Yates v. United States, 354 U.S. 298 (1957)
Yates v. United States, 354 U.S. 298 (1957)
Yates v. United States, 354 U.S. 298 (1957)
298
77 S.Ct. 1064
1 L.Ed.2d 1356
We brought these cases here to consider certain questions arising under the
Smith Act which have not heretofore been passed upon by this Court, and
otherwise to review the convictions of these petitioners for conspiracy to
violate that Act. Among other things, the convictions are claimed to rest upon
an application of the Smith Act which is hostile to the principles upon which its
constitutionality was upheld in Dennis v. United States, 341 U.S. 494, 71 S.Ct.
857, 95 L.Ed. 1137.
These 14 petitioners stand convicted, after a jury trial in the United States
District Court for the Southern District of California, upon a single count
indictment charging them with conspiring (1) to advocate and teach the duty
and necessity of overthrowing the Government of the United States by force
and violence, and (2) to organize, as the Communist Party of the United States,
a society of persons who so advocate and teach, all with the intent of causing
the overthrow of the Government by force and violence as speedily as
circumstances would permit. Act of June 28, 1940, 2(a)(1) and (3), 54 Stat.
670, 671, 18 U.S.C. 371, 2385, 18 U.S.C.A. 371, 2385.1 The conspiracy
is alleged to have originated in 1940 and continued down to the date of the
indictment in 1951. The indictment charged that in carrying out the conspiracy
the defendants and their co-conspirators would (a) become members and
officers of the Communist Party, with knowledge of its unlawful purposes, and
assume leadership in carrying out its policies and activities; (b) cause to be
organized units of the Party in California and elsewhere; (c) write and publish,
in the 'Daily Worker' and other Party organs, articles on the proscribed
advocacy and teaching; (d) conduct schools for the indoctrination of Party
members in such advocacy and teaching, and (e) recruit new Party members,
particularly from among persons employed in the key industries of the nation.
Twenty-three overt acts in furtherance of the conspiracy were alleged.
In the view we take of this case, it is necessary for us to consider only the
following of petitioners' contentions: (1) that the term 'organize' as used in the
Smith Act was erroneously construed by the two lower courts; (2) that the trial
court's instructions to the jury erroneously excluded from the case the issue of
'incitement to action'; (3) that the evidence was so insufficient as to require this
Court to direct the acquittal of these petitioners; and (4) that petitioner
Schneiderman's conviction was precluded by this Court's judgment in
Schneiderman v. United States, 320 U.S. 118, 63 S.Ct. 1333, 87 L.Ed. 1796,
under the doctrine of collateral estoppel.2 For reasons given hereafter, we
conclude that these convictions must be reversed and the case remanded to the
District Court with instructions to enter judgments of acquittal as to certain of
the petitioners, and to grant a new trial as to the rest.
One object of the conspiracy charged was to violate the third paragraph of 18
'The rule that penal laws are to be construed strictly, is perhaps not much less
old than construction itself. It is founded on the tenderness of the law for the
rights of individuals; and on the plain principle that the power of punishment is
vested in the legislative, not in the judicial department. It is the legislature, not
the Court, which is to define a crime, and ordain its punishment.
10
'It is said, that notwithstanding this rule, the intention of the law maker must
govern in the construction of penal, as well as other statutes. This is true. But
this is not a new independent rule which subverts the old. It is a modification of
the ancient maxim, and amounts to this, that though penal laws are to be
construed strictly, they are not to be construed so strictly as to defeat the
obvious intention of the legislature. The maxim is not to be so applied as to
narrow the words of the statute to the exclusion of cases which those words, in
their ordinary acceptation, or in that sense in which the legislature has
obviously used them, would comprehend. The intention of the legislature is to
be collected from the words they employ. Where there is no ambiguity in the
words, there is no room for construction. The case must be a strong one indeed,
which would justify a Court in departing from the plain meaning of words,
especially in a penal act, in search of an intention which the words themselves
did not suggest. To determine that a case is within the intention of a statute, its
language must authorize us to say so. It would be dangerous, indeed, to carry
the principle, that a case which is within the reason or mischief of a statute, is
within its provisions, so far as to punish a crime not enumerated in the statute,
because it is of equal atrocity, or of kindred character, with those which are
enumerated. If this principle has ever been recognized in expounding criminal
law, it has been in cases of considerable irritation, which it would be unsafe to
consider as precedents forming a general rule for other cases.'
11
The statute does not define what is meant by 'organize.' Dictionary definitions
are of little help, for, as those offered us sufficiently show, the term is
susceptible of both meanings attributed to it by the parties here.7 The fact that
the Communist Party commprises various components and activities, in relation
to which some of the petitioners bore the title of 'Organizer,' does not advance
us towards a solution of the problem. The charge here is that petitioners
conspired to organize the Communist Party, and, unless 'organize' embraces the
continuing concept contended for by the Government, the establishing of new
units within in the Party and similar activities, following the Party's initial
formation in 1945, have no independent significance or vitality so far as the
'organizing' charge is involved. Nor are we here concerned with the quality of
petitioners' activities as such, that is, whether particular activities may properly
be categorized as 'organizational.' Rather, the issue is whether the term
'organize' as used in this statute is limited by temporal concepts. Stated most
simply, the problem is to choose between two possible answers to the question:
when was the Communist Party 'organized'? Petitioners contend that the only
natural answer to the question is the formation datein this case, 1945. The
Government would have us answer the question by saying that the Party today
is still not completely 'organized'; that 'organizing' is a continuing process that
does not end until the entity is dissolved.
12
particularly aimed at the Communist Party, and its 'organizing' provisions were
especially directed at the leaders of the movement.
13
We find this argument unpersuasive. While the legislative history of the Smith
Act does show that concern about communism was a strong factor leading to
this legislation, it also reveals that the statute, which was patterned on state
anti-sedition laws directed not against Communists but against anarchists and
syndicalists, was aimed equally at all groups falling within its scope.8 More
important, there is no evidence whatever to support the thesis that the
organizing provision of the statute was written with particular reference to the
Communist Party. Indeed, the congressional hearings indicate that it was the
'advocating and teaching' provision of the Act, rather than the 'organizing'
provision, which was especially thought to reach Communist activities. 9
14
Nor do there appear to be any other reasons for ascribing to 'organize' the
Government's broad interpretation. While it is understandable that Congress
should have wished to supplement the general provisions of the Smith Act by a
special provision directed at the activities of those responsible for creating a
new organization of the proscribed type, such as was the situation involved in
the Dennis case, we find nothing which suggests that the 'organizing' provision
was intended to reach beyond this, that is, to embrace the activities of those
concerned with carrying on the affairs of an already existing organization. Such
activities were already amply covered by other provisions of the Act, such as
the 'membership' clause,10 and the basic prohibition of 'advocacy' in
conjunction with the conspiracy provision, and there is thus no need to stretch
the 'organizing' provision to fill any gaps in the statute. Moreover, it is difficult
to find any considerations, comparable to those relating to persons responsible
for creating a new organization, which would have led the Congress to single
out for special treatment those persons occupying so-called organizational
positions in an existing organization, especially when this same section of the
statute proscribes membership in such an organization without drawing any
distinction between those holding executive office and others.
