Alleging noncompliance with Alabama's corporate registration and
business qualification laws, the State in 1956 brought ouster
proceedings against the petitioner, National Association for the
Advancement of Colored People (NAACP), a New York membership
corporation with an office in Alabama and doing business there, and
it was barred under an
ex parte restraining order from
operating in the State. Before any hearing on the merits, a
contempt judgment, which the State Supreme Court on procedural
grounds refused to review, was rendered against the NAACP for
failure to produce its membership lists and other records under
court order. Without reaching the validity of the underlying
restraining order, this Court reversed, and, following
reinstatement by the State Supreme Court of the contempt judgment,
reversed again. In 1960, the NAACP, still prohibited from operating
in Alabama, sued in a federal court alleging failure by the Alabama
courts to afford it a hearing on the merits. The case reached this
Court a third time, and, in 1961, was remanded with instructions
that the Federal District Court be directed to try the case on the
merits unless the State did so by a certain time. The State Circuit
Court then heard the case; found that the NAACP had violated the
State's constitution and laws; and permanently enjoined it from
doing business in the State. The State Supreme Court affirmed,
solely on the basis of a procedural rule, which it applied to the
NAACP's brief, that where unrelated assignments of error are argued
together and one is without merit, the others will not be
considered.
Held:
1. There was substantial compliance with the procedural rule,
and failure to consider petitioner's asserted constitutional rights
was wholly unwarranted. Pp.
377 U. S.
293-302.
2. In view of what has gone before, this Court is deciding the
case on its merits, rather than remanding it to the State Supreme
Court for that purpose. P.
377 U. S. 302.
Page 377 U. S. 289
3. Alabama's corporate registration requirements are to ensure
amenability of foreign corporations to suit in state courts, and do
not provide for a corporation's permanent ouster for failure to
register or because it engaged in other activities, which, in any
event, furnished no proper basis for excluding the petitioner from
Alabama. Pp.
377 U. S.
302-310.
4. This case does not involve the privilege of a corporation to
do "business" in a State; it involves the freedom of individuals to
associate for the collective advocacy of ideas. P.
377 U. S.
309.
5. While this Court has power to formulate a decree for entry in
the state courts, as held in
Martin v. Hunter's
Lessee, 1 Wheat. 304, the case is remanded to the
State Supreme Court for prompt entry of a decree vacating the
permanent injunction order against petitioner and permitting it to
operate in the State, failing which the NAACP may apply to this
Court for further appropriate relief. P.
377 U. S.
310.
274 Ala. 544,
150
So. 2d 677, reversed and remanded.
MR. JUSTICE HARLAN, delivered the opinion of the Court.
This case, involving the right of the petitioner, the National
Association for the Advancement of Colored People, to carry on
activities in Alabama, reaches this Court for the fourth time. In
1956, the Attorney General of Alabama brought a suit in equity to
oust the association, a New York "membership" corporation, from the
State. The basis of the proceeding was the Association's alleged
failure to comply with Alabama statutes requiring foreign
corporations to register with the Alabama Secretary of State and
perform other acts in order to
Page 377 U. S. 290
qualify to do business in the State; [
Footnote 1] the complaint alleged also that certain of
the petitioner's activities in Alabama, detailed below, were
inimical to the wellbeing of citizens of the State.
On the day the complaint was filed, the Attorney General
obtained an
ex parte restraining order barring the
Association,
pendente lite, from conducting any business
within the State and from taking any steps to qualify to do
business under state law. Before the case was heard on the merits,
the Association was adjudged in contempt for failing to comply with
a court order directing it to produce various records, including
membership lists. The Supreme Court of Alabama dismissed a petition
for certiorari to review the final judgment of contempt on
procedural grounds, 265 Ala. 349,
91 So. 2d
214, which this Court, on review, found inadequate to bar
consideration of the Association's constitutional claims.
NAACP
v. Alabama ex rel. Patterson, 357 U.
S. 449. Upholding those claims, we reversed the judgment
of contempt without reaching the question of the validity of the
underlying restraining order.
In the second round of these proceedings, the Supreme Court of
Alabama, on remand "for proceedings not inconsistent" with this
Court's opinion, 357 U.S. at
357 U. S. 467,
again affirmed the judgment of contempt which this Court had
overturned. 268 Ala. 531,
109 So. 2d
138. This decision was grounded on belief that this Court's
judgment had rested on a "mistaken premise."
Id., 268 Ala.
at 532, 109 So. 2d at 139. Observing that the premise of our prior
decision had been one which the State had "plainly accepted"
throughout the prior proceedings here, this Court ruled that the
State could not, for the first time on remand, change its stance.
360 U. S. 240,
360 U. S. 243.
We noted that the Supreme Court of Alabama "evidently was not
acquainted
Page 377 U. S. 291
with the detailed basis of the proceedings here" when it
reaffirmed the judgment of contempt,
id. at
360 U. S.
243-244, and again remanded without considering the
validity of the restraining order. In so doing, the Court said:
"We assume that the State Supreme Court . . . will not fail to
proceed promptly with the disposition of the matters left open
under our mandate for further proceedings. . . ."
rendered in the prior case.
Id. at
360 U. S.
245.
