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http://laws.findlaw.com/us/378/1.html
U.S. Supreme Court
MALLOY v. HOGAN, 378 U.S. 1 (1964)
378 U.S. 1
MALLOY v. HOGAN, SHERIFF.
CERTIORARI TO THE SUPREME COURT OF ERRORS OF CONNECTICUT.
No. 110.
Argued March 5, 1964.
Decided June 15, 1964.
Petitioner, who was on probation after pleading guilty to a
gambling misdemeanor, was ordered to testify before a referee
appointed by a state court to investigate gambling and other
criminal activities. He refused to answer questions about the
circumstances of his arrest and conviction on the ground that the
answers might incriminate him. Adjudged in contempt and committed to
prison until he answered, he filed an application for writ of habeas
corpus, which the highest state court denied. It ruled that
petitioner was protected against prosecution growing out of his
replies to all but one question, and that as to that question his
failure to explain how his answer would incriminate him negated his
claim to the protection of the privilege under state law. Held:
1. The Fourteenth Amendment prohibits state infringement of the
privilege against self-incrimination just as the Fifth Amendment
prevents the Federal Government from denying the privilege. P. 8.
2. In applying the privilege against self-incrimination, the
same standards determine whether an accused's silence is justified
regardless of whether it is a federal or state proceeding at which
he is called to testify. P. 11.
3. The privilege is available to a witness in a statutory
inquiry as well as to a defendant in a criminal prosecution. P.
11. [378 U.S. 1, 2]
4. Petitioner's claim of privilege as to all the questions
should have been upheld, since it was evident from the implication
of each question in the setting in which it was asked, that a
response or an explanation why it could not be answered might be
dangerous because injurious disclosure would result. Hoffman v.
United States,
341 U.S. 479 , followed. Pp. 11-14.
150 Conn. 220, 187 A. 2d 744, reversed.
Harold Strauch argued the cause and filed a brief for petitioner.
John D. LaBelle, State's Attorney for Connecticut, argued the
cause for respondent. With him on the brief were George D. Stoughton
and Harry W. Hultgren, Jr., Assistant State's Attorneys.
Melvin L. Wulf filed a brief for the American Civil Liberties
Union, as amicus curiae, urging reversal.
Briefs of amici curiae, urging affirmance, were filed by Stanley
Mosk, Attorney General of California, William E. James, Assistant
Attorney General, and Gordon Ringer, Deputy Attorney General, for
the State of California; and by Frank S. Hogan, Edward S. Silver, H.
Richard Uviller, Michael R. Juviler, Aaron E. Koota and Irving P.
Seidman for the National District Attorneys' Association.
MR. JUSTICE BRENNAN delivered the opinion of the Court.
In this case we are asked to reconsider prior decisions holding
that the privilege against self-incrimination is not safeguarded
against state action by the Fourteenth Amendment. Twining v. New
Jersey,
211 U.S. 78 ; Adamson v. California,
332 U.S. 46 .
1 [378 U.S. 1, 3]
The petitioner was arrested during a gambling raid in 1959 by
Hartford, Connecticut, police. He pleaded guilty to the crime of
pool selling, a misdemeanor, and was sentenced to one year in jail
and fined $500. The sentence was ordered to be suspended after 90
days, at which time he was to be placed on probation for two years.
About 16 months after his guilty plea, petitioner was ordered to
testify before a referee appointed by the Superior Court of Hartford
County to conduct an inquiry into alleged gambling and other
criminal activities in the county. The petitioner was asked a number
of questions related to events surrounding his arrest and
conviction. He refused to answer any question "on the grounds it may
tend to incriminate me." The Superior Court adjudged him in
contempt, and committed him to prison until he was willing to answer
the questions. Petitioner's application for a writ of habeas corpus
was denied by the Superior Court, and the Connecticut Supreme Court
of Errors affirmed. 150 Conn. 220, 187 A. 2d 744. The latter court
held that the Fifth Amendment's privilege against self-incrimination
was not available to a witness in a state proceeding, that the
Fourteenth Amendment extended no privilege to him, and that the
petitioner had not properly invoked the privilege available under
the Connecticut Constitution. We granted certiorari.
373 U.S. 948 . We reverse. We hold that the Fourteenth Amendment
guaranteed the petitioner the protection of the Fifth Amendment's
privilege against self-incrimination, and that under the applicable
federal standard, the Connecticut Supreme Court of Errors erred in
holding that the privilege was not properly invoked.
[378 U.S. 1, 4]
The extent to which the Fourteenth Amendment prevents state
invasion of rights enumerated in the first eight Amendments has been
considered in numerous cases in this Court since the Amendment's
adoption in 1868. Although many Justices have deemed the Amendment
to incorporate all eight of the Amendments,
2 the view which has thus far prevailed dates from the decision
in 1897 in Chicago, B. & Q. R. Co. v. Chicago,
166 U.S. 226 , which held that the Due Process Clause requires
the States to pay just compensation for private property taken for
public use.
3 It was on the authority of that decision that the Court said
in 1908 in Twining v. New Jersey, supra, that "it is possible that
some of the personal rights safeguarded by the first eight
Amendments [378 U.S. 1,
5] against National action may also be safeguarded
against state action, because a denial of them would be a denial of
due process of law."
211 U.S., at 99 .
The Court has not hesitated to re-examine past decisions
according the Fourteenth Amendment a less central role in the
preservation of basic liberties than that which was contemplated by
its Framers when they added the Amendment to our constitutional
scheme. Thus, although the Court as late as 1922 said that "neither
the Fourteenth Amendment nor any other provision of the Constitution
of the United States imposes upon the States any restrictions about
`freedom of speech'. . .," Prudential Ins. Co. v. Cheek,
259 U.S. 530, 543 , three years later Gitlow v. New York,
268 U.S. 652 , initiated a series of decisions which today hold
immune from state invasion every First Amendment protection for the
cherished rights of mind and spirit - the freedoms of speech, press,
religion, assembly, association, and petition for redress of
grievances.
4
Similarly, Palko v. Connecticut,
302 U.S. 319 , decided in 1937, suggested that the rights
secured by the Fourth Amendment were not protected against state
action, citing,
302 U.S., at 324 , the statement of the Court in 1914 in Weeks
v. United States,
232 U.S. 383, 398 , that "the Fourth Amendment is not directed
to individual misconduct of [state] officials." In 1961, however,
the [378 U.S. 1, 6]
Court held that in the light of later decisions,
5 it was taken as settled that ". . . the Fourth Amendment's
right of privacy has been declared enforceable against the States
through the Due Process Clause of the Fourteenth . . . ." Mapp v.
Ohio,
367 U.S. 643, 655 . Again, although the Court held in 1942 that
in a state prosecution for a noncapital offense, "appointment of
counsel is not a fundamental right," Betts v. Brady,
316 U.S. 455, 471 ; cf. Powell v. Alabama,
287 U.S. 45 , only last Term this decision was re-examined and
it was held that provision of counsel in all criminal cases was "a
fundamental right, essential to a fair trial," and thus was made
obligatory on the States by the Fourteenth Amendment. Gideon v.
Wainwright,
372 U.S. 335, 343 -344.
6
We hold today that the Fifth Amendment's exception from
compulsory self-incrimination is also protected by the Fourteenth
Amendment against abridgment by the States. Decisions of the Court
since Twining and Adamson have departed from the contrary view
expressed in those cases. We discuss first the decisions which
forbid the use of coerced confessions in state criminal
prosecutions.
Brown v. Mississippi,
297 U.S. 278 , was the first case in which the Court held that
the Due Process Clause prohibited the States from using the
accused's coerced confessions against him. The Court in Brown felt
impelled, in light of Twining, to say that its conclusion did not
involve the privilege against self-incrimination. "Compulsion by
torture to extort a confession is a different matter."
