Petitioner is a nonprofit membership corporation organized under
the laws of New York for the purpose of advancing the welfare of
Negroes. It operates through chartered affiliates which are
independent unincorporated associations, with membership therein
equivalent to membership in petitioner. It had local affiliates in
Alabama, and opened an office of its own there without complying
with an Alabama statute which, with some exceptions, requires a
foreign corporation to qualify before doing business in the State
by filing its corporate charter and designating a place of business
and an agent to receive service of process. Alleging that
petitioner's activities were causing irreparable injury to the
citizens of the State for which criminal prosecution and civil
actions at law afforded no adequate relief, the State brought an
equity suit in a state court to enjoin petitioner from conducting
further activities in, and to oust it from, the State. The court
issued an
ex parte order restraining petitioner,
pendente lite, from engaging in further activities in the
State and from taking any steps to qualify to do business there.
Petitioner moved to dissolve the restraining order, and the court,
on the State's motion, ordered the production of many of
petitioner's records, including its membership lists. After some
delay, petitioner produced substantially all the data called for
except its membership lists. It was adjudged in contempt, and fined
$100,000 for failure to produce the lists. The State Supreme Court
denied certiorari to review the contempt judgment, and this Court
granted certiorari.
Held:
1. Denial of relief by the State Supreme Court did not rest on
an adequate state ground, and this Court has jurisdiction to
entertain petitioner's federal claims. Pp.
357 U. S.
454-458.
2. Petitioner has a right to assert on behalf of its members a
claim that they are entitled under the Federal Constitution to be
protected from being compelled by the State to disclose their
affiliation with the Association. Pp.
357 U. S.
458-460.
Page 357 U. S. 450
3. Immunity from state scrutiny of petitioner's membership lists
is here so related to the right of petitioner's members to pursue
their lawful private interests privately and to associate freely
with others in doing so as to come within the protection of the
Fourteenth Amendment. The State has failed to show a controlling
justification for the deterrent effect on the free enjoyment of the
right to associate which disclosure of petitioner's membership
lists is likely to have. Accordingly, the judgment of civil
contempt and the fine which resulted from petitioner's refusal to
produce its membership lists must fall. Pp.
357 U. S.
460-466.
(a) Freedom to engage in association for the advancement of
beliefs and ideas is an inseparable aspect of the "liberty" assured
by the Due Process Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment. Pp.
357 U. S.
460-461.
(b) In the circumstances of this case, compelled disclosure of
petitioner's membership lists is likely to constitute an effective
restraint on its members' freedom of association. Pp.
357 U. S.
461-463.
(c) Whatever interest the State may have in obtaining the names
of petitioner's ordinary members, it has not been shown to be
sufficient to overcome petitioner's constitutional objections to
the production order. Pp.
357 U. S.
463-466.
4. The question whether the state court's temporary restraining
order preventing petitioner from soliciting support in the State
violates the Fourteenth Amendment is not properly before this
Court, since the merits of the controversy have not been passed on
by the state courts. Pp.
357 U. S.
466-467.
265 Ala. 349,
91 So.
2d 214, reversed, and cause remanded.
Page 357 U. S. 451
MR. JUSTICE HARLAN delivered the opinion of the Court.
We review from the standpoint of its validity under the Federal
Constitution a judgment of civil contempt entered against
petitioner, the National Association for the Advancement of Colored
People, in the courts of Alabama. The question presented is whether
Alabama, consistently with the Due Process Clause of the Fourteenth
Amendment, can compel petitioner to reveal to the State's Attorney
General the names and addresses of all its Alabama members and
agents, without regard to their positions or functions in the
Association. The judgment of contempt was based upon petitioner's
refusal to comply fully with a court order requiring in part the
production of membership lists. Petitioner's claim is that the
order, in the circumstances shown by this record, violated rights
assured to petitioner and its members under the Constitution .
