Appellant, a practicing lawyer in South Carolina who was also a
cooperating lawyer with a branch of the American Civil Liberties
Union (ACLU), after advising a gathering of women of their legal
rights resulting from their having been sterilized as a condition
of receiving public medical assistance, informed one of the women
in a subsequent letter that free legal assistance was available
from the ACLU. Thereafter, the disciplinary Board of the South
Carolina Supreme Court charged and determined that appellant, by
sending such letter, had engaged in soliciting a client in
violation of certain Disciplinary Rules of the State Supreme Court,
and issued a private reprimand. The court adopted the Board's
findings and increased the sanction to a public reprimand.
Held: South Carolina's application of its Disciplinary
Rules to appellant's solicitation by letter on the ACLU's behalf
violates the First and Fourteenth Amendments.
NAACP v.
Button, 371 U. S. 415,
followed;
Ohralik v. Ohio Bar Assn., post, p.
436 U. S. 447,
distinguished. Pp.
436 U. S.
421-439.
(a) Solicitation of prospective litigants by nonprofit
organizations that engage in litigation as "a form of political
expression" and "political association" constitutes expressive and
associational conduct entitled to First Amendment protection, as to
which government may regulate only "with narrow specificity,"
Button, supra at
371 U. S. 429,
371 U. S. 431,
371 U. S. 433.
Pp.
436 U. S.
422-425.
(b) Subsequent decisions have interpreted
Button as
establishing the principle that "collective activity undertaken to
obtain meaningful access to the courts is a fundamental right
within the protection of the First Amendment,"
United
Transportation Union v. Michigan Bar, 401 U.
S. 576,
401 U. S. 585,
and have required that "broad rules framed to protect the public
and to preserve respect for the administration of justice" must not
work a significant impairment of "the value of associational
freedoms,"
Mine Workers v. Illinois Bar Assn.,
389 U. S. 217,
389 U. S. 222.
P.
436 U. S.
426.
(c) Appellant's activity in this case comes within the generous
zone of protection reserved for associational freedoms because she
engaged in solicitation by mail on behalf of a bona fide, nonprofit
organization that pursues litigation as a vehicle for effective
political expression and association, as well as a means of
communicating useful information to the public. There is nothing in
the record to suggest that the ACLU
Page 436 U. S. 413
or its South Carolina affiliate is an organization dedicated
exclusively to providing legal services, or a group of attorneys
that exists for the purpose of financial gain through the recovery
of counsel fees, or a mere sham to evade a valid state rule against
solicitation for pecuniary gain. Pp.
436 U. S.
426-432.
(d) The Disciplinary Rules in question, which sweep broadly,
rather than regulating with the degree of precision required in the
context of political expression and association, have a distinct
potential for dampening the kind of "cooperative activity that
would make advocacy of litigation meaningful,"
Button,
supra at
371 U. S. 438,
as well as for permitting discretionary enforcement against
unpopular causes. P.
436 U. S.
433.
(e) Although a showing of potential danger may suffice in the
context of in-person solicitation for pecuniary gain under the
decision today in
Ohralik, appellant may not be
disciplined unless her activity in fact involved the type of
misconduct at which South Carolina's broad prohibition is said to
be directed. P.
436 U. S.
434.
(f) The record does not support appellee's contention that undue
influence, overreaching, misrepresentation, invasion of privacy,
conflict of interest, or lay interference actually occurred in this
case. And the State's interests in preventing the "stirring up" of
frivolous or vexatious litigation and minimizing commercialization
of the legal profession offer no further justification for the
discipline administered to appellant. Pp.
436 U. S.
434-437.
(g) Nothing in this decision should be read to foreclose
carefully tailored regulation that does not abridge unnecessarily
the associational freedom of nonprofit organizations, or their
members, having characteristics like those of the ACLU. Pp.
436 U. S.
438-439.
268 S.C. 259,
233
S.E.2d 301, reversed.
POWELL, J., delivered the opinion of the Court, in which BURGER,
C.J., and STEWART, WHITE, BLACKMUN, and STEVENS, JJ., joined, and
in all but the first paragraph of Part VI of which MARSHALL, J.,
joined. BLACKMUN, J., filed a concurring opinion,
post, p.
436 U. S. 439.
MARSHALL, J., filed an opinion concurring in part and concurring in
the judgment,
post, p.
436 U. S. 468.
REHNQUIST, J., filed a dissenting opinion,
post, p.
436 U. S. 440.
BRENNAN, J., took no part in the consideration or decision of the
case.
Page 436 U. S. 414
MR. JUSTICE POWELL delivered the opinion of the Court.
We consider on this appeal whether a State may punish a member
of its Bar who, seeking to further political and ideological goals
through associational activity, including litigation, advises a lay
person of her legal rights and discloses in a subsequent letter
that free legal assistance is available from a nonprofit
organization with which the lawyer and her associates are
affiliated. Appellant, a member of the Bar of South Carolina,
received a public reprimand for writing such a letter. The appeal
is opposed by the State Attorney General, on behalf of the Board of
Commissioners on Grievances and Discipline of the Supreme Court of
South Carolina. As this appeal presents a substantial question
under the First and Fourteenth Amendments, as interpreted in
NAACP v. Button, 371 U. S. 415
(1963), we noted probable jurisdiction.
I
Appellant, Edna Smith Primus, is a lawyer practicing in
Columbia, S.C. During the period in question, she was associated
with the "Carolina Community Law Firm," [
Footnote 1] and was an officer of and cooperating
lawyer with the Columbia branch of the American Civil Liberties
Union (ACLU). [
Footnote 2] She
received
Page 436 U. S. 415
no compensation for her work on behalf of the ACLU, [
Footnote 3] but was paid a retainer as
a legal consultant for the South Carolina Council on Human
Relations (Council), a nonprofit organization with offices in
Columbia.
During the summer of 1973, local and national newspapers
reported that pregnant mothers on public assistance in Aiken
County, S.C. were being sterilized or threatened with sterilization
as a condition of the continued receipt of medical assistance under
the Medicaid program. [
Footnote
4] Concerned by this development, Gary Allen, an Aiken
businessman and officer of a local organization serving indigents,
called the Council requesting that one of its representatives come
to Aiken to address some of the women who had been sterilized. At
the Council's behest, appellant, who had not known Allen
previously, called him and arranged a meeting in his office in
July, 1973. Among those attending was Mary Etta Williams, who had
been sterilized by Dr. Clovis H. Pierce after the birth of her
third child. Williams and her grandmother attended the meeting
because Allen, an old family friend, had invited
Page 436 U. S. 416
them and because Williams wanted "[t]o see what it was all
about. . . ." App. 412. At the meeting, appellant advised those
present, including Williams and the other women who had been
sterilized by Dr. Pierce, of their legal rights and suggested the
possibility of a lawsuit.
Early in August, 1973, the ACLU informed appellant that it was
willing to provide representation for Aiken mothers who had been
sterilized. [
Footnote 5]
Appellant testified that, after being advised by Allen that
Williams wished to institute suit against Dr. Pierce, she decided
to inform Williams of the ACLU's offer of free legal
representation. Shortly after receiving appellant's letter, dated
August 30, 1973 [
Footnote 6] --
the centerpiece of this
Page 436 U. S. 417
litigation -- Wllliams visited Dr. Pierce to discuss the
progress of her third child, who was ill. At the doctor's office,
she encountered his lawyer, and, at the latter's request, signed a
release of liability in the doctor's favor. Williams showed
appellant's letter to the doctor and his lawyer, and they retained
a copy. She then called appellant from the doctor's office and
announced her intention not to sue. There was no further
communication between appellant and Williams.
On October 9, 1974, the Secretary of the Board of Commissioners
on Grievances and Discipline of the Supreme Court of South Carolina
(Board) filed a formal complaint with the Board, charging that
appellant had engaged in "solicitation in violation of the Canons
of Ethics" by sending the August 30, 1973, letter to Williams. App.
1-2. Appellant denied any unethical solicitation and asserted,
inter alia, that her conduct was protected by the First
and Fourteenth Amendments and by Canon 2 of the Code of
Professional Responsibility of the American Bar Association (ABA).
The complaint was heard by a panel of the Board on March 20, 1975.
The State's evidence consisted of the letter, the testimony of
Williams, [
Footnote 7]
Page 436 U. S. 418
and a copy of the summons and complaint in the action instituted
against Dr. Pierce and various state officials,
Walker v.
