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{{Mergefrom|Charles Schenck|date=July 2008}} {{Use mdy dates|date=September 2023}}
{{Infobox SCOTUS case {{Infobox SCOTUS case
| Litigants = Schenck v. United States | Litigants = Schenck v. United States
| ArgueDateA = January 9 | ArgueDateA = January 9
| ArgueDateB = 10 | ArgueDateB = 10
| ArgueYear = 1919 | ArgueYear = 1919
| DecideDate = March 3 | DecideDate = March 3
| DecideYear = 1919 | DecideYear = 1919
| FullName = Charles T. Schenck v. United States | FullName = Charles T. Schenck v. United States, Elizabeth Baer v. United States
| USVol = 249 | USVol = 249
| USPage = 47 | USPage = 47
| Citation = 39 S. Ct. 247; 63 L. Ed. 470; 1919 U.S. LEXIS 2223; 17 Ohio L. Rep. 26; 17 Ohio L. Rep. 149 | ParallelCitations = 63 ] 470; 1919 ] 2223; 17 Ohio L. Rep. 26; 17 Ohio L. Rep. 149
| Prior = Defendants convicted, ]; motion for new trial denied, 253 ] 212 (E.D. Pa. 1918) | Prior = Schenck convicted, ]; motion for new trial denied, 253 ] 212
| Subsequent = None | Subsequent = None
| Holding = Defendant's criticism of the draft was not protected by the First Amendment, because it created a clear and present danger to the enlistment and recruiting practices of the U.S. armed forces during a state of war. | Holding = Defendant's criticism of the draft was not protected by the First Amendment, because it was intended to result in a crime and created a clear and present danger to the enlistment and recruiting service of the U.S. armed forces during a state of war.
| Majority = Holmes
| SCOTUS = 1916-1921
| JoinMajority = a unanimous court
| Majority = Holmes
| LawsApplied = ]; {{usc|50|33}}
| JoinMajority = ''unanimous''
| Overruled = '']'', 395 U.S. 444 (1969) (in part)
| LawsApplied = {{usc|50|33}}
| Overruled = '']'', {{ussc|395|444|1969}}
}} }}
'''''Schenck v. United States''''', {{ussc|249|47|1919}}, was a ] decision which upheld the ] and concluded that a defendant did not have a ] right to free speech against the draft during ]. ] was the Secretary of the Socialist party and was responsible for printing, distributing, and mailing 15,000 leaflets to men eligible for the draft that advocated opposition to the draft. These leaflets contained statements such as; "Do not submit to intimidation", "Assert your rights", "If you do not assert and support your rights, you are helping to deny or disparage rights which it is the solemn duty of all citizens and residents of the United States to retain." Ultimately, the case served as the founding of the "]" rule.


'''''Schenck v. United States''''', 249 U.S. 47 (1919), was a ] of the ] concerning enforcement of the ] during ]. A unanimous Supreme Court, in an opinion by Justice ], concluded that Charles Schenck and other defendants, who distributed flyers to ] men urging resistance to induction, could be convicted of an attempt to obstruct the draft, a criminal offense. The ] did not protect Schenck from prosecution, even though, "in many places and in ordinary times, the defendants, in saying all that was said in the circular, would have been within their constitutional rights. But the character of every act depends upon the circumstances in which it is done." In this case, Holmes said, "the words used are used in such circumstances and are of such a nature as to create a ] that they will bring about the substantive evils that Congress has a right to prevent." Therefore, Schenck could be punished.
== The Court's decision ==
The Court, in a unanimous opinion written by Justice ], held that Schenck's criminal conviction was constitutional. The First Amendment did not protect speech encouraging insubordination, since, "when a nation is at war many things that might be said in time of peace are such a hindrance to its effort that their utterance will not be endured so long as men fight, and that no Court could regard them as protected by any constitutional right." In other words, the court held, the circumstances of wartime permit greater restrictions on free speech than would be allowable during peacetime.


