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Benton v. Maryland395 U.S. 784
(1969)
Cases citing this case: Supreme Court
Cases citing this case: Circuit Courts
U.S. Supreme Court
BENTON v. MARYLAND, 395 U.S. 784 (1969)
395 U.S. 784
BENTON v. MARYLAND.
CERTIORARI TO THE COURT OF SPECIAL APPEALS OF MARYLAND.
No. 201.
Argued December 12, 1968. Reargued March 24, 1969.
Decided June 23, 1969.
Petitioner was tried in a Maryland state court for burglary and
larceny. He was acquitted of larceny but convicted of burglary and
sentenced to 10 years in prison. Because the grand and petit juries
in petitioner's case had been selected under an invalid
constitutional provision, the case was remanded to the trial court
and petitioner was given, and exercised, the option of demanding
re-indictment and retrial. Re-indicted for larceny and burglary,
petitioner filed, on the ground of double jeopardy, a motion to
dismiss the larceny count which the trial court denied. On retrial
he was found guilty of both offenses, and concurrently sentenced to
15 years for burglary and 5 years for larceny. The appellate court
ruled against petitioner on the double jeopardy issue and affirmed.
Held:
1. The concurrent sentence doctrine enunciated in Hirabayashi
v. United States,
320 U.S. 81, 105 , does not constitute a jurisdictional bar to
this Court's deciding petitioner's challenge to his larceny
conviction, since the possibilities of adverse collateral effects
to him from that conviction give the case an adversary cast and
make it justiciable. Pp. 787-791.
2. Regardless of whether the concurrent sentence doctrine
survives as a rule of judicial convenience, the doctrine is
inapplicable here since the Maryland appellate court decided not
to apply the doctrine and upheld the larceny conviction despite
petitioner's double jeopardy contention, and since the status of
petitioner's burglary conviction is still in some doubt. Pp.
791-793.
3. The double jeopardy prohibition of the Fifth Amendment, a
fundamental ideal in our constitutional heritage, is enforceable
against the States through the Fourteenth Amendment. Palko v.
Connecticut,
302 U.S. 319 , overruled. Pp. 793-796.
4. Petitioner's larceny conviction cannot stand, since "[c]onditioning
an appeal on one offense on a coerced surrender of a valid plea of
former jeopardy on another offense exacts a forfeiture in plain
conflict with the constitutional bar against double jeopardy."
Green v. United States,
355 U.S. 184, 193 -194. Pp. 796-797.
[395 U.S. 784, 785]
5. The question raised by petitioner that prejudicial error
resulted from the admission at his trial for both burglary and
larceny of some evidence that state law made inadmissible in a
trial for burglary alone was not decided by the Maryland appellate
court and should now be considered by that court. Pp. 797-798.
1 Md. App. 647, 232 A. 2d 541, vacated and remanded.
M. Michael Cramer argued the cause for petitioner on the original
argument and on the reargument. With him on the briefs were H.
Thomas Sisk, Laurence Levitan, and Paul H. Weinstein.
Francis B. Burch, Attorney General of Maryland, argued the cause
for respondent on the reargument. With him on the briefs was Edward
F. Borgerding, First Assistant Attorney General. Mr. Borgerding
argued the cause for respondent on the original argument. With him
on the brief was Mr. Burch.
Peter L. Strauss argued the cause for the United States on the
reargument as amicus curiae. With him on the brief were Solicitor
General Griswold, Assistant Attorney General Wilson, Beatrice
Rosenberg, and Ronald L. Gainer.
MR. JUSTICE MARSHALL delivered the opinion of the Court.
In August 1965, petitioner was tried in a Maryland state court on
charges of burglary and larceny. The jury found petitioner not
guilty of larceny but convicted him on the burglary count. He was
sentenced to 10 years in prison. Shortly after his notice of appeal
was filed in the Maryland Court of Appeals, that court handed down
its decision in the case of Schowgurow v. State, 240 Md. 121, 213 A.
2d 475 (1965). In Schowgurow the Maryland Court of Appeals struck
down a section of the state constitution which required jurors to
swear their belief in the existence of God. As a result of this
decision, petitioner's case was remanded to the trial court.
[395 U.S. 784, 786]
Because both the grand and petit juries in petitioner's
case had been selected under the invalid constitutional provision,
petitioner was given the option of demanding re-indictment and
retrial. He chose to have his conviction set aside, and a new
indictment and new trial followed. At this second trial, petitioner
was again charged with both larceny and burglary. Petitioner
objected to retrial on the larceny count, arguing that because the
first jury had found him not guilty of larceny, retrial would
violate the constitutional prohibition against subjecting persons to
double jeopardy for the same offense. The trial judge denied
petitioner's motion to dismiss the larceny charge, and petitioner
was tried for both larceny and burglary. This time the jury found
petitioner guilty of both offenses, and the judge sentenced him to
15 years on the burglary count
1 and 5 years for larceny, the sentences to run concurrently. On
appeal to the newly created Maryland Court of Special Appeals,
petitioner's double jeopardy claim was rejected on the merits. 1 Md.
