Summoned to testify before a Subcommittee of the House of
Representatives Committee on Un-American Activities, which was
investigating Communist Party activities in the Albany, N.Y., area,
petitioner, who had not attended the hearings in Albany and was
questioned in Washington, D.C., freely answered questions about his
own Communist activities at Cornell University and Ithaca, N.Y.,
but he refused to name persons with whom he had been associated in
such activities there. He was convicted of a violation of 2 U.S.C.
§ 192, which makes it a misdemeanor for any person summoned as
a witness by a congressional committee to refuse to answer any
question pertinent to the question under inquiry. At his trial, in
an effort to prove the pertinency of the questions he refused to
answer, the Government offered documentary evidence of statements
made by the Chairman of the Subcommittee at the hearings in Albany,
which tended to show that the subject of those hearings was
Communist infiltration in the Albany area, particularly in the
field of labor, and one witness testified that petitioner's hearing
was a continuation of the Albany hearings, that the subject of
those hearings was Communist infiltration in the Albany area, and
that the topic under inquiry was not Communism either at Cornell or
in educational institutions generally. It also introduced
transcripts of the testimony of two witnesses at the Albany
hearings who, in addition to testifying about Communist
infiltration into labor unions in the Albany area, had been led
into some testimony about Communist activities by petitioner and
others at Cornell.
Held: on the record in this case, the Government failed
to prove an essential element of the offense, that the questions
which petitioner refused to answer were pertinent to the subject
under inquiry, and his conviction must be set aside. Pp.
367 U. S.
457-472.
108 U.S.App.D.C. 143, 280 F.2d 691, reversed.
Page 367 U. S. 457
MR. JUSTICE STEWART delivered the opinion of the Court.
Once again we are called upon to review a criminal conviction
for refusal to answer questions before a subcommittee of the
Committee on Un-American Activities of the House of
Representatives. [
Footnote 1]
See Quinn v. United States, 349 U.
S. 155;
Emspak v. United States, 349 U.
S. 190;
Watkins v. United States, 354 U.
S. 178;
Barenblatt v. United States,
360 U. S. 109;
Wilkinson v. United States, 365 U.
S. 399;
Braden v. United States, 365 U.
S. 431. The petitioner was brought to trial in the
District Court for the District of Columbia upon an indictment
which charged that he had violated 2 U.S.C. § 192, by refusing
to answer five questions "which were pertinent to the question then
under inquiry" by the subcommittee. He waived a jury, and was
convicted upon four of the five counts of the indictment. The
judgment was affirmed by the Court of Appeals, 108 U.S.App.D.C.
143, 280 F.2d 691, and we brought the case here because of doubt as
to the validity of the conviction in the light of our previous
Page 367 U. S. 458
decisions. [
Footnote 2] 364
U.S. 812. A careful review of the trial record convinces us that
the District Court should have ordered an acquittal.
At the trial, the Government's case consisted largely of
documentary evidence. That evidence showed that a subcommittee of
the House Committee on Un-American Activities conducted hearings in
Albany, New York, in July of 1953, and again in early April of
1954. The petitioner was not present on either occasion. He was
subpoenaed to appear before the subcommittee in Albany on April 9,
1954, but, at the request of his counsel, it was agreed that he
should appear instead before the subcommittee three days later in
the Old House Office Building in Washington, D.C.
He appeared there on the appointed day, accompanied by counsel,
and, without further ado, his interrogation began. The petitioner
freely answered all preliminary questions, revealing that he was
then twenty-four years old and a graduate student at the University
of Pennsylvania. He stated that his early education had been in the
public schools of Brooklyn, New York, from where he had gone to
Cornell University in 1947 for four years as an undergraduate and
two additional years as a graduate student.
The subcommittee's counsel then made the following
statement:
"Mr. Deutch, during hearings at Albany last week, the committee
heard testimony regarding the existence of a Communist Party group
or cell operating among undergraduates at Cornell University, among
certain graduates at Cornell and in the city of Ithaca. "
Page 367 U. S. 459
"In connection with that testimony, the committee was informed
that you were a member of one or more of those groups. If so, I
would like to ask you certain matters relating to your activity
there."
"Were you a member of a group of the Communist Party at
Cornell?"
The petitioner answered, "under protest," that he had indeed
been a member of the Communist Party while at Cornell. [
Footnote 3] He then testified freely
and without further objection as to his own activities and
associations. He stated that,
"from the age of 13 or 14, I had read many books on Marxism,
and, at that time, was very much impressed with trying to solve
certain of the injustices we have nowadays."
He said that, when he got to college, "I felt if I had ideas I
shouldn't be half pregnant about them, so, when I came to college,
I was approached, and joined." He stated that the approach to join
the Party had been made by a student.
As to the general nature of his Communist Party activities at
Cornell, he said,
"about all that happened were bull sessions on Marxism, and some
activities like giving out a leaflet or two. The people I met
didn't advocate the overthrowing of the Government by force and
violence, and, if they had, I wouldn't have allowed it."
He testified that he had known one faculty member at Cornell who
was a Communist, but that this person had quit the Party. He stated
that he had once received from "a personal friend," who was not
connected with the Cornell faculty, a $100 contribution to give to
the Party. He
Page 367 U. S. 460
stated that he had been the only graduate student at Cornell who
was a Communist, and that, as the "head" (and lone member) of the
"graduate group," he had attended meetings in a private house where
a "maximum of 4 or 5" people were present. Many of his answers
indicated a lack of awareness of the details of Communist
activities at Cornell. [
Footnote
4] The petitioner testified that, as of the time of the
hearings, he was no longer a member of the Communist Party, but he
volunteered the information that, "[t]o a great extent, it is only
fair to say I am a Marxist today -- I don't want to deny that."
While the petitioner's answers to the many questions put to him
about his own activities and conduct were thus
Page 367 U. S. 461
fully responsive, he refused to answer five questions he was
asked concerning other people. He declined to give the names of the
faculty member who had been a Communist, of the friend who had made
the $100 contribution, of the student who had originally approached
him about joining the Communist Party, and of the owners of the
house where the meetings had been held. He also declined to say
whether he was acquainted with one Homer Owen. For his refusal to
answer these questions, he was indicted, tried, and convicted.
