Appellees, as consumers of prescription drugs, brought suit
against the Virginia State Board of Pharmacy and its individual
members, appellants herein, challenging the validity under the
First and Fourteenth Amendments of a Virginia statute declaring it
unprofessional conduct for a licensed pharmacist to advertise the
prices of prescription drugs. A three-judge District Court declared
the statute void and enjoined appellants from enforcing it.
Held:
1. Any First Amendment protection enjoyed by advertisers seeking
to disseminate prescription drug price information is also enjoyed,
and thus may be asserted, by appellees as recipients of such
information. Pp.
425 U. S.
756-757.
2. "Commercial speech" is not wholly outside the protection of
the First and Fourteenth Amendments, and the Virginia statute is
therefore invalid. Pp.
425 U. S.
761-773.
(a) That the advertiser's interest in a commercial advertisement
is purely economic does not disqualify him from protection under
the First and Fourteenth Amendments. Both the individual consumer
and society in general may have strong interests in the free flow
of commercial information. Pp.
425 U. S.
762-765.
(b) The ban on advertising prescription drug prices cannot be
justified on the basis of the State's interest in maintaining the
professionalism of its licensed pharmacists; the State is free to
require whatever professional standards it wishes of its
pharmacists, and may subsidize them or protect them from
competition in other ways, but it may not do so by keeping the
public in ignorance of the lawful terms that competing pharmacists
are offering. Pp.
425 U. S.
766-770.
(c) Whatever may be the bounds of time, place, and manner
restrictions on commercial speech, they are plainly exceeded by
Page 425 U. S. 749
the Virginia statute, which singles out speech of a particular
content and seeks to prevent its dissemination completely. Pp.
425 U. S.
770-771.
(d) No claim is made that the prohibited prescription drug
advertisements are false, misleading, or propose illegal
transactions, and a State may not suppress the dissemination of
concededly truthful information about entirely lawful activity,
fearful of that information's effect upon its disseminators and its
recipients. Pp.
425 U. S.
771-773.
373 F.
Supp. 683, affirmed.
BLACKMUN, J., delivered the opinion of the Court, in which
BURGER, C.J., and BRENNAN, STEWART, WHITE, MARSHALL, and POWELL,
JJ., joined. BURGER, C.J.,
post, p.
425 U. S. 773,
and STEWART, J.,
post, p.
425 U. S. 775,
filed concurring opinions. REHNQUIST, J., filed a dissenting
opinion,
post, p.
425 U. S. 781. STEVENS, J., took no part in the
consideration or decision of the case.
MR. JUSTICE BLACKMUN delivered the opinion of the Court.
The plaintiff appellees in this case attack, as violative of the
First and Fourteenth Amendments, [
Footnote 1] that portion of § 54-524.35 of Va.Code
Ann. (1974), which provides that a pharmacist licensed in Virginia
is guilty of unprofessional
Page 425 U. S. 750
conduct if he
"(3) publishes, advertises or promotes, directly or indirectly,
in any manner whatsoever, any amount, price, fee, premium,
discount, rebate or credit terms . . . for any drugs which may be
dispensed only by prescription. [
Footnote 2]"
The three-judge District Court declared the quoted portion of
the statute "void and of no effect," Jurisdictional Statement, App.
1, and enjoined the defendant appellants, the Virginia State Board
of Pharmacy and the individual members of that Board, from
enforcing it.
373 F.
Supp. 683 (ED Va.1974). We noted probable jurisdiction of the
appeal. 420 U.S. 971 (1975).
I
Since the challenged restraint is one that peculiarly concerns
the licensed pharmacist in Virginia, we begin with a description of
that profession as it exists under Virginia law.
The "practice of pharmacy" is statutorily declared to be "a
professional practice affecting the public health, safety and
welfare," and to be "subject to regulation and control in the
public interest." Va.Code Ann. § 54524.2(a) (1974). [
Footnote 3] Indeed, the practice is
subject to extensive
Page 425 U. S. 751
regulation aimed at preserving high professional standards. The
regulatory body is the appellant Virginia State Board of Pharmacy.
The Board is broadly charged by statute with various
responsibilities, including the "[m]aintenance of the quality,
quantity, integrity, safety and efficacy of drugs or devices
distributed, dispensed or administered." § 54-524.16(a). It
also is to concern itself with
"[m]aintaining the integrity of, and public confidence in, the
profession and improving the delivery of quality pharmaceutical
services to the citizens of Virginia."
§ 54-524.16(d). The Board is empowered to "make such
bylaws, rules and regulations . . . as may be necessary for the
lawful exercise of its powers." § 54-524.17.
The Board is also the licensing authority. It may issue a
license, necessary for the practice of pharmacy in the State, only
upon evidence that the applicant is "of good moral character," is a
graduate in pharmacy of a school approved by the Board, and has had
"a suitable period of experience [the period required not to exceed
12 months] acceptable to the Board." § 54-524.21. The
applicant must pass the examination prescribed by the Board.
Ibid. One approved school is the School of Pharmacy of the
Medical College of Virginia, where the curriculum is for three
years following two years of college. Prescribed pre-pharmacy
courses, such as biology and chemistry, are to be taken in college,
and study requirements at the school itself include courses in
organic chemistry, biochemistry, comparative anatomy, physiology,
and pharmacology. Students are also trained in the ethics of the
profession, and there is some clinical experience in the school's
hospital pharmacies and in the medical center operated by the
Medical College. This
Page 425 U. S. 752
is "a rigid, demanding curriculum in terms of what the pharmacy
student is expected to know about drugs." [
Footnote 4]
Once licensed, a pharmacist is subject to a civil monetary
penalty, or to revocation or suspension of his license, if the
Board finds that he "is not of good moral character," or has
violated any of a number of stated professional standards (among
them that he not be "negligent in the practice of pharmacy" or have
engaged in "fraud or deceit upon the consumer . . . in connection
with the practice of pharmacy"), or is guilty of "unprofessional
conduct." § 5524.22:1. "Unprofessional conduct" is
specifically defined in § 5524.35, n. 2,
supra, the
third numbered phrase of which relates to advertising of the price
for any prescription drug, and is the subject of this
litigation.
Inasmuch as only a licensed pharmacist may dispense prescription
drugs in Virginia, § 54-524.48, [
Footnote 5] advertising or other affirmative dissemination
of prescription drug price information is effectively forbidden in
the State. Some pharmacies refuse even to quote prescription drug
prices over the telephone. The Board's position, however, is that
this would not constitute an unprofessional publication. [
Footnote 6] It is clear, nonetheless,
that all advertising of such prices, in the normal sense, is
forbidden. The prohibition does not extend to nonprescription
drugs, but neither is it confined to prescriptions that the
pharmacist compounds himself. Indeed, about 95% of all
prescriptions now are filled with dosage forms prepared by the
pharmaceutical manufacturer. [
Footnote 7]
Page 425 U. S. 753
II
This is not the first challenge to the constitutionality of
§ 54-524.35 and what is now its third-numbered phrase. Shortly
after the phrase was added to the statute in 1968, [
Footnote 8] a suit seeking to enjoin its
operation was instituted by a drug retailing company and one of its
pharmacists. Although the First Amendment was invoked, the
challenge appears to have been based primarily on the Due Process
and Equal Protection Clauses of the Fourteenth Amendment. In any
event, the prohibition on drug price advertising was upheld.
Patterson Drug Co. v. Kingery, 305 F.
Supp. 821 (WD Va.1969). The three-judge court did find that the
dispensation of prescription drugs "affects the public health,
safety and welfare."
Id. at 824-825. No appeal was
taken.
The present, and second, attack on the statute is one made not
by one directly subject to its prohibition, that is, a pharmacist,
but by prescription drug consumers who claim that they would
greatly benefit if the prohibition were lifted and advertising
freely allowed. The plaintiffs are an individual Virginia resident
who suffers from diseases that require her to take prescription
drugs on a daily basis, [
Footnote
9] and two nonprofit organizations. [
Footnote 10] Their
Page 425 U. S. 754
claim is that the First Amendment entitles the user of
prescription drugs to receive information that pharmacists wish to
communicate to them through advertising and other promotional
means, concerning the prices of such drugs.
Certainly that information may be of value. Drug prices in
Virginia, for both prescription and nonprescription items,
strikingly vary from outlet to outlet even within the same
locality. It is stipulated, for example, that, in Richmond, "the
cost of 40 Achromycin tablets ranges from $2.59 to $6.00, a
difference of 140% [
sic]," and that, in the Newport
News-Hampton area, the cost of tetracycline ranges from $1.20 to
$9.00, a difference of 650%. [
Footnote 11]
The District Court seized on the identity of the plaintiff
appellees as consumers as a feature distinguishing the
Page 425 U. S. 755
present case from
Patterson Drug Co. v. Kingery, supra.
Because the unsuccessful plaintiffs in that earlier case were
pharmacists, the court said, "theirs was a
prima facie
commercial approach," 373 F. Supp. at 686. The present plaintiffs,
on the other hand, were asserting an interest in their own health
that was "fundamentally deeper than a trade consideration."
Ibid. In the District Court's view, the expression in
Valentine v. Chrestensen, 316 U. S.
52,
316 U. S. 54-55
(1942), to the effect that "purely commercial advertising" is not
protected had been tempered, by later decisions of this Court, to
the point that First Amendment interests in the free flow of price
information could be found to outweigh the countervailing interests
of the State. The strength of the interest in the free flow of drug
price information was borne out, the court felt, by the fact that
three States by court decision had struck down their prohibitions
on drug price advertising.