The Court followed this reasoning to uphold a series of convictions arising out of prosecutions during wartime, but Holmes began to dissent in the case of '']'', insisting that the Court had departed from the standard he had crafted for them and had begun to allow punishment for ideas. In 1969, ''Schenck'' was largely ] by '']'', which limited the scope of speech that the government may ban to that directed to and likely to incite ] (e.g. a ]).<ref>{{Cite web|last=Timm|first=Trevor|date=2012-11-02|title=It's Time to Stop Using the 'Fire in a Crowded Theater' Quote|url=https://www.theatlantic.com/national/archive/2012/11/its-time-to-stop-using-the-fire-in-a-crowded-theater-quote/264449/|access-date=2020-06-20|website=The Atlantic|language=en-US}}</ref>
In the opinion's most famous passage, Justice Holmes sets out the "]" test:


==Background==
:"The question in every case is whether the words used are used in such circumstances and are of such a nature as to create a clear and present danger that they will bring about the substantive evils that Congress has a right to prevent."
''Schenck'' was the first in a line of Supreme Court cases defining the modern understanding of the First Amendment. Supreme Court Justice ] wrote the often-cited opinion. The United States' entry into the First World War had caused deep divisions in society and was vigorously opposed, especially by socialists, pacifists, isolationists, and those who had ties to Germany. The ] administration launched a broad campaign of criminal enforcement that resulted in thousands of prosecutions. Many of these were for trivial acts of dissent that today would be protected by the First Amendment.


In the first case arising from this campaign to come before the Court{{Emdash}}''Baltzer v. United States'', 248 U.S. 593 (1918){{Emdash}}South Dakota farmers had signed a petition criticizing their governor's administration of the draft, threatening him with defeat at the polls. They were charged with obstructing the recruitment and enlistment service, and convicted.<ref>{{Cite journal |last=Kirby |first=Joe |date=3 Oct 2012 |title="The Case of the German Socialist Farmers: Joe Kirby Challenges the Espionage Act of 1917" |url=https://www.sdhspress.com/journal/south-dakota-history-42-3/ |format=PDF |journal=South Dakota History |volume=42 |issue=3 |pages=239–243 |access-date=20 Mar 2023 |via=South Dakota Historical Society}}</ref> When a majority of the Court voted during their conference to affirm the conviction, Holmes quickly drafted and circulated a strongly worded dissenting opinion:<blockquote>Real obstructions of the law, giving real aid and comfort to the enemy, I should have been glad to see punished more summarily and severely than they sometimes were. But I think that our intention to put out all our powers in aid of success in war should not hurry us into intolerance of opinions and speech that could not be imagined to do harm, although opposed to our own. It is better for those who have unquestioned and almost unlimited power in their hands to err on the side of freedom.<ref>Sheldon Novick, "The Unrevised Holmes and Freedom of Expression," 1991 ''Supreme Court Review'' 303, 389 (1992)(Appendix)</ref></blockquote>Rather than proceed in the face of Holmes's biting dissent, Chief Justice ] set the case aside. Word of the situation evidently reached the Administration, because it abandoned the prosecution. White then asked Holmes to write the opinion for a unanimous Court in the next case, one in which they could agree, ''Schenck v. United States''. Holmes wrote that opinion and wrote again for a unanimous court upholding convictions in two more cases that spring, '']'' and '']'', establishing the standard for deciding the constitutionality of criminal convictions based on expressive behavior. Holmes disliked legislative-style formulas, and he did not repeat the language of "clear and present danger" in any subsequent opinion, however. ''Schenck'' alone accordingly is often cited as the source of this legal standard, and some scholars have suggested that Holmes changed his mind and offered a different view in his equally famous dissent in '']''. The events leading to the assignment of the ''Schenck'' opinion to Holmes were discovered when Holmes's biographer Sheldon Novick unearthed the unpublished ''Baltzer'' opinion among Holmes's papers at ].<ref>Sheldon Novick, </ref>
This case is also the source of the phrase "]," paraphrased from Holmes' assertion that "the most stringent protection of free speech would not protect a man in falsely shouting fire in a theatre and causing a panic."