Pierce, Civ. No. 71 75 (SC, July 28, 1975.),
aff'd in part
and rev'd in part, 560 F.2d 609 (CA4 1977),
cert.
denied, 434 U.S. 1075 (1978). [
Footnote 8] Following denial of appellant's motion to
dismiss, App. 77-82, she testified in her own behalf and called
Allen, a number of ACLU representatives, and several character
witnesses. [
Footnote 9]
The panel filed a report recommending that appellant be found
guilty of soliciting a client on behalf of the ACLU, in violation
of Disciplinary Rules (DR) 2-103(D)(5)(a) and (c) [
Footnote 10] and 2-104(A)(5) [
Footnote 11] of the Supreme Court of
South
Page 436 U. S. 419
Carolina, [
Footnote 12]
and that a private reprimand be issued. It noted that
"[t]he evidence is inconclusive as to whether [appellant]
solicited Mrs. Williams on her own behalf, but she did solicit
Page 436 U. S. 420
Mrs. Williams on behalf of the ACLU, which would benefit
financially in the event of successful prosecution of the suit for
money damages."
The panel determined that appellant violated DR 2-103(D)(5)
"by attempting to solicit a client for a nonprofit organization
which, as its primary purpose, renders legal services, where
respondent's associate is a
Page 436 U. S. 421
staff counsel for the non-profit organization."
Appellant also was found to have violated DR 104(A)(5) because
she solicited Williams, after providing unsolicited legal advice,
to join in a prospective class action for damages and other relief
that was to be brought by the ACLU.
After a hearing on January 9, 1976, the full Board approved the
panel report and administered a private reprimand. On March 17,
1977, the Supreme Court of South Carolina entered an order which
adopted verbatim the findings and conclusions of the panel report
and increased the sanction,
sua sponte, to a public
reprimand. 268 S.C. 259,
233 S.E.2d
301.
On July 9, 1977, appellant filed a jurisdictional statement and
this appeal was docketed. We noted probable jurisdiction on October
3, 1977,
sub nom. In re Smith, 434 U.S. 814. We now
reverse.
II
This appeal concerns the tension between contending values of
considerable moment to the legal profession and to society. Relying
upon
NAACP v. Button, 371 U. S. 415
(1963), and its progeny, appellant maintains that her activity
involved constitutionally protected expression and association. In
her view, South Carolina has not shown that the discipline meted
out to her advances a subordinating state interest in a manner that
avoids unnecessary abridgment of First Amendment freedoms.
[
Footnote 13] Appellee
counters that appellant's letter to Williams falls outside of the
protection of
Button, and that
Page 436 U. S. 422
South Carolina acted lawfully in punishing a member of its Bar
for solicitation.
The States enjoy broad power to regulate "the practice of
professions within their boundaries," and
"[t]he interest of the States in regulating lawyers is
especially great, since lawyers are essential to the primary
governmental function of administering justice, and have
historically been 'officers of the courts.'"
Goldfarb v. Virginia State Bar, 421 U.
S. 773,
421 U. S. 792
(1975). For example, we decide today in
Ohralik v. Ohio State
Bar Assn., post, p.
436 U. S. 447,
that the States may vindicate legitimate regulatory interests
through proscription, in certain circumstances, of in-person
solicitation by lawyers who seek to communicate purely commercial
offers of legal assistance to lay persons.
Unlike the situation in
Ohralik, however, appellant's
act of solicitation took the form of a letter to a woman with whom
appellant had discussed the possibility of seeking redress for an
allegedly unconstitutional sterilization. This was not in-person
solicitation for pecuniary gain. Appellant was communicating an
offer of free assistance by attorneys associated with the ACLU, not
an offer predicated on entitlement to a share of any monetary
recovery. And her actions were undertaken to express personal
political beliefs and to advance the civil liberties objectives of
the ACLU, rather than to derive financial gain. The question
presented in this case is whether, in light of the values protected
by the First and Fourteenth Amendments, these differences
materially affect the scope of state regulation of the conduct of
lawyers.
III
In
NAACP v. Button, supra, the Supreme Court of Appeals
of Virginia had held that the activities of members and staff
attorneys of the National Association for the Advancement of
Colored People (NAACP) and its affiliate, the Virginia State
Conference of NAACP Branches (Conference), constituted
Page 436 U. S. 423
"solicitation of legal business" in violation of state law.
NAACP v. Harrison, 202 Va. 142, 116 S.E.2d 55 (1960).
Although the NAACP representatives and staff attorneys had
"a right to peaceably assemble with the members of the branches
and other groups to discuss with them and advise them relative to
their legal rights in matters concerning racial segregation,"
the court found no constitutional protection for efforts to
"solicit prospective litigants to authorize the filing of suits" by
NAACP-compensated attorneys.
Id. at 159, 116 S.E.2d at
68-69.
This Court reversed:
"We hold that the activities of the NAACP, its affiliates and
legal staff shown on this record are modes of expression and
association protected by the First and Fourteenth Amendments which
Virginia may not prohibit, under its power to regulate the legal
profession, as improper solicitation of legal business violative of
[state law] and the Canons of Professional Ethics."
371 U.S. at
371 U. S.
428-2429. The solicitation of prospective litigants,
[
Footnote 14] many of whom
were not
Page 436 U. S. 424
members of the NAACP or the Conference, for the purpose of
furthering the civil rights objectives of the organization and its
members was held to come within the right "
to engage in
association for the advancement of beliefs and ideas.'"
Id. at 371 U. S. 430,
quoting NAACP v. Alabama, 357 U.
S. 449, 357 U. S. 460
(1958). Since the Virginia statute sought to regulate expressive
and associational conduct at the core of the First Amendment's
protective ambit, the Button Court insisted that
"government may regulate in the area only with narrow specificity."
371 U.S. at 371 U. S. 433.
The Attorney General of Virginia had argued that the law merely (i)
proscribed control of the actual litigation by the NAACP after it
was instituted, ibid., and (ii) sought to prevent the
evils traditionally associated with common law maintenance,
champerty, and barratry, id. at 371 U. S. 438.
[Footnote 15] The Court
found inadequate the first justification because of an absence of
evidence of NAACP interference with the actual conduct of
litigation, or neglect or harassment of clients, and because the
statute, as construed, was not drawn narrowly to advance the
asserted goal. It rejected the analogy to the common law offenses
because of an absence of proof that malicious intent or the
prospect of pecuniary gain inspired the NAACP-sponsored litigation.
It also found a lack of proof that a serious danger of conflict of
interest marked the relationship between the NAACP and its member
and nonmember Negro litigants. The Court concluded that,
"although the [NAACP] has amply shown that its activities fall
within the
Page 436 U. S. 425
First Amendment's protections, the State has failed to advance
any substantial regulatory interest, in the form of substantive
evils flowing from [the NAACP's] activities, which can justify the
broad prohibitions which it has imposed."
Id. at
371 U. S. 444.
[
Footnote 16]
Page 436 U. S. 426
Subsequent decisions have interpreted
Button as
establishing the principle that "collective activity undertaken to
obtain meaningful access to the courts is a fundamental right
within the protection of the First Amendment."
United
Transportation Union v. Michigan Bar, 401 U.
S. 576,
401 U. S. 585
(1971).
See Bates v. State Bar of Arizona, 433 U.
S. 350,
433 U. S. 376
n. 32 (1977). The Court has held that the First and Fourteenth
Amendments prevent state proscription of a range of solicitation
activities by labor unions seeking to provide low-cost, effective
legal representation to their members.
See Railroad Trainmen v.
Virginia Bar, 377 U. S. 1 (1964);
Mine Workers v. Illinois Bar Assn., 389 U.
S. 217 (1967);
United Transportation Union v.
Michigan Bar, supra. And "lawyers accepting employment under
[such plans] have a like protection which the State cannot
abridge."
Railroad Trainmen, supra at
377 U. S. 8.
Without denying the power of the State to take measures to correct
the substantive evils of undue influence, overreaching,
misrepresentation, invasion of privacy, conflict of interest, and
lay interference that potentially are present in solicitation of
prospective clients by lawyers, this Court has required that "broad
rules framed to protect the public and to preserve respect for the
administration of justice" must not work a significant impairment
of "the value of associational freedoms."
Mine Workers,
supra at
389 U. S.
222.
IV
We turn now to the question whether appellant's conduct
implicates interests of free expression and association sufficient
to justify the level of protection recognized in
Button
and subsequent cases. [
Footnote
17] The Supreme Court of South Carolina found appellant to have
engaged in unethical conduct because
Page 436 U. S. 427
she
"'solicit[ed] a client for a non-profit organization, which, as
its primary purpose, renders legal services, where respondent's
associate is a staff counsel for the non-profit organization.'"
268 S.C. at 269, 233 S.E.2d at 306. [
Footnote 18] It rejected appellant's First Amendment
defenses by distinguishing
Button from the case before it.
Whereas the NAACP in that case was primarily a "
political'"
organization that used "`litigation as an adjunct to the overriding
political aims of the organization,'" the ACLU "`has as one of its
primary purposes the rendition of legal services.'" Id. at
268, 269, 233 S.E.2d at 305, 306. The court also intimated that the
ACLU's policy of requesting an award of counsel fees indicated that
the organization might "`benefit financially in the event of
successful prosecution of the suit for money damages.'"
Id. at 263, 233 S.E.2d at 303.