App. 647, 232 A. 2d. 541 (1967). The Court of Appeals denied
discretionary review.
On the last day of last Term, we granted certiorari,
392 U.S. 925 (1968), but limited the writ to the consideration
of two issues:
"(1) Is the double jeopardy clause of the Fifth Amendment
applicable to the States through the Fourteenth Amendment?
After oral argument, it became clear that the existence of a
concurrent sentence on the burglary count might prevent the Court
from reaching the double jeopardy issue, at least if we found that
any error affected only petitioner's larceny conviction. Therefore,
we scheduled the case for reargument,
393 U.S. 994 (1968), limited to the following additional
question not included in the original writ:
"Does the `concurrent sentence doctrine,' enunciated in
Hirabayashi v. United States,
320 U.S. 81, 105 , and subsequent cases, have continuing
validity in light of such decisions as Ginsberg v. New York,
390 U.S. 629, 633 , n. 2, Peyton v. Rowe,
391 U.S. 54 , Carafas v. LaVallee,
391 U.S. 234, 237 -238, and Sibron v. New York,
392 U.S. 40, 50 -58?"
The Solicitor General was invited to file a brief expressing the
views of the United States and to participate in oral argument.
After consideration of all the questions before us, we find no
bar to our decision of the double jeopardy issue. On the merits, we
hold that the Double Jeopardy Clause of the Fifth Amendment is
applicable to the States through the Fourteenth Amendment, and we
reverse petitioner's conviction for larceny.
I.
At the outset of this case we are confronted with a
jurisdictional problem. If the error specified in the original writ
of certiorari were found to affect only petitioner's larceny
conviction,
2 reversal of that conviction would not require the State to
change the terms of
[395 U.S. 784, 788] petitioner's confinement. Whatever
the status of his sentence on the larceny conviction, petitioner
would probably stay in prison until he had served out his sentence
for burglary.
3 Is there, in these circumstances, a live "case" or
"controversy" suitable for resolution by this Court, or is the issue
moot? Is petitioner asking for an advisory opinion on an abstract or
hypothetical question? The answer to these questions is crucial, for
it is well settled that federal courts may act only in the context
of a justiciable case or controversy. Muskrat v. United States,
219 U.S. 346 (1911); see Flast v. Cohen,
392 U.S. 83, 94 -97 (1968).
The language used in a number of this Court's opinions might be
read to indicate that the existence of a valid concurrent sentence
removes the necessary elements of a justiciable controversy. The
"concurrent sentence doctrine" took root in this country quite
early, although its earliest manifestations occurred in slightly
different contexts. In Locke v. United States, 7 Cranch 339 (1813),
a cargo belonging to the plaintiff in error had been condemned under
a libel containing 11 counts. Chief Justice John Marshall speaking
for the Court, found it unnecessary to consider Locke's challenges
to all 11 counts. He declared, simply enough, "The Court however, is
of opinion, that the 4th count is good, and this renders it
unnecessary to decide on the other." Id., at 344. Similar reasoning
was later applied in a case where a single general sentence rested
on convictions under several counts of an indictment. Drawing upon
some English cases and some dicta from Lord Mansfield,
4 the Court in Claassen v. United States,
142 U.S. 140, 146
[395 U.S. 784, 789] (1891), held that if
the defendant had validly been convicted on any one count "the other
counts need not be considered." The most widely cited application of
this approach to cases where concurrent sentences, rather than a
single general sentence, have been imposed is Hirabayashi v. United
States,
320 U.S. 81 (1943). In that case the defendant had been found
guilty of two different offenses and had received concurrent
three-month sentences. He challenged the constitutionality of both
convictions, but this Court affirmed the lower court's judgment
after considering and rejecting only one of his challenges. Since
the conviction on the second count was valid, the Court found it
"unnecessary" to consider the challenge to the first count. Id., at
85, 105.
The concurrent sentence doctrine has been widely, if somewhat
haphazardly, applied in this Court's decisions. At times the Court
has seemed to say that the doctrine raises a jurisdictional bar to
the consideration of counts under concurrent sentences. Some
opinions have baldly declared that judgments of conviction "must be
upheld" if any one count was good. Barenblatt v. United States,
360 U.S. 109, 115 (1959); see United States v. Gainey,
380 U.S. 63, 65 (1965). In other cases the Court has chosen
somewhat weaker language, indicating only that a judgment "may be
affirmed if the conviction on either count is valid." Roviaro v.