297 U.S., at 285 . But this distinction was soon
[378 U.S. 1, 7]
abandoned, and today the admissibility of a confession in a
state criminal prosecution is tested by the same standard applied in
federal prosecutions since 1897, when, in Bram v. United States,
168 U.S. 532 , the Court held that "[i]n criminal trials, in the
courts of the United States, wherever a question arises whether a
confession is incompetent because not voluntary, the issue is
controlled by that portion of the Fifth Amendment to the
Constitution of the United States, commanding that no person `shall
be compelled in any criminal case to be a witness against himself.'"
Id., at 542. Under this test, the constitutional inquiry is not
whether the conduct of state officers in obtaining the confession
was shocking, but whether the confession was "free and voluntary:
that is, [it] must not be extracted by any sort of threats or
violence, nor obtained by any direct or implied promises, however
slight, nor by the exertion of any improper influence. . . ." Id.,
at 542-543; see also Hardy v. United States,
186 U.S. 224, 229 ; Wan v. United States,
266 U.S. 1, 14 ; Smith v. United States,
348 U.S. 147, 150 . In other words the person must not have been
compelled to incriminate himself. We have held inadmissible even a
confession secured by so mild a whip as the refusal, under certain
circumstances, to allow a suspect to call his wife until he
confessed. Haynes v. Washington,
373 U.S. 503 .
The marked shift to the federal standard in state cases began
with Lisenba v. California,
314 U.S. 219 , where the Court spoke of the accused's "free
choice to admit, to deny, or to refuse to answer." Id., at 241. See
Ashcraft v. Tennessee,
322 U.S. 143 ; Malinski v. New York,
324 U.S. 401 ; Spano v. New York,
360 U.S. 315 ; Lynumn v. Illinois,
372 U.S. 528 ; Haynes v. Washington,
373 U.S. 503 . The shift reflects recognition that the American
system of criminal prosecution is accusatorial, not inquisitorial,
and that the Fifth Amendment privilege is its essential mainstay.
Rogers v. Richmond,
365 U.S. 534 , [378
U.S. 1, 8] 541. Governments, state and federal, are
thus constitutionally compelled to establish guilt by evidence
independently and freely secured, and may not by coercion prove a
charge against an accused out of his own mouth. Since the Fourteenth
Amendment prohibits the States from inducing a person to confess
through "sympathy falsely aroused," Spano v. New York, supra, at
323, or other like inducement far short of "compulsion by torture,"
Haynes v. Washington, supra, it follows a fortiori that it also
forbids the States to resort to imprisonment, as here, to compel him
to answer questions that might incriminate him. The Fourteenth
Amendment secures against state invasion the same privilege that the
Fifth Amendment guarantees against federal infringement - the right
of a person to remain silent unless he chooses to speak in the
unfettered exercise of his own will, and to suffer no penalty, as
held in Twining, for such silence.
This conclusion is fortified by our recent decision in Mapp v.
Ohio,
367 U.S. 643 , overruling Wolf v. Colorado,
338 U.S. 25 , which had held "that in a prosecution in a State
court for a State crime the Fourteenth Amendment does not forbid the
admission of evidence obtained by an unreasonable search and
seizure,"
338 U.S., at 33 . Mapp held that the Fifth Amendment privilege
against self-incrimination implemented the Fourth Amendment in such
cases, and that the two guarantees of personal security conjoined in
the Fourteenth Amendment to make the exclusionary rule obligatory
upon the States. We relied upon the great case of Boyd v. United
States,
116 U.S. 616 , decided in 1886, which, considering the Fourth
and Fifth Amendments as running "almost into each other," id., at
630, held that "Breaking into a house and opening boxes and drawers
are circumstances of aggravation; but any forcible and compulsory
extortion of a man's own testimony or of his private papers to be
used as evidence to convict him of crime or to forfeit his goods, is
within [378 U.S. 1, 9]
the condemnation of [those Amendments] . . . ." At 630.
We said in Mapp:
"We find that, as to the Federal Government, the Fourth and
Fifth Amendments and, as to the States, the freedom from
unconscionable invasions of privacy and the freedom from
convictions based upon coerced confessions do enjoy an `intimate
relation' in their perpetuation of `principles of humanity and
civil liberty [secured] . . . only after years of struggle,' Bram
v. United States,
168 U.S. 532, 543 -544 . . . . The philosophy of each
Amendment and of each freedom is complementary to, although not
dependent upon, that of the other in its sphere of influence - the
very least that together they assure in either sphere is that no
man is to be convicted on unconstitutional evidence."
367 U.S., at 656 -657.
In thus returning to the Boyd view that the privilege is one of
the "principles of a free government,"
116 U.S., at 632 ,
7 Mapp necessarily repudiated the Twining concept of the
privilege as a mere rule of evidence "best defended not as an
unchangeable principle of universal justice but as a law proved by
experience to be expedient."
211 U.S., at 113 .
The respondent Sheriff concedes in his brief that under our
decisions, particularly those involving coerced
[378 U.S. 1, 10]
confessions, "the accusatorial system has become a
fundamental part of the fabric of our society and, hence, is
enforceable against the States."
8 The State urges, however, that the availability of the federal
privilege to a witness in a state inquiry is to be determined
according to a less stringent standard than is applicable in a
federal proceeding. We disagree. We have held that the guarantees of
the First Amendment, Gitlow v. New York, supra; Cantwell v.
Connecticut,
310 U.S. 296 ; Louisiana ex rel. Gremillion v. NAACP,
366 U.S. 293 , the prohibition of unreasonable searches and
seizures of the Fourth Amendment, Ker v. California,
374 U.S. 23 , and the right to counsel guaranteed by the Sixth
Amendment, Gideon v. Wainwright, supra, are all to be enforced
against the States under the Fourteenth Amendment according to the
same standards that protect those personal rights against federal
encroachment. In the coerced confession cases, involving the
policies of the privilege itself, there has been no suggestion that
a confession might be considered coerced if used in a federal but
not a state tribunal. The Court thus has rejected the notion that
the Fourteenth Amendment applies to the States only a "watered-down,
subjective version of the individual
[378 U.S. 1, 11] guarantees of the Bill of
Rights, "Ohio ex rel. Eaton v. Price,
364 U.S. 263, 275 (dissenting opinion). If Cohen v. Hurley,
366 U.S. 117 , and Adamson v. California, supra, suggest such an
application of the privilege against self-incrimination, that
suggestion cannot survive recognition of the degree to which the
Twining view of the privilege has been eroded. What is accorded is a
privilege of refusing to incriminate one's self, and the feared
prosecution may be by either federal or state authorities. Murphy v.
Waterfront Comm'n, post, p. 52. It would be incongruous to have
different standards determine the validity of a claim of privilege
based on the same feared prosecution, depending on whether the claim
was asserted in a state or federal court. Therefore, the same
standards must determine whether an accused's silence in either a
federal or state proceeding is justified.
We turn to the petitioner's claim that the State of Connecticut
denied him the protection of his federal privilege. It must be
considered irrelevant that the petitioner was a witness in a
statutory inquiry and not a defendant in a criminal prosecution, for
it has long been settled that the privilege protects witnesses in
similar federal inquiries. Counselman v. Hitchcock,
142 U.S. 547 ; McCarthy v. Arndstein,
266 U.S. 34 ; Hoffman v. United States,
341 U.S. 479 . We recently elaborated the content of the federal
standard in Hoffman:
"The privilege afforded not only extends to answers that would
in themselves support a conviction . . . but likewise embraces
those which would furnish a link in the chain of evidence needed
to prosecute . . . . [I]f the witness, upon interposing his claim,
were required to prove the hazard . . . he would be compelled to
surrender the very protection which the privilege is designed to
guarantee. To sustain the privilege, it need only be evident from
the implications of the question, in the setting in which it is
[378 U.S. 1, 12]
asked, that a responsive answer to the question or an
explanation of why it cannot be answered might be dangerous
because injurious disclosure could result."
341 U.S., at 486 -487.
We also said that, in applying that test, the judge must be
"`perfectly clear, from a careful consideration of all the
circumstances in the case, that the witness is mistaken, and that
the answer[s] cannot possibly have such tendency' to incriminate."