Although the disciplinary panel did not permit full factual
development of the aims and practices of the ACLU,
see
n 9,
supra, the record
does not support the state court's effort to draw a meaningful
distinction between the ACLU and the NAACP. From all that appears,
the ACLU and its local chapters, much like the NAACP and its local
affiliates in
Button, "[engage] in extensive educational
and lobbying activities" and
"also [devote] much of [their] funds and energies to an
extensive program of assisting certain kinds of litigation on
behalf of [their] declared purposes."
371 U.S. at
371 U. S.
419-420.
See App. 177-178; n. 2,
supra. The court below acknowledged that "
the ACLU has
only entered cases in which substantial civil liberties questions
are involved. . . .'" 268 S.C. at 263, 233 S.E.2d at 303. See
Button, 371 U.S. at 371 U. S. 440
n.19. It has engaged in the defense of unpopular
Page 436 U. S. 428
causes and unpopular defendants, [
Footnote 19] and has represented individuals in
litigation that has defined the scope of constitutional protection
in areas such as political dissent, juvenile rights, prisoners'
rights, military law, amnesty, and privacy.
See generally
Rabin, Lawyer for Social Change: Perspectives on Public Interest
Law, 28 Stan.L.Rev. 207, 21214 (1976). For the ACLU, as for the
NAACP, "litigation is not a technique of resolving private
differences"; it is "a form of political expression" and "political
association." 371 U.S. at
371 U. S. 429,
431. [
Footnote 20]
We find equally unpersuasive any suggestion that the level of
constitutional scrutiny in this case should be lowered because of a
possible benefit to the ACLU. The discipline administered to
appellant was premised solely on the possibility of financial
benefit to the organization, rather than any possibility of
pecuniary gain to herself, her associates, or the lawyers
representing the plaintiffs in the
Walker v. Pierce
litigation. [
Footnote 21] It
is conceded that appellant received no compensation
Page 436 U. S. 429
for any of the activities in question. It is also undisputed
that neither the ACLU nor any lawyer associated with it would have
shared in any monetary recovery by the plaintiffs in
Walker v.
Pierce. If Williams had elected to bring suit, and had been
represented by staff lawyers for the ACLU, the situation would have
been similar to that in
Button, where the lawyers for the
NAACP were "organized as a staff and paid by" that organization.
371 U.S. at
371 U. S. 434;
see id. at
371 U. S. 457
(Harlan, J., dissenting);
Mine Workers v. Illinois Bar
Assn., 389 U.S. at
389 U. S.
222-223;
n 16,
supra. [
Footnote
22]
Contrary to appellee's suggestion, the ACLU's policy of
requesting an award of counsel fees does not take this case outside
of the protection of
Button. Although the Court in
Button did not consider whether the NAACP seeks counsel
fees, such requests are often made both by that organization,
see, e.g., NAACP v. Allen, 493 F.2d 614, 622 (CA5 1974);
Boston Chapter, NAACP, Inc. v. Beecher, 371 F.
Supp. 507,
523
(Mass.),
aff'd, 504 F.2d 1017 (CA1 1974),
cert.
denied, 421 U.S. 910 (1975), and by the NAACP Legal Defense
Fund, Inc.,
see, e.g., Bradley v. Richmond School Board,
416 U. S. 696
(1974);
Reynolds v. Coomey, 567 F.2d 1166, 1167 (CA1
1978). In any event, in a case of this kind there are differences
between counsel fees awarded by a court and traditional fee-paying
arrangements which militate against a presumption
Page 436 U. S. 430
that ACLU sponsorship of litigation is motivated by
considerations of pecuniary gain, rather than by its widely
recognized goal of vindicating civil liberties. Counsel fees are
awarded in the discretion of the court; awards are not drawn from
the plaintiff's recovery, and are usually premised on a successful
outcome; and the amounts awarded often may not correspond to fees
generally obtainable in private litigation. Moreover, under
prevailing law during the events in question, an award of counsel
fees in federal litigation was available only in limited
circumstances. [
Footnote 23]
And even if there had been an award during the period in question,
it would have gone to the central fund of the ACLU. [
Footnote 24] Although such benefit to the
organization
Page 436 U. S. 431
may increase with the maintenance of successful litigation, the
same situation obtains with voluntary contributions and foundation
support, which also may rise with ACLU victories in important areas
of the law. That possibility, standing alone, offers no basis for
equating the work of lawyers associated with the ACLU or the NAACP
with that of a group that exists for the primary purpose of
financial gain through the recovery of counsel fees.
See
n 20,
supra.
[
Footnote 25]
Appellant's letter of August 30, 1973, to Mrs. Williams thus
comes within the generous zone of First Amendment protection
reserved for associational freedoms. The ACLU engages in litigation
as a vehicle for effective political expression and association, as
well as a means of communicating useful information to the public.
See n 32,
infra; cf. Bates v. State Bar of Arizona, 433 U.S. at
433 U. S. 364;
Virginia Pharmacy Board v. Virginia Citizens Consumer
Council, 425 U. S. 748,
425 U. S.
779-780 (1976) (STEWART, J., concurring). As
Button indicates, and as appellant offered to prove at the
disciplinary hearing,
see n 9,
supra, the efficacy of litigation as a means
of advancing the cause of civil liberties often depends on the
ability to make legal assistance available to suitable
litigants.
Page 436 U. S. 432
"
Free trade in ideas' means free trade in the opportunity to
persuade to action, not merely to describe facts." Thomas v.
Collins, 323 U. S. 516,
323 U. S. 537
(1945). The First and Fourteenth Amendments require a measure of
protection for "advocating lawful means of vindicating legal
rights," Button, 371 U.S. at 371 U. S. 437,
including "advis[ing] another that his legal rights have been
infringed and refer[ring] him to a particular attorney or group of
attorneys . . . for assistance," id. at 371 U. S.
434.
V
South Carolina's action in punishing appellant for soliciting a
prospective litigant by mail, on behalf of the ACLU, must withstand
the "exacting scrutiny applicable to limitations on core First
Amendment rights. . . ."
Buckley v. Valeo, 424 U. S.
1,
424 U. S. 4 5
(1976). South Carolina must demonstrate "a subordinating interest
which is compelling,"
Bates v. Little Rock, 361 U.
S. 516,
361 U. S. 524
(1960), and that the means employed in furtherance of that interest
are "closely drawn to avoid unnecessary abridgment of associational
freedoms."
Buckley, supra at
424 U. S. 25.
Appellee contends that the disciplinary action taken in this
case is part of a regulatory program aimed at the prevention of
undue influence, overreaching, misrepresentation, invasion of
privacy, conflict of interest, lay interference, and other evils
that are thought to inhere generally in solicitation by lawyers of
prospective clients, and to be present on the record before us.
Brief for Appellee 37-49. We do not dispute the importance of these
interests. This Court's decision in
Button makes clear,
however, that "[b]road prophylactic rules in the area of free
expression are suspect," and that "[p]recision of regulation must
be the touchstone in an area so closely touching our most precious
freedoms." 371 U.S. at
371 U. S. 438;
see Mine Workers v. Illinois Bar Assn., 389 U.S. at
389 U. S.
222-223. Because of the danger of censorship through
selective enforcement of broad prohibitions, and "[b]ecause First
Amendment freedoms need breathing space to survive, government
Page 436 U. S. 433
may regulate in [this] area only with narrow specificity."
Button, supra at
371 U. S.
433.
A
The Disciplinary Rules in question sweep broadly. Under DR
2-103(D)(5), a lawyer employed by the ACLU or a similar
organization may never give unsolicited advice to a lay person that
he retain the organization's free services, and it would seem that
one who merely assists or maintains a cooperative relationship with
the organization also must suppress the giving of such advice if he
or anyone associated with the organization will be involved in the
ultimate litigation.
See Tr. of Oral Arg. 334.
Notwithstanding appellee's concession in this Court, it is far from
clear that a lawyer may communicate the organization's offer of
legal assistance at an informational gathering such as the July,
1973, meeting in Aiken without breaching the literal terms of the
Rule.
Cf. Memorandum of Complainant, Apr. 8, 1975, p. 9.
[
Footnote 26] Moreover, the
Disciplinary Rules in question permit punishment for mere
solicitation unaccompanied by proof of any of the substantive evils
that appellee maintains were present in this case. In sum, the
Rules in their present form have a distinct potential for dampening
the kind of "cooperative activity that would make advocacy of
litigation meaningful,"
Button, supra at
371 U. S. 438,
as well as for permitting discretionary enforcement against
unpopular causes.
B
Even if we ignore the breadth of the Disciplinary Rules and the
absence of findings in the decision below that support
Page 436 U. S. 434
the justifications advanced by appellee in this Court, [
Footnote 27] we think it clear from
the record -- which appellee does not suggest is inadequately
developed -- that findings compatible with the First Amendment
could not have been made in this case. As in
New York Times Co.
v. Sullivan, 376 U. S. 254,
376 U. S.
284-285 (1964),
"considerations of effective judicial administration require us
to review the evidence in the present record to determine whether
it could constitutionally support a judgment [against appellant].