Florida Board of Pharmacy v. Webb's
City, Inc., 219 So. 2d 681
(Fla.1969);
Maryland Board of Pharmacy v. Sav-A-Lot, Inc.,
270 Md. 103 311 A.2d 242 (1973);
Pennsylvania State Board of
Pharmacy v. Pastor, 441 Pa. 186, 272 A.2d 487 (1371).
[
Footnote 12] The District
Court recognized that this Court had upheld -- against federal
constitutional challenges other than on First Amendment grounds --
state restrictions
Page 425 U. S. 756
on the advertisement of prices for optometrists' services,
Head v. New Mexico Board, 374 U.
S. 424 (1963), for eyeglass frames,
Williamson v.
Lee Optical Co., 348 U. S. 483
(1955), and for dentists' services,
Semler v. Dental
Examiners, 294 U. S. 608
(1935). [
Footnote 13] The
same dangers of abuse and deception were not thought to be present,
however, when the advertised commodity was prescribed by a
physician for his individual patient and was dispensed by a
licensed pharmacist. The Board failed to justify the statute
adequately, and it had to fall. 373 F. Supp. at 686-687.
III
The question first arises whether, even assuming that First
Amendment protection attaches to the flow of drug price
information, it is a protection enjoyed by the appellees as
recipients of the information, and not solely, if at all, by the
advertisers themselves who seek to disseminate that
information.
Freedom of speech presupposes a willing speaker. But where a
speaker exists, as is the case here, [
Footnote 14] the protection afforded is to the
communication, to its source and to its recipients both. This is
clear from the decided cases. In
Lamont v. Postmaster
General, 381 U. S. 301
(1965), the Court upheld the First Amendment rights of citizens to
receive political publications sent from abroad.
Page 425 U. S. 757
More recently, in
Kleindienst v. Mandel, 408 U.
S. 753,
408 U. S.
762-763 (1972), we acknowledged that this Court has
referred to a First Amendment right to "receive information and
ideas," and that freedom of speech "
necessarily protects the
right to receive.'" And in Procunier v. Martinez,
416 U. S. 396,
416 U. S.
408-409 (1974), where censorship of prison inmates' mail
was under examination, we thought it unnecessary to assess the
First Amendment rights of the inmates themselves, for it was
reasoned that such censorship equally infringed the rights of
noninmates to whom the correspondence was addressed. There are
numerous other expressions to the same effect in the Court's
decisions. See, e.g., Red Lion Broadcasting Co. v. FCC,
395 U. S. 367,
395 U. S. 390
(1969); Stanley v. Georgia, 394 U.
S. 557, 394 U. S. 564
(1969); Griswold v. Connecticut, 381 U.
S. 479, 381 U. S. 482
(1965); Marsh v. Alabama, 326 U.
S. 501, 326 U. S. 505
(1946); Thomas v. Collins, 323 U.
S. 516, 323 U. S. 534
(1945); Martin v. Struthers, 319 U.
S. 141, 319 U. S. 143
(1943). If there is a right to advertise, there is a reciprocal
right to receive the advertising, and it may be asserted by these
appellees. [Footnote
15]
Page 425 U. S. 758
IV
The appellants contend that the advertisement of prescription
drug prices is outside the protection of the First Amendment
because it is "commercial speech." There can be no question that,
in past decisions, the Court has given some indication that
commercial speech is unprotected. In
Valentine v. Chrestensen,
supra, the Court upheld a New York statute that prohibited the
distribution of any "handbill, circular . or other advertising
matter whatsoever in or upon any street." The Court concluded that,
although the First Amendment would forbid the banning of all
communication by handbill in the public thoroughfares, it imposed
"no such restraint on government as respects purely commercial
advertising." 316 U.S. at
316 U. S. 54.
Further support for a "commercial speech" exception to the First
Amendment may perhaps be found in
Breard v. Alexandria,
341 U. S. 622
(1951), where the Court upheld a conviction for violation of an
ordinance prohibiting door-to-door solicitation of magazine
subscriptions. The Court reasoned: "The selling . . . brings into
the transaction a commercial feature," and it distinguished
Martin v. Struthers, supra, where it had reversed a
conviction for door-to-door distribution of leaflets publicizing a
religious meeting, as a case involving "no element of the
commercial." 341 U.S. at
341 U. S.
642-643. Moreover, the Court several times has stressed
that communications to which First Amendment protection was given
were not "purely commercial."
New York Times Co. v.
Sullivan, 376 U. S. 254,
376 U. S.
266
Page 425 U. S. 759
(1964);
Thomas v. Collins, 323 U.S. at
323 U. S. 533;
Murdock v. Pennsylvania, 319 U. S. 105,
319 U. S. 111
(1943);
Jamison v. Texas, 318 U.
S. 413,
318 U. S. 417
(1943).
Since the decision in
Breard, however, the Court has
never denied protection on the ground that the speech in issue was
"commercial speech." That simplistic approach, which by then had
come under criticism or was regarded as of doubtful validity by
Members of the Court, [
Footnote
16] was avoided in
Pittsburgh Press Co. v. Human Relations
Comm'n, 413 U. S. 376
(1973). There, the Court upheld an ordinance prohibiting newspapers
from listing employment advertisements in columns according to
whether male or female employees were sought to be hired. The
Court, to be sure, characterized the advertisements as "classic
examples of commercial speech,"
id. at
413 U. S. 385,
and a newspaper's printing of the advertisements as of the same
character. The Court, however, upheld the ordinance on the ground
that the restriction it imposed was permissible because the
discriminatory hirings proposed by the advertisements, and by their
newspaper layout, were themselves illegal.
Last Term, in
Bigelow v. Virginia, 421 U.
S. 809 (1975), the notion of unprotected "commercial
speech" all but passed from the scene. We reversed a conviction for
violation of a Virginia statute that made the circulation of any
publication to encourage or promote the
Page 425 U. S. 760
processing of an abortion in Virginia a misdemeanor. The
defendant had published in his newspaper the availability of
abortions in New York. The advertisement in question, in addition
to announcing that abortions were legal in New York, offered the
services of a referral agency in that State. We rejected the
contention that the publication was unprotected because it was
commercial.
Chrestensen's continued validity was
questioned, and its holding was described as "distinctly a limited
one" that merely upheld "a reasonable regulation of the manner in
which commercial advertising could be distributed." 421 U.S. at
421 U. S. 819.
We concluded that "the Virginia courts erred in their assumptions
that advertising, as such, was entitled to no First Amendment
protection," and we observed that the "relationship of speech to
the marketplace of products or of services does not make it
valueless in the marketplace of ideas."
Id. at
421 U. S.
825-826.
Some fragment of hope for the continuing validity of a
"commercial speech" exception arguably might have persisted because
of the subject matter of the advertisement in
Bigelow. We
noted that, in announcing the availability of legal abortions in
New York, the advertisement "did more than simply propose a
commercial transaction. It contained factual material of clear
public interest.'" Id. at 421 U. S. 822.
And, of course, the advertisement related to activity with which,
at least in some respects, the State could not interfere. See
Roe v. Wade, 410 U. S. 113
(1973); Doe v. Bolton, 410 U. S. 179
(1973). Indeed, we observed:
"We need not decide in this case the precise extent to which the
First Amendment permits regulation of advertising that is related
to activities the State may legitimately regulate or even
prohibit."
421 U.S. at
421 U. S.
825.
Here, in contrast, the question whether there is a First
Amendment exception for "commercial speech" is
Page 425 U. S. 761
squarely before us. Our pharmacist does not wish to editorialize
on any subject, cultural, philosophical, or political. He does not
wish to report any particularly newsworthy fact, or to make
generalized observations even about commercial matters. The "idea"
he wishes to communicate is simply this: "I will sell you the X
prescription drug at the Y price." Our question, then, is whether
this communication is wholly outside the protection of the First
Amendment.
V
We begin with several propositions that already are settled or
beyond serious dispute. It is clear, for example, that speech does
not lose its First Amendment protection because money is spent to
project it, as in a paid advertisement of one form or another.
Buckley v. Valeo, 424 U. S. 1,
424 U. S. 35-59
(1976);
Pittsburgh Press Co. v. Human Relations Comm'n,
413 U.S. at
413 U. S. 384;
New York Times Co. v. Sullivan, 376 U.S. at
376 U. S. 266.
Speech likewise is protected even though it is carried in a form
that is "sold" for profit,
Smith v. California,
361 U. S. 147,
361 U. S. 150
(1959) (books);
Joseph Burstyn, Inc. v. Wilson,
343 U. S. 495,
343 U. S. 501
(1952) (motion pictures);
Murdock v. Pennsylvania, 319
U.S. at
319 U. S. 111
(religious literature), and even though it may involve a
solicitation to purchase or otherwise pay or contribute money.
New York Times Co. v. Sullivan, supra; NAACP v. Button,
371 U. S. 415,
371 U. S. 429
(1963);
Jamison v. Texas, 318 U.S. at
318 U. S. 417;
Cantwell v. Connecticut, 310 U. S. 296,
310 U. S.
306-307 (1940).
If there is a kind of commercial speech that lacks all First
Amendment protection, therefore, it must be distinguished by its
content. Yet the speech whose content deprives it of protection
cannot simply be speech on a commercial subject. No one would
contend that our pharmacist may be prevented from being heard
on
Page 425 U. S. 762
the subject of whether, in general, pharmaceutical prices should
be regulated, or their advertisement forbidden. Nor can it be
dispositive that a commercial advertisement is noneditorial, and
merely reports a fact. Purely factual matter of public interest may
claim protection.
