1. The law of Minnesota declaring it a misdemeanor for any
person to teach or advocate by any written or printed matter or by
oral speech that citizens of the state should not aid or assist the
United States in prosecuting or carrying on war with the public
enemies of the United States is valid under the federal
Constitution. P.
254 U. S.
327.
2. Such an enactment may be upheld both as a legitimate measure
of
Page 254 U. S. 326
cooperation by the state with the United States, not in conflict
with the federal war power, p.
254 U. S. 328,
and also as an exercise of the police power to preserve the peace
of the state. P.
254 U. S. 331.
Halter v. Nebraska, 205 U. S. 34;
Presser v. Illinois, 116 U. S. 252.
3. The right of free speech does not cover false and malicious
misrepresentation of the objects and motives of this country in
entering upon a war, made in a public speech for the purpose of
discouraging the recruiting of troops, while the war is flagrant
and armies are being raised. P.
254 U. S.
332.
141 Minn. 263 affirmed.
The case is stated in the opinion.
MR. JUSTICE McKENNA delivered the opinion of the Court.
A statute of Minnesota makes it unlawful "to interfere with or
discourage the enlistment of men in the military or naval forces of
the United States or of the State of Minnesota."
Its second and third sections are as follows:
"Sec. 2. Speaking by Word of Mouth against Enlistment Unlawful.
-- It shall be unlawful for any person in any public place, or at
any meeting where more than five persons are assembled, to advocate
or teach by word of mouth or otherwise that men should not enlist
in the military or naval forces of the United States or the State
of Minnesota."
"Sec. 3. Teaching or Advocating by Written or Printed Matter
against Enlistment Unlawful. -- It shall be unlawful
Page 254 U. S. 327
for any person to teach or advocate by any written or printed
matter whatsoever, or by oral speech, that the citizens of this
state should not aid or assist the United States in prosecuting or
carrying on war with the public enemies of the United States."
Section 4 defines a citizen to be "any person within the
confines of the state," and § 5 declares violations of the act to
be gross misdemeanors and punishable by fine and imprisonment.
The indictment charged that Gilbert, at a time and place
designated in the state, and under the conditions prohibited by §
2, the United States being then and there at war with the kingdom
and imperial government of Germany, used the following
language:
"We are going over to Europe to make the world safe for
democracy, but I tell you we had better make America safe for
democracy first. You say, what is the matter with our democracy? I
tell you what is the matter with it: have you had anything to say
as to who should be President? Have you had anything to say as to
who should be Governor of this state? Have you had anything to say
as to whether we would go into this war? You know you have not. If
this is such a good democracy, for Heaven's sake, why should we not
vote on conscription of men? We were stampeded into this war by
newspaper rot to pull England's chestnuts out of the fire for her.
I tell you if they conscripted wealth like they have conscripted
men, this war would not last over forty-eight hours. . . ."
A demurrer to the indictment was overruled, and Gilbert was
tried and convicted. The judgment was that he pay a fine of $500
and be imprisoned in the county jail of the County of Goodhue for
one year, and pay the costs of the prosecution. The judgment was
affirmed by the supreme court of the state.
The statute, it is contended, is repugnant to the Constitution
of the United States in that: (1) "All power of legislation
Page 254 U. S. 328
regarding the subject matter contained in the statute is
conferred upon Congress and withheld from the states." (2) And that
the statute is obnoxious to the "inherent right of free speech
respecting the concerns, activities and interests of the United
States of America and its government."
We shall consider the objections in their order. It is said in
support of the exclusive power in Congress that Congress alone can,
under the Constitution, "provide for the common defense and general
welfare of the United States," "declare war," "raise and support
armies," "to make rules for the government and regulation of the
land and naval forces." To these affirmative delegations of power
to Congress there is added, it is said, a prohibition to the states
to "engage in war, unless actually invaded, or in such imminent
danger as will not admit of delay." And
"that the State of Minnesota is not a party to the war now
[then] being waged. If it is not engaged in any war, and until it
does so engage, legislation such as a belligerent sovereign might
enact is beyond its province."
These specific grounds of objection to the statute are attempted
to be reinforced by analogy to the power of Congress over
interstate commerce to the exclusion of the interference of the
states.