{{multiple image
==Subsequent developments==
| align = left
As a result of the 9-0 decision, ] spent six months in prison. After his sentence was up, ] was found dead in his home, authorities assume an overdose of pain reducers. {{Citation needed|date=October 2009}}
| width = 100
| footer = The leaflet at issue in ''Schenck v. United States''
| image1 = Schenck v. United States Leaflet (Obverse).jpg
| caption1 = Obverse
| image2 = Schenck v. United States Leaflet (Reverse).jpg
| caption2 = Reverse
}}
The facts of the ''Schenck'' case were as follows. Charles Schenck and Elizabeth Baer were members of the Executive Committee of the ] in Philadelphia, of which Schenck was General Secretary. The executive committee authorized, and Schenck oversaw, printing and mailing more than 15,000 fliers to ] during World War I. The fliers urged men not to submit to the draft, saying "Do not submit to intimidation", "Assert your rights", "If you do not assert and support your rights, you are helping to deny or disparage rights which it is the solemn duty of all citizens and residents of the United States to retain," and urged men not to comply with the draft on the grounds that military conscription constituted ], which is prohibited by the ].<ref>''Schenck v. United States'', 249 U.S. 47, 49-51 (1917)</ref>

After jury trials Schenck and Baer were convicted of violating Section 3 of the ].<ref>{{cite web | url=http://ows.edb.utexas.edu/site/espionage-act-and-limitations-first-amendment/espionage-act | title =The Espionage Act and The Limitations of the First Amendment | author =University of Texas at Austin | author-link =University of Texas at Austin | publisher =edb.utexas.edu}}, which prohibited willful obstruction of the recently-enacted draft.</ref> Both defendants appealed to the ], arguing that their conviction, and the statute which purported to authorize it, were contrary to the ]. They relied heavily on the text of the ], and their claim that the Espionage Act of 1917 had what today one would call a "chilling effect" on free discussion of the war effort.<ref></ref>

==The Court's decision==
]]]
The Court, in a unanimous opinion written by Justice ], held that Schenck's criminal conviction was constitutional. The statute only applied to successful obstructions of the draft, but common-law precedents allowed prosecution for attempts that were dangerously close to success. Attempts made by speech or writing could be punished like other attempted crimes; the First Amendment did not protect speech encouraging men to resist induction, because, "when a nation is at war, many things that might be said in time of peace are such a hindrance to its effort that their utterance will not be endured so long as men fight, and that no Court could regard them as protected by any constitutional right."<ref name=opinion>{{Ussc|volume=249|page=47|year=1919|name=Schenck v. United States}}</ref> In other words, the court held, the circumstances of wartime allow greater restrictions on free speech than would be allowed during peacetime, if only because new and greater dangers are present.

The opinion's most famous and most often quoted passage was this: <blockquote>The most stringent protection of free speech would not protect a man in falsely shouting fire in a theatre and causing a panic. ... The question in every case is whether the words used are used in such circumstances and are of such a nature as to create a clear and present danger that they will bring about the substantive evils that Congress has a right to prevent. It is a question of proximity and degree.<ref>{{Ussc|volume=249|page=47|year=1919|pin=52}}</ref></blockquote> The phrase "]" has since become a popular metaphor for the dangers or limitations of free speech, even though Holmes limited it to "falsely" shouting and did not specify a "crowded" theater.<ref>{{cite web| url=https://reason.com/2022/10/27/yes-you-can-yell-fire-in-a-crowded-theater/| author=Emma Camp| title=Yes, You Can Yell 'Fire' in a Crowded Theater| publisher=Reason| date=October 27, 2022}}</ref>