15
California courts. As the hearings on the Smith Act show, however, its
particular prototype was the New York Criminal Anarchy Act,13 not the
California statute, and the 'organizing' provisions of the New York Act have
never been construed by any court. Moreover, to the extent that the language of
the California statute, which itself was patterned on the earlier New York
legislation, might be significant, we think that little weight can be given to
these California decisions. The 'general rule that adoption of the wording of a
statute from another legislative jurisdiction carries with it the previous judicial
interpretation of the wording * * * is a presumption of legislative intention * *
* which varies in strength with the similarity of the language, the established
character of the decisions in the jurisdiction from which the language was
adopted and the presence or lack of other indicia of intention.' Carolene
Products Co. v. United States, 323 U.S. 18, 26, 65 S.Ct. 15, 89 L.Ed. 15. Here,
the three California cases relied on by petitioners were all decisions of lower
courts, and, in the absence of anything in the legislative history indicating that
they were called to its attention, we should not assume that Congress was aware
of them.
16
We are thus left to determine for ourselves the meaning of this provision of the
Smith Act, without any revealing guides as to the intent of Congress. In these
circumstances we should follow the familiar rule that criminal statutes are to be
strictly construed and give to 'organize' its narrow meaning, that is, that the
word refers only to acts entering into the creation of a new organization, and not
to acts thereafter performed in carrying on its activities, even though such acts
may loosely be termed 'organizational.' See United States v. Wiltberger, supra;
United States v. Lacher, 134 U.S. 624, 628, 10 S.Ct. 625, 626, 33 L.Ed. 1080;
United States v. Gradwell, 243 U.S. 476, 485, 37 S.Ct. 407, 410, 61 L.Ed. 857;
Fasulo v. United States, 272 U.S. 620, 628, 47 S.Ct. 200, 201, 71 L.Ed. 443.
Such indeed is the normal usage of the word 'organize,'14 and until the
decisions below in this case the federal trial courts in which the question had
arisen uniformly gave it that meaning. See United States v. Flynn, unreported
(D.C.S.D.N.Y.), No. C. 13737, affirmed, 2 Cir., 216 F.2d 354, 358;
Mesarosh v. United States, D.C., 116 F.Supp. 345, affirmed, 3 Cir., 223 F.2d
449, 465 (dissenting opinion of Hastie, J.); see also United States v. Dennis,
unreported (D.C.S.D.N.Y.), No. C. 12887, affirmed, 2 Cir., 183 F.2d 201;
Id., 341 U.S. 494, 71 S.Ct. 857, 95 L.Ed. 1137.15
17
We too think this statute should be read 'according to the natural and obvious
import of the language, without resorting to subtle and forced construction for
the purpose of either limiting or extending its operation.' United States v.
Temple, 105 U.S. 97, 99, 26 L.Ed. 967.
18
The Government contends that even if the trial court was mistaken in its
construction of the statute, the error was harmless because the conspiracy
charged embraced both 'advocacy' of violent overthrow and 'organizing' the
Communist Party, and the jury was instructed that in order to convict it must
find a conspiracy extending to both objectives. Hence, the argument is, the jury
must in any event be taken to have found petitioners guilty of conspiring to
advocate, and the convictions are supportable on that basis alone. We cannot
accept this proposition for a number of reasons. The portions of the trial court's
instructions relied on by the Government are not sufficiently clear or specific to
warrant our drawing the inference that the jury understood it must find an
agreement extending to both 'advocacy' and 'organizing' in order to convict.16
Further, in order to convict, the jury was required, as the court charged, to find
an overt act which was 'knowingly done in furtherance of an object or purpose
of the conspiracy charged in the indictment,' and we have no way of knowing
whether the overt act found by the jury was one which it believed to be in
furtherance of the 'advocacy' rather than the 'organizing' objective of the
alleged conspiracy. The character of most of the overt acts alleged associates
them as readily with 'organizing' as with 'advocacy.'17 In these circumstances
we think the proper rule to be applied is that which requires a verdict to be set
aside in cases where the verdict is supportable on one ground, but not on
another, and it is impossible to tell which ground the jury selected. Stromberg
v. People of State of California, 283 U.S. 359, 367368, 51 S.Ct. 532, 535, 75
L.Ed. 1117; Williams v. State of North Carolina, 317 U.S. 287, 291292, 63
S.Ct. 207, 209210, 87 L.Ed. 279; Cramer v. United States, 325 U.S. 1, 36, 65
S.Ct. 918, 935, note 45, 89 L.Ed. 1441.
19
We conclude, therefore, that since the Communist Party came into being in
1945, and the indictment was not returned until 1951, the three-year statute of
limitations had run on the 'organizing' charge, and required the withdrawal of
that part of the indictment from the jury's consideration. Samuel v. United
States, 9 Cir., 169 F.2d 787, 798. See also Haupt v. United States, 330 U.S.
631, 641, note 1, 67 S.Ct. 874, 878, 91 L.Ed. 1145; Stromberg v. People of
State of California, supra, 283 U.S. at page 368, 51 S.Ct. at page 535.
Petitioners contend that the instructions to the jury were fatally defective in that
the trial court refused to charge that, in order to convict, the jury must find that
the advocacy which the defendants conspired to promote was of a kind
calculated to 'incite' persons to action for the forcible overthrow of the
Government. It is argued that advocacy of forcible overthrow as mere abstract
doctrine is within the free speech protection of the First Amendment; that the
We print in the margin the pertinent parts of the trial court's instructions. 18
After telling the jury that it could not convict the defendants for holding or
expressing mere opinions, beliefs, or predictions relating to violent overthrow,
the trial court defined the content of the proscribed advocacy or teaching in the
following terms, which are crucial here:
23
'Any advocacy or teaching which does not include the urging of force and
violence as the means of overthrowing and destroying the Government of the
United States is not within the issue of the indictment here and can constitute
no basis for any finding against the defendants.
24
'The kind of advocacy and teaching which is charged and upon which your
verdict must be reached is not merely a desirability but a necessity that the
Government of the United States be overthrown and destroyed by force and
violence and not merely a propriety but a duty to overthrow and destroy the
Government of the United States by force and violence.'
25
There can be no doubt from the record that in so instructing the jury the court
regarded as immaterial, and intended to withdraw from the jury's consideration,
any issue as to the character of the advocacy in terms of its capacity to stir
listeners to forcible action. Both the petitioners and the Government submitted
proposed instructions which would have required the jury to find that the
proscribed advocacy was not of a mere abstract doctrine of forcible overthrow,
but of action to that end, by the use of language reasonably and ordinarily
calculated to incite persons to such action.19 The trial court rejected these
proposed instructions on the ground that any necessity for giving them which
may have existed at the time the Dennis case was tried20 was removed by this
Court's subsequent decision in that case. The court made it clear in colloquy
with counsel that in its view the illegal advocacy was made out simply by
showing that what was said dealt with forcible overthrow and that it was uttered
with a specific intent to accomplish that purpose,21 insisting that all such
We are thus faced with the question whether the Smith Act prohibits advocacy
and teaching of forcible overthrow as an abstract principle, divorced from any
effort to instigate action to that end, so long as such advocacy or teaching is
engaged in with evil intent. We hold that it does not.