Alabama has a statute, similar to those of many other States,
which requires a foreign corporation, except as exempted, to
qualify before doing business by filing its corporate charter with
the Secretary of State and designating a place of business and an
agent to receive service of process. The statute imposes a fine on
a corporation transacting intrastate business before qualifying,
and provides for criminal prosecution of officers of such a
corporation. Ala.Code, 1940, Tit. 10, §§ 192-198. The National
Association for the Advancement of Colored People is a nonprofit
membership corporation organized under the laws of New York. Its
purposes, fostered on a nationwide basis, are those indicated by
its name,
* and it
operates
Page 357 U. S. 452
through chartered affiliates which are independent
unincorporated associations, with membership therein equivalent to
membership in petitioner. The first Alabama affiliates were
chartered in 1918. Since that time, the aims of the Association
have been advanced through activities of its affiliates, and, in
1951, the Association itself opened a regional office in Alabama,
at which it employed two supervisory persons and one clerical
worker. The Association has never complied with the qualification
statute, from which it considered itself exempt.
In 1956, the Attorney General of Alabama brought an equity suit
in the State Circuit Court, Montgomery County, to enjoin the
Association from conducting further activities within, and to oust
it from, the State. Among other things, the bill in equity alleged
that the Association had opened a regional office and had organized
various affiliates in Alabama; had recruited members and solicited
contributions within the State; had given financial support and
furnished legal assistance to Negro students seeking admission to
the state university, and had supported a Negro boycott of the bus
lines in Montgomery to compel the seating of passengers without
regard to race. The bill recited that the Association, by
continuing to do business in Alabama without complying with the
qualification statute, was
". . . causing irreparable injury to the property and civil
rights of the residents and citizens of the State of Alabama for
which criminal prosecution and civil actions at law afford no
adequate relief. . . ."
On the day the complaint was filed, the Circuit Court issued
ex parte an order restraining the Association,
pendente lite, from engaging in
Page 357 U. S. 453
further activities within the State and forbidding it to take
any steps to qualify itself to do business therein.
Petitioner demurred to the allegations of the bill and moved to
dissolve the restraining order. It contended that its activities
did not subject it to the qualification requirements of the statute
and that, in any event, what the State sought to accomplish by its
suit would violate rights to freedom of speech and assembly
guaranteed under the Fourteenth Amendment to the Constitution of
the United States. Before the date set for a hearing on this
motion, the State moved for the production of a large number of the
Association's records and papers, including bank statements,
leases, deeds, and records containing the names and addresses of
all Alabama "members" and "agents" of the Association. It alleged
that all such documents were necessary for adequate preparation for
the hearing, in view of petitioner's denial of the conduct of
intrastate business within the meaning of the qualification
statute. Over petitioner's objections, the court ordered the
production of a substantial part of the requested records,
including the membership lists, and postponed the hearing on the
restraining order to a date later than the time ordered for
production.
Thereafter, petitioner filed its answer to the bill in equity.
It admitted its Alabama activities substantially as alleged in the
complaint and that it had not qualified to do business in the
State. Although still disclaiming the statute's application to it,
petitioner offered to qualify if the bar from qualification made
part of the restraining order were lifted, and it submitted with
the answer an executed set of the forms required by the statute.
However petitioner did not comply with the production order, and
for this failure, was adjudged in civil contempt and fined $10,000.
The contempt judgment provided that the fine would be subject to
reduction or remission if compliance
Page 357 U. S. 454
were forthcoming within five days, but otherwise would be
increased to $100,000.
At the end of the five-day period, petitioner produced
substantially all the data called for by the production order
except its membership lists, as to which it contended that Alabama
could not constitutionally compel disclosure, and moved to modify
or vacate the contempt judgment, or stay its execution pending
appellate review. This motion was denied. While a similar stay
application, which was later denied. was pending before the Supreme
Court of Alabama, the Circuit Court made a further order adjudging
petitioner in continuing contempt and increasing the fine already
imposed to $100,000. Under Alabama law,
see Jacoby v. Goetter,
Weil & Co., 74 Ala. 427, the effect of the contempt
adjudication was to foreclose petitioner from obtaining a hearing
on the merits of the underlying ouster action, or from taking any
steps to dissolve the temporary restraining order which had been
issued
ex parte, until it purged itself of contempt.
But cf. Harrison v. St. Louis & S.F. R. Co.,
232 U. S. 318;
Hovey v. Elliott, 167 U. S. 409.
