Petitioner was convicted in a Federal District Court of
violating 18 U.S.C. § 1001 by swearing falsely that he was not a
member of, or affiliated with, the Communist Party, in an affidavit
filed with the National Labor Relations Board to enable a union of
which he was an officer to comply with § 9 (h) of the National
Labor Relations Act, as amended by the Taft-Hartley Act. At the
trial, petitioner moved under 18 U.S.C. § 3500 for production, for
use in cross-examination, of all statements given by two government
witnesses relating to their testimony. All narrative statements of
both witnesses which related to their direct testimony were
produced and made available to petitioner, but notes made by an FBI
agent covering oral reports of one witness regarding his expenses
and receipts signed by both witnesses for money paid to them for
expenses were not produced, and they were not in the record before
this Court. In this Court, the Solicitor General represented that
the notes covering oral reports of the witness regarding his
expenses had been destroyed before the trial, that most of the
receipts for expense money signed by the witnesses did not relate
to anything mentioned in their direct testimony, and that, although
some of the receipts contained information relating to the direct
testimony of one of the witnesses, all such information had been
made available to petitioner in the narrative statements of that
witness.
Held:
1. The judgment is vacated, and the cause is remanded to the
District Court for a hearing and findings of fact on the issues
raised by the Solicitor General's representations. If the District
Court finds that his representations are true in all material
respects, it shall enter a new final judgment based upon the record
as supplemented by its findings, thereby preserving to petitioner
the right to appeal to the Court of Appeals. If the District Court
finds that the Solicitor General's representations are untrue in
any material respect, it shall grant petitioner a new trial. Pp.
368 U. S.
236-244.
Page 368 U. S. 232
(a) If the agent's notes of the oral reports of expenses were
made only for the purpose of transferring the data thereon to
receipts to be signed by the witness, and if, after having served
that purpose, they were destroyed in good faith and in accord with
normal practice, their destruction did not constitute an
impermissible destruction of evidence nor deprive petitioner of any
right. Pp.
368 U. S.
241-242.
(b) Petitioner would not be entitled to a new trial because of
the nonproduction of those notes, if they were so destroyed and not
in existence at the time of the trial. P.
368 U. S.
242.
(c) Notwithstanding the fact that the receipts given by the
witnesses for expense money were "statements," within the meaning
of 18 U.S.C. § 3500, and were demanded under that section,
petitioner would not be entitled to a new trial because of their
nonproduction if they did not relate to the direct testimony of
those witnesses. Pp.
368 U. S.
242-243.
(d) If some of the receipts did relate to the direct testimony
of one witness, but the information contained in them had already
been given to petitioner in the narrative statements of that
witness, the District Court could properly find that the error in
failing to produce those receipts was harmless. Pp.
368 U. S.
243-244.
2. The District Court's instructions to the jury (quoted in the
opinion, p. 246,
n 5, and p.
254,
n 13) properly defined
"membership in," and "affiliation with," the Communist Party. Pp.
368 U. S.
242-258.
(a) Membership in such a secretly operating organization is, to
all but the organization and its member or members, necessarily
subjective, and, although it must be proved by evidence of
objective facts and circumstances having a rational tendency to
show, and from which the jury may rationally and logically infer,
the ultimate subjective fact of membership, it is, in the very
nature of such a case, necessary that the court's instructions
define membership in such an organization in subjective terms or
not at all. P.
368 U. S.
249.
(b) The following definition of "membership" contained in the
instructions was not erroneous:
"Membership in the Communist Party, the same as membership in
any other organization, constitutes the state of being one of those
persons who belong to or comprise the Communist Party. It connotes
a status of mutuality between the individual and the organization.
That is to say, there must be present the desire on the part of the
individual to belong
Page 368 U. S. 233
to the Communist Party and a recognition by that Party that it
considers him as a member."
Pp.
368 U. S.
249-251.
(c) The instructions did not fail adequately to state the
objective circumstances that might be considered by the jury in
determining membership, and the criteria submitted were not too
indefinite to give the jury the necessary guidance. Pp.
368 U. S.
251-253.
(d) Independently of, and wholly apart from, § 5 of the
Communist Control Act of 1954, it was proper to tell the jury, as
this instruction did, that, in determining whether the defendant
was or was not a member of the Communist Party on the date charged
in the indictment, they might consider 12 of the 14 criteria
specified by Congress in § 5 of that Act. Pp.
368 U. S.
252-253.
(e) The instructions did not allow a finding of membership on a
date other than that charged in the indictment. P.
368 U. S.
253.
(f) The instructions did not violate the First Amendment or deny
due process by permitting the jury to base its finding of
membership upon statements and acts that are protected by that
Amendment. Pp.
368 U. S.
253-254.
(g) The Court's instruction defining "affiliation" was correct.
Pp.
368 U. S.
254-258.
(h) The instruction was not erroneous for failure to advise the
jury that one may not be "affiliated with" the Communist Party,
within the meaning of § 9(h), by any direct relationship with the
Party, but only by being a member of another organization that is
affiliated with the Party. Pp.
368 U. S.
256-257.
(i) The ultimate fact of affiliation, though subjective, may be
proved by evidence of objective facts and circumstances having a
rational tendency to show, and from which the jury may rationally
and logically find, affiliation. P.
368 U. S.
257.
(j) Though one paragraph of the instructions was erroneous and
conflicted with another paragraph, it could not prejudice
petitioner, because it exacted a higher standard of proof of
affiliation than the law required. Pp.
368 U. S.
257-258.
275 F.2d 561, judgment vacated and case remanded for further
proceedings.
Page 368 U. S. 234
MR. JUSTICE WHITTAKER delivered the opinion of the Court.
For the purpose of enabling a labor union of which he was then
an officer to comply with § 9(h) of the National Labor Relations
Act, as amended 29 U.S.C. § 159(h), and hence to use the processes
of the National Labor Relations Board, [
Footnote 1] petitioner made on December 9, and caused to
be filed with the Board on December 11, 1952, an affidavit
reciting,
inter alia, "I am not a member of the Communist
Party or affiliated with such Party." Upon receipt of that
affidavit and like ones of all other officers of the union, the
Board advised the union that it had complied with § 9(h) and could
make use of the Board's processes.
In November, 1955, an indictment in two counts was returned
against petitioner in the United States District Court for the
Northern District of Illinois. The first
Page 368 U. S. 235
count charged that, in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 1001, [
Footnote 2] petitioner had falsely
sworn, in the affidavit, that he was not a member of the Communist
Party, and the second charged that, in violation of the same
statute, he had also falsely sworn in that affidavit that he was
not affiliated with the Communist Party. A jury trial was had which
resulted in a verdict of guilty on both counts, and the court
sentenced petitioner to imprisonment. On appeal, the United States
Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit originally affirmed, but,
before the motion for rehearing was ruled, this Court's decision in
Jencks v. United States, 353 U. S. 657,
came down, and, on the authority of that case, the court granted
the motion for rehearing, reversed the judgment and remanded the
case for a new trial.
United States v. Killian, 246 F.2d
77, 82. A new trial was had. It also resulted in a verdict of
guilty on both counts, and petitioner was sentenced to imprisonment
for five years on Count I, and for three years on Count II, the
sentences to run concurrently. On appeal, the United States Court
of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit affirmed,
United States v.
Killian, 275 F.2d 561, and we granted certiorari limited to
two questions, namely, (1) whether production of statements
submitted by Government informer witnesses for their expenses, and
the receipts executed by them for the payments, is required by 18
U.S.C. § 3500 when the Government offers at the trial to produce a
list of the dates and amounts of the
Page 368 U. S. 236
payments, and (2) whether the instructions to the jury properly
defined membership in and affiliation with the Communist Party. 365
U.S. 810.
The Government introduced evidence tending to show that
petitioner was a member and active in the affairs of the Communist
Party from 1949 through August, 1953, but, inasmuch as there is not
before us any question concerning the sufficiency of the evidence
to make a submissible case for the jury, it is not necessary to
review the evidence in detail.
I
. The Document Production Questions
Intelligent understanding of the document production questions
presented requires a brief statement of their basis. They arose in
connection with the testimony of Government witnesses Sullivan and
Ondrejka.
On direct examination, Sullivan testified that he joined the
Communist Party in 1948 at the request of the Federal Bureau of
Investigation, and, in October, 1949, transferred his membership
from Cincinnati, Ohio, to Madison, Wisconsin, where, by secret
means, he made contact with local leaders of the Communist Party
and became active in its affairs. In those activities, he met
petitioner in December, 1949. Petitioner was then the section
organizer for the Party in Madison. Thereafter, Sullivan attended a
number of secret Communist Party group meetings in Madison in 1949
and 1950 at which petitioner was present and acted as the spokesman
and leader. Sullivan testified that he gave written reports to the
FBI respecting Party meetings and activities soon after they
occurred.
At the close of Sullivan's direct testimony, petitioner moved
for production, for use in cross-examination, of all statements
given by the witness to the FBI relating to his direct testimony.
The narrative statements were produced to the judge
in
camera, who, after excising the
Page 368 U. S. 237
parts that did not relate to the witness' direct testimony,
handed them to petitioner's counsel. On cross-examination, Sullivan
testified that he was paid stipulated monthly amounts for his
services, and was reimbursed for his expenses incurred in Communist
Party activities, by the FBI, and that, when he received the money,
he signed a receipt for it. His connection with the FBI terminated
in 1952.
After completing the cross-examination of the witness,
petitioner again moved for production of all statements made by the
witness to the FBI, without excision. The Government objected to
the motion on the grounds that it had produced all of the witness'
statements that related to his direct testimony, and that there was
no showing that the witness had given any other statements to the
Government that related to his direct testimony. Thereupon, the
court denied petitioner's motion. Petitioner then moved to strike
the testimony of the witness, and that motion, too, was denied.