==Subsequent jurisprudence== ==Subsequent jurisprudence==
In subsequent cases, when it appeared to him that the Court was departing from the precedents established in ''Schenck'' and companion cases, Holmes dissented, reiterating his view that expressions of honest opinion were entitled to near absolute protection, but that expressions made with the specific intent to cause a criminal harm, or that threatened a clear and present danger of such harm, could be punished. In '']'', he elaborated on the common-law privileges for freedom of speech and of the press, and stated his conviction that freedom of opinion was central to the constitutional scheme because competition in the "marketplace" of ideas was the best test of their truth. In '']'' (1927), concerning a conviction for seditious speech forbidden by California law, Holmes joined a concurring opinion written by Justice ] once again explaining the clear-and-present-danger standard for criminal attempts in these terms, reiterating the argument that political speech was protected because of the value of democratic deliberation. The Supreme Court continued to affirm convictions for seditious speech in a series of prosecutions of leftists, however, culminating in '']'', 341 U.S. 494 (1951) in which a bitterly divided Court upheld the sedition convictions for the leaders of the Communist Party. Judge Learned Hand in the court below and Chief Justice Vinson for the plurality in the Supreme Court cited ''Schenck'', and the language of "clear and present danger" accordingly fell into disfavor among the advocates of free speech and freedom of the press.
The requirement to establish "clear and present danger" test was later weakened and the less restrictive "]" test adopted in '']'' (1927). Justices Holmes and ] shied from this test, but concurred with the final result. Some contend that the "clear and present danger" test was originally just a re-phrasing of the "bad tendency" test. After the repression following the Red Scare, and general disillusion with the war, Holmes sought to prop up free speech with the "clear and present danger" test, a standard intended to clarify and narrow the circumstances in which speech could be restricted. This view has merit considering Holmes never referred to "clear and present danger" in the companion cases of ] and ].


A unanimous Court in a brief '']'' opinion in '']'' (1969), abandoned the disfavored language while seemingly applying the reasoning of ''Schenck'' to reverse the conviction of a Ku Klux Klan member prosecuted for giving an inflammatory speech. The Court said that speech could be prosecuted only when it posed a danger of "]," a formulation that is sometimes said to reflect Holmes' reasoning as more fully explicated in his ''Abrams'' dissent, rather than the common law of attempts explained in ''Schenck''. ''Brandenburg'' is also taken to have repudiated the clear-and-present-danger standard as construed in ''Dennis'', and to have adopted something more like the explication given by Holmes and Brandeis in subsequent opinions. Partly because the standard for protecting expressive behavior under the First Amendment was stated differently in his different opinions, "revisionist" scholars have argued that Holmes changed his mind in the summer of 1919, and that after writing three opinions for a unanimous court, he stated a different and more liberal view in his ''Abrams'' dissent a few weeks later.<ref>], ''Law Without Values: The Life, Work, and Legacy of Justice Holmes''; University of Chicago Press, 2000, {{ISBN|0-226-01520-3}}, pp. 76-77, citing numerous commentaries.</ref> Bolstered by this argument, a number of advocates for freedom of expression have insisted that the Supreme Court has rejected ''Schenck'' and the majority opinion in ''Abrams,'' and in practice has followed the reasoning of Holmes' ''Abrams'' dissent and Brandeis' and Holmes' concurring opinion in ''Whitney''.<ref>Thomas Healy, ''The Great Dissent: How Oliver Wendell Holmes Changed his Mind—and Changed the History of Freedom of Speech in America''; Henry Holt and Company, 2013, {{ISBN|9780805094565}}</ref>
Both of these cases were later narrowed by '']'' (1969), which replaced the "bad tendency" test with the "]" test.