27
28
'The statute does not penalize the utterance or publication of abstract 'doctrine'
or academic discussion having no quality of incitement to any concrete action. *
* * It is not the abstract 'doctrine' of overthrowing organized government by
unlawful means which is denounced by the statute, but the advocacy of action
for the accomplishment of that purpose. * * * This (Manifesto) * * * is (in) the
language of direct incitement. * * * That the jury were warranted in finding that
the Manifesto advocated not merely the abstract doctrine of overthrowing
organized government by force, violence and unlawful means, but action to that
end, is clear. * * * That utterances inciting to the overthrow of organized
government by unlawful means, present a sufficient danger of substantive evil
to bring their punishment within the range of legislative discretion, is clear.' Id.,
268 U.S. at pages 664 669, 45 S.Ct. at pages 629631.
29
The legislative history of the Smith Act and related bills shows beyond all
question that Congress was aware of the distinction between the advocacy or
teaching of abstract doctrine and the advocacy or teaching of action, and that it
did not intend to disregard it.26 The statute was aimed at the advocacy and
teaching of concrete action for the forcible overthrow of the Government, and
not of principles divorced from action.
30
31
32
This misconceives the situation confronting the Court in Dennis and what was
held there. Although the jury's verdict, interpreted in light of the trial court's
instructions,29 did not justify the conclusion that the defendants' advocacy was
directed at, or created any danger of, immediate overthrow, it did establish that
the advocacy was aimed at building up a seditious group and maintaining it in
readiness for action at a propitious time. In such circumstances, said Chief
Justice Vinson, the Government need not hold its hand 'until the putsch is about
to be executed the plans have been laid and the signal is awaited. If
Government is aware that a group aiming at its overthrow is attempting to
indoctrinate its members and to commit them to a course whereby they will
strike when the leaders feel the circumstances permit, action by the
Government is required.' 341 U.S. at page 509, 71 S.Ct. at page 867. The
essence of the Dennis holding was that indoctrination of a group in preparation
for future violent action, as well as exhortation to immediate action, by
advocacy found to be directed to 'action for the accomplishment' of forcible
overthrow, to violence as 'a rule or principle of action,' and employing
'language of incitement,' id., 341 U.S. at pages 511512, 71 S.Ct. at page 868,
is not constitutionally protected when the group is of sufficient size and
cohesiveness, is sufficiently oriented towards action, and other circumstances
are such as reasonably to justify apprehension that action will occur. This is
quite a different thing from the view of the District Court here that mere
doctrinal justification of forcible overthrow, if engaged in with the intent to
accomplish overthrow, is punishable per se under the Smith Act. That sort of
advocacy, even though uttered with the hope that it may ultimately lead to
violent revolution, is too remote from concrete action to be regarded as the kind
of indoctrination preparatory to action which was condemned in Dennis. As one
of the concurring opinions in Dennis put it: 'Throughout our decisions there has
recurred a distinction between the statement of an idea which may prompt its
hearers to take unlawful action, and advocacy that such action be taken.' Id.,
341 U.S. at page 545, 71 S.Ct. at page 885. There is nothing in Dennis which
makes that historic distinction obsolete.
33
The Court of Appeals took a different view from that of the District Court.
While seemingly recognizing that the proscribed advocacy must be associated
in some way with action, and that the instructions given the jury here fell short
in that respect, it considered that the instructions which the trial court refused
were unnecessary in this instance because establishment of the conspiracy, here
charged under the general conspiracy statute, required proof of an overt act,
whereas in Dennis, where the conspiracy was charged under the Smith Act, no
overt act was required.30 In other words, the Court of Appeals thought that the
requirement of proving an overt act was an adequate substitute for the linking
of the advocacy to action which would otherwise have been necessary.31 This,
of course, is a mistaken notion, for the overt act will not necessarily evidence
the character of the advocacy engaged in, nor, indeed, is an agreement to
advocate forcible overthrow itself an unlawful conspiracy if it does not call for
advocacy of action. The statement in Dennis that 'it is the existence of the
conspiracy which creates the danger,' 341 U.S. at page 511, 71 S.Ct. at page
868, does not support the Court of Appeals. Bearing in mind that Dennis, like
all other Smith Act conspiracy cases thus far, including this one, involved
advocacy which had already taken place, and not advocacy still to occur, it is
clear that in context the phrase just quoted referred to more than the basic
agreement to advocate. 'The mere fact that (during the indictment period)
petitioners' activities did not result in an attempt to overthrow the Government
by force and violence is of course no answer to the fact that there was a group
that was ready to make the attempt. The formation by petitioners of such a
highly organized conspiracy, with rigidly disciplined members subject to call
when the leaders, these petitioners, felt that the time had come for action,
coupled with * * * world conditions, * * * disposes of the contention that a
conspiracy to advocate, as distinguished from the advocacy itself, cannot be
constitutionally restrained, because it comprises only the preparation. It is the
existence of the conspiracy which creates the danger. * * * If the ingredients of
the reaction are present, we cannot bind the Government to wait until the
catalyst is added.' 341 U.S. at pages 510511, 71 S.Ct. at page 868 (emphasis
supplied). The reference of the term 'conspiracy,' in context, was to an
agreement to accomplish overthrow at some future time, implicit in the jury's
findings under the instructions given, rather than to an agreement to speak.
Dennis was thus not concerned with a conspiracy to engage at some future time
in seditious advocacy, but rather with a conspiracy to advocate presently the
taking of forcible action in the future. It was action, not advocacy, that was to
be postponed until 'circumstances' would 'permit.' We intimate no views as to
whether a conspiracy to engage in advocacy in the future, where speech would
thus be separated from action by one further removed, is punishable under the
Smith Act.
34
We think, thus, that both of the lower courts here misconceived Dennis.
35
In light of the foregoing we are unable to regard the District Court's charge
upon this aspect of the case as adequate. The jury was never told that the Smith
Act does not denounce advocacy in the sense of preaching abstractly the
forcible overthrow of the Government. We think that the trial court's statement
that the proscribed advocacy must include the 'urging,' 'necessity,' and 'duty' of
forcible overthrow, and not merely its 'desirability' and 'propriety,' may not be
regarded as a sufficient substitute for charging that the Smith Act reaches only
advocacy of action for the overthrow of government by force and violence. The
essential distinction is that those to whom the advocacy is addressed must be
urged to do something, now or in the future, rather than merely to believe in
something. At best the expressions used by the trial court were equivocal, since
in the absence of any instructions differentiating advocacy of abstract doctrine
from advocacy of action, they were as consistent with the former as they were
with the latter. Nor do we regard their ambiguity as lessened by what the trial
court had to say as to the right of the defendants to announce their beliefs as to
the inevitability of violent revolution, or to advocate other unpopular opinions.