On direct examination, Ondrejka testified that he joined the
Communist Party at the request of the FBI in October, 1949, and
remained a member of the Party until November, 1953. He met
petitioner at a Communist Party meeting in Milwaukee, Wisconsin, in
January, 1951, and thereafter attended many secret Communist Party
meetings in Milwaukee where petitioner was present and active, and
also participated with petitioner in numerous Party activities,
until August, 1953, and knew petitioner to be a member of the
Communist Party throughout that period. Ondrejka testified that he
gave written reports to the FBI respecting Party meetings and
activities soon after they occurred.
At the conclusion of Ondrejka's direct testimony, petitioner
moved for production, for use in cross-examination, of all
statements given by the witness to the FBI. The court ordered to
Government to produce to the judge,
Page 368 U. S. 238
in camera, "all statements that in any way affect the
direct examination of the witness." Accordingly, all of the
narrative statements given by the witness to the Government
relating to his direct testimony were produced to the judge, who,
after excising such parts as did not relate to the witness' direct
testimony, delivered them to petitioner's counsel. Petitioner then
moved for production of all statements relating to the testimony of
the witness, without excision. That motion was denied.
On cross-examination, Ondrejka testified that he was paid
stipulated monthly amounts in cash for his services by the FBI,
and, in addition, was reimbursed by the FBI for his expenses, such
as Communist Party dues, literature, contributions and travel,
which he orally reported to an FBI agent, who made notes thereof
and later reimbursed him in cash. The court sustained the
Government's objection to a question asking whether Ondrejka signed
receipts for the moneys paid to him in reimbursement for his
expenses.
Petitioner then moved for production of all statements given by
the witness to the FBI, whether written by the witness or by an FBI
agent as the result of interviews with the witness, which related
to the witness' testimony on cross-examination, including
particularly reports by the witness of his reimbursable expenses
and the receipts which he signed evidencing reimbursement for those
expenses. The Government opposed production of the documents on the
ground that they did not relate to the direct testimony of the
witness. It further objected to producing Ondrejka's reports of
expenses, and the receipts he had signed when reimbursed for those
expenses, on the grounds that they were administrative records of
the FBI, and were immaterial and irrelevant, but the Government
offered to produce a list showing the dates and amounts of the
payments and whether they were for services or expenses. Petitioner
refused to
Page 368 U. S. 239
receive that proffered list. Thereupon, the court denied the
motion. Petitioner then moved to strike all of Ondrejka's
testimony, and that motion, too, was denied.
Petitioner contends that his general demands for "all
statements," as well as his specific demand for the reports and
receipts made by Ondrejka, encompassed, and the trial court erred
to his prejudice in denying his motion to require the Government to
produce, (1) the notes made by the FBI agents covering Ondrejka's
oral reports of expenses, and (2) the receipts signed by Sullivan
and Ondrejka for moneys paid to them in reimbursement for expenses.
He supports these contentions with an elaborate argument which we
need not delineate because the Solicitor General now concedes that
the FBI notes of Ondrejka's oral reports may have been "statements"
within the meaning of 18 U.S.C. § 3500(e)(2), [
Footnote 3] and he flatly concedes that the
receipts signed by Sullivan and Ondrejka were "statements" within
the meaning of § 3500.
However, the Solicitor General contends that, on the actual
facts -- many of which are not incorporated in the record before us
-- petitioner is not entitled to, and that we should not on this
incomplete and imperfect record order, a new trial because the true
facts are that the FBI agents' notes covering Ondrejka's oral
reports of expenses were not in existence at the time of the trial,
and the receipts signed by Sullivan and Ondrejka do not "relate to"
their direct testimony, as required by § 3500, or, if it may be
said that any of them do "relate to" their direct testimony, that
the same information, in much
Page 368 U. S. 240
greater detail, was given to petitioner in the witnesses'
narrative statements that were produced and delivered to his
counsel at the trial, and hence, if there was any error, it was
harmless.
More specifically, the Solicitor General tells us in his brief
that, although the nature of the Government's objections in the
courts below implied that the agents' notes were in existence, his
interrogation of the FBI agents has disclosed that, after they
incorporated the data contained in their notes of Ondrejka's oral
reports into the receipts to be signed by him, the agents destroyed
the notes in accord with their normal practice, and hence those
notes were not in existence at the time of either of petitioner's
trials. Although the receipts are not contained in the record
before us, the Solicitor General says that there are 124 of them,
and that a careful examination of them reveals that none of
Sullivan's receipts contains any itemization whatever of the nature
of the reimbursed expenses, and thus they do not "relate to"
anything mentioned in his direct testimony. With respect to
Ondrejka's receipts, the Solicitor General says that, although the
Government inadvertently represented to the District Court and the
Court of Appeals that the list, proffered to petitioner at the
trial and showing the dates and amounts of payments made to
Ondrejka, gave all of the information that was contained in the
receipts, his examination has disclosed that nine of Ondrejka's
receipts do contain some itemization of the nature of his
reimbursed expenses, but that only two of the nine can be said to
"relate to" anything mentioned by Ondrejka on his direct
examination, and that the same information, in greater detail, was
contained in Ondrejka's narrative statements that were produced and
delivered to petitioner's counsel at the trial.
For these reasons, the Solicitor General contends that, viewed
upon the now known and readily available actual
Page 368 U. S. 241
facts, no error -- at least no prejudicial error -- resulted
from the nonproduction of the FBI notes and the Sullivan and
Ondrejka receipts at the trial. However, the Solicitor General
recognizes that petitioner is not bound to accept his statement
that the FBI notes of Ondrejka's oral reports of expenses were
destroyed in accord with normal practice long prior to the trial,
and that petitioner is entitled to an opportunity to examine the
FBI agents and other responsible Government officials on these
matters, which, of course, can be done only in the District Court.
He recognizes, too, that his contentions with respect to the
receipts signed by Sullivan and Ondrejka necessarily involve a
detailed examination and comparison of the lengthy direct testimony
of Sullivan and Ondrejka, the 124 receipts, the list showing the
dates and amounts of payments to Ondrejka that was proffered to
petitioner by the Government at the trial, and the numerous
narrative statements by Sullivan and Ondrejka that were produced
and delivered to petitioner at the trial, and he submits that this
cannot appropriately be done in this Court, especially since
neither the receipts nor the proffered list is contained in the
present record, but can properly be done only in the District
Court. He therefore asks us to vacate the judgment and remand the
case to the District Court to hear these issues and to determine
whether a new trial should be ordered or the judgment should be
reinstated with the right in the petitioner, of course, to appeal
from any such judgment to the Court of Appeals.
In opposition, petitioner argues that the claimed destruction of
the agents' notes admits the destruction of evidence that may have
been helpful to him, and deprives him of his rights under § 3500
and to due process of law, and therefore the judgment should be
reversed. Alternatively, he argues that only he and his counsel
could determine the uses that might have been made of
Page 368 U. S. 242
the receipts had they been produced, and he concludes that it
would not be possible for the District Court, on remand, to find
that the failure to produce the receipts was nonprejudicial or
harmless error, and that therefore he is entitled to a new
trial.
As to petitioner's contention that the claimed destruction of
the agents' notes admits the destruction of evidence, deprives him
of legal rights, and requires reversal of the judgment, it seems
appropriate to observe that almost everything is evidence of
something, but that does not mean that nothing can ever safely be
destroyed. If the agents' notes of Ondrejka's oral reports of
expenses were made only for the purpose of transferring the data
thereon to the receipts to be signed by Ondrejka, and if, after
having served that purpose, they were destroyed by the agents in
good faith and in accord with their normal practice, it would be
clear that their destruction did not constitute an impermissible
destruction of evidence, nor deprive petitioner of any right. Those
are the factual representations made by the Solicitor General.
Whether they are true can be determined only upon a hearing in the
District Court.
It is entirely clear that petitioner would not be entitled to a
new trial because of the nonproduction of the agents' notes if
those notes were so destroyed, and not in existence at the time of
the trial. It is equally clear that, notwithstanding the fact that
the Sullivan and Ondrejka receipts were "statements" within the
meaning of § 3500 and were demanded under that section, petitioner
would not be entitled to a new trial because of the nonproduction
of those receipts if, in truth, they do not relate to the direct
testimony of those witnesses inasmuch as § 3500(c) requires "the
court [to] excise the portions of [the] statement which do not
relate to the subject matter of the testimony of the witness." The
Solicitor General represents that 115 of the 124 receipts signed by
Sullivan and
Page 368 U. S. 243
Ondrejka do not contain any itemization of the nature of the
reimbursed expenses nor relate to the direct testimony of those
witnesses. If those representations are true, petitioner would not
be entitled to a new trial because of the nonproduction of those
115 receipts. Inasmuch as the receipts are not contained in the
record before us, whether the Solicitor General's representations
are true can be determined only upon a hearing in the District
Court.
But the Solicitor General finds that two of Ondrejka's receipts
may be said to relate to Ondrejka's direct testimony. However, he
says that the same information as they contain and much more on the
same subjects was contained in Ondrejka's narrative statements that
were produced and delivered to petitioner at the trial, and
therefore petitioner could not have been prejudiced by the
nonproduction of those two receipts, and is not entitled to a new
trial on that account. It is true, as petitioner argues, that only
the defense is in position to determine the precise uses that may
be made of demanded documents,
Jencks v. United States,
353 U. S. 657,
353 U. S. 668,
but that is not to say that the harmless error rule is never
applicable in respect to the nonproduction of demanded documents.
