The judgment is reversed and the case is remanded to the New
Hampshire Supreme Court for further proceedings not inconsistent
with this opinion.
It is so ordered.
[
Footnote 1]
The statute provides in pertinent part:
"[A]nyone . . . who . . . has knowingly or willfully done any
act to . . . contribute to the delinquency of [a] child, may be
punished by a fine of not more than five hundred dollars or by
imprisonment for not more than one year or both."
[
Footnote 2]
The complaint charged that appellant
"did willfully contribute to the delinquency of a minor by
selling or causing to be sold a button with obscene material with
slogan on same, to-wit, 'Copulation Not Masturbation' to . . . a
minor child of the age of 14 years, knowing the said child was a
minor. . . ."
[
Footnote 3]
The Rule provides, in pertinent part, that:
"Questions not presented according to [the requirements of this
rule] will be disregarded, save as the court, at its option, may
notice a plain error not presented."
This discretion has been long acknowledged,
see Columbia
Heights Realty Co. v. Rudolph, 217 U.
S. 547 (1910), recently affirmed in
Blonder-Tongue
Laboratories, Inc. v. University of Illinois Foundation,
402 U. S. 313,
402 U. S. 320
n. 6 (1971), and extends to review of the trial court record,
see Sibbach v. Wilson & Co., 312 U. S.
1 (1941).
See also Terminiello v. Chicago,
337 U. S. 1
(1949).
MR. JUSTICE REHNQUIST, with whom THE CHIEF JUSTICE and MR.
JUSTICE WHITE join, dissenting.
Appellant Denis M. Vachon operates the Head Shop in Manchester,
New Hampshire, where he sells various beads, dresses, posters, and
the like. In, July 1969, a 14-year-old girl, accompanied by her
girlfriend, went to the shop seeking to purchase a button or pin
like the
Page 414 U. S. 481
one purchased by her friend the previous week. She found the
button, inscribed "Copulation Not Masturbation," and purchased it
from a salesperson in the store. It was conceded in the New
Hampshire courts that appellant was in control of the premises
where the sale was made. At a jury-waived trial, appellant was
convicted of contributing to the delinquency of a minor, a
statutory offense proscribed in these words:
"[A]nyone . . . who shall knowingly or willfully encourage, aid,
cause, or abet, or connive at, or has knowingly or willfully done
any act to produce, promote, or contribute to the delinquency of
[a] child, may be punished. . . ."
N.H.Rev.Stat.Ann. § 169:32 (Supp. 1972). The Supreme Court of
New Hampshire affirmed appellant's conviction. 113 N.H. 239, 306
A.2d 781 (1973).
The Court decides that appellant's conviction under this statute
violates rights secured to him by the Due Process Clause of the
Fourteenth Amendment, concluding on the basis of its "independent
examination of the trial record" that
"evidence is completely lacking that appellant personally sold
the girl the button or even that he was aware of the sale or
present in the store at the time."
I
In one sense, there can be no doubt that the Court's conclusion
is based upon an "independent examination of the trial record,"
since the claim sustained here was neither made in constitutional
form to the Supreme Court of New Hampshire nor even presented by
appellant in his jurisdictional statement in this Court.
*
Page 414 U. S. 482
A litigant seeking to preserve a constitutional claim for review
in this Court must not only make clear to the lower courts the
nature of his claim, but he must also make it clear that the claim
is constitutionally grounded.
Bailey v. Anderson,
326 U. S. 203
(1945). The closest that appellant came in his brief on appeal to
the Supreme Court of New Hampshire to discussing the issue on which
this Court's opinion turns is in the sixth section (at 17-18),
which is headed:
"The State's failure to introduce any evidence of scienter
should have resulted in dismissal of the charge following the
presentation of the State's case."
Appellant in that section makes the customary appellate
arguments of insufficiency of the evidence, and does not so much as
mention either the United States Constitution or a single case
decided by this Court. The Supreme Court of New Hampshire treated
these arguments as raising a classic state law claim of
insufficient evidence of
scienter; nothing in that court's
opinion remotely suggests that it was treating the claim as having
a basis other than in state law.