[
Footnote 5]
The reason which the petitioner gave the subcommittee for his
refusal to answer these questions can best be put in his own
words:
"Sir, I am perfectly willing to tell about my own activities,
but do you feel I should trade my moral scruples by informing on
someone else? . . . I can only say that, whereas I do not want to
be in
Page 367 U. S. 462
contempt of the committee, I do not believe I can answer
questions about other people, but only about myself. . . . I happen
to have been a graduate student -- the only one there, and the
organization is completely defunct, and the individual you are
interested in wasn't even a professor. The magnitude of this is
really beyond reason."
The chairman of the subcommittee ruled that it was the
petitioner's duty nevertheless to answer the questions:
"That decision does not rest with you, as to whether or not the
scope of this inquiry -- as to whether or not certain individuals
are important now or not. That is the responsibility of we
Representatives to determine. That determination cannot rest with
you. It may be very true that the individual to whom you have
referred is no longer a member of the Communist Party. However,
that is a supposition on your part -- and a supposition which the
committee cannot accept. . . . I think that it is only fair to
advise the witness -- again advise the witness -- that any scruples
he may have due to a desire to protect friends and acquaintances is
not a legal reason for declining to answer the questions which are
now being put to you, and which will be put to you by counsel."
In an effort to prove the pertinence of the questions which the
petitioner had refused to answer, the Government offered at the
trial the transcripts of the opening statements of Subcommittee
Chairman Kearney at the Albany hearings in 1953 and 1954, and of
Subcommittee Chairman Velde at a hearing in Chicago in 1954, as
well as an additional portion of the transcript of the 1954 Albany
hearing. One witness, the counsel for the Committee on Un-American
Activities, testified. A review
Page 367 U. S. 463
of this evidence convinces us that the Government failed to
prove the charge in the indictment that the questions which the
petitioner refused to answer were "pertinent to the question then
under inquiry" by the subcommittee before which he appeared.
The Chairman's opening statement at the Albany hearing in 1953
consisted largely of a paraphrase of the Committee's authorizing
resolution and a general summary of the Committee's past
activities. [
Footnote 6] The
only statement of a specific purpose was as follows:
"The committee, in its course of investigation, came into
possession of reliable information indicating
Page 367 U. S. 464
Communist Party activities within the Albany area. The committee
decided that this information was of such a character as to merit
an investigation to determine its nature, extent, character, and
objects. "
Page 367 U. S. 465
At the opening of the Albany hearings in 1954, the Chairman
stated that the subcommittee would "resume this morning the
investigation of Communist Party activities within the capital
area." He made clear that the hearings were "a continuation of the
open hearings which were conducted in Albany" in 1953. He pointed
out that testimony at the 1953 hearings had "related to the efforts
of the Communist Party to infiltrate industry and other segments of
society in the capital area." "This committee," he said, ". . . is
investigating communism within the field of labor where it has
substantial evidence that it exists."
The opening statement of the Chairman of the subcommittee which
held hearings in Chicago in 1954 is the same statement that was
before this Court in
Watkins v. United States,
354 U. S. 178,
354 U. S. 210.
As was pointed out in the
Watkins opinion, Mr. Velde "did
no more than paraphrase the authorizing resolution and give a very
general sketch of the past efforts of the Committee." [
Footnote 7] Moreover, the statement
indicated that that subcommittee hearing was directed primarily
towards investigation of activities in the Chicago area:
"We are here in Chicago, Ill., realizing that this is the center
of the great midwestern area of the United States. It cannot be
said that subversive infiltration has had a greater, nor a lesser,
success in infiltrating this important area. The hearings today are
the culmination of an investigation that has been conducted by the
committee's competent staff, and is a part of the committee's
intention for holding hearings in various parts of the
country."
The transcripts of part of the testimony of two witnesses at the
1954 Albany hearings, John Marqusee and Emmanuel Richardson, were
also introduced at the petitioner's
Page 367 U. S. 466
trial. These transcripts showed that Marqusee's testimony had
related primarily to Communist infiltration of a labor union in
Schenectady for which he had worked during a summer vacation in
1948. [
Footnote 8] At that
time, he had been a student in the New York State School of
Industrial and Labor Relations, which, he had testified, was a part
of Cornell University. He had told the subcommittee that he had
never had any contact with the Communist Party before taking the
labor union job. The transcripts showed that he had explained that
he had taken the job in accordance with the school's
requirement
"that every student should put forth his efforts in securing a
job during the summer, during the intervening summers of his 4-year
program, 1 summer with a labor union, 1 with a management group, if
possible, and 1 summer with a neutral agency, such as a mediation
agency or arbitration service."
There was no mention of the Cornell Graduate School, nor of the
petitioner, in the transcript of Marqusee's testimony.
The transcript of Richardson's testimony showed that he had
testified that, as a student at the Cornell Law School in 1950, he
had joined the Communist Party at the request of the Federal Bureau
of Investigation. He had named several people he had known as
Communists on the Cornell campus, including the petitioner and
Homer Owen. He had stated that the petitioner had known a member of
the Cornell faculty who was a Communist Party member, and that he
had once received through the petitioner a contribution to the
Party from someone else of "one hundred and some dollars." The
transcript showed that Richardson had also testified at length
concerning Communist infiltration into a labor union in a plant in
Syracuse where he had worked during the summers of 1951 and
1952.
Page 367 U. S. 467
After these transcripts had been introduced at the petitioner's
trial, the Government called its only witness, Frank S. Tavenner,
Jr., who had been the "interrogating attorney" at the Albany
hearings and at the petitioner's hearing before the subcommittee in
Washington. [
Footnote 9] Mr.
Tavenner emphasized that the hearing in Washington was a
continuation of the Albany hearings, which he characterized as "a
general investigation of Communist Party activities in what was
referred to as the
Capital Area.'" Under interrogation of
government counsel, the witness expressly disclaimed that the
purpose of the Washington hearing had been to investigate Communist
activities in educational institutions. [Footnote 10] He was asked what "connection was there
between [the subject of the petitioner's testimony] and the
investigations entitled `Albany, New York?'" This question was
never answered.