Our second decision was announced on June 8, 1959. Unable to
obtain a hearing on the merits in the Alabama courts, the
Association, in June, 1960, commenced proceedings in the United
States District Court to obtain a hearing there. Alleging that the
restraining order and the failure of the Alabama courts to afford
it a hearing on the validity of the order were depriving it of
constitutional rights, the Association sought to enjoin enforcement
of the order. Without passing on the merits, the District Court
dismissed the action, because it would not assume that the
executive and judicial officers of Alabama involved in the
litigation would fail to protect "the constitutional rights of all
citizens."
NAACP v. Gallion, 190 F.
Supp. 583, 586. The Court of Appeals agreed that the matter
"should be litigated initially in the courts of the State." 290
F.2d 337, 343. It, however, vacated the judgment below and remanded
the case to the District Court with instructions "to permit the
issues presented to be determined with expedition in the State
courts," but to retain jurisdiction and take steps necessary to
protect the Association's right to be heard on its constitutional
claims.
Ibid.
The jurisdiction of this Court was invoked a third time. On
October 23, 1961, we entered an order as follows:
". . . The judgment below is vacated, and the case is remanded
to the Court of Appeals with instructions to direct the District
Court to proceed
Page 377 U. S. 292
with the trial of the issues in this action unless within a
reasonable time, no later than January 2, 1962, the State of
Alabama shall have accorded to petitioner an opportunity to be
heard on its motion to dissolve the state restraining order of June
1, 1956, and upon the merits of the action in which such order was
issued. Pending the final determination of all proceedings in the
state action, the District Court is authorized to retain
jurisdiction over the federal action and to take such steps as may
appear necessary and appropriate to assure a prompt disposition of
all issues involved in, or connected with, the state action. . .
."
368 U.S.
16-17.
In December, 1961, more than five years after it was
"temporarily" ousted from Alabama, the Association obtained a
hearing on the merits in the Circuit Court of Montgomery County,
the court which had issued the restraining order in 1956. On
December 29, 1961, [
Footnote 2]
the Circuit Court entered a final decree in which the court found
that the Association had continued to do business in Alabama "in
violation of the Constitution and laws of the State relating to
foreign corporations," and that the Association's activities in the
State were
"in violation of other laws of the State of Alabama and are and
have been a usurpation and abuse of its corporate functions and
detrimental to the State of Alabama. . . ."
The decree permanently enjoined the Association and those
affiliated with it from doing "any further business of any
description or kind" in Alabama and from attempting to qualify to
do business there. The Association appealed to the Supreme Court of
Alabama, which, on February 28, 1963, affirmed the judgment below
without considering the
Page 377 U. S. 293
merits. 274 Ala. 544,
150 So. 2d
677. The Supreme Court relied wholly on procedural grounds,
detailed more fully below. This Court again granted certiorari, 375
U.S. 810.
I
We consider first the nonfederal basis of the decision of the
Alabama Supreme Court, which is asserted by the State as a barrier
to consideration of the constitutionality of the Association's
ouster from Alabama.
In its Assignment of Errors to the Supreme Court of Alabama, the
Association specified 23 claimed errors in the proceedings in the
trial court. [
Footnote 3] Each
claim of error was separately numbered and set off in a separate
paragraph. Most of the claims alleged that the error involved
deprived the Association and those connected with it of rights
protected by the Federal Constitution. The brief filed by the
Association in the State Supreme Court is divided into four
sections: "Statement of Case," "Statement of Facts," "Propositions
of Law" (containing 15 separately numbered and paragraphed
propositions of law, with a separate list of cases supporting
each), and "Argument." [
Footnote
4] The "Argument" section is subdivided into five parts by
Roman numerals unaccompanied by any headings. There is a specific
reference in the "Argument" to each assignment of error on which
the Association relied. [
Footnote
5] Only one assignment of error is mentioned
Page 377 U. S. 294
more than once; that assignment is mentioned twice, both times
in connection with the same substantive issue. In only two
paragraphs is there a reference to more than one assigned error,
one paragraph including a discussion of two related assignments and
another including a discussion of four related assignments.
The brief is reproduced in Appendix B to the petition for
certiorari in this Court; the accuracy of the reproduction is not
questioned by the State.
The Supreme Court of Alabama based its decision entirely on the
asserted failure of the Association's brief to conform to rules of
the court. Although it referred to Rule 9 of its Rules, which
concerns the form of an appellant's brief, [
Footnote 6] the Supreme Court gave no indication of any
respect in which the Association's brief fell short of the
requirements of that Rule, and appears to have placed no reliance
on it at all.
See 274 Ala. at 546, 150 So.2d
Page 377 U. S. 295
at 679. The basis of the decision below was, rather,
"a rule of long standing and frequent application that, where
unrelated assignments of error are argued together and one is
without merit, the others will not be considered."
Ibid. Proceeding to apply that rule to the
Association's brief, the Supreme Court held that at least one of
the assignments of error contained in each of the five numbered
subdivisions of the "Argument" section of the brief was without
merit, and that it would therefore not consider the merit of any of
the other assignments. [
Footnote
7] The Attorney
Page 377 U. S. 296
General of Alabama argues that this is a nonfederal ground of
decision adequate to bar review in this Court of the serious
constitutional claims which the Association presents. We find this
position wholly unacceptable.
