A Los Angeles municipal ordinance makes it an offense for a
person who has been convicted of a crime punishable in California
as a felony to remain in the City or more than five days without
registering with the Chief of Police. On appeal from a conviction
for failure to register,
Held: when applied to a person who.has no actual
knowledge of his duty to register, and where no showing is made of
the probability of such knowledge, this ordinance violates the Due
Process Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment. Pp.
355 U. S.
226-230.
Reversed.
Page 355 U. S. 226
MR. JUSTICE DOUGLAS delivered the opinion of the Court.
Section 52.38(a) of the Los Angeles Municipal Code defines
"convicted person" as follows:
"Any person who, subsequent to January 1, 1921, has been or
hereafter is convicted of an offense punishable as a felony in the
State of California, or who has been or who is hereafter convicted
of any offense in any place other than the State of California,
which offense, if committed in the State of California, would have
been punishable as a felony."
Section 52.39 provides that it shall be unlawful for "any
convicted person" to be or remain in Los Angeles for a period of
more than five days without registering; it requires any person
having a place of abode outside the city to register if he comes
into the city on five occasions or more during a 30-day period; and
it prescribes the information to be furnished the Chief of Police
on registering.
Section 52.43(b) makes the failure to register a continuing
offense, each day's failure constituting a separate offense.
Appellant, arrested on suspicion of another offense, was charged
with a violation of this registration law.
* The evidence
showed that she had been, at the time of her arrest, a resident of
Los Angeles for over seven years. Within that period, she had been
convicted in Los Angeles of the crime of forgery, an offense which
California punishes as a felony. Though convicted of a crime
punishable as a felony, she had not, at the time of her arrest,
registered under the Municipal Code. At the trial, appellant
Page 355 U. S. 227
asserted that § 52.39 of the Code denies her due process of
law and other rights under the Federal Constitution unnecessary to
enumerate. The trial court denied this objection. The case was
tried to a jury, which found appellant guilty. The court fined her
$250 and placed her on probation for three years. Appellant,
renewing her constitutional objection, moved for arrest of judgment
and a new trial. This motion was denied. On appeal, the
constitutionality of the Code was again challenged. The Appellate
Department of the Superior Court affirmed the judgment, holding
there was no merit to the claim that the ordinance was
unconstitutional. The case is here on appeal. 28 U.S.C. §
1257(2). We noted probable jurisdiction, 352 U.S. 914, and
designated
amicus curiae to appear in support of
appellant. The case having been argued and reargued, we now hold
that the registration provisions of the Code as sought to be
applied here violate the Due Process requirement of the Fourteenth
Amendment.
The registration provision, carrying criminal penalties, applies
if a person has been convicted "of an offense punishable as a
felony in the State of California" or, in case he has been
convicted in another State, if the offense "would have been
punishable as a felony" had it been committee in California. No
element of willfulness is, by terms, included in the ordinance, nor
read into it by the California court as a condition necessary for a
conviction.
We must assume that appellant had no actual knowledge of the
requirement that she register under this ordinance, as she offered
proof of this defense, which was refused. The question is whether a
registration act of this character violates due process where it is
applied to a person who has no actual knowledge of his duty to
register, and where no showing is made of the probability of such
knowledge.
Page 355 U. S. 228
We do not go with Blackstone in saying that "a vicious will" is
necessary to constitute a crime, 4 Bl.Comm. *21, for conduct alone,
without regard to the intent of the doer, is often sufficient.
There is wide latitude in the lawmakers to declare an offense and
to exclude elements of knowledge and diligence from its definition.
See Chicago, B. & Q. R. Co. v. United States,
220 U. S. 559,
220 U. S. 578.
But we deal here with conduct that is wholly passive -- mere
failure to register. It is unlike the commission of acts, or the
failure to act under circumstances that should alert the doer to
the consequences of his deed.
Cf. Shevlin-Carpenter Co. v.
Minnesota, 218 U. S. 57;
United States v. Balint, 258 U. S. 250;
United States v. Dotterweich, 320 U.
S. 277,
320 U. S. 284.
The rule that "ignorance of the law will not excuse"
(
Shevlin-Carpenter Co. v. Minnesota, supra, at
218 U. S. 68) is
deep in our law, as is the principle that, of all the powers of
local government, the police power is "one of the least limitable."
District of Columbia v. Brooke, 214 U.
S. 138,
214 U. S. 149.
On the other hand, due process places some limits on its exercise.
Engrained in our concept of due process is the requirement of
notice. Notice is sometimes essential so that the citizen has the
chance to defend charges. Notice is required before property
interests are disturbed, before assessments are made, before
penalties are assessed. Notice is required in a myriad of
situations where a penalty or forfeiture might be suffered for mere
failure to act. Recent cases illustrating the point are
Mullane
v. Central Hanover Bank & Trust Co., 339 U.
S. 306;
Covey v. Town of Somers, 351 U.
S. 141;
Walker v. City of Hutchinson,
352 U. S. 112.
These cases involved only property interests in civil litigation.
But the principle is equally appropriate where a person, wholly
passive and unaware of any wrongdoing, is brought to the bar of
justice for condemnation in a criminal case.
Page 355 U. S. 229
Registration laws are common, and their range is wide.
Cf.