On this record, the District Court found the subject under
inquiry to be "the infiltration of Communism into educational and
labor fields." 147 F. Supp. at 91. The Court of Appeals never
stated what it thought the subject under inquiry by the
subcommittee was.
As our cases make clear, two quite different issues regarding
pertinency may be involved in a prosecution under 2 U.S.C. §
192. One issue reflects the requirement of the Due Process Clause
of the Fifth Amendment that the pertinency of the interrogation to
the topic under the
Page 367 U. S. 468
congressional committee's inquiry must be brought home to the
witness at the time the questions are put to him.
"Unless the subject matter has been made to appear with
undisputable clarity, it is the duty of the investigative body,
upon objection of the witness on grounds of pertinency, to state
for the record the subject under inquiry at that time and the
manner in which the propounded questions are pertinent
thereto."
Watkins v. United States, 354 U.S. at
354 U. S.
214-215.
See Barenblatt v. United States, 360
U.S. at
360 U. S.
123-124. The other and different pertinency issue stems
from the prosecution's duty at the trial to prove that the
questions propounded by the congressional committee were, in fact,
"pertinent to the question under inquiry" by the committee.
"Undeniably, a conviction for contempt under 2 U.S.C. § 192
cannot stand unless the questions asked are pertinent to the
subject matter of the investigation."
Barenblatt, supra, at
360 U. S.
123.
"[T]he statute defines the crime as refusal to answer 'any
question pertinent to the question under inquiry.' Part of the
standard of criminality, therefore, is the pertinency of the
questions propounded to the witness."
Watkins, supra, at
354 U. S. 208.
See Wilkinson v. United States, 365 U.S. at
365 U. S.
407-409,
365 U. S. 413;
Braden v. United States, 365 U.S. at
365 U. S. 433,
365 U. S.
435-436;
Sacher v. United States, 356 U.
S. 576,
356 U. S. 577;
Sinclair v. United States, 279 U.
S. 263,
279 U. S.
296-297. These two basically different issues must not
be blurred by treating them as a single question of
"pertinency."
With regard to the first issue, it is evident that the
petitioner was not made aware at the time he was questioned of the
question then under inquiry, nor of how the questions which were
asked related to such a subject. The chairman made no opening
statement, and the petitioner heard no other witnesses testify. The
resolution creating the subcommittee revealed nothing. It was
Page 367 U. S. 469
merely a general resolution authorizing the creation of a
subcommittee to act for the Committee. Committee counsel simply
advised the petitioner that the committee had previously heard
evidence regarding Communist activity at Cornell, and that he
proposed to ask the petitioner "certain matters relating to your
activity there." As to his own activity there, the petitioner
freely testified. When the petitioner declined to give the names of
other people, no clear explanation of the topic under inquiry was
forthcoming.
It is also evident, however, that the thoughts which the
petitioner voiced in refusing to answer the questions about other
people can hardly be considered as the equivalent of an objection
upon the grounds of pertinency. Although he did indicate doubt as
to the importance of the questions, the petitioner's main concern
was clearly his own conscientious unwillingness to act as an
informer. It can hardly be considered, therefore, that the
objections which the petitioner made at the time were
"adequate, within the meaning of what was said in
Watkins,
supra, at
354 U. S. 214-215, to
trigger what would have been the Subcommittee's reciprocal
obligation had it been faced with a pertinency objection."
Barenblatt, supra, at
360 U. S.
124.
We need not pursue the matter, however, because, in any event,
it is clear that the Government at the trial failed to carry its
burden of proving the pertinence of the questions.
See Bowers
v. United States, 92 U.S.App.D.C. 79, 202 F.2d 447, 452. The
first step in proving that component of the offense was to show the
subject of the subcommittee's inquiry.
Wilkinson v. United
States, 365 U.S. at
365 U. S. 407.
As related above, the Government offered documentary evidence of
statements made by the chairman of the subcommittees at two
hearings in Albany which tended to show that those subcommittees
were investigating Communist infiltration in the Albany or
Page 367 U. S. 470
"capital" area, particularly in the field of labor. [
Footnote 11] The Government
presented one witness who testified that the petitioner's hearing
was a continuation of the Albany hearings, and that the subject of
those hearings was Communist infiltration in the Albany area. He
disavowed any implication that the topic under inquiry was
Communism either at Cornell or in educational institutions
generally.
Yet the questions which the petitioner was convicted of refusing
to answer obviously had nothing to do with the Albany area, or with
Communist infiltration into labor unions. It can hardly be
seriously contended that Cornell University is in the Albany area.
Indeed, we may take judicial notice of the fact that Ithaca is more
than one hundred and sixty-five miles from Albany, and in an
entirely different economic and geographic area of New York. The
petitioner was asked nothing about Albany or the Albany area. So
far as the record shows, he knew nothing about that subject. He was
asked nothing about labor or labor unions. So far as the record
shows, he knew nothing about them. He was asked nothing about any
possible connection between Cornell or its graduate school and
Communist infiltration in Albany. Yet the petitioner was basically
a cooperative witness, and there is nothing in the record to
indicate that, except for giving the names of others, he would not
have freely answered any inquiry the subcommittee wished to pursue
with respect to these subjects. It is true that the transcript of
the testimony of two witnesses at the Albany hearings established
that, in addition to testifying about Communist infiltration into
labor unions in the Albany area, they had been willingly led into
some testimony about Communist activities by the petitioner and
others at Cornell.
Page 367 U. S. 471
But that excursion can hardly justify a disregard of the
Government's careful proof at the petitioner's trial of what the
subject under inquiry actually was. The pertinence of the
interrogation of those two witnesses is not before us. The
pertinence of the petitioner's interrogation is.
In enacting 2 U.S.C. § 192, the Congress invoked the aid of
the federal judicial system to protect itself from contumacious
conduct.
Watkins, supra, at
354 U. S.
207.
"In fulfillment of their obligation under this statute, the
courts must accord to the defendants every right which is
guaranteed to defendants in all other criminal cases."
Id. at
354 U. S.
208.
"One of the rightful boasts of Western civilization is that the
[prosecution] has the burden of establishing guilt solely on the
basis of evidence produced in court, and under circumstances
assuring an accused all the safeguards of a fair procedure."