Paying full respect to the state court's opinion, it seems to us
crystal clear that the rule invoked by it cannot reasonably be
deemed applicable to this case. In its brief, the Association
referred to each of its assignments of error separately, and
specified the argument pertaining thereto. A separate paragraph was
devoted to each of the assignments of error except, as noted above,
for two related assignments included in one paragraph and four
other related assignments included in another paragraph.
Page 377 U. S. 297
These six assignments, like all the others, were specified and
explicitly tied to the argument relating to each. We are at a loss
to understand how it could be concluded that the structure of the
brief did not fully meet the requirement that unrelated assignments
of error not be "argued together." Had the petitioner simply
omitted the Roman numerals which subdivide its "Argument" section,
intended presumably as an organizational aid to understanding,
there would have been no conceivable basis for the suggestion that
the various errors were argued "in bulk"; and, indeed, the sole
basis mentioned in the Alabama court's opinion for the conclusion
that these errors were grouped for argument is the numbering of
subdivisions. [
Footnote 8] The
numbering was a mere stylistic device, which cannot well be
regarded as detracting from the brief's full conformity with the
rule in question. The consideration of asserted constitutional
rights may not be thwarted by simple recitation that there has not
been observance of a procedural rule with which there has been
compliance in both substance and form, in every real sense.
Davis v. Wechsler, 263 U. S. 22,
263 U. S. 24;
Staub v. City of Baxley, 355 U. S. 313,
355 U. S.
318-320. To the same effect,
see this Court's
discussion of a similar aspect of prior proceedings in this case,
357 U.S. at
357 U. S.
454-458.
The Alabama courts have not heretofore applied their rules
respecting the preparation of briefs with the pointless severity
shown here. In the early case of
Bell v. Fulgham, 202 Ala.
217, 218, 80 So. 39, 40, the court said:
"The brief filed by appellant is characterized by a degree of
informality and an apparent lack of attention to Rule 10 . . .
(predecessor to the present
Page 377 U. S. 298
Rule 9); but the rule is directory, and, from the time of its
adoption, the court has exercised its discretion in the
consideration of briefs which fairly and helpfully make the points
upon which appellant relies. Agreeably with the practice thus
established, the brief for appellant has been considered."
More recently, in
Bolton v. Barnett Lumber & Supply
Co., 267 Ala. 74, 75,
100 So. 2d
9, the court stated again that its rule governing the form of
an appellant's brief was "directory," and said that,
"if appellant's brief, even though not in compliance with the
rule, fairly and helpfully makes the points upon which appellant
relies, this court may, in its discretion, consider it."
The court noted that it saw "no reason why there should be any
real difficulty in complying with these rules."
Ibid.
Other cases are in accord. In
Brothers v. Brothers, 208
Ala. 258, 259, 94 So. 175, 177, the Alabama Supreme Court said:
"It is true that the brief for appellant does not refer to the
tenth and eleventh assignments of error by number, as it should in
strictness have done. But, in view of the simplicity of the record,
and of the facts that only four or five rulings are discussed, and
that specific reference to the assignments was not necessary to our
understanding of the argument, we have preferred to condone the
fault in this instance."
In
Madison Limestone Co. v. McDonald, 264 Ala. 295,
301,
87 So. 2d
539, 544, the court treated as sufficient three assignments of
error which were "not properly expressed." In
City of
Montgomery v. Mott, 266 Ala. 422,
96 So.
2d 766, there were 25 assignments of error, none of which was
referred to by number in the appellant's brief. The Alabama Supreme
Court said that the brief did not "strictly conform" to the rules
governing "the form and contents" of appellants' briefs, but that
it
Page 377 U. S. 299
did "not feel that the defects in the brief warrant a dismissal
of the appeal."
Id., 266 Ala. at 424, 96 So.2d. at 767.
The court stated:
"We have condoned noncompliance with the rule in question when
the record is short and simple and when a strict compliance with
the rule is not essential to an understanding of the assignments of
error which are argued in appellant's brief."
Ibid. Kendall Alabama Co. v. City of Fort
Payne, 262 Ala. 465, 466,
79 So. 2d
801, 802, is to the same effect.
In
State v. Farabee, 268 Ala. 437, 439,
108 So. 2d
148, 149-150, the court said:
"As pointed out by the appellee, appellant's brief has not
complied fully with the standards required by Supreme Court Rule 9.
. . . A concise statement of so much of the record as fully
presents every error and exception relied upon referring to the
pages of the transcript did not appear under the heading,
'Statement of the Case.' Only two general propositions of law were
set out to sustain the seven assignments of error presented on
appeal.
And only one case was cited in appellant's argument,
which seemed to argue several assignments together.
Nevertheless , we will exercise our discretion and give
consideration to the points argued. . . ."
(Italics added.) The court thus regarded as too unimportant to
prevent consideration of the merits the very ground on which it
relies here, even though it was accompanied by other failures to
comply with the rules. In
Shelby County v. Baker, 269 Ala.