Upon very similar facts, we recently approved a holding that
nonproduction of demanded documents was harmless error.
Rosenberg v. United States, 360 U.
S. 367. We there said:
"Since the same information that would have been afforded had
the document been given to defendant was already in the possession
of the defense by way of the witness' admissions while testifying,
it would deny reason to entertain the belief that defendant could
have been prejudiced by not having had opportunity to inspect the
letter."
360 U.S. at
360 U. S.
371.
While, as we said in the
Rosenberg case,
supra, a
"court should not confidently guess what defendant's
attorney
Page 368 U. S. 244
might have found useful for impeachment purposes in withheld
documents to which the defense is entitled . . . , when the very
same information was possessed by defendant's counsel as would have
been available were error not committed, [a court properly can find
that] it would offend common sense and the fair administration of
justice to order a new trial."
360 U.S. at
360 U. S.
371.
If it is true, as the Solicitor General represents, that the
information contained on the two Ondrejka receipts had already been
given to petitioner in Ondrejka's narrative statements covering the
same subjects, it is clear that the District Court properly could
find that the error in failing to produce those two receipts was
harmless.
Accordingly, we vacate the judgment and remand the cause to the
District Court for a hearing confined to the issues raised by the
Solicitor General's representations as stated in this opinion. The
District Court shall make findings of fact on those issues. If the
District Court finds that the Solicitor General's representations
are true in all material respects, it shall enter a new final
judgment based upon the record as supplemented by its findings,
thereby preserving to petitioner the right to appeal to the Court
of Appeals. If, on the other hand, the District Court finds that
the Solicitor General's representations are untrue in any material
respect, it shall grant petitioner a new trial.
II
. The Instructions to the Jury
Whether the District Court, on remand, grants or denies a new
trial, it is obvious that petitioner's contentions respecting the
court's instructions to the jury will not be mooted, [
Footnote 4] and it seems necessary to decide
them.
Page 368 U. S. 245
Because of the nature of some of petitioner's contentions
respecting the instructions, it seems appropriate to make clear
just what was the charge upon which petitioner was convicted. He
was not charged with criminality for being a member of or
affiliated with the Communist Party, nor for participation in any
criminal activities of or for the Communist Party. He was not
charged with advocating or teaching the overthrow of the
Government, as was the case in
Yates v. United States,
354 U. S. 298, or
with knowing membership in an organization advocating the overthrow
of the Government by force and violence, as in
Scales v. United
States, 367 U. S. 203, and
Noto v. United States, 367 U. S. 290. The
charge was that, to enable a labor union of which he was an officer
to comply with § 9(h) of the National Labor Relations Act and thus
be permitted to use the processes of the Labor Board, petitioner,
on December 11, 1952, knowingly made and caused to be transmitted
to the Labor Board a false affidavit, saying he was not then a
member of or affiliated with the Communist Party when, in fact, he
was both a member of and affiliated with the Communist Party, and
that those acts were made criminal and punishable by 18 U.S.C. §
1001.
Nothing in § 9(h) or elsewhere in the Labor Management Relations
Act makes or purports to make criminal either membership in or
affiliation with the Communist Party,
American Communications
Ass'n v. Douds, 339 U. S. 382,
339 U. S. 402,
but § 1001 provides that
"Whoever, in any matter within the jurisdiction of any
department or
Page 368 U. S. 246
agency of the United States knowingly and willfully falsifies .
. . a material fact . . . or makes or uses any false writing or
document knowing the same to contain any false . . . statement . .
. shall be fined not more than $10,000 or imprisoned not more than
five years, or both."
Petitioner was charged with and convicted for violating that
statute -- of knowingly making and transmitting to the Labor Board
on December 11, 1952, an affidavit falsely swearing that he was not
a member of or affiliated with the Communist Party -- not for being
a member of or affiliated with the Communist Party, nor for
participating in any activities, lawful or unlawful, of the
Communist Party, although, of course, determination of whether the
affidavit was true or false requires a determination of whether
petitioner was a member of or affiliated with the Communist Party
on December 11, 1952. Neither is there any question here about the
fact that the evidence was sufficient to make a submissible case
for the jury and to support its verdict -- notwithstanding
petitioner's tangential implications to the contrary. The questions
here are simply whether the court's instructions to the jury
properly defined membership in and affiliation with the Communist
Party.
Membership. Petitioner first contends that the
instruction respecting membership [
Footnote 5] should have defined "membership"
Page 368 U. S. 247
as, and required a finding of, "a definite objective factual
phenomenon" or a "specific formal act of joining," rather than, as
was done, in the subjective terms of a state of mind. If petitioner
is right in this contention, it would follow, despite the fact the
question is foreclosed against him here, that the evidence did not
make a submissible case for the jury on Count I of the indictment,
and his motion for a directed verdict of acquittal on that count
should have been granted, for there was no evidence of "a definite
objective factual phenomenon [of joining]" or of "a specific formal
act of joining." Indeed, the very nature of the case -- claimed
membership in an underground or secretly operating organization
whose membership
Page 368 U. S. 248
records, if any, are not available to the Government --
precludes the possibility of such evidence, and, if the rule were
as petitioner contends, false affidavits of non-Communist Party
membership could be made and submitted
Page 368 U. S. 249
to the Labor Board with impunity. Membership in such a secretly
operating organization is, to all but the organization and its
member or members, necessarily subjective, and, although it must be
proved by evidence of objective facts and circumstances having a
rational tendency to show, and from which the jury may rationally
and logically infer, the ultimate subjective fact of membership, it
is, in the very nature of such a case, necessary that the court's
instructions define membership in such an organization in
subjective terms or not at all.
A similar question arising under § 9(h) was presented in
Jencks v. United States, 353 U. S. 657, but
the Court's opinion, turning on the document production question,
did not reach it. However, Mr. Justice Burton's separate concurring
opinion, joined by MR. JUSTICE HARLAN, 353 U.S. at
353 U. S. 672,
and, on the question here considered, also by MR. JUSTICE
FRANKFURTER, 353 U.S. at
353 U. S. 672,
did reach the question. It found the membership defining
instruction given in that case to be deficient because it
"failed to emphasize to the jury the essential element of
membership in an organized group-the desire of an individual to
belong to the organization and a recognition by the organization
that it considers him as a member. "
Page 368 U. S. 250
353 U.S. at
353 U. S. 679.
In the instant case, the District Court's instruction to the jury
defined membership to the jury in almost precisely that language
(
see note 5 sixth
paragraph). Similar instructions in cases arising under § 9(h) have
been held proper by every United States Court of Appeals that has
passed upon the question.
Fisher v. United States, 231
F.2d 99, 107 (C.A.9th Cir.); [
Footnote 6]
Lohman v. United States, 251 F.2d
951, 954 (C.A.6th Cir.); [
Footnote
7]
Lohman v. United States, 266 F.2d 3 (C.A.6th Cir.);
[
Footnote 8]
Travis v.
United States, 269 F.2d 928, 942-943 (C.A.10th Cir.).
[
Footnote 9] From these
consistent holdings and
Page 368 U. S. 251
upon principle, it seems clear that the instruction's definition
of membership was not erroneous under Count I of the
indictment.
Petitioner next contends that the court's instruction failed to
tell the jury precisely what objective circumstances would be
sufficient to justify a finding of membership, and that the
criteria which it told the jury they might consider in determining
the question of membership were too indefinite to give the jury the
necessary guidance. Although the ultimate fact of membership in
such a case is almost necessarily a subjective one, it may be
proved, as we have said, by objective facts and circumstances
having a rational tendency to show, and from which the jury
rationally and logically may find, the ultimate fact of membership.
But, for the purpose of confining the jury's considerations to the
relevant evidence, it was proper for the court to outline the
objective acts, shown in the evidence, which they might consider in
determining the ultimate subjective fact of membership. Here, the
court's instruction, after telling the jury that intent is a state
of mind and can only be determined by what an individual says and
does, went on to say that, in determining the issue as to whether
the defendant was or was not a member of the Communist Party at the
time alleged in the indictment, the jury might take into
consideration, as circumstances bearing on that question, the acts
and statements of the defendant (
see note 5 sixth paragraph), and, in this connection,
they might take into consideration whether the defendant did the
things set forth in the 12 numbered paragraphs that followed,
which,
Page 368 U. S. 252
it said, were some of the indicia of Communist Party membership
(
see note 5 eighth
paragraph).
While the criteria specified in the numbered paragraphs of the
challenged instruction were, in substance, 12 of the 14 criteria
specified by Congress in § 5 of the Communist Control Act of 1954
(50 U.S.C. § 844) to be considered by a jury in determining
Communist Party membership under that Act, it is unnecessary for us
to determine in this case whether that section applies, by force of
law, to prosecutions under 18 U.S.C. § 1001 for making a false
affidavit to the Labor Board in purported compliance with § 9(h) of
the National Labor Relations Act, for it is obvious that those 12
criteria rationally tend to show, and were sufficient to enable a
jury rationally and logically to find, the ultimate fact of
membership, though subjective, and hence it was proper,
independently of and wholly apart from § 5 of the Communist Control
Act of 1954, to tell the jury, as this instruction did, that they
might consider those criteria in determining whether the defendant
was or was not a member of the Communist Party on the date charged
in the indictment.
Similar criteria were contained in the membership instruction
given in the
Jencks case,
supra, [
Footnote 10] and the opinion of Mr. Justice
Burton did not find any error in that aspect of the instruction.