The bases of the objections seem to be that plaintiff in error
had an accountability as a citizen of the United States different
from that which he had as a citizen of the state, and that
therefore he was not subject to the power or jurisdiction of the
state exercised in the act under review. Manifestly, to support the
contention, something more is necessary than the letter of the
cited constitutional provisions. The broader proposition must be
established that a state has no interest or concern in the United
States or its armies or power of protecting them from public
enemies.
Undoubtedly, the United States can declare war and it,
Page 254 U. S. 329
not the states, has the power to raise and maintain armies. But
there are other considerations. The United States is composed of
the states, the states are constituted of the citizens of the
United States, who also are citizens of the states, and it is from
these citizens that armies are raised and wars waged, and whether
to victory and its benefits, or to defeat and its calamities, the
states as well as the United States are intimately concerned. And
whether to victory or defeat depends upon their morale, the spirit,
and determination that animates them -- whether it is repellant and
adverse or eager and militant, and to maintain it eager and
militant against attempts at its debasement in aid of the enemies
of the United States, is a service of patriotism, and from the
contention that it encroaches upon or usurps any power of Congress
there is an instinctive and immediate revolt. Cold and technical
reasoning in its minute consideration may indeed insist on a
separation of the sovereignties and resistance in each to any
cooperation from the other, but there is opposing demonstration in
the fact that this country is one composed of many, and must on
occasions be animated as one, and that the constituted and
constituting sovereignties must have power of cooperation against
the enemies of all. Of such instance, we think, is the statute of
Minnesota, and it goes no farther. It therefore has none of the
character of the illustrations adduced against it, nor the
possibility of conflict of powers which they condemn. This was the
view of the supreme court of the state, and the court expressed it
with detail and force of reasoning. The same view of the statute
was expressed in
State v. Holm, 139 Minn. 267, where,
after a full discussion, the contention was rejected that the
Espionage Law of June 15, 1917, abrogated or superseded the
statute, the court declaring that the fact that the citizens of the
state are also citizens of the United States and owe a duty to the
nation does not absolve them from duty to the state, nor preclude a
state from
Page 254 U. S. 330
enforcing such duty. "The same act," it was said, "may be an
offense or transgression of both" nation and state, and both may
punish it without a conflict of their sovereignties. Numerous cases
were cited, commencing with
Moore v.
Illinois, 14 How. 13, and terminating with
Halter v. Nebraska, 205 U. S. 34.
[
Footnote 1]
The latter case is especially pertinent in its sentiment and
reasoning. It sustained a statute of Nebraska directed against the
debasement of the national flag to trade uses against the
contention that the flag, being the national emblem, was subject
only to the control of the national power. In sustaining the
statute, it was recognized that in a degradation of the flag there
is a degradation of all of which it is the symbol -- that is, "the
national power and national honor," and what they represent and
have in trust. To maintain and reverence these, to "encourage
patriotism and love of country among its people," may be affirmed,
it was said, to be a duty that rests upon each state, and that
"when, by its legislation, the state encourages a feeling of
patriotism towards the nation, it necessarily encourages a like
feeling towards the state."
And so with the statute of Minnesota. An army is an instrument
of government, a necessity of its power and honor, and, it may be,
of its security. An army, of course, can only be raised and
directed by Congress; in neither has
Page 254 U. S. 331
the state power, but it has power to regulate the conduct of its
citizens and to restrain the exertion of baleful influences against
the promptings of patriotic duty to the detriment of the welfare of
the nation and state. To do so is not to usurp a national power; it
is only to render a service to its people, as Nebraska rendered a
service to its people when it inhibited the debasement of the
flag.
We concur, therefore, in the final conclusion of the court that
the state is not inhibited from making
"the national purposes its own purposes, to the extent of
exerting its police power to prevent its own citizens from
obstructing the accomplishment of such purposes."
The statute, indeed, may be supported as a simple exertion of
the police power to preserve the peace of the state. As counsel for
the state say:
"The act under consideration does not relate to the raising of
armies for the national defense, nor to rules and regulations for
the government of those under arms. It is simply a local police
measure, aimed to suppress a species of seditious speech which the
legislature of the state has found objectionable. If the
legislature has otherwise power to prohibit utterances of the
character of those here complained of, the fact that such
suppression has some contributory effect on the federal function of
raising armies is quite beside the question."
