any overt act
with a view to bringing the Government of this State or of the
United States into hatred or contempt.
(d) To incite any person or persons to do or attempt to do
personal injury or harm to any officer of this State or of the
United States, or to damage or destroy any public property or the
property of any public official because of his official
position.
Page 350 U. S. 511
The word "sedition" shall also include:
(e) The actual damage to, or destruction of, any public property
or the property of any public official, perpetrated because the
owner or occupant is in official position.
(f) Any writing, publication, printing, cut, cartoon, or
utterance which advocates or teaches the duty, necessity, or
propriety of engaging in crime, violence, or any form of terrorism,
as a means of accomplishing political reform or change in
government.
(g) The sale, gift or distribution of any prints, publications,
books, papers, documents, or written matter in any form, which
advocates, furthers or teaches sedition as hereinbefore
defined.
(h) Organizing or helping to organize or becoming a member of
any assembly, society, or group, where any of the policies or
purposes thereof are seditious as hereinbefore defined.
Sedition shall be a felony. Whoever is guilty of sedition shall,
upon conviction thereof, be sentenced to pay a fine not exceeding
ten thousand dollars ($10,000), or to undergo imprisonment not
exceeding twenty(20) years, or both.
18 U.S.C. § 2385
Whoever knowingly or willfully advocates, abets, advises, or
teaches the duty, necessity, desirability, or propriety of
overthrowing or destroying the government of the United States or
the government of any State, Territory, District or Possession
thereof, or the government of any political subdivision therein, by
force or violence, or by the assassination of any officer of any
such government; or
Whoever, with intent to cause the overthrow or destruction of
any such government, prints, publishes, edits, issues, circulates,
sells, distributes, or publicly displays any written or printed
matter advocating, advising, or teaching the duty, necessity,
desirability, or propriety of
Page 350 U. S. 512
overthrowing or destroying any government in the United States
by force or violence, or attempts to do so; or
Whoever organizes or helps or attempts to organize any society,
group, or assembly of persons who teach, advocate, or encourage the
overthrow or destruction of any such government by force or
violence; or becomes or is a member of, or affiliates with, any
such society, group, or assembly of persons, knowing the purposes
thereof --
Shall be fined not more than $10,000 or imprisoned not more than
ten years, or both, and shall be ineligible for employment by the
United States or any department or agency thereof, for the five
years next following his conviction.
[
Footnote 1]
Pa. Penal Code § 207, 18 Purdon's Pa.Stat.Ann. § 4207.
The text of the statute is set out in an Appendix to this opinion,
post, p.
350 U. S.
510.
[
Footnote 2]
The Supreme Court also did not have to reach the question of the
constitutionality of subdivision (c) of the Pennsylvania Act, the
basis of four counts of the twelve-count indictment, which punishes
utterances
"or conduct [intended to] incite or encourage any person to
commit any overt act with a view to bringing the Government of this
State or of the United States into hatred or contempt."
Cf. Winters v. New York,
333 U.
S. 507. This provision is strangely reminiscent of the
Sedition Act of 1798, 1 Stat. 596, which punished utterances
made
"with intent to defame the . . . government, or either house of
the . . . Congress, or the . . . President, or to bring them . . .
into contempt or disrepute; or to excite against them . . . the
hatred of the good people of the United States. . . ."
[
Footnote 3]
377 Pa. 58, 104 A.2d 133.
[
Footnote 4]
377 Pa. at 69, 104 A.2d at 139.
[
Footnote 5]
54 Stat. 670.
[
Footnote 6]
318 U.S.C. § 2385. The text of the statute is set out in an
Appendix to this opinion,
post, p.
350 U. S. 511.
(Another part of the Smith Act, punishing the advocacy of mutiny,
is now 18 U.S.C. § 2387.)
[
Footnote 7]
"No question of federal supersession of a state statute was in
issue . . . when the Supreme Court upheld the validity of the state
statutes in
Gitlow v. New York, 268 U. S.
652 (1925), and
Whitney v. California,
274 U. S.
357 (1927)."