341 U.S., at 488 .
The State of Connecticut argues that the Connecticut courts
properly applied the federal standards to the facts of this case. We
disagree.
The investigation in the course of which petitioner was
questioned began when the Superior Court in Hartford County
appointed the Honorable Ernest A. Inglis, formerly Chief Justice of
Connecticut, to conduct an inquiry into whether there was reasonable
cause to believe that crimes, including gambling, were being
committed in Hartford County. Petitioner appeared on January 16 and
25, 1961, and in both instances he was asked substantially the same
questions about the circumstances surrounding his arrest and
conviction for pool selling in late 1959. The questions which
petitioner refused to answer may be summarized as follows: (1) for
whom did he work on September 11, 1959; (2) who selected and paid
his counsel in connection with his arrest on that date and
subsequent conviction; (3) who selected and paid his bondsman; (4)
who paid his fine; (5) what was the name of the tenant of the
apartment in which he was arrested; and (6) did he know John Bergoti.
The Connecticut Supreme Court of Errors ruled that the answers to
these questions could not tend to incriminate him because the
defenses of double jeopardy and the running of the one-year statute
of limitations on misdemeanors would defeat any prosecution growing
out of his answers to the first
[378 U.S. 1, 13] five questions. As for
the sixth question, the court held that petitioner's failure to
explain how a revelation of his relationship with Bergoti would
incriminate him vitiated his claim to the protection of the
privilege afforded by state law.
The conclusions of the Court of Errors, tested by the federal
standard, fail to take sufficient account of the setting in which
the questions were asked. The interrogation was part of a
wide-ranging inquiry into crime, including gambling, in Hartford. It
was admitted on behalf of the State at oral argument - and indeed it
is obvious from the questions themselves - that the State desired to
elicit from the petitioner the identity of the person who ran the
pool-selling operation in connection with which he had been arrested
in 1959. It was apparent that petitioner might apprehend that if
this person were still engaged in unlawful activity, disclosure of
his name might furnish a link in a chain of evidence sufficient to
connect the petitioner with a more recent crime for which he might
still be prosecuted.
9
Analysis of the sixth question, concerning whether petitioner
knew John Bergoti, yields a similar conclusion. In the context of
the inquiry, it should have been apparent to the referee that
Bergoti was suspected by the State to be involved in some way in the
subject matter of the investigation. An affirmative answer to the
question [378 U.S. 1,
14] might well have either connected petitioner with a
more recent crime, or at least have operated as a waiver of his
privilege with reference to his relationship with a possible
criminal. See Rogers v. United States,
340 U.S. 367 . We conclude, therefore, that as to each of the
questions, it was "evident from the implications of the question, in
the setting in which it [was] asked, that a responsive answer to the
question or an explanation of why it [could not] be answered might
be dangerous because injurious disclosure could result," Hoffman v.
United States,
341 U.S., at 486 -487; see Singleton v. United States,
343 U.S. 944 .
While MR. JUSTICE DOUGLAS joins the opinion of the Court, he also
adheres to his concurrence in Gideon v. Wainwright,
372 U.S. 335, 345 .
Footnotes
[
Footnote 1 ] In both cases the question was whether comment upon
the failure of an accused to take the stand in his own defense in a
state prosecution violated the privilege. It was assumed, but not
decided, in both cases that such comment in a federal prosecution
for a federal offense would infringe the provision of the Fifth
Amendment that "no person
[378 U.S. 1, 3] . . . shall be compelled in
any criminal case to be a witness against himself." For other
statements by the Court that the Fourteenth Amendment does not apply
the federal privilege in state proceedings, see Cohen v. Hurley,
366 U.S. 117, 127 -129; Snyder v. Massachusetts,
291 U.S. 97, 105 .
[
Footnote 2 ] Ten Justices have supported this view. See Gideon
v. Wainwright,
372 U.S. 335, 346 (opinion of MR. JUSTICE DOUGLAS). The Court
expressed itself as unpersuaded to this view in In re Kemmler,
136 U.S. 436, 448 -449; McElvaine v. Brush,
142 U.S. 155, 158 -159; Maxwell v. Dow,
176 U.S. 581, 597 -598; Twining v. New Jersey, supra, p. 96. See
Spies v. Illinois,
123 U.S. 131 . Decisions that particular guarantees were not
safeguarded against state action by the Privileges and Immunities
Clause or other provision of the Fourteenth Amendment are: United
States v. Cruikshank,
92 U.S. 542, 551 ; Prudential Ins. Co. v. Cheek,
259 U.S. 530, 543 (First Amendment); Presser v. Illinois,
116 U.S. 252, 265 (Second Amendment); Weeks v. United States,
232 U.S. 383, 398 (Fourth Amendment); Hurtado v. California,
110 U.S. 516, 538 (Fifth Amendment requirement of grand jury
indictments); Palko v. Connecticut,
302 U.S. 319, 328 (Fifth Amendment double jeopardy); Maxwell v.
Dow, supra, at 595 (Sixth Amendment jury trial); Walker v. Sauvinet,
92 U.S. 90, 92 (Seventh Amendment jury trial); In re Kemmler,
supra; McElvaine v. Brush, supra; O'Neil v. Vermont,
144 U.S. 323, 332 (Eighth Amendment prohibition against cruel
and unusual punishment).
[
Footnote 3 ] In Barron v. Baltimore, 7 Pet. 243, decided before
the adoption of the Fourteenth Amendment, Chief Justice Marshall,
speaking for the Court, held that this right was not secured against
state action by the Fifth Amendment's provision: "Nor shall private
property be taken for public use, without just compensation."
[
Footnote 4 ] E. g., Gitlow v. New York,
268 U.S. 652, 666 (speech and press); Lovell v. City of Griffin,
303 U.S. 444, 450 (speech and press); New York Times Co. v.
Sullivan,
376 U.S. 254 (speech and press); Staub v. City of Baxley,
355 U.S. 313, 321 (speech); Grosjean v. American Press Co.,
297 U.S. 233, 244 (press); Cantwell v. Connecticut,
310 U.S. 296, 303 (religion); De Jonge v. Oregon,
299 U.S. 353, 364 (assembly); Shelton v. Tucker,
364 U.S. 479, 486 (association); Louisiana ex rel. Gremillion v.
NAACP,
366 U.S. 293, 296 (association); NAACP v. Button,
371 U.S. 415 (association and speech); Brotherhood of Railroad
Trainmen v. Virginia ex rel. Virginia State Bar,
377 U.S. 1 (association).
[
Footnote 5 ] See Wolf v. Colorado,
338 U.S. 25, 27 -28; Elkins v. United States,
364 U.S. 206, 213 .
[
Footnote 6 ] See also Robinson v. California,
370 U.S. 660, 666 , which, despite In re Kemmler, supra;
McElvaine v. Brush, supra; O'Neil v. Vermont, supra, made applicable
to the States the Eighth Amendment's ban on cruel and unusual
punishments.
[
Footnote 7 ] Boyd had said of the privilege, ". . . any
compulsory discovery by extorting the party's oath . . . to convict
him of crime . . . is contrary to the principles of a free
government. It is abhorrent to the instincts of an Englishman; it is
abhorrent to the instincts of an American. It may suit the purposes
of despotic power; but it cannot abide the pure atmosphere of
political liberty and personal freedom."
116 U.S., at 631 -632. Dean Griswold has said: "I believe the
Fifth Amendment is, and has been through this period of crisis, an
expression of the moral striving of the community. It has been a
reflection of our common conscience, a symbol of the America which
stirs our hearts." The Fifth Amendment Today 73 (1955).