Especially when it is unmistakable that the court did not consider the urging of
Nor can we accept the Government's argument that the District Court was
justified in not charging more than it did because the refused instructions
proposed by both sides specified that the advocacy must be of a character
reasonably calculated to 'incite' to forcible overthrow, a term which, it is now
argued, might have conveyed to the jury an implication that the advocacy must
be of immediate action. Granting that some qualification of the proposed
instructions would have been permissible to dispel such an implication, and that
it was not necessary even that the trial court should have employed the
particular term 'incite,' it was nevertheless incumbent on the court to make clear
in some fashion that the advocacy must be of action and not merely abstract
doctrine. The instructions given not only do not employ the word 'incite,' but
also avoid the use of such terms and phrases as 'action,' 'call for action,' 'as a
rule or principle of action,' and so on, all of which were offered in one form or
another by both the petitioners and the Government.33
37
38
'In further construction and interpretation of the statute (the Smith Act) I charge
you that it is not the abstract doctrine of overthrowing or destroying organized
government by unlawful means which is denounced by this law, but the
teaching and advocacy of action for the accomplishment of that purpose, by
language reasonably and ordinarily calculated to incite persons to such action.
Accordingly, you cannot find the defendants or any of them guilty of the crime
charged unless you are satisfied beyond a reasonable doubt that they conspired
* * * to advocate and teach the duty and necessity of overthrowing or
destroying the Government of the United States by force and violence, with the
intent that such teaching and advocacy be of a rule or principle of action and by
language reasonably and ordinarily calculated to incite persons to such action,
all with the intent to cause the overthrow * * * as speedily as circumstances
would permit.' (Emphasis added.) United States v. Foster, D.C., 9 F.R.D. 367,
391; Dennis v. United States, 341 U.S. at pages 511512, 71 S.Ct. at page
868.
39
at page 516, 71 S.Ct. at page 870. Rather, we have scrutinized the record to see
whether there are individuals as to whom acquittal is unequivocally demanded.
We do this because it is in general too hypothetical and abstract an inquiry to
try to judge whether the evidence would have been inadequate had the cases
been submitted under a proper charge, and had the Government realized that all
its evidence must be channeled into the 'advocacy' rather that the 'organizing'
charge. We think we may do this by drawing on our power under 28 U.S.C.
2106, 28 U.S.C.A. 2106, because under that statute we would no doubt be
justified in refusing to order acquittal even where the evidence might be
deemed palpably insufficient, particularly since petitioners have asked in the
alternative for a new trial as well as for acquittal. See Bryan v. United States,
338 U.S. 552, 70 S.Ct. 317, 94 L.Ed. 335.
42
On this basis we have concluded that the evidence against petitioners Connelly,
Kusnitz, Richmond, Spector, and Steinberg is so clearly insufficient that their
acquittal should be ordered, but that as to petitioners Carlson, Dobbs, Fox,
Healey (Mrs. Connelly), Lambert, Lima, Schneiderman, Stack, and Yates, we
would not be justified in closing the way to their retrial. We proceed to the
reasons for these conclusions.
43
some future time we cannot but regard this record as strikingly deficient. At
best this voluminous record shows but a half dozen or so scattered incidents
which, even under the loosest standards, could be deemed to show such
advocacy. Most of these were not connected with any of the petitioners, or
occurred many years before the period covered by the indictment. We are
unable to regard this sporadic showing as sufficient to justify viewing the
Communist Party as the nexus between these petitioners and the conspiracy
charged. We need scarcely say that however much one may abhor even the
abstract preaching of forcible overthrow of government, or believe that forcible
overthrow is the ultimate purpose to which the Communist Party is dedicated,
it is upon the evidence in the record that the petitioners must be judged in this
case.
44
We must, then, look elsewhere than to the evidence concerning the Communist
Party as such for the existence of the conspiracy to advocate charged in the
indictment. As to the petitioners Connelly, Kusnitz, Richmond, Spector, and
Steinberg we find no adequate evidence in the record which would permit a
jury to find that they were members of such a conspiracy. For all purposes
relevant here, the sole evidence as to them was that they had long been
members, officers or functionaries of the Communist Party of California; and
that standing alone, as Congress has enacted in 4(f) of the Internal Security
Act of 1950,35 makes out no case against them. So far as this record shows,
none of them has engaged in or been associated with any but what appear to
have been wholly lawful activities,36 or has ever made a single remark or been
present when someone else made a remark, which would tend to prove the
charges against them. Connelly and Richmond were, to be sure, the Los
Angeles and Executive Editors, respectively, of the Daily People's World, the
West Coast Party organ, but we can find nothing in the material introduced into
evidence from that newspaper which advances the Government's case.
45
Moreover, apart from the inadequacy of the evidence to show, at best, more
than the abstract advocacy and teaching of forcible overthrow by the Party, it is
difficult to perceive how the requisite specific intent to accomplish such
overthrow could be deemed proved by a showing of mere membership or the
holding of office in the Communist Party. We therefore think that as to these
petitioners the evidence was entirely too meagre to justify putting them to a
new trial, and that their acquittal should be ordered.
46
Nor can we say that the evidence linking these nine petitioners to that sort of
advocacy, with the requisite specific intent, is so tenuous as not to justify their
retrial under proper legal standards. Fox, Healey, Lambert, Lima,
Schneiderman, Stack, and Yates, as members of the State and San Francisco
County Boards, were shown to have been closely associated with Ida Rothstein,
the principal teacher of the San Francisco classes, who also during this same
period arranged in a devious and conspiratorial manner for the holding of
Board meetings at the home of the witness Honig, which were attended by
these petitioners. It was also shown that from time to time instructions
emanated from the Boards or their members to instructors of groups at lower
levels. And while none of the written instructions produced at the trial were
invidious in themselves, it might be inferred that additional instructions were
given which were not reduced to writing. Similarly, there was evidence of close
association between petitioners Carlson and Dobbs and associates or superiors
of the witness Scarletto, which might be taken as indicating that these two
petitioners had knowledge of the apparatus in which Scarletto was active. And
finally, all of these nine petitioners were shown either to have made statements
themselves, or apparently approved statements made in their presence, which a
jury might take as some evidence of their participation with the requisite intent
in a conspiracy to advocate illegal action.
48
49
50
51
While upon a new trial the overt act must be found, in view of what we have
held, to have been in furtherance of a conspiracy to 'advocate,' rather than to
'organize,' we are not prepared to say that one of the episodes relied on here
could not be found to be in furtherance of such an objective, if, under proper
instructions, a jury should find that the Communist Party was a vehicle through
which the alleged conspiracy was promoted. While in view of our acquittal of
Steinberg, the first of these episodes, in which he is alleged to have been
involved, may no longer be relied on as an overt act, this would not affect the
second episode, in which petitioner Schneiderman was alleged and proved to
have participated.