Very similar instructions telling the jury that they might consider
such or similar criteria in determining the ultimate subjective
fact of membership within the meaning of § 9(h) have been
consistently and uniformly approved,
Hupman v. United
States, 219 F.2d 243 (C.A.6th Cir.); [
Footnote 11]
Fisher v. United States,
231 F.2d
Page 368 U. S. 253
99, 107 (C.A.9th Cir.). [
Footnote 12] In
Travis v. United States, 247
F.2d 130, 135, the United States Court of Appeals for the Tenth
Circuit reversed because the membership instruction failed to
specify and require the jury to consider such criteria in
determining the question of membership. On retrial, the jury was
instructed to consider virtually the same criteria of membership as
was the jury in the instant case. The defendants were again
convicted, and, on appeal, the Court of Appeals specifically
approved the instruction. Travis v. United States, 269 F.2d 928,
942-943.
We think there is no merit in petitioner's contention that the
instruction failed adequately to state the objective circumstances
that might be considered by the jury in determining membership or
that the criteria submitted were too indefinite to give the jury
the necessary guidance.
Nor is there any merit in petitioner's contention that those
criteria allowed a finding of membership on a date other than that
charged in the indictment. That contention fails to consider the
whole charge, particularly the vital fact that the court repeatedly
emphasized to the jury that the issue for them to determine was
whether petitioner was or was not a member of the Communist Party
on the date that he executed and transmitted the affidavit.
Petitioner, and the
amici curiae, contend that § 5 of
the Communist Control Act of 1954 (50 U.S.C. § 844) is
constitutionally invalid in that it violates the First Amendment of
the Constitution and denies due process because it permits a jury
to base its finding of membership upon statements and acts that are
protected by the First Amendment. They then argue that, because the
challenged
Page 368 U. S. 254
instruction substantially adopted 12 of the 14 criteria
mentioned in that section this instruction, too, was violative of
the First Amendment and denied due process. We have no occasion
here to consider the constitutionality of § 5 of the Communist
Control Act of 1954 because, as we have said, the indicia which the
challenged instruction told the jury to consider as circumstances
bearing upon the issue of membership did rationally tend to show,
and were sufficient, if believed, to enable the jury rationally and
logically to find, the ultimate subjective fact of membership,
wholly apart from and independently of § 5 of the Communist Control
Act of 1954. To petitioner's argument that the submitted criteria
permitted the jury to find membership from statements and acts that
were wholly innocent in themselves or even protected by the First
Amendment, it is enough to recall that nothing in § 9(h) or
elsewhere in the National Labor Relations Act makes or purports to
make criminal either membership in or affiliation with the
Communist Party,
American Communications Ass'n v. Douds,
supra, 339 U.S. at
339 U. S. 402,
and that petitioner was not charged with criminality for being a
member of or affiliated with the Communist Party, nor with
participating in any criminal activities of or for the Communist
Party, but only with having made and submitted to the Government an
affidavit falsely swearing that he was not a member of or
affiliated with the Communist Party in violation of 18 U.S.C. §
1001. It would be strange doctrine, indeed, to say that membership
in the Communist Party -- when, as here, a lawful status -- cannot
be proved by evidence of lawful acts and statements, but only by
evidence of unlawful acts and statements.
Affiliation. We think the court's instruction defining
affiliation [
Footnote 13]
was correct under Count II of the indictment
Page 368 U. S. 255
and in accord with all the precedents. A far less complete and
definitive instruction on affiliation was given by the trial court
in
Jencks v. United States, supra, and was challenged in
this Court. That instruction merely quoted dictionary definitions
and then stated that
"[a]ffiliation . . . means something less than membership but
more than sympathy. Affiliation with the Communist Party may be
proved by either circumstantial or direct evidence, or both."
See 353 U.S. at
353 U. S. 679.
The Court's opinion, turning on the document production problem,
did not reach that question. However the opinion of Mr. Justice
Burton did reach the question. It did not find the instruction
erroneous insofar as it went, but found it to be deficient
because
"It did not require a continuing course of conduct 'on a fairly
permanent basis' 'that could not be abruptly ended without giving
at least reasonable cause for the charge of a breach of good
faith,'"
and thus "allowed the jury to convict petitioner on the basis
of
Page 368 U. S. 256
acts of intermittent cooperation." 353 U.S. at
353 U. S.
679-680. The instruction given in this case contained
not only the definition given in the
Jencks case
(
see note 13
paragraph one) but went on to embody almost exactly the expanded
definition prescribed by Mr. Justice Burton (
see note 13 paragraph two). The opinions
of the Court of Appeals have uniformly approved that definition. In
Bryson v. United States, 238 F.2d 657, 664, the United
States Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit found an identical
instruction to be "full and complete," and said that it "adequately
informed the jury of the meaning of the term [affiliated with] and
provided an adequate standard for evaluating the evidence." In
Lohman v. United States, 251 F.2d 951, 954, the United
States Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit, speaking through
Judge, now MR. JUSTICE, STEWART, specifically approved the
definition of "affiliated with" prescribed by Mr. Justice Burton's
opinion in the
Jencks case; and in
Travis v. United
States, 247 F.2d 130, 135, the United States Court of Appeals
for the Tenth Circuit approved an almost identical instruction.
[
Footnote 14]
Petitioner contends that one may not be "affiliated with" the
Communist Party, within the meaning of § 9(h), by any direct
relationship with the Party, but only by being a member of another
organization that is affiliated with the Party, and that the
instruction was erroneous for failure so to advise the jury. If
petitioner is right in this contention, it would follow, despite
the fact the question is foreclosed against him here, that the
evidence did not make a submissible case for the jury on Count II
of the indictment, and his motion for a directed verdict of
acquittal on that count should have been granted, for there was no
evidence that petitioner was
Page 368 U. S. 257
affiliated with the Communist Party through membership in some
other organization. It is true that one may be "affiliated with"
the Communist Party through membership in an organization that is
affiliated with the Communist Party,
American Communications
Ass'n v. Douds, supra, 339 U.S. at
339 U. S. 406,
339 U. S. 421,
339 U. S. 450,
but that is not to say one may not do so directly, and every
decision that has considered the meaning of "affiliated with," as
used in § 9(h), has held that one may be directly affiliated with
the Communist Party.
See Mr. Justice Burton's separate
concurring opinion in
Jencks v. United States, supra, 353
U.S. at
353 U. S. 672,
353 U. S. 679;
and
Bryson v. United States, supra, 238 F.2d at 664;
Lohman v. United States, supra, 251 F.2d at 954;
Travis v. United States, supra, 269 F.2d at 942.
In a manner similar to his attack upon the court's instruction
defining membership, petitioner contends that the instruction in
question erroneously defined the phrase "affiliated with" only in
subjective terms, and without objective criteria. However, just as
with regard to membership, affiliation, in relation to Count II in
this case, is necessarily subjective. But the ultimate fact of
affiliation, though subjective, may be proved by evidence of
objective facts and circumstances having a rational tendency to
show, and from which the jury may rationally and logically find,
the ultimate fact of affiliation. It cannot be disputed here that
there was such evidence at the trial. The court's instruction told
the jury that
"[w]hether or not the defendant was affiliated with the
Communist party . . . is a question of fact which you are to
determine from all the evidence in the case,"
and that their determination should be based on the "statements
made or acts done by the accused, and all other facts and
circumstances in evidence. . . ." We think that instruction was
adequate.
Petitioner argues that because the first paragraph of the
instruction stated that affiliation
"means a relationship
Page 368 U. S. 258
short of and less than membership in the Communist Party, but
more than that of mere sympathy for the aims and objectives of the
Communist Party,"
and the third paragraph of the instruction stated that
"affiliation . . . means a relationship which is equivalent or
equal to that of membership in all but name," it was contradictory
and confusing. We agree that the third paragraph appears
inconsistent with the first. However, it is evident that the
erroneous third paragraph could not have prejudiced petitioner, for
it, though inconsistent with the correct first paragraph, exacted a
higher standard of proof of affiliation than the law required.
Petitioner, quite understandably, would require instructions as
specific as mathematical formulas. But such specificity often is
impossible. The phrases "member of" and "affiliated with,"
especially when applied to the relationship between persons and
organizations that conceal their connection, cannot be defined in
absolute terms. The most that is possible, and hence all that can
be expected, is that the trial court shall give the jury a fair
statement of the issues --
i.e., whether petitioner was a
member of or affiliated with the Communist Party on the date of his
affidavit -- give a reasonable definition of the terms and outline
the various criteria, shown in the evidence, which the jury may
consider in determining the ultimate issues. We believe that the
instructions in this case, which are consistent with all the
judicial precedents under § 9(h), adequately met those tests.
Accordingly, the judgment is vacated, and the case is remanded
to the District Court for further proceedings consistent with this
opinion.
It is so ordered.
[
Footnote 1]
Section 9(h), 29 U.S.C. § 159(h), provided in pertinent part
that
"No investigation shall be made by the Board of any question
affecting commerce concerning the representation of employees,
raised by a labor organization under subsection (c) of this
section, and no complaint shall be issued pursuant to a charge made
by a labor organization under subsection (b) of section 160 of this
title, unless there is on file with the Board an affidavit executed
contemporaneously or within the preceding twelvemonth period by
each officer of such labor organization . . . that he is not a
member of the Communist Party or affiliated with such party. . .
."
This section was repealed by Pub.L. 86-257, 86th Cong., 1st
Sess., § 201(d), 73 Stat. 519, 525.
[
Footnote 2]
18 U.S.C. § 1001:
"Whoever, in any matter within the jurisdiction of any
department or agency of the United States, knowingly and willfully
falsifies, conceals or covers up by any trick, scheme, or device a
material fact, or makes any false, fictitious or fraudulent
statements or representations, or makes or uses any false writing
or document knowing the same to contain any false, fictitious or
fraudulent statement or entry, shall be fined not more than $10,000
or imprisoned not more than five years, or both."