111, 116,
110 So. 2d
896, 900, the court said:
"Appellant has assigned thirty separate grounds as error, but
has argued them in groups, so as to make available to this Court
application of the rule that, where assignments of error not
kindred in nature are argued together and one of them is without
merit,
Page 377 U. S. 300
the others in the group will not be examined. . . . However,
many of the assignments seem to be somewhat kindred, and, in
deference to counsel, we will consider them."
(Citations omitted.) In
Brooks v. Everett, 271 Ala.
380,
124 So. 2d
100, the court considered assignments of error although there
were 38 of them, and none had been "specifically referred to in
appellant's brief."
Id., 271 Ala. at 381, 124 So. 2d at
102. The court said:
". . . [W]e have held that, although appellant's brief does not
comply with the rule, if it fairly and helpfully makes the points
upon which appellant relies this court may, in its discretion,
consider those points on their merits."
Ibid. See also Stariha v. Hagood, 252 Ala.
158, 162, 40 So. 2d 85, 89;
Quinn v. Hannon, 262 Ala. 630,
632-633,
80 So. 2d
239, 241;
Thompson v. State, 267 Ala. 22, 25,
99 So.
2d 198, 200.
The cases cited in the Alabama Supreme Court's opinion and in
the brief of the State Attorney General in this Court quite
evidently do not support the State's position. In some, there were
no assignments of error,
Dobson v. Deason, 258 Ala. 219,
61 So. 2d 764, or none was mentioned in the appellant's brief,
Bolton v. Barnett Lumber & Supply Co., supra; Pak-A-Sak of
Alabama, Inc. v. Lauten, 271 Ala. 276, 279,
123 So. 2d
122, 125. In another group of cases, several different
allegations of error were joined in a single assignment of error.
Mobile, Jackson & Kansas City R. Co. v. Bromberg, 141
Ala. 258, 273, 37 So. 395, 398;
Alabama Chemical Co. v.
Hall, 212 Ala. 8, 10, 101 So. 456, 458;
Snellings v.
Jones, 33 Ala.App. 301, 303, 33 So. 2d 371. The remaining
cases are the only ones which are at all related to the present
case. In them, the Supreme Court of Alabama held that if any one of
a group of unrelated assignments of error which had been argued
together, or "in bulk," was insufficient, all of them must fall.
Ford v. Bradford, 218 Ala. 62, 65, 117 So.
Page 377 U. S. 301
429, 431;
Taylor v. Taylor, 251 Ala. 374, 383, 37 So.
2d 645, 652-653;
First National Bank of Birmingham v.
Lowery, 263 Ala. 36, 41,
81 So. 2d
284, 287;
Thompson v. State, 267 Ala. 22, 25,
99 So.
2d 198, 200;
Bertolla v. Kaiser, 267 Ala. 435, 440,
103 So. 2d
736, 740;
McElhaney v. Singleton, 270 Ala. 162, 167,
117 So. 2d
375, 380;
Mize v. Mize, 273 Ala. 369, 370,
141 So. 2d
200, 201. While it does not always appear in the opinions how
the assignments of error were argued, every indication is that,
unlike the situation here, they were grouped together "for the
purpose of argument,"
First National Bank of Birmingham,
supra, 263 Ala. at 41, 81 So. 2d at 287, and were in fact
argued as a group, as the words used by the court suggest. In
McElhaney, supra, 270 Ala. at 166, 117 So. 2d at 380, for
example, the court quoted the appellant's brief as follows:
"Proposition No. 2 refers to and is covered by Assignments 2, 3
& 4. . . ." In the remainder of the discussion of these
Assignments in the brief, also quoted,
ibid., they are
never again mentioned or distinguished. In
Taylor, supra,
251 Ala. at 383, 37 So. 2d at 652, 51 assignments of error were
"grouped and argued together in brief." None of these cases even
approaches a ruling that when, as here, assignments of error are
individually specified in connection with the argument relevant to
each, they are to be regarded as "argued in bulk" because,
forsooth, the argument as a whole is divided on the pages of the
brief into numbered subdivisions.
In sum, we think that what we said when this litigation was
first here, with respect to the procedural point there asserted as
a state ground of decision adequate to bar review on the merits,
also fits the present situation:
"Novelty in procedural requirements cannot be permitted to
thwart review in this Court applied for by those who, in justified
reliance upon prior decisions, seek vindication in state courts of
their federal constitutional rights."
357 U.S. at
357 U. S.
457-458.
Page 377 U. S. 302
The State has urged that if the nonfederal ground relied on
below be found inadequate, as we find it to be, the case be
remanded to the Supreme Court of Alabama for decision on the
merits. While this might be well enough in other circumstances, in
view of what has gone before, we reject that contention and proceed
to the merits.