Bigelow v. Virginia, 421 U.S. at
421 U. S. 822;
Thornhill v. Alabama, 310 U. S. 88,
310 U. S. 102
(1940).
Our question is whether speech which does "no more than propose
a commercial transaction,"
Pittsburgh Press Co. v. Human
Relations Comm'n, 413 U.S. at
413 U. S. 385,
is so removed from any "exposition of ideas,"
Chaplinsky v. New
Hampshire, 315 U. S. 568,
315 U. S. 572
(1942), and from "
truth, science, morality, and arts in
general, in its diffusion of liberal sentiments on the
administration of Government,'" Roth v. United States,
354 U. S. 476,
354 U. S. 484
(1957), that it lacks all protection. Our answer is that it is
not.
Focusing first on the individual parties to the transaction that
is proposed in the commercial advertisement, we may assume that the
advertiser's interest is a purely economic one. That hardly
disqualifies him from protection under the First Amendment. The
interests of the contestants in a labor dispute are primarily
economic, but it has long been settled that both the employee and
the employer are protected by the First Amendment when they express
themselves on the merits of the dispute in order to influence its
outcome.
See, e.g., NLRB v. Gissel Packing Co.,
395 U. S. 575,
395 U. S.
617-618 (1969);
NLRB v. Virginia Electric &
Power Co., 314 U. S. 469,
314 U. S. 477
(1941);
AFL v. Swing, 312 U. S. 321,
312 U. S.
325-326 (1941);
Thornhill v. Alabama, 310 U.S.
at
310 U. S. 102.
We know of no requirement that, in order to avail themselves of
First Amendment protection, the parties to a labor dispute need
address themselves to the merits of unionism in general
Page 425 U. S. 763
or to any subject beyond their immediate dispute. [
Footnote 17] It was observed in
Thornhill that "the practices in a single factory may have
economic repercussions upon whole region and affect widespread
systems of marketing."
Id. at
310 U. S. 103.
Since the fate of such a "single factory" could as well turn on its
ability to advertise its product as on the resolution of its labor
difficulties, we see no satisfactory distinction between the two
kinds of speech.
As to the particular consumer's interest in the free flow of
commercial information, that interest may be as keen, if not keener
by far, than his interest in the day's most urgent political
debate. Appellees' case in this respect is a convincing one. Those
whom the suppression of prescription drug price information hits
the hardest are the poor, the sick, and particularly the aged. A
disproportionate amount of their income tends to be spent on
prescription drugs; yet they are the least able to learn, by
shopping from pharmacist to pharmacist, where their scarce dollars
are best spent. [
Footnote
18] When drug prices
Page 425 U. S. 764
vary as strikingly as they do, information as to who is charging
what becomes more than a convenience. It could mean the alleviation
of physical pain or the enjoyment of basic necessities.
Generalizing, society also may have a strong interest in the
free flow of commercial information. Even an individual
advertisement, though entirely "commercial," may be of general
public interest. The facts of decided cases furnish illustrations:
advertisements stating that referral services for legal abortions
are available,
Bigelow v. Virginia, supra; that a
manufacturer of artificial furs promotes his product as an
alternative to the extinction by his competitors of fur-bearing
mammals,
see Fur Information & Fashion Council, Inc. v. E.
F. Timme & Son, 364 F. Supp.
16 (SDNY 1973); and that a domestic producer advertises his
product as an alternative to imports that tend to deprive American
residents of their jobs,
cf. Chicago Joint Board v. Chicago
Tribune Co., 435 F.2d 470 (CA7 1970),
cert. denied,
402 U.S. 973 (1971). Obviously, not all commercial messages contain
the same or even a very great public interest element. There are
few to which such an element, however, could not be added. Our
pharmacist, for example, could cast himself as a commentator on
store-to-store disparities
Page 425 U. S. 765
in drug prices, giving his own and those of a competitor as
proof. We see little point in requiring him to do so, and little
difference if he does not.
Moreover, there is another consideration that suggests that no
line between publicly "interesting" or "important" commercial
advertising and the opposite kind could ever be drawn. Advertising,
however tasteless and excessive it sometimes may seem, is
nonetheless dissemination of information as to who is producing and
selling what product, for what reason, and at what price. So long
as we preserve a predominantly free enterprise economy, the
allocation of our resources in large measure will be made through
numerous private economic decisions. It is a matter of public
interest that those decisions, in the aggregate, be intelligent and
well informed. To this end, the free flow of commercial information
is indispensable.
See Dun & Bradstreet, Inc. v. Grove,
404 U. S. 898,
904-906 (1971) (Douglas, J., dissenting from denial of certiorari).
See also FTC v. Procter & Gamble Co., 386 U.
S. 568,
386 U. S.
603-604 (1967) (Harlan, J., concurring). And if it is
indispensable to the proper allocation of resources in a free
enterprise system, it is also indispensable to the formation of
intelligent opinions as to how that system ought to be regulated or
altered. Therefore, even if the First Amendment were thought to be
primarily an instrument to enlighten public decisionmaking in a
democracy, [
Footnote 19] we
could not say that the free flow of information does not serve that
goal. [
Footnote 20]
Page 425 U. S. 766
Arrayed against these substantial individual and societal
interests are a number of justifications for the advertising ban.
These have to do principally with maintaining a high degree of
professionalism on the part of licensed pharmacists. [
Footnote 21] Indisputably, the State
has a strong interest in maintaining that professionalism. It is
exercised in a number of ways for the consumer's benefit. There is
the clinical skill involved in the compounding of drugs, although,
as has been noted, these now make up only a small percentage of the
prescriptions filled. Yet, even with respect to
manufacturer-prepared compounds, there is room for the
pharmacist
Page 425 U. S. 767
to serve his customer well or badly. Drugs kept too long on the
shelf may lose their efficacy or become adulterated. They can be
packaged for the user in such a way that the same results occur.
The expertise of the pharmacist may supplement that of the
prescribing physician, if the latter has not specified the amount
to be dispensed or the directions that are to appear on the label.
The pharmacist, a specialist in the potencies and dangers of drugs,
may even be consulted by the physician as to what to prescribe. He
may know of a particular antagonism between the prescribed drug and
another that the customer is or might be taking, or with an allergy
the customer may suffer. The pharmacist himself may have supplied
the other drug or treated the allergy. Some pharmacists,
(concededly not a large number) "monitor" the health problems and
drug consumptions of customers who come to them repeatedly.
[
Footnote 22] A pharmacist
who has a continuous relationship with his customer is in the best
position, of course, to exert professional skill for the customer's
protection.
Price advertising, it is argued, will place in jeopardy the
pharmacist's expertise and, with it, the customer's health. It is
claimed that the aggressive price competition that will result from
unlimited advertising will make it impossible for the pharmacist to
supply professional services in the compounding, handling, and
dispensing
Page 425 U. S. 768
of prescription drugs. Such services are time-consuming and
expensive; if competitors who economize by eliminating them are
permitted to advertise their resulting lower prices, the more
painstaking and conscientious pharmacist will be forced either to
follow suit or to go out of business. It is also claimed that
prices might not necessarily fall as a result of advertising. If
one pharmacist advertises, others must, and the resulting expense
will inflate the cost of drugs. It is further claimed that
advertising will lead people to shop for their prescription drugs
among the various pharmacists who offer the lowest prices, and the
loss of stable pharmacist-customer relationships will make
individual attention -- and certainly the practice of monitoring --
impossible. Finally, it is argued that damage will be done to the
professional image of the pharmacist. This image, that of a skilled
and specialized craftsman, attracts talent to the profession and
reinforces the better habits of those who are in it. Price
advertising, it is said, will reduce the pharmacist's status to
that of a mere retailer. [
Footnote 23]
The strength of these proffered justifications is greatly
undermined by the fact that high professional standards, to a
substantial extent, are guaranteed by the close regulation to which
pharmacists in Virginia are subject. And this case concerns the
retail sale by the pharmacist more than it does his professional
standards. Surely, any pharmacist guilty of professional
dereliction that actually endangers his customer will promptly lose
his
Page 425 U. S. 769
license. At the same time, we cannot discount the Board's
justifications entirely. The Court regarded justifications of this
type sufficient to sustain the advertising bans challenged on due
process and equal protection grounds in
Head v. New Mexico
Board, supra; Williamson v. Lee Optical Co., supra; and
Semler v. Dental Examiners, supra.
The challenge now made, however, is based on the First
Amendment. This casts the Board's justifications in a different
light, for on close inspection it is seen that the State's
protectiveness of its citizens rests in large measure on the
advantages of their being kept in ignorance. The advertising ban
does not directly affect professional standards one way or the
other. It affects them only through the reactions it is assumed
people will have to the free flow of drug price information. There
is no claim that the advertising ban in any way prevents the
cutting of corners by the pharmacist who is so inclined. That
pharmacist is likely to cut corners in any event. The only effect
the advertising ban has on him is to insulate him from price
competition and to open the way for him to make a substantial, and
perhaps even excessive, profit in addition to providing an inferior
service. The more painstaking pharmacist is also protected but,
again, it is a protection based in large part on public
ignorance.
It appears to be feared that if the pharmacist who wishes to
provide low cost, and assertedly low quality, services is permitted
to advertise, he will be taken up on his offer by too many
unwitting customers. They will choose the low-cost, low-quality
service and drive the "professional" pharmacist out of business.