377 Pa. at 73-74, 104 A.2d at 141.
Although the judgments of conviction in both
Gitlow and
Whitney were rendered in 1920, before repeal of the
federal wartime sedition statute of 1918, 41 Stat. 1359, the
question of supersession was not raised in either case, and, of
course, not considered in this Court's opinions.
[
Footnote 8]
"Nor is a State stripped of its means of self-defense by the
suspension of its sedition statute through the entry of the Federal
Government upon the field. There are many valid laws on
Pennsylvania's statute books adequate for coping effectively with
actual or threatened internal civil disturbances. As to the
nationwide threat to all citizens, imbedded in the type of conduct
interdicted by a sedition act, we are -- all of us -- protected by
the Smith Act, and in a manner more efficient and more consistent
with the service of our national welfare in all respects."
377 Pa. at 70, 104 A.2d at 139.
[
Footnote 9]
254 U.S. at
254 U. S. 331.
The Court went on to observe:
". . . the State knew the conditions which existed and could
have a solicitude for the public peace, and this record justifies
it. Gilbert's remarks were made in a public meeting. They were
resented by his auditors. There were protesting interruptions, also
accusations and threats against him, disorder and intimations of
violence. And such is not an uncommon experience. On such
occasions, feeling usually runs high, and is impetuous; there is a
prompting to violence, and when violence is once yielded to, before
it can be quelled, tragedies may be enacted. To preclude such
result or a danger of it is a proper exercise of the power of the
State."
Id. at
254 U. S.
331-332.
[
Footnote 10]
Petitioner makes the subsidiary argument that 18 U.S.C. §
3231 shows a congressional intention not to supersede state
criminal statutes by any provision of Title 18. Section 3231
provides:
"The district courts of the United States shall have original
jurisdiction, exclusive of the courts of the States, of all
offenses against the laws of the United States."
"Nothing in this title shall be held to take away or impair the
jurisdiction of the courts of the several States under the laws
thereof."
The office of the second sentence is merely to limit the effect
of the jurisdictional grant of the first sentence. There was no
intention to resolve particular supersession questions by the
Section.
[
Footnote 11]
See Appendix,
post, p.
350 U. S. 511.
See also the Voorhis Act, passed in 1940, now codified as
18 U.S.C. § 2386, and the Foreign Agents Registration Act,
passed in 1938, 22 U.S.C. § 611
et seq.
[
Footnote 12]
50 U.S.C. § 781
et seq.
[
Footnote 13]
Id. § 782(3), (4).
[
Footnote 14]
Id., § 786.
[
Footnote 15]
Id., § 787.
[
Footnote 16]
Id., § 794(a).
[
Footnote 17]
Id. §§ 784, 785, 789, 790.
[
Footnote 18]
50 U.S.C. (1955 Supp.) § 841.
[
Footnote 19]
Id. § 843.
[
Footnote 20]
Id. § 782(4A).
[
Footnote 21]
It is worth observing that, in
Hines, this Court held a
Pennsylvania statute providing for alien registration was
superseded by Title III of the same Act of which the commonly
called Smith Act was Title I. Title II amended certain statutes
dealing with the exclusion and deportation of aliens. The
provisions of Title I involve a field of no less dominant federal
interest than Titles II and III, in which Congress manifestly did
not desire concurrent state action.
[
Footnote 22]
50 U.S.C. § 781(15).
[
Footnote 23]
United States v. Mesarosh [Nelson], 116 F.
Supp. 345,
aff'd, 223 F.2d 449,
cert.
granted, 350 U.S. 922.
[
Footnote 24]
377 Pa. at 76, 104 A.2d at 142.
[
Footnote 25]
The Public Papers and Addresses of Franklin D. Roosevelt, 1939
Volume, pp. 478-479 (1941).
[
Footnote 26]
Proceedings, p. 23.