This Court's duty is not limited to the elaboration of
constitutional principles; we must also, in proper cases, review
the evidence to make certain that those principles [can be]
constitutionally applied."
See Jenkins v. Georgia, 418 U.
S. 153,
418 U. S.
160-161 (1974);
Pickering v. Board of
Education, 391 U. S. 563,
391 U. S.
574-575,
391 U. S.
578-582, and n. 2 (1968);
Edwards v. South
Carolina, 372 U. S. 229,
372 U. S.
235-236 (1963).
Where political expression or association is at issue, this
Court has not tolerated the degree of imprecision that often
characterizes government regulation of the conduct of commercial
affairs. The approach we adopt today in
Ohralik, post, p.
436 U. S. 447,
that the State may proscribe in-person solicitation for pecuniary
gain under circumstances likely to result in adverse consequences,
cannot be applied to appellant's activity on behalf of the ACLU.
Although a showing of potential danger may suffice in the former
context, appellant may not be disciplined unless her activity in
fact involved the type of misconduct at which South Carolina's
broad prohibition is said to be directed.
The record does not support appellee's contention that
Page 436 U. S. 435
undue influence, overreaching, misrepresentation, or invasion of
privacy actually occurred in this case. Appellant's letter of
August 30, 1973, followed up the earlier meeting -- one concededly
protected by the First and Fourteenth Amendments -- by notifying
Williams that the ACLU would be interested in supporting possible
litigation. The letter imparted additional information material to
making an informed decision about whether to authorize litigation,
and permitted Williams an opportunity, which she exercised, for
arriving at a deliberate decision. The letter was not facially
misleading; indeed, it offered "to explain what is involved so you
can understand what is going on." The transmittal of this letter --
as contrasted with in-person solicitation -- involved no
appreciable invasion of privacy; [
Footnote 28] nor did it afford any significant
opportunity for overreaching or coercion. Moreover, the fact that
there was a written communication lessens substantially the
Page 436 U. S. 436
difficulty of policing solicitation practices that do offend
valid rules of professional conduct.
See Ohralik, post at
436 U. S.
466-467. The manner of solicitation in this case
certainly was no more likely to cause harmful consequences than the
activity considered in
Button, see n 14,
supra.
Nor does the record permit a finding of a serious likelihood of
conflict of interest or injurious lay interference with the
attorney-client relationship. Admittedly, there is some potential
for such conflict or interference whenever a lay organization
supports any litigation. That potential was present in
Button, in the NAACP's solicitation of nonmembers and its
disavowal of any relief short of full integration,
see 371
U.S. at
371 U. S. 420;
id. at
371 U. S. 460,
371 U. S. 465
(Harlan, J., dissenting). But the Court found that potential
insufficient in the absence of proof of a "serious danger" of
conflict of interest,
id. at
371 U. S. 443,
or of organizational interference with the actual conduct of the
litigation,
id. at
371 U. S. 433,
371 U. S. 444.
As in
Button,
"[n]othing that this record shows a to the nature and purpose of
[ACLU] activities permits an inference of any injurious
intervention in or control of litigation which would
constitutionally authorize the application,"
id. at
371 U. S. 444,
of the Disciplinary Rules to appellant's activity. [
Footnote 29] A "very distant possibility of
harm,"
Mine Workers v. Illinois Bar Assn., 389 U.S. at
389 U. S. 223,
cannot justify proscription of the activity of appellant revealed
by this record.
See id. at
389 U. S.
223-224. [
Footnote
30]
The State's interests in preventing the "stirring up" of
frivolous or vexatious litigation and minimizing
commercialization
Page 436 U. S. 437
of the legal profession offer no further justification for the
discipline administered in this case. The
Button Court
declined to accept the proffered analogy to the common law offenses
of maintenance, champerty, and barratry, where the record would not
support a finding that the litigant was solicited for a malicious
purpose or "for private gain, serving no public interest," 371 U.S.
at
371 U. S. 440;
see id. at
371 U. S.
439-444. The same result follows from the facts of this
case. And considerations of undue commercialization of the legal
profession are of marginal force where, as here, a nonprofit
organization offers its services free of charge to individuals who
may be in need of legal assistance and may lack the financial means
and sophistication necessary to tap alternative sources of such
aid. [
Footnote 31]
At bottom, the case against appellant rests on the proposition
that a State may regulate in a prophylactic fashion all
solicitation activities of lawyers because there may be some
potential for overreaching, conflict of interest, or other
substantive evils whenever a lawyer gives unsolicited advice and
communicates an offer of representation to a layman. Under certain
circumstances, that approach is appropriate in the case of speech
that simply "propose[s] a commercial transaction,"
Pittsburgh
Press Co. v. Human Relations Comm'n, 413 U.
S. 376,
413 U. S. 385
(1973).
See Ohralik, post at
436 U. S.
455-459. In the context
Page 436 U. S. 438
of political expression and association, however, a State must
regulate with significantly greater precision. [
Footnote 32]
VI
The State is free to fashion reasonable restrictions with
respect to the time, place and manner of solicitation by members of
its Bar.
See Bates v. State Bar of Arizona, 433 U.S. at
433 U. S. 384;
Virginia Pharmacy Board v. Virginia Consumer Council, 425
U.S. at
425 U. S. 771,
and cases cited therein. The State's special interest in regulating
members of a profession it licenses, and who serve as officers of
its courts, amply justifies the application of narrowly drawn rules
to proscribe solicitation that in fact is misleading, overbearing,
or involves other features of deception or improper influence.
[
Footnote 33] As we decide
today in
Page 436 U. S. 439
Ohralik, a State also may forbid in-person solicitation
for pecuniary gain under circumstances likely to result in these
evils. And a State may insist that lawyers not solicit on behalf of
lay organizations that exert control over the actual conduct of any
ensuing litigation.
See Button, 371 U.S. at
371 U. S. 447
(WHITE, J., concurring in part and dissenting in part).
Accordingly, nothing in this opinion should be read to foreclose
carefully tailored regulation that does not abridge unnecessarily
the associational freedom of nonprofit organizations, or their
members, having characteristics like those of the NAACP or the
ACLU.
We conclude that South Carolina's application of DR
2-103(D)(5)(a) and (c) and 2-104(A)(5) to appellant's solicitation
by letter on behalf of the ACLU violates the First and Fourteenth
Amendments. The judgment of the Supreme Court of South Carolina
is
Reversed.
MR. JUSTICE BRENNAN took no part in the consideration or
decision of this case.
[For opinion of MR. JUSTICE MARSHALL, concurring in part and
concurring in the judgment,
see post, p.
436 U. S.
468.]
[
Footnote 1]
The court below determined that the Carolina Community Law Firm
was "
an expense-sharing arrangement, with each attorney keeping
his own fees.'" 268 S.C. 259, 261, 233
S.E.2d 301, 302 (1977). The firm later changed its name to
Buhl, Smith & Bagby.
[
Footnote 2]
The ACLU was organized in 1920 by individuals who had worked in
the defense of the rights of conscientious objectors during World
War I and political dissidents during the postwar period. It views
itself as a "national nonpartisan organization defending our Bill
of Rights for all without distinction or compromise." ACLU,
Presenting the American Civil Liberties Union 2 (1948). The
organization's activities range from litigation and lobbying to
educational campaigns in support of its avowed goals.
See
Rabin, Lawyers for Social Change: Perspectives on Public Interest
Law, 28 Stan.L.Rev. 207, 211-212 (1976); Note, Private
Attorneys-General: Group Action in the Fight for Civil Liberties,
58 Yale L.J. 574, 576 (1949);
see also App. 185-186.
See generally C. Markmann, The Noblest Cry: A History of
the American Civil Liberties Union (1965); D. Johnson, The
Challenge to American Freedoms: World War I and the Rise of the
American Civil Liberties Union (1963).
[
Footnote 3]
Although all three lawyers in the Carolina Community Law Firm
maintained some association with the ACLU -- appellant and Carlton
Bagby as unsalaried cooperating lawyers, and Herbert Buhl as staff
counsel -- appellant testified that "the firm did not handle any
litigation for [the] ACLU." App. 134.
[
Footnote 4]
See, e.g., 3 Carolina Doctors Are Under Inquiry in
Sterilization of Welfare Mothers, New York Times, July 22, 1973, p.
30, cols. 1-3.
[
Footnote 5]
App. 94-95, 131-133, 136-137; Brief for Appellee 8.
[
Footnote 6]
Written on the stationery of the Carolina Community Law Firm,
the letter stated:
rj:
"August 30, 1973"
lj:
"Mrs. Marietta Williams"
"347 Sumter Street"
"Aiken, South Carolina 29801"
"Dear Mrs. Williams:"
"You will probably remember me from talking with you at Mr.