[
Footnote 8 ] The brief states further: "Underlying the decisions
excluding coerced confessions is the implicit assumption that an
accused is privileged against incriminating himself, either in the
jail house, the grand jury room, or on the witness stand in a public
trial. . . . ". . . It is fundamentally inconsistent to suggest, as
the Court's opinions now suggest, that the State is entirely free to
compel an accused to incriminate himself before a grand jury, or at
the trial, but cannot do so in the police station. Frank recognition
of the fact that the Due Process Clause prohibits the States from
enforcing their laws by compelling the accused to confess,
regardless of where such compulsion occurs, would not only clarify
the principles involved in confession cases, but would assist the
States significantly in their efforts to comply with the limitations
placed upon them by the Fourteenth Amendment."
[
Footnote 9 ] See Greenberg v. United States,
343 U.S. 918 , reversing per curiam, 192 F.2d 201; Singleton v.
United States,
343 U.S. 944 , reversing per curiam, 193 F.2d 464. In United
States v. Coffey, 198 F.2d 438 (C. A. 3d Cir.), cited with approval
in Emspak v. United States,
349 U.S. 190 , the Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit
stated: "in determining whether the witness really apprehends danger
in answering a question, the judge cannot permit himself to be
skeptical; rather must he be acutely aware that in the deviousness
of crime and its detection incrimination may be approached and
achieved by obscure and unlikely lines of inquiry." 198 F.2d, at
440-441.
MR. JUSTICE HARLAN, whom MR. JUSTICE CLARK joins, dissenting.
Connecticut has adjudged this petitioner in contempt for refusing
to answer questions in a state inquiry. The courts of the State,
whose laws embody a privilege against self-incrimination, refused to
recognize the petitioner's claim of privilege, finding that the
questions asked him were not incriminatory. This Court now holds the
contempt adjudication unconstitutional because, it is decided: (1)
the Fourteenth Amendment makes the Fifth Amendment privilege against
self-incrimination applicable to the States; (2) the federal
standard justifying a claim of this privilege likewise applies to
the States; and (3) judged by that standard the petitioner's claim
of privilege should have been upheld.
Believing that the reasoning behind the Court's decision carries
extremely mischievous, if not dangerous, consequences for our
federal system in the realm of criminal
[378 U.S. 1, 15]
law enforcement, I must dissent. The importance of the issue
presented and the serious incursion which the Court makes on
time-honored, basic constitutional principles justify a full
exposition of my reasons.
I.
I can only read the Court's opinion as accepting in fact what it
rejects in theory: the application to the States, via the Fourteenth
Amendment, of the forms of federal criminal procedure embodied
within the first eight Amendments to the Constitution. While it is
true that the Court deals today with only one aspect of state
criminal procedure, and rejects the wholesale "incorporation" of
such federal constitutional requirements, the logical gap between
the Court's premises and its novel constitutional conclusion can, I
submit, be bridged only by the additional premise that the Due
Process Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment is a shorthand directive
to this Court to pick and choose among the provisions of the first
eight Amendments and apply those chosen, freighted with their entire
accompanying body of federal doctrine, to law enforcement in the
States.
I accept and agree with the proposition that continuing
re-examination of the constitutional conception of Fourteenth
Amendment "due process" of law is required, and that development of
the community's sense of justice may in time lead to expansion of
the protection which due process affords. In particular in this
case, I agree that principles of justice to which due process gives
expression, as reflected in decisions of this Court, prohibit a
State, as the Fifth Amendment prohibits the Federal Government, from
imprisoning a person solely because he refuses to give evidence
which may incriminate him under the laws of the State.
1 I do not understand, however,
[378 U.S. 1, 16] how this process of
re-examination, which must refer always to the guiding standard of
due process of law, including, of course, reference to the
particular guarantees of the Bill of Rights, can be short-circuited
by the simple device of incorporating into due process, without
critical examination, the whole body of law which surrounds a
specific prohibition directed against the Federal Government. The
consequence of such an approach to due process as it pertains to the
States is inevitably disregard of all relevant differences which may
exist between state and federal criminal law and its enforcement.
The ultimate result is compelled uniformity, which is inconsistent
with the purpose of our federal system and which is achieved either
by encroachment on the States' sovereign
[378 U.S. 1, 17]
powers or by dilution in federal law enforcement of the
specific protections found in the Bill of Rights.
II.
As recently as 1961, this Court reaffirmed that "the Fifth
Amendment's privilege against self-incrimination," ante, p. 3, was
not applicable against the States. Cohen v. Hurley,
366 U.S. 117 . The question had been most fully explored in
Twining v. New Jersey,
211 U.S. 78 . Since 1908, when Twining was decided, this Court
has adhered to the view there expressed that "the exemption from
compulsory self-incrimination in the courts of the States is not
secured by any part of the Federal Constitution,"
211 U.S., at 114 . Snyder v. Massachusetts,
291 U.S. 97, 105 ; Brown v. Mississippi,
297 U.S. 278, 285 ; Palko v. Connecticut,
302 U.S. 319, 324 ; Adamson v. California,
332 U.S. 46 ; Knapp v. Schweitzer,
357 U.S. 371, 374 ; Cohen, supra. Although none of these cases
involved a commitment to prison for refusing to incriminate oneself
under state law, and they are relevantly distinguishable from this
case on that narrow ground,
2 it is perfectly clear from them that until today it has been
regarded as settled law that the Fifth Amendment privilege did not,
by any process of reasoning, apply as such to the States.
The Court suggests that this consistent line of authority has
been undermined by the concurrent development of constitutional
doctrine in the areas of coerced confessions and search and seizure.
This is post facto reasoning at best. Certainly there has been no
intimation until now that Twining has been tacitly overruled.
It was in Brown v. Mississippi, supra, that this Court first
prohibited the use of a coerced confession in a state criminal
trial. The petitioners in Brown had been tortured
[378 U.S. 1, 18]
until they confessed. The Court was hardly making an
artificial distinction when it said:
". . . [T]he question of the right of the State to withdraw the
privilege against self-incrimination is not here involved. The
compulsion to which the quoted statements [from Twining and
Snyder, supra,] refer is that of the processes of justice by which
the accused may be called as a witness and required to testify.
Compulsion by torture to extort a confession is a different
matter."
3
297 U.S., at 285 . (Emphasis supplied.)
The majority is simply wrong when it asserts that this perfectly
understandable distinction "was soon abandoned," ante, pp. 6-7. In
none of the cases cited, ante, pp. 7-8, in which was developed the
full sweep of the constitutional prohibition against the use of
coerced confessions at state trials, was there anything to suggest
that the Fifth Amendment was being made applicable to state
proceedings. In Lisenba v. California,
314 U.S. 219 , the privilege against self-incrimination is not
mentioned. The relevant question before the Court was whether "the
evidence [of coercion] requires that we set aside the finding of two
courts and a jury, and adjudge the admission of the confessions so
fundamentally unfair, so contrary to the common concept of ordered
liberty, as to amount to a taking of life without due process of
law." Id., at 238. The question was the same in Ashcraft v.
Tennessee,
322 U.S. 143 ; the Court there adverted to the "third degree,"
e. g., id., at 150, note 5, and "secret inquisitorial practices,"
[378 U.S. 1, 19]
id., at 152. Malinski v. New York,
324 U.S. 401 , is the same; the privilege against
self-incrimination is not mentioned.
4 So too in Spano v. New York,
360 U.S. 315 ; Lynumn v. Illinois,
372 U.S. 528 ; and Haynes v. Washington,
373 U.S. 503 . Finally, in Rogers v. Richmond,
365 U.S. 534 , although the Court did recognize that "ours is an
accusatorial and not an inquisitorial system," id., at 541, it is
clear that the Court was concerned only with the problem of coerced
confessions, see ibid.; the opinion includes nothing to support the
Court's assertion here, ante, p. 7, that "the Fifth Amendment
privilege is . . . [the] essential mainstay" of our system.
In Adamson, supra, the Court made it explicit that it did not
regard the increasingly strict standard for determining the
admissibility at trial of an out-of-court confession as undermining
the holding of Twining. After stating that "the due process clause
does not protect, by virtue of its mere existence, the accused's
freedom from giving testimony by compulsion in state trials that is
secured to him against federal interference by the Fifth Amendment,"
the Court said: "The due process clause forbids compulsion to
testify by fear of hurt, torture or exhaustion. It forbids any other
type of coercion that falls within the scope of due process."