They will respond only to costly and excessive advertising, and end
up paying the price. They will go from one pharmacist to another,
following the discount, and destroy the pharmacist-customer
relationship. They will lose respect for
Page 425 U. S. 770
the profession because it advertises. All this is not in their
best interests, and all this can be avoided if they are not
permitted to know who is charging what.
There is, of course, an alternative to this highly paternalistic
approach. That alternative is to assume that this information is
not in itself harmful, that people will perceive their own best
interests if only they are well enough informed, and that the best
means to that end is to open the channels of communication, rather
than to close them. If they are truly open, nothing prevents the
"professional" pharmacist from marketing his own assertedly
superior product, and contrasting it with that of the low-cost,
high-volume prescription drug retailer. But the choice among these
alternative approaches is not ours to make, or the Virginia General
Assembly's. It is precisely this kind of choice, between the
dangers of suppressing information, and the dangers of its misuse
if it is freely available, that the First Amendment makes for us.
Virginia is free to require whatever professional standards it
wishes of its pharmacists; it may subsidize them or protect them
from competition in other ways.
Cf. Parker v. Brown,
317 U. S. 341
(1943). But it may not do so by keeping the public in ignorance of
the entirely lawful terms that competing pharmacists are offering.
In this sense, the justifications Virginia has offered for
suppressing the flow of prescription drug price information, far
from persuading us that the flow is not protected by the First
Amendment, have reinforced our view that it is. We so hold.
VI
In concluding that commercial speech, like other varieties, is
protected, we of course do not hold that it can never be regulated
in any way. Some forms of commercial speech regulation are surely
permissible. We mention a few only to make clear that they are not
before us and therefore are not foreclosed by this case.
Page 425 U. S. 771
There is no claim, for example, that the prohibition on
prescription drug price advertising is a mere time, place, and
manner restriction. We have often approved restrictions of that
kind provided that they are justified without reference to the
content of the regulated speech, that they serve a significant
governmental interest, and that, in so doing, they leave open ample
alternative channels for communication of the information.
Compare Grayned v. City of Rockford, 408 U.
S. 104,
408 U. S. 116
(1972);
United States v. O'Brien, 391 U.
S. 367,
391 U. S. 377
(1968);
and Kovacs v. Cooper, 336 U. S.
77,
336 U. S. 86-87
(1949),
with Buckley v. Valeo, 424 U.S. l;
Erznoznik
v. City of Jacksonville, 422 U. S. 205,
422 U. S. 209
(1975);
Cantwell v. Connecticut, 310 U.S. at
310 U. S.
304-308;
and Saia v. New York, 334 U.
S. 558,
334 U. S. 562
(1948). Whatever may be the proper bounds of time, place, and
manner restrictions on commercial speech, they are plainly exceeded
by this Virginia statute, which singles out speech of a particular
content and seeks to prevent its dissemination completely.
Nor is there any claim that prescription drug price
advertisements are forbidden because they are false or misleading
in any way. Untruthful speech, commercial or otherwise, has never
been protected for its own sale.
Gertz v. Robert Welch,
Inc., 418 U. S. 323,
418 U. S. 340
(1974);
Konigsberg v. State Bar, 366 U. S.
36,
366 U. S. 49,
and n. 10 (1961). Obviously, much commercial speech is not provably
false, or even wholly false, but only deceptive or misleading. We
foresee no obstacle to a State's dealing effectively with this
problem. [
Footnote 24] The
First Amendment,
Page 425 U. S. 772
as we construe it today, does not prohibit the State from
insuring that the stream of commercial information flow cleanly as
well as freely.
See, for example, Va.Code Ann. §
182-216 (1975).
Also, there is no claim that the transactions proposed in the
forbidden advertisements are themselves illegal in any way.
Cf.
Pittsburgh Press Co. v. Human Relations Comm'n, 413 U.
S. 376 (1973);
United States
Page 425 U. S. 773
v. Hunter, 459 F.2d 205 (CA4),
cert. denied,
409 U. S. 934
(1972). Finally, the special problems of the electronic broadcast
media are likewise not in this case.
Cf. Capitol Broadcasting
Co. v. Mitchell, 333 F.
Supp. 582 (DC 1971),
aff'd, sub nom. Capitol Broadcasting
Co. v. Action Attorney General, 405 U.S. 1000 (1972).
What is at issue is whether a State may completely suppress the
dissemination of concededly truthful information about entirely
lawful activity, fearful of that information's effect upon its
disseminators and its recipients. Reserving other questions,
[
Footnote 25] we conclude
that the answer to this one is in the negative.
The judgment of the District Court is affirmed.
It is so ordered.
MR. JUSTICE STEVENS took no part in the consideration or
decision of this case.
[
Footnote 1]
The First Amendment is applicable to the States through the Due
Process Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment.
See, e.g., Bigelow
v. Virginia, 421 U. S. 809,
421 U. S. 811
(1975);
Schneider v. State, 308 U.
S. 147,
308 U. S. 160
(1939).
[
Footnote 2]
Section 54-524.35 provides in full:
"Any pharmacist shall be considered guilty of unprofessional
conduct who (1) is found guilty of any crime involving grave moral
turpitude, or is guilty of fraud or deceit in obtaining a
certificate of registration; or (2) issues, publishes, broadcasts
by radio, or otherwise, or distributes or uses in any way
whatsoever advertising matter in which statements are made about
his professional service which have a tendency to deceive or
defraud the public, contrary to the public health and welfare; or
(3) publishes, advertises or promotes, directly or indirectly, in
any manner whatsoever, any amount, price, fee, premium, discount,
rebate or credit terms for professional services or for drugs
containing narcotics or for any drugs which may be dispensed only
by prescription."
[
Footnote 3]
The parties, also, have stipulated that pharmacy "is a
profession." Stipulation of Facts � 11, App. 11.
[
Footnote 4]
Id. � 8, App. 11.
See generally id.
�� 6-16, App. 112.
[
Footnote 5]
Exception is made for "legally qualified" practitioners of
medicine, dentistry, osteopathy, chiropody, and veterinary
medicine. § 54-524.53
[
Footnote 6]
Stipulation of Facts � 25, App. 15.
[
Footnote 7]
Id. � 18, App. 13.
[
Footnote 8]
Theretofore, an administrative regulation to the same effect had
been outstanding. The Board, however, in 1967, was advised by the
State Attorney General's office that the regulation was
unauthorized. The challenged phrase was added to the statute the
following year.
See Patterson Drug Co. v.
Kingery, 305 F.
Supp. 821, 823 n. 1 (WD Va.1969).
[
Footnote 9]
Stipulation of Facts � 3, App. 9.
[
Footnote 10]
The organizations are the Virginia Citizens Consumer Council,
Inc., and the Virginia State AFL-CIO. Each has a substantial
membership (approximately 150,000 and 69,000, respectively) many of
whom are users of prescription drugs.
Id. 1 and 2, App. 9.
The American Association of Retired Persons and the National
Retired Teachers Association, also claiming many members who
"depend substantially on prescription drugs for their wellbeing,"
Brief 2, are among those who have filed briefs
amici
curiae in support of the appellees.
[
Footnote 11]
Stipulation of Facts 22(b) and (c), App. 14. The phenomenon of
widely varying drug prices is apparently national in scope. The
American Medical Association conducted a survey in Chicago that
showed price differentials in that city of up to 1200% for the same
amounts of a specific drug. A study undertaken by the Consumers
Union in New York found that prices for the same amount of one drug
ranged from 79� to $7.45, and for another from $1.25 to
$11.50.
Id. 22(d) and (e), App. 14.
Amici
American Association of Retired Persons and National Retired
Teachers Association state that, in 1974, they participated in a
survey of three prescription drug prices at 28 pharmacies in
Washington, D.C. and found pharmacy-to-pharmacy variances in the
price of identical drugs as great as 245%. Brief as
Amici
Curiae 10. The prevalence of such discrepancies "throughout
the United States" is documented in a recent report. Staff Report
to the Federal Trade Commission, Prescription Drug Price
Disclosures 119 (1975). The same report indicates that 34 States
impose significant restrictions on dissemination of drug price
information and, thus, make the problem a national one.
Id. at 34.
[
Footnote 12]
The Florida and Pennsylvania decisions appear to rest on state
constitutional grounds. The Maryland decision was based on the Due
Process Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment as well as on provisions
of the State Constitution.
Accord: Terry v. California State Board of
Pharmacy, 395 F. Supp.
94 (ND Cal.1975),
appeal docketed, No. 75-336.
Contra: Urowsky v. Board of Regents, 38 N.Y.2d 364, 342
N.E.2d 583 (1975);
Supermarkets General Corp. v. Sills, 93
N.J.Super. 326,
225 A.2d 728 (1966).
See Note: Commercial Speech -- An End in Sight to
Chrestensen 23 De Paul L.Rev. 1258 (1974); Comment, 37
Brooklyn L.Rev. 617 (1971); Comment, 24 Wash. and Lee L.Rev. 299
(1967).
[
Footnote 13]
In
Head v. New Mexico Board, the First Amendment issue
was raised. This Court refused to consider it, however, because it
had not been presented to the state courts, nor reserved in the
notice of appeal here. 374 U.S. at
374 U. S. 432
n. 12. The Court's action to this effect was noted in
Pittsburgh Press Co. v. Human Relations Comm'n,
413 U. S. 376,
413 U. S. 387
n. 10 (1973). The appellants at the oral argument recognized that
Head was a due process case. Tr. of Oral Arg. 10.