== See also == ==See also==
*]
*'']''
*]
*]
*]
*]
*'']'', {{ussc|250|616|1919}} *'']'', {{ussc|250|616|1919}}
*'']'', {{ussc|274|357|1927}}
*'']'', {{ussc|341|494|1951}}
*'']'', {{ussc|395|444|1969}} *'']'', {{ussc|395|444|1969}}
*'']'', {{ussc|315|568|1942}}
*'']'', {{ussc|341|494|1951}}
*'']'', {{ussc|340|315|1951}}
*'']'', {{ussc|414|105|1973}}
*'']'', {{ussc|323|214|1944}}
*'']'', {{ussc|340|290|1951}}
*'']'', (1917)
*'']'', {{ussc|343|1|1952}}
*'']'', {{ussc|337|1|1949}}
*'']'', {{ussc|274|357|1927}}


==References==
== Further reading ==
{{Reflist}}
*{{cite journal |last=Kessler |first=Mark |authorlink= |coauthors= |year=1993 |month= |title=Legal Discourse and Political Intolerance: The Ideology of Clear and Present Danger |journal=Law & Society Review |volume=27 |issue=3 |pages=559&ndash;598 |doi=10.2307/3054105 |url= |accessdate= |quote= }}
*{{cite book |chapter=Schenck v. United States and Abrams v. United States |last=Smith |first=Stephen A. |title=Free Speech on Trial: Communication Perspectives on Landmark Supreme Court Decisions |editor=Parker, Richard A. (ed.) |year=2003 |publisher=University of Alabama Press |location=Tuscaloosa, AL |isbn=081731301X |pages=20&ndash;35 }}


==Further reading==
== External links ==
*{{Cite journal |last=Kessler |first=Mark |year=1993 |title=Legal Discourse and Political Intolerance: The Ideology of Clear and Present Danger |journal=Law & Society Review |volume=27 |issue=3 |pages=559–598 |doi=10.2307/3054105 |jstor= 3054105|publisher=Law & Society Review, Vol. 27, No. 3 }}
*{{wikisource-inline|Schenck v. United States}}
* Krotoszynski Jr, Ronald J. "The Clear and Present Dangers of the Clear and Present Danger Test: Schenck and Abrams Revisited." ''SMU Law Review'' 72 (2019): 415-440
*{{caselaw source
*{{Cite book |chapter=Schenck v. United States and Abrams v. United States |last=Smith |first=Stephen A. |title=Free Speech on Trial: Communication Perspectives on Landmark Supreme Court Decisions |editor=Parker, Richard A.|year=2003 |publisher=University of Alabama Press |location=Tuscaloosa, AL |isbn=0-8173-1301-X |pages=20–35 }}
|case=''Schenck v. United States'', 249 U.S. 47 (1919)
*
|enfacto=http://www.enfacto.com/case/U.S./249/47/
* {{cite magazine| last=Timm | first=Trevor | title=It's Time to Stop Using the 'Fire in a Crowded Theater' Quote | magazine=The Atlantic | date=2 November 2012 | url=https://www.theatlantic.com/national/archive/2012/11/its-time-to-stop-using-the-fire-in-a-crowded-theater-quote/264449/}}
|findlaw=http://laws.findlaw.com/us/249/47.html

|other_source1=LII
==External links==
|other_url1=http://www.law.cornell.edu/supct-cgi/get-us-cite?249+47
*{{Wikisource-inline|Schenck v. United States|''Schenck v. United States''}}
*{{Caselaw source
|case=''Schenck v. United States'', {{ussc|249|47|1919|el=no}}
| cornell =https://www.law.cornell.edu/supremecourt/text/249/47
| courtlistener =https://www.courtlistener.com/opinion/99296/schenck-v-united-states/
| findlaw=https://caselaw.findlaw.com/us-supreme-court/249/47.html
| googlescholar = https://scholar.google.com/scholar_case?case=8474153321909160293
| justia=http://supreme.justia.com/us/249/47/case.html
| loc =http://cdn.loc.gov/service/ll/usrep/usrep249/usrep249047/usrep249047.pdf
}} }}
*
* (PDF)
* *
* *
* from ]'s '']''