The State Supreme Court thereafter twice dismissed petitions for
certiorari to review this final contempt judgment, the first time,
91 So. 2d
221, for insufficiency of the petition's allegations and the
second time on procedural grounds. 265 Ala. 349,
91 So. 2d
214. We granted certiorari because of the importance of the
constitutional questions presented. 353 U.S. 972.
I
We address ourselves first to respondent's contention that we
lack jurisdiction because the denial of certiorari by the Supreme
Court of Alabama rests on an independent nonfederal ground, namely,
that petitioner, in applying for certiorari, had pursued the wrong
appellate
Page 357 U. S. 455
remedy under state law. Respondent recognizes that our
jurisdiction is not defeated if the nonfederal ground relied on by
the state court is "without any fair or substantial support,"
Ward v. Board of County Commissioners, 253 U. S.
17,
253 U. S. 22. It
thus becomes our duty to ascertain,
". . . in order that constitutional guaranties may appropriately
be enforced, whether the asserted non-federal ground independently
and adequately supports the judgment."
Abie State Bank v. Bryan, 282 U.
S. 765,
282 U. S.
773.
The Alabama Supreme Court held that it could not consider the
constitutional issues underlying the contempt judgment which
related to the power of the State to order production of membership
lists because review by certiorari was limited to instances
". . . where the court lacked jurisdiction of the proceeding, or
where, on the face of it, the order disobeyed was void, or where
procedural requirements with respect to citation for contempt and
the like were not observed, or where the fact of contempt is not
sustained. . . ."
265 Ala. at 353, 91 So. 2d at 217. The proper means for
petitioner to obtain review of the judgment in light of its
constitutional claims, said the court, was by way of mandamus to
quash the discovery order prior to the contempt adjudication.
Because of petitioner's failure to pursue this remedy, its
challenge to the contempt order was restricted to the above
grounds. Apparently not deeming the constitutional objections to
draw into question whether, "on the face of it, the order disobeyed
was void," the court found no infirmity in the contempt judgment
under this limited scope of review. At the same time, it did go on
to consider petitioner's constitutional challenge to the order to
produce membership lists, but found it untenable, since membership
lists were not privileged against disclosure pursuant to reasonable
state demands and since the privilege against self-incrimination
was not available to corporations.
Page 357 U. S. 456
We are unable to reconcile the procedural holding of the Alabama
Supreme Court in the present case with its past unambiguous
holdings as to the scope of review available upon a writ of
certiorari addressed to a contempt judgment. As early as 1909, that
court said in such a case,
Ex parte Dickers, 162 Ala. 272,
at 276, 279-280, 50 So. 218, at 220, 221:
"Originally, on certiorari, only the question of jurisdiction
was inquired into; but this limit has been removed, and now the
court 'examines the law questions involved in the case which may
affect its merits.' . . ."
"
* * * *"
". . . [T]he judgment of this court is that the proper way to
review the action of the court in cases of this kind is by
certiorari, and not by appeal."
"We think that certiorari is a better remedy than mandamus,
because the office of a 'mandamus' is to require the lower court or
judge to act, and not 'to correct error or to reverse judicial
action,' . . . whereas, in a proceeding by certiorari, errors of
law in the judicial action of the lower court may be inquired into
and corrected."
This statement was in full accord with the earlier case of
Ex parte Boscowitz, 84 Ala. 463, 4 So. 279, and the
practice in the later Alabama cases, until we reach the present
one, appears to have been entirely consistent with this rule.
See Ex parte Wheeler, 231 Ala. 356, 358, 165 So. 74,
75-76;
Ex parte Blakey, 240 Ala. 517, 199 So. 857;
Ex
parte Sellers, 250 Ala. 87, 88, 33 So. 2d 349, 350. For
example, in
Ex parte Morris, 252 Ala. 551, 42 So. 2d 17,
decided as late as 1949, the petitioner had been held in contempt
for his refusal to obey a court order to produce names of members
of the Ku Klux Klan. On writ of certiorari, constitutional grounds
were urged in part for
Page 357 U. S. 457
reversal of the contempt conviction. In denying the writ of
certiorari, the Supreme Court concluded that petitioner had been
accorded due process, and, in explaining its denial, the court
considered and rejected various constitutional claims relating to
the validity of the order. There was no intimation that the
petitioner had selected an inappropriate form of appellate review
to obtain consideration of all questions of law raised by a
contempt judgment.