[
Footnote 3]
The Solicitor General concedes that the FBI notes of Ondrejka's
oral reports may have come within the meaning of "statement" as
defined by 18 U.S.C. § 3500(e)(2), namely,
"a stenographic . . . recording . . . which is a substantially
verbatim recital of an oral statement made by said witness to an
agent of the Government and recorded contemporaneously with the
making of such oral statement."
[
Footnote 4]
These instruction questions are not likely to be mooted on
remand, because, if a new trial is granted, it is probable, since
the Court of Appeals has already approved them, the District Court
would give the same or similar instructions to the jury on the new
trial, and, if petitioner should be convicted, the same question
would likely be brought here again. If we then disapproved the
instructions, a fourth trial would be necessary. If, on the other
hand, the District Court denies a new trial and enters a new
judgment, it is likely that the Court of Appeals would again
approve these instructions, and that the same questions would be
brought here again.
[
Footnote 5]
The instruction respecting membership was as follows:
"The crucial issue of fact in this case is whether, on December
11, 1952, John Joseph Killian was or was not then a member of the
Communist Party or affiliated with such Party."
"The affidavit does not call upon any person to state whether or
not in the past he has ever been a member of the Communist Party or
affiliated with it. A person who has been at some time in the past
a member of the Communist Party or affiliated with that Party but
who has terminated such membership or affiliation prior to the
making of the affidavit would be entitled to sign the affidavit
under oath without violating the law."
"Since the affidavit speaks in the present tense only, the
fundamental issue of fact for you to decide is whether or not at
the time alleged in the indictment the defendant knowingly and
willfully used an affidavit which was false and which he knew to be
false at that time."
"Whether or not the defendant was a member of the Communist
Party at the time alleged in the indictment is a question of fact
which you are to determine from all of the evidence in the case. In
determining this question, you must bear in mind that the burden of
proof rests on the Government to prove the defendant guilty beyond
a reasonable doubt. Membership or lack of membership in the
Communist Party may be established by direct, as well as
circumstantial, evidence."
"Membership in the Communist Party, the same as membership in
any other organization, constitutes the state of being one of those
persons who belong to or comprise the Communist Party. It connotes
a status of mutuality between the individual and the organization.
That is to say, there must be present the desire on the part of the
individual to belong to the Communist Party and a recognition by
that Party that it considers him as a member."
"Intent is a state mind, and can only be determined by what an
individual says and what he does. In determining the issue as to
whether the defendant was or was not a member of the Communist
Party at the time alleged in the indictment, you may take into
consideration the acts and statements of this defendant, as
disclosed by the evidence, bearing in mind that individual and
unrelated isolated acts of the defendant showing cooperation with
the Communist Party or isolated statements of the defendant showing
sympathy with the Communist Party are not, in themselves,
conclusive evidence of membership, but are circumstances which you
may take into consideration along with all the other evidence in
this case."
"In determining whether or not the defendant was a member of the
Communist Party at the time alleged in the indictment, you may take
into consideration whether the defendant:"
"1. Paid dues or made any financial contributions to the
Communist Party or collected any funds on its behalf;"
"2. Attended Communist Party meetings, classes, conferences, or
any other type of Communist Party gathering;"
"3. Had made himself subject to the discipline of the Communist
Party in any form whatsoever;"
"4. Participated in any recruiting activities on behalf of the
Communist Party;"
"5. Has executed orders, plans or directives of any kind of the
Communist Party;"
"6. Has acted as an agent, messenger, correspondent, organizer,
or in any other capacity in behalf of the Communist Party;"
"7. Has been accepted to his knowledge as an officer or member
of the Communist Party, or as one to be called upon for services by
other officers or members of the Communist Party;"
"8. Has conferred with officers or other members of the
Communist Party in behalf of any plan or enterprise of the
Communist Party;"
"9. Has spoken or in any other way communicated orders,
directives or plans of the Communist Party;"
"10. Has advised, counseled, or in any other way imparted
information, suggestions, or recommendations, to officers or
members of the Communist Party, or to anyone else, in behalf of the
Communist Party;"
"11. Has indicated by word, action, conduct, writing, or in any
other way, a willingness to carry out in any manner and to any
degree the plans, objectives or designs of the Communist
Party;"
"12. Has in any other way participated in the activities,
planning or actions of the Communist Party;"
"These are some of the indicia of Communist Party membership,
but you are not limited solely to those I have enumerated. As sole
arbiters of the facts, it is your duty to consider all the
evidence, either direct or circumstantial, which bears upon the
question of whether or not the defendant was a member of the
Communist Party on the date alleged in the indictment."
"In determining this question, you must bear in mind that the
burden of proof rests upon the Government to prove the defendant
guilty beyond a reasonable doubt. If you find that the Government
has sustained this burden by proving beyond a reasonable doubt that
the defendant was a member of the Communist Party on December 11,
1952, as alleged in the indictment, and if you find also that the
Government has proved beyond a reasonable doubt the other essential
elements of the offense charged in the first count of the
indictment, as I have outlined them to you, then you must find the
defendant guilty as to the first count."
[
Footnote 6]
In
Fisher v. United States, supra, the Court of Appeals
for the Ninth Circuit said:
"Membership is composed of a desire on the part of the person in
question to belong to an organization and acceptance by the
organization. Moreover, certain actions are usually required, such
as paying dues, attending meetings, and doing some of the work of
the group."
231 F.2d at 107.
[
Footnote 7]
In
Lohman v. United States, supra, the Court of Appeals
for the Sixth Circuit, speaking through Judge, now MR. JUSTICE,
STEWART, said:
"Membership should be so defined as to emphasize to the jury the
necessity of finding that the appellant desired to belong to the
Communist Party, and that the Communist Party recognized that it
considered him as a member.
Jencks v. United States, 353
U.S. at
353 U. S. 657,
353 U. S.
679 (concurring opinion);
Fisher v. United
States, 1956, 231 F.2d 99, 106-107;
Travis v. United
States, 247 F.2d 130, 135-136. . . ."
[
Footnote 8]
[
Footnote 9]
In
Travis v. United States, supra, the Court of Appeals
for the Tenth Circuit said of the membership instruction, precisely
like the one here, that
"The instructions were meaningful and clear. They included 11 of
the 14 indicia of membership outlined by Congress in Section 5 of
the Communist Control Act of 1954, and emphasized the primary
element of membership as suggested by Mr. Justice Burton in
Jencks v. United States, 353 U. S. 657, that there must
be present 'the desire of an individual to belong to the
organization and a recognition by the organization that it
considers him as a member.' This adequately outlined the kind of
acts that could be considered evidence of membership and included
the idea of the continuing reciprocal relationship necessary for
that status."
269 F.2d at 942-943.
[
Footnote 10]
Compare the Jencks instruction, 353 U.S. at
353 U. S. 679,
with the 12 numbered paragraphs in note 5.
[
Footnote 11]
In
Hupman v. United States, supra, the Court of Appeals
for the Sixth Circuit said that a very similar instruction was
"fair, [and] substantially covered the crucial questions of law,
with a careful analysis of the elements of the offense charged."
219 F.2d at 249.
[
Footnote 12]
In
Fisher v. United States, supra, the Court of Appeals
for the Ninth Circuit, in dealing with a similar question, said:
"The jury should have been reminded of the components of the term
membership, rather than be supplied with synonyms." 231 F.2d at
107.
[
Footnote 13]
The instruction respecting affiliation was as follows:
"The verb 'affiliated,' as used in the Second Count of the
indictment, means a relationship short of and less than membership
in the Communist Party, but more than that of mere sympathy for the
aims and objectives of the Communist Party."
"A person may be found to be 'affiliated' with an organization,
even though not a member, when there is shown to be a close working
alliance or association between him and the organization, together
with a mutual understanding or recognition that the organization
can rely and depend upon him to cooperate with it, and to work for
its benefit, for an indefinite future period upon a fairly
permanent basis."
"Briefly stated, affiliation, as charged in the Second Count of
the indictment, means a relationship which is equivalent or equal
to that of membership in all but name."
"Whether or not the defendant was affiliated with the Communist
Party at the time alleged in the indictment is a question of fact
which you are to determine from all the evidence in the case.
Affiliation or lack of affiliation in the Communist Party may be
established by direct, as well as circumstantial, evidence."
"In determining the issue as to whether the defendant was or was
not affiliated with the Communist Party at the time alleged in the
indictment, you may take into consideration any statements made or
acts done by the accused, and all other facts and circumstances in
evidence which may aid determination of the issue."
[
Footnote 14]
Compare United States ex rel. Kettunen v. Reimer, 79
F.2d 315 (C.A.2d Cir.),
and Bridges v. Wixon, 326 U.
S. 135, defining the term affiliation, but as used in
the deportation statutes.
MR. JUSTICE BLACK, dissenting.
As a prerequisite to his union's right to seek relief from
unfair labor practices before the National Labor Relations Board,
petitioner was compelled to subscribe to an oath
Page 368 U. S. 259
which stated: (1) "I am not a member of the Communist Party or
affiliated with such Party;" and (2) "I do not believe in, and I am
not a member of nor do I support any organization that believes in
or teaches, the overthrow of the United States Government by force
or by any illegal or unconstitutional methods." The Government now
claims that, in submitting to this compulsion, petitioner made
false statements as to his membership in and affiliation with the
Communist Party, and, on the basis of these allegedly false
statements, it seeks to send petitioner to prison. I agree with MR.