{{US1stAmendment Freedom of Speech Clause Supreme Court case law|state=collapsed}}
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{{DEFAULTSORT:Schenck V. United States}}
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Latest revision as of 01:51, 22 December 2024

1919 United States Supreme Court case
Schenck v. United States
Supreme Court of the United States
Argued January 9–10, 1919
Decided March 3, 1919
Full case nameCharles T. Schenck v. United States, Elizabeth Baer v. United States
Citations249 U.S. 47 (more)63 L. Ed. 470; 1919 U.S. LEXIS 2223; 17 Ohio L. Rep. 26; 17 Ohio L. Rep. 149
Case history
PriorSchenck convicted, E.D. Pa.; motion for new trial denied, 253 F. 212
SubsequentNone
Holding
Defendant's criticism of the draft was not protected by the First Amendment, because it was intended to result in a crime and created a clear and present danger to the enlistment and recruiting service of the U.S. armed forces during a state of war.
Court membership
Chief Justice
Edward D. White
Associate Justices
Joseph McKenna · Oliver W. Holmes Jr.
William R. Day · Willis Van Devanter
Mahlon Pitney · James C. McReynolds
Louis Brandeis · John H. Clarke
Case opinion
MajorityHolmes, joined by a unanimous court
Laws applied
U.S. Const. amend. I; 50 U.S.C. § 33
Overruled by
Brandenburg v. Ohio, 395 U.S. 444 (1969) (in part)

Schenck v. United States, 249 U.S. 47 (1919), was a landmark decision of the U.S. Supreme Court concerning enforcement of the Espionage Act of 1917 during World War I. A unanimous Supreme Court, in an opinion by Justice Oliver Wendell Holmes Jr., concluded that Charles Schenck and other defendants, who distributed flyers to draft-age men urging resistance to induction, could be convicted of an attempt to obstruct the draft, a criminal offense. The First Amendment did not protect Schenck from prosecution, even though, "in many places and in ordinary times, the defendants, in saying all that was said in the circular, would have been within their constitutional rights. But the character of every act depends upon the circumstances in which it is done." In this case, Holmes said, "the words used are used in such circumstances and are of such a nature as to create a clear and present danger that they will bring about the substantive evils that Congress has a right to prevent." Therefore, Schenck could be punished.

The Court followed this reasoning to uphold a series of convictions arising out of prosecutions during wartime, but Holmes began to dissent in the case of Abrams v. United States, insisting that the Court had departed from the standard he had crafted for them and had begun to allow punishment for ideas. In 1969, Schenck was largely overturned by Brandenburg v. Ohio, which limited the scope of speech that the government may ban to that directed to and likely to incite imminent lawless action (e.g. a riot).

Background

Schenck was the first in a line of Supreme Court cases defining the modern understanding of the First Amendment. Supreme Court Justice Oliver Wendell Holmes Jr. wrote the often-cited opinion. The United States' entry into the First World War had caused deep divisions in society and was vigorously opposed, especially by socialists, pacifists, isolationists, and those who had ties to Germany. The Wilson administration launched a broad campaign of criminal enforcement that resulted in thousands of prosecutions. Many of these were for trivial acts of dissent that today would be protected by the First Amendment.

In the first case arising from this campaign to come before the Court—Baltzer v. United States, 248 U.S. 593 (1918)—South Dakota farmers had signed a petition criticizing their governor's administration of the draft, threatening him with defeat at the polls. They were charged with obstructing the recruitment and enlistment service, and convicted. When a majority of the Court voted during their conference to affirm the conviction, Holmes quickly drafted and circulated a strongly worded dissenting opinion:

Real obstructions of the law, giving real aid and comfort to the enemy, I should have been glad to see punished more summarily and severely than they sometimes were. But I think that our intention to put out all our powers in aid of success in war should not hurry us into intolerance of opinions and speech that could not be imagined to do harm, although opposed to our own. It is better for those who have unquestioned and almost unlimited power in their hands to err on the side of freedom.