[
Footnote 14]
"In the absence of Section 54-524.35(3), some pharmacies in
Virginia would advertise, publish and promote price information
regarding prescription drugs."
Stipulation of Facts � 26, App. 15.
[
Footnote 15]
The dissent contends that there is no such right to receive the
information that another seeks to disseminate, at least not when
the person objecting could obtain the information in another way,
and could himself disseminate it. Our prior decisions, cited above,
are said to have been limited to situations in which the
information sought to be received "would not be otherwise
reasonably available,"
see post at
425 U. S. 782;
emphasis is also placed on the appellees' great need for the
information, which need, assertedly, should cause them to take
advantage of the alternative of digging it up themselves. We are
aware of no general principle that freedom of speech may be
abridged when the speaker's listeners could come by his message by
some other means, such as seeking him out and asking him what it
is. Nor have we recognized any such limitation on the independent
right of the listener to receive the information sought to be
communicated. Certainly, the recipients of the political
publications in
Lamont could have gone abroad and
thereafter disseminated them themselves. Those in
Kleindienst who organized the lecture tour by a foreign
Marxist could have done the same. And the addressees of the inmate
correspondence in
Procunier could have visited the prison
themselves. As for the recipients' great need for the information
sought to be disseminated, if it distinguishes our prior cases at
all, it makes the appellees' First Amendment claim a stronger,
rather than a weaker, one.
[
Footnote 16]
See Bigelow v. Virginia, 421 U.S. at
421 U. S. 820
n. 6, citing Mr. Justice Douglas' observation in
Cammarano v.
United States, 358 U. S. 498,
358 U. S. 514
(1959) (concurring opinion), that the
Chrestensen ruling
"was casual, almost offhand. And it has not survived reflection";
the similar observation of four Justices in dissent in
Lehman
v. City of Shaker Heights, 418 U. S. 298,
418 U. S. 314
n. 6 (1974); and expressions of three Justices in separate dissents
in
Pittsburgh Press Co. v. Human Relations Comm'n, 413
U.S. at
413 U. S. 393,
398, and 401.
See also Mr. Justice Douglas' comment,
dissenting from the denial of certiorari in
Dun &
Bradstreet, Inc. v. Grove, 404 U. S. 898,
904-906 (1971).
[
Footnote 17]
The speech of labor disputants, of course, is subject to a
number of restrictions. The Court stated in
NLRB v. Gissel
Packing Co., 395 U.S. at
395 U. S. 618,
for example, that an employer's threats of retaliation for the
labor actions of his employees are "without the protection of the
First Amendment." The constitutionality of restrictions upon speech
in the special context of labor disputes is not before us here. We
express no views on that complex subject, and advert to cases in
the labor field only to note that, in some circumstances speech of
an entirely private and economic character enjoys the protection of
the First Amendment.
[
Footnote 18]
The point hardly needs citation, but a few figures are
illustrative. It has been estimated, for example, that, in 1973 and
1974 per capita drug expenditures of persons age 65 and over were
$97.27 and $103.17, respectively, more than twice the figures of
$41.18 and $45.14 for all age groups. Cooper & Piro, Age
Differences in Medical Care Spending, Fiscal Year 1973, 37 Social
Security Bull., No. 5, p. 6 (1974); Mueller & Gibson, Age
Differences in Health Care Spending, Fiscal Year 1974, 38 Social
Security Bull., No. 6, p. 5 (1975). These figures, of course,
reflect the higher rate of illness among the aged. In 1971, 16.9%
of all Americans 65 years and over were unable to carry on major
activities because of some chronic condition, the figure for all
ages being only 2.9%. Statistical Policy Division, Office of
Management and Budget, Social Indicators 1973, p. 36. These figures
eloquently suggest the diminished capacity of the aged for the kind
of active comparison shopping that a ban on advertising makes
necessary or desirable. Diminished resources are also the general
rule for those 65 and over; their income averages about half that
for all age groups.
Id. at 176.
The parties have stipulated that a "significant portion of
income of elderly persons is spent on medicine." Stipulation of
Facts � 27 App. 15.
[
Footnote 19]
For the views of a leading exponent of this position,
see A. Meiklejohn, Free Speech And Its Relation to
Self-Government (1948). This Court likewise has emphasized the role
of the First Amendment in guaranteeing our capacity for democratic
self-government.
See New York Time Co. v. Sullivan,
376 U. S. 254,
376 U. S.
269-270 (1964), and cases cited therein.
[
Footnote 20]
Pharmaceuticals themselves provide a not insignificant
illustration. The parties have stipulated that expenditures for
prescription drugs in the United States in 1970 were estimated at
$9.14 billion. Stipulation of Facts 17, App. 12. It has been said
that the figure for drugs and drug sundries in 1974 was $9.695
billion, with that amount estimated to be increasing about $700
million per year. Worthington, National Health Expenditures
1929-1974, 38 Social Security Bull., No. 2, p. 9 (1975). The task
of predicting the effect that a free flow of drug price information
would have on the production and consumption of drugs obviously is
a hazardous and speculative one. It was recently undertaken,
however, by the staff of the Federal Trade Commission in the course
of its report,
see n 11,
supra, on the merits of a possible
Commission rule that would outlaw drug price advertising
restrictions. The staff concluded that consumer savings would be
"of a very substantial magnitude, amounting to many millions of
dollars per year." Staff Report,
supra, n 11, at 181.
[
Footnote 21]
An argument not advanced by the Board, either in its brief or in
the testimony proffered prior to summary judgment, but which on
occasion has been made to other courts,
see, e.g., Pennsylvania
State Board of Pharmacy v. Pastor, 441 Pa. 186, 272 A.2d 487
(1971), is that the advertisement of low drug prices will result in
overconsumption and in abuse of the advertised drugs. The argument
prudently has been omitted. By definition, the drugs at issue here
may be sold only on a physician's prescription. We do not assume,
as apparently the dissent does, that simply because low prices will
be freely advertised, physicians will overprescribe, or that
pharmacists will ignore the prescription requirement.
[
Footnote 22]
Monitoring, even if pursued, is not fully effective. It is
complicated by the mobility of the patient; by his patronizing more
than one pharmacist; by his being treated by more than one
prescriber; by the availability of over-the-counter drugs; and by
the antagonism of certain foods and drinks. Stipulation of Facts
30-47, App. 119. Neither the Code of Ethics of the American
Pharmaceutical Association nor that of the Virginia Pharmaceutical
Association requires a pharmacist to maintain family prescription
records.
Id. � 42, App. 18. The appellant Board has
never promulgated a regulation requiring such records.
Id.
� 43, App. 18.
[
Footnote 23]
Descriptions of the pharmacist's expertise, its importance to
the consumer, and its alleged jeopardization by price advertising
are set forth at length in the numerous summaries of testimony of
proposed witnesses for the Board, and objections to testimony of
proposed witnesses for the plaintiffs, that the Board filed with
the District Court prior to summary judgment, the substance of
which appellees did not contest. App. 4, 27-48, 52-53; Brief for
Appellants 5, and n. 2.
[
Footnote 24]
In concluding that commercial speech enjoys First Amendment
protection, we have not held that it is wholly undifferentiable
from other forms. There are common sense differences between speech
that does "no more than propose a commercial transaction,"
Pittsburgh Press Co. v. Human Relations Comm'n, 413 U.S.
at
413 U. S. 385,
and other varieties. Even if the differences do not justify the
conclusion that commercial speech is valueless, and thus subject to
complete suppression by the State, they nonetheless suggest that a
different degree of protection is necessary to insure that the flow
of truthful and legitimate commercial information is unimpaired.
The truth of commercial speech, for example, may be more easily
verifiable by its disseminator than, let us say, news reporting or
political commentary, in that ordinarily the advertiser seeks to
disseminate information about a specific product or service that he
himself provides and presumably knows more about than anyone else.
Also, commercial speech may be more durable than other kinds. Since
advertising is the since
qua non of commercial profits,
there is little likelihood of its being chilled by proper
regulation and forgone entirely.
Attributes such as these, the greater objectivity and hardiness
of commercial speech, may make it less necessary to tolerate
inaccurate statements for fear of silencing the speaker.
Compare New York Times Co. v. Sullivan, 376 U.
S. 254 (1964),
with Dun & Bradstreet, Inc. v.
Grove, 404 U. S. 898
(1971). They may also make it appropriate to require that a
commercial message appear in such a form, or include such
additional information, warnings, and disclaimers, as are necessary
to prevent its being deceptive.
Compare Miami Herald Publishing
Co. v. Tornillo, 418 U. S. 241
(1974),
with Banzhaf v. FCC, 132 U.S.App.D.C. 14, 405 F.2d
1082 (1968),
cert. denied sub nom. Tobacco Institute, Inc. v.
FCC, 396 U.S. 842 (1969).
Cf. United States v. 95 Barrels
of Vinegar, 265 U. S. 438,
265 U. S. 443
(1924) ("It is not difficult to choose statements, designs and
devices which will not deceive"). They may also make inapplicable
the prohibition against prior restraints.
Compare New York
Times Co. v. United States, 403 U. S. 713
(1971),
with Donaldson v. Read Magazine, 333 U.
S. 178,
333 U. S.
189-191 (1948);
FTC v. Standard Education
Society, 302 U. S. 112
(1937);
E. F. Drew & Co. v. FTC, 235 F.2d 735, 739-740
(CA2 1956),
cert. denied, 352 U.S. 969 (1957).