Allen's office in July about the sterilization performed on you.
The American Civil Liberties Union would like to file a lawsuit on
your behalf for money against the doctor who performed the
operation. We will be coming to Aiken in the near future and would
like to explain what is involved so you can understand what is
going on."
"Now I have a question to ask of you. Would you object to
talking to a women's magazine about the situation in Aiken? The
magazine is doing a feature story on the whole sterilization
problem and wants to talk to you and others in South Carolina. If
you don't mind doing this, call me
collect at 254-8151 on
Friday before 6:00, if you receive this letter in time. Or call me
on Tuesday morning (after Labor Day)
collect."
"I want to assure you that this interview is being done to show
what is happening to women against their wishes, and is not being
done to harm you in any way. But I want you to decide, so call me
collect and let me know of your decision. This practice must
stop."
"About the lawsuit, if you are interested, let me know, and Ill
let you know when we will come down to talk to you about it. We
will be coming to talk to Mrs. Waters at the same time; she has
already asked the American Civil Liberties Union to file a suit on
her behalf."
"Sincerely,"
"s/ Edna Smith"
"Edna Smith"
"Attorney-at-law"
App. 3-4.
[
Footnote 7]
Williams testified that, at the July meeting, appellant advised
her of her legal remedies, of the possibility of a lawsuit if her
sterilization had been coerced, and of appellant's willingness to
serve as her lawyer without compensation. Williams recounted that
she had told appellant that, because her child was in critical
condition, she "did not have time for" a lawsuit, and "would
contact [appellant] some more." She also denied that she had
expressed to Allen an interest in suing her doctor.
Id. at
29-34, 58. On cross-examination, however, Williams confirmed an
earlier statement she had made in an affidavit that appellant "did
not attempt to persuade or pressure me to file [the] lawsuit."
Id. at 52.
See n 28,
infra.
[
Footnote 8]
This class action was filed on April 15, 1974, by two Negro
women alleging that Dr. Pierce, in conspiracy with state officials,
had sterilized them, or was threatening to do so, solely on account
of their race and number of children, while they received
assistance under the Medicaid program. The complaint sought
declaratory and injunctive relief, damages, and attorney's fees,
and asserted violations of the Constitution and 42 U.S.C. §§ 1981,
1983, 1985(3), and 2000d.
Bagby, one of appellant's associates in the Carolina Community
Law Firm and fellow cooperating lawyer with the ACLU, was one of
several attorneys of record for the plaintiffs. Buhl, another of
appellant's associates and a staff counsel for the ACLU in South
Carolina, also may have represented one of the women.
[
Footnote 9]
Appellant also offered to produce expert testimony to the effect
that some measure of solicitation of prospective litigants is
necessary in safeguarding the civil liberties of inarticulate,
economically disadvantaged individuals who may not be aware of
their legal rights and of the availability of legal counsel, App.
166-168; that the purpose of the ACLU is to advance and defend the
cause of civil liberties,
id. at 183-186; and that the
ACLU relies on decisions such as
NAACP v. Button,
371 U. S. 415
(1963), in advising its attorneys of the extent of constitutional
protection for their litigation activities, App. 187-188. These
offers of proof were rejected as not germane to the disciplinary
proceeding.
[
Footnote 10]
South Carolina's DR 2-103(D) provides:
"(D) A lawyer shall not knowingly assist a person or
organization that recommends, furnishes, or pays for legal services
to promote the use of his services or those of his partners or
associates. However, he may cooperate in a dignified manner with
the legal service activities of any of the following, provided that
his independent professional judgment is exercised in behalf of his
client without interference or control by any organization or other
person: "
"(1) A legal aid office or public defender office:"
"(a) Operated or sponsored by a duly accredited law school."
"(b) Operated or sponsored by a bona fide non-profit community
organization."
"(c) Operated or sponsored by a governmental agency."
"(d) Operated, sponsored, or approved by a bar association
representative of the general bar of the geographical area in which
the association exists."
"(2) A military legal assistance office."
"(3) A lawyer referral service operated, sponsored, or approved
by a bar association representative of the general bar of the
geographical area in which the association exists."
"(4) A bar association representative of the general bar of the
geographical area in which the association exists."
"(5) Any other non-profit organization that recommends,
furnishes, or pays for legal services to its members or
beneficiaries, but only in those instances and to the extent that
controlling constitutional interpretation at the time of the
rendition of the services requires the allowance of such legal
service activities, and only if the following conditions, unless
prohibited by such interpretation, are met:"
"(a) The primary purposes of such organization do not include
the rendition of legal services."
"(b) The recommending, furnishing, or paying for legal services
to its members is incidental and reasonably related to the primary
purposes of such organization."
"(c) Such organization does not derive a financial benefit from
the rendition of legal services by the lawyer."
"(d) The member or beneficiary for whom the legal services are
rendered, and not such organization, is recognized as the client of
the lawyer in that matter."
[
Footnote 11]
South Carolina's DR 2-104(A) provides:
"(A) A lawyer who has given unsolicited advice to a layman that
he should obtain counsel or take legal action shall not accept
employment resulting from that advice, except that:"
"(1) A lawyer may accept employment by a close friend, relative,
former client (if the advice is germane to the former employment),
or one whom the lawyer reasonably believes to be a client."
"(2) A lawyer may accept employment that results from his
participation in activities designed to educate laymen to recognize
legal problems, to make intelligent selection of counsel, or to
utilize available legal services if such activities are conducted
or sponsored by any of the offices or organizations enumerated in
DR 2-103(D)(1) through (6), to the extent and under the conditions
prescribed therein."
"(3) A lawyer who is furnished or paid by any of the offices or
organizations enumerated in DR 2-103(D)(1), (2), or (5) may
represent a member or beneficiary thereof to the extent and under
the conditions prescribed therein."
"(4) Without affecting his right to accept employment, a lawyer
may speak publicly or write for publication on legal topics so long
as he does not emphasize his own professional experience or
reputation and does not undertake to give individual advice."
"(5) If success in asserting rights or defenses of his client in
litigation in the nature of a class action is dependent upon the
joinder of others, a lawyer may accept, but shall not seek,
employment from those contacted for the purpose of obtaining their
joinder."
[
Footnote 12]
Section 4(b) of the Supreme Court of South Carolina's Rule on
Disciplinary Procedure defines misconduct as a "violation of any of
the Canons of Professional Ethics as adopted by this Court from
time to time. . . ." 22 S.C.Code, p. 59 (1977). On March 1, 1973,
the state court adopted the ABA's Code of Professional
Responsibility. Rule 32 of the Supreme Court of South Carolina,
id. at 48. Although DR 2-103(D) has been revised
substantially by the ABA, South Carolina has not adopted that
revision.
[
Footnote 13]
In addition to her claim of protection under this Court's
Button decision, appellant contends that (i) the State's
failure to give her fair notice of the precise charges leveled
against her in the disciplinary proceeding worked a violation of
due process,
see In re Ruffalo, 390 U.
S. 544 (1968); (ii) the absence of proof of essential
elements of the Disciplinary Rules also violated due process,
see Thompson v. Louisville, 362 U.
S. 199 (1960); and (iii) the Disciplinary Rules are void
for vagueness under the First and Fourteenth Amendments,
see
Bouie v. Columbia, 378 U. S. 347
(1964). In view of our disposition of this case, we do not reach
these contentions.
[
Footnote 14]
The
Button Court described the solicitation activities
of NAACP members and attorneys in the following terms:
"Typically, a local NAACP branch will invite a member of the
legal staff to explain to a meeting of parents and children the
legal steps necessary to achieve desegregation. The staff member
will bring printed forms to the meeting authorizing him, and other
NAACP or [NAACP Legal] Defense Fund attorneys of his designation,
to represent the signers in legal proceedings to achieve
desegregation. On occasion, blank forms have been signed by
litigants, upon the understanding that a member or members of the
legal staff, with or without assistance from other NAACP lawyers,
or from the Defense Fund, would handle the case. It is usual, after
obtaining authorizations, for the staff lawyer to bring into the
case the other staff members in the area where suit is to be
brought, and sometimes to bring in lawyers from the national
organization or the Defense Fund. In effect, then, the prospective
litigant retains not so much a particular attorney as the firm of
NAACP and Defense Fund lawyers. . . . "
"These meetings are sometimes prompted by letters and bulletins
from the Conference urging active steps to fight segregation. The
Conference has on occasion distributed to the local branches
petitions for desegregation to be signed by parents and filed with
local school boards, and advised branch officials to obtain, as
petitioners, persons willing to 'go all the way' in any possible
litigation that may ensue."
371 U.S. at
371 U. S.
421-422.
[
Footnote 15]
Put simply, maintenance is helping another prosecute a suit;
champerty is maintaining a suit in return for a financial interest
in the outcome; and barratry is a continuing practice of
maintenance or champerty.
