1. Section 14 of the Classification Act of 1879 provides that,
in order to be admitted as second class mail, a publication "must
be originated and published for the dissemination of information of
a public character, or devoted to literature, the sciences, arts .
. ."
Held that, under this provision, the Postmaster General
is without power to prescribe standards for the literature or the
art which a mailable periodical (not obscene) disseminates, or to
determine whether the contents of the periodical meet some standard
of the public good or welfare. Pp.
327 U. S. 148,
327 U. S.
158.
2. A purpose on the part of Congress to grant the Postmaster
General a power of censorship -- a power so abhorrent to our
traditions -- is not lightly to be inferred. P.
327 U. S.
151.
3. When read in the context of the postal laws of which it is an
integral part, the provisions of § 14 must be taken as establishing
standards which relate to the format of the publication and to the
nature of its contents, but not to their quality, worth, or value.
P.
327 U. S.
152.
Page 327 U. S. 147
In that new, "literature" and the "arts" mean no more than
productions which convey ideas by words, pictures, or drawings. P.
327 U. S.
153.
151 F.2d 49 affirmed.
In a suit by the respondent to enjoin the Postmaster General
from carrying into effect an order revoking respondent's second
class mail permit, the district court denied the injunction and
dismissed the complaint. The Court of Appeals for the District of
Columbia reversed. 151 F.2d 49. This Court granted certiorari. 326
U.S. 708.
Affirmed, p.
327 U. S.
159.
MR. JUSTICE DOUGLAS delivered the opinion of the Court.
Congress has made obscene material nonmailable, 35 Stat. 1129,
18 U.S.C. § 334, and has applied criminal sanctions for the
enforcement of that policy. It has
Page 327 U. S. 148
divided mailable matter into four classes, periodical
publications constituting the second class. [
Footnote 1] § 7 of the Classification Act of 1879,
20 Stat. 358, 43 Stat. 1067, 39 U.S.C. § 221. And it has specified
four conditions upon which a publication shall be admitted to the
second class. § 14 of the Classification Act of 1879, 20 Stat. 358,
48 Stat. 928, 39 U.S.C. § 226. The Fourth condition, which is the
only one relevant here, [
Footnote
2] provides:
"Except as otherwise provided by law, the conditions upon which
a publication shall be admitted to the second class are as follows
. . . Fourth. It must be originated and published for the
dissemination of information of a public character, or devoted to
literature, the sciences, arts, or some special industry, and
having a legitimate list of subscribers. Nothing herein contained
shall be so construed as to admit to the second class rate regular
publications designed primarily for advertising purposes, or for
free circulation, or for circulation at nominal rates."
Respondent is the publisher of Esquire Magazine, a monthly
periodical which was granted a second class permit in 1933. In
1943, pursuant to the Act of March 3, 1901, 31 Stat. 1107, 39
U.S.C. § 232, a citation was issued
Page 327 U. S. 149
to respondent by the then Postmaster General (for whom the
present Postmaster General has now been substituted as petitioner)
to show cause why that permit should not be suspended or revoked.
[
Footnote 3] A hearing was held
before a board designated by the then Postmaster General. [
Footnote 4] The board recommended that
the permit not be revoked. Petitioner's predecessor took a
different view. He did not find that Esquire Magazine contained
obscene material and therefore was nonmailable. He revoked its
second class permit because he found that it did not comply with
the Fourth condition. The gist of his holding is contained in the
following excerpt from his opinion:
"The plain language of this statute does not assume that a
publication must in fact be 'obscene' within the intendment of the
postal obscenity statutes before it can be found not to be
'originated and published for the dissemination of information of a
public character, or devoted to literature, the sciences, arts, or
some special industry.'"
"Writings and pictures may be indecent, vulgar, and risque and
still not be obscene in a technical sense. Such writings and
pictures may be in that obscure and treacherous borderland zone
where the average person hesitates to find them technically
obscene, but still may see ample proof that they are morally
improper, and not for the public welfare and the public good. When
such writings or pictures occur in isolated instances, their
dangerous tendencies and malignant qualities may be considered of
lesser importance."
"When, however, they become a dominant and systematic feature,
they most certainly cannot be said to be for the public good, and a
publication which uses them in that manner is not making the
'special contribution
Page 327 U. S. 150
to the public welfare' which Congress intended by the Fourth
condition."