332 U.S., at 54
[378 U.S. 1, 20] (footnotes omitted). Plainly, the
Court regarded these two lines of cases as distinct. See also Palko
v. Connecticut, supra, at 326, to the same effect.
5 Cohen, supra, which adhered to Twining, was decided after all
but a few of the confession cases which the Court mentions.
The coerced confession cases are relevant to the problem of this
case not because they overruled Twining sub silentio, but rather
because they applied the same standard of fundamental fairness which
is applicable here. The recognition in them that federal supervision
of state criminal procedures must be directly based on the
requirements of due process is entirely inconsistent with the theory
here espoused by the majority. The parallel treatment of federal and
state cases involving coerced confessions resulted from the fact
that the same demand of due process was applicable in both; it was
not the consequence of the automatic engrafting of federal law
construing constitutional provisions inapplicable to the States onto
the Fourteenth Amendment.
The decision in Mapp v. Ohio,
367 U.S. 643 , that evidence unconstitutionally seized, see Wolf
v. Colorado,
338 U.S. 25, 28 , may not be used in a state criminal trial
furnishes no "fortification," see ante, p. 8, for today's decision.
The very passage from the Mapp opinion which the Court quotes, ante,
p. 9, makes explicit the distinct bases of the exclusionary rule as
applied in federal and state courts:
"We find that, as to the Federal Government, the Fourth and
Fifth Amendments and, as to the States, the freedom from
unconscionable invasions of privacy and the freedom from
convictions based upon coerced confessions do enjoy an `intimate
relation' [378 U.S.
1, 21] in their perpetuation of `principles of
humanity and civil liberty [secured] . . . only after years of
struggle,' Bram v. United States,
168 U.S. 532, 543 -544 (1897)."
367 U.S., at 656 -657 (footnote omitted). See also id., at
655.
Although the Court discussed Boyd v. United States,
116 U.S. 616 , a federal case involving both the Fourth and
Fifth Amendments, nothing in Mapp supports the statement, ante, p.
8, that the Fifth Amendment was part of the basis for extending the
exclusionary rule to the States. The elaboration of Mapp in Ker v.
California,
374 U.S. 23 , did in my view make the Fourth Amendment
applicable to the States through the Fourteenth; but there is
nothing in it to suggest that the Fifth Amendment went along as
baggage.
III.
The previous discussion shows that this Court's decisions do not
dictate the "incorporation" of the Fifth Amendment's privilege
against self-incrimination into the Fourteenth Amendment.
Approaching the question more broadly, it is equally plain that the
line of cases exemplified by Palko v. Connecticut, supra, in which
this Court has reconsidered the requirements which the Due Process
Clause imposes on the States in the light of current standards,
furnishes no general theoretical framework for what the Court does
today.
The view of the Due Process Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment
which this Court has consistently accepted and which has "thus far
prevailed," ante, p. 4, is that its requirements are as "old as a
principle of civilized government," Munn v. Illinois,
94 U.S. 113, 123 , the specific applications of which must be
ascertained "by the gradual process of judicial inclusion and
exclusion . . .," Davidson v. New Orleans,
96 U.S. 97, 104 . Due process requires "observance of those
general rules established in our system of jurisprudence for the
security of private
[378 U.S. 1, 22] rights." Hagar v. Reclamation District
No. 108,
111 U.S. 701, 708 . See Hurtado v. California,
110 U.S. 516, 537 .
"This court has never attempted to define with precision the
words `due process of law' . . . . It is sufficient to say that
there are certain immutable principles of justice which inhere in
the very idea of free government which no member of the Union may
disregard . . . ." Holden v. Hardy,
169 U.S. 366, 389 .
It followed from this recognition that due process encompassed
the fundamental safeguards of the individual against the abusive
exercise of governmental power that some of the restraints on the
Federal Government which were specifically enumerated in the Bill of
Rights applied also against the States. But, while inclusion of a
particular provision in the Bill of Rights might provide historical
evidence that the right involved was traditionally regarded as
fundamental, inclusion of the right in due process was otherwise
entirely independent of the first eight Amendments:
". . . [I]t is possible that some of the personal rights
safeguarded by the first eight Amendments against National action
may also be safeguarded against state action, because a denial of
them would be a denial of due process of law. . . . If this is so,
it is not because those rights are enumerated in the first eight
Amendments, but because they are of such a nature that they are
included in the conception of due process of law." Twining, supra,
at 99. (Emphasis supplied.)
Relying heavily on Twining, Mr. Justice Cardozo provided what may
be regarded as a classic expression of this approach in Palko v.
Connecticut, supra. After considering a number of individual rights
(including the right
[378 U.S. 1, 23] not to incriminate oneself) which were
"not of the very essence of a scheme of ordered liberty," id., at
325, he said:
"We reach a different plane of social and moral values when we
pass to the privileges and immunities that have been taken over
from the earlier articles of the federal bill of rights and
brought within the Fourteenth Amendment by a process of
absorption. These in their origin were effective against the
federal government alone. If the Fourteenth Amendment has absorbed
them, the process of absorption has had its source in the belief
that neither liberty nor justice would exist if they were
sacrificed." Id., at 326.
Further on, Mr. Justice Cardozo made the independence of the Due
Process Clause from the provisions of the first eight Amendments
explicit:
"Fundamental . . . in the concept of due process, and so in
that of liberty, is the thought that condemnation shall be
rendered only after trial. Scott v. McNeal,
154 U.S. 34 ; Blackmer v. United States,
284 U.S. 421 . The hearing, moreover, must be a real one, not
a sham or a pretense. Moore v. Dempsey,
261 U.S. 86 ; Mooney v. Holohan,
294 U.S. 103 . For that reason, ignorant defendants in a
capital case were held to have been condemned unlawfully when in
truth, though not in form, they were refused the aid of counsel.
Powell v. Alabama, supra, pp. 67, 68. The decision did not turn
upon the fact that the benefit of counsel would have been
guaranteed to the defendants by the provisions of the Sixth
Amendment if they had been prosecuted in a federal court. The
decision turned upon the fact that in the particular situation
laid before us in the evidence the benefit of counsel was
essential to the substance of a hearing." Id., at 327.
[378 U.S. 1, 24]
It is apparent that Mr. Justice Cardozo's metaphor of
"absorption" was not intended to suggest the transplantation of case
law surrounding the specifics of the first eight Amendments to the
very different soil of the Fourteenth Amendment's Due Process
Clause. For, as he made perfectly plain, what the Fourteenth
Amendment requires of the States does not basically depend on what
the first eight Amendments require of the Federal Government.
Seen in proper perspective, therefore, the fact that First
Amendment protections have generally been given equal scope in the
federal and state domains or that in some areas of criminal
procedure the Due Process Clause demands as much of the States as
the Bill of Rights demands of the Federal Government, is only
tangentially relevant to the question now before us. It is toying
with constitutional principles to assert that the Court has
"rejected the notion that the Fourteenth Amendment applies to the
states only a `watered-down, subjective version of the individual
guarantees of the Bill of Rights,'" ante, pp. 10-11. What the Court
has, with the single exception of the Ker case, supra, p. 21; see
infra, p. 26, consistently rejected is the notion that the Bill of
Rights, as such, applies to the States in any aspect at all.
If one attends to those areas to which the Court points, ante, p.
10, in which the prohibitions against the state and federal
governments have moved in parallel tracks, the cases in fact reveal
again that the Court's usual approach has been to ground the
prohibitions against state action squarely on due process, without
intermediate reliance on any of the first eight Amendments. Although
more recently the Court has referred to the First Amendment to
describe the protection of free expression against state
infringement, earlier cases leave no doubt that such references are
"shorthand" for doctrines developed by another
[378 U.S. 1, 25]
route. In Gitlow v. New York,
268 U.S. 652, 666 , for example, the Court said:
"For present purposes we may and do assume that freedom of
speech and of the press - which are protected by the First
Amendment from abridgment by Congress - are among the fundamental
personal rights and `liberties' protected by the due process
clause of the Fourteenth Amendment from impairment by the States."