[
Footnote 25]
We stress that we have considered in this case the regulation of
commercial advertising by pharmacists. Although we express no
opinion as to other professions, the distinctions, historical and
functional, between professions, may require consideration of quite
different factors. Physicians and lawyers, for example, do not
dispense standardized products; they render professional services
of almost infinite variety and nature, with the consequent enhanced
possibility for confusion and deception if they were to undertake
certain kinds of advertising.
MR. CHIEF JUSTICE BURGER, concurring.
The Court notes that roughly 95% of all prescriptions are filled
with dosage units already prepared by the manufacturer and sold to
the pharmacy in that form. These are the drugs that have a market
large enough to make their preparation profitable to the
manufacturer; for the same reason, they are the drugs that it is
profitable for the pharmacist to advertise. In dispensing
Page 425 U. S. 774
these
prepackaged items, the pharmacist performs
largely a packaging, rather than a compounding function of former
times. Our decision today, therefore, deals largely with the
State's power to prohibit pharmacists from advertising the retail
price of
prepackaged drugs. As the Court notes,
ante at
425 U. S. 773
n. 25, quite different factors would govern were we faced with a
law regulating or even prohibiting advertising by the traditional
learned professions of medicine or law.
"The interest of the States in regulating lawyers is especially
great, since lawyers are essential to the primary governmental
function of administering justice, and have historically been
'officers of the courts.'"
Goldfarb v. Virginia State Bar, 421 U.
S. 773,
421 U. S. 792
(1975).
See also Cohen v. Hurley, 366 U.
S. 117,
366 U. S.
123-124 (1961). We have also recognized the State's
substantial interest in regulating physicians.
See, e.g.,
United States v. Oregon Medical Society, 343 U.
S. 326,
343 U. S. 336
(1952);
Semler v. Oregon State Board of Dental Examiners,
294 U. S. 608,
294 U. S. 612
(1935). Attorneys and physicians are engaged primarily in providing
services in which professional judgment is a large component, a
matter very different from the retail sale of labeled drugs already
prepared by others.
MR. JUSTICE STEWART aptly observes that the "differences between
commercial price and product advertising . . and ideological
communication" allow the State a scope in regulating the former
that would be unacceptable under the First Amendment with respect
to the latter. I think it important to note also that the
advertisement of professional services carries with it quite
different risks from the advertisement of standard products. The
Court took note of this in
Semler, supra at
294 U. S. 612,
in upholding a state statute prohibiting entirely certain types of
advertisement by dentists:
"The legislature was not dealing with traders in
Page 425 U. S. 775
commodities, but with the vital interest of public health, and
with a profession treating bodily ills and demanding different
standards of conduct from those which are traditional in the
competition of the market place. The community is concerned with
the maintenance of professional standards which will insure not
only competency in individual practitioners, but protection against
those who would prey upon a public peculiarly susceptible to
imposition through alluring promises of physical relief. And the
community is concerned in providing safeguards not only against
deception, but against practices which would tend to demoralize the
profession by forcing its members into an unseemly rivalry which
would enlarge the opportunities of the least scrupulous."
I doubt that we know enough about evaluating the quality of
medical and legal services to know which claims of superiority are
"misleading" and which are justifiable. Nor am I sure that even
advertising the price of certain professional services is not
inherently misleading, since what the professional must do will
vary greatly in individual cases. It is important to note that the
Court wisely leaves these issues to another day.
MR. JUSTICE STEWART, concurring.
In
Thornhill v. Alabama, 310 U. S.
88, the Court observed that
"[f]reedom of discussion, if it would fulfill its historic
function in this nation, must embrace all issues about which
information is needed or appropriate to enable the members of
society to cope with the exigencies of their period."
Id. at
310 U. S. 102.
Shortly after the
Thornhill decision, the Court identified
a single category of communications that is constitutionally
unprotected: communications "which, by their very utterance,
inflict
Page 425 U. S. 776
injury."
Chaplinsky v. New Hampshire, 315 U.
S. 568,
315 U. S. 572.
Yet only a month after
Chaplinsky, and without reference
to that decision, the Court stated in
Valentine v.
Chrestensen, 316 U. S. 52,
316 U. S. 54,
that "the Constitution imposes no such restraint on government as
respects purely commercial advertising." For more than 30 years,
this "casual, almost off-hand" statement in
Chrestensen
has operated to exclude commercial speech from the protection
afforded by the First Amendment to other types of communication.
Cammarano v. United States, 358 U.
S. 498,
358 U. S. 514
(Douglas, J., concurring). [
Footnote
2/1]
Today the Court ends the anomalous situation created by
Chrestensen and holds that a communication which does no
more than propose a commercial transaction is not "wholly outside
the protection of the First Amendment."
Ante at
425 U. S. 761.
But since it is a cardinal principle of the First Amendment that
"government has no power to restrict expression because of its
message, its ideas, its subject matter, or its content," [
Footnote 2/2] the Court's decision calls
into immediate question the constitutional legitimacy of every
state and federal law regulating false or deceptive advertising. I
write separately to explain why I think today's decision does not
preclude such governmental regulation.
Page 425 U. S. 777
The Court has, on several occasions, addressed the problem posed
by false statements of fact in libel cases. Those cases demonstrate
that, even with respect to expression at the core of the First
Amendment, the Constitution does not provide absolute protection
for false factual statements that cause private injury. In
Gertz v. Robert Welch, Inc., 418 U.
S. 323,
418 U. S. 340,
the Court concluded that "there is no constitutional value in false
statements of fact." As the Court had previously recognized in
New York Times Co. v. Sullivan, 376 U.
S. 254, however, factual errors are inevitable in free
debate, and the imposition of liability for erroneous factual
assertions can "dampe[n] the vigor and limi[t] the variety of
public debate" by inducing "self-censorship."
Id. at
376 U. S. 279.
In order to provide ample "breathing space" for free expression,
the Constitution places substantial limitations on the discretion
of government to permit recovery for libelous communications.
See Gertz v. Robert Welch, Inc., supra at
418 U. S.
347-349.
The principles recognized in the libel decisions suggest that
government may take broader action to protect the public from
injury produced by false or deceptive price or product advertising
than from harm caused by defamation. In contrast to the press,
which must often attempt to assemble the true facts from sketchy
and sometimes conflicting sources under the pressure of publication
deadlines, the commercial advertiser generally knows the product or
service he seeks to sell and is in a position to verify the
accuracy of his factual representations before he disseminates
them. The advertiser's access to the truth about his product and
its price substantially eliminates any danger that governmental
regulation of false or misleading price or product advertising will
chill accurate and nondeceptive commercial expression. There
Page 425 U. S. 778
is, therefore, little need to sanction "some falsehood in order
to protect speech that matters."
Id. at 341.
The scope of constitutional protection of communicative
expression is not universally inelastic. In the area of labor
relations, for example, the Court has recognized that
"an employer's free speech right to communicate his views to his
employees is firmly established, and cannot be infringed by a union
or the National Labor Relations Board."
NLRB v. Gissel Packing Co., 395 U.
S. 575,
395 U. S. 617.
See NLRB v. Virginia Electric & Power Co.,
314 U. S. 469.
Yet, in that context, the Court has concluded that the employer's
freedom to communicate his views to his employees may be restricted
by the requirement that any predictions "be carefully phrased on
the basis of objective fact." [
Footnote
2/3] 395 U.S. at
395 U. S. 618.
In response to the contention that the "line between so-called
permitted predictions and proscribed threats is too vague to stand
up under traditional First Amendment analysis," the Court relied on
the employer's intimate knowledge of the employer employee
relationship and his ability to "avoid coercive speech simply by
avoiding conscious overstatements he has reason to believe will
mislead his employees."
Page 425 U. S. 779
Id. at
395 U. S. 620.
Cf. United States v. 9 Barrels of Vinegar, 265 U.
S. 438,
265 U. S. 443
("It is not difficult to choose statements, designs and devices
which will not deceive"). Although speech in the labor relations
setting may be distinguished from commercial advertising, [
Footnote 2/4] the
Gissel Packing
Co. opinion is highly significant in the present context
because it underscores the constitutional importance of the
speaker's specific and unique knowledge of the relevant facts and
establishes that a regulatory scheme monitoring "the impact of
utterances" is not invariably inconsistent with the First
Amendment. [
Footnote 2/5]
See 395 U.S. at
395 U. S.
620.
The Court's determination that commercial advertising of the
kind at issue here is not "wholly outside the protection of" the
First Amendment indicates by its very phrasing that there are
important differences between commercial price and product
advertising, on the one hand, and ideological communication, on the
other.
See ante at
425 U. S.
771-772, n. 24. Ideological expression, be it oral,
literary, pictorial, or theatrical, is integrally related to the
exposition of thought -- thought that may shape our concepts of the
whole universe of man. Although such expression may convey factual
information relevant to social and individual decisionmaking, it is
protected by
Page 425 U. S. 780
the Constitution, whether or not it contains factual
representations and even if it includes inaccurate assertions of
fact. Indeed, disregard of the "truth" may be employed to give
force to the underlying idea expressed by the speaker. [
Footnote 2/6] "Under the First Amendment,
there is no such thing as a false idea," and the only way that
ideas can be suppressed is through "the competition of other
ideas,"
Gertz v. Robert Welch, Inc., 418 U.S. at
418 U. S.
339-340.
