1. Jurisdiction of this Court over an appellate case cannot be
established by consent or acquiescence of parties. P.
278 U. S.
66.
2. The validity of a state statute may be drawn in question
under § 237a of the Judicial Code, on the ground of its being
repugnant to the federal Constitution, without the use of any
particular form of words. If the record as a whole shows, either
expressly or by clear intendment, that this claim of invalidity and
ground therefor were brought to the attention of the state court
with fair precision and in due time, the claim is to be regarded as
having been adequately presented. P.
278 U. S.
67.
Page 278 U. S. 64
3. To show that such claim of invalidity was denied by the state
court, it is not necessary that the ruling shall have been put in
direct terms; it suffices if the necessary effect of the judgment
has been to deny the claim. P.
278 U. S.
67.
4. A proceeding in habeas corpus in a state court, in keeping
with the state practice, to obtain the release of one held in
custody under a criminal charge upon the ground that the state
statute on which the charge is based violates the federal
Constitution is a " suit " within the meaning of Jud.Code, § 237a,
and an order of the state court of last resort refusing the
discharge is a final judgment in that suit and subject to review by
this Court. P.
278 U. S.
70.
5. The privilege of being and remaining a member of an
oath-bound association within a state cannot be within the
privilege and immunities clause of the Fourteenth Amendment, since
it is not a privilege arising out of United States citizenship. P.
278 U. S.
71.
6. To require associations having an oath-bound membership to
file with a state officer sworn copies of their constitutions,
oaths of membership, etc., with lists of their members and
officers, and to provide that persons who become or remain members,
or attend meetings, knowing that such requirement has not been
complied with, shall be arrested and punished, is a reasonable
exercise of the police power, and not a violation of such persons'
liberty under the due process clause of the Fourteenth Amendment.
P.
278 U. S.
72.
7. Such regulations do not violate the equality clause of the
Fourteenth Amendment when applied to one class of oath-bound
associations, and not to another class, if the class so regulated
has a tendency to make the secrecy of its purposes and membership a
cloak for conduct inimical to the personal rights of others and to
the public welfare, while the other class is free from that
tendency. P.
278 U. S.
73.
8. Confining the regulations to associations having a membership
of twenty or more persons is not an unreasonable discrimination. P.
278 U. S.
77.
241 N.Y. 405 affirmed.
Error to a final order of the Supreme Court of New York, entered
upon remittitur from the Court of Appeals. The latter court
affirmed the Appellate Division in affirming an order discharging
the relator's writ of habeas corpus.
See 123 Misc. 859;
213 App.Div. 414.
Page 278 U. S. 65
MR. JUSTICE VAN DEVANTER delivered the opinion of the Court.
The relator, Bryant, who was held in custody to answer a charge
of violating a statute of New York, brought a proceeding in habeas
corpus in a court of that state to obtain his discharge on the
ground, as was stated in the petition, that the warrant under which
he was arrested and detained was issued without any jurisdiction,
in that the statute which he was charged with violating was
unconstitutional.
The court sustained the validity of the statute and refused to
discharge him,
People ex rel. Bryant v. Sheriff of Erie
County, 123 Misc. 859, and that judgment was affirmed by the
Appellate Division, 213 App.Div. 414, and by the Court of Appeals,
241 N.Y. 405. He them sued out the present writ of error under §
237(a) of the Judicial Code, his assignment of errors presented in
obtaining the writ being to the effect that the Court of Appeals
erroneously had held the statute valid against a contention made by
him that it was invalid, because repugnant to so much of the
Fourteenth Amendment to the Constitution of the United States as
declares:
"No state shall make or enforce any law which shall abridge the
privileges or immunities of citizens of the United States; nor
shall any state deprive any person of life, liberty, or property,
without due process of law; nor deny to any person within its
jurisdiction the equal protection of the laws. "
Page 278 U. S. 66
The material parts of the state statute (Art. 5-A, Civil Rights
Law, c. 664, 1110), are as follows:
"Sec. 53. Every existing membership corporation, and every
existing unincorporated association having a membership of twenty
or more persons, which corporation or association requires an oath
as a prerequisite or condition of membership, other than a labor
union or a benevolent order mentioned in the benevolent orders law,
within thirty days after this article takes effect, and every such
corporation or association hereafter organized, within ten days
after the adoption thereof, shall file with the secretary of state
a sworn copy of its constitution, bylaws, rules, regulations and
oath of membership, together with a roster of its membership and a
list of its officers for the current year. . . ."
"Sec. 56. . . . Any person who becomes a member of any such
corporation or association, or remains a member thereof, or attends
a meeting thereof, with knowledge that such corporation or
association has failed to comply with any provision of this article
shall be guilty of a misdemeanor."