United States,
353 U.S. 53, 59 , n. 6 (1957). And on at least one occasion, the
Court has ignored the rule entirely and decided an issue that
affected only one count, even though there were concurrent
sentences. Putnam v. United States,
162 U.S. 687 (1896).
One can search through these cases, and related ones, without
finding any satisfactory explanation for the concurrent sentence
doctrine. See United States v. Hines, 256 F.2d 561, 562-563 (C. A.
2d Cir. 1958). But whatever the underlying justifications for the
doctrine, [395 U.S.
784, 790] it seems clear to us that it cannot be taken
to state a jurisdictional rule. See Yates v. United States,
355 U.S. 66, 75 -76 (1957); Putnam v. United States, supra.
Moreover, whatever may have been the approach in the past, our
recent decisions on the question of mootness in criminal cases make
it perfectly clear that the existence of concurrent sentences does
not remove the elements necessary to create a justiciable case or
controversy.
In Sibron v. New York,
392 U.S. 40 (1968), we held that a criminal case did not become
moot upon the expiration of the sentence imposed. We noted "the
obvious fact of life that most criminal convictions do in fact
entail adverse collateral legal consequences." Id., at 55. We
concluded that the mere possibility of such collateral consequences
was enough to give the case the "impact of actuality" which was
necessary to make it a justiciable case or controversy. Sibron and a
number of other recent cases have canvassed the possible adverse
collateral effects of criminal convictions,
5 and we need not repeat that analysis here. It is enough to say
that there are such possibilities in this case. For example, there
are a few States which consider all prior felony convictions for the
purpose of enhancing sentence under habitual criminal statutes, even
if the convictions actually constituted only separate counts in a
single indictment tried on the same day.
6 Petitioner might some day in one of these States have both his
larceny and burglary convictions counted against him. Although this
possibility [395 U.S.
784, 791] may well be a remote one, it is enough to
give this case an adversary cast and make it justiciable. Moreover,
as in Sibron, both of petitioner's convictions might some day be
used to impeach his character if put in issue at a future trial.
Although petitioner could explain that both convictions arose out of
the same transaction, a jury might not be able to appreciate this
subtlety.
We cannot, therefore, say that this Court lacks jurisdiction to
decide petitioner's challenge to his larceny conviction. It may be
that in certain circumstances a federal appellate court, as a matter
of discretion, might decide (as in Hirabayashi) that it is
"unnecessary" to consider all the allegations made by a particular
party.
7 The concurrent sentence rule may have some continuing validity
as a rule of judicial convenience. That is not a subject we must
canvass today, however. It is sufficient for present purposes to
hold that there is no jurisdictional bar to consideration of
challenges to multiple convictions, even though concurrent sentences
were imposed.
II.
While Maryland apparently agrees that there is no jurisdictional
bar to consideration of petitioner's larceny conviction, it argues
that the possibility of collateral consequences is so remote in this
case that any double jeopardy violation should be treated as a
species of "harmless error." The Solicitor General, while not
commenting at length on the facts of this particular case,
[395 U.S. 784, 792]
suggests that we treat the concurrent sentence doctrine
as a principle of judicial efficiency which permits judges to avoid
decision of issues which have no appreciable impact on the rights of
any party. Both Maryland and the Solicitor General argue that the
defendant should bear the burden of convincing the appellate court
of the need to review all his concurrent sentences. Petitioner, on
the other hand, sees in Sibron a command that federal appellate
courts treat all errors which may possibly affect a defendant's
rights, and he argues that the concurrent sentence rule therefore
has no continuing validity, even as a rule of convenience.
Because of the special circumstances in this case, we find it
unnecessary to resolve this dispute. For even if the concurrent
sentence doctrine survives as a rule of judicial convenience, we
find good reason not to apply it here. On direct appeal from
petitioner's conviction, the Maryland Court of Special Appeals did
in fact rule on his double jeopardy challenge to the larceny count.
1 Md. App., at 650-651, 232 A. 2d, at 542-543. It is unclear whether
Maryland courts always consider all challenges raised on direct
appeal, notwithstanding the existence of concurrent sentences,
8 but at least in this case the State decided not to apply the
concurrent sentence rule. This may well indicate that the State has
some interest in keeping the larceny conviction alive;
9 if, as Maryland argues here, the larceny conviction is of no
importance to either party, one wonders why the state courts found
it necessary to pass on it. Since the future importance of the
conviction may well turn on issues of state law about which we are
not well informed, we propose, on direct appeal from the Maryland
courts, to accept their judgment on this question. Since
[395 U.S. 784, 793]
they decided this federal constitutional question, we
see no reason why we should not do so as well. Moreover, the status
of petitioner's burglary conviction and the eventual length of his
sentence are both still in some doubt.
10 Should any attack on the burglary conviction be successful,
or should the length of the burglary sentence be reduced to less
than five years, petitioner would then clearly have a right to have
his larceny conviction reviewed. As we said in Sibron v. New York,
supra, at 56-57, it is certainly preferable to have that review now
on direct appeal, rather than later.