The Court went on to consider the extent of those freedoms in the
context of state interests. Mr. Justice Holmes, in dissent, said:
"The general principle of free speech, it seems to me, must be
taken to be included in the Fourteenth Amendment, in view of the
scope that has been given to the word `liberty' as there used,
although perhaps it may be accepted with a somewhat larger
latitude of interpretation than is allowed to Congress by the
sweeping language that governs or ought to govern the laws of the
United States." Id., at 672.
Chief Justice Hughes, in De Jonge v. Oregon,
299 U.S. 353, 364 , gave a similar analysis:
"Freedom of speech and of the press are fundamental rights
which are safeguarded by the due process clause of the Fourteenth
Amendment of the Federal Constitution. . . . The right of
peaceable assembly is a right cognate to those of free speech and
free press and is equally fundamental. As this Court said in
United States v. Cruikshank,
92 U.S. 542, 552 : `The very idea of a government, republican
in form, implies a right on the part of its citizens to meet
peaceably for consultation in respect to public affairs and to
petition for a redress of grievances.' The First Amendment of the
Federal Constitution expressly guarantees that right against
abridgment [378 U.S.
1, 26] by Congress. But explicit mention there does
not argue exclusion elsewhere. For the right is one that cannot be
denied without violating those fundamental principles of liberty
and justice which lie at the base of all civil and political
institutions, - principles which the Fourteenth Amendment embodies
in the general terms of its due process clause."
The coerced confession and search and seizure cases have already
been considered. The former, decided always directly on grounds of
fundamental fairness, furnish no support for the Court's present
views. Ker v. California, supra, did indeed incorporate the Fourth
Amendment's protection against invasions of privacy into the Due
Process Clause. But that case should be regarded as the exception
which proves the rule.
6 The right to counsel in state criminal proceedings, which this
Court assured in Gideon v. Wainwright,
372 U.S. 335 , does not depend on the Sixth Amendment. In Betts
v. Brady,
316 U.S. 455, 462 , this Court had said:
"Due process of law is secured against invasion by the federal
Government by the Fifth Amendment, and is safeguarded against
state action in identical words by the Fourteenth. The phrase
formulates a concept less rigid and more fluid than those
envisaged in other specific and particular provisions of the Bill
of Rights. Its application is less a matter of rule. Asserted
denial is to be tested by an appraisal of the totality of facts in
a given case. That which may, in one setting, constitute a denial
of fundamental fairness, shocking to the universal sense of
justice, may, in other circumstances, and in the light of other
considerations, fall short of such denial." (Footnote omitted.)
[378 U.S. 1, 27]
Although Gideon overruled Betts, the constitutional approach in
both cases was the same. Gideon was based on the Court's conclusion,
contrary to that reached in Betts, that the appointment of counsel
for an indigent criminal defendant was essential to the conduct of a
fair trial, and was therefore part of due process.
372 U.S., at 342 -345.
The Court's approach in the present case is in fact nothing more
or less than "incorporation" in snatches. If, however, the Due
Process Clause is something more than a reference to the Bill of
Rights and protects only those rights which derive from fundamental
principles, as the majority purports to believe, it is just as
contrary to precedent and just as illogical to incorporate the
provisions of the Bill of Rights one at a time as it is to
incorporate them all at once.
IV.
The Court's undiscriminating approach to the Due Process Clause
carries serious implications for the sound working of our federal
system in the field of criminal law.
The Court concludes, almost without discussion, that "the same
standards must determine whether an accused's silence in either a
federal or state proceeding is justified," ante, p. 11. About all
that the Court offers in explanation of this conclusion is the
observation that it would be "incongruous" if different standards
governed the assertion of a privilege to remain silent in state and
federal tribunals. Such "incongruity," however, is at the heart of
our federal system. The powers and responsibilities of the state and
federal governments are not congruent; under our Constitution, they
are not intended to be. Why should it be thought, as an a priori
matter, that limitations on the investigative power of the States
are in all respects identical with limitations on the investigative
power of the Federal Government? This certainly
[378 U.S. 1, 28]
does not follow from the fact that we deal here with
constitutional requirements; for the provisions of the Constitution
which are construed are different.
As the Court pointed out in Abbate v. United States,
359 U.S. 187, 195 , "the States under our federal system have
the principal responsibility for defining and prosecuting crimes."
The Court endangers this allocation of responsibility for the
prevention of crime when it applies to the States doctrines
developed in the context of federal law enforcement, without any
attention to the special problems which the States as a group or
particular States may face. If the power of the States to deal with
local crime is unduly restricted, the likely consequence is a shift
of responsibility in this area to the Federal Government, with its
vastly greater resources. Such a shift, if it occurs, may in the end
serve to weaken the very liberties which the Fourteenth Amendment
safeguards by bringing us closer to the monolithic society which our
federalism rejects. Equally dangerous to our liberties is the
alternative of watering down protections against the Federal
Government embodied in the Bill of Rights so as not unduly to
restrict the powers of the States. The dissenting opinion in Aguilar
v. Texas, post, p. 116, evidences that this danger is not imaginary.
See my concurring opinion in Aguilar, ibid.
Rather than insisting, almost by rote, that the Connecticut
court, in considering the petitioner's claim of privilege, was
required to apply the "federal standard," the Court should have
fulfilled its responsibility under the Due Process Clause by
inquiring whether the proceedings below met the demands of
fundamental fairness which due process embodies. Such an approach
may not satisfy those who see in the Fourteenth Amendment a set of
easily applied "absolutes" which can afford a haven from unsettling
doubt. It is, however, truer to the spirit which requires this Court
constantly to re-examine fundamental
[378 U.S. 1, 29] principles and at the
same time enjoins it from reading its own preferences into the
Constitution.
The Connecticut Supreme Court of Errors gave full and careful
consideration to the petitioner's claim that he would incriminate
himself if he answered the questions put to him. It noted that its
decisions "from a time antedating the adoption of . . . [the
Connecticut] constitution in 1818" had upheld a privilege to refuse
to answer incriminating questions. 150 Conn. 220, 223, 187 A. 2d
744, 746. Stating that federal cases treating the Fifth Amendment
privilege had "persuasive force" in interpreting its own
constitutional provision, and citing Hoffman v. United States,
341 U.S. 479 , in particular, the Supreme Court of Errors
described the requirements for assertion of the privilege by quoting
from one of its own cases, 150 Conn., at 225, 187 A. 2d, at 747:
"[A] witness . . . has the right to refuse to answer any
question which would tend to incriminate him. But a mere claim on
his part that the evidence will tend to incriminate him is not
sufficient. . . . [He having] made his claim, it is then . . .
[necessary for the judge] to determine in the exercise of a legal
discretion whether, from the circumstances of the case and the
nature of the evidence which the witness is called upon to give,
there is reasonable ground to apprehend danger of criminal
liability from his being compelled to answer. That danger `must be
real and appreciable, with reference to the ordinary operation of
law in the ordinary course of things - not a danger of an
imaginary and unsubstantial character, having reference to some
extraordinary and barely possible contingency, so improbable that
no reasonable man would suffer it to influence his conduct. We
think that a merely remote and naked possibility, out of the
ordinary course of law and such as no reasonable man would be
affected by, [378
U.S. 1, 30] should not be suffered to obstruct the
administration of justice. The object of the law is to afford to a
party, called upon to give evidence in a proceeding inter alios,
protection against being brought by means of his own evidence
within the penalties of the law. But it would be to convert a
salutary protection into a means of abuse if it were to be held
that a mere imaginary possibility of danger, however remote and
improbable, was sufficient to justify the withholding of evidence
essential to the ends of justice.' Cockburn, C. J., in Regina v.