Both parties treat the case as rightly here and as presenting
the question whether the state statute is repugnant to the
provisions before quoted from the Fourteenth Amendment. But as
consent or acquiescence of the parties does not suffice to
establish our appellate jurisdiction, and some of our number have
doubted the existence of such jurisdiction in this case, we now
take up the question.
Section 237a of the Judicial Code (§ 344, Title 28, U.S.Code)
provides that this Court may review upon writ of error [
Footnote 1] "a final judgment or decree
in any suit" in the
Page 278 U. S. 67
court of last resort of a state
"where is drawn in question the validity of a statute of any
state, on the ground of its being repugnant to the Constitution,
treaties, or laws of the United States, and the decision is in
favor of its validity."
It is under this provision that a review is invoked.
There are various ways in which the validity of a state statute
may be drawn in question on the ground that it is repugnant to the
Constitution of the United States. No particular form of words or
phrases is essential, but only that the claim of invalidity and the
ground therefor be brought to the attention of the state court with
fair precision and in due time. And if the record as a whole shows
either expressly or by clear intendment that this was done, the
claim is to be regarded as having been adequately presented.
[
Footnote 2]
Of course, the decision must have been against the claim of
invalidity, but it is not necessary that the ruling shall have been
put in direct terms. If the necessary effect of the judgment has
been to deny the claim, that is enough. [
Footnote 3]
With these general rules in mind, we turn to what is shown in
this case. The petition for habeas corpus, while asserting that the
state statute was "unconstitutional," contained no mention of any
constitutional provision, state or federal. The opinion delivered
by the court of
Page 278 U. S. 68
first instance was similarly indefinite. Up to that point, it is
left uncertain whether the claim of invalidity was grounded on some
provision of the state constitution, or on some provision of the
Constitution of the United States, or on both. If this were all,
there plainly would be no basis for a review in this Court. But
more appears. The relator took an appeal to the Appellate Division.
The appeal was not accompanied by an assignment of errors, but this
was not an omission. The local practice does not recognize an
assignment of errors as known in other jurisdictions; it merely
requires the appellant to set forth in a printed brief "the points
to be relied on by him." In the opinion delivered, which for
present purposes is deemed part of the record, [
Footnote 4] the Appellate Division stated
distinctly that the relator's claim of invalidity was grounded on
asserted repugnance to both the due process of law clause of the
state constitution and the clauses hereinbefore quoted from the
Fourteenth Amendment. After so stating the claim, the court
considered it at length and denied it. From that decision, the
relator appealed to the Court of Appeals. Again the appeal was not
accompanied by an assignment of errors, and for the same reason as
before.
See Rule 7, Court of Appeals Rules. The appeal was
entertained and the decision of the Appellate Division was
affirmed. The Court of Appeals in its opinion does not mention the
constitution of the state or the Fourteenth Amendment, but does
state that the relator was asserting the "unconstitutionality" of
the statute on the ground that it deprived him of his liberty
without due process of law and denied him the equal protection of
the laws, etc. Nothing in the opinion is at all indicative of an
abandonment
Page 278 U. S. 69
by the relator of his reliance on the Fourteenth Amendment which
was so distinctly stated in the opinion of the Appellate Division.
On the contrary, the court's discussion of the case and its
citation of authorities proceed as if it were considering the
identical claim of invalidity that was presented in the Appellate
Division and there denied. Among the citations are several
decisions of this Court dealing only with the clauses before quoted
from the Fourteenth Amendment. Indeed, the opinion shows that, in
upholding the statute against the contention that it denies the
equal protection of the laws, the Court of Appeals practically
rested its decision "on the authority" of
Radice v. New
York, 264 U. S. 292,
264 U. S.
296-297, where another statute of New York assailed as
in conflict with the equal protection clause of that amendment was
sustained.
From this showing in the record, coupled with the absence from
the state constitution of an equal protection of the laws clause,
we think it apparent that the claim of invalidity by reason of the
statute's repugnance to the Fourteenth Amendment was presented to
the Court of Appeals, and that, by its decision, the statute was
upheld against that claim.
Upon looking at that decision as published in the official
reports (241 N.Y. 405), we find it stated by the reporter in his
accompanying synopsis of the briefs that the brief on behalf of the
relator embodied the specific claim that the statute was invalid
because in conflict with the equal protection and other provisions
of the Fourteenth Amendment. But, as we otherwise reach the
conclusion that the claim was adequately made, there is no need to
notice what is said in the reporter's synopsis beyond observing
that it probably points to the reason why both parties, and the
Chief Judge who allowed the writ of error, treated the case as one
in which the question of the validity of the statute under the
Constitution of the United States had been properly presented.