[
Footnote 27]
377 Pa. at 74-75, 104 A.2d at 141.
[
Footnote 28]
E.g., compare Fla.Stat., 1953, § 876.02:
"Any person who -- . . . (5) Becomes a member of, associated
with or promotes the interest of any criminal anarchistic,
communistic, nazi-istic or fascistic organization, . . . [s]hall be
guilty of a felony . . . ,"
with 50 U.S.C. § 783(f):
"Neither the holding of office nor membership in any Communist
organization by any person shall constitute per se a violation of
subsection (a) or subsection (c) of this section or of any other
criminal statute. The fact of the registration of any person under
section 787 or section 788 of this title as an officer or member of
any Communist organization shall not be received in evidence
against such person in any prosecution for any alleged violation of
subsection (a) or subsection (c) of this section or for any alleged
violation of any other criminal statute."
[
Footnote 29]
Garner v. Teamsters Union, 346 U.
S. 485,
346 U. S.
490-491.
[
Footnote 30]
But see Grant, The Lanza Rule of Successive
Prosecutions, 32 Col.L.Rev. 1309.
MR. JUSTICE REED, with whom MR. JUSTICE BURTON and MR. JUSTICE
MINTON join, dissenting.
The problems of governmental power may be approached in this
case free from the varied viewpoints that focus on the problems of
national security. This is a jurisdictional problem of general
importance because it involves an asserted limitation on the police
power of the States when it is applied to a crime that is
punishable also by the Federal Government. As this is a recurring
problem, it is appropriate to explain our dissent.
Congress has not, in any of its statutes relating to sedition,
specifically barred the exercise of state power to punish the same
Acts under state law. And we read the majority opinion to assume
for this case that, absent federal legislation, there is no
constitutional bar to punishment of sedition against the United
States by both a State and the Nation. [
Footnote 2/1] The majority limits to the federal
Page 350 U. S. 513
courts the power to try charges of sedition against the Federal
Government.
First, the Court relies upon the pervasivness of the
anti-subversive legislation embodied in the Smith Act of 1940, 18
U.S.C. § 2385, the Internal Security Act of 1950, 64 Stat.
987, and the Communist Control Act of 1954, 68 Stat. 775. It
asserts that these Acts, in the aggregate, mean that Congress has
occupied the "field of sedition" to the exclusion of the States.
The "occupation of the field" argument has been developed by this
Court for the Commerce Clause and legislation thereunder to prevent
partitioning of this country by locally erected trade barriers. In
those cases, this Court has ruled that state legislation is
superseded when it conflicts with the comprehensive regulatory
scheme and purpose of a federal plan.
Cloverleaf Butter Co. v.
Patterson, 315 U. S. 148. The
two cases cited by the Court to support its argument that the broad
treatment of any subject within the federal power bars supplemental
action by States are of this nature. In our view, neither case is
apposite to the Smith Act. The
Varnville case dealt with
general regulation of interstate commerce making the originating
carrier liable to the holder of its interstate bill of lading for
damage caused by a common carrier of property. This Court held that
the section through the federal commerce power superseded a state
right of action against a nonoriginating carrier for damages and a
penalty for injury occurring on another line. The pertinent
section, 34 Stat. 595, § 7, expressed a controlling federal
policy for this commerce. The
Rice case dealt with
regulations of warehouses. We barred state action in that area
because the Act declared that the authority it conferred "shall be
exclusive with respect to all persons securing a license" under the
Act. 331 U.S. at
331 U. S. 224
and
331 U. S.
233.
But the federal sedition laws are distinct criminal statutes
that punish willful advocacy of the use of force
Page 350 U. S. 514
against "the government of the United States or the government
of any State." These criminal laws proscribe certain local activity
without creating any statutory or administrative regulation. There
is, consequently, no question as to whether some general
congressional regulatory scheme might be upset by a coinciding
state plan. [
Footnote 2/2] In these
circumstances, the conflict should be clear and direct before this
Court reads a congressional intent to void state legislation into
the federal sedition acts. [
Footnote
2/3] Chief Justice Marshall wrote:
"To interfere with the penal laws of a State where they . . .
have for their sole object the internal government of the country
is a very serious measure which Congress cannot be supposed to
adopt lightly or inconsiderately. . . . It would be taken
deliberately, and the intention would be clearly and unequivocally
expressed."