Irvin v. Dowd, 366 U. S. 717,
366 U. S. 729
(concurring opinion). Among these is the presumption of the
defendant's innocence.
Sinclair v. United States, 279 U.S.
at
279 U. S.
296-297;
Flaxer v. United States, 358 U.S. at
358 U. S. 151.
It was incumbent upon the prosecution in this case to prove that
the petitioner had committed the offense for which he was indicted.
One element of that offense was the pertinence to the subject
matter under inquiry of the questions the petitioner refused to
answer. [
Footnote 12] We
hold, as a matter of law, that there was a failure of such proof in
this case.
Sacher v. United States, 356 U.
S. 576;
see Sinclair v. United States, 279 U.S.
at
279 U. S.
298-299;
Braden v. United States, 365 U.S. at
365 U. S.
436-437.
We do not decide today any question respecting the power or
legislative purpose of this subcommittee of the House Un-American
Activities Committee. Nor do we reach the large issues stirred by
the petitioner's First
Page 367 U. S. 472
Amendment claims. Our decision is made within the conventional
framework of the federal criminal law, and in accord with its
traditional concepts. In a word, we hold only that the Government
failed to prove its case. [
Footnote 13]
Reversed.
[
Footnote 1]
"Every person who having been summoned as a witness by the
authority of either House of Congress to give testimony or to
produce papers upon any matter under inquiry before either House,
or any joint committee established by a joint or concurrent
resolution of the two Houses of Congress, or any committee of
either House of Congress, willfully makes default, or who, having
appeared, refuses to answer any question pertinent to the question
under inquiry, shall be deemed guilty of a misdemeanor, punishable
by a fine of not more than $1,000 nor less than $100 and
imprisonment in a common jail for not less than one month nor more
than twelve months."
2 U.S.C. § 192.
[
Footnote 2]
See, in addition to the cases cited in the text,
supra: Sinclair v. United States, 279 U.
S. 263;
United States v. Bryan, 339 U.
S. 323;
United States v. Fleischman,
339 U. S. 349;
United States v. Rumely, 345 U. S. 41;
Sacher v. United States, 356 U. S. 576;
Flaxer v. United States, 358 U. S. 147.
See also McPhaul v. United States, 364 U.
S. 372.
[
Footnote 3]
"I will answer that question, but only under protest."
"I wish to register a challenge as to the jurisdiction of this
committee under Public Law 601, which is the committee's enabling
legislation. This question, or any similar questions involving my
associations, past or future, I am answering, but only under
protest as to its constitutionality. But, under your jurisdiction
as stated, I answer yes, I was a member of the Communist
Party."
[
Footnote 4]
The following colloquies are typical:
"Mr. Doyle: Who published the leaflets?"
"Mr. Deutch: I believe the Communist Party published them."
"Mr. Doyle: What Communist Party? Where did you get the
leaflets? From the national headquarters?"
"Mr. Deutch: I don't believe so. It was a local branch."
"Mr. Doyle: Where was the office of the local branch from which
you got these leaflets?"
"Mr. Deutch: I didn't know where it was. I was just asked to
distribute them."
"Mr. Tavenner: Were you ever a member of the Downtown Club of
the Communist Party in Ithaca?"
"Mr. Deutch: I don't believe so."
"Mr. Tavenner: Did you attend meetings of that group?"
"Mr. Deutch: No. That is, I don't believe so. The reason I
wonder is because that organization became defunct, so that there
was really no organization. Downtown was uptown, and there were so
few people that I just want to qualify that statement."
"Mr. Scherer: Let me ask you this question. You knew where the
meetings were held?"
"Mr. Deutch: I don't believe I know exactly where they were.
This is because -- since Mr. Richardson drove me there."
(Mr. Richardson was a law student at Cornell who had joined the
Communist Party at the behest of the Federal Bureau of
Investigation.
See p.
367 U. S. 466,
infra.)
[
Footnote 5]
The questions, as set out in the five counts of the indictment,
were as follows:
"
Count One"
"The committee was advised that a witness by the name of Ross
Richardson has stated that you acted as liaison between a Communist
Party group on the campus and a member of the faculty at Cornell,
and that you knew the name of the member of that faculty, who was a
member of the Communist Party. Will you tell us who that member of
the faculty was?"
"
Count Two"
"Will you tell the committee, please, the source of that $100
contribution, if it was made?"
"
Count Three"
"Where were these meetings held?"
"
Count Four"
"Were you acquainted with Homer Owen?"
"
Count Five"
"The witness is directed to give the name of the person by whom
he was approached."
The petitioner was convicted on all but Count Three.
[
Footnote 6]
"The committee is charged by the Congress of the United States
with the responsibility of investigating the extent, character and
objects of un-American propaganda activities in the United States,
the diffusion within the United States of subversive and
un-American propaganda that is instigated from foreign countries,
or of a domestic origin, and attacks the principles of the form of
government as guaranteed by our Constitution and all other
questions in relation thereto that will aid Congress in any
necessary remedial legislation."
"It has been fully established by testimony before this and
other congressional committees, and before the courts of our land,
that the Communist Party of the United States is part of an
international conspiracy, which is being used as a tool or a weapon
by a foreign power to promote its own foreign policy and which has
for its objective the overthrow of the governments of all
non-Communist countries, resorting to the use of force and violence
if necessary. This organization cannot live and expand within the
United States except by the promulgation and diffusion of
subversive and un-American propaganda designed to win adherence to
its cause."
"The first witness in this hearing will testify regarding
certain aspects of the worldwide Communist conspiracy, which should
demonstrate what a serious matter it is to permit individuals who
are subject to the directives and discipline of the Communist Party
to be placed in positions of leadership in any functional
organization."
"The committee, in its course of investigation, came into
possession of reliable information indicating Communist Party
activities within the Albany area. The committee decided that this
information was of such a character as to merit an investigation to
determine its nature, extent, character, and objects."
"Many witnesses have appeared before this committee, sitting in
various places throughout the United States, and have revealed
their experiences as former Communist Party members. Such testimony
has added immeasurably to the sum total of the knowledge,
character, extent, and objects of Communist activities in this
country."