52
For the foregoing reasons we think that the way must be left open for a new
trial to the extent indicated.
54
We differ with petitioner, first of all, in his estimate of what the Schneiderman
case determined for purposes of the doctrine of collateral estoppel. That
doctrine makes conclusive in subsequent proceedings only determinations of
fact, and mixed fact and law, that were essential to the decision. Commissioner
of Internal Revenue v. Sunnen, 333 U.S. 591, 601602, 68 S.Ct. 715, 721, 92
L.Ed. 898; Tait v. Western Maryland R. Co., 289 U.S. 620, 53 S.Ct. 706, 77
L.Ed. 1405; The Evergreens v. Nunan, 2 Cir., 141 F.2d 927, 928, 152 A.L.R.
1187. As we read the Schneiderman opinion, the only determination essential
to the decision was that Schneiderman had not, prior to 1927, adopted an
interpretation of the Communist Party's teachings featuring 'agitation and
exhortation calling for present violent action.' 320 U.S. at pages 157159, 63
S.Ct. at pages 13521353. If it be accepted that the holding extended in the
alternative to the character of advocacy engaged in by the Communist Party,
then the essential finding was that the Party had not, in 1927, engaged in
'agitation and exhortation calling for present violent action.' Ibid. The Court in
Schneiderman certainly did not purport to determine what the doctrinal content
of 'Marxism-Leninism' might be at all times and in all places. Nor did it
establish that the books and pamphlets introduced against Schneiderman in that
proceeding could not support in any way an inference of criminality, no matter
how or by whom they might thereafter be used. At most, we think, it made the
determinations we have stated, limited to the time and place that were then in
issue.
56
with whether petitioner has engaged in 'agitation and exhortation calling for
present violent action,' whether in 1927 or later. Even if it were conclusively
established against the Government that neither petitioner nor the Communist
Party had ever engaged in such advocacy, that circumstance would constitute
no bar to a conviction under 18 U.S.C. 371, 18 U.S.C.A. 371, of conspiring
to advocate forcible overthrow of government in violation of the Smith Act. It
is not necessary for conviction here that advocacy of 'present violent action' be
proved. Petitioner's demand for judgment of acquittal must therefore be
rejected. The decision in Federal Trade Commission v. Cement Institute, 333
U.S. 683, 708 709, 68 S.Ct. 793, 807, 92 L.Ed. 1010, is precisely in point and is
controlling.
57
What we have said we think also disposes of petitioner's contention that the
trial court should have instructed the jury that certain evidentiary or subordinate
issues must be taken as conclusively determined in his favor. The argument is
that the determinations made in the Schneiderman case are not wholly
irrelevant to this case, even if they do not conclude it, and hence that petitioner
should be entitled to an instruction giving those determinations such partial
conclusive effect as they might warrant. We think, however, that the doctrine of
collateral estoppel does not establish any such concept of 'conclusive evidence'
as that contended for by petitioner. The normal rule is that a prior judgment
need be given no conclusive effect at all unless it establishes one of the ultimate
facts in issue in the subsequent proceeding. So far as merely evidentiary or
'mediate' facts are concerned, the doctrine of collateral estoppel is inoperative.
The Evergreens v. Nunan, 2 Cir., 141 F.2d 927, 152 A.L.R. 1187; Restatement,
Judgments 68, comment p. Whether there are any circumstances in which the
giving of limiting instructions such as those requested here might be necessary
or proper, we need not now determine. Cf. Bordonaro Bros. Theatres, Inc., v.
Paramount Pictures, Inc., 2 Cir., 203 F.2d 676, 678. It is sufficient for us to hold
that in this case the matters of fact and mixed fact and law necessarily
determined by the prior judgment, limited as they were to the year 1927, were
so remote from the issues as to justify their exclusion from evidence in the
discretion of the trial judge.
58
Since there must be a new trial, we have not found it necessary to deal with the
contentions of the petitioners as to the fairness of the trial already held. The
judgment of the Court of Appeals is reversed, and the case remanded to the
District Court for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
59
It is so ordered.
60
with instructions.
61
62
I agree with the result reached by the Court, and with the opinion of the Court
except as to its interpretation of the term 'organize' as used in the Smith Act. As
to that, I agree with the interpretation given it by the Court of Appeals. 9 Cir.,
225 F.2d 146.
63
Mr. Justice BRENNAN and Mr. Justice WHITTAKER took no part in the
consideration or decision of this case.
64
Mr. Justice BLACK, with whom Mr. Justice DOUGLAS joins, concurring in
part and dissenting in part.
I.
65
I would reverse every one of these convictions and direct that all the defendants
be acquitted. In my judgment the statutory provisions on which these
prosecutions are based abridge freedom of speech, press and assembly in
violation of the First Amendment to the United States Constitution. See my
dissent and that of Mr. Justice Douglas in Dennis v. United States, 341 U.S.
494, 579, 581, 71 S.Ct. 857, 902, 903, 95 L.Ed. 1137. Also see my opinion in
American Communications Ass'n, C.I.O. v. Douds, 339 U.S. 382, 445, 70 S.Ct.
674, 707, 94 L.Ed. 925.
66
The kind of trials conducted here are wholly dissimilar to normal criminal
trials. Ordinarily these 'Smith Act' trials are prolonged affairs lasting for
months. In part this is attributable to the routine introduction in evidence of
massive collections of books, tracts, pamphlets, newspapers, and manifestoes
discussing Communism, Socialism, Capitalism, Feudalism and governmental
institutions in general, which, it is not too much to say, are turgid, diffuse,
abstruse, and just plain dull. Of course, no juror can or is expected to plow his
way through this jungle of verbiage. The testimony of witnesses is
comparatively insignificant. Guilt or innocence may turn on what Marx or
Engels or someone else wrote or advocated as much as a hundred or more years
ago. Elaborte, refined distinctions are drawn between 'Communism,' 'Marxism,'
'Leninism,' 'Trotskyism,' and 'Stalinism.' When the propriety of obnoxious or
unorthodox views about government is in reality made the crucial issue, as it
must be in cases of this kind, prejudice makes conviction inevitable except in
the rarest circumstances.
II.
67
Since the Court proceeds on the assumption that the statutory provisions
involved are valid, however, I feel free to express my views about the issues it
considers.
68
First.I agree with Part I of the Court's opinion that deals with the statutory
term, 'organize,' and holds that the organizing charge in the indictment was
barred by the three-year statute of limitations.
69
Second.I also agree with the Court insofar as it holds that the trial judge
erred in instructing that persons could be punished under the Smith Act for
teaching and advocating forceful overthrow as an abstract principle. But on the
other hand, I cannot agree that the instruction which the Court indicates it
might approve is constitutionally permissible. The Court says that persons can
be punished for advocating action to overthrow the Government by force and
violence, where those to whom the advocacy is addressed are urged 'to do
something, now or in the future, rather than merely to believe in something.'
