The four appellants were convicted in state courts for refusing
to answer questions about Communistic or subversive activities put
to them at sessions of the "Un-American Activities Commission"
established in the legislative branch of the Ohio Government. Each
was led by the Commission to believe that the privilege against
self-incrimination afforded by the Ohio Constitution was generally
available to him, and each relied on that privilege; but the Ohio
Supreme Court sustained their convictions on the ground that the
privilege was not able to them, because a state immunity statute
deprived them of the protection of that privilege.
Held:
1. The appeals are dismissed for want of jurisdiction under 28
U.S.C. §1257(2), since appellants have not demonstrated that
an attack was made by them in the state courts on the validity of a
state statute under the Federal Constitution; but certiorari is
granted, since various rights, privileges and immunities under the
Federal Constitution were claimed in the state courts, as required
by 28 U.S.C. §1257(3). Pp.
360 U. S.
434-437.
2. The convictions of three of the appellants violated the Due
Process Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment, since they were
entrapped by being convicted for exercising a privilege which the
Commission had led them to believe was available to them. Pp.
360 U. S.
437-440.
3. The conviction of the other appellant for refusing to state
where he lived after being directed by the Commission to do so is
affirmed by an equally divided Court. Pp.
360 U. S.
440-442,
360 U. S.
442-445.
167 Ohio St. 295, 147 N.E.2d 847, affirmed in part and reversed
in part.
Page 360 U. S. 424
MR. JUSTICE BRENNAN delivered the opinion of the Court.
These two appeals involve convictions of four appellants for
refusal to answer certain questions put to them at sessions of the
"Un-American Activities Commission" of the State of Ohio,
established in the legislative branch of the Ohio Government.
[
Footnote 1] The appellants had
claimed the privilege against self-incrimination in refusing to
answer each of the questions. The cases are before us for the
second time; on prior appeals, the judgments below were vacated and
the causes remanded for reconsideration in the light of
Sweezy
v. New Hampshire, 354 U. S. 234, and
Watkins v. United States, 354 U.
S. 178.
See 354 U.S. 929. The remand resulted
in a reaffirmance of the prior judgment without discussion, 167
Ohio St. 295, 147 N.E.2d 847, and, on the present appeals, we
postponed
Page 360 U. S. 425
further consideration of the jurisdictional questions presented
until the arguments on the merits. 358 U.S. 862, 863.
The issues tendered by the parties range broadly and involve the
power of the Ohio Legislature, in view of existing federal
legislation, to investigate activities deemed subversive of the
forms of government within the Nation,
cf. Pennsylvania v.
Nelson, 350 U. S. 497; the
power of the State to compel disclosure of matters interconnected
with the protected freedoms of speech and assembly,
cf. NAACP
v. Alabama, 357 U. S. 449;
Sweezy v. New Hampshire, supra; the existence of an
expressed legislative interest for such an inquiry, and its
definition and articulation to the person summoned,
cf. Watkins
v. United States, supra; Sweezy v. New Hampshire, supra; Scull v.
Virginia, 359 U. S. 344, and
the effect on testimonial compulsion of state immunity statutes not
affording immunity from federal prosecution,
cf. Knapp v.
Schweitzer, 357 U. S. 371. But
our disposition of these cases makes it unnecessary to consider the
application of the principles of the cases just cited. The
appellants were informed by the Commission that they had a right to
rely on the privilege against self-incrimination afforded by art.
I, § 10, of the Ohio Constitution. The Ohio Supreme Court,
however, held that the appellants were presumed to know the law of
Ohio -- that an Ohio immunity statute deprived them of the
protection of the privilege -- and that they therefore had
committed an offense by not answering the questions as to which
they asserted the privilege. We hold that, in the circumstances of
these cases, the judgments of the Ohio Supreme Court affirming the
convictions violated the Due Process Clause of the Fourteenth
Amendment, and must be reversed, except as to one conviction, as to
which we are equally divided. After the Commission, speaking for
the State, acted as it did to sustain the Ohio Supreme Court's
judgment
Page 360 U. S. 426
would be to sanction an indefensible sort of entrapment by the
State -- convicting a citizen for exercising a privilege which the
State had clearly told him was available to him. We agree with that
part of Judge Stewart's dissenting opinion in the Ohio Supreme
Court in which he said:
"since the defendants were apprised by the commission at the
time they were testifying that they had a right to refuse to answer
questions which might incriminate them, they could not possibly, in
following the admonition of the commission, be in contempt of it. .
. ."
164 Ohio St. at 563, 133 N.E.2d at 125. A rather detailed
description of the proceedings below must be made to illuminate the
basis of decision below and the turning point of our review of it
here.