11 For these reasons, and because there is no jurisdictional
bar, we find it appropriate to reach the questions specified in our
original writ of certiorari.
III.
In 1937, this Court decided the landmark case of Palko v.
Connecticut,
302 U.S. 319 . Palko, although indicted for first-degree murder,
had been convicted of murder in the second degree after a jury trial
in a Connecticut state court. The State appealed and won a new
trial. Palko argued that the Fourteenth Amendment incorporated, as
against the States, the Fifth Amendment requirement that no person
"be subject for the same offence to be twice put in jeopardy of life
or limb." The Court disagreed. Federal double jeopardy standards
were not applicable against the States. Only when a kind of jeopardy
subjected a defendant to "a hardship so acute and shocking that our
polity will not endure it," id., at 328, did the Fourteenth
Amendment apply. The order
[395 U.S. 784, 794] for a new trial was
affirmed. In subsequent appeals from state courts, the Court
continued to apply this lesser Palko standard. See, e. g., Brock v.
North Carolina,
344 U.S. 424 (1953).
Recently, however, this Court has "increasingly looked to the
specific guarantees of the [Bill of Rights] to determine whether a
state criminal trial was conducted with due process of law."
Washington v. Texas,
388 U.S. 14, 18 (1967). In an increasing number of cases, 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 . . . .'" Malloy v.
Hogan,
378 U.S. 1, 10 -11 (1964).
12 Only last Term we found that the right to trial by jury in
criminal cases was "fundamental to the American scheme of justice,"
Duncan v. Louisiana,
391 U.S. 145, 149 (1968), and held that the Sixth Amendment
right to a jury trial was applicable to the States through the
Fourteenth Amendment.
13 For the same reasons, we today find that the double jeopardy
prohibition of the Fifth Amendment represents a fundamental ideal in
our constitutional heritage, and that it should apply to the States
through the Fourteenth Amendment. Insofar as it is inconsistent with
this holding, Palko v. Connecticut is overruled.
Palko represented an approach to basic constitutional rights
which this Court's recent decisions have rejected. It was cut of the
same cloth as Betts v. Brady,
316 U.S. 455 (1942), the case which held that a criminal
defendant's right to counsel was to be determined by deciding in
each case whether the denial of that right was "shocking to the
universal sense of justice." Id., at 462. It
[395 U.S. 784, 795]
relied upon Twining v. New Jersey,
211 U.S. 78 (1908), which held that the right against compulsory
self-incrimination was not an element of Fourteenth Amendment due
process. Betts was overruled by Gideon v. Wainwright,
372 U.S. 335 (1963); Twining, by Malloy v. Hogan,
378 U.S. 1 (1964). Our recent cases have thoroughly rejected the
Palko notion that basic constitutional rights can be denied by the
States as long as the totality of the circumstances does not
disclose a denial of "fundamental fairness." Once it is decided that
a particular Bill of Rights guarantee is "fundamental to the
American scheme of justice," Duncan v. Louisiana, supra, at 149, the
same constitutional standards apply against both the State and
Federal Governments. Palko's roots had thus been cut away years ago.
We today only recognize the inevitable.
The fundamental nature of the guarantee against double jeopardy
can hardly be doubted. Its origins can be traced to Greek and Roman
times, and it became established in the common law of England long
before this Nation's independence.
14 See Bartkus v. Illinois,
359 U.S. 121, 151 -155 (1959) (BLACK, J., dissenting). As with
many other elements of the common law, it was carried into the
jurisprudence of this Country through the medium of Blackstone, who
codified the doctrine in his Commentaries. "[T]he plea of autrefoits
acquit, or a former acquittal," he wrote, "is grounded on this
universal maxim of the common law of England, that no man is to be
brought into jeopardy of his life more than once for the same
offence."
15 Today, every State incorporates some form of the prohibition
in its constitution or common law.
16 As this Court put it in Green v. United States,
355 U.S. 184, 187 -188 (1957), "[t]he underlying
[395 U.S. 784, 796]
idea, one that is deeply ingrained in at least the
Anglo-American system of jurisprudence, is that the State with all
its resources and power should not be allowed to make repeated
attempts to convict an individual for an alleged offense, thereby
subjecting him to embarrassment, expense and ordeal and compelling
him to live in a continuing state of anxiety and insecurity, as well
as enhancing the possibility that even though innocent he may be
found guilty." This underlying notion has from the very beginning
been part of our constitutional tradition. Like the right to trial
by jury, it is clearly "fundamental to the American scheme of
justice." The validity of petitioner's larceny conviction must be
judged, not by the watered-down standard enunciated in Palko, but
under this Court's interpretations of the Fifth Amendment double
jeopardy provision.