"Witnesses from Hollywood, labor unions, the legal profession,
medical profession, and other groups have made a great contribution
to the defense of our country by disclosing to this committee facts
within their knowledge."
"In the view of this committee, such testimony should not be
held against an individual where it has that character of
trustworthiness which convinces one that the witness has completely
and finally terminated Communist Party membership and that such
testimony has been given in all good faith."
"The committee is not concerned with the political beliefs or
opinions of any witness who has been called before it. It is
concerned only with the facts showing the extent, character, and
objects of the Communist Party activities."
"In keeping with the longstanding policy of this committee, any
individual or organization whose name is mentioned during the
course of the hearings in such a manner as to adversely affect them
shall have an opportunity to appear before the committee for the
purpose of making a denial or explanation of any adverse
references."
"I would also like at this time, before the beginning of these
hearings, to make this announcement to the public: we are here at
the discretion of the Congress of the United States, trying to
discharge a duty and obligation that has been placed upon us. The
public is here by permission of the committee, and not by any
compulsion. Any attempt or effort on the part of anyone to make a
demonstration or audible comment in this hearing room, either
favorably or unfavorably, toward the committee's undertaking, or to
what any witness may have to say, will not be countenanced by the
committee. If such conduct should occur, the officers on duty will
be requested to eject the offenders from the hearing room."
[
Footnote 7]
The entire statement of Mr. Velde is set out at 354 U.S.
354 U. S.
210-211, note 49.
[
Footnote 8]
Schenectady is sixteen miles from Albany.
[
Footnote 9]
The subcommittee before which the petitioner appeared, "for the
purpose of taking this testimony this morning," consisted of
Representative Jackson, Acting Chairman, and Representatives
Scherer and Doyle. The subcommittee which had conducted the
hearings at Albany a few days earlier was composed of
Representative Kearney, Chairman, and Representatives Scherer an
Walter.
[
Footnote 10]
"Q. How does it happen that Mr. Deutch's testimony appears in
'Education-8' if it was a part actually of 'Albany'?"
"A. Well, the staff, in the releasing of this testimony at a
later date, placed it for convenience under the heading of
Education."
[
Footnote 11]
We disregard the evidence indicating that the subject under
inquiry was Communist activities in the Chicago area.
[
Footnote 12]
This was hardly a matter within the peculiar knowledge of the
petitioner.
Cf. McPhaul v. United States, 364 U.
S. 372,
364 U. S.
379.
[
Footnote 13]
For a Court opinion specifically to join issue with what is
written in dissent is a practice ordinarily to be avoided. One of
the dissenting opinions in this case, however, is largely based
upon what are asserted to be "the undisputed relevant facts in the
record." Since every litigant is entitled to have his case reviewed
on the facts in the record, it is appropriate to state explicitly
that:
(1) The record affirmatively shows that neither Marqusee nor
Richardson testified, directly or indirectly, to "passing out
handbills at strike scenes," or to any "plan of using the prestige
and innocent aid of the university's placement service in getting
summer jobs with labor unions in upper New York," or anywhere
else.
(2) The record affirmatively shows that at no time did the
subcommittee, or anyone on its behalf, "advise" the petitioner, or
anyone else, that the subcommittee was investigating the
infiltration of communism into the "educational and labor
fields."
MR. JUSTICE HARLAN, whom MR. JUSTICE FRANKFURTER joins,
dissenting.
There is, of course, no doubt that a showing of "pertinency" is
an essential part of the Government's burden in a prosecution under
2 U.S.C. § 192. But the nature of this burden may differ,
dependent upon what transpired at the Congressional inquiry giving
rise to the prosecution.
In a case where the prosecution involves the defendant's refusal
to answer a question whose pertinency was explained to him by the
Congressional Committee before which he appeared as a witness --
following his appropriate objection that the question was not
pertinent to the matter "under inquiry,"
see Barenblatt v.
United States, 360 U. S. 109,
360 U. S.
123-124 -- the Government must stand or fall upon that
explanation. For it would be obviously unfair to allow the
Government at trial to prove pertinency
Page 367 U. S. 473
on a different theory than was given to the defendant at the
time he testified, and on the basis of which he presumably
determined that he need not answer the question put.
Where, however, the defendant made no "pertinency" objection as
a witness before the Congressional Committee, the Government at
trial is left free to satisfy the requirement of pertinency in any
way it may choose. The present case is such a one, for, as the
Court's opinion recognizes, the petitioner here made no adequate
pertinency objection before the House Un-American Activities
Subcommittee.
I dissent because, in my opinion, the Court's holding that the
Government failed to establish "pertinency" rests on a too
niggardly view of both the issue and the record. Pertinency, which,
in the context of an investigatory proceeding, is, of course, a
term of wider import than "relevancy" in the context of a trial, is
to be judged not in terms of the immediate probative significance
of a particular question to the matter under authorized inquiry,
but in light of its tendency to elicit information which might be a
useful link in the investigatory chain.
See Carroll v. United
States, 16 F.2d 951, 953. An investigation must proceed "step
by step."
Ibid.
Pertinency is found lacking here because (1) inquiry as to
affairs relating to petitioner's student days at Cornell
University, situated at Ithaca, N.Y., it is said, was not germane
to the Subcommittee's investigation as to Communist activities in
"the Albany area;" and (2) in any event, such investigation, the
Court finds, related only to alleged Communist infiltration into
labor unions, and not as well to infiltration "at Cornell or in
educational institutions generally." I can agree with neither facet
of this holding.
It is quite true, as the Court says, that Ithaca is some 165
miles away from Albany, but it seems to me much
Page 367 U. S. 474
too refined to say, as a matter of law, that the trial court
could not reasonably determine that Ithaca was within the
Subcommittee's terms of reference. Indeed, I think it fair to
suggest that, in common usage, at least among New Yorkers, "Albany
area" would be regarded as aptly descriptive of "upstate" New York.
In relation to "pertinency," the matter should not be judged as if
it were one of technical jurisdiction or venue.
The other aspect of the Court's holding seems to me equally
infirm. Accepting, as I shall, the Court's view that the trial
record shows that the Subcommittee at the relevant time, was
investigating only alleged Communist "labor union," and not
"educational," infiltration, it seems to me abundantly clear that
the lower courts were justified in concluding that all of the
questions with respect to which the petitioner was convicted
* were pertinent
to that matter.