"A publication, to enjoy these unique mail privileges and
special preferences, is bound to do more than refrain from
disseminating material which is obscene or bordering on the
obscene. It is under a positive duty to contribute to the public
good and the public welfare."
Respondent thereupon sued in the District Court for the District
of Columbia to enjoin the revocation order. The parties stipulated
at a pretrial conference that the suit would not be defended on the
ground that Esquire Magazine was obscene or was for any other
reason nonmailable. [
Footnote
5] The District Court denied the injunction and dismissed the
complaint.
55 F. Supp.
1015. The Court of Appeals reversed. 151 F.2d 49. The case is
here on a petition for a writ of certiorari which we granted
because of the importance of the problem in the administration of
the postal laws.
The issues of Esquire Magazine under attack are those for
January to November inclusive of 1943. The material complained of
embraces in bulk only a small percentage of those issues. [
Footnote 6] Regular features of the
magazine (called "The Magazine for Men") include articles on topics
of current interest, short stories, sports articles or stories,
short articles by men prominent in various fields of activities,
articles about men prominent in the news, a book review department
headed by the late William Lyon Phelps, a theatrical department
headed by George Jean Nathan, a department on the lively arts by
Gilbert Seldes, a department devoted to men's clothing, and
pictorial features, including war action paintings, color
photographs of dogs, and water colors or etchings of game
Page 327 U. S. 151
birds and reproductions of famous paintings, prints, and
drawings. There was very little in these features which was
challenged. But petitioner's predecessor found that the
objectionable items, though a small percentage of the total bulk,
were regular recurrent features which gave the magazine its
dominant tone or characteristic. These include jokes, cartoons,
pictures, articles, and poems. They were said to reflect the
smoking-room type of humor, featuring, in the main, sex. Some
witnesses found the challenged items highly objectionable, calling
them salacious and indecent. Others thought they were only racy and
risque. Some condemned them as being merely in poor taste. Other
witnesses could find no objection to them.
An examination of the items makes plain, we think, that the
controversy is not whether the magazine publishes "information of a
public character" or is devoted to "literature" or to the "arts."
It is whether the contents are "good" or "bad." To uphold the order
of revocation would therefore grant the Postmaster General a power
of censorship. Such a power is so abhorrent to our traditions that
a purpose to grant it should not be easily inferred.
The second class privilege is a form of subsidy. [
Footnote 7] From the beginning, Congress has
allowed special rates to certain classes of publications. The Act
of February 20, 1792, 1 Stat. 232, 238, granted newspapers a more
favorable rate. These were extended to magazines and pamphlets by
the Act of May 8, 1794, 1 Stat. 354, 362. Prior to the
Classification Act of 1879, periodicals were put into the second
class, [
Footnote 8] which, by
the Act of March 3, 1863, 12 Stat.
Page 327 U. S. 152
701, 705, included "all mailable matter exclusively in print,
and regularly issued at stated periods, without addition by
writing, mark, or sign." That Act plainly adopted a strictly
objective test, and left no discretion to the postal authorities to
withhold the second class privilege from a mailable newspaper or
periodical because it failed to meet some standard of worth or
value or propriety. There is nothing in the language or history of
the Classification Act of 1879 which suggests that Congress, in
that law, made any basic change in its treatment of second class
mail, let alone such an abrupt and radical change as would be
entailed by the inauguration of even a limited form of
censorship.
The postal laws make a clear-cut division between mailable and
nonmailable material. The four classes of mailable matter are
generally described by objective standards which refer in part to
their contents, but not to the quality of their contents. [
Footnote 9] The more particular
descriptions of the first, [
Footnote 10] third, [
Footnote 11] and fourth [
Footnote 12] classes follow the same
Page 327 U. S. 153
pattern, as do the first three conditions specified for second
class matter. [
Footnote 13]
If, therefore, the Fourth condition is read in the context of the
postal laws of which it is an integral part, it, too, must be taken
to supply standards which relate to the format of the publication
and to the nature of its contents, but not to their quality, worth,
or value. In that view, "literature" or the "arts" mean no more
than productions which convey ideas by words, pictures, or
drawings.