Under the Court's approach, defendants could still be convicted simply for
agreeing to talk as distinguished from agreeing to act. I believe that the First
Amendment forbids Congress to punish people for talking about public affairs,
whether or not such discussion incites to action, legal or illegal. See
Meiklejohn, Free Speech and Its Relation to Self-Government. Cf. Chafee,
Book Review, 62 Harv.L.Rev. 891. As the Virginia Assembly said in 1785, in
its 'Statute for Religious Liberty,' written by Thomas Jefferson, 'it is time
enough for the rightful purposes of civil government, for its officers to interfers
when principles break out into overt acts against peace and good order * * *.'*
Cf. Giboney v. Empire Storage & Ice Co., 336 U.S. 490, 501502, 69 S.Ct.
684, 690, 93 L.Ed. 834; Labor Board v. Virginia Electric & P. Co., 314 U.S.
469, 476480, 62 S.Ct. 344, 347, 348, 86 L.Ed. 348; Virginia Electric & P.
Co. v. National Labor Relations Board, 319 U.S. 533, 539, 63 S.Ct. 1214, 1218,
87 L.Ed. 1568.
70
Third.I also agree with the Court that petitioners, Connelly, Kusnitz,
Richmond, Spector, and Steinberg, should be ordered acquitted since there is
no evidence that they have ever engaged in anything but 'wholly lawful
activities.' But in contrast to the Court, I think the same action should also be
taken as to the remaining nine defendants. The Court's opinion summarizes the
strongest evidence offered against these defendants. This summary reveals a
pitiful inadequacy of proof to show beyond a reasonable doubt that the
defendants were guilty of conspiring to incite persons to act to overthrow the
Government. The Court says:
71
'In short, while the record contains evidence of little more than a general
program of educational activity by the Communist Party which included
advocacy of violence as a theoretical matter, we are not prepared to say, at this
stage of the case, that it would be impossible for a jury, resolving all conflicts
in favor of the Government and giving the evidence as to these San Francisco
and Los Angeles episodes its utmost sweep, to find that advocacy of action was
also engaged in when the group involved was thought particularly trustworthy,
dedicated, and suited for violent tasks.'
72
It seems unjust to compel these nine defendants, who have just been through
one four-month trial, to go through the ordeal of another trial on the basis of
such flimsy evidence. As the Court's summary demonstrates, the evidence
introduced during the trial against these defendants was insufficient to support
their conviction. Under such circumstances, it was the duty of the trial judge to
direct a verdict of acquittal. If the jury had been discharged so that the
Government could gather additional evidence in an attempt to convict, such a
discharge would have been a sound basis for a plea of former jeopardy in a
second trial. See Wade v. Hunter, 336 U.S. 684, 69 S.Ct. 834, 93 L.Ed. 974,
and cases cited there. I cannot agree that 'justice' requires this Court to send
these cases back to put these defendants in jeopardy again in violation of the
spirit if not the letter of the Fifth Amendment's provision against double
jeopardy.
73
74
'Each was a public meeting held under Party auspices at which speeches were
made by one or more of the petitioners extolling leaders of the Soviet Union
and criticizing various aspects of the foreign policy of the United States. At one
of the meetings an appeal for funds was made. Petitioners contend that these
meetings do not satisfy the requirement of the statute that there be shown an act
done by one of the conspirators 'to effect the object of the conspiracy.' The
Government concedes that nothing unlawful was shown to have been said or
done at these meetings, but contends that these occurrences nonetheless
sufficed as overt acts under the jury's findings.'
75
The Court holds that attendance at these lawful and orderly meetings
constitutes an 'overt act' sufficient to meet the statutory requirements. I
disagree.
76
III.
77
In essence, petitioners were tried upon the charge that they believe in and want
to foist upon this country a different and to us a despicable form of authoritarian
government in which voices criticizing the existing order are summarily
silenced. I fear that the present type of prosecutions are more in line with the
philosophy of authoritarian government than with that expressed by our First
Amendment.
78
Doubtlessly, dictators have to stamp out causes and beliefs which they deem
subversive to their evil regimes. But governmental suppression of causes and
beliefs seems to me to be the very antithesis of what our Constitution stands for.
The choice expressed in the First Amendment in favor of free expression was
made against a turbulent background by men such as Jefferson, Madison, and
Masonmen who believed that loyalty to the provisions of this Amendment
was the best way to assure a long life for this new nation and its Government.
Unless there is complete freedom for expression of all ideas, whether we like
them or not, concerning the way government should be run and who shall run
it, I doubt if any views in the long run can be secured against the censor. The
First Amendment provides the only kind of security system that can preserve a
free governmentone that leaves the way wide open for people to favor,
discuss, advocate, or incite causes and doctrines however obnoxious and
antagonistic such views may be to the rest of us.
79
80
81
The conspiracy charged here is the same as in Dennis, except that here it is
geared to California conditions, and brought, for the period 1948 to 1951, under
the general conspiracy statute, 18 U.S.C. 371, 18 U.S.C.A. 371, rather than
the old conspiracy section of the Smith Act. The indictment charges petitioners
with a conspiracy to violate two sections of the Smith Act, as recodified in 18
U.S.C. 2385, 18 U.S.C.A. 2385, by knowingly and wilfully (1) teaching and
advocating the violent overthrow of the Government of the United States, and
(2) organizing in California through the creation of groups, cells, schools,
assemblies of persons, and the like, the Communist Party, a society which
teaches or advocates violent overthrow of the Government.
82
The conspiracy includes the same group of defendants as in the Dennis case
though petitioners here occupied a lower echelon in the party hierarchy. They,
nevertheless, served in the same army and were engaged in the same mission.
The convictions here were based upon evidence closely paralleling that
adduced in Dennis and in United States v. Flynn, 2 Cir., 1954, 216 F.2d 354,
both of which resulted in convictions. This Court laid down in Dennis the
principles governing such prosecutions and they were closely adhered to here,
although the nature of the two cases did not permit identical handling.
83
I would affirm the convictions. However, the Court has freed five of the
convicted petitioners and ordered new trials for the remaining nine. As to the
five, it says that the evidence is 'clearly insufficient.' I agree with the Court of
Appeals, the District Court, and the jury that the evidence showed guilt beyond
a reasonable doubt.1 It paralleled that in Dennis and Flynn and was equally as
strong. In any event, this Court should not acquit anyone here. In its long
history I find no case in which an acquittal has been ordered by this Court
solely on the facts. It is somewhat late to start in now usurping the function of
the jury, especially where new trials are to be held covering the same charges.
It may bealthough after today's opinion it is somewhat doubtfulthat under
the new theories announced by the Court for Smith Act prosecutions sufficient
evidence might be available on remand. To say the least, the Government
should have an opportunity to present its evidence under these changed
conditions.