II
The complaint against the Association, as finally amended,
alleged that it was a New York corporation maintaining an office
and doing business in Alabama. The acts charged against the
Association were:
"(1) that it had 'employed or otherwise paid money' to Autherine
Lucy and Polly Meyers Hudson to encourage them to enroll as
students in the University of Alabama in order to test the legality
of its policy against admitting Negroes;"
"(2) that it had furnished legal counsel to represent Autherine
Lucy in proceedings to obtain admission to the University;"
"(3) that it had 'engaged in organizing, supporting and
financing an illegal boycott' to compel a bus line in Montgomery,
Alabama, not to segregate passengers according to race;"
"(4) that it had 'falsely charged' officials of the State and
the University of Alabama with acts in violation of state and
federal law;"
"(5) that it had 'falsely charged' the Attorney General of
Alabama and the Alabama courts with 'arbitrary, vindictive, and
collusive' acts intended to prevent it from contesting its ouster
from the State 'before an impartial judicial forum,' and had
'falsely charged' the Circuit Court and Supreme Court of the State
with deliberately denying it a hearing on the merits of its ouster;
"
Page 377 U. S. 303
"(6) that it had 'falsely charged' the State and its Attorney
General with filing contempt proceedings against it, knowing the
charges therein to be false;"
"(7) that it had 'willfully violated' the order restraining it
from carrying on activities in the State;"
"(8) that it attempted to 'pressure' the Mayor of Philadelphia,
the Governor of Pennsylvania, and the Penn State football team into
'a boycott of the Alabama football team' when the two teams were to
play each other in the Liberty Bowl;"
"(9) that it had 'encouraged, aided, and abetted the unlawful
breach of the peace in many cities in Alabama for the purpose of
gaining national notoriety and attention to enable it to raise
funds under a false claim that it is for the protection of alleged
constitutional rights;'"
"(10) that it had 'encouraged, aided, and abetted a course of
conduct within the State of Alabama, seeking to deny to the
citizens of Alabama the constitutional right to voluntarily
segregate'; and"
"(11) that it had carried on its activities in Alabama without
complying with state laws requiring foreign corporations to
register and perform other acts in order to do business within the
State."
All of these acts were alleged to be "causing irreparable injury
to the property and civil rights of the residents and citizens of
the State of Alabama for which criminal prosecution and civil
actions at law afford no adequate relief. . . ." The complaint
stated also that "the said conduct, procedure, false allegations,
and methods used by Respondent render totally unacceptable to the
State of Alabama and its people the said Respondent corporation and
the activities and business it transacts in this State."
The last allegation, that the Association has failed to comply
with the statutory requirements for a foreign corporation
Page 377 U. S. 304
to do business in Alabama, furnishes no basis under Alabama law
for its ouster. The requirements in question are set out in the
Code of Alabama of 1940, Tit. 10, §§ 192-194. These provisions
require that, before doing business in Alabama, a foreign
corporation file with the Secretary of State its articles of
incorporation and a written instrument designating a place of
business within the State and an authorized agent residing there.
There is a filing fee of $10. The corporation must file notice of
amendments to its articles of incorporation and changes in its
place of business or authorized agent. [
Footnote 9]
Page 377 U. S. 305
There is nothing in these sections which attaches the
consequence of permanent ouster to a foreign corporation which
fails to register. [
Footnote
10] That this is not the effect of the statute is conclusively
demonstrated by § 194, which provides the State with a different
and complete remedy:
". . . [A]ny . . . [foreign] corporation that engages in or
transacts any business in this state without complying with the
provisions of the two preceding sections shall, for each offense,
forfeit and pay to the state the sum of one thousand dollars."
Alabama cases confirm that the registration requirements are
what they appear on their face to be: provisions ensuring that
foreign corporations will be amenable to suit in Alabama courts.
[
Footnote 11]
"They constitute a police regulation for the protection of the
property interests of the citizens of the state. . . . The doing of
a single act of business, if it be in the exercise of a corporate
function, is prohibited. The policy of the Constitution and statute
is to protect our citizens against the fraud and imposition
Page 377 U. S. 306
of insolvent and unreliable corporations, and to place them in
an attitude to be reached by legal process from our courts in favor
of citizens having cause of complaint."
Alabama Western R. Co. v. Talley-Bates Const. Co., 162
Ala. 396, 402-403, 50 So. 341, 342.
See Armour Packing Co. of
La., Ltd. v. Vinegar Bend Lumber Co., 149 Ala. 205, 42 So.
866;
George M. Muller Mfg. Co. v. First National Bank of
Dothan, 176 Ala. 229, 57 So. 762. The Attorney General of
Alabama has referred us to no case, and we have been able to find
none, in which a foreign corporation was ousted from Alabama for
failing to comply with the registration statute. [
Footnote 12]
The other asserted grounds for excluding the petitioner from
Alabama furnish no better foundation for the action below. The
first two grounds relied on are manifestly untenable. Before these
proceedings were commenced, this Court had upheld the right of
Autherine Lucy and
Page 377 U. S. 307
Polly Anne Meyers to enroll at the University of Alabama.
Lucy v. Adams, 350 U. S. 1. Neither
furnishing them with financial assistance, in effect a scholarship,
to attend the University nor providing them with legal counsel to
assist their efforts to gain admission was unlawful, or could,
consistently with the decisions of this Court, be inhibited because
contrary to the University's policy against admitting Negroes.
NAACP v. Button, 371 U. S. 415.