If the Fourth condition is read in that way, it is plain that
Congress made no radical or basic change in the type of regulation
which it adopted for second class mail in 1879. The inauguration of
even a limited type of censorship would have been such a startling
change as to have left some traces in the legislative history. But
we find none. Congressman Money, a member of the Postal Committee
who defended the bill on the floor of the House, stated that it was
"nothing but a simplification of the postal code. There are no new
powers granted to the Department by this bill, none whatever." 8
Cong.Rec. 2134. The bill contained registration provisions which
were opposed on the ground that they might be the inception of a
censorship of the press.
Id., p. 2137. These were deleted.
Id. pp. 2137, 2138. It is difficult to imagine that the
Congress, having deleted them for fear of censorship, gave the
Postmaster General by the Fourth
Page 327 U. S. 154
condition discretion to deny periodicals the second class rate,
if, in his view, they did not contribute to the public good.
Congressman Money indeed referred to "the daily newspapers, with
their load of gossip and scandal and everyday topics that are
floating through the press" as being entitled without question to
the second class privilege.
Id., p. 2135. To the charge
that the bill imposed a censorship, he pointed out that it only
withheld the privileged rate from publications "made up simply of
advertising concerns not intended for public education," and
added:
"We know the reason for which papers are allowed to go at a low
rate of postage, amounting almost to the franking privilege, is
because they are the most efficient educators of our people. It is
because they go into general circulation and are intended for the
dissemination of useful knowledge such as will promote the
prosperity and the best interests of the people all over the
country. Then all this vast mass of matter is excluded from that
low rate of postage. I say, instead of being a censorship upon the
press, it is for the protection of the legitimate journals of the
country."
Id. 2135.
The policy of Congress has been clear. It has been to encourage
the distribution of periodicals which disseminated "information of
a public character" or which were devoted to "literature, the
sciences, arts, or some special industry," because it was thought
that those publications as a class contributed to the public good.
[
Footnote 14] The standards
prescribed in the Fourth condition have been criticized, but not on
the ground that they provide for censorship. [
Footnote 15] As stated by the Postal Commission
of 1911, H.Doc. 559, 62nd Cong., 2d Sess., p. 142:
Page 327 U. S. 155
"The original object in placing on second class matter a rate
far below that on any other class of mail was to encourage the
dissemination of news and of current literature of educational
value. This object has been only in part attained. The low rate has
helped to stimulate an enormous mass of periodicals, many of which
are of little utility for the cause of popular education. Others
are of excellent quality, but the experience of the post office has
shown the impossibility of making a satisfactory test based upon
literary or educational values. To attempt to do so would be to set
up a censorship of the press. Of necessity, the words of the
statute -- 'devoted to literature, the sciences, arts, or some
special industry' -- must have a broad interpretation."
We may assume that Congress has a broad power of classification,
and need not open second class mail to publications of all types.
The categories of publications entitled to that classification have
indeed varied through the years. [
Footnote 16] And the Court held, in
Ex parte
Jackson, 96 U. S. 727, that
Congress could constitutionally make it a
Page 327 U. S. 156
crime to send fraudulent or obscene material through the mails.
But grave constitutional questions are immediately raised once it
is said that the use of the mails is a privilege which may be
extended or withheld on any grounds whatsoever.
See the
dissents of Mr. Justice Brandeis and Mr. Justice Holmes in
Milwaukee Publishing Co. v. Burleson, 255 U.
S. 407,
255 U. S.
421-423,
255 U. S.
430-432,
255 U. S.
437-438. Under that view, the second class rate could be
granted on condition that certain economic or political ideas not
be disseminated. The provisions of the Fourth condition would have
to be far more explicit for us to assume that Congress made such a
radical departure from our traditions [
Footnote 17] and undertook to clothe the Postmaster
General with the power to supervise the tastes of the reading
public of the country. [
Footnote
18]
Page 327 U. S. 157
It is plain, as we have said, that the favorable second class
rates were granted periodicals meeting the requirements of the
Fourth condition, so that the public good might be served through a
dissemination of the class of periodicals described. But that is a
far cry from assuming that Congress had any idea that each
applicant for the second class rate must convince the Postmaster
General that his publication positively contributes to the public
good or public welfare. Under our system of government, there is an
accommodation for the widest varieties of tastes and ideas.