JUSTICE DOUGLAS that, if the Government is to be allowed to do this
sort of thing at all, it should only be upon a showing that
petitioner was a member who engaged in illegal activities in
connection with his Communist Party membership. But I wish also to
reiterate my own belief that our Constitution, properly interpreted
and applied, would prohibit this prosecution completely --
regardless of the nature of petitioner's connection with the
Communist Party. I think the Constitution absolutely prohibits the
Government from sending people to jail for "crimes" that arise out
of, and indeed are manufactured out of, the imposition of test
oaths that invade the freedoms of belief and political association
-- freedoms which the Founders of our Nation recognized as
indispensable to a democratic society.
The test oath is an historic weapon against religious and
political minorities, but the fact that this practice has survived
the centuries surely cannot be pointed to either as a source of
pride or, in my judgment, as evidence that the practice is
constitutional. Quite the contrary, I think that history shows test
oaths to be one of the most generally and continuously hated and
dangerous forms of governmental intrusion upon individual freedom
that liberty-loving people have had to contend with. It was
squarely in the face of this history of almost universal
condemnation that this Court, in
American
Communications
Page 368 U. S. 260
Ass'n v. Douds, 339 U. S. 382,
upheld the test oath requirement upon which this prosecution is
based, resting its decision upon the ground that, however obnoxious
test oaths may be, they must be endured in the interest of
interstate commerce. Eleven years have elapsed since that decision,
and I think it is fair to say that this recent experience with test
oaths in this country has done nothing to change the evil
reputation they gained throughout previous centuries in other
countries. The question before us now is thus no different from
that originally presented to us in
Douds: can Congress, in
the name of regulation of interstate commerce, circumvent the
history, language and purpose of our Bill of Rights and impose test
oaths designed to penalize political or religious minorities? I
would overrule the decision in
Douds and order this
prosecution dismissed. As I said there,
"Whether religious, political, or both, test oaths are
implacable foes of free thought. By approving their imposition,
this Court has injected compromise into a field where the First
Amendment forbids compromise."
Id. at
339 U. S.
448.
MR. JUSTICE DOUGLAS has asked me to add the following:
"I deduce from what the Court does today that the
Douds
decision was good for one Monday only, and that it is being
overruled
sub silentio on the point now in issue. I did
not participate in the
Douds decision, as I was
necessarily absent when it was argued. I would, however, be content
to decide this case within the framework which the
Douds
case established. Yet, since the
Douds decision is now
apparently discarded on the point in issue, and since we face anew
the precise question it tendered, I see no constitutional answer to
the opinions of MR. JUSTICE BLACK in that case and in the present
one that Congress has no power to exact from people affirmations or
affidavits of belief, apart from the accepted form of oath of
office demanded of all officials. "
Page 368 U. S. 261
MR. JUSTICE DOUGLAS, with whom THE CHIEF JUSTICE and MR. JUSTICE
BLACK concur, dissenting.
This is a prosecution under 18 U.S.C. § 1001, which penalizes
the making of false statements on a matter within the jurisdiction
of a federal agency. The false statements charged in the indictment
involve 29 U.S.C. § 159(h), which is § 9(h) of the National Labor
Relations Act -- the provision that required [
Footnote 2/1] the filing of the so-called non-communist
affidavit before the National Labor Relations Board could entertain
petitions of a union.
See Leedom v. International Union,
352 U. S. 145. One
count charged that petitioner's affidavit, filed under § 9(h), that
he was not "a member of the Communist Party" was false. A second
count charged that the affidavit was also false in averring he was
not "affiliated" with that party. After a jury trial, petitioner
was convicted under both counts and sentenced to terms that run
concurrently.
An instruction, offered by defendant and refused by the Court,
reads as follows:
"Whether intermittent or repeated, the act or acts tending to
prove membership and that both the defendant and the communist
party intended such a relationship to exist on December 11, 1952,
must be of that quality which indicates an adherence to or a
furtherance of the illegal purposes or objectives of the communist
party, as distinguished from mere cooperation with it in lawful
activities. The act or acts must evidence a working alliance to
bring the illegal program to fruition. Unless there is evidence
which convinces you beyond a reasonable doubt of some illegal
purpose or objective of the communist party on December 11, 1952,
and that the relationship
Page 368 U. S. 262
between the defendant and the communist party on and after this
date was a relationship based on the illegal purpose or objective,
you must acquit the defendant on Count I of the indictment."
I do not see how denial of this instruction was consistent with
the Court's decision in
Communications Ass'n v. Douds,
339 U. S. 382. In
that case, as in the present one, the Court dealt with the
constitutionality of the "Affidavit of Noncommunist Union Officer."
The affidavit now, as then, reads as follows:
"The undersigned, being duly sworn, deposes and says:"
"1. I am a responsible officer of the union named below."
"2. I am not a member of the Communist Party or affiliated with
such party."
"3. I do not believe in, and I am not a member of nor do I
support any organization that believes in or teaches, the overthrow
of the United States Government by force or by any illegal or
unconstitutional methods."
It was this affidavit that petitioner executed.
In
Douds, the Court sustained the constitutionality of
the required affidavit by tailoring it to exclude membership that
did not include belief in the overthrow of the government by force
or other illegal or unconstitutional means. Chief Justice Vinson
said for the Court:
"We hold, therefore, that the belief identified in § 9(h) is a
belief in the objective of overthrow by force or by any illegal or
unconstitutional methods of the Government of the United States as
it now exists under the Constitution and laws thereof."
339 U. S. 339 U.S.
382,
339 U. S.
407-408.
Page 368 U. S. 263
MR. JUSTICE FRANKFURTER, who joined the Court's opinion, filed a
separate opinion in which he pinpointed one of the objections
running to the broad definition now, as well as then, given the
term "member":
"I cannot deem it within the rightful authority of Congress to
probe into opinions that involve only an argumentative
demonstration of some coincidental parallelism of belief with some
of the beliefs of those who direct the policy of the Communist
Party, though without any allegiance to it. To require oaths as to
matters that open up such possibilities invades the inner life of
men whose compassionate thought or doctrinaire hopes may be as far
removed from any dangerous kinship with the Communist creed as were
those of the founders of the present orthodox political parties in
this country."
"The offensive provisions of § 9(h) leave unaffected, however,
the valid portions of the section. In § 16, Congress has made
express provision for such severance. Since the judgments below
were based in part on what I deem unconstitutional requirements, I
cannot affirm, but would remand to give opportunity to obey merely
the valid portions of § 9(h)."
339 U. S. 339 U.S.
382,
339 U. S.
422.
Beliefs are as much in issue here as they were in the
Douds case. If that case means anything, it means that one
who was a member only to promote a lawful cause of the party should
not be subjected to the legal odium that attaches to full-fledged
members. The fact that one believes in peace, disarmament, a ban on
nuclear testing, or the disbandment of NATO may put him out of step
with the majority. But unless we toss to the winds the tolerance
which a Free Society shows for unorthodox, as well as orthodox,
views, the fact that a person embraces lawful views of the party
should not establish that he is
Page 368 U. S. 264
a "member" of the party within the meaning of the Act.
Membership, as that word is used in the Act, should be proved by
facts which tie the accused to the illegal aims of the party. If
beliefs are used to condemn the individual, we have ourselves gone
a long way down the totalitarian path.
Killian's association with the party appears to have been
restricted to lawful purposes: he was against this country's
policies in Indo-China; he was for the recognition of Red China; he
was against colonialism; he was against war; he urged people to
subscribe to The Daily Worker. He attended party meetings, promoted
a united front, discussed current political events, recruited
Negroes for party membership, and the like. If his attendance at
the meetings was for an illegal purpose, I have failed to find it
in the record. I find no evidence that Killian used his affiliation
with the party to promote immediately, or even at long range, the
overthrow of the government. I find no evidence that he organized
violence, promoted sabotage, collected arms, or spied for a foreign
power. If he lied in his affidavit, he lied about his beliefs. But
insofar as the record shows, he had a right to promote those
beliefs alone or in association with others. All the beliefs I find
espoused by Killian in this record were protected by the First
Amendment. He had a right to advocate them alone or in conjunction
with others. [
Footnote 2/2] Some
causes
Page 368 U. S. 265
espoused by the Communist Party may be wholly lawful. Such was
the case in
De Jonge v. Oregon, 299 U.
S. 353, where speeches were made "against illegal raids
on workers' halls and homes and against the shooting of striking
longshoremen" by the police and "against conditions in the county
jail,"
id. at
299 U. S. 359.
That "peaceable assembly" and that "lawful public discussion"
(
id. at
299 U. S. 365)
were held not subject to punishment, even though the meeting was
under the auspices of an organization that might have been
prosecuted for other activities. If the
De Jonge case
means anything, it means there must be a separation of the lawful
from the unlawful activities of a party when a "member" is summoned
to account for his actions.
In varied situations, this Court has refused to bring down on
people heavy penalties for being a "Communist" or for being
"affiliated" with that party where the acts to prove it were
intrinsically innocent.
The Court took that view in cases under the Smith Act.
Scales v. United States, 367 U. S. 203,
367 U. S.
222:
"We decline to attribute to Congress a purpose to punish nominal
membership, even though accompanied by 'knowledge' and 'intent,'
not merely because of the close constitutional questions that such
a purpose would raise . . . , but also for two other reasons: it is
not to be lightly inferred that Congress intended to visit upon
mere passive members
Page 368 U. S. 266
the heavy penalties imposed by the Smith Act. Nor can we assume
that it was Congress' purpose to allow the quality of the
punishable membership to be measured solely by the varying
standards of that relationship as subjectively viewed by different
organizations. It is more reasonable to believe that Congress
contemplated an objective standard fixed by the law itself, thereby
assuring an evenhanded application of the statute."
In light of the
Scales decision and the prior decision
in
Yates v. United States, 354 U.