Page 278 U. S. 70
Our jurisdiction to review the decision is questioned also
because of the nature of the case, it being a proceeding in habeas
corpus brought to obtain the discharge of one who is held in
custody to answer a charge of violating a state statute alleged to
be invalid by reason of its conflict with the Constitution of the
United States. But we think our jurisdiction is in this regard so
well established by prior decisions and long continued practice
that it is not debatable.
In the early case of
Holmes v.
Jennison, 14 Pet. 540,
39 U. S. 563,
39 U. S. 568,
39 U. S. 597,
614, this Court held after much consideration that a proceeding in
habeas corpus in a state court to obtain the release of one held in
custody upon a criminal charge, where the detention is alleged to
be in violation of the Constitution of the United States, is a
"suit" within the meaning of the jurisdictional statute, and that
an order of the state court of last resort refusing to discharge
him is a final judgment in that suit, and subject to review by this
Court. That holding has been respected and given effect in an
unbroken line of later decisions, all of which, in their material
facts and surroundings, were like the case now before us. [
Footnote 5] It also has been followed
in other cases related in principle. [
Footnote 6]
The proceeding before us was not brought in antagonism to the
established practice in the state, but in entire
Page 278 U. S. 71
keeping with that practice as confirmed by local statutes. Civil
Practice Act, Art. 77, §§ 1230-1235, 1251. This was recognized in
the decisions given by the courts of the state. And the proceeding
was independent, adversary and both adapted and directed to the
enforcement of a most important personal right. It is quite unlike
the fragmentary or branch proceeding considered in
Grays Harbor
Logging Co. v. Coats-Fordney Logging Co., 243 U.
S. 251,
243 U. S. 256;
the judgment in which was held to be interlocutory only, and not
final in the sense of the jurisdictional statute.
We are accordingly of opinion that the case and the judgment
therein are of such a nature that we have jurisdiction to review
the latter.
The offense charged against the relator is that he attended
meetings and remained a member of the Buffalo Provisional Klan of
the Knights of the Ku Klux Klan, an unincorporated association --
but neither a labor union nor a benevolent order mentioned in the
benevolent orders law -- having a membership of more than 20
persons and requiring an oath as a prerequisite or condition of
membership, he then having knowledge that such association had
wholly failed to comply with the requirement in § 53.
There are various privileges and immunities which, under our
dual system of government, belong to citizens of the United States
solely by reason of such citizenship. It is against their
abridgement by state laws that the privilege and immunity clause in
the Fourteenth Amendment is directed. But no such privilege or
immunity is in question here. If to be and remain a member of a
secret, oath-bound association within a state be a privilege
arising out of citizenship at all, it is an incident of state,
rather than United States citizenship, and such protection as is
thrown about it by the Constitution is in no
Page 278 U. S. 72
wise affected by its possessor being a citizen of the United
States. Thus, there is no basis here for invoking the privilege and
immunity clause. [
Footnote
7]
The relator's contention under the due process clause is that
the statute deprives him of liberty in that it prevents him from
exercising his right of membership in the association. But his
liberty in this regard, like most other personal rights, must yield
to the rightful exertion of the police power. There can be no doubt
that, under that power, the state may prescribe and apply to
associations having an oath-bound membership any reasonable
regulation calculated to confine their purposes and activities
within limits which are consistent with the rights of others and
the public welfare. The requirement in § 53 that each association
shall file with the secretary of state a sworn copy of its
constitution, oath of membership, etc., with a list of members and
officers is such a regulation. It proceeds on the twofold theory
that the state within whose territory and under whose protection
the association exists is entitled to be informed of its nature and
purpose, of whom it is composed and by whom its activities are
conducted, and that requiring this information to be supplied for
the public files will operate as an effective or substantial
deterrent from the violations of public and private right to which
the association might be tempted if such a disclosure were not
required. The requirement is not arbitrary or oppressive, but
reasonable and likely to be of real effect. Of course, power to
require the disclosure includes authority to prevent individual
members of an association which has failed to comply from attending
meetings or retaining membership with knowledge
Page 278 U. S. 73
of its default. We conclude that the due process clause is not
violated.
The main contention made under the equal protection clause is
that the statute discriminates against the Knights of the Ku Klux
Klan and other associations in that it excepts from its
requirements several associations having oath-bound membership,
such as labor unions, the Masonic fraternity, the Independent Order
of Odd Fellows, the Grand Army of the Republic, and the Knights of
Columbus -- all named in another statute, which provides for their
incorporation and requires the names of their officers as elected
from time to time to be reported to the secretary of state.