The Alabama cases do indicate, as was said in the opinion below,
that an order requiring production of evidence ". . .
may
be reviewed on petition for mandamus." 265 Ala. at 353, 91 So. 2d
at 217. (Italics added.)
See Ex parte Hart, 240 Ala. 642,
200 So. 783;
cf. Ex parte Driver, 255 Ala. 118,
50 So. 2d
413. But we can discover nothing in the prior state cases which
suggests that mandamus is the
exclusive remedy for
reviewing court orders after disobedience of them has led to
contempt judgments. Nor, so far as we can find, do any of these
prior decisions indicate that the validity of such orders can be
drawn in question by way of certiorari only in instances where a
defendant had no opportunity to apply for mandamus. Although the
opinion below suggests no such distinction, the State now argues
that this was, in fact, the situation in all of the earlier
certiorari cases, because there, the contempt adjudications, unlike
here, had followed almost immediately the disobedience to the court
orders. Even if that is indeed the rationale of the Alabama Supreme
Court's present decision, such a local procedural rule, although it
may now appear in retrospect to form part of a consistent pattern
of procedures to obtain appellate review, cannot avail the State
here, because petitioner could not fairly be deemed to have been
apprised of its existence. Novelty in procedural requirements
cannot be permitted to thwart review in this Court applied for by
those who, in justified reliance upon prior decisions, seek
vindication in state courts of their federal constitutional
Page 357 U. S. 458
rights.
Cf. Brinkerhoff-Faris Co. v. Hill, 281 U.
S. 673.
That there was justified reliance here is further indicated by
what the Alabama Supreme Court said in disposing of petitioner's
motion for a stay of the first contempt judgment in this case. This
motion, which was filed prior to the final contempt judgment and
which stressed constitutional issues, recited that
"[t]he only way in which the [Association] can seek a review of
the validity of the order upon which the adjudication of contempt
is based [is] by filing a petition for Writ of Certiorari in this
Court."
In denying the motion, 265 Ala. 356, 357,
91 So. 2d
220,
221,
the Supreme Court stated:
"It is the established rule of this Court that the proper method
of reviewing a judgment for civil contempt of the kind here
involved is by a petition for common law writ of certiorari. . .
."
"But the petitioner here has not applied for writ of certiorari,
and we do not feel that the petition [for a stay] presently before
us warrants our interference with the judgment of the Circuit Court
of Montgomery County here sought to be stayed."
We hold that this Court has jurisdiction to entertain
petitioner's federal claims.
II
The Association both urges that it is constitutionally entitled
to resist official inquiry into its membership lists, and that it
may assert, on behalf of its members, a right personal to them to
be protected from compelled disclosure by the State of their
affiliation with the Association as revealed by the membership
lists. We think that petitioner argues more appropriately the
rights of its members, and that its nexus with them is sufficient
to permit that it act as their representative before this
Page 357 U. S. 459
Court. In so concluding, we reject respondent's argument that
the Association lacks standing to assert here constitutional rights
pertaining to the members, who are not, of course, parties to the
litigation.
To limit the breadth of issues which must be dealt with in
particular litigation, this Court has generally insisted that
parties rely only on constitutional rights which are personal to
themselves.
Tileston v. Ullman, 318 U. S.
44; Robertson and Kirkham, Jurisdiction of the Supreme
Court (1951 ed.), § 298. This rule is related to the broader
doctrine that constitutional adjudication should where possible be
avoided.
See Ashwander v. Tennessee Valley Authority,
297 U. S. 288,
297 U. S.
346-348 (concurring opinion). The principle is not
disrespected where constitutional rights of persons who are not
immediately before the Court could not be effectively vindicated
except through an appropriate representative before the Court.
See Barrows v. Jackson, 346 U. S. 249,
346 U. S.
255-259;
Joint Anti-Fascist Refugee Committee v.
McGrath, 341 U. S. 123,
341 U. S.
183-187 (concurring opinion).