Mrs. Morgan, appellant in No. 463, was summoned before the
Commission and interrogated mainly in regard to Communist Party
activities. She appeared without counsel. To each question put, she
answered,
"I regret that I cannot answer your question under the Fifth
Amendment of the Constitution, because to do so would give your
Committee an opportunity to incriminate me,"
or some more abbreviated form of words to the same effect. Such
responses were given to virtually all the questions, and, in almost
every case, the Commission proceeded directly to ask its next
question after receiving the response. In no case did the
Commission direct that she answer its question. In one or two
cases, Commission members expressed surprise that she might
consider an answer incriminating, and, on such an occasion, the
Chairman asked her,
"Mrs. Morgan, are you aware of the fact that your failure to
answer questions -- some questions of this Commission, might also
tend to put you in an embarrassing situation?"
At another point, the Chairman positively informed her,
"I should like to advise you, under the Fifth Amendment, you are
permitted to refuse to answer questions that might tend to
incriminate
Page 360 U. S. 427
you. . . . But you are not permitted to refuse to answer
questions simply for your own convenience."
Raley, Stern, and Brown, appellants in No. 175, appeared before
the Commission successively on another occasion about six months
later. They were interrogated about subversive activities in the
labor movement. Raley answered some questions, but to most of them
asserted the privilege against self-incrimination of the Federal
and Ohio Constitutions. Most of his assertions of the privilege,
including his initial ones, were not made the subject of comment or
question by the Commission, the next question in the inquiry being
put at once. On some few occasions when Raley claimed the
privilege, the Commission members indicated their doubt whether any
answer to a specific question put could be incriminating. On one
occasion, the Commission asked Raley as to whether he recollected a
certain interview. Raley claimed the privilege. The Chairman took
the view that Raley was required to speak as to whether he recalled
the interview, but assured him that the privilege existed as to the
details of the interview: "If you recall it, and we ask you as to
your recollection, then you are privileged to claim your rights
under the Constitution. . . ." This and one other occasion were the
only ones in which the Commission even approached directing an
answer to a question by Raley; but, in one case, the Chairman
finally asked Raley to confer with his counsel to determine
whether, in his opinion, the privilege applied, and, in another,
Raley did so of his own accord; then, upon an affirmative reply by
Raley's counsel, the Commission passed at once to the next
question. [
Footnote 2]
Page 360 U. S. 428
Stern was the next person to appear at the inquiry. After giving
his name, he claimed the privilege against self-incrimination at
the very next, question, which called for his address. Commission
counsel asked him,
"Is there something about the nature or character of the home in
which you live that to admit you live there would make you subject
to criminal prosecution?"
On Stern's continued refusal to answer, the Chairman directed an
answer to the question, which was refused. To most subsequent
questions, Stern again claimed the privilege against
self-incrimination, and, on the great majority of questions, the
Commission simply passed on to the next question. The Chairman and
Stern worked out a short form of words whereby he would be
understood to be claiming the privilege
Page 360 U. S. 429
as to a particular question. [
Footnote 3] At one point, Stern asked the Commission if
the Commission had the right to go into his opinions and to require
him to speak as to them. The Chairman informed him, "Not if, in
your opinion, by so doing you might tend to incriminate yourself."
On a few occasions, the Chairman requested that Stern answer a
question, but, except for the question as to his residence, the
occasions were those in which Stern had neither given a direct
answer nor invoked the privilege, and, upon assertion of the
privilege in these cases, the request was not renewed. [
Footnote 4]
Page 360 U. S. 430
Brown then was subjected to inquiry. He claimed the privilege as
to self-incrimination to most of the questions put to him. While
the Chairman never told him in so many words (as he had told the
other three appellants) that the privilege was available, Brown and
the Chairman engaged in long colloquies in an attempt by the
Chairman to clarify that, by using a certain form of words, Brown
was claiming the privilege. [
Footnote 5] The Chairman's concern
Page 360 U. S. 431
is inexplicable on any other basis than that he deemed the
privilege available at the inquiry, and his statements would tend
to create such an impression in one appearing at the inquiry. When
once he made it clear that he was claiming the privilege as to a
question, Brown was never directed to answer. He was on a couple of
occasions directed to answer a question when he was engaging in a
colloquy with the Commission without either having answered it
directly or having claimed the privilege; upon his claim of the
privilege, the next question was at once put. [
Footnote 6]
The Ohio immunity statute extends, so far as is here relevant,
to any person appearing before a legislative committee, and grants
immunity from state prosecutions or penalties "on account of a
transaction, matter, or thing, concerning which he testifies"; the
statute declares that the testimony given on such an appearance
"shall not be used as evidence in a criminal proceeding" against
the person testifying. Ohio Rev.Code, § 101.44. For reasons
unexplained, the existence of this immunity was never suggested by
the Commission to any of the appellants, and in fact, as the above
statement makes evident,
Page 360 U. S. 432
the Commission's actions were totally inconsistent with a view
on its part that the privilege against self-incrimination was not
available. The Commission thought the privilege available, and it
gave positive advice that it could be used. As the Chairman
testified in the proceedings below:
"It was the policy of the commission not [to] press questions
which we felt would be of an incriminating nature. For instance,
whenever a witness was asked a question -- I believe every witness
before the commission was asked the question -- are you or have you
ever been a member of the communist party, and if the witness
refused to answer that question, we did not press it. Frequently I
made statements which indicated the policy of the commission."