The principle to be applied in determining whether a particular
discrimination or classification offends against the equal
protection clause is shown in the following excerpts from some of
our decisions:
Patsone v. Pennsylvania, 232 U.
S. 138,
232 U. S.
144:
"The discrimination undoubtedly presents a more difficult
question. But we start with the general consideration that a state
may classify with reference to the evil to be prevented, and that,
if the class discriminated against is or reasonably might be
considered to define those from whom the evil mainly to be feared,
it properly may be picked out. A lack of abstract symmetry does not
matter. The question is a practical one, dependent upon experience.
The demand for symmetry ignores the specific difference that
experience is supposed to have shown to mark the class. It is not
enough to invalidate the law that others may do the same thing and
go unpunished if, as a matter of fact, it is found that the danger
is characteristic of the class named.
Lindsley v. Natural
Carbonic Gas Co., 220 U. S. 61,
220 U. S.
80-81. The state 'may direct its law against what it
deems the evil as it actually exists, without covering the whole
filed of possible abuses.'
Central Lumber Co. v. South
Dakota, 226 U. S. 157,
226 U. S.
160. "
Page 278 U. S. 74
Miller v. Wilson, 236 U. S. 373,
236 U. S.
383:
"The contention as to the various omissions which are noted in
the objections here urged ignores the well established principle
that the legislature is not bound, in order to support the
constitutional validity of its regulation, to extend it to all
cases which it might possibly reach. Dealing with practical
exigencies, the legislature may be guided by experience.
Patsone v. Pennsylvania, 232 U. S. 138,
232 U. S.
144. It is free to recognize degrees of harm, and it may
confine its restrictions to those classes of cases where the need
is deemed to be clearest."
Radice v. New York, 264 U. S. 292,
264 U. S.
296:
"Such classification must not be 'purely arbitrary, oppressive
or capricious.'
American Sugar Refining Co. v. Louisiana,
179 U. S.
89,
179 U. S. 92. But the mere
production of inequality is not enough. Every selection of persons
for regulation so results, in some degree. The inequality produced,
in order to encounter the challenge of the Constitution, must be
'actually and palpably unreasonable and arbitrary.'
Arkansas
Natural Gas Co. v. Railroad Commission, 261 U. S.
379,
261 U. S. 384, and cases
cited. Thus, classifications have been sustained which are based
upon differences between fire insurance and other kinds of
insurance.
Orient Insurance Co. v. Daggs, 172 U. S.
557,
172 U. S. 562; between
railroads and other corporations,
Tullis v. Lake Erie &
Western R. Co., 175 U. S. 348,
175 U. S.
351; between barber shop employment and other kinds of
labor,
Petit v. Minnesota, 177 U. S.
164,
177 U. S. 168; between
'immigrant agents' engaged in hiring laborers to be employed beyond
the limits of a state and persons engaged in the business of hiring
for labor within the state,
Williams v. Fears,
179 U. S.
270,
179 U. S. 275; between sugar
refiners who produce the sugar and those who purchase it,
American Sugar Refining Co. v. Louisiana, supra."
Quaker City Cab Co. v. Pennsylvania, 277 U.
S. 389:
"The equal protection clause does not detract from
Page 278 U. S. 75
the right of the state justly to exert its taxing power or
prevent it from adjusting its legislation to differences in
situation or forbid classification in that connection,"
"but it does require that the classification be not arbitrary,
but based on a real and substantial difference having a reasonable
relation to the subject of the particular legislation."
"
Power Co. v. Saunders, 274 U. S.
490,
274 U. S. 493."
The courts below recognized the principle shown in the cases
just cited, and reached the conclusion that the classification was
justified by a difference between the two classes of associations
shown by experience, and that the difference consisted (a) in a
manifest tendency on the part of one class to make the secrecy
surrounding its purposes and membership a cloak for acts and
conduct inimical to personal rights and public welfare, and (b) in
the absence of such a tendency on the part of the other class. In
pointing out this difference, one of the courts said of the Ku Klux
Klan, the principal association in the included class:
"It is a matter of common knowledge that this organization
functions largely at night, its members disguised by hoods and
gowns and doing things calculated to strike terror into the minds
of the people,"
and later said of the other class:
"These organizations and their purposes are well known, many of
them having been in existence for many years. Many of them are
oath-bound and secret. But we hear of no complaints against them
regarding violation of the peace or interfering with the rights of
others."
Another of the courts said:
"It is a matter of common knowledge that the association or
organization of which relator is concededly a member exercise
activities tending to the prejudice and intimidation of sundry
classes of our citizens. But the legislation is not confined to
this society,"
and later said of the other class:
"Labor unions have a recognized lawful purpose. The benevolent
orders mentioned in the Benevolent Orders Law have already received
legislative scrutiny and been
Page 278 U. S. 76
granted special privileges so that the legislature may well
consider them beneficent, rather than harmful agencies."