And the state knew the conditions which existed, and could have
a solicitude for the public peace, and this record justifies it.
Gilbert's remarks were made in a public meeting. They were resented
by his auditors. There were protesting interruptions, also
accusations and threats against him, disorder, and intimations of
violence. And such is not an uncommon experience. On such
occasions, feeling usually runs high and is impetuous; there is a
prompting to violence, and, when violence is once yielded to,
before it can be quelled, tragedies may be enacted. To preclude
such result or a
Page 254 U. S. 332
danger of it is a proper exercise of the power of the state.
Presser v. Illinois, 116 U. S.
267.
The next contention is that the statute is violative of the
right of free speech, and therefore void. It is asserted that the
right of free speech is a natural and inherent right, and that it
and the freedom of the press "were regarded as among the most
sacred and vital possessed by mankind when this nation was born,
when its Constitution was framed and adopted." And the contention
seems necessary for the plaintiff in error to support. But, without
so deciding or considering the freedom asserted as guaranteed or
secured either by the Constitution of the United States or by the
Constitution of the state, we pass immediately to the contention,
and for the purposes of this case may concede it -- that is,
concede that the asserted freedom is natural and inherent, but it
is not absolute; it is subject to restriction and limitation. And
this we have decided. In
Schenck v. United States,
249 U. S. 47,
249 U. S. 52, we
distinguished times and occasions, and said that "the most
stringent protection of free speech would not protect a man in
falsely shouting fire in a theater and causing a panic;" and in
Frohwerk v. United States, 249 U.
S. 204,
249 U. S. 206,
we said
"that the First Amendment, while prohibiting legislation against
free speech as such, cannot and obviously was not intended to give
immunity to every possible use of language."
See also Debs v. United States, 249 U.
S. 211;
Abrams v. United States, 250 U.
S. 616. In
Schaefer v. United States,
251 U. S. 466,
commenting on those cases and their contentions, it was said that
the curious spectacle was presented of the Constitution of the
United States being invoked to justify the activities of anarchy or
of the enemies of the United States, and, by a strange perversion
of its precepts, it was adduced against itself. And we did more
than reject the contention, we forestalled all repetitions of it,
and the contention in the case at bar is a repetition of it. It is
a direct assault upon
Page 254 U. S. 333
the statute of Minnesota, and a direct assertion in spite of the
prohibition of the statute that one can, by speech, teach or
advocate that the citizens of the state should not aid or assist
"the United States in prosecuting or carrying on war with the
public enemies of the United States," and be protected by the
Constitution of the United States.
The same conditions existed as in the cited cases -- that is, a
condition of war and its emergency existed, and there was explicit
limitation to § 3 in the charge of the trial court to the jury. The
court read §§ 2 and 3 of the statute to the jury, and said: "I take
it from the reading of the whole indictment that it is prosecuted
under § 3, which I have just read to you."
Gilbert's speech had the purpose they denounce. The nation was
at war with Germany, armies were recruiting, and the speech was the
discouragement of that -- its purpose was necessarily the
discouragement of that. It was not an advocacy of policies or a
censure of actions that a citizen had the right to make. The war
was flagrant; it had been declared by the power constituted by the
Constitution to declare it, and in the manner provided for by the
Constitution. It was not declared in aggression, but in defense, in
defense of our national honor, in vindication of the "most sacred
rights of our nation and our people." [
Footnote 2]
This was known to Gilbert, for he was informed in affairs and
the operations of the government, and every word that he uttered in
denunciation of the war was false, was deliberate misrepresentation
of the motives which impelled it and the objects for which it was
prosecuted. He could have had no purpose other than that of which
he was charged. It would be a travesty on the constitutional
privilege he invokes to assign him its protection.
Judgment affirmed.
MR. JUSTICE HOLMES concurs in the result.
THE CHIEF JUSTICE, being of the opinion that the subject matter
is within the exclusive legislative power of Congress, when
exerted, and that the action of Congress has occupied the whole
field, therefore dissents.