The Court purports to decide the
scienter question on
the basis of Rule 40(1)(d)(2) of the Rules of this Court, which
provides:
"1. Briefs of an appellant or petitioner on the merits shall be
printed as prescribed in Rule 39, and shall contain in the order
here indicated --"
"
* * * *"
"(d)(2) The phrasing of the questions presented need not be
identical with that set forth in the jurisdictional statement or
the petition for certiorari,
Page 414 U. S. 483
but the brief may not raise additional questions or change the
substance of the questions already presented in those documents.
Questions not presented according to this paragraph will be
disregarded, save as the court, at its option, may notice a plain
error not presented."
The very language of this rule makes it clear that it applies to
this Court's review of cases in which it has previously either
noted probable jurisdiction or granted certiorari. The cases cited
by the Court in support of what it does here are therefore
necessarily cases in which review had been granted and which had
been orally argued; in addition, each of those cases arose in the
federal courts.
See Columbia Heights Realty Co. v.
Rudolph, 217 U. S. 547
(1910);
Sibbach v. Wilson & Co., 312 U. S.
1 (1941);
Blonder-Tongue Laboratories, Inc. v.
University of Illinois Foundation, 402 U.
S. 313 (1971).
Whatever the import of Rule 40(1)(d)(2) in cases arising in the
federal courts, it surely does not give this Court the power to
simply ignore the limitations placed by 28 U.S.C. § 1257 on our
jurisdiction to review final judgments of the highest court of a
State. That jurisdiction permits review in this Court by appeal
where a state statute has been upheld against a federal
constitutional challenge, or by writ of certiorari where a federal
constitutional challenge is "specifically set up or claimed" in
state court. Our prior cases establish that we will "not decide
federal constitutional issues raised here for the first time on
review of state court decisions."
Cardinale v. Louisiana,
394 U. S. 437,
394 U. S. 438
(1969).
See Crowell v.
Randell, 10 Pet. 368 (1836). Since the Supreme
Court of New Hampshire was not presented with a federal
constitutional challenge to the sufficiency of the evidence,
resolution of this question by the Court is inconsistent with the
congressional limitation on our
Page 414 U. S. 484
jurisdiction to review the final judgment of the highest court
of a State.
II
Even if appellant's "sufficiency of the evidence" contention in
the Supreme Court of New Hampshire could be said to have been
presented as a federal constitutional claim based on
Thompson
v. Louisville, 362 U. S. 199
(1960), I would nonetheless be unable to join in the Court's
disposition of it. In
Thompson, the only state court
proceedings reaching the merits of the case were in the Louisville
Police Court from which there was no right of appeal to any higher
state court, and there was therefore no state court opinion written
which construed the statute under which Thompson was convicted.
This Court therefore had no choice but to engage in its own
construction of the statute, and, upon doing so, it concluded that
the record was "entirely lacking in evidence to support any of the
charges."
Id. at
362 U. S. 204.
Thompson was obviously an extraordinary case, and, up
until now, has been saved for extraordinary situations; it has not
heretofore been broadened so as to make lack of evidentiary support
for only one of several elements of an offense a constitutional
infirmity in a state conviction.
Here, however, the Supreme Court of New Hampshire construed the
state statute defining contributing to the delinquency of a minor,
and held that the evidence adduced at the trial was sufficient to
support a finding on each element of that offense. While the
Supreme Court of New Hampshire did say, as the Court indicates,
that the State was required to prove that the accused acted
"
voluntarily and intentionally, and not because of mistake or
accident or other innocent reason,'" 113 N.H. at 242, 306 A.2d at
784, it said this in a context of several paragraphs of treatment
of the elements of the offense. Just as those reading and relying
upon our opinions would
Page 414 U. S.
485
be ill-advised to seize one phrase out of context, I think
we are ill-advised to so treat the opinion of the Supreme Court of
New Hampshire. That court had several observations to make about
the statutory offense which bear on the issue of "willfulness" upon
which this Court focuses:
"It is uncontested that the defendant was in control of the
premises where the sale was made. There was evidence that a
girlfriend of this minor had previously purchased there a pin 'like
that.' These pins were displayed on a card on a counter. The trial
court saw the minor, and had an opportunity to conclude whether her
minority should have been apparent to whoever sold the pin. The
court could find that the defendant was aware of the character of
the pins which were being offered for sale and sold in his
establishment."