Rather than proceed in the face of Holmes's biting dissent, Chief Justice Edward Douglass White set the case aside. Word of the situation evidently reached the Administration, because it abandoned the prosecution. White then asked Holmes to write the opinion for a unanimous Court in the next case, one in which they could agree, Schenck v. United States. Holmes wrote that opinion and wrote again for a unanimous court upholding convictions in two more cases that spring, Frohwerk v. United States and Debs v. United States, establishing the standard for deciding the constitutionality of criminal convictions based on expressive behavior. Holmes disliked legislative-style formulas, and he did not repeat the language of "clear and present danger" in any subsequent opinion, however. Schenck alone accordingly is often cited as the source of this legal standard, and some scholars have suggested that Holmes changed his mind and offered a different view in his equally famous dissent in Abrams v. United States. The events leading to the assignment of the Schenck opinion to Holmes were discovered when Holmes's biographer Sheldon Novick unearthed the unpublished Baltzer opinion among Holmes's papers at Harvard Law School.

ObverseReverseThe leaflet at issue in Schenck v. United States

The facts of the Schenck case were as follows. Charles Schenck and Elizabeth Baer were members of the Executive Committee of the Socialist Party in Philadelphia, of which Schenck was General Secretary. The executive committee authorized, and Schenck oversaw, printing and mailing more than 15,000 fliers to men slated for conscription during World War I. The fliers urged men not to submit to the draft, saying "Do not submit to intimidation", "Assert your rights", "If you do not assert and support your rights, you are helping to deny or disparage rights which it is the solemn duty of all citizens and residents of the United States to retain," and urged men not to comply with the draft on the grounds that military conscription constituted involuntary servitude, which is prohibited by the Thirteenth Amendment.

After jury trials Schenck and Baer were convicted of violating Section 3 of the Espionage Act of 1917. Both defendants appealed to the United States Supreme Court, arguing that their conviction, and the statute which purported to authorize it, were contrary to the First Amendment. They relied heavily on the text of the First Amendment, and their claim that the Espionage Act of 1917 had what today one would call a "chilling effect" on free discussion of the war effort.

The Court's decision

Oliver Wendell Holmes Jr.

The Court, in a unanimous opinion written by Justice Oliver Wendell Holmes Jr., held that Schenck's criminal conviction was constitutional. The statute only applied to successful obstructions of the draft, but common-law precedents allowed prosecution for attempts that were dangerously close to success. Attempts made by speech or writing could be punished like other attempted crimes; the First Amendment did not protect speech encouraging men to resist induction, because, "when a nation is at war, many things that might be said in time of peace are such a hindrance to its effort that their utterance will not be endured so long as men fight, and that no Court could regard them as protected by any constitutional right." In other words, the court held, the circumstances of wartime allow greater restrictions on free speech than would be allowed during peacetime, if only because new and greater dangers are present.

The opinion's most famous and most often quoted passage was this:

The most stringent protection of free speech would not protect a man in falsely shouting fire in a theatre and causing a panic. ... The question in every case is whether the words used are used in such circumstances and are of such a nature as to create a clear and present danger that they will bring about the substantive evils that Congress has a right to prevent. It is a question of proximity and degree.

The phrase "shouting fire in a crowded theater" has since become a popular metaphor for the dangers or limitations of free speech, even though Holmes limited it to "falsely" shouting and did not specify a "crowded" theater.