IV.
It is clear that petitioner's larceny conviction cannot stand
once federal double jeopardy standards are applied. Petitioner was
acquitted of larceny in his first trial. Because he decided to
appeal his burglary conviction, he is forced to suffer retrial on
the larceny count as well. As this Court held in Green v. United
States, supra, at 193-194, "[c]onditioning an appeal of one offense
on a coerced surrender of a valid plea of former jeopardy on another
offense exacts a forfeiture in plain conflict with the
constitutional bar against double jeopardy."
Maryland argues that Green does not apply to this case because
petitioner's original indictment was absolutely void. One cannot be
placed in "jeopardy" by a void indictment, the State argues. This
argument sounds a bit strange, however, since petitioner could
quietly have served out his sentence under this "void" indictment
had he not appealed his burglary conviction. Only by accepting the
option of a new trial could the indictment
[395 U.S. 784, 797]
be set aside; at worst the indictment would seem only
voidable at the defendant's option, not absolutely void. In any
case, this argument was answered here over 70 years ago in United
States v. Ball,
163 U.S. 662 (1896). In that case Millard Fillmore Ball was
indicted, together with two other men, for the murder of one William
T. Box in the Indian Territory. He was acquitted and his
codefendants were convicted. They appealed and won a reversal on the
ground that the indictment erroneously failed to aver the time or
place of Box's death. All three defendants were retried, and this
time Ball was convicted. This Court sustained his double jeopardy
claim, notwithstanding the technical invalidity of the indictment
upon which he was first tried. The Court refused to allow the
Government to allege its own error to deprive the defendant of the
benefit of an acquittal by a jury. Id., at 667-668. "[A]lthough the
indictment was fatally defective, yet, if the court had jurisdiction
of the cause and of the party, its judgment is not void, but only
voidable by writ of error . . .," and the Government could not have
the acquittal set aside over the defendant's objections. Id., at
669-670. This case is totally indistinguishable. Petitioner was
acquitted of larceny. He has, under Green, a valid double jeopardy
plea which he cannot be forced to waive. Yet Maryland wants the
earlier acquittal set aside, over petitioner's objections, because
of a defect in the indictment. This it cannot do. Petitioner's
larceny conviction cannot stand.
V.
Petitioner argues that his burglary conviction should be set
aside as well. He contends that some evidence, inadmissible under
state law in a trial for burglary alone, was introduced in the joint
trial for both burglary and larceny, and that the jury was
prejudiced by this evidence.
17 [395 U.S.
784, 798] This question was not decided by the Maryland
Court of Special Appeals because it found no double jeopardy
violation at all. It is not obvious on the face of the record that
the burglary conviction was affected by the double jeopardy
violation. To determine whether there is in fact any such
evidentiary error, we would have to explore the Maryland law of
evidence and the Maryland definitions of larceny and burglary, and
then examine the record in detail. We do not think that this is the
kind of determination we should make unaided by prior consideration
by the state courts.
18 Accordingly, we think it "just under the circumstances," 28
U.S.C. 2106, to vacate the judgment below and remand for
consideration of this question. The judgment is vacated and the case
is remanded for further proceedings not inconsistent with this
opinion.
Footnotes
[
Footnote 1 ] The increase in petitioner's sentence on the
burglary count from 10 to 15 years is presently the subject of
litigation on federal habeas corpus in the lower federal courts. A
federal district court ordered the State to resentence petitioner,
Benton v. Copinger, 291 F. Supp. 141 (D.C. Md. 1968), and an appeal
brought by the State is presently pending in the United States Court
of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit.
[
Footnote 2 ] See Part V, infra. Of course, if the error infected
both counts upon which petitioner was convicted, there would be no
concurrent sentence problem at all. We do not, however, resolve the
question of whether the burglary conviction was "tainted."
[
Footnote 3 ] The length of that sentence is presently a matter
in dispute, see n. 1, supra.
[
Footnote 4 ] Grant v. Astle, 2 Doug. 722, 99 Eng. Rep. 459
(1781); Peake v. Oldham, 1 Cowp. 275, 98 Eng. Rep. 1083 (1775); Rex
v. Benfield, 2 Burr. 980, 97 Eng. Rep. 664 (1760).
[
Footnote 5 ] Street v. New York,
394 U.S. 576, 579 -580, n. 3 (1969); Carafas v. LaVallee,
391 U.S. 234, 237 -238 (1968); Ginsberg v. New York,
390 U.S. 629, 633 -634, n. 2 (1968).
[
Footnote 6 ] The majority rule is, apparently, that all
convictions handed down at the same time count as a single
conviction for the purpose of habitual offender statutes, but a few
States follow the stricter rule described in the text. The relevant
cases are collected at 24 A. L. R. 2d 1262-1267 (1952), and in the
accompanying supplements.