Commercial price and product advertising differs markedly from
ideological expression because it is confined to the promotion of
specific goods or services. [
Footnote
2/7] The First Amendment protects the advertisement because of
the "information of potential interest and value" conveyed,
Bigelow v. Virginia, 421 U. S. 809,
421 U. S. 822,
rather than because of any direct contribution to the interchange
of ideas.
See ante at
425 U. S.
762-765,
425 U. S. 770.
[
Footnote 2/8] Since the factual
claims contained in commercial price or product advertisements
relate to tangible goods or services, they may be tested
empirically and corrected to reflect the truth without in any
manner jeopardizing the free dissemination
Page 425 U. S. 781
of thought. Indeed, the elimination of false and deceptive
claims serves to promote the one facet of commercial price and
product advertising that warrants First Amendment protection -- its
contribution to the low of accurate and reliable information
relevant to public and private decisionmaking.
[
Footnote 2/1]
In recent years, the soundness of the sweeping language of the
Chrestensen opinion has been repeatedly questioned.
See Bigelow v. Virginia, 421 U. S. 809,
421 U. S.
819-821;
Lehman v. City of Shaker Heights,
418 U. S. 298,
418 U. S.
314-315, and n. 6 (BRENNAN, J., dissenting);
Pittsburgh Press Co. v. Human Relations Comm'n,
413 U. S. 376,
413 U. S. 398
(Douglas, J., dissenting);
id. at
413 U. S. 401,
and n. 6 (STEWART, J., dissenting);
Dun & Bradstreet, Inc.
v. Grove, 404 U. S. 898,
904-906 (Douglas, J., dissenting from denial of certiorari).
[
Footnote 2/2]
Police Dept. of Chicago v. Mosley, 408 U. S.
92,
408 U. S. 95.
See, e.g., Hudgens v. NLRB, 424 U.
S. 507,
424 U. S. 520;
Erznoznik v. City of Jacksonville, 422 U.
S. 205,
422 U. S. 209;
Pell v. Procunier, 417 U. S. 817,
417 U. S. 828;
Grayned v. City of Rockford, 408 U.
S. 104,
408 U. S.
115.
[
Footnote 2/3]
Speech by an employer or a labor union organizer that contains
material misrepresentations of fact or appeals to racial prejudice
may form the basis of an unfair labor practice or warrant the
invalidation of a certification election.
See, e.g., Sewell
Mfg. Co., 138 N.L.R.B. 66;
United States Gypsum Co.,
130 N.L.R.B. 901;
Gummed Products Co., 112 N.L.R.B. 1092.
Such restrictions would clearly violate First Amendment guarantees
if applied to political expression concerning the election of
candidates to public office.
See Vanasco v.
Schwartz, 401 F. Supp.
87 (EDNY) (three-judge court),
summarily aff'd sub nom.
Schwartz v. Postel, 423 U.S. 1041. Other restrictions designed
to promote antiseptic conditions in the labor relations context,
such as the prohibition of certain campaigning during the 24-hour
period preceding the election, would be constitutionally
intolerable if applied in the political arena.
Compare Peerless
Plywood Co., 107 N.L.R.B. 427,
with Mills v. Alabama,
384 U. S. 214.
[
Footnote 2/4]
In the labor relations area, governmental regulation of
expression by employers has been justified in part by the competing
First Amendment associational interests of employees and by the
economic dependence of employees on their employers.
See NLRB
v. Gissel Packing Co., 395 U.S. at
395 U. S.
617-618;
NLRB v. Virginia Electric & Power
Co., 314 U. S. 469,
314 U. S.
477.
[
Footnote 2/5]
The Court in
Gissel Packing Co. emphasized the NLRB's
expertise in determining whether statements by employers would tend
to mislead or coerce employees. 395 U.S. at
395 U. S. 620.
The NLRB's armamentarium for responding to material
misrepresentations and deceptive tactics includes the issuance of
cease and desist orders and the securing of restraining orders.
See 29 U.S.C. §§ 160(c), (j).
[
Footnote 2/6]
As the Court observed in
Cantwell v. Connecticut,
310 U. S. 296,
310 U. S.
310:
"To persuade others to his own point of view, the pleader, as we
know, at times, resorts to exaggeration, to vilification of men who
have been, or are, prominent in church or state, and even to false
statement. But the people of this nation have ordained in the light
of history, that, in spite of the probability of excesses and
abuses, these liberties are, in the long view, essential to
enlightened opinion and right conduct on the part of the citizens
of a democracy."
[
Footnote 2/7]
See Developments in the Law -- Deceptive Advertising,
80 Harv.L.Rev. 1005, 1030-1031 (1967).
[
Footnote 2/8]
The information about price and product conveyed by commercial
advertisements may, of course, stimulate thought and debate about
political questions. The drug price information at issue in the
present case might well have an impact, for instance, on a person's
views concerning price control issues, government subsidy
proposals, or special health care, consumer protection, or tax
legislation.
MR. JUSTICE REHNQUIST, dissenting.
The logical consequences of the Court's decision in this case, a
decision which elevates commercial intercourse between a seller
hawking his wares and a buyer seeking to strike a bargain to the
same plane as has been previously reserved for the free marketplace
of ideas, are far-reaching indeed. Under the Court's opinion, the
way will be open not only for dissemination of price information,
but for active promotion of prescription drugs, liquor, cigarettes,
and other products the use of which it has previously been thought
desirable to discourage. Now, however, such promotion is protected
by the First Amendment so long as it is not misleading or does not
promote an illegal product or enterprise. In coming to this
conclusion, the Court has overruled a legislative determination
that such advertising should not be allowed, and has done so on
behalf of a consumer group which is not directly disadvantaged by
the statute in question. This effort to reach a result which the
Court obviously considers desirable is a troublesome one, for two
reasons. It extends standing to raise First Amendment claims beyond
the previous decisions of this Court. It also extends the
protection of that Amendment to purely commercial endeavors which
its most vigorous champions on this Court had thought to be beyond
its pale.
I
I do not find the question of the appellees' standing to urge
the claim which the Court decides quite as easy
Page 425 U. S. 782
as the Court does. The Court finds standing on the part of the
consumer appellees based upon a "right to
receive
information.'" Ante at 425 U. S. 757.
Yet it has been stipulated in this case that the challenged statute
does not prohibit anyone from receiving this information either in
person or by phone. Ante at 425 U. S. 752,
and n. 6. The statute forbids "only publish[ing], advertis[ing] or
promot[ing]" prescription drugs.
While it may be generally true that publication of information
by its source is essential to effective communication, it is surely
less true, where, as here, the potential recipients of the
information have, in the Court's own words, a "keen, if not keener
by far," interest in it than "in the day's most urgent political
debate."
Ante at
425 U. S. 763.
Appellees who have felt so strongly about their right to receive
information as to litigate the issue in this lawsuit must also have
enough residual interest in the matter to call their pharmacy and
inquire.
The statute, in addition, only forbids pharmacists to publish
this price information. There is no prohibition against a consumer
group, such as appellees, collecting and publishing comparative
price information as to various pharmacies in an area. Indeed they
have done as much in their briefs in this case. Yet, though
appellees could both receive and publish the information in
question, the Court finds that they have standing to protest that
pharmacists are not allowed to advertise. Thus, contrary to the
assertion of the Court, appellees are not asserting their "right to
receive information" at all, but rather the right of some third
party to publish. In the cases relied upon by the Court,
ante at
425 U. S.
756-757, the plaintiffs asserted their right to receive
information which would not be otherwise reasonably available to
them.
* They did not
seek to assert the right of a third
Page 425 U. S. 783
party, not before the Court, to disseminate information. Here,
the only group truly restricted by this statute, the pharmacists,
have not even troubled to join in this litigation and may well feel
that the expense and competition of advertising is not in their
interest.
Thus, the issue on the merits is not, as the Court phrases it,
whether "[o]ur pharmacist" may communicate the fact that he "will
sell you the X prescription drug at the Y price." No pharmacist is
asserting any such claim to so communicate. The issue is rather
whether appellee consumers may override the legislative
determination that pharmacists should not advertise even though the
pharmacists themselves do not object. In deciding that they may do
so, the Court necessarily adopts a rule which cannot be limited
merely to dissemination of price alone, and which cannot possibly
be confined to pharmacists, but must likewise extend to lawyers,
doctors, and all other professions.
The Court speaks of the consumer's interest in the free flow of
commercial information, particularly in the case of the poor, the
sick, and the aged. It goes on to observe that "society also may
have a strong interest in the free flow of commercial information."
Ante at
425 U. S. 764.
One need not disagree with either of these statements in order to
feel that they should presumptively be the concern of the Virginia
Legislature, which sits to balance these and other claims in the
process of making laws such as the one here under attack. The Court
speaks of the
Page 425 U. S. 784
importance in a "predominantly free enterprise economy" of
intelligent and well informed decisions as to allocation of
resources.
Ante at
425 U. S. 765.
While there is again much to be said for the Court's observation as
a matter of desirable public policy, there is certainly nothing in
the United States Constitution which requires the Virginia
Legislature to hew to the teachings of Adam Smith in its
legislative decisions regulating the pharmacy profession.
E.g.,
Nebbia v. New York, 291 U. S. 502
(1934);
Olsen v. Nebraska, 313 U.
S. 236 (1941).
As Mr. Justice Black, writing for the Court, observed in
Ferguson v. Skrupa, 372 U. S. 726,
372 U. S. 730
(1963):
"The doctrine . . . that due process authorizes courts to hold
laws unconstitutional when they believe the legislature has acted
unwisely -- has long since been discarded. We have returned to the
original constitutional proposition that courts do not substitute
their social and economic beliefs for the judgment of legislative
bodies who are elected to pass laws."