Indictments were found against the four appellants for failure
to answer various of the questions put to them at the inquiry. In
the cases of Raley, Stern, and Brown -- who were indicted at the
same time and tried together, but in a different court from Mrs.
Morgan -- only a few of the questions were made the subject of the
indictment. [
Footnote 7] There
appears to have been some effort to restrict their indictments to
those questions to which the prosecution thought no answer could
have been incriminating. On the other hand, virtually every
question asked Mrs. Morgan was made the subject of her indictment.
[
Footnote 8]
A jury was waived by Raley, Stern, and Brown, and they were
found guilty on each of the relatively few counts found against
them, the trial court filing no opinion or conclusions of law. The
Court of Appeals affirmed the
Page 360 U. S. 433
convictions on some of the counts as to Raley, on one of the two
counts as to Stern, and on all the counts as to Brown, and reversed
the convictions on some of the counts as to Raley and on one count
as to Stern. [
Footnote 9] 100
Ohio App. 75, 99-100, 136 N.E.2d 295, 315-316. It held that there
was sufficient direction to the witnesses to answer the questions
involved, so that their refusal was willful. The touchstone by
which it affirmed some of the counts of the convictions and
reversed others was whether, in the court's view, an answer to the
question might have in fact been incriminating. While the court
indicated that the immunity statute applied, it did not rely upon
it in its judgment -- as it expressly stated, 100 Ohio App. at 99,
136 N.E.2d at 315, and as its reversals of certain of the counts
indicated.
A jury was also waived by Mrs. Morgan, and she too was found
guilty by a trial judge. The judge acquitted her on a few counts as
to questions found not pertinent to the inquiry or duplicative of
other questions. But, as to the remaining counts, he ruled that her
plea of self-incrimination was not valid because she had referred
solely to the Fifth Amendment, and not to the appropriate provision
of the Ohio Constitution guaranteeing freedom from compulsory
self-incrimination. Ohio Const., art. I, § 10. Because of
this, he held that it was unnecessary to have directed Mrs. Morgan
to answer the questions or to have advised her at the inquiry that
her plea of the privilege against self-incrimination was rejected.
Further constitutional claims were summarily rejected. The Court of
Appeals -- a different one from that which passed on the appeal of
Raley, Stern, and Brown -- affirmed the judgment for the reasons
stated in the trial court's opinion.
On appeal, the Supreme Court of Ohio, though affirming the
convictions, abandoned reliance on the theories
Page 360 U. S. 434
under which the appellants were found guilty by the courts
below. It ruled that a fair reference to the privilege against
self-incrimination of the United States Constitution was adequate
to invoke the privilege under the Ohio Constitution, finding such
reference made. 164 Ohio St. at 538-539, 133 N.E.2d at 111-112. And
it did not discuss the theory on which the Court of Appeals relied
in the case of Raley, Stern, and Brown; its basis for affirming the
judgment was entirely independent of that of the Court of Appeals.
The Supreme Court placed its reliance entirely on the immunity
statute. It held that the immunity under the statute was
automatically available to the appellants, that, even though it did
not preclude federal prosecution, it was adequate to make answers
compellable, and that, since "the immunity granted . . . precluded
the possibility of justifying a refusal" to answer on the grounds
of self-incrimination, 164 Ohio St. at 553, 133 N.E.2d at 120, a
direction by the Commission to the appellants to answer was not
necessary. Various objections to the convictions under state law
were also passed on, and rejected. As we have noted, on remand from
this Court, the Ohio Supreme Court passed on contentions made under
Sweezy v. New Hampshire, supra, and
Watkins v. United
States, supra, and adhered to its former judgments.
First. We must examine our jurisdiction over these
appeals. Appellants assert jurisdiction under 28 U.S.C. §
1257(2), a grant of jurisdiction on appeal,
"where is drawn in question the validity of a statute of any
state on the ground of its being repugnant to the Constitution,
treaties or laws of the United States, and the decision is in favor
of its validity."
In their notices of appeal to this Court, appellants have
phrased some of their federal constitutional claims as attacks on
the constitutionality of the Ohio statute authorizing the
Commission and the statute providing for immunity. But this does
not suffice:
Page 360 U. S. 435
"It is essential to our jurisdiction on appeal . . . that there
be an explicit and timely insistence in the state courts that a
state statute, as applied, is repugnant to the federal
Constitution, treaties or laws."
Charleston Federal Savings & Loan Ass'n v.
Alderson, 324 U. S. 182,
324 U. S. 185.
Despite the import of our order postponing the consideration of
jurisdiction till the hearing on the merits,
see Rule
16(4) of this Court, [
Footnote
10] appellants have made no effort to support their burden of
demonstrating an attack made by them on the validity of a state
statute in the state courts, and we have found none. Accordingly,
the appeals are dismissed.