If petitioner's rank-and-file members are constitutionally
entitled to withhold their connection with the Association despite
the production order, it is manifest that this right is properly
assertable by the Association. To require that it be claimed by the
members themselves would result in nullification of the right at
the very moment of its assertion. Petitioner is the appropriate
party to assert these rights, because it and its members are, in
every practical sense, identical. The Association, which provides
in its constitution that "[a]ny person who is in accordance with
[its] principles and policies . . ." may become a member, is but
the medium through which its individual members seek to make more
effective the expression of their own views. The reasonable
likelihood that the Association itself through diminished financial
support and membership may be adversely
Page 357 U. S. 460
affected if production is compelled is a further factor pointing
towards our holding that petitioner has standing to complain of the
production order on behalf of its members.
Cf. Pierce v.
Society of Sisters, 268 U. S. 510,
268 U. S.
534-536.
III
We thus reach petitioner's claim that the production order in
the state litigation trespasses upon fundamental freedoms protected
by the Due Process Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment. Petitioner
argues that, in view of the facts and circumstances shown in the
record, the effect of compelled disclosure of the membership lists
will be to abridge the rights of its rank-and-file members to
engage in lawful association in support of their common beliefs. It
contends that governmental action which, although not directly
suppressing association, nevertheless carries this consequence, can
be justified only upon some overriding valid interest of the
State.
Effective advocacy of both public and private points of view,
particularly controversial ones, is undeniably enhanced by group
association, as this Court has more than once recognized by
remarking upon the close nexus between the freedoms of speech and
assembly.
De Jonge v. Oregon, 299 U.
S. 353,
299 U. S. 364;
Thomas v. Collins, 323 U. S. 516,
323 U. S. 530.
It is beyond debate that freedom to engage in association for the
advancement of beliefs and ideas is an inseparable aspect of the
"liberty" assured by the Due Process Clause of the Fourteenth
Amendment, which embraces freedom of speech.
See Gitlow v. New
York, 268 U. S. 652,
268 U. S. 666;
Palko v. Connecticut, 302 U. S. 319,
302 U. S. 324;
Cantwell v. Connecticut, 310 U. S. 296,
310 U. S. 303;
Staub v. City of Baxley, 355 U. S. 313,
355 U. S. 321.
Of course, it is immaterial whether the beliefs sought to be
advanced by association pertain to political, economic, religious
or cultural matters, and state action which may have the
Page 357 U. S. 461
effect of curtailing the freedom to associate is subject to the
closest scrutiny.
The fact that Alabama, so far as is relevant to the validity of
the contempt judgment presently under review, has taken no direct
action,
cf. De Jonge v. Oregon, supra; Near v. Minnesota,
283 U. S. 697, to
restrict the right of petitioner's members to associate freely,
does not end inquiry into the effect of the production order.
See American Communications Assn. v. Douds, 339 U.
S. 382,
339 U. S. 402.
In the domain of these indispensable liberties, whether of speech,
press, or association, the decisions of this Court recognize that
abridgment of such rights, even though unintended, may inevitably
follow from varied forms of governmental action. Thus, in
Douds, the Court stressed that the legislation there
challenged, which, on its face, sought to regulate labor unions and
to secure stability in interstate commerce, would have the
practical effect "of discouraging" the exercise of constitutionally
protected political rights, 339 U.S. at
339 U. S. 393,
and it upheld the statute only after concluding that the reasons
advanced for its enactment were constitutionally sufficient to
justify its possible deterrent effect upon such freedoms. Similar
recognition of possible unconstitutional intimidation of the free
exercise of the right to advocate underlay this Court's narrow
construction of the authority of a congressional committee
investigating lobbying and of an Act regulating lobbying, although
in neither case was there an effort to suppress speech.
United
States v. Rumely, 345 U. S. 41,
345 U. S. 46-47;
United States v. Harriss, 347 U.
S. 612,
347 U. S.
625-626. The governmental action challenged may appear
to be totally unrelated to protected liberties. Statutes imposing
taxes upon, rather than prohibiting particular activity have been
struck down when perceived to have the consequence of unduly
curtailing the liberty of freedom of press assured under the
Fourteenth Amendment.
Grosjean v.