New York ex rel. Bryant v. Zimmerman, 278 U. S.
63;
United States v. Harriss, 347 U.
S. 612;
United States v. Kahriger, 345 U. S.
22. Many such laws are akin to licensing statutes in
that they pertain to the regulation of business activities. But the
present ordinance is entirely different. Violation of its
provisions is unaccompanied by any activity whatever, mere presence
in the city being the test. Moreover, circumstances which might
move one to inquire as to the necessity of registration are
completely lacking. At most, the ordinance is but a law enforcement
technique designed for the convenience of law enforcement agencies
through which a list of the names and addresses of felons then
residing in a given community is compiled. The disclosure is merely
a compilation of former convictions already publicly recorded in
the jurisdiction where obtained. Nevertheless, this appellant, on
first becoming aware of her duty to register, was given no
opportunity to comply with the law and avoid its penalty, even
though her default was entirely innocent. She could but suffer the
consequences of the ordinance, namely, conviction with the
imposition of heavy criminal penalties thereunder. We believe that
actual knowledge of the duty to register or proof of the
probability of such knowledge and subsequent failure to comply are
necessary before a conviction under the ordinance can stand. As
Holmes wrote in The Common Law,
"A law which punished conduct which would not be blameworthy in
the average member of the community would be too severe for that
community to bear."
Id. at 50. Its severity lies in the absence of an opportunity
either to avoid the consequences of the law or to defend any
prosecution brought under it. Where a person did not know of the
duty to register, and where there was no proof of the probability
of such knowledge, he may not be convicted consistently
Page 355 U. S. 230
with due process. Were it otherwise, the evil would be as great
as it is when the law is written in print too fine to read or in a
language foreign to the community.
Reversed.
MR. JUSTICE BURTON, dissents because he believes that, as
applied to this appellant, the ordinance does not violate her
constitutional rights.
* For a recent comprehensive review of these registration laws,
see Note, 103 U. of Pa.L.Rev. 60 (1954).
MR. JUSTICE FRANKFURTER, whom MR. JUSTICE HARLAN and MR. JUSTICE
WHITTAKER join, dissenting.
The present laws of the United States and of the forty-eight
States are thick with provisions that command that some things not
be done and others be done, although persons convicted under such
provisions may have had no awareness of what the law required or
that what they did was wrongdoing. The body of decisions sustaining
such legislation, including innumerable registration laws, is
almost as voluminous as the legislation itself. The matter is
summarized in
United States v. Balint, 258 U.
S. 250,
258 U. S.
252:
"Many instances of this are to be found in regulatory measures
in the exercise of what is called the police power, where the
emphasis of the statute is evidently upon achievement of some
social betterment rather than the punishment of the crimes as in
cases of
mala in se."
Surely there can hardly be a difference as a matter of fairness,
of hardship, or of justice, if one may invoke it, between the case
of a person wholly innocent of wrongdoing, in the sense that he was
not remotely conscious of violating any law, who is imprisoned for
five years for conduct relating to narcotics, and the case of
another person who is placed on probation for three years on
condition that she pay $250, for failure, as a local resident,
convicted under local law of a felony, to register under
Page 355 U. S. 231
a law passed as an exercise of the State's "police power."*
Considerations of hardship often lead courts, naturally enough, to
attribute to a statute the requirement of a certain mental element
-- some consciousness of wrongdoing and knowledge of the law's
command -- as a matter of statutory construction. Then too, a
cruelly disproportionate relation between what the law requires and
the sanction for its disobedience may constitute a violation of the
Eighth Amendment as a cruel and unusual punishment, and, in respect
to the States, even offend the Due Process Clause of the Fourteenth
Amendment.
But what the Court here does is to draw a constitutional line
between a State's requirement of doing and not doing. What is this
but a return to Year Book distinctions between feasance and
nonfeasance -- a distinction that may have significance in the
evolution of common law notions of liability, but is inadmissible
as a line between constitutionality and unconstitutionality. One
can be confident that Mr. Justice Holmes would have been the last
to draw such a line. What he wrote about "blameworthiness" is worth
quoting in its context:
"It is not intended to deny that criminal liability, as well as
civil, is founded on blameworthiness. Such a denial would shock the
moral sense of any civilized community; or, to put it another way,
a law which punished conduct which would not be blameworthy in the
average member of the community would be too severe for that
community to bear."
(This passage
Page 355 U. S. 232
must be read in the setting of the broader discussion of which
it is an essential part. Holmes, The Common Law at 49-50.)
If the generalization that underlies, and alone can justify,
this decision were to be given its relevant scope, a whole volume
of the United States Reports would be required to document in
detail the legislation in this country that would fall or be
impaired. I abstain from entering upon a consideration of such
legislation, and adjudications upon it, because I feel confident
that the present decision will turn out to be an isolated deviation
from the strong current of precedents -- a derelict on the waters
of the law. Accordingly, I content myself with dissenting.
* This case does not involve a person who, convicted of a crime
in another jurisdiction, must decide whether he has been convicted
of a crime that "would have been punishable as a felony" had it
been committed in California. Appellant committed forgery in
California, and was convicted under California law. Furthermore,
she was convicted in Los Angeles itself, and there she resided for
over seven years before the arrest leading to the present
proceedings.