Cohens v.
Virginia, 6 Wheat. 264,
19 U. S. 443.
Moreover, it is quite apparent that, since 1940, Congress has been
keenly aware of the magnitude of existing state legislation
proscribing sedition. It may be validly assumed that, in these
circumstances, this Court should not void state legislation without
a clear mandate from Congress. [
Footnote 2/4]
Page 350 U. S. 515
We cannot agree that the federal criminal sanctions against
sedition directed at the United States are of such a pervasive
character as to indicate an intention to void state action.
Secondly, the Court states that the federal sedition statutes
touch a field "in which the federal interest is so dominant" they
must preclude state laws on the same subject. This concept is
suggested in a comment on
Hines v. Davidowitz,
312 U. S. 52, in
the
Rice case, at
331 U. S. 230. The Court in
Davidowitz ruled
that federal statutes compelling alien registration preclude
enforcement of state statutes requiring alien registration. We read
Davidowitz to teach nothing more than that, when the
Congress provided a single nationwide integrated system of
regulation so complete as that for aliens' registration (with
fingerprinting, a scheduling of activities, and continuous
information as to their residence), the Act bore so directly on our
foreign relations as to make it evident that Congress intended only
one uniform national alien registration system. [
Footnote 2/5]
Page 350 U. S. 516
We look upon the Smith Act as a provision for controlling
incitements to overthrow by force and violence the Nation, or any
State, or any political subdivision of either. [
Footnote 2/6] Such an exercise of federal police
power carries, we think, no such dominancy over similar state
powers as might be attributed to continuing federal regulations
concerning foreign affairs or coinage, for example. [
Footnote 2/7] In the responsibility of
national and local governments to protect themselves against
sedition, there is no "dominant interest."
Page 350 U. S. 517
We are citizens of the United States and of the State wherein we
reside, and are dependent upon the strength of both to preserve our
rights and liberties. Both may enact criminal statutes for mutual
protection unless Congress has otherwise provided. It was so held
in
Gilbert v. Minnesota, 254 U. S. 325. In
Gilbert, the federal interest in raising armies did not
keep this Court from permitting Minnesota to punish persons who
interfered with enlistments (
id. at
254 U. S.
326), even though a comprehensive federal criminal law
proscribed identical activity. 40 Stat. 553. We do not understand
that case as does the majority. In our view, this Court treated the
Minnesota statute only alternatively as a police measure, p.
254 U. S. 331.
Minnesota made it unlawful to advocate "that men should not enlist
in the military or naval forces of the United States." It was
contended, pp.
254 U. S.
327-328, that the power to punish such advocacy was
"conferred upon Congress and withheld from the States." This Court
ruled against the contention, saying:
"An army, of course, can only be raised and directed by
Congress, in neither has the State power, but it has power to
regulate the conduct of its citizens and to restrain the exertion
of baleful influences against the promptings of patriotic duty to
the detriment of the welfare of the Nation and State. To do so is
not to usurp a National power; it is only to render a service to
its people. . . ."
Id. at
254 U. S.
330-331. [
Footnote
2/8]
Page 350 U. S. 518
Thirdly, the Court finds ground for abrogating Pennsylvania's
anti-sedition statute because, in the Court's view, the State's
administration of the Act may hamper the enforcement of the federal
law. Quotations are inserted from statements of President Roosevelt
and Mr. Hoover, the Director of the Federal Bureau of
Investigation, to support the Court's position. But a reading of
the quotations leads us to conclude that their purpose was to gain
prompt knowledge of evidence of subversive activities so that the
federal agency could be fully advised. We find no suggestion from
any official source that state officials should be less alert to
ferret out or punish subversion. The Court's attitude as to
interference seems to us quite contrary to that of the Legislative
and Executive Departments. Congress was advised of the existing
state sedition legislation when the Smith Act was enacted, and has
been kept current with its spread. [
Footnote 2/9] No declaration of exclusiveness followed.
