Application to stay the commencement of the California Superior
Court trial of a tort action in which applicants are defendants so
that they may apply for a writ of certiorari in this Court to
review, on federal constitutional grounds, the California Court of
Appeal's judgment reversing the Superior Court's dismissal of the
action and remanding for a trial is denied, absent a sufficient
showing by applicants of irreparable injury resulting from the
Court of Appeal's judgment if the stay is not granted.
MR. JUSTICE REHNQUIST, Circuit Justice.
Applicants have requested that I stay the commencement of a
civil trial in the Superior Court of the City and County of San
Francisco in which they are defendants in order that they may have
an opportunity to apply for and obtain a writ of certiorari from
this Court to review the judgment of the Court of Appeal of the
State of California filed October 26, 1977. That court reversed the
judgment of dismissal rendered by the Superior Court in a case
wherein respondent sought damages from petitioners for injuries
allegedly inflicted upon her by persons who were acting under the
stimulus of observing a scene of brutality which had been broadcast
in a television drama entitled "Born Innocent." Applicants contend
that the First and Fourteenth Amendments to the United States
Constitution prevent their being subjected to liability and damages
in an action such as this, and intend to petition this Court for
certiorari to review the judgment of the Court of Appeal remanding
the case for trial.
I find it unnecessary to determine whether four Justices of this
Court would vote to grant a petition for certiorari by these
Page 434 U. S. 1355
applicants to review a California judgment sustaining a judgment
for damages against them on the basis described above in the face
of their claim that the First and Fourteenth Amendments prohibit
the rendering of such a judgment. The only question before me is
whether those same constitutional provisions would be thought by at
least four Justices of this Court to call for the granting of a
writ of certiorari to review the interlocutory judgment of the
state Court of Appeal which did no more than remand the case for a
trial on the issues joined. I am quite prepared to assume that the
Court would find the decision of the Court of Appeal sought to be
stayed a "final judgment" for purposes of 28 U.S.C. ยง 1257(2)
pursuant to its holding in
Cox Broadcasting Corp. v. Cohn,
420 U. S. 469
(1975). But the mere fact that the Court would have jurisdiction to
grant a stay does not dispose of all the prudential considerations
which, to my mind, militate against the grant of the application in
this case. Every year we grant petitions for certiorari or note
probable jurisdiction in cases in which we ultimately conclude that
a state or federal court has failed to give sufficient recognition
to a federal constitutional claim, and have as a consequence
reversed the judgment of such court rendered upon the merits of the
action. But this is a far cry from saying that this Court would
have stayed further proceedings in the same cases at an
interlocutory stage comparable to the case now before me.
True, in the case of double jeopardy, we have held that the
subjecting of the defendant to the second trial itself is a
violation of the constitutional right secured by the Sixth
Amendment,
Abney v. United States, 431 U.
S. 651,
431 U. S.
660-661 (1977), even though any judgment of conviction
rendered in that trial would be subject to ultimate reversal on
appeal. The same doctrine is found in cases more closely resembling
this such as
Miami Herald Publishing Co. v. Tornillo,
418 U. S. 241
(1974), and
Cox, supra. But in both
Tornillo and
in
Cox, the First and Fourteenth Amendment claims were far
more precisely
Page 434 U. S. 1356
drawn as a result of the decisions of the state courts than is
the case here. A reading of the opinion of the Court of Appeal
indicates that it might have been based on a state procedural
ground, by reason of the fact that the trial judge, himself, after
denial of a motion for summary judgment but before the empanelment
of a jury, viewed the entire film and rendered judgment for
applicants because he found that it did not "advocate or encourage
violent and depraved acts, and thus, did not constitute an
incitement.'" The Court of Appeal held that this was a
violation of respondent's right to trial by jury guaranteed her by
the California Constitution, and went on to state that:
"[I]t is appropriate to acknowledge that, if the cause had
proceeded properly to trial before a jury and a verdict awarding
damages to appellant had been the result, it would have been the
responsibility of the trial court, or perhaps of this court on
appeal, to determine upon a reevaluation of the evidence whether
the jury's fact determination could be sustained against a First
Amendment challenge to the jury's determination of a
'constitutional fact.' (
Rosenbloom v. Metromedia, supra,
403 U. S.
29,
403 U. S. 54. . . .)"
Olivia N. v. National Broadcasting Co.,
Inc., 74 Cal. App. 3d
383, 389, 141 Cal. Rptr. 511, 514 (1977).
The contours of California tort law are regulated by the
California courts and the California Legislature, subject only to
the limitations imposed on those bodies by the United States
Constitution and laws and treaties enacted pursuant thereto. In the
principal case relied upon by applicants in support of their stay,
United States v. Shipp, 203 U. S. 563
(1906), "a sheriff allowed appellant to be lynched pending appeal
to this Court of his conviction." A requirement to defend an action
such as applicants are now required to defend in the Superior
Court, and if unsuccessful there to post a supersedeas bond and
prosecute their constitutional claims through the
Page 434 U. S. 1357
normal appellate process to this Court, is scarcely a comparable
example of irreparable injury. Since I find that applicants' claims
of irreparable injury resulting from the judgment of the Court of
Appeal in this case are not sufficient to warrant my granting their
application, I accordingly deny the stay.
So ordered.