Boyes, 1 B. & S. 311, 330 . . . ." McCarthy v. Clancy, 110 Conn.
482, 488-489, 148 A. 551, 555.
The court carefully applied the above standard to each question
which the petitioner was asked. It dealt first with the question
whether he knew John Bergoti. The court said:
"Bergoti is nowhere described or in any way identified, either
as to his occupation, actual or reputed, or as to any criminal
record he may have had. . . . Malloy made no attempt even to
suggest to the court how an answer to the question whether he knew
Bergoti could possibly incriminate him. . . . On this state of the
record the question was proper, and Malloy's claim of privilege,
made without explanation, was correctly overruled. Malloy `chose
to keep the door tightly closed and to deny the court the smallest
glimpse of the danger he apprehended. He cannot then complain that
we see none.' In re Pillo, 11 N. J. 8, 22, 93 A. 2d 176 . . . ."
150 Conn., at 226-227, 187 A. 2d, at 748.
The remaining questions are summarized in the majority's opinion,
ante, p. 12. All of them deal with the circumstances surrounding the
petitioner's conviction on a gambling charge in 1959. The court
declined to decide [378
U.S. 1, 31] "whether, on their face and apart from any
consideration of Malloy's immunity from prosecution, the questions
should or should not have been answered in the light of his failure
to give any hint of explanation as to how answers to them could
incriminate him." 150 Conn., at 227, 187 A. 2d, at 748. The court
considered the State's claim that the petitioner's prior conviction
was sufficient to clothe him with immunity from prosecution for
other crimes to which the questions might pertain, but declined to
rest its decision on that basis. Id., at 227-229, 187 A. 2d, at
748-749. The court concluded, however, that the running of the
statute of limitations on misdemeanors committed in 1959 and the
absence of any indication that Malloy had engaged in any crime other
than a misdemeanor removed all appearance of danger of incrimination
from the questions propounded concerning the petitioner's activities
in 1959. The court summarized this conclusion as follows:
"In all this, Malloy confounds vague and improbable
possibilities of prosecution with reasonably appreciable ones.
Under claims like his, it would always be possible to work out
some finespun and improbable theory from which an outside chance
of prosecution could be envisioned. Such claims are not enough to
support a claim of privilege, at least where, as here, a witness
suggests no rational explanation of his fears of incrimination,
and the questions themselves, under all the circumstances, suggest
none." Id., at 230-231, 187 A. 2d, at 750.
Peremptorily rejecting all of the careful analysis of the
Connecticut court, this Court creates its own "finespun and
improbable theory" about how these questions might have incriminated
the petitioner. With respect to his acquaintance with Bergoti, this
Court says only:
"In the context of the inquiry, it should have been apparent to
the referee that Bergoti was suspected
[378 U.S. 1, 32]
by the State to be involved in some way in the subject
matter of the investigation. An affirmative answer to the question
might well have either connected petitioner with a more recent
crime, or at least have operated as a waiver of his privilege with
reference to his relationship with a possible criminal." Ante, pp.
13-14.
The other five questions, treated at length in the Connecticut
court's opinion, get equally short shrift from this Court; it takes
the majority, unfamiliar with Connecticut law and far removed from
the proceedings below, only a dozen lines to consider the questions
and conclude that they were incriminating:
"The interrogation was part of a wide-ranging inquiry into
crime, including gambling, in Hartford. It was admitted on behalf
of the State at oral argument - and indeed it is obvious from the
questions themselves - that the State desired to elicit from the
petitioner the identity of the person who ran the pool-selling
operation in connection with which he had been arrested in 1959.
It was apparent that petitioner might apprehend that if this
person were still engaged in unlawful activity, disclosure of his
name might furnish a link in a chain of evidence sufficient to
connect the petitioner with a more recent crime for which he might
still be prosecuted." (Footnote omitted.) Ante, p. 13.
I do not understand how anyone could read the opinion of the
Connecticut court and conclude that the state law which was the
basis of its decision or the decision itself was lacking in
fundamental fairness. The truth of the matter is that under any
standard - state or federal - the commitment for contempt was
proper. Indeed, as indicated above, there is every reason to believe
that the Connecticut court did apply the Hoffman standard
[378 U.S. 1, 33]
quoted approvingly in the majority's opinion. I entirely
agree with my Brother WHITE, post, pp. 36-38, that if the matter is
viewed only from the standpoint of the federal standard, such
standard was fully satisfied. The Court's reference to a federal
standard is, to put it bluntly, simply an excuse for the Court to
substitute its own superficial assessment of the facts and state law
for the careful and better informed conclusions of the state court.
No one who scans the two opinions with an objective eye will, I
think, reach any other conclusion.
I would affirm.
[
Footnote 1 ] That precise question has not heretofore been
decided by this Court. Twining v. New Jersey,
211 U.S. 78 , and the cases which
[378 U.S. 1, 16]
followed it, see infra, p. 17, all involved issues not
precisely similar. Although the Court has stated broadly that an
individual could "be required to incriminate himself in . . . state
proceedings," Cohen v. Hurley,
366 U.S. 117, 127 , the context in which such statements were
made was that the State had in each case recognized the right to
remain silent. In Twining, supra, until now the primary authority,
the Court noted that "all the States of the Union have, from time to
time, with varying form but uniform meaning, included the privilege
in their constitutions, except the States of New Jersey and Iowa,
and in those States it is held to be part of the existing law."
211 U.S., at 92 . While I do not believe that the coerced
confession cases furnish any basis for incorporating the Fifth
Amendment into the Fourteenth, see infra, pp. 17-20, they do, it
seems to me, carry an implication that coercion to incriminate
oneself, even when under the forms of law, cf. Brown v. Mississippi,
297 U.S. 278, 285 , discussed infra, pp. 17-18, is inconsistent
with due process. Since every State already recognizes a privilege
against self-incrimination so defined, see VIII Wigmore, Evidence (McNaughton
rev. 1961), 2252, the effect of including such a privilege in due
process is only to create the possibility that a federal question,
to be decided under the Due Process Clause, would be raised by a
State's refusal to accept a claim of the privilege.
[
Footnote 2 ] See note 1, supra.
[
Footnote 3 ] Nothing in the opinion in Brown supports the
Court's intimation here, ante, p. 6, that if Twining had not been on
the books, reversal of the convictions would have been based on the
Fifth Amendment. The Court made it plain in Brown that it regarded
the trial use of a confession extracted by torture as on a par with
domination of a trial by a mob, see, e. g., Moore v. Dempsey,
261 U.S. 86 , where the trial "is a mere pretense,"
297 U.S., at 286 .
[
Footnote 4 ] "And so, when a conviction in a state court is
properly here for review, under a claim that a right protected by
the Fourteenth Amendment has been denied, the question is not
whether the record can be found to disclose an infraction of one of
the specific provisions of the first eight amendments. To come
concretely to the present case, the question is not whether the
record permits a finding, by a tenuous process of psychological
assumptions and reasoning, that Malinski by means of a confession
was forced to self-incrimination in defiance of the Fifth Amendment.
The exact question is whether the criminal proceedings which
resulted in his conviction deprived him of the due process of law by
which he was constitutionally entitled to have his guilt
determined." Malinski, supra, at 416 (opinion of Frankfurter, J.).
[
Footnote 5 ] In Adamson and Palko, supra, which adhered to the
rule announced in Twining, supra, the Court cited some of the very
cases now relied on by the majority to show that Twining was
gradually being eroded.
332 U.S., at 54 , notes 12, 13;
302 U.S., at 325 , 326.
[
Footnote 6 ] Cf. the majority and dissenting opinions in Aguilar
v. Texas, post, p. 108.
MR. JUSTICE WHITE, with whom MR. JUSTICE STEWART joins,
dissenting.
I.