[
Footnote 19] What is good
literature, what has educational value, what is refined public
information, what is good art varies with individuals, as it does
from one generation to another. There doubtless would be a
contrariety of views [
Footnote
20] concerning Cervantes' Don Quixote,
Page 327 U. S. 158
Shakespeare's Venus & Adonis, or Zola's Nana. But a
requirement that literature or art conform to some norm prescribed
by an official smacks of an ideology foreign to our system. The
basic values implicit in the requirements of the Fourth condition
can be served only by uncensored distribution of literature. From
the multitude of competing offerings, the public will pick and
choose. What seems to one to be trash may have for others fleeting
or even enduring values. But to withdraw the second class rate from
this publication today because its contents seemed to one official
not good for the public would sanction withdrawal of the second
class rate tomorrow from another periodical whose social or
economic views seemed harmful to another official. The validity of
the obscenity laws is recognition that the mails may not be used to
satisfy all tastes, no matter how perverted. But Congress has left
the Postmaster General with no power to prescribed standards for
the literature or the art which a mailable periodical
disseminates.
This is not to say that there is nothing left to the Postmaster
General under the Fourth condition. It is his duty to "execute all
laws relative to the Postal Service." Rev.Stat. § 396, 5 U.S.C. §
369. For example, questions will arise, as they did in
Houghton
v. Payne, 194 U. S. 88;
Bates & Guild Co. v. Payne, 194 U.
S. 106, and
Smith v. Hitchcock, 226 U. S.
53, whether the publication which seeks the favorable
second class rate is a periodical as defined in the Fourth
condition or a book or other type of publication. And it may appear
that the information contained in a periodical may not be of a
"public character." But the power to determine whether a periodical
(which is mailable) contains information of a public character,
literature, or art does not include the further power
Page 327 U. S. 159
to determine whether the contents meet some standard of the
public good or welfare.
Affirmed.
MR. JUSTICE JACKSON took no part in the consideration or
decision of this case.
[
Footnote 1]
"That mailable matter of the second class shall embrace all
newspapers and other periodical publications which are issued at
stated intervals, and as frequently as four times a year and are
within the conditions named in sections twelve and fourteen."
§ 10 of the Classification Act of 1879, 20 Stat. 358, 39 U.S.C.
§ 224. For other periodical publications which are included in
second class matter,
see 37 Stat. 550, 39 U.S.C. § 229; 31
Stat. 660, 39 U.S.C. § 230.
[
Footnote 2]
The first three conditions are:
"First. It must regularly be issued at stated intervals, as
frequently as four times a year, and bear a date of issue, and be
numbered consecutively. Second. It must be issued from a known
office of publication. Third. It must be formed of printed paper
sheets, without board, cloth, leather, or other substantial
binding, such as distinguish printed books for preservation from
periodical publications:
Provided, That publications
produced by the stencil, mimeograph, or hectograph process or in
imitation of typewriting shall not be regarded as printed within
the meaning of this clause."
[
Footnote 3]
Sec. 1 of that Act provides:
"When any publication has been accorded second class mail
privileges, the same shall not be suspended or annulled until a
hearing shall have been granted to the parties interested."
[
Footnote 4]
See 7 Fed.Reg. 3001.
[
Footnote 5]
It was not contended that Esquire Magazine does not comply with
the first three conditions of 39 U.S.C. § 226, set forth in
note 2 supra.
[
Footnote 6]
Items taking up a part or all of 86 pages out of a total of 1972
pages.
[
Footnote 7]
It was found to be worth $500,000 a year to Esquire
Magazine.
"A newspaper editor fears being put out of business by the
administrative denial of the second class mailing privilege much
more than the prospect of prison subject to a jury trial."
Chafee, Freedom of Speech (1920), p. 199.
[
Footnote 8]
Rates on periodicals designed primarily for advertising purposes
or for free circulation were increased by the Act of July 12, 1876,
19 Stat. 78, 82.
[
Footnote 9]
Sec. 7 of the Classification Act of 1879, as amended, 39 U.S.C.
§ 221, provides:
"Mailable matter shall be divided into four classes:"
"First, written matter;"
"Second, periodical publications;"
"Third, miscellaneous printed matter and other mailable matter
not in the first, second, or fourth classes;"
"Fourth, merchandise and other mailable matter weighing not less
than eight ounces and not in any other class."