The third court, after recognizing "the potentialities of evil
in secret societies" and observing that "the danger of certain
organizations has been judicially demonstrated" -- meaning in that
state -- said:
"Benevolent orders, labor, unions, and college fraternities have
existed for many years, and, while not immune from hostile
criticism, have on the whole justified their existence."
We assume that the legislature had before it such information as
was readily available, including the published report of a hearing
before a committee of the House of Representatives of the
Fifty-Seventh Congress relating to the formation, purposes, and
activities of the Ku Klux Klan. [
Footnote 8] If so, it was advised -- putting aside
controverted evidence -- that the order was a revival of the Ku
Klux Klan of an earlier time, with additional features borrowed
from the Know Nothing and the A.P A. orders of other periods; that
its membership was limited to native-born, gentile, protestant
whites; that, in part of its constitution and printed creed, it
proclaimed the widest freedom for all and full adherence to the
Constitution of the United States, in another exacted of its
members an oath to shield and preserve "white supremacy," and in
still another declared any person actively opposing its principles
to be "a dangerous ingredient in the body politic of our country
and an enemy to the weal of our national commonwealth;" that it was
conducting a crusade against Catholics, Jews, and negroes, and
stimulating hurtful religious and race prejudices; that it was
striving for political power, and assuming a sort of guardianship
over the administration of local, state, and national affairs,
Page 278 U. S. 77
and that at times it was taking into its own hands the
punishment of what some of its members conceived to be crimes.
We think it plain that the action of the courts below in holding
that there was a real and substantial basis for the distinction
made between the two sets of associations or orders was right, and
should not be disturbed.
Criticism is made of the classification on the further ground
that the regulation is confined to associations having a membership
of 20 or more persons. Classification based on numbers is not
necessarily unreasonable. There are many instances in which it has
been sustained. We think it not unreasonable in this instance. With
good reason, the legislature may have thought that an association
of less than 20 persons would have only a negligible influence, and
be without the capacity for harm that would make regulation
needful.
We conclude that all the objections urged against the statute
are untenable as held by the courts below.
Judgment affirmed.
[
Footnote 1]
The acts of January 32, 1928, c. 14, 45 Stat. 54, and April 26,
1928, c. 440, 45 Stat. 466, substituted an appeal for a writ of
error.
See Revised Rules, 275 U.S. Appendix, pp. 630, 646,
647.
[
Footnote 2]
Crowell v.
Randell, 10 Pet. 368,
35 U. S. 392,
398;
Nielson v.
Lagow, 12 How. 98,
53 U. S.
109-110;
Furman v.
Nichol, 8 Wall. 44,
75 U. S. 56;
Green Bay, etc., Canal Co. v. Patten Paper Co.,
172 U. S. 58,
172 U. S. 67-68;
St. Louis, Iron Mountain & Southern Ry. Co. v.
Starbird, 243 U. S. 592,
243 U. S.
598-599;
Whiteney v. California, 274 U.
S. 357,
274 U. S.
360.
[
Footnote 3]
Crowell v. Randell, supra; Chapman v. Goodnow,
123 U. S. 540,
123 U. S. 548;
Bell's Gap R. Co. v. Pennsylvania, 134 U.
S. 232,
134 U. S. 236;
Walter A. Wood Co. v. Skinner, 139 U.
S. 293,
139 U. S. 295;
Roby v. Colehour, 146 U. S. 153,
146 U. S.
159-160;
St. Louis, Iron Mountain & Southern Ry.
Co. v. Starbird, supra, p.
243 U. S.
601.
[
Footnote 4]
Murdock v.
Memphis, 20 Wall. 590,
87 U. S. 633;
Philadelphia Fire Association v. New York, 119 U.
S. 110,
119 U. S. 116;
San Jose Land & Water Co. v. San Jose Ranch Co.,
189 U. S. 177,
189 U. S.
179-180;
Neilson v.
Lagow, 12 How. 98,
53 U. S.
109-110.
[
Footnote 5]
Smith v. Alabama, 124 U. S. 465;
Osborne v. Florida, 164 U. S. 650;
Lieberman v. Van De Carr, 199 U.
S. 552;
Silz v. Hesterberg, 211 U. S.
31;
Flaherty v. Hanson, 215 U.
S. 515;
Collins v. Texas, 223 U.
S. 288;
Sligh v. Kirkwood, 237 U. S.
52.
[
Footnote 6]
Ableman v.