[
Footnote 7 ] In Sibron we noted the inadequacies of a procedure
which postpones appellate review until it is proposed to subject the
convicted person to collateral consequences.
392 U.S., at 56 -57. For the reasons there stated, an attempt to
impose collateral consequences after an initial refusal to review a
conviction on direct appeal because of the concurrent sentence
doctrine may well raise some constitutional problems. That issue is
not, however, presented by this case, and accordingly we express no
opinion on it.
[
Footnote 8 ] Compare Meade v. State, 198 Md. 489, 84 A. 2d 892
(1951), with Marks v. State, 230 Md. 108, 185 A. 2d 909 (1962).
[
Footnote 9 ] See n. 7, supra.
[
Footnote 10 ] See n. 1, supra, and Part V, infra.
[
Footnote 11 ] A stronger case for total abolition of the
concurrent sentence doctrine may well be made in cases on direct
appeal, as compared to convictions attacked collaterally by suits
for post-conviction relief. Because of our disposition of this case,
we need not reach this question.
[
Footnote 12 ] Quoting from Ohio ex rel. Eaton v. Price,
364 U.S. 263, 275 (1960) (opinion of BRENNAN, J.).
[
Footnote 13 ] A list of those Bill of Rights guarantees which
have been held "incorporated" in the Fourteenth Amendment can be
found in Duncan, supra, at 148.
[
Footnote 14 ] J. Sigler, Double Jeopardy 1-37 (1969).
[
Footnote 15 ] 4 W. Blackstone, Commentaries *335.
[
Footnote 16 ] Sigler, supra, n. 14, at 78-79; Brock v. North
Carolina,
344 U.S. 424, 435 , n. 6 (1953) (Vinson, C. J., dissenting).
[
Footnote 17 ] There is no danger here that the jury might have
been tempted to compromise on a lesser charge because of an
erroneous retrial on a greater charge. See United States ex rel.
Hetenyi v. Wilkins, 348 F.2d 844, 866 (C. A. 2d Cir. 1965), cert.
denied, sub nom. Mancusi v. Hetenyi,
383 U.S. 913 (1966). Larceny is a lesser offense than burglary.
[
Footnote 18 ] See Note, Individualized Criminal Justice in the
Supreme Court: A Study of Dispositional Decision Making, 81 Harv. L.
Rev. 1260, 1272-1273 (1968).
MR. JUSTICE WHITE, concurring.
While I agree with the Court's extension of the prohibition
against double jeopardy to the States, and with the Court's
conclusion that the concurrent sentence rule constitutes no
jurisdictional bar, additional comment on the wisdom and effects of
applying a concurrent sentence rule seems appropriate.
In a time of increasingly congested judicial dockets, often
requiring long delays before trial and upon appeal,
[395 U.S. 784, 799]
judicial resources have become scarce. Where a man has
been convicted on several counts and sentenced concurrently upon
each, and where judicial review of one count sustains its validity,
the need for review of the other counts is not a pressing one since,
regardless of the outcome, the prisoner will remain in jail for the
same length of time under the count upheld. Rather than permit other
cases to languish while careful review of these redundant counts is
carried to its futile conclusion, judicial resources might be better
employed by moving on to more pressing business. This is not a rule
of convenience to the judge, but rather of fairness to other
litigants.
This is not to say, however, that the fact of conviction under
the unreviewed counts could never be of importance to the prisoner.
After his release it is possible they might be used against him in a
recidivism prosecution, or used to impeach his testimony in a trial
for another offense, to pick two obvious examples. Nevertheless, the
unreviewed counts are, by hypothesis, not of immediate importance to
his confinement, and our experience gives us no indication that they
are frequently of such importance later that the concurrent sentence
rule should not be applied.
The unreviewed count is often one which, but for the concurrent
sentence rule, the prisoner would have a right to challenge, either
directly or on collateral attack. Arguably, to deny him that right
when another man, convicted after a separate trial on each count, or
sentenced consecutively, could not be denied that right under the
applicable state or federal law, raises an equal protection
question. But clearly so long as the denied review is of no
significance to the prisoner the denial of equal protection is not
invidious but only theoretical.
But should a situation arise in which the convict can demonstrate
that the unreviewed count is being used
[395 U.S. 784, 800]
against him, so as to work some harm to him additional
to that stemming from the reviewed count, his grievance becomes
real. At that point it may be that the unreviewed count may not be
used against him, unless it is determined that the lack of earlier
review can be cured by then supplying the convict the review to
which he would earlier have been entitled but for his concurrent
sentence on another count. For myself, postponed review, a question
which the Court reserves (ante, at 791, n. 7), presents no
insuperable difficulties. Appellate review is always conducted on a
cold record, and collateral proceedings frequently deal with a stale
record and stale facts. There is nothing inherently unfair in
permitting the record to become colder while it is irrelevant to any
human need, and other litigants' demands are more pressing. Whether
reversal on such a record, after delayed review, would permit
retrial or a hearing on a claim involving, for example, a coerced
confession, is yet a further question which there is no present need
to address. Should a satisfactory hearing or retrial prove
impossible this would be an unfortunate byproduct of an initially
crowded docket.