See Sweezy v. New Hampshire,
supra, at
354 U. S. 236.
But since various rights, privileges and immunities under the
Federal Constitution were claimed below, 28 U.S.C. § 1257(3),
we consider the appeal papers as petitions for certiorari, and, in
view of the public importance of the questions presented, grant
certiorari. 28 U.S.C. § 2103.
The view we take to the merits of the case requires us to
examine whether the appellants made a proper challenge to their
convictions below, on federal constitutional grounds, on the theory
that they were being convicted for claiming the privilege against
self-incrimination after not being given to understand at the time
of the inquiry that such a privilege was unavailable. In the lower
Ohio courts, federal constitutional questions as to the adequacy of
the insistence of the Commission on an answer to its questions were
involved in the lower courts' discussion of the cases. In the
appeal of Raley, Stern and Brown, the Court of Appeals discussed
the extent to which the Commission gave the defendants to
understand that answers were in fact desired to particular
questions, and this as
Page 360 U. S. 436
part of its consideration of constitutional claims under both
the Federal and Ohio Constitutions. 100 Ohio App. at 87-90, 136
N.E.2d at 308-310. The trial court's opinion in Mrs. Morgan's case
refers to the contention that a direction to answer was not given
to the defendant, and also recites that a due process claim under
the Federal Constitution was made.
The assignments of error made by Mrs. Morgan in the State
Supreme Court show that she claimed in that court that the judgment
of conviction was violative of due process, as guaranteed by the
Federal Constitution, in that, while she claimed the privilege, she
was not
"charged with refusal to answer any questions asked by members
of the Commission, and that she was not notified that her claim of
the privilege as rejected by the Commission."
The State Supreme Court passed on this claim, [
Footnote 11] holding that a direction to
answer was unnecessary, because of the immunity statute, and stated
generally that its reasoning and conclusions in her case "apply
with equal force to the appeal of Raley, Stern and Brown." 164 Ohio
St. at 532, 133 N.E.2d at 108. There can be no question as to the
proper presentation of a federal claim when the highest state court
passes on it.
See Manhattan Life Ins. Co. of New York v.
Cohen, 234 U. S. 123,
234 U. S. 134.
We think this sufficient here to satisfy the statutory requirement
that the federal
Page 360 U. S. 437
right sought to be vindicated in this Court be one claimed
below. 28 U.S.C. § 1257(3). [
Footnote 12]
Second. We conclude that the judgments of conviction
rendered below violate the Due Process Clause of the Fourteenth
Amendment, with an exception to be later noted. We need not decide
whether there is demanded of state investigating bodies as explicit
a rejection of a claimed privilege against self-incrimination as
has been held to be necessary under the statute punishing contempts
of Congress.
Quinn v. United States, 349 U.
S. 155;
Emspak v. United States, 349 U.
S. 190,
349 U. S. 202;
Bart v. United States, 349 U. S. 219. Nor
need we decide whether it would be a sufficient basis for reversal
here simply that the appellants were not given notice of the
immunity law at the inquiry, though, in analogous contexts, we have
insisted that state investigators make clear to those before them
the basis on which an answer is required.
Scull v.
Virginia, 359 U. S. 344,
359 U. S. 353.
This case is more than that; here, the Chairman of the Commission,
who clearly appeared to be the agent of the State in a position to
give such assurances, apprised three of the appellants that the
privilege in fact existed, and, by his behavior toward the fourth,
obviously gave the same impression. Other members of the Commission
and its counsel made statements which
Page 360 U. S. 438
were totally inconsistent with any belief in the applicability
of the immunity statute, and it is fair to characterize the whole
conduct of the inquiry as to the four as identical with what it
would have been if Ohio had had no immunity statute at all. Yet
here, the crime said to have been committed by the appellants, as
defined by the State Supreme Court, was simply that of declining to
answer any relevant question on the ground of possible
self-incrimination. This was because the Court held that the Ohio
immunity statute automatically removed any basis for a valid claim
of the privilege, which generally exists under Ohio law. [
Footnote 13] Ohio Const., art. I,
§ 10. Accordingly, any refusal to answer, based on a claim of
the privilege, was said to constitute the offense. While there is
no suggestion that the Commission had any intent to deceive the
appellants, we repeat that to sustain the judgment of the Ohio
Supreme Court on such a basis after the Commission had acted as it
did would be to sanction the most indefensible sort of entrapment
by the State -- convicting a citizen for exercising a privilege
which the State clearly had told him was available to him.
Cf.
Sorrells v. United States, 287 U. S. 435,
287 U. S. 442.
A State may not issue commands to its citizens, under criminal
sanctions, in language so vague and undefined as to afford no fair
warning of what conduct might transgress them.
Lanzetta v. New
Jersey, 306 U. S. 451.