[
Footnote 10]
First class. "Mailable matter of the first class shall
embrace letters, postal cards, and all matters wholly or partly in
writing. . . ." 39 U.S.C. § 222.
[
Footnote 11]
Third class.
"Mail matter of the third class shall include books, circulars,
and other matter wholly in print (except newspapers and other
periodicals entered as second class matter), proof sheets,
corrected proof sheets, and manuscript copy accompanying same,
merchandise (including farm and factory products) and all other
mailable matter not included in the first or second class, or in
the fourth class. . . ."
39 U.S.C. § 235.
[
Footnote 12]
Fourth class.
"Mail matter of the fourth class shall weigh in excess of eight
ounces, and shall include books, circulars, and other matter wholly
in print (except newspapers and other periodicals entered as second
class matter), proof sheets, corrected proof sheets and manuscript
copy accompanying same, merchandise (including farm and factory
products), and all other mailable matter not included in the first
or second class, or in the third class as defined in section 235 of
this title, not exceeding eleven pounds in weight, nor greater in
size than seventy-two inches in length and girth combined, nor in
form or kind likely to injure the person of any postal employee or
damage the mail equipment or other mail matter and not of a
character perishable within a period reasonably required for
transportation and delivery."
39 U.S.C. § 240.
[
Footnote 13]
See note 2
supra.
[
Footnote 14]
See Lewis Publishing Co. v. Morgan, 229 U.
S. 288,
229 U. S. 301;
Annual Report of Postmaster General (1892), p. 71.
[
Footnote 15]
See Report of the Postal Commission of 1906, H.Doc,
608, 59th Cong., 2d Sess., pp. xxxvi-xxxvii:
"But in what way can it be said that a requirement that a
certain printed matter should be 'devoted to literature' serves to
mark it off from anything else that can be put into print. There is
practically no form of expression of the human mind that cannot be
brought within the scope of 'public information,' 'literature, the
sciences, art, or some special industry.' It would have been just
as effective and just as reasonable for the statute to have said,
'devoted to the interests of humanity,' or ' devoted to the
development of civilization,' or 'devoted to human intellectual
activity.'"
"The prime defect in the statute is, then, that it defines not
by qualities, but by purposes, and the purpose described is so
broad as to include everything and exclude nothing."
"With the exception of a few instances where the publication has
been excluded because the information was deemed not to be public,
no periodical has ever been classified by the application of tests
of this kind. Any attempt to apply them generally would simply end
in a press censorship."
[
Footnote 16]
As we have seen, the Fourth condition bars admission to second
class privileges of publications "designed primarily for
advertising purposes, or for free circulation, or for circulation
at nominal rates." Publications of state departments of agriculture
were not granted the special rate until the Act of June 6, 1900, 31
Stat. 660, 39 U.S.C. § 230. And that was not done for publications
of benevolent and fraternal societies, of institutions of learning,
trade unions, strictly professional, literary, historical, and
scientific societies until the Act of August 24, 1912, 37 Stat.
550, 39 U.S.C. § 229.
[
Footnote 17]
See Deutsch, Freedom of the Press and of the Mails, 36
Mich.L.Rev. 703, 715-727.
[
Footnote 18]
When Congress has been concerned with the content of matter
passing through the mails, it has enacted criminal statutes making,
for example, obscene material (35 Stat. 1129, 18 U.S.C. § 334),
fraudulent material (35 Stat. 1130, 18 U.S.C. § 338), and seditious
literature (40 Stat. 230, 18 U.S.C. § 344), nonmailable in any
class. And it has granted the Postmaster General power to refuse to
deliver mail for any person whom he finds to be using the mails in
conducting lotteries or fraudulent schemes. Rev.Stat. § 3929, 39
U.S.C. § 259.
But that power has been zealously watched and strictly confined.