In this very case, the Executive appears by brief of the Department
of Justice,
amicus curiae. The brief summarizes this
point:
"The administration of the various state laws has not, in the
course of the fifteen years that the federal and state sedition
laws have existed side by side, in fact, interfered with,
embarrassed, or impeded the enforcement of the Smith Act. The
significance of this absence of conflict in administration or
enforcement
Page 350 U. S. 519
of the federal and state sedition laws will be appreciated when
it is realized that this period has included the stress of wartime
security requirements and the federal investigation and prosecution
under the Smith Act of the principal national and regional
Communist leaders. [
Footnote
2/10]"
Id. at 30-31. Mere fear by courts of possible
difficulties does not seem to us in these circumstances a valid
reason for ousting a State from exercise of its police power. Those
are matters for legislative determination.
Finally, and this one point seems in and of itself decisive,
there is an independent reason for reversing the Pennsylvania
Supreme Court. The Smith Act appears in Title 18 of the United
States Code, which Title codifies the federal criminal laws.
Section 3231 of that Title provides:
"Nothing in this title shall be held to take away or impair the
jurisdiction of the courts of the several States under the laws
thereof."
That declaration springs from the federal character of our
Nation. It recognizes the fact that maintenance of order and
fairness rests primarily with the States. The section was first
enacted in 1825, and has appeared successively in the federal
criminal laws since that time. [
Footnote 2/11] This Court has interpreted the section
to mean that States may provide concurrent legislation in the
absence of explicit congressional intent to the contrary.
Sexton v. California, 189 U. S. 319,
189 U. S.
324-325. The majority's position in this case
Page 350 U. S. 520
cannot be reconciled with that clear authorization of
Congress.
The law stands against any advocacy of violence to change
established governments. Freedom of speech allows full play to the
processes of reason. The state and national legislative bodies have
legislated within constitutional limits so as to allow the widest
participation by the law enforcement officers of the respective
governments. The individual States were not told that they are
powerless to punish local acts of sedition, nominally directed
against the United States. Courts should not interfere. We would
reverse the judgment of the Supreme Court of Pennsylvania.
[
Footnote 2/1]
No problem of double punishment exists in this case.
See the Court's opinion, p.
350 U. S. 499,
and its last paragraph, p.
350 U. S. 509.
See United States v. Lanza,
260 U. S. 377,
260 U. S. 382;
The Federalist, No. 32.
Cf. 18 U. S. Moore,
5 Wheat. 1, statement at p. 22 with that at pp.
18 U. S.
44-45.
[
Footnote 2/2]
Hunt, Federal Supremacy and State Anti-Subversive Legislation,
53 Mich.L.Rev. 407, 427-428; Note, 55 Col.L.Rev. 83, 90.
[
Footnote 2/3]
Gilbert v. Minnesota, 254 U. S. 325,
254 U. S.
328-333;
Reid v. Colorado, 187 U.
S. 137,
187 U. S. 148;
Sinnot v.
Davenport, 22 How. 227,
63 U. S. 243;
Fox v. Ohio, 5
How. 410,
46 U. S.
432-435.
[
Footnote 2/4]
Forty-two States, along with Alaska and Hawaii, now have laws
which penalize the advocacy of violent overthrow of the federal or
state governments. Digest of the Public Record of Communism in the
United States (Fund for the Republic, 1955) 266-306. In hearings
before the House Judiciary Committee on the proposed Smith Act,
both witnesses and members of the Committee made references to
existing state sedition laws. Hearings before Subcommittee No. 3,
Committee on the Judiciary, House of Representatives, on H.R. 5138,
76th Cong., 1st Sess., pp. 7, 69, 83-85. Similar comment was heard
in the congressional debates. 84 Cong.Rec. 10452. In fact, the
Smith Act was patterned on the New York Criminal Anarchy Statute.
Commonwealth v. Nelson, 377 Pa. 58, 86, 104 A.2d 133, 147.
The original text of the Smith Act is set out in the hearings
before Subcommittee No. 3,
supra, p. 1, and the New York
Act may be read in
Gitlow v. New York, 268 U.