Similarly in
Williamson v. Lee Optical Co.,
348 U. S. 483
(1955), the Court, in dealing with a state prohibition against the
advertisement of eyeglass frames, held:
"We see no constitutional reason why a State may not treat all
who deal with the human eye as members of a profession who should
use no merchandising methods for obtaining customers."
Id. at
348 U. S.
490.
The Court addresses itself to the valid justifications which may
be found for the Virginia statute, and apparently discounts them
because it feels they embody a "highly paternalistic approach."
Ante at
425 U. S. 770.
It concludes that the First Amendment requires that channels of
advertising communication with respect to prescription drugs must
be opened, and that Virginia may not
Page 425 U. S. 785
keep "the public in ignorance of the entirely lawful terms that
competing pharmacists are offering."
Ibid.
The Court concedes that legislatures may prohibit false and
misleading advertisements, and may likewise prohibit advertisements
seeking to induce transactions which are themselves illegal. In a
final footnote, the opinion tosses a bone to the traditionalists in
the legal and medical professions by suggesting that, because they
sell services, rather than drugs the holding of this case is not
automatically applicable to advertising in those professions. But
if the sole limitation on permissible state proscription of
advertising is that it may not be false or misleading, surely the
difference between pharmacists' advertising and lawyers' and
doctors' advertising can be only one of degree, and not of kind. I
cannot distinguish between the public's right to know the price of
drugs and its right to know the price of title searches or physical
examinations or other professional services for which standardized
fees are charged. Nor is it apparent how the pharmacists in this
case are less engaged in a regulatable profession than were the
opticians in
Williamson, supra.
Nor will the impact of the Court's decision on existing
commercial and industrial practice be limited to allowing
advertising by the professions. The Court comments that, in labor
disputes
"it has long been settled that both the employee and the
employer are protected by the First Amendment when they express
themselves on the merits of the dispute in order to influence its
outcome."
Ante at
425 U. S. 762.
But the first case cited by the Court in support of this
proposition,
NLRB v. Gissel Packing Co., 395 U.
S. 575,
395 U. S.
617-618 (1969), falls a good deal short of supporting
this general statement. The Court there said that
"an employer is free to communicate to his employees any of his
general views about unionism or any of his specific views about a
particular union, so long as the
Page 425 U. S. 786
communications do not contain a 'threat of reprisal or force or
promise of benefit.'"
Id. at
395 U. S. 618.
This carefully guarded language is scarcely a ringing endorsement
of even the second-class First Amendment rights which the Court has
today created in commercial speech.
It is hard to see why an employer's right to publicize a promise
of benefit may be prohibited by federal law, so long as the promise
is neither false nor deceptive, if pharmacists' price advertising
may not be prohibited by the Virginia Legislature. Yet such a
result would be wholly inconsistent with established labor law.
Both the Courts of Appeals and the National Labor Relations
Board have not hesitated to set aside representation elections in
which the employer made statements which were undoubtedly truthful
but which were found to be implicitly coercive. For instance, in
NLRB v. Realist, Inc., 328 F.2d 840 (CA7 1964), an
election was set aside when the employer, in a concededly
nonthreatening manner, raised the specter of plant closings which
would result from unionism. In
Oak Mfg. Co., 141 N.L.R.B.
1323, 1328-1330 (1963), the Board set aside an election where the
employer stated "categorically" that the union "cannot and will not
obtain any wage increase for you," and, with respect to seniority,
said that it could "assure" the employees that the union's program
"will be worse" than the present system. In
Freeman Mfg.
Co., 148 N.L.R.B. 577 (1964), the employer sent letters to
employees in which he urged that unionization might cause customers
to cease buying the company's product because of delays and higher
prices. The Board found this to be ground for invalidating the
election. Presumably all of these holdings will require
reevaluation in the light of today's decision with a view toward
allowing the employer's speech because it is now protected by the
First Amendment, as expanded by this decision.
Page 425 U. S. 787
There are undoubted difficulties with an effort to draw a bright
line between "commercial speech," on the one, hand and "protected
speech," on the other, and the Court does better to face up to
these difficulties than to attempt to hide them under labels. In
this case, however, the Court has unfortunately substituted for the
wavering line previously thought to exist between commercial speech
and protected speech a no more satisfactory line of its own -- that
between "truthful" commercial speech, on the one hand, and that
which is "false and misleading," on the other. The difficulty with
this line is not that it wavers, but, on the contrary, that it is
simply too Procrustean to take into account the congeries of
factors which I believe could, quite consistently with the First
and Fourteenth Amendments, properly influence a legislative
decision with respect to commercial advertising.
The Court insists that the rule it lays down is consistent even
with the view that the First Amendment is "primarily an instrument
to enlighten public decisionmaking in a democracy."
Ante
at
425 U. S. 765.
I had understood this view to relate to public decisionmaking as to
political, social, and other public issues, rather than the
decision of a particular individual as to whether to purchase one
or another kind of shampoo. It is undoubtedly arguable that many
people in the country regard the choice of shampoo as just as
important as who may be elected to local, state, or national
political office, but that does not automatically bring information
about competing shampoos within the protection of the First
Amendment. It is one thing to say that the line between strictly
ideological and political commentaries and other kinds of
commentary is difficult to draw, and that the mere fact that the
former may have in it an element of commercialism does not strip it
of First Amendment protection.
See New York Times Co. v.
Sullivan, 376 U. S. 254
(1964). But it is another thing to say that, because that
Page 425 U. S. 788
line is difficult to draw, we will stand at the other end of the
spectrum and reject out of hand the observation of so dedicated a
champion of the First Amendment as Mr. Justice Black that the
protections of that Amendment do not apply to a "
merchant' who
goes from door to door `selling pots.'" Breard v. Cit of
Alexandria, 341 U. S. 622,
341 U. S. 650
(1951) (dissenting).
In the case of "our" hypothetical pharmacist, he may now
presumably advertise not only the prices of prescription drugs, but
may attempt to energetically promote their sale so long as he does
so truthfully. Quite consistently with Virginia law requiring
prescription drugs to be available only through a physician, "our"
pharmacist might run any of the following representative
advertisements in a local newspaper:
"Pain getting you down? Insist that your physician prescribe
Demerol. You pay a little more than for aspirin, but you get a lot
more relief."
"Can't shake the flu? Get a prescription for Tetracycline from
your doctor today."
"Don't spend another sleepless night. Ask your doctor to
prescribe Seconal without delay."
Unless the State can show that these advertisements are either
actually untruthful or misleading, it presumably is not free to
restrict in any way commercial efforts on the part of those who
profit from the sale of prescription drugs to put them in the
widest possible circulation. But such a line simply makes no
allowance whatever for what appears to have been a considered
legislative judgment in most States that, while prescription drugs
are a necessary and vital part of medical care and treatment, there
are sufficient dangers attending their widespread use that they
simply may not be promoted in the same manner as hair creams,
deodorants, and toothpaste. The very real dangers that general
advertising for such drugs
Page 425 U. S. 789
might create in terms of encouraging, even though not
sanctioning, illicit use of them by individuals for whom they have
not been prescribed, or by generating patient pressure upon
physicians to prescribe them, are simply not dealt with in the
Court's opinion. If prescription drugs may be advertised, they may
be advertised on television during family viewing time. Nothing we
know about the acquisitive instincts of those who inhabit every
business and profession to a greater or lesser extent gives any
reason to think that such persons will not do everything they can
to generate demand for these products in much the same manner and
to much the same degree as demand for other commodities has been
generated.
Both Congress and state legislatures have, by law, sharply
limited the permissible dissemination of information about some
commodities because of the potential harm resulting from those
commodities, even though they were not thought to be sufficiently
demonstrably harmful to warrant outright prohibition of their sale.
Current prohibitions on television advertising of liquor and
cigarettes are prominent in this category, but apparently, under
the Court's holding, so long as the advertisements are not
deceptive, they may no longer be prohibited.
This case presents a fairly typical First Amendment problem --
that of balancing interests in individual free speech against
public welfare determinations embodied in a legislative enactment.
As the Court noted in
American Communications Assn. v.
Douds, 339 U. S. 382,
339 U. S. 399
(1950):
"[L]egitimate attempts to protect the public not from the remote
possible effects of noxious ideologies, but from the present
excesses of direct, active conduct, are not presumptively bad
because they
Page 425 U. S. 790
interfere with and, in some of its manifestations, restrain the
exercise of First Amendment rights."
Here, the rights of the appellees see to me to be marginal, at
best. There is no ideological content to the information which they
seek and it is freely available to them -- they may even publish it
if they so desire. The only persons directly affected by this
statute are not parties to this lawsuit. On the other hand, the
societal interest against the promotion of drug use for every ill,
real or imaginary, seems to me extremely strong. I do not believe
that the First Amendment mandates the Court's "open door policy"
toward such commercial advertising.
* The Court contends,
ante at
425 U. S.
757-758, n. 15, that this case is indistinguishable from
Procunier, Kleindienst, and
Lamont, in that, in
all of those cases it was possible for the parties to obtain the
information on their own. In
Procunier, this would have
entailed traveling to a state prison; in
Kleindienst and
Lamont, traveling abroad. Obviously such measures would
limit access to information in a way that the requirement of a
phone call or a trip to the corner drugstore would not.