Page 254 U. S. 334
[
Footnote 1]
In
Gustafson v. Rhinow, 144 Minn. 415, the Supreme
Court of Minnesota sustained a law of the state giving to soldiers
who served in the war against Germany $15 for each month or
fraction of a month of service, against an attack that the soldiers
were soldiers of the United States. The court expressed the concern
and interest of the state as follows:
"It is true that the federal government alone has power to
declare war, but, having done so, the government and people of
Minnesota became bound to defend and support the national
government. While the states of the nation are sovereign in a
certain field, they are also members of the family of states
constituting the national organization."
[
Footnote 2]
Words of President Wilson in his war message to Congress, April
2, 1917.
MR. JUSTICE BRANDEIS, dissenting.
Joseph Gilbert, manager of the organization department of the
Nonpartisan League, was sentenced to fine and imprisonment for
speaking on August 18, 1917 at a public meeting of the league,
words held to be prohibited by c. 463 of the laws of Minnesota,
approved April 20, 1917. Gilbert was a citizen of the United States
and apparently of a state other than Minnesota. He claimed
seasonably that the statute violated rights guaranteed to him by
the federal Constitution. This claim has been denied; and, in my
opinion, erroneously.
The Minnesota statute was enacted during the World War, but it
is not a war measure. The statute is said to have been enacted by
the state under its police power to preserve the peace, but it is
in fact an act to prevent teaching that the abolition of war is
possible. Unlike the federal Espionage Act of June 15, 1917, c. 30,
40 Stat. 217, 219, it applies equally whether the United States is
at peace or at war. It abridges freedom of speech and of the press
not in a particular emergency, in order to avert a clear and
present danger, but under all circumstances. The restriction
imposed relates to the teaching of the doctrine of pacifism, and
the legislature in effect proscribes it for all time. The statute
does not in terms prohibit the teaching of the doctrine. Its
prohibition is more specific, and is directed against the teaching
of certain applications of it. This specification operates, as will
be seen, rather to extend than to limit the scope of the
prohibition.
Page 254 U. S. 335
Sections 1 and 2 prohibit teaching or advocating by printed
matter, writing, or word of mouth that men should not enlist in the
military or naval forces of the United States. The prohibition is
made to apply whatever the motive, the intention, or the purpose of
him who teaches. It applies alike to the preacher in the pulpit,
the professor at the university, the speaker at a political
meeting, the lecturer at a society or club gathering. Whatever the
nature of the meeting and whether it be public or private, the
prohibition is absolute if five persons are assembled. The reason
given by the speaker for advising against enlistment is immaterial.
Young men, considering whether they should enter these services as
a means of earning a livelihood or as a career, may not be told
that, in the opinion of the speaker, they can serve their country
and themselves better by entering the civil service of state or
nation, or by studying for one of the professions, or by engaging
in the transportation service, or in farming or in business, or by
becoming a workman in some productive industry. Although conditions
may exist in the army or the navy which are undermining efficiency,
which tend to demoralize those who enter the service and would
render futile their best efforts, the state forbids citizens of the
United States to advocate that men should not enlist until existing
abuses or defects are remedied. The prohibition imposed by the
Minnesota statute has no relation to existing needs or desires of
the government. It applies although recruiting is neither in
process nor in contemplation. For the statute aims to prevent not
acts, but beliefs. The prohibition imposed by § 3 is even more
far-reaching than that provided in §§ 1 and 2. Section 3 makes it
punishable to teach in any place a single person that a citizen
should not aid in carrying on a war, no matter what the relation of
the parties may be. Thus, the statute invades the privacy and
freedom of the home. Father and mother may not follow the
promptings of religious belief,
Page 254 U. S. 336
of conscience, or of conviction, and teach son or daughter the
doctrine of pacifism. If they do, any police officer may summarily
arrest them.
That such a law is inconsistent with the conceptions of liberty
hitherto prevailing seems clear. But it is said that the guaranty
against abridging freedom of speech contained in the First
Amendment of the federal Constitution applies only to federal
action; that the legislation here complained of is that of a state;
that the validity of the statute has been sustained by its highest
court as a police measure; that the matter is one of state concern,
and that consequently this Court cannot interfere. But the matter
is not one merely of state concern. The state law affects directly
the functions of the federal government. It affects rights,
privileges, and immunities of one who is a citizen of the United
States, and it deprives him of an important part of his liberty.
These are rights which are guaranteed protection by the federal
Constitution, and they are invaded by the statute in question.