"Defendant is charged with willfully contributing to the
delinquency of a minor by selling or causing to be sold to her the
button in question. To act willfully is 'to act voluntarily and
intentionally, and not because of mistake or accident or other
innocent reason.' [Citations omitted.] The trial court could
properly find and rule that the sale of this button to the minor
was intentional. The trial court could further conclude that the
seller of this type of button should have realized that it would
tend to be harmful to the morals of the purchaser or others. R.S.A.
169:32 (Supp. 1972). This would warrant a finding and ruling that
the defendant willfully contributed to the delinquency of this
minor, as charged in the complaint. [Citations omitted.]"
Id. at 242, 36 A.2d at 784.
The Court simply casts aside this authoritative construction of
New Hampshire law, seizes one phrase out
Page 414 U. S. 486
of context, and concludes that there was no evidence to
establish that the appellant "[knew] the girl to be a minor,
personally sold her the buton, or personally caused another to sell
it to her." The word "personally" is the contribution of this Court
to the New Hampshire statute; it is not contained in the statute,
and is not once used by the Supreme Court of New Hampshire in its
opinion dealing with the facts of this very case. Indeed, the
entire thrust of the opinion of the Supreme Court of New Hampshire
is that appellant need not
personally have sold the button
to the minor nor
personally have authorized its sale to a
minor in order to be guilty of the statutory offense. The only fair
reading of the above-quoted language from the Supreme Court of New
Hampshire is that the word "willfully" in the statute does not mean
"
personally," and the facts that the appellant controlled
and operated the shop, that the same type of pin had been
previously purchased at the shop, and that the pins were
prominently offered for sale were sufficient evidence on the issue
of willfulness.
This may seem to us a somewhat broad construction of the
language "willfully" or "knowingly," though our own cases make it
clear that we are dealing with words which may be given a variety
of meanings by their context:
"The difference between willful failure to pay a tax when due,
which is made a misdemeanor, and willful attempt to defeat and
evade one, which is made a felony, is not easy to detect or define.
Both must be willful, and willful, as we have said, is a word of
many meanings, its construction often being influenced by its
context.
United States v. Murdock, 290 U. S.
389. It may well mean something more as applied to
nonpayment of a tax than when applied to failure to make a return.
Mere voluntary and
Page 414 U. S. 487
purposeful, as distinguished from accidental, omission to make a
timely return might meet the test of willfulness."
Spies v. United States, 317 U.
S. 492,
317 U. S.
497-498 (1943).
But since our authority to review state court convictions is
limited to the vindication of claims of federal rights, we must
take the meaning of the statute, and of the words "willfully" and
"knowingly" which it uses, as given to us by the Supreme Court of
New Hampshire. I would have thought such a proposition well settled
by our prior decisions:
"We, of course, are bound by a State's interpretation of its own
statute, and will not substitute our judgment for that of the
State's when it becomes necessary to analyze the evidence for the
purpose of determining whether that evidence supports the findings
of a state court."
Garner v. Louisiana, 368 U. S. 157,
368 U. S. 166
(1961). We do have constitutional authority in appropriate cases to
hold that the State's construction of its statute is such that the
statutory language did not give a criminal defendant fair warning
of the conduct which is construed to be embraced within it.
Cole v. Arkansas, 333 U. S. 196
(1948);
Bouie v. City of Columbia, 378 U.
S. 347 (1964). But this is a far cry from our own
rewriting of a state statute in order to make it require a highly
specific intent, and then turning around and saying that there was
no evidence before the state courts to prove the kind of intent
which we have said the statute requires. I would at least note
probable jurisdiction over the appeal and set the case for oral
argument.
* Appellant makes two contentions in his jurisdictional
statement: first, that the New Hampshire statutes defining
contributing to the delinquency of a minor and sale and delivery of
obscene material (N.H.Rev.Stat.Ann. §§ 571-A:1, 571-A:2 (Supp.
1972)) have been applied to the sale of the button by appellant in
a way that infringes upon his First and Fourteenth Amendment
rights; and, second, that the New Hampshire statute defining
contributing to the delinquency of a minor is unconstitutionally
vague. There is simply nothing else presented by the jurisdictional
statement.
Since the Court instead chooses, without ever having heard
argument, to rewrite the New Hampshire statute and substitute its
interpretation for that of the Supreme Court of New Hampshire, I
dissent.