The Fifth Amendment safeguards an important complex of values,
but it is difficult for me to perceive how these values are served
by the Court's holding that the privilege was properly invoked in
this case. While purporting to apply the prevailing federal standard
of incrimination - the same standard of incrimination that the
Connecticut courts applied - the Court has all but stated that a
witness' invocation of the privilege to any question is to be
automatically, and without more, accepted. With deference, I prefer
the rule permitting the judge rather than the witness to determine
when an answer sought is incriminating.
The established rule has been that the witness' claim of the
privilege is not final, for the privilege qualifies a citizen's
general duty of disclosure only when his answers would subject him
to danger from the criminal law. The privilege against
self-incrimination or any other evidentiary privilege does not
protect silence which is solely an expression of political protest,
a desire not to inform, a fear of social obloquy or economic
disadvantage or fear of prosecution for future crimes. Smith v.
United States, [378
U.S. 1, 34]
337 U.S. 137, 147 ; Brown v. Walker,
161 U.S. 591, 605 . If the general duty to testify when
subpoenaed is to remain and the privilege is to be retained as a
protection against compelled incriminating answers, the trial judge
must be permitted to make a meaningful determination of when answers
tend to incriminate. See The Queen v. Boyes, 1 B. & S. 311, 329-330
(1861); Mason v. United States,
244 U.S. 362 . I do not think today's decision permits such a
determination.
Answers which would furnish a lead to other evidence needed to
prosecute or convict a claimant of a crime - clue evidence - cannot
be compelled, but "this protection must be confined to instances
where the witness has reasonable cause to apprehend danger from a
direct answer." Hoffman v. United States,
341 U.S. 479 , at 486; Mason v. United States,
244 U.S. 362 . Of course the witness is not required to disclose
so much of the danger as to render his privilege nugatory. But that
does not justify a flat rule of no inquiry and automatic acceptance
of the claim of privilege. In determining whether the witness has a
reasonable apprehension, the test in the federal courts has been
that the judge is to decide from the circumstances of the case, his
knowledge of matters surrounding the inquiry and the nature of the
evidence which is demanded from the witness. Hoffman v. United
States,
341 U.S. 479 ; Mason v. United States,
244 U.S. 362 . Cf. Rogers v. United States,
340 U.S. 367 . This rule seeks and achieves a workable
accommodation between what are obviously important competing
interests. As Mr. Chief Justice Marshall said: "The principle which
entitles the United States to the testimony of every citizen, and
the principle by which every witness is privileged not to accuse
himself, can neither of them be entirely disregarded. . . . When a
question is propounded, it belongs to the court to consider and to
decide whether any direct answer to it can implicate the witness."
In [378 U.S. 1, 35]
re Willie, 25 Fed. Cas. No. 14,692e, at 39-40. I would not
only retain this rule but apply it in its present form. Under this
test, Malloy's refusals to answer some, if not all, of the questions
put to him were clearly not privileged.
II.
In November 1959, Malloy was arrested in a gambling raid in
Hartford and was convicted of pool selling, an offense defined as
occupying and keeping a building containing gambling apparatus.
After a 90-day jail term, his one-year sentence was suspended and
Malloy was placed on probation for two years. In early 1961, Malloy
was summoned to appear in an investigation into whether crimes,
including gambling, had been committed in Hartford County, and was
asked various questions obviously and solely designed to ascertain
who Malloy's associates were in connection with his pool-selling
activities in Hartford in 1959. Malloy initially refused to answer
virtually all the questions put to him, including such innocuous
ones as whether he was the William Malloy arrested and convicted of
pool selling in 1959. After he was advised to consult with counsel
and did so, he declined to answer each one of the following
questions on the ground that it would tend to incriminate him:
"Q. Now, on September 11, 1959, when you were arrested at 600
Asylum Street, and the same arrest for which you were convicted in
the Superior Court on November 5, 1959, for whom were you working?
"Q. On September 11, 1959, when you were arrested, and the same
arrest for which you were convicted in the Superior Court on
November 5, 1959, who furnished the money to pay your fine when
you were convicted in the Superior Court?
"Q. After your arrest on September 11, 1959, and the same
arrest for which you were convicted on November 5, 1959, who
selected your bondsman?
"Q. As a result of your arrest on September 11, 1959, and the
same arrest for which you were convicted on November 5, 1959, who
furnished the money to pay your fine?
"Q. Do you know whose apartment it was [that you were arrested
in on September 11, 1959]?
"Q. I ask you again, Mr. Malloy, now, so there will be no
misunderstanding of what I want to know. When you were arrested on
September 11, 1959, at 600 Asylum Street in Hartford, and the same
arrest for which you were convicted in Superior Court on November
5, 1959, for whom were you working?"
It was for refusing to answer these questions that Malloy was
cited for contempt, the Connecticut courts noting that the privilege
does not protect one against informing on friends or associates.
These were not wholly innocuous questions on their face, but they
clearly were in light of the finding, of which Malloy was told, that
he was immune from prosecution for any pool-selling activities in
1959. As the Connecticut Supreme Court of Errors found, the State
bore its burden of proving that the statute of limitations barred
any prosecution for any type of violation of the state pool-selling
statute in 1959. Malloy advanced the claim before the Connecticut
courts, and again before this Court, that he could perhaps be
prosecuted for a conspiracy and that the statute of limitations on a
felony was [378 U.S. 1,
37] five years. But the Connecticut courts were unable
to find any state statute which Malloy's gambling activities in 1959
in Hartford, the subject of the inquiry, could have violated and
Malloy has not yet pointed to one. Beyond this Malloy declined to
offer any explanation or hint at how the answers sought could have
incriminated him. In these circumstances it is wholly speculative to
find that the questions about others, not Malloy, posed a
substantial hazard of criminal prosecution to Malloy. Theoretically,
under some unknown but perhaps possible conditions any fact is
potentially incriminating. But if this be the rule, there obviously
is no reason for the judge, rather than the witness, to pass on the
claim of privilege. The privilege becomes a general one against
answering distasteful questions.
The Court finds that the questions were incriminating because
petitioner "might apprehend that if [his associates in 1959] were
still engaged in unlawful activity, disclosure of [their names]
might furnish a link in a chain of evidence sufficient to connect
the petitioner with a more recent crime for which he might still be
prosecuted." Ante, p. 13. The assumption necessary to the above
reasoning is that all persons, or all who have committed a
misdemeanor, are continuously engaged in crime. This is but another
way of making the claim of privilege automatic. It is not only
unrealistic generally but peculiarly inappropriate in this case.
Unlike cases relied on by the Court, like Hoffman v. United States,
supra, where the claimant was known to be involved in rackets in the
area, which were the subject of the inquiry, and had a "broadly
published police record," Malloy had no record as a felon. He had
engaged once in an unlawful activity - pool selling - a misdemeanor
and was given a suspended sentence. He had been on probation since
that time and was on probation at the time of the inquiry. Again,
unlike Hoffman, nothing in these questions indicates petitioner
[378 U.S. 1, 38]
was called because he was suspected of criminal activities
after 1959. There is no support at all in this record for the
cynical assumption that he had committed criminal acts after his
release in 1960.
Even on the Court's assumption that persons convicted of a
misdemeanor are necessarily suspect criminals, sustaining the
privilege in these circumstances is unwarranted, for Malloy placed
no reliance on this theory in the courts below or in this Court. In
order to allow the judge passing on the claim to understand how the
answers sought are incriminating, I would at least require the
claimant to state his grounds for asserting the privilege to
questions seemingly irrelevant to any incriminating matters.
Adherence to the federal standard of incrimination stated in
Mason and Hoffman, supra, in form only, while its content is eroded
in application, is hardly an auspicious beginning for application of
the privilege to the States. As was well stated in a closely
analogous situation, "[t]o continue a rule which is honored by this
Court only with lip service is not a healthy thing and in the long
run will do disservice to the federal system." Gideon v. Wainwright,
372 U.S. 335 , at 351 (HARLAN, J., concurring).
I would affirm. [378
U.S. 1, 39] |