Congress has the exclusive power to legislate concerning the
army and navy of the United States, and to determine, among other
things, the conditions of enlistment. It has likewise exclusive
power to declare war, to determine to what extent citizens shall
aid in its prosecution, and how effective aid may best be secured.
Congress, which has power to raise an army and naval forces by
conscription when public safety demands, may, to avert a clear and
present danger, prohibit interference by persuasion with the
process of either compulsory or voluntary enlistment. As an
incident of its power to declare war, it may, when the public
safety demands, require from every citizen full support, and may,
to avert a clear and present danger, prohibit interference by
persuasion with the giving of such support. But Congress might
conclude that the most effective army or navy would be one composed
wholly of men who had enlisted with full appreciation of
Page 254 U. S. 337
the limitations and obligations which the service imposes, and
in the face of efforts to discourage their doing so. [
Footnote 2/1] It might conclude that the
most effective army would be one composed exclusively of men who
are firmly convinced that war is sometimes necessary if honor is to
be preserved, and also that the particular war in which they are
engaged in a just one. Congress, legislating for a people justly
proud of liberties theretofore enjoyed and suspicious or resentful
of any interference with them, might conclude that even in times of
great danger, the most effective means of securing support from the
great body of citizens is to accord to all full freedom to
criticize the acts and administration of their country, although
such freedom may be used by a few, to urge upon their fellow
citizens not to aid the government in carrying on a war, which
reason or faith tells them is wrong, and will therefore bring
misery upon their country.
The right to speak freely concerning functions of the federal
government is a privilege or immunity of every citizen of the
United States which, even before the adoption of the Fourteenth
Amendment, a state was powerless to curtail. It was held in
Crandall v.
Nevada, 6 Wall. 35,
73 U. S. 44, that
the United States has the power to call to the seat of government
or elsewhere any citizen to aid it in the conduct of public
affairs, that every citizen has the correlative right to go there
or anywhere in the pursuit of public or private business, and that
"no power can exist in a state to obstruct this right which would
not enable it to defeat the purpose for which the government was
established." The right of a citizen of the United States to take
part, for his own or the country's benefit, in the making of
federal laws and in the conduct of the government necessarily
includes the right to speak or write about them, to endeavor to
make his own opinion concerning laws existing
Page 254 U. S. 338
or contemplated prevail, and, to this end, to teach the truth as
he sees it. Were this not so,
"the right of the people to assemble for the purpose of
petitioning Congress for a redress of grievance or for anything
else connected with the powers or duties of the national
government"
would be a right totally without substance.
See United
States v. Cruikshank, 92 U. S. 542,
92 U. S. 552;
The Slaughterhouse
Cases, 16 Wall. 36,
83 U. S. 79. Full
and free exercise of this right by the citizen is ordinarily also
his duty, for its exercise is more important to the nation than it
is to himself. Like the course of the heavenly bodies, harmony in
national life is a resultant of the struggle between contending
forces. In frank expression of conflicting opinion lies the
greatest promise of wisdom in governmental action, and in
suppression lies ordinarily the greatest peril. There are times
when those charged with the responsibility of government, faced
with clear and present danger, may conclude that suppression of
divergent opinion is imperative because the emergency does not
permit reliance upon the lower conquest of error by truth. And, in
such emergencies, the power to suppress exists. But the
responsibility for the maintenance of the army and navy, for the
conduct of war, and for the preservation of government, both state
and federal, from "malice domestic and foreign levy" rests upon
Congress. It is true that the states have the power of
self-preservation inherent in any government to suppress
insurrection and repel invasion, and to that end they may maintain
such a force of militia as Congress may prescribe and arm.
Houston v.
Moore, 5 Wheat. 1. But the duty of preserving the
state governments falls ultimately upon the federal government.
Luther v.
Borden, 7 How. 1,
48 U. S. 77;
The Prize
Cases, 2 Black 635,
67 U. S. 668;
Texas v.
White, 7 Wall. 700,
74 U. S. 727.
And the superior responsibility carries with it the superior right.
The states act only under the express direction of Congress.
See National Defense Act, June 3, 1916, c. 134, 39
Stat.
Page 254 U. S. 339
166; Selective Service Act, May 18, 1917, c. 15, 40 Stat. 76.