See generally 4 W. Blackstone,
Commentaries *134-136; Zimroth, Group Legal Services and the
Constitution, 76 Yale L.J. 966, 969-970 (1967); Radin, Maintenance
by Champerty, 24 Calif.L.Rev. 48 (1935).
[
Footnote 16]
Whatever the precise limits of the holding in
Button,
the Court at least found constitutionally protected the activities
of NAACP members and staff lawyers in
"advising Negroes of their constitutional rights, urging them to
institute litigation of a particular kind, recommending particular
lawyers and financing such litigation."
371 U.S. at
371 U. S. 447
(WHITE, J., concurring in part and dissenting in part). In the
following Term, the Court noted that Button presented an
"occasion to consider an . . . attempt by Virginia to enjoin the
National Association for the Advancement of Colored People from
advising prospective litigants to seek the assistance of particular
attorneys. In fact, . . . the attorneys were actually employed by
the association which recommended them, and recommendations were
made even to nonmembers."
Railroad Trainmen v. Virginia Bar, 377 U. S.
1,
377 U. S. 7
(1964);
see Mine Workers v. Illinois Bar Assn.,
389 U. S. 217,
389 U. S. 221,
389 U. S.
222-223 (1967).
The dissent of MR JUSTICE REHNQUIST suggests that
Button is distinguishable from this case because there
"lawyers played only a limited role" in the solicitation of
prospective litigants, and "the Commonwealth did not attempt to
discipline the individual lawyers. . . ."
Post at
436 U. S. 444,
and n. 3. We do not think that
Button can be read in this
way. As the
Button Court recognized,
see n 14,
supra, and as the
Virginia Supreme Court of Appeals had found,
NAACP v.
Harrison, 202 Va. 142, 154-155, 116 S.E.2d 55, 65 (1960),
NAACP staff attorneys were involved in the actual solicitation
efforts. The absence of discipline in
Button was not due
to an absence of lawyer involvement in solicitation. Indeed, from
all that appears, no one was disciplined; the case came to this
Court in the posture of an anticipatory action for declaratory
relief. The state court's decree made quite clear that "the
solicitation of legal business by . . . [NAACP] attorneys, as shown
by the evidence," and the acceptance of such solicited employment
by NAACP-compensated attorneys, violated the state ban and the
canons of ethics.
Id. at 164, 116 S.E.2d at 72. We
therefore cannot view as dicta
Button's holding that
"the activities of the NAACP . . . legal staff shown on this
record are modes of expression and association protected by the
First and Fourteenth Amendments which Virginia may not prohibit,
under its power to regulate the legal profession, as improper
solicitation of legal business. . . ."
371 U.S. at
371 U. S.
428-429.
[
Footnote 17]
Appellee
"finds no fault in Appellant's conduct in meeting with the women
to advise them of their legal rights, even if such advice was
unsolicited. There is no doubt that such activity is protected
under the First Amendment."
Brief for Appellee 30.
[
Footnote 18]
In the discussion that follows, we do not treat separately the
two Disciplinary Rules upon which appellant's violation was based.
Since DR 2-103(D)(5) was held by the court below to proscribe in a
narrower fashion the same conduct as DR 2-104(A)(5),
see
n 26,
infra, a
determination of unconstitutionality as to the former would subsume
the latter.
[
Footnote 19]
See, e.g., Scopes v. State, 154 Tenn. 105, 289 S.W. 363
(1927);
De Jonge v. Oregon, 299 U.
S. 353 (1937);
Hague v. CIO, 307 U.
S. 496 (1939);
Wieman v. Updegraff,
344 U. S. 183
(1952);
United States v. O'Brien, 391 U.
S. 367 (1968);
Oestereich v. Selective Service
Bd., 393 U. S. 233
(1968).
[
Footnote 20]
There is nothing in the record to suggest that the ACLU or its
South Carolina affiliate is an organization dedicated exclusively
to the provision of legal services.
See n 2,
supra. Nor does the record
support any inference that either the ACLU or its affiliate "is a
mere sham to cover what is actually nothing more than an attempt,"
Eastern Railroad Presidents Conf. v. Noerr Motor Freight,
Inc., 365 U. S. 127,
365 U. S. 144
(1961), by a group of attorneys to evade a valid state rule against
solicitation for pecuniary gain.
Compare Valentine v.
Chrestensen, 316 U. S. 52,
316 U. S. 55
(1942),
with New York Times Co. v. Sullivan, 376 U.
S. 254,
376 U. S. 266
(1964).
Cf. California Transport v. Trucking Unlimited,
404 U. S. 508,
404 U. S. 515
(1972).
[
Footnote 21]
Appellee conjectures that appellant would have received
increased support from private foundations if her reputation was
enhanced as a result of her efforts in the cause of the ACLU. The
decision below acknowledged, however, that the evidence did not
support a finding that appellant solicited Williams on her own
behalf. 268 S.C. at 263, 233 S.E.2d at 303. Since the discipline in
this case was premised solely on the possibility that appellant's
solicitation might have conferred a financial benefit on the ACLU,
ibid., and any award of counsel fees would have been
received only for the organization's benefit,
see n 24,
infra we also attach
no significance to the fact that two of the attorneys in the
Doe v. Pierce litigation were associated with appellant in
an arrangement for sharing office expenses.
See nn.
1 8 supra.
[
Footnote 22]
"The Virginia State Conference of [NAACP] Branches or petitioner
pays the fees and expenses of the attorneys when they are handling
a case involving discrimination, supported by the state or the
national organization. . . . A fee of $60 per day is paid to the
attorneys . . . who are almost invariably members of the legal
staff."
Brief for Petitioner in
NAACP v. Gray, O.T. 1962, No.
5, pp. 9-10.
[
Footnote 23]
In
Alyeska Pipeline Service Co. v. Wilderness Society,
421 U. S. 240
(1975), the Court held that a federal court may not award counsel
fees in the absence of specific statutory authorization, a showing
of "bad faith" in the conduct of the litigation, or facts giving
rise to a "common fund" or "common benefit" recovery. The Court of
Appeals for the Fourth Circuit anticipated our ruling in
Alyeska. See Bradley v. School Board of Richmond,
472 F.2d 318, 327-331 (1972),
vacated and remanded on other
grounds, 416 U. S. 696
(1974);
Bradley v. School Board of Richmond, 345 F.2d 310,
321 (1965).
[
Footnote 24]
Appellant informs us that the ACLU policy then in effect
provided that cooperating lawyers associated with the ACLU or with
an affiliate could not receive an award of counsel fees for
services rendered in an ACLU-sponsored litigation. Reply Brief for
Appellant 4-5;
see App. 173-175, 181-183; 1976 Policy
Guide of the American Civil Liberties Union, Policy #512, p.
302:
"Under no circumstances may any cooperating attorney associated
in any way with an ACLU or affiliate case receive payment for
services rendered in such a case, whether as a fee or voluntary
donation. The smallest exception to this rule would jeopardize the
voluntary nature of the cooperating system and the effectiveness of
ACLU's entire legal program."
Apparently it was feared that allowing acceptance of such fees
might lead to selection of clients and cases for pecuniary reasons.
See App. 182.
This policy was changed in 1977 to permit local experimentation
with the sharing of court-awarded fees between state affiliates and
cooperating attorneys. The South Carolina chapter has not exercised
that option. Reply Brief for Appellant 5-6. We express no opinion
whether our analysis in this case would be different had the latter
policy been in effect during the period in question.
[
Footnote 25]
The Internal Revenue Service has announced certain requirements
for "public interest law firms" that seek tax-exempt status under §
501(c)(3) of the Internal Revenue Code of 1954, 26 U.S.C. §
501(c)(3). Such an organization (i) may not accept fees from its
clients as compensation for services rendered; (ii) may accept fees
"in public interest cases" only if such fees are awarded by a court
or administrative agency; (iii) may "not use the likelihood or
probability of a fee award as a consideration in its selection of
cases"; (iv) may not defray "more than 50 percent of the total cost
of its legal functions" from awarded fees, unless an exemption is
granted; (v) may not permit payment of awarded fees directly to
individual staff attorneys; and (vi) may not accept awarded fees in
circumstances that would result in any conflict with state law or
professional canons of ethics. Rev.Proc. 75-13, § 3, 1975-1
Cum.Bull. 662.
See Rev.Ruls. 75-74 through 776, 1975-1
Cum.Bull. 152-155.
[
Footnote 26]
DR 2-104(A)(5), as construed below, stands as a separate
prohibition, even though it appears in terms to be an exception to
DR 2-104(A), which bars only the acceptance of employment after the
giving of unsolicited advice. It was applied in this case to an
attorney who recommended participation in a prospective litigation
and who did not accept any employment.
[
Footnote 27]
Rights of political expression and association may not be
abridged because of state interests asserted by appellate counsel
without substantial support in the record or findings of the state
court.