Inexplicably contradictory commands in statutes ordaining criminal
penalties have, in the same fashion, judicially been denied the
force of criminal sanctions.
United States v. Cardiff,
344 U. S. 174.
Here, there were more than commands simply vague or even
contradictory. There was active misleading.
Cf. Johnson v.
United States, 318 U. S. 189,
318 U. S. 197.
The State Supreme Court dismissed the statements of
Page 360 U. S. 439
the Commission as legally erroneous, but the fact remains that
at the inquiry they were the voice of the State most presently
speaking to the appellants. [
Footnote 14] We cannot hold that the Due process clause
permits convictions to be obtained under such circumstances.
We cannot reach a contrary conclusion by joining with the
speculation of the court below that some of appellants might have
behaved the same way regardless of what the Commission told them.
We think it impermissible in a criminal case to excuse fatal
defects by assuming that a person summoned to an inquiry, simply
because he expresses defiance beforehand, will continue to be
defiant even if a proper explanation is made of what the inquiry
wants of him and the basis on which it is wanted.
See Flaxer v.
United States, 358 U. S. 147,
358 U. S. 151.
It is alleged that the personal attitudes of the appellants toward
the Commission were defective in various ways, but, of course, the
indictments and convictions were had simply for refusing to answer
questions. Neither can we find any ground for affirmance in the
fact that certain refusals to answer occurred before the Chairman's
assurances to the various appellants that the privilege existed
became explicit. Certainly such assurances removed any reason for
the appellants to reconsider their prior assertions of the
privilege. And the positive assurances given only made explicit an
attitude that the Commission had manifested throughout its
interviews with these appellants.
Page 360 U. S. 440
We cannot carve the inquiry into segments; the record does not
suggest any picture of the Commission's negation of the privilege
followed by an acquiescence in its use.
Finally, it is argued that the convictions may be supportable
here as to those questions which an appellant was directed to
answer after claiming the privilege. As the statement of the case
we have made indicates, it is not shown that there was such a
direction as to any question except one put to Stern, [
Footnote 15] which stands as the
basis for the sole count on which his conviction rests. As to the
conviction based on this question, the Court is equally divided. To
four of us, the matter is plain. Under the circumstances of the
inquiry, the direction to answer given Stern was obviously not
given because of the immunity statute, but because the Commission
took the position that a generally available privilege did not
Page 360 U. S. 441
exist as to a particular question, since no answer to it could
possibly incriminate. Stern made his decision not to answer, it
must be assumed, in the light of the Commission's attitude that the
privilege generally applied, and on the basis of his own
determination that the answer would tend to incriminate him. The
Ohio Supreme Court has not disagreed with him on the issue on which
he was directed to answer; it made no finding that the Commission
was correct on the basis on which it ordered the answer -- that no
response to the question possibly could incriminate. [
Footnote 16] Four of us think that
the same affront to the Due Process Clause as is generally
presented in this case is presented by a judgment ignoring the
grounds on which the Commission's direction to answer was given,
and affirming the conviction by reason of an immunity statute whose
existence the Commission negated. To four of us, it is obvious that
Stern was as much "entrapped" as the others. It is hardly an
answer, in our view, to say he was directed to answer the question.
In effect, the Commission said to Stern:
"We recognize your privilege against self-incrimination in this
inquiry, but you must take care that you claim it only where your
answer might really tend to be incriminating. We do not see how
saying where you live might incriminate you, so, to this question
we reject your claim of privilege, and order you to answer."
Stern's refusal to answer after
Page 360 U. S. 442
the direction opened him to the risk that a court might hold
that he was wrong, and that the Commission properly ruled that no
answer could be incriminatory. But the Ohio Supreme Court has not
held this; it has not held that Stern's decision that the answer
would tend to incriminate him was wrong, but only that the
Commission was wrong in telling him that the privilege applied at
all. It may have been at his peril that Stern made his decision
that the answer was incriminatory, but four of us cannot see how,
consistently with the Due Process Clause, it can be said that he
thereby also assumed the very different peril that the basic
premise of what the Commission was telling him -- that the
privilege existed -- was one hundred percent in error. We four
regret that our Brethren remain unpersuaded on this score, and
that, accordingly, as to Stern, the judgment must be affirmed by an
equally divided Court.
Appeals dismissed.
On writs of certiorari, judgments reversed as to Raley,
Brown and Morgan; judgment affirmed as to Stern by an equally
divided Court.
MR. JUSTICE STEWART took no part in the consideration or
decision of these cases.
* Together with No. 463,
Morgan v. Ohio, also on appeal
from the same Court, argued April 23, 1959.
[
Footnote 1]
The three appellants in No. 175, Raley, Stern, and Brown, were
convicted in a joint trial in a different Common Pleas Court from
the one in which appellant in No. 463, Mrs. Morgan, was convicted.