The fact that they may stimulate and encourage recruiting, just as
they may stimulate and encourage interstate commerce,
Monongahela Nav. Co. v. United States, 148 U.
S. 312,
148 U. S. 329,
does not give them the power by police regulations or otherwise to
exceed the authority expressly granted to them by the federal
government.
See Kurtz v. Moffitt, 115 U.
S. 487;
Prigg v.
Pennsylvania, 16 Pet. 539. Congress, being charged
with responsibility for those functions of government, must
determine whether a paramount interest of the nation demands that
free discussion in relation to them should be curtailed. No state
may trench upon its province.
Prior to the passage of the Minnesota statute, it had been the
established policy of the United States, departed from only once in
the life of the nation, [
Footnote
2/2] to raise its military and naval forces in times of war, as
in peace, conclusively by voluntary enlistment. Service was deemed
a privilege of Americans, not a duty exacted by law. Specific
provision had been made to ensure that enlistment should be the
result of free, informed, and deliberate choice. [
Footnote 2/3] The law of the United States left an
American as
Page 254 U. S. 340
free to advise his fellows not to enter the army or the navy as
he was free to recommend their enlistment. The government had
exacted from American citizens no service except the prompt payment
of taxes. Although war had been declared, such was still the
policy, and the law of the United States when Minnesota enacted the
statute here in question.
The Minnesota statute was, when enacted, inconsistent with the
law of the United States because, at that time, Congress still
permitted free discussion of these governmental functions. Later,
and before Gilbert spoke the words complained of, the federal
Espionage Law was enacted, but the Minnesota statute was also
inconsistent with it. The federal act did not prohibit the teaching
of any doctrine; it prohibited only certain tangible obstructions
to the conduct of the existing war with the German Empire committed
with criminal intent. It was so understood and administered by the
Department of Justice. [
Footnote
2/4] Under the Minnesota law, teaching or advice that men
Page 254 U. S. 341
should not enlist is made punishable although the jury should
find (1) that the teaching or advocacy proved wholly futile, and no
obstruction resulted; (2) that there was no intent to obstruct, and
the court, taking judicial notice of facts, should rule (3) that,
when the words were written or spoken, the United States was at
peace with all the world. That this conflict was not merely a
technical one, but a cause of real embarrassment and danger to the
federal government, we learn from one of the officials entrusted
with the administration of the Espionage Act:
"In the State of Minnesota, because of what was claimed to be
either inadequate federal law or inadequate federal administration,
state laws of a sweeping character were passed and enforced with
severity. Whether justified or not in adopting this policy of
repression, the result of its adoption increased discontent, and
the most serious cases of alleged interference with civil liberty
were reported to the federal government from that state. [
Footnote 2/5]"
In
Johnson v. Maryland, ante, 254 U. S. 51, this
Court held that the power of Congress to establish post roads
precluded the state from requiring of a post office employee using
the state highway in the transportation of mail the customary
evidence of competency to drive a motortruck, although the danger
to public safety was obvious and it did not appear that the federal
government had undertaken to deal with the matter by statute or
regulation. The prohibition of state action rests, as the Court
pointed out there,
"not upon any consideration of degree, but upon the entire
absence of power on the part of the states to touch the
instrumentalities of the United States."
As exclusive power over enlistments in the army and the navy of
the United States and the responsibility for the conduct of war is
vested by the federal Constitution in Congress,
Page 254 U. S. 342
legislation by a state on this subject is necessarily void
unless authorized by Congress. It is so when Congress makes no
regulation, because, by omitting to make regulations, Congress
signifies its intention that, in this respect, the action of the
citizen shall be untrammeled. This would be true even if the
subject in question were one over which Congress and the states
have concurrent power. For where Congress has occupied a field
theretofore open also to state legislation, it necessarily excludes
all such.
Southern Railway v. Reid, 222 U.
S. 424;
Chicago, Rock Island & Pacific Railway
Co. v. Hardwick Farmers' Elevator Co., 226 U.
S. 426. Here Congress not only had exclusive power to
act on the subject; it had exercised that power directly by the
Espionage Law before Gilbert spoke the words for which he was
sentenced. The provisions of the Minnesota statute and its title
preclude a contention that its purpose was to prevent breaches of
the peace.