Only shortly before it examined petitioner, the Subcommittee had
interrogated two witnesses, Marqusee and Richardson, with respect
to their Communist affiliations, their summer work with two labor
unions in Schenectady and in Syracuse, and Communist infiltration
into such unions, all while they were both students at Cornell. One
of these witnesses, Richardson, had testified that, during this
period, he had known the petitioner, and one Homer Owen (Count Four
of the indictment), as Communists on the Cornell campus. I do not
see why it should now be deemed either that the Subcommittee's
interest in petitioner's testimony was confined to "educational
infiltration" or that its preliminary questioning of him might not
have led to developing information bearing on "labor union
infiltration," possibly stemming from student Communist activity on
the Cornell campus, had
Page 367 U. S. 475
further inquiry not been blocked by petitioner's refusal to
answer.
I cannot agree that the decision of this case has been made
"within the conventional framework of the federal criminal law."
For surely, in judging the pertinency of a question put in the
course of an otherwise valid Congressional inquiry, as this one is
recognized to have been, we should not insist that the inquiring
committee follow stricter rules than the courts themselves apply in
determining, for example, the sufficiency of a plea of
self-incrimination under the "link in the chain" rule,
see,
e.g., Blau v. United States, 340 U. S. 159, or
in judging "materiality" in a perjury case,
see, e.g., Carroll
v. United States, supra. In reversing this conviction, I think
the Court has strayed from the even course of decision.
I would affirm.
* Counts One, Two, Four, and Five of the indictment, set forth
in
note 5 of the Court's
opinion Ante. p.
367 U. S.
461.
MR. JUSTICE WHITTAKER, whom MR. JUSTICE CLARK joins,
dissenting.
I must say, with all respect, that I think the Court has grossly
misread this record. For, after studying and analyzing it, it seems
entirely clear to me that not only did petitioner fail to complain
of any uncertainty about the subject under inquiry, or object that
the questions put to him were not pertinent to the inquiry, but,
moreover, at least three of the questions he refused to answer
were, on their face, clearly pertinent to the inquiry as a matter
of law. Demonstration of these facts can be made only by carefully
setting forth in detail the undisputed relevant facts in the
record. I now turn to that task.
Acting under the statutory command of Congress to investigate
and report to it on the extent, character and objects of
"un-American propaganda activities," the "diffusion . . . of
subversive . . . propaganda," and "all other questions in relation
thereto that would aid
Page 367 U. S. 476
Congress in any necessary remedial legislation," [
Footnote 2/1] a Subcommittee of the House
Committee on Un-American Activities conducted investigatory
hearings at Albany, New York on April 7, 8, and 9, 1954, relative
to Communist subversive activities. At those hearings, evidence was
adduced, principally by the testimony of a former graduate student
of the School of Industrial and Labor Relations of Cornell
University, one Marqusee, and by one Richardson, a former student
in the Cornell Law School, that a Communist cell existed in that
University from 1947 through 1953. Those witnesses testified that
they were members of that cell, and, in addition to holding
frequent secret meetings and occasionally passing out handbills at
strike scenes, the members of the cell formulated and carried out a
plan of using the prestige and innocent aid of the university's
placement service in getting summer jobs with labor unions in upper
New York -- particularly Ithaca, Schenectady, and Syracuse --
where, by fellow Communists, they were put in contact with the
leaders of Communist cells in the unions, and there further carried
on their Communist activities. Richardson -- who was in fact an
employee of, and regularly reported to, the Federal Bureau of
Investigation -- testified that there were at least six members of
the Cornell cell, and that one of the most active members of it was
petitioner, Deutch, and that another was one Homer Owen. Richardson
further testified that, in 1952 and 1953, Deutch was the liaison
between an undisclosed member of the Cornell faculty and that cell;
that, in that period, Deutch collected for and turned over to the
cell various contributions, including one for $100, but declined to
name the donor.
Page 367 U. S. 477
Having this and other similar information, the Subcommittee
determined to interrogate Deutch, and, locating him in the graduate
school of the University of Pennsylvania in Philadelphia, it caused
him to be subpoenaed to appear before the Subcommittee at Albany on
Friday, April 9, 1954. But, at the request of petitioner's counsel,
and for petitioner's convenience, the Subcommittee agreed to take
petitioner's testimony in executive session at Washington, D.C., on
Monday, April 12, instead of at Albany on Friday, April 9.
At the appointed time, petitioner, accompanied by his counsel,
appeared before the Subcommittee in Washington, and was sworn and
interrogated. After asking and obtaining his name, place and date
of birth, and his educational background, the committee advised
petitioner that the particular aspect of Communist infiltration
into the educational and labor fields to be inquired into in his
interrogation was the existence and nature of ". . . a Communist
Party group or cell operating among undergraduates . . . [and]
graduates at Cornell. . . ." Specifically, counsel for the
committee stated:
"Mr. Deutch, during hearings at Albany last week, the committee
heard testimony regarding the existence of a Communist Party group
or cell operating among undergraduates at Cornell University, among
certain graduates at Cornell and in the city of Ithaca."
"In connection with that testimony, the committee was informed
that you were a member of one or more of those groups. If so, I
would like to ask you [about] certain matters relating to your
activity there."
The subject under inquiry, so stated, would appear to have been
thus made quite plain. It appears to have been entirely plain to
petitioner and his counsel, as neither of them then, or at any time
during the hearing, manifested
Page 367 U. S. 478
any want of understanding of the subject, or asked for any
further explanation of it.
Thereupon the following immediately occurred:
"[Mr. Tavenner -- counsel for the Committee]: Were you a member
of a group of the Communist Party at Cornell?"
"Mr. Deutch: I will answer that question, but only under
protest."
"I wish to register a challenge as to the jurisdiction of this
committee under Public Law 601, which is the committee's enabling
legislation. This question, or any similar question, involving my
associations, past or future, I am answering, but only under
protest as to its constitutionality. But, under your jurisdiction
as stated, I answer yes, I was a member of the Communist
Party."