The judgments as to Raley, Stern, and Brown were affirmed in the
Court of Appeals for Hamilton County, 100 Ohio App. 75, 136 N.E.2d
295, and that of Mrs. Morgan in the Court of Appeals for Franklin
County. The cases were decided by the Ohio Supreme Court in a
single opinion, 164 Ohio St. 529, 133 N.E.2d 104, which affirmed
the convictions.
Raley, Stern, and Brown were convicted under the then applicable
provisions of Ohio General Code, § 12137, which provided that
"a failure . . . to answer as a witness, when lawfully required"
may be punished "as for a contempt." Mrs. Morgan was convicted
under Ohio General Code, § 12845, which punished those,
summoned before a Committee of the State Legislature, who refuse
"to answer a question pertinent to the matter under inquiry."
[
Footnote 2]
After the Chairman's initial statement quoted in the text, and
some exchange between the Chairman and Raley's counsel, the
following occurred:
"Chairman Renner: I should like for you to consult with counsel
to determine whether, in his opinion, you are required to answer
the question, whether you to answer the question, whether you
recollect having had such an interview."
"The Witness: I have ben advised by counsel that the privilege
does apply, if I desire to use it."
"Chairman Renner: Counsel [for the Commission] may proceed."
Whereupon, the next question was put. In the other instance,
Raley appears to have consulted with counsel of his own accord:
"Chairman Renner: Mr. Raley, would you explain to the Commission
how you could incriminate yourself by acknowledging the location of
the headquarters of Local 766 on that date?"
"The Witness: I don't believe, Mr. Chairman, that I have to give
a reason for asserting the privileges of the Constitution, so my
answer would be the same to that I gave Mr. Isaacs. [The Commission
Counsel.] I will assert my privileges."
"Chairman Renner: I nevertheless request an answer."
"The Witness: Just a second while I confer with counsel."
"Mr. Berger [Raley's counsel]: I would like to hear the question
read."
"Chairman Renner: Read the question, please."
"(Several questions and answers read by the reporter.)"
"Mr. Berger: That is what I thought."
"(The witness conferred with counsel.)"
"The Witness: I think I was correct in view of the line of
questions that I have to assert my privileges under the
Constitution."
"Chairman Renner: Counsel will proceed."
And again, the next question was forthwith put.
[
Footnote 3]
"Chairman Renner: Counsel, just a moment. When you say you claim
the privilege, you claim the privilege of not replying by reason of
the fact that your answer might tend to incriminate you?"
"The Witness: I claim the privilege of not answering under the
Fifth Amendment of the United States Constitution, and Section 1,
Article 10 of the Ohio Constitution, as I understand them."
"Chairman Renner: I do not insist that you recite in full the
precise article or section of the Bill of Rights of the state of
Ohio, or the Federal Constitution, but, in your reply, if you are
resorting to those sections, make it clear that you are resorting
to those sections, or let us have an understanding that when you
say, 'The same answer,' that that is what it means."
"The Witness: It means that I claim the privilege of the Fifth
Amendment of the United States Constitution and Article 1, Section
10 of the Ohio Constitution, as I understand them."
"Chairman Renner: And when you say, 'I claim the privilege,'
that is what you mean in full; is that correct?"
"The Witness: That is correct."
[
Footnote 4]
One such exchange was as follows:
"Chairman Renner: The chair will ask the witness to answer the
question that has been placed by Counsel. It is to be presumed that
the witness is excused from answering the previous question. We are
trying to make it easier for you, Mr. Stern."
"The Witness: I plead the privilege."
"By Mr. Isaacs:"
"Q. I take it you are not making the denial that you started to
make before?"
"A. I invoke the privilege."
Whereupon, the next question was put.
[
Footnote 5]
"Chairman Renner: What do you mean when you say 'The answer is
the same'?"
"The Witness: I mean when I say 'The answer is the same,' the
preceding question that was asked me, linking up with the next
question that is asked me, I answered the first question. I said I
invoked the Fifth Amendment of the United States Constitution."
"Chairman Renner: You mean you refuse to answer?"
"The Witness: I did not say I refuse. I didn't refuse and I
don't know what you mean. I said, 'invoked.' Do you know what the
word 'invoked' means?"
"Chairman Renner: Do you refuse to answer?"
"The Witness: The answer is the same."
Later, the Chairman tried again:
"Chairman Renner: Each time you have replied by saying, 'The
answer is the same,' that full explanation that you have given, is
that what you mean; is that correct?"
"The Witness: I understand this amendment to mean that I can't
be forced to testify against myself."
"Chairman Renner: And each time that you say the answer is the
same, you mean to invoke that right; is that correct"
"The Witness: When a question is projected to me --"
"Chairman Renner: Will you answer my question?"
"The Witness: . . . by you, I will answer that question on the
basis of that question that is projected at that time. . . ."
"Chairman Renner: I am simply trying to clarify for the record
what you mean each time you say, 'The answer is the same.'"
On another occasion, the Chairman had the matter cleared up, at
least for a while:
"Chairman Renner: What do you mean, 'the answer is the
same'?"