American
Page 357 U. S. 462
Press Co., 297 U. S. 233;
Murdock v. Pennsylvania, 319 U. S. 105.
It is hardly a novel perception that compelled disclosure of
affiliation with groups engaged in advocacy may constitute as
effective a restraint on freedom of association as the forms of
governmental action in the cases above were thought likely to
produce upon the particular constitutional rights there involved.
This Court has recognized the vital relationship between freedom to
associate and privacy in one's associations. When referring to the
varied forms of governmental action which might interfere with
freedom of assembly, it said in
American Communications Assn.
v. Douds, supra, at
339 U. S.
402:
"A requirement that adherents of particular religious faiths or
political parties wear identifying armbands, for example, is
obviously of this nature."
Compelled disclosure of membership in an organization engaged in
advocacy of particular beliefs is of the same order. Inviolability
of privacy in group association may in many circumstances be
indispensable to preservation of freedom of association,
particularly where a group espouses dissident beliefs.
Cf.
United States v. Rumely, supra, at
345 U. S. 56-58
(concurring opinion).
We think that the production order, in the respects here drawn
in question, must be regarded as entailing the likelihood of a
substantial restraint upon the exercise by petitioner's members of
their right to freedom of association. Petitioner has made an
uncontroverted showing that, on past occasions, revelation of the
identity of its rank-and-file members has exposed these members to
economic reprisal, loss of employment, threat of physical coercion,
and other manifestations of public hostility. Under these
circumstances, we think it apparent that compelled disclosure of
petitioner's Alabama membership is likely to affect adversely the
ability of petitioner and
Page 357 U. S. 463
its members to pursue their collective effort to foster beliefs
which they admittedly have the right to advocate, in that it may
induce members to withdraw from the Association and dissuade others
from joining it because of fear of exposure of their beliefs shown
through their associations and of the consequences of this
exposure.
It is not sufficient to answer, as the State does here, that
whatever repressive effect compulsory disclosure of names of
petitioner's members may have upon participation by Alabama
citizens in petitioner's activities follows not from state action,
but from private community pressures. The crucial factor is the
interplay of governmental and private action, for it is only after
the initial exertion of state power represented by the production
order that private action takes hold.
We turn to the final question -- whether Alabama has
demonstrated an interest in obtaining the disclosures it seeks from
petitioner which is sufficient to justify the deterrent effect
which we have concluded these disclosures may well have on the free
exercise by petitioner's members of their constitutionally
protected right of association.
See American Communications
Assn. v. Douds, supra, at
339 U. S. 400;
Schneider v. State, 308 U. S. 147,
308 U. S. 161.
Such a ". . . subordinating interest of the State must be
compelling,"
Sweezy v. New Hampshire, 354 U.
S. 234,
354 U. S. 265
(concurring opinion). It is not of moment that the State has here
acted solely through its judicial branch, for whether legislative
or judicial, it is still the application of state power which we
are asked to scrutinize.
It is important to bear in mind that petitioner asserts no right
to absolute immunity from state investigation, and no right to
disregard Alabama's laws. As shown by its substantial compliance
with the production order, petitioner does not deny Alabama's right
to obtain from it such information as the State desires concerning
the purposes
Page 357 U. S. 464
of the Association and its activities within the State.
Petitioner has not objected to divulging the identity of its
members who are employed by or hold official positions with it. It
has urged the rights solely of its ordinary rank-and-file members.
This is therefore not analogous to a case involving the interest of
a State in protecting its citizens in their dealings with paid
solicitors or agents of foreign corporations by requiring
identification.
See Cantwell v. Connecticut, supra, at
310 U. S. 306;
Thomas v. Collins, supra, at
323 U. S.
538.