See First National Bank of Boston v. Bellotti,
435 U. S. 765,
435 U. S.
789-790 (1978);
United Transportation Union v.
Michigan Bar, 401 U. S. 576,
401 U. S. 581
(1971);
Sherbert v. Verner, 374 U.
S. 398,
374 U. S. 407
(1963);
Button, 371 U.S. at
371 U. S.
442-443;
Wood v. Georgia, 370 U.
S. 375,
370 U. S. 388
(1962);
Thomas v. Collins, 323 U.
S. 516,
323 U. S. 530,
323 U. S. 536
(1945).
[
Footnote 28]
This record does not provide a constitutionally adequate basis
for a finding, not made below, that appellant deliberately thrust
her professional services on an individual who had communicated
unambiguously a decision against litigation.
Cf. Rowan v. Post
Office Dept., 397 U. S. 728
(1970). For present purposes, we credit Williams' conflicting
testimony to the effect that, at the July meeting, she told
appellant that, because of the condition of her child she "didn't
have time to think about suing" and "if I needed you all, I will
call you." App. 74;
see n 7,
supra. But even on that view of the
testimony, appellant's letter cannot be characterized as a pressure
tactic. A month had elapsed between the meeting and the letter. Not
only was there a possibility that Williams' personal situation
might have changed during this period, but appellant testified that
Allen, a close friend of the Williams family, told her that
Williams subsequently communicated to him an interest in the
lawsuit; Allen corroborated this testimony. App. 115-116, 137,
195-196. In light of these circumstances, and Williams' own
acknowledgment that appellant "did not attempt to persuade or
pressure me to file this lawsuit,"
id. at 52, appellant
did not go beyond the pale of constitutional protection in writing
a single letter for the purpose of imparting new information
material to a decision whether or not to authorize litigation, and
inquiring "if you are interested, let me know, and I'll let you
know when we will come down to talk to you about it."
[
Footnote 29]
Although the decision whether or not to support a particular
litigation is made in accordance with the ACLU's broader
objectives, the organization's declared policy is to avoid all
interference with the attorney-client relationship after that
decision has been made.
See 1976 Policy Guide of the
American Civil Liberties Union, Policy #513, p 305.
[
Footnote 30]
We are not presented in this case with a situation where the
income of the lawyer who solicits the prospective litigant or who
engages in the actual representation of the solicited client rises
or falls with the outcome of the particular litigation.
See
supra at
436 U. S.
428-431, and
n
24.
[
Footnote 31]
Button makes clear that
"regulations which reflect hostility to stirring up litigation
have been aimed chiefly at those who urge recourse to the courts
for private gain, serving no public interest,"
371 U.S. at
371 U. S. 440,
and that "[o]bjection to the intervention of a lay intermediary . .
. also derives from the element of pecuniary gain,"
id. at
371 U. S. 441.
In recognition of the overarching obligation of the lawyer to serve
the community,
see Canon 2 of the ABA Code of Professional
Responsibility, the ethical rules of the legal profession
traditionally have recognized an exception from any general ban on
solicitation for offers of representation, without charge, extended
to individuals who may be unable to obtain legal assistance on
their own.
See, e.g., In re Ades, 6 F. Supp.
467, 475-476 (Md.1934);
Gunnels v. Atlanta Bar Assn.,
191 Ga. 366, 12 S.E.2d 602 (1940); American Bar Association,
Opinions of the Committee on Professional Ethics, Formal Opinion
148, pp. 416-419 (1967).
[
Footnote 32]
Normally the purpose or motive of the speaker is not central to
First Amendment protection, but it does bear on the distinction
between conduct that is "an associational aspect of
expression'," Emerson, Freedom of Association and Freedom of
Expression, 74 Yale L.J. 1, 26 (1964), and other activity subject
to plenary regulation by government. Button recognized
that certain forms of "cooperative, organizational activity," 371
U.S. at 371 U. S. 430,
including litigation, are part of the "freedom to engage in
association for the advancement of beliefs and ideas," NAACP v.
Alabama, 357 U. S. 449,
357 U. S. 460
(1958), and that this freedom is an implicit guarantee of the First
Amendment. See Healy v. James, 408 U.
S. 169, 408 U. S. 181
(1972). As shown above, appellant's speech -- as part of
associational activity -- was expression intended to advance
"beliefs and ideas." In Ohralik v. Ohio State Bar Assn.,
post, p. 436 U. S. 447, the
lawyer was not engaged in associational activity for the
advancement of beliefs and ideas; his purpose was the advancement
of his own commercial interests. The line, based in part on the
motive of the speaker and the character of the expressive activity,
will not always be easy to draw, cf. Virginia Pharmacy Board v.
Virginia Consumer Council, 425 U. S. 748,
425 U. S.
787-788 (1976) (REHNQUIST, J., dissenting), but that is
no reason for avoiding the undertaking.
[
Footnote 33]
We have no occasion here to delineate the precise contours of
permissible state regulation. Thus, for example, a different
situation might be presented if an innocent or merely negligent
misstatement were made by a lawyer on behalf of an organization
engaged in furthering associational or political interests.
MR. JUSTICE BLACKMUN, concurring.
Although I join the opinion of the Court, my understanding of
the first paragraph of Part VI requires further explanation. The
dicta contained in that paragraph are unnecessary to the decision
of this case and its First Amendment overtones. I, for one, am not
now able to delineate in the area of political solicitation the
extent of state authority to proscribe misleading statements.
Despite the positive language of the text,
*
Page 436 U. S. 440
footnote 33 explains that the Court also has refused to draw a
line regarding misrepresentation:
"We have no occasion here to delineate the precise contours of
permissible state regulation. Thus, for example, a different
situation might be presented if an innocent or merely negligent
misstatement were made by a lawyer on behalf of an organization
engaged in furthering associational or political interests."
It may well be that the State is able to proscribe such
solicitation. The resolution of that issue, however, requires a
balancing of the State's interests against the important First
Amendment values that may lurk in even a negligent misstatement.
The Court wisely has postponed this task until an appropriate case
is presented and full arguments are carefully considered.
*
"The State's special interest in regulating members of a
profession it licenses, and who serve as officers of its courts,
amply justifies the application of narrowly drawn rules to
proscribe solicitation that in fact is misleading. . . ."
Ante at
436 U. S.
438.
MR. JUSTICE REHNQUIST, dissenting.
In this case and the companion case of
Ohralik v. Ohio State
Bar Assn., post, p.
436 U. S. 447, the
Court tells its own tale of two lawyers: one tale ends happily for
the lawyer, and one does not. If we were given the latitude of
novelists in deciding between happy and unhappy endings for the
heroes and villains of our tales, I might well join in the Court's
disposition of both cases. But, under our federal system, it is for
the States to decide which lawyers shall be admitted to the Bar and
remain there; this Court may interfere only if the State's decision
is rendered impermissible by the United States Constitution. We
can, of course, develop a jurisprudence of epithets and slogans in
this area, in which "ambulance chasers" suffer one fate and "civil
liberties lawyers" another. But I remain unpersuaded by the Court's
opinions in these two cases that there is a principled basis for
concluding that the First and Fourteenth Amendments forbid South
Carolina from disciplining Primus here, but permit Ohio to
discipline Ohralik
Page 436 U. S. 441
in the companion case. I believe that both South Carolina and
Ohio acted within the limits prescribed by those Amendments, and I
would therefore affirm the judgment in each case.
This Court said in
United Transportation Union v. Michigan
Bar, 401 U. S. 576,
401 U. S. 585
(1971):
"The common thread running through our decisions in
NAACP
v. Button, [
371 U.S.
415 (1963),]
Trainmen [v. Virginia Bar, 377 U. S. 1
(1964),] and
United Mine Workers [v. Illinois Bar Assn.,
389 U. S.
217 (1967),] is that collective activity undertaken to
obtain meaningful access to the courts is a fundamental right
within the protection of the First Amendment."
The Court today ignores the absence of this common thread from
the fabric of this case, and decides that South Carolina may not
constitutionally discipline a member of its Bar for badgering a lay
citizen to take part in "collective activity" which she has never
desired to join.
Neither
Button nor any other decision of this Court
compels a State to permit an attorney to engage in uninvited
solicitation on an individual basis. Further, I agree with the
Court's statement in the companion case that the State has a strong
interest in forestalling the evils that result "when a lawyer, a
professional trained in the art of persuasion, personally solicits
an unsophisticated, injured, or distressed lay person."
Ohralik, post at
436 U. S. 465.
The reversal of the judgment of the Supreme Court of South Carolina
thus seems to me quite unsupported by previous decisions or by any
principle which may be abstracted from them.
In distinguishing between Primus' protected solicitation and
Ohralik's unprotected solicitation, the Court lamely declares:
"We have not discarded the 'common sense' distinction between
speech proposing a commercial transaction, which occurs in an area
traditionally subject to government regulation, and other varieties
of speech."