84
I cannot agree that half of the indictment against the remaining nine petitioners
should be quashed as barred by the statute of limitations. I agree with my
Brother BURTON that the Court has incorrectly interpreted the term 'organize'
as used in the Smith Act. The Court concludes that the plain words of the Act,2
'Whoever organizes or helps or attempts to organize any society, group, or
assembly of persons' (emphasis added) embodies only those 'acts entering into
the creation of a new organization.' As applied to the Communist Party, the
Court holds that it refers only to the reconstitution of the Party in 1945 and a
part of the prosecution here is, therefore, barred by the three-year statute of
limitations. This construction frustrates the purpose of the Congress for the Act
was passed in 1940 primarily to curb the growing strength and activity of the
Party.3 Under such an interpretation all prosecution would have been barred at
the very time of the adoption of the Act for the Party was formed in 1919. If the
Congress had been concerned with the initial establishment of the Party it
would not have used the words 'helps or attempts,' nor the phrase 'group, or
assembly of persons.' It was concerned with the new Communist fronts, cells,
schools, and other groups, as well as assemblies of persons, which were being
created nearly every day under the aegis of the Party to carry on its purposes.
This is what the indictment here charges and the proof shows beyond doubt
was in fact done. The decision today prevents for all time any prosecution of
Party members under this subparagraph of the Act.
85
While the holding of the Court requires a reversal of the case and a retrial, the
Court very properly considers the instructions given by the trial judge. I do not
agree with the conclusion of the Court regarding the instructions, but I am
highly pleased to see that it disposes of this problem so that on the new trial
instructions will be given that will at least meet the views of the Court. I have
studied the section of the opinion concerning the instructions and frankly its
'artillery of words' leaves me confused as to why the majority concludes that
the charge as given was insufficient. I thought that Dennis merely held that a
charge was sufficient where it requires a finding that 'the Party advocates the
theory that there is a duty and necessity to overthrow the Government by force
87
I have read this statement over and over but do not seem to grasp its meaning
for I see no resemblance between it and what the respected Chief Justice wrote
in Dennis, nor do I find any such theory in the concurring opinions. As I see it,
the trial judge charged in essence all that was required under the Dennis
opinions, whether one takes the view of the Chief Justice or of those concurring
in the judgment. Apparently what disturbs the Court now is that the trial judge
here did not give the Dennis charge although both the prosecution and the
defense asked that it be given. Since he refused to grant these requests I
suppose the majority feels that there must be some difference between the two
charges, else the one that was given in Dennis would have been followed here.
While there may be some distinctions between the charges, as I view them they
are without material difference. I find, as the majority intimates, that the
distinctions are too 'subtle and difficult to grasp.'
88
However, in view of the fact that the case must be retried, regardless of the
disposition made here on the charges, I see no reason to engage in what
becomes nothing more than an exercise in semantics with the majority about
this phase of the case. Certainly if I had been sitting at the trial I would have
given the Dennis charge, not because I consider it any more correct, but simply
because it had the stamp of approval of this Court. Perhaps this approach is too
practical. But I am sure the trial judge realizes now that practicality often pays.
89
I should perhaps add that I am in agreement with the Court in its holding that
petitioner Schneiderman can find no aid from the doctrine of collateral estoppel.
member of, or affiliates with, any such society, group, or assembly of persons,
knowing the purposes thereof
'Shall be fined not more than $10,000 or imprisoned not more than ten years, or
both * * *.'
For convenience the original Smith Act and 2385 will both be referred to in
this opinion as 'the Smith Act.'
It will be noted that the recodification did not carry into 2385 the conspiracy
section of the Smith Act ( 3). The latter provision, however, was in substance
restored to 2385 on July 24, 1956, to apply to offenses committed on or after
that date. 70 Stat. 623.
The conspiracy charged in this case was laid under 3 of the Smith Act for the
period 1940 to September 1, 1948, and for the period thereafter, down to the
filing of the indictment in 1951, under the general conspiracy statute, 18 U.S.C.
371, 18 U.S.C.A. 371, providing in pertinent part as follows:
'If two or more persons conspire * * * to commit any offense against the United
States, * * * and one or more of such persons doany act to effect the object of
the conspiracy, each shall be fined not more than $10,000 or imprisoned not
more than five years, or both.'
2
Both petitioners and the Government cite the following definitions of 'organize'
from Webster's New International Dictionary (2d ed.): '1. To furnish with
organs; to give an organic structure to * * *.' 2. To arrange or constitute in
interdependent parts, each having a special function, act, office, or relation with
respect to the whole; to systematize; to get into working order; as, to organize
an army; to organize recruits.' The Government also gives us the following
from Funk & Wagnall's New Standard Dictionary (1947): '1. To bring into
systematic connection and cooperation as parts of a whole, or to bring the
various parts of into effective correlation and cooperation; as, to organize the
peasants into an army.' And petitioners cite Black's Law Dictionary, as follows:
'To establish or furnish with organs; to systematize; to put into working order;
to arrange in order for the normal exercise of its appropriate functions.'
8
Id., passim.
10
The 'organizing' section, supra, 354 U.S. 301, 77 S.Ct. 1067, note 1, also makes
it an offense 'to be or become a member of, or affiliate with, any such society,
group, or assembly of persons, knowing the purposes thereof.'
11
12
13
14
In other contexts state courts have given the term that meaning. See State ex rel.
Childs v. School District, 54 Minn. 213, 55 N.W. 1122; Whitmire v. Cass, 213
S.Ct. 230, 236, 49 S.E.2d 1, 3; Warren v. Barber Asphalt Pav. Co., 115 Mo.
572, 576577, 22 S.W. 490491; Commonwealth v. Wm. Mann Co., 150 Pa.
64, 70, 24 A. 601, 602.
15
Following the decision of the Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit in this
case, 'organize' has been given its wider meaning by two District Courts in that
circuit, United States v. Fujimoto, reported on another point, 107 F.Supp. 865,
and United States v. Huff, now pending on appeal to the Court of Appeals. The
Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit, following the Ninth Circuit, has likewise
given the term its broader meaning. Wellman v. United States, 227 F.2d 757.
16
The trial court did no more on this score than to charge, in the language of the
indictment, that the conspiracy had two objects, namely, to advocate and teach
forcible overthrow and to organize the Communist Party as a vehicle for that
purpose, and then instruct the jury that it must find that 'the conspiracy charged
in the indictment' had been proved beyond a reasonable doubt.
17
18
overthrow and destruction of the Government of the United States by force and
violence as speedily as circumstances would permit.
'The defendants, in common with all other persons living under our
Constitution, have a general right protected by the First Amendment to hold,
express, teach and advocate opinions, even though their opinions are rejected
by the overwhelming majority of the American people; and have the further
right to organize or combine peaceably with other persons for the purpose of
spreading and promoting their opinions more effectively.
'Whether you agree with these opinions or whether they seem to you
reasonable, unreasonable, absurd, distasteful or hateful has no bearing whatever
on the right of other persons to maintain them and to seek to persuade others of
their validity.