S. 298, it is difficult to see why, if membership is to
be punished, a different standard should be applied here from that
applied in the Smith Act. The constitutional overtones are as
pronounced here as they were in
Yates and
Scales.
Attributing to Congress a purpose to impose punitive measures "upon
mere passive members" is as unwarranted here as in those other
situations. We should say here what was said in
Scales,
supra, pp.
367 U. S.
229-230:
"The clause does not make criminal all association with an
organization, which has been shown to engage in illegal advocacy.
There must be clear proof that a defendant 'specifically intend[s]
to accomplish [the aims of the organization] by resort to
violence.'
Noto v. United States, post, p.
367 U. S.
290. Thus, the member for whom the organization is a
vehicle for the advancement of legitimate aims and policies does
not fall within the ban of the statute: he lacks the requisite
specific intent 'to bring about the overthrow of the government as
speedily as circumstances would permit.' Such a person may be
foolish, deluded, or perhaps merely optimistic, but he is not by
this statute made a criminal."
Cf. Rowoldt v. Perfetto, 355 U.
S. 115. To convict petitioner for membership linked only
to the lawful objectives of the party is inconsistent with the
Page 368 U. S. 267
holding in the
De Jonge case, with what the Court did
in
Yates and
Scales, and with the definition of
"member" spelled out with particularity in the
Douds
case.
It may be that a jury, on this record, could find that
petitioner was a member who adhered to the illegal purposes of the
Communist Party. But unless the issues are so restricted, beliefs
that were held in the
Douds case to be immune from the
Government's inquiry now become elements of a crime.
[
Footnote 2/1]
It was repealed by the Act of September 14, 1959, 73 Stat. 519,
525.
[
Footnote 2/2]
"It is altogether impossible to reason from the opinions which a
man professes to his feelings and his actions; and, in fact, no
person is ever such a fool as to reason thus, except when he wants
a pretext for persecuting his neighbours. A Christian is commanded,
under the strongest sanctions, to be just in all his dealings. Yet
to how many of the twenty-four millions of professing Christians in
these islands would any man in his senses lend a thousand pounds
without security? A man who should act, for one day, on the
supposition that all the people about him were influenced by the
religion which they profess would find himself ruined before night;
and no man ever does act on that supposition in any of the ordinary
concerns of life, in borrowing, in lending, in buying, or in
selling. But when any of our fellow creatures are to be oppressed,
the case is different. Then we represent those motives which we
know to be so feeble for good as omnipotent for evil. Then we lay
to the charge of our victims all the vices and follies to which
their doctrines, however remotely, seem to tend. We forget that the
same weakness, the same laxity, the same disposition to prefer the
present to the future, which make men worse than a good religion,
make them better than a bad one."
Macaulay's Essays (N.Y.1869), p. 668.
MR. JUSTICE BRENNAN, dissenting.
I dissent because I think the instructions to the jury on the
crucial definitions of membership and affiliation were fatally
defective in light of our decision 12 years ago in
American
Communications Ass'n v. Douds, 339 U.
S. 382. The trial judge refused to give the following
instruction requested by the petitioner:
"The communist party, like other voluntary organizations, sets
forth conditions which a person must accept in order to become and
remain a member. The burden is on the prosecution to prove beyond a
reasonable doubt what the conditions for such membership were on
the date in question, whether found in its constitution or
elsewhere, and that the defendant accepted these conditions.
[
Footnote 3/1]"
In my view, such an instruction was required under our decision
in
Douds, and it was error to refuse it.
I
Douds sustained § 9(h) against constitutional
challenge. Its constitutionality was sustained not, as here, within
the limited framework of a perjury prosecution,
Page 368 U. S. 268
but rather in the large -- against the broadside challenges
arising from denials of recourse to the processes of the National
Labor Relations Board to unions whose officers refused to execute
the required affidavits. In that context, an interpretation of
"member" clearly emerges from the
Douds decision. Yet, in
this case, which squarely presents an issue as to the correctness
of an instruction on the meaning of "member" as used in § 9(h), the
majority makes not a single reference to that interpretation, which
is at war with the majority's holding here.
Only six members of the Court participated in
Douds.
Chief Justice Vinson wrote an opinion for himself and Justices Reed
and Burton. MR. JUSTICE FRANKFURTER wrote a separate opinion but,
as regards the issue immediately to be discussed, Chief Justice
Vinson also spoke for him.
The opinion of Chief Justice Vinson is partially a bifurcated
one, distinguishing the clause forswearing membership in or
affiliation with the Communist Party, [
Footnote 3/2] which this case implicates, from the
"belief" clause [
Footnote 3/3]
under which the Government does not here charge the petitioner with
false swearing.
As to the "membership" portion of the oath, the opinion of the
Chief Justice held for the majority of the participating Justices
that Congress could validly impute to the Communist Party an
institutional predilection for political strikes, and could
reasonably act on the assumption that members of the Party or its
affiliates would partake of that predisposition. As the Chief
Justice's opinion saw it, the crucial issue as to this part of the
oath was whether, granting the permissibility of the
assumptions,
Page 368 U. S. 269
§ 9(h) incorporated an allowable mode of regulation in view of
its undoubted inhibiting effect upon participation in legitimate
party activities within the ambit of the First Amendment. The
opinion held for constitutionality, concluding that the public
interest in preventing political strikes justified the tangential
interference with legitimate activity. No definitional problem
respecting "member" or "affiliate" was considered in this
context.
Coming to the "belief" clause, however, the Chief Justice found
it necessary to construe that portion of the oath as referring to
belief in violent overthrow "as an objective, not merely a
prophecy." [
Footnote 3/4] His view
was that the clause, assisted by this gloss, presented no different
problem from that already discussed in connection with membership,
with one exception which is crucial for our purposes. The special
problem which the Chief Justice perceived was one of proof:
"Insofar as a distinction between beliefs and political
affiliations is based upon absence of any 'overt act' in the former
case, it is relevant, if at all, in connection with problems of
proof.
In proving that one swore falsely that he is not a
Communist, the act of joining the Party is crucial. Proof that
one lied in swearing that he does not believe in overthrow of the
Government by force, on the other hand, must consist in proof of
his mental state. To that extent, they differ."
"To state the difference, however, is but to recognize that,
while objective facts may be proved directly, the state of a man's
mind must be inferred from the things he says or does. Of course,
we agree that the courts cannot 'ascertain the thought that has had
no outward manifestation.' But courts and juries every day pass
upon knowledge, belief and intent -- the state of men's minds --
having before them no more
Page 368 U. S. 270
than evidence of their words and conduct, from which, in
ordinary human experience, mental condition may be inferred. . . .
False swearing in signing the affidavit must, as in other cases
where mental state is in issue, be proved by the outward
manifestations of state of mind. In the absence of such
manifestations, which are as much 'overt acts' as the act of
joining the Communist Party, there can be no successful prosecution
for false swearing. [
Footnote
3/5]"
It was, of course, obvious to the Court in
Douds that
the belief portion of the oath referred to a subjective phenomenon
-- the affiant's internal attachment to the goal of violent
overthrow -- which would have to be provable wholly through his
statements and writings -- "the outward manifestations of state of
mind." But it is equally obvious that the
Douds Court had
no notion that membership could be taken as signifying a subjective
relationship of mutuality, provable by actions not particularly
bespeaking an externally manifested tie. For it is clear beyond
cavil that, to the Court in
Douds, a conviction under the
membership clause required evidence from which could be inferred
the existence, beyond a reasonable doubt, of an "objective fact" --
"the act of joining the Party." That this is so only becomes more
apparent from examination of the separate opinions of JUSTICES
FRANKFURTER [
Footnote 3/6] and
Jackson. [
Footnote 3/7] It is
evident that the five
Page 368 U. S. 271
Justices who sustained the membership clause considered
membership to involve an externally manifested act or acts of
association and admission, understood as such by the Party and by
the member. This is the "
Douds sense" of membership to
which I subsequently refer.
Accordingly, since the Court today authorizes an instruction
which permits a jury to convict of false swearing as to membership,
conceived as a purely subjective phenomenon, without the jury's
having had to conclude that membership in the
Douds sense
existed, it goes beyond
Douds and repudiates a critical
assumption of that decision. [
Footnote
3/8]
Page 368 U. S. 272
II
The district judge's instruction concerning membership is most
effectively dealt with by considering, first, his definition of
"membership," and, second, his enumeration of facts by which
membership so defined could be proven.
The entire definition of membership was this:
"Membership in the Communist Party, the same as membership in
any other organization, constitutes the state of being one of those
persons who belong to or comprise the Communist Party. It connotes
a status of mutuality between the individual and the organization.
That is to say, there must be present the desire on the part of the
individual to belong to the Communist Party, and a recognition by
that Party that it considers him as a member."
All must agree that it is in the third sentence alone that the
definition resides; for the first sentence is mere tautology, while
the second is far too vague to be of any help whatever. The most
striking thing about the third sentence is that, although it is
ambiguous, standing alone,
Page 368 U. S. 273
it might possibly be thought consistent with
Douds.
[
Footnote 3/9] "Recognition" by the
Party that it "considers" one to be a member might suggest the
objective manifestation of acceptance -- the externalized
establishment of the tie -- which
Douds conceived to be
necessary to the relationship. The additional element of "desire on
the part of the individual to belong" would simply except from
"membership" a formal association entered into unwittingly or on
account of duress. [
Footnote
3/10] But, if the definition of membership in question does
omit the
Douds element of objective, outward alliance --
as I believe it does, in light of the instructions which followed
-- then its application in this case raises a grave question of
fair warning.