Booth, 21 How. 506;
In re Neagle,
135 U. S. 1;
Ward v. Race Horse, 163 U. S. 504;
Urquhart v. Brown, 205 U. S. 179,
205 U. S.
181-182.
And see 27 U. S.
Charleston, 2 Pet. 449,
27 U. S. 464;
Plessy v. Ferguson, 163 U. S. 537;
Mt. Vernon Cotton Co. v. Alabama Power Co., 240 U. S.
30;
Detroit & Mackinac Ry. Co. v. Michigan R.
Comm'n, 240 U.S.
564;
St. Louis, B. & M Ry. Co. v. Taylor,
266 U. S. 200.
[
Footnote 7]
Slaughter House
Cases, 16 Wall. 36,
83 U. S. 77,
et seq.; 83 U. S.
Illinois, 16 Wall. 130,
83 U. S. 139;
Bartemeyer v.
Iowa, 18 Wall. 129,
85 U. S. 133;
Minor v.
Happersett, 21 Wall. 162,
88 U. S. 171;
United States v. Cruikshank, 92 U. S.
542,
92 U. S. 551,
552, 23 L. Ed. 588; Giozza v. Tiernan,
148 U.
S. 657,
148 U. S. 661;
In re Lockwood, 154 U. S. 116,
154 U. S.
117.
[
Footnote 8]
House Committee Hearings, 1921, vol. 302.
See also The
Challenge of the Klan, by Stanley Frost; The Ku Klux Klan, by John
M. Mecklin.
Separate opinion of MR. JUSTICE McREYNOLDS.
For two reasons, I think we have no jurisdiction of this writ of
error and that it should be dismissed.
The cause was finally determined by the Court of Appeals of New
York January 12, 1926. The record fails to disclose that any
federal question was presented to or considered by that court.
Moreover, the real controversy between the parties involves no
substantial federal question.
The petition for habeas corpus, presented to the Supreme Court,
affirmed that plaintiff in error was confined in the Buffalo jail
under pretense that he had
"violated Chapter 664 of the Laws of 1923, which law is commonly
known as the Walker Law, and which law is sections
Page 278 U. S. 78
53, 54, 55, and 56 of Article 5-A of the Civil Rights Law."
These sections are printed below.
* It then
alleged:
"That said imprisonment and restraint is illegal in this,
to-wit: that the Magistrate was without jurisdiction to issue the
warrant, or cause his arrest, inasmuch as chapter 664 of the Laws
of 1923, is unconstitutional and void and of no force or
effect."
"And, upon that ground alone, it sought the petitioner's
release. The petition did not refer to the Federal Constitution or
any statute of the United States."
The warrant for plaintiff in error's arrest was based upon an
information which, in the language of the Court of Appeals,
charged:
"That he attended a meeting of and remained a member of Buffalo
Provisional Klan of the Knights of the Ku Klux Klan with knowledge
that said
Page 278 U. S. 79
association, which has more than 20 members, requires an oath as
a prerequisite or condition of membership, and is not a labor union
or a benevolent order mentioned in the Benevolent Orders Law
(Consol.Laws, c. 3), had not complied with the provisions of the
statute by filing with the secretary of state a sworn copy of its
constitution, bylaws, rules, regulations and oath of membership,
together with a roster of its membership and a list of its officers
for the current year."
The writ of habeas corpus followed the usual form; the record
contains no return thereto.
Upon an affidavit that the constitutionality of chapter 664, Act
of 1923, had been challenged, the Supreme Court permitted the
Attorney General to intervene.
Page 278 U. S. 80
The cause was heard by the Supreme Court upon the petition,
information, warrant, writ of habeas corpus, and argument of
counsel. No other evidence was introduced. There is nothing to show
that the association to which plaintiff in error belonged had any
connection whatever with the Ku Klux Klan of the last century;
nothing to show its purposes, or the nature of the oath taken by
members.
The Supreme Court discharged the writ, but neither its judgment
nor the accompanying opinion mentions the federal Constitution or
any statute of the United States. Without supporting evidence, that
court said:
"It may be assumed that the legislature informed itself of
conditions bearing upon the proposed legislation. These conditions
probably are not such as would enable the court to take judicial
notice of them, but the legislature could well have learned of the
acts of the Klan. It is a matter of common knowledge that this
organization functions largely at night, its members disguised by
hoods and gowns and doing things calculated to strike terror into
the minds of the people. It is claimed that they are organized
against certain of the citizens by reason of race or religion."
Thereupon, the cause was appealed to the Appellate Division,
without any assignment of errors, and that court affirmed the order
discharging the writ. The opinion there contains the following
language:
"The facts are not in dispute. Relator sued out a writ of habeas
corpus upon the theory that the statute in question is
unconstitutional, and that is the only question to be determined. .