Subsequent jurisprudence

In subsequent cases, when it appeared to him that the Court was departing from the precedents established in Schenck and companion cases, Holmes dissented, reiterating his view that expressions of honest opinion were entitled to near absolute protection, but that expressions made with the specific intent to cause a criminal harm, or that threatened a clear and present danger of such harm, could be punished. In Abrams v. United States, he elaborated on the common-law privileges for freedom of speech and of the press, and stated his conviction that freedom of opinion was central to the constitutional scheme because competition in the "marketplace" of ideas was the best test of their truth. In Whitney v. California (1927), concerning a conviction for seditious speech forbidden by California law, Holmes joined a concurring opinion written by Justice Louis D. Brandeis once again explaining the clear-and-present-danger standard for criminal attempts in these terms, reiterating the argument that political speech was protected because of the value of democratic deliberation. The Supreme Court continued to affirm convictions for seditious speech in a series of prosecutions of leftists, however, culminating in Dennis v. United States, 341 U.S. 494 (1951) in which a bitterly divided Court upheld the sedition convictions for the leaders of the Communist Party. Judge Learned Hand in the court below and Chief Justice Vinson for the plurality in the Supreme Court cited Schenck, and the language of "clear and present danger" accordingly fell into disfavor among the advocates of free speech and freedom of the press.

A unanimous Court in a brief per curiam opinion in Brandenburg v. Ohio (1969), abandoned the disfavored language while seemingly applying the reasoning of Schenck to reverse the conviction of a Ku Klux Klan member prosecuted for giving an inflammatory speech. The Court said that speech could be prosecuted only when it posed a danger of "imminent lawless action," a formulation that is sometimes said to reflect Holmes' reasoning as more fully explicated in his Abrams dissent, rather than the common law of attempts explained in Schenck. Brandenburg is also taken to have repudiated the clear-and-present-danger standard as construed in Dennis, and to have adopted something more like the explication given by Holmes and Brandeis in subsequent opinions. Partly because the standard for protecting expressive behavior under the First Amendment was stated differently in his different opinions, "revisionist" scholars have argued that Holmes changed his mind in the summer of 1919, and that after writing three opinions for a unanimous court, he stated a different and more liberal view in his Abrams dissent a few weeks later. Bolstered by this argument, a number of advocates for freedom of expression have insisted that the Supreme Court has rejected Schenck and the majority opinion in Abrams, and in practice has followed the reasoning of Holmes' Abrams dissent and Brandeis' and Holmes' concurring opinion in Whitney.

See also

References

  1. Timm, Trevor (November 2, 2012). "It's Time to Stop Using the 'Fire in a Crowded Theater' Quote". The Atlantic. Retrieved June 20, 2020.
  2. Kirby, Joe (October 3, 2012). ""The Case of the German Socialist Farmers: Joe Kirby Challenges the Espionage Act of 1917"" (PDF). South Dakota History. 42 (3): 239–243. Retrieved March 20, 2023 – via South Dakota Historical Society.
  3. Sheldon Novick, "The Unrevised Holmes and Freedom of Expression," 1991 Supreme Court Review 303, 389 (1992)(Appendix)
  4. Sheldon Novick, "Preface, Honorable Justice at twenty-five," in Honorable Justice: The Life of Oliver Wendell Holmes (1989, 2013)
  5. Schenck v. United States, 249 U.S. 47, 49-51 (1917)
  6. University of Texas at Austin. "The Espionage Act and The Limitations of the First Amendment". edb.utexas.edu., which prohibited willful obstruction of the recently-enacted draft.
  7. Brief of Plaintiffs in Error - Schenk
  8. Schenck v. United States, 249 U.S. 47 (1919)
  9. 249 U.S. 47, 52 (1919)
  10. Emma Camp (October 27, 2022). "Yes, You Can Yell 'Fire' in a Crowded Theater". Reason.
  11. Albert Alschuler, Law Without Values: The Life, Work, and Legacy of Justice Holmes; University of Chicago Press, 2000, ISBN 0-226-01520-3, pp. 76-77, citing numerous commentaries.
  12. Thomas Healy, The Great Dissent: How Oliver Wendell Holmes Changed his Mind—and Changed the History of Freedom of Speech in America; Henry Holt and Company, 2013, ISBN 9780805094565

Further reading

External links

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