"Mr. Tavenner: The committee was advised that a witness by the
name of Ross Richardson has stated that you acted as liaison
between a Communist Party group on the campus and a member of the
faculty at Cornell, and that you knew the name of the member of
that faculty, who was a member of the Communist Party."
"Will you tell us who that member of the faculty was?"
"Mr. Deutch: Sir, I am perfectly willing to tell about my own
activities, but do you feel I should trade my moral scruples by
informing on someone else?"
"
* * * *"
"Mr. Jackson [the acting chairman of the Subcommittee]: That is
entirely beside the point. You have been asked a question, and we
must insist that you answer the question or decline to answer it,
and
Page 367 U. S. 479
your declination must consist of something more than your moral
scruples."
"Mr. Deutch: As to details of that, I think the whole question
has been magnified more than it should have."
"Mr. Jackson: There is a question pending, and the Chair must
insist that you answer the question that has been asked."
"Mr. Deutch: I can only say that, whereas I do not want to be in
contempt of the committee, I do not believe I can answer questions
about other people, but only about myself."
"Mr. Jackson: You therefore refuse to answer the question that
is pending, is that correct?"
"Mr. Deutch: Yes, sir. . . ."
Petitioner's refusal to answer that question resulted in Count
One of his subsequent indictment.
A colloquy then ensued between petitioner and the acting
chairman and another member of the Subcommittee, at the conclusion
of which petitioner stated: "The only thing I am saying, sir, my
challenge is, is it constitutional under Public Law 601?"
Thereupon the following occurred:
"Mr. Tavenner: The committee received testimony from Ross
Richardson to the effect that you collected certain donations for
the benefit of the Communist Party, and that, on one occasion, you
delivered to him the sum of $100, without designating to him the
source of it. Will you tell the committee, please, the source of
that $100 contribution, if it was made?"
"Mr. Deutch: No; this contribution was made -- I believe I gave
you the reason why I decline to answer regarding names, and this
was from a personal friend. "
Page 367 U. S. 480
In reply to the acting chairman's direction to answer the
question, petitioner stated:
"Mr. Deutch: I feel like I can't answer that question. I realize
there are many problems facing me, and it wasn't an easy decision
to make."
"Mr. Jackson: The Chair directs again that you answer."
"Mr. Deutch: I am unable to."
"Mr. Tavenner: . . . I want to know if you refuse to answer the
question."
"Mr. Deutch: Yes, sir."
Petitioner's refusal to answer that question resulted in Count
Two of his subsequent indictment.
The background of the question, and the question, that resulted
in Count Three of the indictment are omitted, because the District
Court dismissed that Count, and it is not before us.
Petitioner then refused, though directed by the acting chairman,
to answer the question: "Were you acquainted with Homer Owen?" And
that refusal resulted in Count Four of his subsequent
indictment.
Then, after saying ". . . so when I came to college, I was
approached and joined [the Communist Party]," petitioner was asked
and answered as follows:
"Mr. Tavenner: By whom were you approached?"
"Mr. Deutch: I was approached by a student. I don't wish to give
his name."
"Mr. Jackson: The witness is directed to give the name of the
person by whom he was approached."
"Mr. Deutch: I decline to give the name."
Petitioner's refusal to answer that question resulted in Count
Five of his indictment.
This, I submit, is a fair statement of the undisputed relevant
facts, and it sets forth literally every contention, objection, and
reason given by petitioner at the hearing
Page 367 U. S. 481
for his refusal to answer these questions. Apart from the formal
testimony of Mr. Tavenner and some documentary exhibits offered by
the Government, this was the evidence that was offered and received
at petitioner's contempt trial in the District Court.
I think this record provides an ample basis to support the
District Court's finding that, in general, "The Committee was
investigating the infiltration of Communism into educational and
labor fields," 147 F. Supp. at 91, but whether or not that was the
general and announced subject of the hearings is immaterial to this
case, because here, petitioner was told, near the beginning of his
interrogation and before the relevant questions were propounded,
that the subject about which the committee wished to interrogate
him was
"the existence of a Communist Party group or cell operating
among [students] at Cornell University . . . [and] matters relating
to [his] activity there."
Like the Court of Appeals, I think these "quoted statements made
to [petitioner] by the committee counsel and a committee member
clearly indicated the object of the inquiry" of petitioner --
i.e., the nature and extent of Communist infiltration at
Cornell -- "and the pertinency of the questions [to that subject]."
108 U.S.App.D.C. at 148, 280 F.2d at 696.
Likewise, it seems entirely clear to me, as it did to the Court
of Appeals, that not only did petitioner fail to object to any
question on the ground of pertinency, but "[n]ever once did he
indicate unawareness of the purpose of the hearing, or doubt as to
the pertinency of the questions." 108 U.S.App.D.C. at 146, 280 F.2d
at 694. It also seems plain to me, as it did to the Court of
Appeals, that petitioner
"declined to answer the questions, not on the ground of
pertinency, [but rather on the ground] that it was against his
'moral scruples' to answer questions about other people."
108 U.S.App.D.C. at 147, 280 F.2d at 695. "Nor," as said by the
Court of Appeals,
"did he claim that he did not understand how the questions
Page 367 U. S. 482
related to the subject under inquiry, or what that subject was.
On the contrary, it is quite obvious that he recognized that the
questions were pertinent to the subject under inquiry, and he based
his refusal to answer solely and simply on the fact that he did not
wish to give the names of other persons . . . [and] [n]ot until the
trial in the District Court, in what appears to be afterthought,
did appellant raise the questions of pertinency and unawareness of
the subject matter of the inquiry."
108 U.S.App.D.C. at 147-148, 280 F.2d at 695-696. It thus seems
clear to me, as it did to the Court of Appeals, that
"the Government has proved beyond a reasonable doubt that the
subject under inquiry and the pertinency of the questions were made
to appear at the committee hearing with 'indisputable
clarity.'"
108 U.S.App.D.C. at 147, 280 F.2d at 695.
Yet this Court now reverses the findings and judgments of the
two courts below upon the sole ground "that the Government at the
trial failed to carry its burden of proving the pertinence of the
questions." I am compelled by the evidence, respectfully, to
disagree.