The third charge listed above is scarcely more substantial. Even
if we were to indulge the doubtful assumption that an organized
refusal to ride on Montgomery's buses in protest against a policy
of racial segregation might, without more, in some circumstances
violate a valid state law, such a violation could not
constitutionally be the basis for a permanent denial of the right
to associate for the advocacy of ideas by lawful means. As we said
at a prior stage in this litigation:
"It is beyond debate that freedom to engage in association for
the advancement of beliefs and ideas is an inseparable aspect of
the 'liberty' assured by the Due Process Clause of the Fourteenth
Amendment, which embraces freedom of speech."
357 U.S. at
357 U. S. 460.
This Court has repeatedly held that a governmental purpose to
control or prevent activities constitutionally subject to state
regulation may not be achieved by means which sweep unnecessarily
broadly, and thereby invade the area of protected freedoms.
See
id., 357 U.S. at
357 U. S.
463-464. " . . . [T]he power to regulate must be so
exercised as not, in attaining a permissible end, unduly to
infringe the protected freedom."
Cantwell v. Connecticut,
310 U. S. 296,
310 U. S.
304.
". . . [E]ven though the governmental purpose be legitimate and
substantial, that purpose cannot be pursued by means that broadly
stifle fundamental personal liberties when the end can be more
narrowly
Page 377 U. S. 308
achieved."
Shelton v. Tucker, 364 U. S. 479,
364 U. S. 488
(footnote omitted). For other cases elaborating this principle,
see Lovell v. Griffin, 303 U. S. 444,
303 U. S. 451;
Schneider v. State, 308 U. S. 147,
308 U. S. 161,
308 U. S. 165;
Martin v. Struthers, 319 U. S. 141,
319 U. S.
146-149;
Saia v. New York, 334 U.
S. 558;
American Communications Assn. v. Douds,
339 U. S. 382;
Kunz v. New York, 340 U. S. 290,
340 U. S.
294-295;
Louisiana ex rel. Gremillion v. NAACP,
366 U. S. 293.
This principle is applicable here even though the ouster of the
petitioner from Alabama has been accomplished solely by judicial
act; "whether legislative or judicial, it is still the application
of state power which we are asked to scrutinize." 357 U.S. at
357 U. S.
463.
In the first proceedings in this case, we held that the
compelled disclosure of the names of the petitioner's members would
entail "the likelihood of a substantial restraint upon the exercise
by petitioner's members of their right to freedom of association."
357 U.S. at
357 U. S. 462.
It is obvious that the complete suppression of the Association's
activities in Alabama which was accomplished by the order below is
an even more serious abridgment of that right. The allegations of
illegal conduct contained in the third charge against the
petitioner suggest no legitimate governmental objective which
requires such restraint.
Compare Kunz v. New York, supra,
at
340 U. S.
294-295.
The fourth, fifth, and sixth charges against the petitioner all
involve alleged "false charges" made by the Association or its
representatives against state officials. [
Footnote 13]
Page 377 U. S. 309
Without speculating on other possible constitutional infirmities
to which these allegations may be subject,
cf. New York Times
Co. v. Sullivan, 376 U. S. 254, we
conclude that, for the reasons discussed above, they furnish no
basis for the restriction of the right of the petitioner's members
to associate in Alabama. So too with the seventh charge, which
alleges violation of the "temporary" restraining order in effect
from 1956 to 1961 (when it was made permanent). We dispose of this
charge on the same basis as the others, without considering the
sufficiency of the evidence to support the finding that there was a
violation of the order or the serious constitutional questions
raised by an order which restrained for so long a time the exercise
of unquestionable constitutional rights on the grounds involved
here. We pass the eighth charge without comment; by no stretch can
it be considered germane to the present controversy. The ninth
charge, involving alleged breaches of the peace, falls with the
third. "There are appropriate public remedies to protect the peace
and order of the community. . . ."
Kunz, supra, at
340 U. S. 294,
which do not infringe constitutional rights. The tenth charge, if
it adds anything to those which have gone before, simply challenges
the right of the petitioner and its members to express their views,
by words and lawful conduct, on a subject of vital constitutional
concern. Such a challenge cannot stand.
There is no occasion in this case for us to consider how much
survives of the principle that a State can impose such conditions
as it chooses on the right of a foreign corporation to do business
within the State, or can exclude it from the State altogether.
E.g., Crescent Cotton Oil Co. v. Mississippi, 257 U.
S. 129,
257 U. S. 137.
This case, in truth, involves not the privilege of a corporation to
do business in a State, but rather the freedom of individuals to
associate for the collective advocacy of ideas.
"Freedoms such as . . . [this] are protected not only against
heavy-handed frontal attack, but also from being stifled by
more
Page 377 U. S. 310
subtle governmental interference."
Bates v. City of Little Rock, 361 U.
S. 516,
361 U. S. 523.
Nor is
New York ex rel. Bryant v. Zimmerman, 278 U. S.
63, which involved New York's application of a
regulatory statute to the Ku Klux Klan, more relevant here than it
was at the earlier stage of these proceedings where we said that it
"involved markedly different considerations in terms of the
interest of the State . . . ," 357 U.S. at
357 U. S. 465.
The Court noted,
inter alia, that the
Bryant
decision was
"based on the particular character of the Klan's activities,
involving acts of unlawful intimidation and violence, which the
Court assumed was before the state legislature when it enacted the
statute, and of which the Court itself took judicial notice."
Ibid.