. ."
"Relator complains that the exemption in said statute of labor
unions and the benevolent orders mentioned in the Benevolent Orders
Law is an unlawful classification in violation of Sec. 6 of Article
I of the Constitution of
Page 278 U. S. 81
the State of New York, which provides, among other things, that
no person shall be deprived of life, liberty or property without
due process or law, and of Sec. 1 of the Fourteenth Amendment of
the Federal Constitution, which provides that no state shall make
or enforce any law which shall abridge the privileges or immunities
of citizens of the United States, and that no state shall deprive
any person of life, liberty or property without due process of law,
and that no state shall deny to any person within its jurisdiction
the equal protection of the laws. . . ."
"It is a matter of common knowledge that the association or
organization of which relator is concededly a member exercises
activities tending to the prejudice and intimidation of sundry
classes of our citizens. . . ."
The foregoing is the only direct reference to federal
Constitution or laws disclosed by the record.
Finally, the cause went by appeal and without assignment of
error of the Court of Appeals of New York. That court affirmed the
order of the Appellate Division and delivered a supporting opinion,
which does not mention the federal Constitution, or any statute of
the United States. Certainly it cannot be said that the record
affirmatively discloses that any federal question was raised or
considered in the Court of Appeals.
In
Crowell v.
Randell (1836), 10 Pet. 368,
35 U. S. 392,
upon motion to dismiss the writ of error to the Supreme Court of
Delaware for want of jurisdiction, Mr. Justice Story, in behalf of
the Court, said:
"In the interpretation of this section [25] of the Act of 1789,
it has been uniformly held that, to give this Court appellate
jurisdiction, two things should have occurred and be apparent in
the record: first, that some one of the questions stated in the
section did arise in the court below, and, secondly, that a
decision was actually made thereon, by the same court, in the
manner required by
Page 278 U. S. 82
the section. If both of these do not appear on the record, the
appellate jurisdiction fails. It is not sufficient to show that
such a question might have occurred or such a decision might have
been made in the court below. It must be demonstrable that they did
exist, and were made. The principal, perhaps the only important
difficulty which has even been felt by the Court, has been in
ascertaining in particular cases, whether these matters (the
question and decision) were apparent on the record. And here the
doctrine of the Court has been that it is not indispensable that it
should appear on the record, in
totidem verbis or by
direct and positive statement, that the question was made and the
decision given by the court below on the very point; but that it is
sufficient, if it be clear from the facts stated by just and
necessary inference that the question was made, and that the court
below must, in order to have arrived at the judgment pronounced by
it, have come to the very decision of that question as
indispensable to that judgment."
The language of the Act of February 13, 1925 and of the
Judiciary Act of 1789 presently important is substantially the
same.
In
Michigan Sugar Co. v. Michigan, 185 U.
S. 112,
185 U. S. 113,
by Chief Justice Fuller, this Court said:
"The supreme court of the state did not refer to the federal
Constitution or consider and decide any federal question. For aught
that appears, the court proceeded in its determination of the cause
without any thought that it was disposing of such a question."
"The rule is firmly established, and has been frequently
reiterated, that the jurisdiction of this Court to reexamine the
final judgment of a state court under the third division of section
709 cannot arise from mere inference, but only from averments so
distinct and positive as to place
Page 278 U. S. 83
it beyond question that the party bringing the case here from
such court intended to assert a federal right. The statutory
requirement is not met unless the party unmistakably declares that
he invokes for the protection of his rights the Constitution, or
some treaty, statute, commission or authority, of the United
States. Applying this rule to the case before us, the writ of error
cannot be maintained."
In
Whitney v. California, 274 U.
S. 357,
274 U. S. 360,
we held --
"It has long been settled that this Court acquires no
jurisdiction to review the judgment of a state court of last resort
on a writ of error unless it affirmatively appears on the face of
the record that a federal question constituting an appropriate
ground for such review was presented in and expressly or
necessarily decided by such state court."
Crowell v.
Randell, 10 Pet. 368,
35 U. S. 392;
Mississippi & M. Railroad
Co. v. Rock, 4 Wall. 177,
71 U. S. 180;
California Powder Works v. Davis, 151 U.
S. 389,
151 U. S. 393;
Cincinnati, etc., railway v. Slade, 216 U. S.
78,
216 U. S. 83;
Hiawassee Power Co. v. Carolina-Tenn. Co., 252 U.
S. 341,
252 U. S. 343;
New York v. Kleinert, 268 U. S. 646,
268 U. S. 650,
were cited.
See also Mellon v. O'Neil, 275 U.