"The Witness: In regard to that question, in the manner in which
that question was phrased, I again invoke -- see -- the Fifth
Amendment of the Constitution of the United States, see? Do you
understand what that means?"
"Chairman Renner: That is what I wanted."
[
Footnote 6]
The following is illustrative:
"Q. I ask you if it is not a fact that, in February of 1950, you
caused to be distributed a leaflet stated to be issued by the
Workers Club, Emmett C. Brown, Chairman, 1064 Flint Street?"
"A. Is that a fact?"
"Q. I am asking you to affirm or deny that fact."
"A. If you know it, why ask me to affirm?"
"Chairman Renner: Answer the question, Mr. Brown."
"The Witness: I invoke the privileges of the Fifth
Amendment."
Whereupon, the next question was asked.
[
Footnote 7]
Sixteen against Raley, two against Stern, four against Brown.
These were minor fractions of the numbers of questions put them to
which the privilege was pleaded.
[
Footnote 8]
The only omissions appear to be in regard to several pleas of
self-incrimination made by Mrs. Morgan when, in handing a statement
to the Commission for the record, she was asked whether it was her
statement.
[
Footnote 9]
The State did not appeal the reversals.
[
Footnote 10]
"If consideration of the question of jurisdiction is postponed,
counsel should address themselves, at the outset of their briefs
and oral argument, to the question of jurisdiction."
[
Footnote 11]
Said the court:
"It is argued also that the
Quinn case,
supra
[
Quinn v. United States, 349 U. S. 155], is, in effect, a
mandate by the Supreme Court of the United States to all
legislative bodies, both national and state, that they must
specifically direct a witness to answer he may be cited for
contempt, and a directive to all judicial tribunals in the nation
that such must be the case before a witness may be convicted of
contempt."
164 Ohio St. at 545, 133 N.E.2d at 115. Clearly, this was a
discussion of whether the theory of the
Quinn case, that a
witness must be apprised of the rejection of the privilege, was
binding on the States as a matter of the Federal Constitution.
[
Footnote 12]
It is true that the assertion of violation of federal rights
through the lack of a direction to answer, passed on below, does
not precisely match the dispositive ground of the case, that is,
not merely the absence of a direction to answer on the part of the
Commission, but the positive assurances that the privilege was
available. But this is really only a variation of the former theme,
put into sharper focus by the State Supreme Court's theory of
decision.
See Dewey v. Des Moines, 173 U.
S. 193,
173 U. S. 198.
The claim made and passed on was, in essence, lack of knowledge by
the appellants, because of the Commission's actions, that they were
being considered as unlawfully refusing to answer the questions.
The Supreme Court's conclusion added more force to the contention,
but did not change its nature.
[
Footnote 13]
Accordingly, the applicability of
Twining v. New
Jersey, 211 U. S. 78, to
the present case need not be discussed.
[
Footnote 14]
The State Supreme Court relied on
Sinclair v. United
States, 279 U. S. 263,
279 U. S. 299,
in support of its holding.
Sinclair dealt with a witness
at an investigation who refused to answer questions by reason of a
legal theory he entertained, where the Committee rejected his legal
theory explicitly and ordered him to answer. He refused, and was
convicted. The Court found his legal theory in error, and held
that, under the circumstances, the entertaining of this erroneous
legal theory in good faith was no defense to the witness. That
Sinclair is wholly inapposite here requires no further
statement.
[
Footnote 15]
It is suggested that Brown declined to answer one question other
than on grounds of self-incrimination. No such finding was made by
the Ohio Supreme Court, which treated the entire case as involving
pleas of self-incrimination; accordingly, so do we. No direction to
answer as to this question was given by the Commission. It may be
well to quote the entire context:
"Q. And what has been your educational background?"
"A. I refuse to answer that question. I invoke my rights and
privileges under the Fifth Amendment."
"Q. Is there some particular illegal institution which you
attended or some Communist Party school that you attended that
makes you hesitate to reveal where you were educated?"
"A. No, I just don't think it is your business."
"Chairman Renner: We will determine that, Mr. Brown."
"By Mr. Isaacs:"
"Q. Do I understand, for the record, you are refusing to answer
the question because you feel it is not our business?"
"A. The answer is the same."
"Mr. Isaacs: May the record show that, please."
"Q. [Going on to the next question.] What has been your
employment record in recent years, Mr. Brown?"
[
Footnote 16]
While one of the Ohio Courts of Appeals put its affirmance of
some of the counts on this basis, the issue whether any particular
questions were free of the possibility of an incriminating answer
was not considered by the Ohio Supreme Court, and was, in fact,
irrelevant to the court under the view it took of the case. We
review its judgment here, and it is basic that, after finding
constitutional error in a state court judgment, we cannot affirm it
here by postulating some ground of state law not relied on below.
Murdock v.