For the foregoing reasons, I agree with the Court that the
concurrent sentence rule, while not of jurisdictional dimensions,
should be preserved as a matter of proper judicial administration
both on direct appeal and collateral attack, although at least in
theory it raises a number of questions concerning the subsequent
effects of the unreviewed counts. It may be that where it can be
reliably predicted in a particular case that each count would entail
concrete prejudicial consequences at a later date, the appellate
court at the time of initial review would prefer to deal with all
counts rather than to apply the concurrent sentence rule.
[395 U.S. 784, 801]
MR. JUSTICE HARLAN, whom MR. JUSTICE STEWART joins, dissenting.
One of the bedrock rules that has governed, and should continue
to govern, the adjudicative processes of this Court is that the
decision of constitutional questions in the disposition of cases
should be avoided whenever fairly possible. Today the Court turns
its back on that sound principle by refusing, for the flimsiest of
reasons, to apply the "concurrent sentence doctrine" so as not to be
required to decide the far-reaching question whether the Double
Jeopardy Clause of the Fifth Amendment is "incorporated" into the
Due Process Clause of the Fourteenth, thereby making the former
applicable lock, stock, and barrel to the States. Indeed, it is
quite manifest that the Court has actually been at pains to "reach
out" to decide that very important constitutional issue.
I consider that the concurrent sentence doctrine is applicable
here, and that dismissal of the writ is accordingly called for.
Despite that, I feel constrained also to express my views on the
merits because of what I conceive to be the importance of the
constitutional approach at stake.
I.
The Court decides, and I agree, that petitioner's larceny
conviction is not moot, and that the concurrent sentence doctrine is
not a jurisdictional bar to entertainment of challenges to multiple
convictions, so long as the convictions sought to be reviewed are
not moot. However, I would also emphasize, in agreement with the
position of the Government as amicus curiae, that the concurrent
sentence rule does have continuing vitality as an element of
judicial discretion, and that appellate courts may decline to review
a conviction carrying a concurrent sentence when another
"concurrent" conviction
[395 U.S. 784, 802] has been reviewed and
found valid and the unreviewed conviction foreseeably will have no
significant adverse consequences for the appellant. As the Solicitor
General has pointed out, the concurrent sentence doctrine plays a
significant role in conserving the time and energy of appellate
courts.
1 To require that these already overworked courts
2 invariably review in full detail each of several convictions
carrying concurrent sentences seems to me senselessly doctrinaire.
3
A.
As has been noted, the concurrent sentence doctrine is applicable
only if there exists a valid concurrent conviction. In this
instance, petitioner's double jeopardy argument is directed to his
larceny conviction, but he claims that the concurrent sentence
doctrine is no impediment to reaching that question because his
concurrent, and otherwise valid, burglary conviction was tainted by
having been tried together with the larceny count. It is therefore
necessary to consider whether this claim of taint has merit.
The Court finds that resolution of the taint issue is likely to
involve such difficult points of Maryland law as to make a remand to
the Maryland courts the soundest course. See ante, at 797-798.
However, my examination
[395 U.S. 784, 803] of the question
convinces me that the pertinent Maryland law is quite elementary.
And, unlike the Court, I am not deterred by the prospect of having
to "examine . . . in detail," ante, at 798, the 42-page record of
petitioner's second trial.
I conclude that there was no real possibility of taint. Burglary
in Maryland consists of breaking and entering any dwelling house in
the nighttime with intent to steal, take, or carry away the personal
goods of another. See Md. Code Ann., Art. 27, 30 (a) (1967). Larceny
in Maryland is a common-law crime, consisting of the taking and
carrying away of the personal property of another with intent to
deprive the owner of the property permanently. See, e. g., Fletcher
v. State, 231 Md. 190, 189 A. 2d 641 (1963). Evidence was introduced
at petitioner's second trial to show that he not only entered a
locked house at night but also made off with several household
appliances. The latter evidence was, of course, pertinent to the
larceny count. However, it was also plainly relevant to the burglary
count, since it tended to show intent to steal.