'No inference that any of the defendants knowingly and wilfully conspired as
charged in the indictment, or intended to cause or bring about the overthrow
and destruction of the Government of the United States by force and violence
as speedily as circumstances would permit, may be drawn from the advocacy or
teaching of
socialism or other economic or political or social doctrines, by reason of any
unpopularity of such doctrines or by reason of any opinion you may hold with
respect to whether such doctrines, or the opinions or beliefs of any of the
defendants, are unreasonable, distasteful, absurd or hateful.
'The defendants, in common with other persons living under our Constitution,
have the right protected by the First Amendment to criticize our system of
Government and the Government itself, even though the speaking or writing of
such criticism may undermine confidence in the Government or cause or
increase discontent. They have the right also to criticize the foreign policy of
the United States and the role being played by this country in international
affairs; and to praise the foreign policy of other governments and the role being
played by those governments in international affairs.
'The right of the defendants to enjoy such freedom of expression is unaffected
by whether or not the opinions spoken or published may seem to you to be
crudely intemperate, or to contain falsehoods, or to be designed to embarrass
the Government. No inference of conspiracy to advocate and teach the
necessity and duty of overthrow and destruction of the Government of the
United States by force and violence, or of intent to cause or bring about the
overthrow and destruction of the Government of the United States by force and
violence as speedily as circumstances would permit, may be drawn from such
expressions alone.'
19
The Government's proposed instruction was that given by the trial court in the
Dennis case, 341 U.S. 494, 71 S.Ct. 857, 95 L.Ed. 1137. See 354 U.S. 326, 77
S.Ct. 1080, infra.
21
22
For discussion of the principal cases in this Court on the subject, see the several
opinions in Dennis v. United States, supra.
23
24
See Dennis v. United States, supra, 341 U.S. at page 541, 71 S.Ct. at page 883.
25
Hearings on H.R. 4313 and H.R. 6427, May 22, 1935, cited in note 8, supra, at
pp. 5, 6.
26
27
28
29
The writ of certiorari in Dennis did not bring up the sufficiency of the evidence.
340 U.S. 863, 71 S.Ct. 91, 95 L.Ed. 630.
30
31
32
33
34
35
While there was evidence that might tend to link petitioner Richmond to 'the
conspiracy,' i.e., evidence of association by him with other petitioners, and with
an individual who might be found by the jury to have engaged during the same
period in the proscribed advocacy, see 354 U.S. 332, 333, 77 S.Ct. 1084, infra,
we think that without more such evidence would not justify refusal to direct an
acquittal.
Petitioners Richmond, Connelly, Kusnitz, Steinberg, and Spector are set free.
Richmond at the time of his indictment had for many years been the editorinchief of the Daily People's World, the official organ of the Party on the West
Coast. He had joined the Party in 1931 and received his indoctrination in
Communist technique at the offices of the Daily Worker, the official Party
paper on the East Coast. In 1937 he was chosen by the Party's Central
Committee to be
managing editor of the Daily People's World and was transferred to California.
From 1946 through 1948 he regularly attended secret meetings of the state and
county boards of the Party, admission to which was by identification from a
special list of Party members prepared by the Party chairman or its security
chief. Party strategy was mapped out at 'very secret meetings' attended by
Richmond and the core of the Party machinery, including at least seven of the
petitioners here. Richmond served on a special committee to help develop
'preconvention discussion' with petitioner Yates; he represented the state
committee at the 1950 convention; he addressed many Party meetings
preaching the 'vanguard role' of the Party and the importance of the People's
World in the Communist movement; and his articles in the paper urged the
'Leninist and Marxist approach.'
Connelly, a Party member since at least 1938, was the Los Angeles editor of
the People's World. During the mobilization effort early in World War II he
devoted his efforts to 'building up sentiment against * * * the war effort' among
steel, aircraft, and shipyard workers. He attended the same secret meetings
attended by Richmond.
There can be no question that the proof sustained the charges against Richmond
and Connelly in the conspiracy. Their newspaper was the conduit through
which the Party announced its aims, policies, and decisions, sought its funds,
and recruited its members. It is the height of naivete to claim that the People's
World does not publish appeals to its readers to follow Party doctrine in seeking
the overthrow of the Government by force, but it is stark reality to conclude
that such a publication provides an incomparable means of promoting the
Party's aim of forcible seizure when the time is ripe.
Petitioner Spector has been active in the California Party since the early 1930's.
He taught 'Marxism-Leninism' in Party schools
and was 'division organizer' in Los Angeles County. He attended 'underground
meetings' with petitioners Lambert, Dobbs, Healy, Carlson, and Schneiderman.
The witness Rosser testified that these meetings were 'so hid that you couldn't
get to them unless you were invited and taken there.' In 1946 he 'conducted
classes' for Party members in Hollywood, and in 1947 as a member of a
committee of three Party officials examined the witness Russell, a student in
one of his classes, on charges of being a Party 'police spy.'
Petitioner Kusnitz, following an organizational indoctrination period in New
York City, became a Party leader in California in 1946, served as 'section
organizer,' and later as 'organizational secretary' in Los Angeles. Her position
was directly below that of the local chairman in Party hierarchy. She attended
many secret meetings and was present at a Party meeting with petitioner Yates
when Yates advocated the necessity of 'Soviet support' and 'Marxist-Leninist
training' as a means of bringing about the Soviet 'type of government * * * all
over the world.' She contributed articles to Communist publications and was
very active in the 'regrouping of * * * clubs into smaller units'; conducting a 'six
session leadership training seminar'; carrying on campaigns for subscriptions to
the People's World; and leading the 'Party Building drive' for the recruitment of
members.
Petitioner Henry Steinberg, active in the Young Communist League, and
associated with the Party since 1936, was the 'educational director.' He took
part in the creation of the program for the Party's training schools in Los
Angeles County. His 'education department' sponsored several meetings, one
honoring the 25th anniversary of the death of Lenin. He worked with petitioner
Schneiderman, the Party Chairman in California, attended meetings regularly,
was active in circulation drives for the People's World, and was the principal
speaker at many meetings.
2
'We all know that the Communist movement has as its ultimate objective the
overthrow of government by force and violence or by any means, legal or
illegal, or a combination of both. That testimony was indisputably produced
before the special committee of which I was chairman, and came from the lips
not of those who gave hearsay testimony, but of the actual official records of
the Communist Party of the United States, presented to our committee by the
executive secretary of the Communist Party and the leader of the Communist
Party in the United States, Earl Browder. * * * Therefore, a Communist is one
who intends knowingly or willfully to participate in any actions, legal or illegal,
or a combination of both, that will bring about the ultimate overthrow of our
Government. He is the one we are aiming at. * * *' (Emphasis added.) 84
Cong.Rec. 10454.
See also Hearings before Subcommittee No. 3 of the House Committee on the
Judiciary on H.R. 5138, 76th Cong., 1st Sess. 84.