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Supreme Court — Part 27
Page 83
83 / 83
0-19 (Rev. 7g 8-58}
#6 tee
ja PF
ie F
From « lecture a@elivered a
the University of California,
where Barth is a visiting lec-
rer ‘on leave: from the edi-
department of The
Washington Post.
SEI Marre tein
AE UVVALAI So cours,
Alexander Hamilton wrote in
* the Federalist, were intended
te be “an intermediary body
between the people and the
islative in order, among
er things, to keep the lat-
fer within the limits assigned
~ thelg authority.”
And he declared that the
restraints which the Consti-
tution sought to impose on
Corigress “can be preserved in
practice no other way than
through the medium of courts
of justice whose duty it must
be to declare ail acts con-
the Constitution void. With-
put this, 4 all the reservations
sat par ticular rignts and privi-
leges would amount to noth-
' The Federal courts — end
specially the United States
upreme Court—are expected
under this concept of the ju-
icial function to serve as
ehtinels and champions of
ndividual liberty as against
e potentially oppressive
ower of the State—and es-
pecially against legislative in-
temperance and extravagance.
It can fairly be said, I think,
at the Warren Court has
gifilled this concept a great
eal more vigorously and
ffectively than the Vinson
ourt which preceded it. If
wees Ade An thee med Dane de le
FU WAVINT LUT I> UCL MET AAS
half, taking 4a the dividing
point 1953, the year in which |
Earl Warren, succeeded Fred
Vinson as Chief Justice, you,
will find an unmistakable and,
indeed, dramatic change in
the tenor of the Court's deci-
sions during the tast five.
years as compared with the!
five years preceding. |
phere is to relate the general
trend and temper of the Su-
preme Court's decisions dur-
ing the past decade to the
emotional | _ Tentation and
commun ty. in which the |
ed
1
trary to the manifest tenor of |
What I want to ‘erent |
we ‘ ‘ourt ata |
beeets @:H/o pv ee ison Secah adele
——-
n the fwthewebaore-
{head—in much the manner |
that a mother sometimes puts
‘ her hand on the forehead of
| a child to determine ff he is :
well. enough to go off to school |
ot arrive at some
of rough, unscientific
anw@ eadentttad io wraanhal aria
guu MUM ASE cA
judgment as to the national ‘
—end
liberties. °
ONE ILLUSTRATION of
contrast between the
Henan Warran Maurte
‘ec OPT AMovE and TEMA CL WU
“fmay be found in the striking
difference of emphasis be-
tween them in interpreting
the Smith Act—the Act which
‘ akes it a crime to teach or
+» advocate the duty or neces-
ity of overthrowing the Gov-
riment by force and -vio-
lence.
In an opinion written by
Chief Justice Vinson himself
z in 1951, the Court upheld the
. constitutionality, of the Smith
: Act, Justices Black and Doug-
i las ‘dissenting.
In 1957-—-without actually
pudiating the Dennts deci-
on of 1951 — the Warren
ourt reversed the conviction
f eavareal Malifarnise Cammn-
=f S2VOral LSirtormia Omri
uista, adopting the view that
nen may be punished for ad-
ocating .overthrow. of .the
overnment by force and vio-
‘Hence only when fthose to
hey
= My hope fs to pul a hand, as
temperature regarding civil .. ‘i
i.
Pinion
». <7 if
a
aa
te et Se eed
"vate political bellef. In elo-
quent dissenting opinions,
ch distinguished Appellate
‘Court judges as Edgerton and
ark contended that ques
torts prt to witnesses by the
' House Commities Un-
merican Activities violated
irst Amendment rights.
But the Vinson Court de
clined to review any of these
cages. And so it allowed the
(Un-American Activities Com.
ttee and the Senate Inter-
nal Securify Subcommittee,
and even Sen. MeCarthy’s
rmanent Subcommittee on
vestigations, to proceed un-
checked im their deliberate
arte fa nnnish he nnhlisiic
FOrts ff PUNISH GY pupaciey
onduct or bellef which the
Constitution ef tke United
States forbade Congress to
make vunishable by law.
In the Watkins decision a
year ago, however, Chief Jus-
tice Warren reasserted a doc-
trine long settled by the
courts that the congressional
ower ito investigate 1s a
imited power, subject to the
same limitations which the
Qpnstitution imposes on thé
: er to legislate, of whic
is an adjunct.
Then he went on te asse
_ language very
‘whom the advocacy is ad.
dressed are
{ture, rather than merely to
‘believe something.”
. This still leaves the possi-
bility, as Mr. Justice Bleck
, Pointed out, that men may be
‘eonvicted for
talk as distinguished from
agreeing to- act.” Neverthe-
eas, it goex a long way toward
estoring to the clear-and-
resent-danger doctrine some
f the original meaning given
it by Justices Holmes and,
randels and almost drained
om it by Judge Learned
Hand and by the Vinson
Court. The Warren Court put
pits emphasis on the protection
i free speech rather than on
[the protection of national se-
COURTS miay be judged,
to some extent, by what they
urged “to do
something now or in the fu-
“agreeing to
Court functions, don’t do—granted, of course,
the wisdom of waiting until
an apt case comes before
them, Time and again—in the
a Zosephson Case, in the Bar-
t ase, in the Lawson Case
GOMIn. 2-74 others so—wéllenthe
aky
and_ip th
Vinson Court was asked to
“
O
NoT JOT RECORDED
46 MAR 16 1959 «
= —
quiry by congressidirettereesti-
ating sammittass inén pri-
——aees
nea "§ Tolpety
TT “hI Eabaent ——
~~ ase
Parsons
gn
rott
Ke ee
Holloman
Su Di25 ye { Vb Efe [ Wash. Post and 2,
Times Herald
Wash, News
Wash. Star _W__ SE
N.Y. Herald —
Tribune
N. Y. Journal-
American
N. Y. Mirror _-__
N. Y. Daily News —
N. Y. Times
Daily Worker —_-__
The Warlar
100 Wome.
New. Leader
Date _JAN + OU AN gh
›
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