Memphis, 20 Wall. 590,
87 U. S. 636,
proposition 7;
cf. Bi-Metallic Investment Co. v. State Board of
Equalization, 239 U. S. 441,
239 U. S.
444.
MR. JUSTICE CLARK, with whom MR. JUSTICE FRANKFURTER, MR.
JUSTICE HARLAN and MR. JUSTICE WHITTAKER join.
We think the conviction of Stern must be affirmed. Like our
Brethren who would reverse as to him, we too agree with Judge
Stewart of Ohio's Supreme Court. But, as we read his opinion, he
swept with a whisk broom, not a carpet sweeper. Our Brothers take
too broad a swath.
Page 360 U. S. 443
Judge Stewart said that, since Ohio's Commission advised
appellants that they had a right to refuse to answer questions
which might incriminate them, "they could not possibly, in
following the admonition of the Commission, be in contempt of it"
in refusing to answer any such queries. Brother BRENNAN's opinion
characterizes the action of the Commission as an
"indefensible sort of entrapment . . . convicting a citizen for
exercising a privilege which the State clearly had told him was
available to him."
We agree that such was true as to three of these appellants, and
therefore concur in the opinion as to Brown, Raley and Morgan. But,
as Judge Stewart went on to point out, the record clearly shows
that Stern was not so entrapped. [
Footnote 2/1]
Stern was convicted for refusal to answer the question, "Where
do you reside, Mr. Stern?" The Chairman refused to accept Stern's
plea of the privilege, [
Footnote
2/2] and twice
Page 360 U. S. 444
unequivocally directed him to answer the question. Stern
persisted in his refusal. The due process ground used in our
Brother BRENNAN's opinion to invalidate the convictions of Brown,
Raley and Morgan is, therefore, not present as to Stern. There was
no "entrapment" in the above question upon which he was convicted,
since it was made clear, even without reference to the Ohio
immunity statute, that, as to that question, the privilege was not
available. The reason given by the Commission, except where bad
faith is necessary, which is not true here, [
Footnote 2/3] is irrelevant. The test is whether the
witness was commanded to answer regardless. Neither Morgan nor
Raley was so directed, but Stern was categorically instructed to do
so. [
Footnote 2/4]
Page 360 U. S. 445
Admitting that the direction to answer was "obviously . . .
[given] because the Commission took the position that a generally
available privilege did not exist," four members of the Court still
refuse to affirm as to Stern because the State Supreme Court did
not go on that ground. But they overlook the sweep of their own
opinion. It is the Federal Due Process Clause that is being
applied, and the Court must take the facts as shown by the record.
It clearly shows that Stern was not entrapped by the statements of
the Chairman as to the availability of the privilege for the
question forming the basis of the only count of the indictment
before us. Unlike the others, he was specifically ordered to
answer. In this posture of the facts, there could be no entrapment,
and hence no lack of due process. We would therefore affirm as to
Stern.
[
Footnote 2/1]
Judge Stewart said that the witnesses could not have been in
contempt "except as to the few questions which two of them were
directed to answer." 164 Ohio St. at 564, 133 N.E.2d at 126. The
second witness whom Judge Stewart had in mind would seem from the
record before us to be Brown. The first count of Brown's indictment
was based on a refusal to answer the question, "And what has been
your educational background?" After pleading the privilege, Brown
was pressed for an explanation as to why his answer would be
incriminating. Brown responded "I just don't think it is your
business." When pressed further, Brown reverted to the privilege.
On the record here, we find no specific direction to Brown to
answer, and thus we must concur in the reversal of Brown's
conviction. The question of the sufficiency of the plea will, of
course, be open on remand.
[
Footnote 2/2]
The pertinent colloquy following Stern's refusal to answer was
as follows:
"Q. What is there in either of those constitutions [Ohio and
federal] that permits a witness to refuse to state where he
resides?"
"A. I claim the privilege under the Fifth Amendment of the
United States Constitution, and Section 1, Article 10 of the Ohio
Constitution."
"Q. Is there something about the nature or character of the home
in which you live that to admit you live there would make you
subject to criminal prosecution?"
"A. The same answer."
"Chairman Renner: The chair will request that the witness answer
the question."
"The Witness: I have answered the question."
"Mr. Isaacs [the Commission's Counsel]: Mr. Chairman, I ask that
the witness be ordered and directed to answer the question."
"Chairman Renner: The chairman directs the witness to answer the
question relating to his address, the address of his residence in
Cincinnati."
"The Witness: The same answer."
"Q. [By Mr. Isaacs]: As a matter of fact, Mr. Stern, you reside
at 3595 Wilson Avenue in the city of Cincinnati, Ohio; is that not
correct?"
"A. The same answer."
[
Footnote 2/3]
Under Ohio law as announced in the opinion below it is not
necessary to show a "willful" or "deliberate" refusal to answer.
164 Ohio St. at 543, 133 N.E.2d at 114.
[
Footnote 2/4]
As to Brown,
see note
1 supra.