S. 652,
268 U. S.
654-655. Further evidence of congressional notice of
state legislation may be found since the passage of the Smith Act.
S.Rep. No. 1358, 81st Cong., 2d Sess., p. 9; H.R.Rep. No. 2980,
81st Cong., 2d Sess., p. 2; H.R.Rep. No.1950, 81st Cong., 2d Sess.,
pp. 25-46 (Un-American Activities Committee).
See 67
Harv.L.Rev. 1419, 1420; 40 Cornell L.Rev. 130, 133.
[
Footnote 2/5]
In
Allen-Bradley Local v. Board, 315 U.
S. 740,
315 U. S. 749,
we said:
"In the
Hines case, a federal system of alien
registration was held to supersede a state system of registration.
But there, we were dealing with a problem which had an impact on
the general field of foreign relations. The delicacy of the issues
which were posed alone raised grave questions as to the propriety
of allowing a state system of regulation to function alongside of a
federal system. In that field, any 'concurrent state power that may
exist is restricted to the narrowest of limits.' P.
312 U. S.
68. Therefore, we were more ready to conclude that a
federal Act in a field that touched international relations
superseded state regulation than we were in those cases where a
State was exercising its historic powers over such traditionally
local matters as public safety and order and the use of streets and
highways."
The
Davidowitz case is distinguishable on other
grounds. Alien registration is not directly related to control of
undesirable conduct; consequently there is no imperative problem of
local law enforcement. 102 Pa.L.Rev. at 1091. There is also
considerable legislative history behind the Alien Registration Act
which suggests that Congress was trying to avoid overburdening of
aliens; some features of the conflicting state law had been
expressly rejected by Congress. 312 U.S. at
312 U. S. 71-73.
See 39 Minn.L.Rev. 213. It should be noted also that the
coincidence between the state and federal laws in the
Davidowitz case was so great that no real purpose was
served by the state law. 34 Boston U.L.Rev. 514, 517-518.
States are barred by the Constitution from entering into
treaties and by 18 U.S.C. § 953 from correspondence or
intercourse with foreign governments with relation to their
disputes or controversies with this Nation.
[
Footnote 2/6]
Such efforts may be punishable crimes.
Dennis v. United
States, 341 U. S. 494,
341 U. S.
508-510.
[
Footnote 2/7]
It seems quite reasonable to believe
"that the exclusion principle is to be more strictly applied
when the Congress acts in a field wherein the constitutional grant
of power to the federal government is exclusive, as in its right to
protect interstate commerce and to control international
relations."
Albertson v. Millard, 106 F.
Supp. 635, 641.
[
Footnote 2/8]
Mr. Justice Brandeis, dissenting, emphasized the ruling here
applicable thus:
"Congress has the exclusive power to legislate concerning the
Army and the Navy of the United States, and to determine, among
other things, the conditions of enlistment. . . ."
". . . The States act only under the express direction of
Congress. . . ."
". . . As exclusive power over enlistments in the Army and the
Navy of the United States and the responsibility for the conduct of
war is vested by the Federal Constitution in Congress, legislation
by State on this subject is necessarily void unless authorized by
Congress. . . . Here, Congress not only had exclusive power to act
on the subject; it had exercised that power directly by the
Espionage Law before Gilbert spoke the words for which he was
sentenced. . . . The States may not punish treason against the
United States . . . although indirectly acts of treason may affect
them vitally. No more may they arrogate to themselves authority to
punish the teaching of pacifism which the legislature of Minnesota
appears to have put into that category."
Id. at
254 U. S.
336-343.
[
Footnote 2/9]
See 350
U.S. 497fn2/4|>note 4,
supra.
[
Footnote 2/10]
The brief added, p. 31:
". . . the Attorney General of the United States recently
informed the attorneys general of the several states . . . that a
full measure of federal-state cooperation would be in the public
interest.
See New York Times, Sept. 15, 1955, p. 19."
[
Footnote 2/11]
4 Stat. 115, 122-123; 18 U.S.C.A. § 3231 (Historical and
Revision Notes).