Whether there was "justification" in this instance turns solely
on the substantiality of Alabama's interest in obtaining the
membership lists. During the course of a hearing before the Alabama
Circuit Court on a motion of petitioner to set aside the production
order, the State Attorney General presented at length, under
examination by petitioner, the State's reason for requesting the
membership lists. The exclusive purpose was to determine whether
petitioner was conducting intrastate business in violation of the
Alabama foreign corporation registration statute, and the
membership lists were expected to help resolve this question. The
issues in the litigation commenced by Alabama by its bill in equity
were whether the character of petitioner and its activities in
Alabama had been such as to make petitioner subject to the
registration statute, and whether the extent of petitioner's
activities without qualifying suggested its permanent ouster from
the State. Without intimating the slightest view upon the merits of
these issues, we are unable to perceive that the disclosure of the
names of petitioner's rank-and-file members has a substantial
bearing on either of them. As matters stand in the state court,
petitioner (1) has admitted its presence and conduct of activities
in Alabama since 1918; (2) has offered to comply in all respects
with the state qualification statute, although preserving
Page 357 U. S. 465
its contention that the statute does not apply to it, and (3)
has apparently complied satisfactorily with the production order,
except for the membership lists, by furnishing the Attorney General
with varied business records, its charter and statement of
purposes, the names of all of its directors and officers, and with
the total number of its Alabama members and the amount of their
dues. These last items would not, on this record, appear subject to
constitutional challenge, and have been furnished, but whatever
interest the State may have in obtaining names of ordinary members
has not been shown to be sufficient to overcome petitioner's
constitutional objections to the production order.
From what has already been said, we think it apparent that
Bryant v. Zimmerman, 278 U. S. 63,
cannot be relied on in support of the State's position, for that
case involved markedly different considerations in terms of the
interest of the State in obtaining disclosure. There, this Court
upheld, as applied to a member of a local chapter of the Ku Klux
Klan, a New York statute requiring any unincorporated association
which demanded an oath as a condition to membership to file with
state officials copies of its
". . . constitution, by laws, rules, regulations and oath of
membership, together with a roster of its membership and a list of
its officers for the current year."
N.Y.Laws 1923, c. 664, §§ 53, 56. In its opinion, the Court took
care to emphasize the nature of the organization which New York
sought to regulate. The decision was based on the particular
character of the Klan's activities, involving acts of unlawful
intimidation and violence, which the Court assumed was before the
state legislature when it enacted the statute, and of which the
Court itself took judicial notice. Furthermore, the situation
before us is significantly different from that in
Bryant,
because the organization there had made no effort to comply
with
Page 357 U. S. 466
any of the requirements of New York's statute, but rather had
refused to furnish the State with
any information as to
its local activities.
We hold that the immunity from state scrutiny of membership
lists which the Association claims on behalf of its members is here
so related to the right of the members to pursue their lawful
private interests privately and to associate freely with others in
so doing as to come within the protection of the Fourteenth
Amendment. And we conclude that Alabama has fallen short of showing
a controlling justification for the deterrent effect on the free
enjoyment of the right to associate which disclosure of membership
lists is likely to have. Accordingly, the judgment of civil
contempt and the $100,000 fine which resulted from petitioner's
refusal to comply with the production order in this respect must
fall.
IV
Petitioner joins with its attack upon the production order a
challenge to the constitutionality of the State's
ex parte
temporary restraining order preventing it from soliciting support
in Alabama, and it asserts that the Fourteenth Amendment precludes
such state action. But, as noted above, petitioner has never
received a hearing on the merits of the ouster suit, and we do not
consider these questions properly here. The Supreme Court of
Alabama noted in its denial of the petition for certiorari that
such petition raised solely a question pertinent to the contempt
adjudication.
"The ultimate aim and purpose of the litigation is to determine
the right of the state to enjoin petitioners from doing business in
Alabama. That question, however, is not before us in this
proceeding."
265 Ala. at 352, 91 So. 2d at 216. The proper method for raising
questions in the state appellate courts pertinent to the underlying
suit for an injunction appears
Page 357 U. S. 467
to be by appeal, after a hearing on the merits and final
judgment by the lower state court. Only from the disposition of
such an appeal can review be sought here.
For the reasons stated, the judgment of the Supreme Court of
Alabama must be reversed, and the case remanded for proceedings not
inconsistent with this opinion.
Reversed.
* The Certificate of Incorporation of the Association provides
that its
". . . principal objects . . . are voluntarily to promote
equality of rights and eradicate caste or race prejudice among the
citizens of the United States; to advance the interest of colored
citizens; to secure for them impartial suffrage, and to increase
their opportunities for securing justice in the courts, education
for their children, employment according to their ability, and
complete equality before the law."