The judgment below must be reversed. In view of the history of
this case, we are asked to formulate a decree for entry in the
state courts which will assure the Association's right to conduct
activities in Alabama without further delay. While such a course
undoubtedly lies within this Court's power,
Martin v.
Hunter's Lessee, 1 Wheat. 304, we prefer to follow
our usual practice and remand the case to the Supreme Court of
Alabama for further proceedings not inconsistent with this opinion.
Such proceedings should include the prompt entry of a decree, in
accordance with state procedures, vacating in all respects the
permanent injunction order issued by the Circuit Court of
Montgomery County, Alabama, and permitting the Association to take
all steps necessary to qualify it to do business in Alabama. Should
we unhappily be mistaken in our belief that the Supreme Court of
Alabama will promptly implement this disposition, leave is given
the Association to apply to this Court for further appropriate
relief.
Reversed and remanded.
[
Footnote 1]
Code of Alabama of 1940, Tit. 10, §§ 192-194.
See
note 9 infra, p.
304.
[
Footnote 2]
This was four days before the date on which, by this Court's
order of October 23, 1961, the Federal District Court was to
proceed with a trial on the merits if the Alabama courts had not
yet granted the petitioner a hearing.
See supra.
[
Footnote 3]
The Assignment of Errors is part of the typewritten record filed
with this Court.
[
Footnote 4]
There is also a "Conclusion," which requests reversal of the
judgment below.
[
Footnote 5]
One assignment of error was not mentioned in the Association's
brief at all, and was deemed waived by the Alabama Supreme Court.
274 Ala. at 549, 150 So. 2d at 682.
[
Footnote 6]
Rule 9 provides:
"Appellant's brief under separate headings shall contain: (a)
under the heading 'Statement of the Case,' a concise statement of
so much of the record as fully presents every error and exception
relied upon referring to the pages of the transcript; (b) under the
heading 'Statement of the Facts,' a condensed recital of the
evidence in narrative form so as to present the substance clearly
and concisely, referring to the pages of the transcript, and if the
insufficiency of the evidence to sustain the verdict or finding, in
fact or law, is assigned, then the statement shall contain a
condensed recital of the evidence given by each witness in
narrative form bearing on the points in issue so as to fully
present the substance of the testimony of the witness clearly and
concisely; (c) under the heading 'Propositions of Law,' a concise
statement, without argument, of each rule or proposition of law
relied upon to sustain the errors assigned, together with the
authorities relied upon in support of each, and in citing cases,
the names of parties must be given, with the book and page where
reported; (d) argument with respect to errors assigned which
counsel desire to insist upon. Assignments of error not
substantially argued in brief will be deemed waived, and will not
be considered by the court. The statements made by appellant under
the headings 'Statement of the Case' and 'Statement of the Facts'
will be taken to be accurate and sufficient for decision unless the
opposite party in his brief shall make the necessary corrections or
additions."
261 Ala. XXII.
[
Footnote 7]
The fifth subdivision of the "Argument" section of the
petitioner's brief, which is illustrative of the whole, is as
follows:
"
V
"
"The evidence discloses that these proceedings are singular in
that there is no showing that such proceedings had been taken
against any similar foreign corporation since 1918. It is clear
from the manner in which these proceedings were instituted, without
notice to appellant, that state officials were attempting to misuse
the law to oust appellant from the state purely because appellant's
aims and objectives are at variance with views held by state
officials. The question of denial of Fourteenth Amendment rights
here involved is before the Court under Assignment of Error Number
10. As pointed out in Proposition Number 1,
ante, racial
discrimination of any kind is unlawful when imposed and enforced by
governmental authorities, whether in schools,
Brown v. Board of
Education, supra; recreational facilities,
Dawson v.
Mayor, supra; in public parks,
Holmes v. City of Atlanta,
supra; in intrastate commerce,
Gayle v. Browder,
supra; in interstate commerce,
Bailey v. Patterson,
supra; and in any and all kinds of public facilities."
"The courts have consistently struck down state regulations and
actions which, in purpose and effect, seek to impose
discrimination.
Yick Wo v. Hopkins, 118 U. S.
356;
Oyama v. California, 332 U. S.
633;
Takahashi v. Fish & Game Commission,
334 U. S.
410."
"It is also clear that the state may not impose restrictions
upon persons to prevent their advocating by lawful means the
elimination of racial discrimination and segregation,
NAACP v.
Alabama, supra. What the state is here attempting to do is to
prevent the appellant, and those who work in concert with it, from
taking lawful action in opposition to illegal state policy which
seeks to perpetuate an unconstitutional pattern of segregation and
discrimination, as submitted under Assignment of Error Number 16.
In short, the state is using these proceedings to accomplish racial
discrimination forbidden by the Fourteenth Amendment, and the
judgment herein, in effect, constitutes a forbidden discrimination
in violation of the Constitution of the United States.
Cf.
Gomillion v. Lightfoot, supra."
"Under these circumstances, denial of appellant's motion for a
rehearing was error, as submitted under Assignment of Error Number
23, and a deprivation of due process as guaranteed under the
Fourteenth Amendment."