S. 212,
274 U. S. 214;
Dewey v. Des Moines, 173 U. S. 193,
173 U. S. 199;
Keokuk & Hamilton Bridge Co. v. Illinois, 175 U.
S. 626,
175 U. S.
634.
It is not enough that the opinion of the Appellate Division
referred to the Constitution of the United States. To give us
jurisdiction, the record must show affirmatively that the federal
question was before the court of appeals. Mere inference will not
do. This rule has been rigidly enforced for a hundred years.
The function of a writ of habeas corpus is to test the validity
of challenged imprisonment, not the guilt or innocence of the
prisoner. And over and over again, this Court has asserted that it
will not permit habeas corpus to perform the office of a writ of
error.
Page 278 U. S. 84
It must now be accepted as settled doctrine in this Court that
one is not deprived of any federal right merely by being put on
trial for violating a state statute which conflicts with the
Federal Constitution. Nor is one deprived of his federal right
solely because he may be imprisoned after conviction of violating a
state statute admittedly in conflict with the Federal
Constitution.
It follows that, when the petition for habeas corpus alleged
that plaintiff in error was imprisoned under a charge of violating
a state statute said to be unconstitutional and void, no real
federal question was raised. The legality of his imprisonment did
not depend at all upon the validity of the act which it was said he
had violated. His right was to an orderly hearing upon the charge,
with the privilege of ultimate review here. And as the habeas
corpus proceeding never involved any substantial question arising
under the Constitution or laws of the United States, we have no
jurisdiction to review it.
Undoubtedly cases like this have been entertained here in the
past. But, since it has become settled law that mere imprisonment
and trial under a charge based upon an unconstitutional state
statute does not deprive one of his liberty without due process of
law, we should deny further jurisdiction. There is no longer any
controverted federal question essential to decision of the
cause.
This view is aided by consideration of the serious and manifest
evil which will follow a different course. Certainly, we should not
undertake to determine the validity of a state statute in advance
of trial upon the merits simply because some prisoner sees fit to
sue out a writ of habeas corpus upon the alleged ground of conflict
between the statute and federal Constitution.
*
"Section 53. Copies of Documents and statements to be Filed. --
Every existing membership corporation, and every existing
unincorporated association having a membership of twenty or more
persons, which corporation or association requires an oath as a
prerequisite or condition of membership, other than a labor union
or a benevolent order mentioned in the benevolent orders law,
within thirty days after this article takes effect, and every such
corporation or association hereafter organized, within ten days
after the adoption thereof, shall file with the secretary of state
a sworn copy of its constitution, bylaws, rules, regulations and
oath of membership, together with a roster of its membership, and a
list of its officers for the current year. Every such corporation
and association shall, in case its constitution, bylaws, rules,
regulations, or oath of membership or any part thereof, be revised,
changed or amended, within ten days after such revision or
amendment file with the secretary of state a sworn copy of such
revised, changed or amended constitution, bylaw, rule, regulation
or oath of membership. Every such corporation or association shall,
within thirty days after a change has been made in its officers,
file with the secretary of state a sworn statement showing such
change. Every such corporation or association shall, at intervals
of six months, file with the secretary of state a sworn statement
showing the names and addresses of such additional members as have
been received in such corporation or association during such
interval."
"Section 54. Resolutions Concerning Political Matters. -- Every
such corporation or association shall, within ten days after the
adoption thereof, file in the office of the secretary of state
every resolution, or the minutes of any action of such corporation
or association, providing for concerted action of its members or of
a part thereof to promote or defeat legislation, federal, state or
municipal, or to support or to defeat any candidate for political
office."
"Section 55. Anonymous Communications Prohibited. -- It shall be
unlawful for any such corporation or association to send, deliver,
mail or transmit to any person in this state who is not a member of
such corporation or association any anonymous letter, document,
leaflet, or other written or printed matter, and all such letters,
documents, leaflets or other written or printed matter, intended
for a person not a member of such corporation or association, shall
bear on the same the name of such corporation or association and
the names of the officers thereof together with the addresses of
the latter."
"Section 56. Offenses; Penalties. -- Any corporation or
association violating any provision of this article shall be guilty
of a misdemeanor punishable by a fine of not less than one thousand
dollars nor more than ten thousand dollars. Any officer of such
corporation or association and every member of the board of
directors, trustees or other similar body, who violates any
provision of this article or permits or acquiesces in the violation
of any provision of this article by any such corporation shall be
guilty of a misdemeanor. Any person who becomes a member of any
such corporation or association, or remains a member thereof, or
attends a meeting thereof, with knowledge that such corporation or
association has failed to comply with any provision of this article
shall be guilty of a misdemeanor."