Here, whether or not petitioner was told or knew that the
general subject of the inquiry was "infiltration of Communism into
educational and labor fields," he was specifically told that the
committee had information that he had recently been a member of a
Communist cell at Cornell, had acted as the liaison between an
undisclosed member of the faculty and that cell, had collected and
turned over to the cell monies from donors whom he refused to
identify; and, then, coming specifically to the particular subject
about which the committee desired to interrogate him, petitioner
was told that the committee wished to interrogate him about "a
Communist Party group or cell operating among undergraduates . . .
[and] . . . graduates at Cornell and in the city of Ithaca" and
"matters relating to [his] activity there." In the second place,
the subject under inquiry, thus stated, was not only
Page 367 U. S. 483
crystal clear, but appears to have been entirely plain to
petitioner and his counsel, as neither of them then, or at any time
during the hearing, manifested any want of understanding of the
subject or asked for any further explanation of it. In the third
place, neither petitioner nor his counsel made any objection, or
even hinted any objection, to any question put to petitioner at the
hearing on the ground of pertinency. Instead, petitioner said: "The
only thing I am saying, sir, my challenge is, is it constitutional
under Public Law 601?" And, finally at the trial, the Government
proved this specific committee purpose by introducing into evidence
not only the record made at the hearing, but also the testimony of
the Committee's counsel as to these matters. It is, therefore,
passing strange that the Court is unable to find any proof of
pertinency of the questions.
In
Watkins v. United States, 354 U.
S. 178, the witness had expressly "objected to the
questions on the grounds of lack of pertinency" (
id., at
354 U. S.
214), and the committee failed to clarify that matter.
Hence, we said:
"Unless the subject matter has been made to appear with
undisputable clarity, it is the duty of the investigative body,
upon objection of the witness on grounds of pertinency, to
state for the record the subject under inquiry at that time and the
manner in which the propounded questions are pertinent
thereto."
Id. at
354 U. S.
214-215. (Emphasis added.) Here, as stated, not only was
pertinency made to appear with "undisputable clarity," but,
moreover, petitioner and his counsel gave every indication to the
committee that they were aware of the subject under inquiry, and
made no objection whatever on the ground of pertinency.
In
Barenblatt v. United States, 360 U.
S. 109, the witness had said at the hearing, "I might
wish to . . . challenge the pertinency of the question to the
investigation," and, at another point, in a lengthy written
statement, he quoted from this Court's opinion in
Jones v.
Securities &
Page 367 U. S. 484
Exchange Comm'n, 298 U. S. 1,
language relating to a witness' right to be informed of the
pertinency of questions asked him by an administrative agency, and
then contended in this Court that his conviction for contempt of
Congress should be reversed because the subject of the inquiry and
the relevancy of the questions thereto were not made clear. In
rejecting that claim, and in contrasting that situation from the
one existing in the
Watkins case, we said:
"These statements cannot, however, be accepted as the equivalent
of a pertinency objection. At best, they constituted but a
contemplated objection to questions still unasked, and, buried as
they were in the context of petitioner's general challenge to the
power of the Subcommittee, they can hardly be considered adequate,
within the meaning of what was said in
Watkins, supra, at
354 U. S. 214-215, to
trigger what would have been the Subcommittee's reciprocal
obligation had it been faced with a pertinency objection."
360 U.S. at
360 U. S.
123-124.
I also think that this Court's decision in
United States v.
Bryan, 339 U. S. 323, is
highly relevant to this question. For it is as true here as it was
there that, if petitioner did not understand the subject under
inquiry, or believed that the questions put to him were not
relevant to that subject,
"a decent respect for the House of Representatives, by whose
authority [he was being questioned], would have required that [he]
state [his] reasons for [refusing answers to the questions]."
Id., at
339 U. S. 332.
Such an objection would have given the Subcommittee an opportunity
to avoid the blocking of its inquiry by a further and even more
detailed explanation of the subject under inquiry, and the manner
in which the propounded questions were pertinent thereto.
"To deny the Committee the opportunity to consider [such an]
objection or remedy it is, in itself, a contempt of its authority,
and an obstruction of its processes.
See Bevan v. Kreiger,
289 U. S.
459,
289 U. S. 464-465
(1933)."
339 U.S. at
339 U. S. 333.
Petitioner's failure to
Page 367 U. S. 485
make any such objection at the hearing, but raising it for the
first time at his contempt trial, was patently an attempted
"evasion of the duty of one summoned . . . before a congressional
committee, [and] cannot be condoned."
Id. at
339 U. S. 333.
And see McPhaul v. United States, 364 U.
S. 372,
364 U. S.
379.
This alone should be, and is for me, a complete answer to
petitioner's claim, and to the Court's holding, "that the
Government at the trial failed to carry its burden of proving the
pertinence of the questions."
But, in addition, at least the questions involved in Counts One,
Two and Five of the indictment were, on their face, clearly
pertinent to the inquiry as a matter of law. [
Footnote 2/2] Petitioner had been specifically told that
the particular subject upon which he was to be interrogated was
"the existence of a Communist Party group or cell operating
among undergraduates . . . [and] graduates at Cornell and in the
city of Ithaca,"
and "matters relating to [his] activity there." Surely the
questions involved in Counts One, Two, and Five of the Indictment
were, on their face, clearly pertinent to that subject. One cannot
profitably elaborate a truth so plain.
Barenblatt v. United
States, 360 U. S. 109,
360 U. S.
123-125.
And see McPhaul v. United States,
364 U. S. 372,
364 U. S.
380-381.
For these reasons, I am bound to think that the two courts below
were right, and that the judgment should be affirmed.
[
Footnote 2/1]
Legislative Reorganization Act of 1946, 60 Stat. 812, 828. Rule
XI(1)(q)(2), Rules of the House of Representatives H.Res. 5, 83d
Cong., 1st Sess., 99 Cong.Rec. 15.
And see pp. 18, 24.
[
Footnote 2/2]
Inasmuch as a general sentence was imposed on the four counts of
no more than the law allows to be imposed on any one count, it
follows that, if any one of the four counts was adequately proved
by the Government, the judgment must be affirmed.
Barenblatt v.
United States, supra, at
360 U. S. 126,
note 25.