Compare Ex parte Meckel, 220 S.W. 81. But
neither the fact that it was a police regulation,
New York
Central Railroad Co. v. Winfield, 244 U.
S. 147, nor the fact that it was legislation in aid of
congressional action would, if true, save the statute. For
"when the United States has exercised its exclusive powers . . .
so far as to take possession of the field, the states no more can
supplement its requirements than they can annul them."
Pennsylvania R. Co. v. Public Service Comm'n,
250 U. S. 566,
250 U. S. 569;
Northern Pacific Railway Co. v. Washington, 222 U.
S. 370. The exclusiveness of the power of the federal
government with which this state legislation interferes springs
from the very roots of political sovereignty. The states may not
punish treason against the United States,
People v. Lynch,
11 Johns. 549;
Ex parte Quarrier, 2 W.Va. 569, although,
indirectly, acts of treason may affect them vitally. No more may
they arrogate to themselves authority to punish the teaching of
pacifism which the Legislature of Minnesota appears
Page 254 U. S. 343
to have put into that category.
Compare Schaefer v. United
States, 251 U. S. 466,
251 U. S. 494,
note.
As the Minnesota statute is, in my opinion, invalid because it
interferes with federal functions and with the right of a citizen
of the United States to discuss them, I see no occasion to consider
whether it violates also the Fourteenth Amendment. But I have
difficulty in believing that the liberty guaranteed by the
Constitution, which has been held to protect against state denial
the right of an employer to discriminate against a workman because
he is a member of a trade union,
Coppage v. Kansas,
236 U. S. 1, the
right of a business man to conduct a private employment agency,
Adams v. Tanner, 244 U. S. 590, or
to contract outside the state for insurance of his property,
Allgeyer v. Louisiana, 165 U. S. 578,
165 U. S. 589,
although the legislature deems it inimical to the public welfare,
does not include liberty to teach, either in the privacy of the
home or publicly, the doctrine of pacifism, so long, at least, as
Congress has not declared that the public safety demands its
suppression. I cannot believe that the liberty guaranteed by the
Fourteenth Amendment includes only liberty to acquire and to enjoy
property.
[
Footnote 2/1]
See General John A. Logan, "The Volunteer Soldier of
America," pp. 89-91; Col. F. N. Maude in the Contemporary Review v.
189, p. 37.
[
Footnote 2/2]
Act of March 3, 1863, c. 75, 12 Stat. 731.
[
Footnote 2/3]
Recruiting officers were required to explain to every man before
he signed the enlistment paper the nature of the service, the
length of the term, the amount of pay, clothing, rations, and other
allowances to which a soldier is entitled by law, and to read and
explain to the applicant many of the articles of war before
administering to him the oath of enlistment. U.S. Army Regulations,
1913, paragraphs 854, 856.
The following is contained in the instructions sent to all
officers and men assigned to recruiting duty:
"All progress and success rests fundamentally on truth. Hence,
never resort to indirection or misrepresentation or suppression of
part of the facts in order to push a wavering case over the line.
Recruits signed up on misrepresented facts or partial information
do not make good soldiers. They resent being fooled just as you
would, and will never yield their full value to a government whose
agents obtained their services in a way not fully square.
Therefore, tell your prospect anything he wants to know about the
army. If the real facts are not strong enough to win him, you don't
want him anyway."
Recruiters Handbook, United States Army, p. 16.
[
Footnote 2/4]
"The general policy of the Attorney General (Mr. Gregory) toward
free speech has been well understood and adhered to by his
subordinates with a good deal of consistency. From the outset,
recognizing that free expression of public opinion is the life of
the nation, we have endeavored to impress on our subordinates the
necessity of keeping within the limits of policy established by
Congress and bearing in mind at all times the constitutional
guaranties. Repeatedly their attention has been called to the fact
that expression of private or public opinion relating to matters of
governmental policy or of political character must not be confused
with willful attempts to interfere with our conduct of the war. At
all times we have had before us the dangers which follow attempts
to restrain public discussion; and, so far as instructions issued
by the Attorney General have been concerned, they have consistently
and at all times emphasized this general policy."
John Lord O'Brian, "Civil Liberty in War Time," Report of New
York state Bar Assn., vol. 42, p. 308.
[
Footnote 2/5]
Report of New York Bar Assn., vol. 42, p. 296.