Post at
436 U. S.
455-456. Yet to the extent that this "common sense"
distinction focuses on the content of the speech, it is at least
suspect under many of
Page 436 U. S. 442
this Court's First Amendment cases,
see, e.g., Police Dept.
of Chicago v. Mosley, 408 U. S. 92,
408 U. S. 96-98
(1972), and to the extent it focuses upon the motive of the
speaker, it is subject to manipulation by clever practitioners. If
Albert Ohralik, like Edna Primus, viewed litigation "
not [as] a
technique of resolving private differences,'" but as "`a form of
political expression' and `political association,'" ante
at 436 U. S. 428,
quoting Button, supra at 371 U. S. 429,
371 U. S. 431,
for all that appears, he would be restored to his right to
practice. And we may be sure that the next lawyer in Ohralik's
shoes who is disciplined for similar conduct will come here cloaked
in the prescribed mantle of "political association" to assure that
insurance companies do not take unfair advantage of
policyholders.
This absence of any principled distinction between the two cases
is made all the more unfortunate by the radical difference in
scrutiny brought to bear upon state regulation in each area. Where
solicitation proposes merely a commercial transaction, the Court
recognizes "the need for prophylactic regulation in furtherance of
the State's interest in protecting the lay public."
Ohralik,
post at
436 U. S. 468.
On the other hand, in some circumstances (at least in those
identical to the instant case) [
Footnote 2/1] "[w]here political expression or
association is at
Page 436 U. S. 443
issue," a member of the Bar "may not be disciplined unless her
activity in fact involve[s] the type of misconduct at which South
Carolina's broad prohibition is said to be directed."
Ante
at
436 U. S.
434.
I do not believe that any State will be able to determine with
confidence the area in which it may regulate prophylactically and
the area in which it may regulate only upon a specific showing of
harm. Despite the Court's assertion to the contrary,
ante
at
436 U. S. 438
n. 32, the difficulty of drawing distinctions on the basis of the
content of the speech or the motive of the speaker is a valid
reason for avoiding the undertaking where a more objective standard
is readily available. I believe that constitutional inquiry must
focus on the character of the conduct which the State seeks to
regulate, and not on the motives of the individual lawyers or the
nature of the particular litigation involved. The State is
empowered to discipline for conduct which it deems detrimental to
the public interest unless foreclosed from doing so by our cases
construing the First and Fourteenth Amendments.
In
Button, this Court recognized the right of the
National Association for the Advancement of Colored People to
engage in collective activity, including the solicitation of
potential plaintiffs from outside its ranks, for the purpose of
instituting and maintaining litigation to achieve the desegregation
of public schools. The NAACP utilized letters, bulletins, and
petition drives, 371 U.S. at
371 U. S. 422,
apparently directed toward both members and nonmembers of the
organization,
id. at
371 U. S. 433,
[
Footnote 2/2] to organize public
meetings for the purpose of soliciting
Page 436 U. S. 444
plaintiffs. As described in
Button, lawyers played only
a limited role in this solicitation:
"Typically, a local NAACP branch will invite a member of the
legal staff to explain to a meeting of parents and children the
legal steps necessary to achieve desegregation. The staff member
will bring printed forms to the meeting, authorizing him, and other
NAACP or Defense Fund attorneys of his designation, to represent
the signers in legal proceedings to achieve desegregation."
Id. at
371 U. S. 421.
The Court held that the organization could not be punished by the
Commonwealth of Virginia for solicitation on the basis of its role
in instituting desegregation litigation. [
Footnote 2/3]
Here, South Carolina has not attempted to punish the ACLU or any
laymen associated with it. Gary Allen, who was the instigator of
the effort to sue Dr. Pierce, remains as free as before to solicit
potential plaintiffs for future litigation. Likewise, Primus
remains as free a before to address gatherings of the sort
described in
Button to advise potential plaintiffs of
their legal rights. Primus' first contact with Williams took place
at such a gathering, and South Carolina, evidently in response to
Button, has not attempted to discipline
Page 436 U. S. 445
her for her part in that meeting. It has disciplined her for
initiating further contact on an individual basis with Williams,
who had not expressed any desire to become involved in the
collective activity being organized by the ACLU. While
Button appears to permit such individual solicitation for
political purposes by lay members of the organization,
id.
at
371 U. S. 422,
it nowhere explicitly permits such activity on the part of
lawyers.
As the Court understands the Disciplinary Rule enforced by South
Carolina,
"a lawyer employed by the ACLU or a similar organization may
never give unsolicited advice to a lay person that he or she retain
the organization's free services."
Ante at
436 U. S. 433.
That prohibition seems to me entirely reasonable. A State may
rightly fear that members of its Bar have powers of persuasion not
possessed by laymen,
post at
436 U. S.
464-465, and it may also fear that such persuasion may
be as potent in writing as it is in person. Such persuasion may
draw an unsophisticated layman into litigation contrary to his own
best interests,
compare ante at
436 U. S.
434-438,
with Ohralik, post at
436 U. S.
464-467, and it may force other citizens of South
Carolina to defend against baseless litigation which would not
otherwise have been brought. I cannot agree that a State must prove
such harmful consequences in each case simply because an
organization such as the ACLU or the NAACP is involved.
I cannot share the Court's confidence that the danger of such
consequences is minimized simply because a lawyer proceeds from
political conviction, rather than for pecuniary gain. A State may
reasonably fear that a lawyer's desire to resolve "substantial
civil liberties questions," 268 S.C. 259, 263,
233
S.E.2d 301, 303 (1977), may occasionally take precedence over
his duty to advance the interests of his client. It is even more
reasonable to fear that a lawyer in such circumstances will be
inclined to pursue both culpable and blameless defendants to the
last ditch in order to achieve his
Page 436 U. S. 446
ideological goals. [
Footnote
2/4] Although individual litigants, including the ACLU, may be
free to use the courts for such purposes, South Carolina is
likewise free to restrict the activities of the members of its Bar
who attempt to persuade them to do so. I can only conclude that the
discipline imposed upon Primus does not violate the Constitution,
and I would affirm the judgment of the Supreme Court of South
Carolina.
[
Footnote 2/1]
The Court carefully reserves judgment on factual circumstances
in any way distinguishable from those presented here. For instance,
the Court suggests that different considerations would arise if
Primus herself had received any benefit from the solicitation, or
if her income depended in any way on the outcome of the litigation.
Ante at
436 U. S.
428-429, n. 21,
436 U. S. 436 n. 30. Likewise, the Court emphasizes that
the lawyers conducting the litigation would have taken no share had
attorney's fees been awarded by the court.
Ante at
436 U. S. 430
n. 24. Finally, the Court points out that Williams had not
"communicated unambiguously a decision against litigation,"
ante at
436 U. S. 435
n. 28, that the solicitation was not effected in person,
ante at
436 U. S. 435,
and that legal services were offered free of charge,
ante
at
436 U. S. 437.
All these reservations seem to imply that a State might be able to
raise an absolute prohibition against any of these factual
variations, even "[i]n the context of political expression and
association."
Ante at
436 U. S.
437-438.
But see ante, p.
436 U. S. 439
(BLACKMUN, J., concurring). On the other hand, in Ohralik,
post at
436 U. S. 463
n. 20, the Court appears to give a broader reading to today's
holding.
"We hold today in Primus that a lawyer who engages in
solicitation as a form of protected political association generally
may not be disciplined without proof of actual wrongdoing that the
State constitutionally may proscribe."
[
Footnote 2/2]
Of all our cases recognizing the protected status of "collective
activity undertaken to obtain meaningful access to the courts,"
United Transportation Union v. Michigan Bar, 401 U.
S. 576,
401 U. S. 585
(1971), only
Button involves the solicitation of
nonmembers of the organization.
See United Transportation
Union, supra at
401 U. S.
577-578;
Mine Workers v. Illinois Bar Assn.,
389 U. S. 217,
389 U. S. 218
(1967);
Railroad Trainmen v. Virginia Bar, 377 U. S.
1,
377 U. S. 7
(1964).
[
Footnote 2/3]
In
Button, the Commonwealth did not attempt to
discipline the individual lawyers for their role in the
solicitation. The Court's statement that
"the activities of the . . . legal staff shown on this record
are modes of expression and association protected by the First and
Fourteenth Amendments which Virginia may not prohibit,"
371 U.S. at
371 U. S.
428-429, is therefore technically dictum. Thus, the
Court's conclusion today that a State may not discipline a member
of its bar for soliciting an individual not already engaged in the
sort of collective activity protected under our cases is as
unprecedented as it is unsound.
[
Footnote 2/4]
In the case with which Primus was concerned, the last ditch was
the denial of certiorari in this Court after the Court of Appeals
for the Fourth Circuit had held that Pierce had not, in fact, acted
under color of state law.
Walker v. Pierce, 560 F.2d 609
(CA4 1977),
cert. denied, 434 U.S. 1075 (1978).