Douds was decided on May 8, 1950. Two and one-half
years later, on December 11, 1952, Killian swore that he was not a
member of the Communist Party. Why he should have supposed that he
was disavowing anything except objectively manifested
Douds-sense membership -- the most natural meaning to
impute to the oath, and the one explicitly assumed by the Court in
upholding the constitutionality of its exaction -- I cannot
imagine. To convict him of perjury now, on the assumption that
membership may exist without externalized application to and
acceptance into the organization, is to trap petitioner in the
backlash of an unpredicatable shift in construction.
III
For the reasons above stated, I conclude that the district
judge's definition of "membership" could have been correct only if
it meant, and reasonably must have been
Page 368 U. S. 274
taken to mean, that some objective act of joining and acceptance
is a requisite element. The judge did not rest with his definition
of membership, but went on to instruct the jury what evidence it
could consider in determining the membership issue. I do not reach
the question whether the evidence in this case was sufficient to
convict under a proper instruction. It is not necessary to hold
that direct proof of the act of joining is required, in order to
conclude that, because so many of the matters enumerated by the
judge are devoid of any rational tendency to show membership in the
Douds sense, the conviction must be reversed. The effect
of this part of the instruction was either to authorize the jury to
consider evidence not relevant to membership as properly defined,
or to lead it into thinking that it might convict although it never
found membership in the
Douds sense. [
Footnote 3/11]
Among the indicia of membership which the jury was authorized to
consider were the following:
"(a) Whether the petitioner 'paid dues
or made any financial
contributions to the Communist Party or collected any funds on
its behalf.'"
"(b) Whether the petitioner 'attended Communist Party meetings,
classes, conferences, or any other type of Communist Party
gathering.'"
"(c) Whether petitioner 'has been accepted to his knowledge as
an officer or member of the Communist Party,
or as one to be
called upon for services by other officers or members of the
Communist Party.'"
"(d) Whether petitioner '
has conferred with officers or
other members behalf of any plan or enterprise of in
Page 368 U. S. 275
behalf of any plan or enterprise of the Communist
Party.'"
"(e) Whether petitioner '
has advised, counseled, or in any
other way imparted information, suggestions, or recommendations, to
officers or members of the Communist Party, or to anyone else, in
behalf of the Communist Party.'"
"(f) Whether petitioner '
has spoken or in any other way
communicated orders, directives or plans of the Communist
Party.' (Emphasis added.)"
Surely the enumerated italicized indicia are too free-wheeling
and open-ended to be permissible descriptions of factual phenomena
from which the existence of membership in anything resembling the
Douds sense might be inferred. And the error was
compounded; for the jury were instructed that they might consider
whether the petitioner
"has indicated by word, action, conduct, writing, or in any
other way, a willingness to carry out in any manner and to any
degree the plans, objectives or designs of the Communist
Party;"
or whether he "has in any other way participated in the
activities, planning or actions of the Communist Party." Surely it
cannot be said that such indicia are probative of membership in any
sense of that term which could justify a legislative assumption
that membership, so defined, imported a dangerous possibility of
resort to political strikes -- the very premise of
constitutionality in Douds.
To sum up: either the enumerated factual matters recommended to
the jury's consideration by the instruction were in significant
measure irrelevant or they betokened a definition of membership
which so radically departs from our own previous understanding that
(a) the constitutionality of § 9(h) should be reconsidered in its
light, and (b) it is grossly unfair to convict Killian of perjury
on the basis of this new definition which he cannot be held to have
foreseen, swearing, as he did, but
Page 368 U. S. 276
two and one-half years after the
Douds decision was
announced. The District Court should have drafted an instruction
which would have required the jury -- in order to return a
conviction -- to have concluded that Killian was a member in the
Douds sense. This it clearly failed to do. I therefore
think that the conviction on Count I must be reversed.
IV
I think that the same fatal defects inhere in the instruction on
"affiliation." My Brother FRANKFURTER, in
Douds, expressed
the view that, to avoid questions of unconstitutionality,
affiliation should be construed in § 9(h) as limited to proof of
actual membership "in an organization that is in fact a controlled
cover for [the Communist] . . . Party," [
Footnote 3/12] and all who joined the Chief Justice's
opinion manifested their understanding that this was what
affiliation meant. [
Footnote
3/13] No instruction in this form was given. However, unlike
the case as to "membership," no instruction embodying the
Douds definition of "affiliation" was requested, nor did
petitioner's counsel in objecting to the instruction rely on the
Douds interpretation. I, therefore, can see no basis for a
reversal of the conviction under Count II. Fed.Rules Crim.Proc.
30.
V
Since my views have not prevailed as regards the instructions
and the instructions actually given have been sustained, I must say
a word as to the Court's disposition of the
Jencks issue.
I agree with the disposition which remands the cause to the
District Court for a hearing confined to the issues raised by the
Solicitor General's representations.
See Campbell v. United
States, 365 U. S. 85. I
also agree that, if the trial court finds that the information
Page 368 U. S. 277
contained on the two Ondrejka receipts had already been given to
petitioner in other statements of Ondrejka earlier turned over to
petitioner, the District Court could find that the error in failing
to produce those two receipts was harmless.
Rosenberg v. United
States, 360 U. S. 367,
360 U. S. 377,
footnote (dissenting opinion). But if the information on the
receipts has not been given to petitioner in other statements of
Ondrejka, I think the district judge must order a new trial for the
reasons stated in my dissent in
Rosenberg v. United
States, 360 U. S. 367,
360 U. S.
373.
[
Footnote 3/1]
This is the third paragraph of Defendant's Proposed Instruction
No. 16-17, found at pp. 606-608 of the trial transcript on file
with the Clerk.
[
Footnote 3/2]
I.e., "that he is not a member of the Communist Party
or affiliated with such party."
[
Footnote 3/3]
I.e.,
"that he does not believe in, and is not a member of or supports
any organization that believes in or teaches, the overthrow of the
United States Government by force or by any illegal or
unconstitutional methods."
[
Footnote 3/4]
339 U.S. at
339 U. S.
407.
[
Footnote 3/5]
Id. at
339 U. S.
410-411. (Emphasis added.)
[
Footnote 3/6]
My Brother FRANKFURTER joined in the opinion of the Chief
Justice as it related to the membership portion of the oath. He
agreed that the membership clause was constitutional, and that the
belief clause would have been constitutional had it been
susceptible of the gloss endowed by the Chief Justice. His
understanding of the meanings to be attributed to "member" and
"affiliate" clearly emerges from the following, read in light of
his holding that the membership clause is constitutional:
"If I possibly could, to avoid questions of unconstitutionality,
I would construe the requirements of § 9(h) to be restricted to
disavowal of
actual membership in the Communist Party, or
in an organization that is in fact a controlled cover for that
Party or of active belief, as a matter of present policy, in the
overthrow of the Government of the United States by force."
339 U.S. at
339 U. S.
421-422. (Emphasis added.)
[
Footnote 3/7]
To Mr. Justice Jackson, writing separately, the belief portion
of the oath appeared unconstitutional. He agreed that the
membership clause could withstand attack, but only because of
certain peculiar characteristics he discerned in the Communist
Party and in the condition of membership in it. Underlying his
holding was the proposition that the Communist Party was a
foreign-controlled organization dedicated to the seizure of power
by force; but the final, and crucial, link in the chain of
reasoning was his characterization of membership in the party:
"Membership in the Communist Party is totally different [from
membership in other political parties]. The Party is a secret
conclave. Members are admitted only upon acceptance as reliable and
after indoctrination in its policies, to which the member is fully
committed. They are provided with cards or credentials, usually
issued under false names so that the identification can only be
made by officers of the Party who hold the code. Moreover, each
pledges unconditional obedience to party authority."
Id. at
339 U. S.
432.
It was the forswearing of this type of membership -- and no
other -- which Mr. Justice Jackson held that Congress
constitutionally could require.
[
Footnote 3/8]
Since
Douds can be authority for the constitutionality
of the membership clause of § 9(h) only with respect to the Court's
clear understanding there of the meaning of "member," today's
approval of a substantially altered definition appears to make
necessary a new piece of constitutional adjudication. To put it
another way, there is implicit in the majority's opinion -- though
unspoken -- a holding that § 9(h) is constitutional with the
definition of membership which omits the
Douds
requirement. Because I think that the trial judge's erroneous
instruction itself required reversal, I express no view on this
constitutional question. Nor is this a matter without real
significance. The
Douds Court found "delicate and
difficult," 339 U.S. at
339 U. S. 400,
the problem whether membership in the narrow sense there used
sufficiently justified an inference of the likelihood of political
strikes to warrant the resulting inhibition of protected activity.
To substitute for the narrow definition of membership a concept the
existence of which is provable by the acts enumerated by the
district judge,
see infra, pp.
368 U. S.
274-275, quite clearly creates the need for a fresh
exercise of judgment.
[
Footnote 3/9]
For this reason, I do not understand that the brief suggestion
of three members of the Court in
Jencks, 353 U.S. at
353 U. S. 679,
that membership be defined in language similar to that of the third
sentence, lends any support to today's new holding that membership
may be conceived for our purposes as a strictly subjective
phenomenon.
[
Footnote 3/10]
Compare Rowoldt v. Perfetto, 355 U.
S. 115.
[
Footnote 3/11]
The effect of the enumerated indicia surely was not sufficiently
dispelled by the halting admonition that
"
individual and
unrelated isolated acts of the
defendant showing cooperation with the Communist Party or
isolated statements of the defendant showing sympathy with
the Communist Party are not, in themselves, conclusive evidence of
membership. . . ."
Transcript, 705. (Emphasis added.)
[
Footnote 3/12]
339 U.S. at
339 U. S.
421.
[
Footnote 3/13]
Id. at
339 U. S.
406.