The Supreme Court of Alabama dealt with the arguments thus
presented as follows:
"Assignments of error 10, 16 and 23 are argued together in
Subsection V of appellant's brief. No. 10 is unrelated to the
others and charges that the court erred in denying appellant's
motion for rehearing."
"It is settled that a decree denying an application for
rehearing will not support an appeal; nor is such a decree subject
to review on assignments of error on appeal from the final decree.
. . . [Citations omitted.]"
"Since assignment of error 10 is without merit and is argued
with Nos. 16 and 23, the others are not considered.
Taylor v.
Taylor, 251 Ala. 374, 37 So. 2d 645."
274 Ala. at 548-549, 150 So. 2d at 681-682. This is illustrative
of the disposition below of the remainder of the petitioner's
"Argument."
[
Footnote 8]
"The argument section of appellant's brief is divided into five
different subdivisions, each dealing with the argument of two or
more assignments of error."
274 Ala. at 546, 150 So. 2d at 679.
See also the first
sentence of the portion of the court's opinion quoted in
note 7 supra, p. 296.
[
Footnote 9]
"Every corporation not organized under the laws of this state
shall, before engaging in or transacting any business in this
state, file with the secretary of state a certified copy of its
articles of incorporation or association and file an instrument of
writing, under the seal of the corporation and signed officially by
the president and secretary thereof, designating at least one known
place of business in this state and an authorized agent or agents
residing thereat; and when any such corporation shall amend its
articles of incorporation or association, or shall abandon or
change its place of business as designated in such instrument, or
shall substitute another agent or agents for the agent or agents
designated in such instrument of writing, such corporation shall
file a new instrument of writing as herein provided, before
transacting any further business in this state."
"Such instrument when filed by a corporation engaged in any
business of insurance must be filed in the office of the
superintendent of insurance, and when filed by a corporation
engaged in any other business than that of insurance must be filed
in the office of the secretary of state, and there shall be paid at
the same time for filing such instrument to the officer with whom
the same is filed the sum of ten dollars for the use of the
state."
"It is unlawful for any foreign corporation to engage in or
transact any business in this state before filing the written
instrument provided for in the two preceding sections; and any such
corporation that engages in or transacts any business in this state
without complying with the provisions of the two preceding sections
shall, for each offense, forfeit and pay to the state the sum of
one thousand dollars."
Code of Alabama of 1940, Tit. 10, §§ 192-194.
These provisions are carried forward, with some changes, in the
Code of Alabama (1958 Recomp.), Tit. 10, §§ 21(90)-21(92). Since
the Association has been restrained since 1956 from complying with
the statutory requirements, the 1940 provisions are applicable to
this case.
The complaint alleged also that the Association was violating
Art. 12, § 232, of the Alabama Constitution, which provides:
"No foreign corporation shall do any business in this state
without having at least one known place of business and an
authorized agent or agents therein, and without filing with the
secretary of state a certified copy of its articles of
incorporation or association. Such corporation may be sued in any
county where it does business, by service of process upon an agent
anywhere in the state. The legislature shall, by general law,
provide for the payment to the State of Alabama of a franchise tax
by such corporation, but such franchise tax shall be based on the
actual amount of capital employed in this state. Strictly
benevolent, educational, or religious corporations shall not be
required to pay such a tax."
[
Footnote 10]
Compare, e.g., the provisions of Mass.Gen.Laws Ann., c.
181, § 19; Vermont Statutes Ann., Tit. 11, § 861.
[
Footnote 11]
See the second sentence of Art. 12, § 232, of the
Alabama Constitution, quoted in
note 9 supra.
[
Footnote 12]
The Circuit Court's decree, presumably an exercise of the
court's general powers in equity, was not accompanied by any
opinion, but was evidently based on the court's finding that the
other allegations of the complaint were proved by the evidence,
and, along with the Association's failure to register, warranted
its ouster from the State. (The court reserved the right "at a
future date to state in an opinion its full and complete findings
of fact and its rulings on the law in this case, with appropriate
citations of authorities." So far as we are presently advised, no
opinion has been filed.) Nothing in the decree suggests that the
court regarded failure to register, by itself, as a sufficient
basis for ouster under Alabama law.
Even if Alabama law were otherwise, past failure to register
could not constitutionally be made the basis for permanently
preventing the Association from registering, and thereby denying
its members the right to associate in Alabama.
See infra,
pp.
377 U. S.
309-310.
Since we think it clear from the foregoing that the Association
may not, under Alabama law, be ousted from the State merely for
failure to register, it is unnecessary for us to consider the
petitioner's other contentions that, as a nonprofit organization,
it is exempt from the registration requirement, and that, having
knowingly permitted the Association to carry on its activities in
Alabama since 1918, the State was barred by laches from invoking
the registration requirement in 1956.
[
Footnote 13]
The "false charges" with which the fourth charge against the
Association is concerned were made (and later withdrawn) by
Autherine Lucy, in proceedings in the Federal District Court to
compel officials in the University of Alabama to vacate an order
suspending her from attendance at classes.
See Lucy v.
Adams, Civ. No. 652, decided in the United States District
Court for the Northern District of Alabama on January 24, 1957.
The fifth and sixth charges against the Association concern the
proceedings in this case, and were added to the complaint, along
with the fourth charge, by amendment in 1961.