See, for example, S.Rep. 118, 24th Cong., 1st Sess.,
reporting adversely on the recommendation of President Jackson that
a law be passed prohibiting the use of the mails for the
transmission of publications intended to instigate the slaves to
insurrection. It was said, p. 3:
"But, to understand more fully the extent of the control which
the right of prohibiting circulation through the mail would give to
the Government over the press, it must be borne in mind that the
power of Congress over the Post Office and the mail is an exclusive
power. It must also be remembered that Congress, in the exercise of
this power, may declare any road or navigable water to be a post
road, and that, by the act of 1825, it is provided 'that no stage,
or other vehicle which regularly performs trips on a post road, or
on a road parallel to it, shall carry letters.' The same provision
extends to packets, boats, or other vessels, on navigable waters.
Like provision may be extended to newspapers and pamphlets, which,
if it be admitted that Congress has the right to discriminate in
reference to their character, what papers shall or what shall not
be transmitted by the mail, would subject the freedom of the press,
on all subjects, political, moral, and religious, completely to its
will and pleasure. It would, in fact, in some respects more
effectually control the freedom of the press than any sedition law,
however severe its penalties. The mandate of the Government alone
would be sufficient to close the door against circulation through
the mail, and thus at its sole will and pleasure, might intercept
all communications between the press and the people. . . ."
[
Footnote 19]
"The foolish judgments of Lord Eldon about one hundred years ago
proscribing the works of Byron and Southey, and the finding by the
jury under a charge by Lord Denman that the publication of
Shelley's 'Queen Mab' was an indictable offense, are a warning to
all who have to determine the limits of the field within which
authors may exercise themselves."
United States v. One Book Entitled Ulysses, 72 F.2d
705, 708.
[
Footnote 20]
In the present case, petitioner's predecessor said in his
report:
"when the polls of public opinion submitted by the publication
are examined, it is found that these pictures were characterized as
obscene or indecent by 19 to 22% of the persons interviewed, and
that 20 to 26% of the persons polled would object to having them in
their homes."
MR. JUSTICE FRANKFURTER, concurring.
The case lies within very narrow confines. The publication under
scrutiny is a periodical. It is therefore entitled to the special
rates accorded by Congress, provided it is published "for the
dissemination of information of a public character, or devoted to
literature, the sciences, arts. . . ." If it be devoted to
"literature," it becomes unnecessary to consider how small an
infusion of "information of a public character" entitles a
periodical to the second class mail rates when the bulk of its
contents would not otherwise satisfy the Congressional
conditions.
Congress has neither defined its conception of "literature" nor
has it authorized the Postmaster General to do so. But it has
placed a limitation upon what is to be deemed "literature" for a
privilege which the Court rightly calls a form of subsidy. Matters
that are declared nonmailable (Criminal Code § 211, 35 Stat. 1129,
36 Stat. 1339, 18 U.S.C. § 334) are, of course, not "literature"
within the scope of the second class privilege. But the Postmaster
General does not contend that the periodical with which we are
concerned was nonmailable. He merely contends that it was not
devoted to the kind of "literature" which may claim the subsidy of
second class matter. But, since Congress has seen fit to allow
"literature" conveyed by periodicals to have the second class
privilege without making any allowable classification of
"literature," except only that nonmailable matter as defined by §
211 of the Criminal Code is excluded, the
Page 327 U. S. 160
area of "literature, the sciences, arts" includes all
composition of words, pictorial representation, or notations that
are intelligible to any portion of the population, no matter
whether their appeal is extensive or esoteric. Since the Postmaster
General disavows the nonmailability of the issues of the periodical
he had before him, and since Congress did not qualify "literature,
the sciences, arts" by any standards of taste or edification or
public elevation, the Postmaster General exceeded his powers in
denying this periodical a second class permit.
It seems to me important strictly to confine discussion in this
case because its radiations touch, on the one hand, the very basis
of a free society -- that of the right of expression beyond the
conventions of the day -- and, on the other hand, the freedom of
society from constitutional compulsion to subsidize enterprise,
whether in the world of matter or of mind. While one may entirely
agree with Mr. Justice Holmes, in
Leach v. Carlile,
258 U. S. 138,
258 U. S. 140,
as to the extent to which the First Amendment forbids control of
the post so far as sealed letters are concerned, one confronts an
entirely different set of questions in considering the basis on
which the Government may grant or withhold subsidies through low
postal rates and huge subsidies if one is to judge by the glimpse
afforded by the present case. It will be time enough to consider
such questions when the Court cannot escape decision upon them.