Petitioner bases his taint argument primarily on the proposition
that he was entitled to have the evidence concerning the missing
appliances excluded from his second trial under the doctrine of
"collateral estoppel," he having been acquitted of larceny at the
first trial. However, even if it is assumed that the conviction on
the larceny count was bad on double jeopardy or due process grounds
and that the principle of collateral estoppel has some application
to state criminal trials through the Due Process Clause of the
Fourteenth Amendment,
4 I think that the doctrine would not prevent
[395 U.S. 784, 804]
admission of the evidence on the issue of burglary. The
principle of collateral estoppel makes conclusive, in collateral
proceedings, only those matters which were "actually litigated and
determined in the original action . . . ." Cromwell v. County of
Sac,
94 U.S. 351, 353 (1877).
5 The Maryland Constitution provides:
"In the trial of all criminal cases, the Jury shall be the
Judges of Law, as well as of fact, except that the Court may pass
upon the sufficiency of the evidence to sustain a conviction." Md.
Const., Art. 15, 5.
Hence, petitioner's acquittal of larceny at his first trial may
have rested solely upon that jury's unique view of the law
concerning that offense, and cannot be taken as having necessarily
"determined" any particular question of fact.
It follows from what has been said in this section that there can
be no estoppel effect in a collateral proceeding, such as
petitioner's second trial for burglary, and that petitioner's taint
argument must fail.
6 [395 U.S. 784,
805]
B.
Since petitioner's second burglary conviction was not tainted by
his simultaneous trial for larceny, it is necessary to consider
whether the concurrent sentence doctrine is inapplicable for the
other possible reason: that petitioner foreseeably will suffer
significant adverse consequences on account of his larceny
conviction.
7
No such consequences can reasonably be predicted. The Court
itself notes that only a "few States" would allow petitioner's
larceny conviction to be used against him for purposes of sentencing
as a habitual offender, and concedes that "this possibility may well
be a remote one." Ante, at 790-791. When it is recalled that
petitioner had been convicted of three felonies even prior to his
present burglary conviction,
8 this possibility is reduced to the vanishing point.
9
There remain the possibilities that petitioner's larceny
conviction might be considered generally by a judge if and when
petitioner is sentenced following some future conviction, and that
the conviction might be used to impeach him in future judicial
proceedings. In the circumstances of this case, these potential
consequences are plainly insignificant. Petitioner's burglary and
larceny convictions were based upon the very same series of acts on
his part. This fact could readily be brought to the attention either
of a sentencing judge or of a trier of fact before whom petitioner
was sought to be impeached. Predictably, knowledge of the identical
origin of the two convictions would reduce the extra impact of the
[395 U.S. 784, 806]
larceny conviction to negligible proportions. Thus, it
would be difficult to imagine a case in which a "concurrent"
conviction would be likely to entail fewer adverse consequences.
C.
The Court nonetheless holds that "[b]ecause of the special
circumstances in this case" it will not apply the concurrent
sentence doctrine, and that it is unnecessary even to decide whether
the doctrine has "continuing validity, even as a rule of
convenience." See ante, at 792. One of the "special circumstances"
cited by the Court is the existence of the "taint" issue, which the
Court finds it desirable to remand to the state courts. As has been
noted, I can perceive no difficulties which would justify a remand.
The second of the "special circumstances" relied on by the Court
is that "in this case the [state courts] decided not to apply the
concurrent sentence rule" and reached the "double jeopardy" issue
themselves. See ante, at 792. The Court concludes that "[s]ince [the
Maryland courts] decided this federal constitutional question, we
see no reason why we should not do so as well." See ante, at
792-793. This reasoning baffles me. In determining whether or not to
reach a constitutional issue the decision of which is not absolutely
necessary to the disposition of a case, this Court has long been
guided by the rule that "[w]here a case . . . can be decided without
reference to questions arising under the Federal Constitution, that
course is usually pursued and is not departed from without important
reasons." Siler v. Louisville & N. R. Co.,
213 U.S. 175, 193 (1909); see Ashwander v. TVA,
297 U.S. 288, 345 (1936) (Brandeis, J., concurring). In deciding
whether such "important reasons" exist, this Court has never
regarded itself as bound to reach the constitutional issue merely
because the court below did so, and has often declined to pass
[395 U.S. 784, 807]
upon constitutional questions even though fully
canvassed by the lower court.
10 On some of these occasions, the Court has relied in
justification upon the concurrent sentence doctrine.
11
Since I cannot believe that the Court wishes as a general matter
to abandon the salutary and well-established principle of declining
to rule on constitutional questions in advance of necessity, and
since I find the "taint" issue entirely free of the complexities
which the Court claims to perceive, I cannot help but conclude that
the real reason for reaching the "double jeopardy" issue in this
case is the Court's eagerness to see that provision "incorporated"
into the Fourteenth Amendment and thus made applicable against the
States.
D.
As has been shown, this case satisfies both preconditions to
application of the concurrent sentence doctrine. Reliance upon that
doctrine would enable the Court to avoid decision of a substantial
constitutional question. Accordingly, I would apply the concurrent
sentence rule and decline to review petitioner's larceny conviction.
Since the case was brought here on a writ of certiorari limited to
the "double jeopardy" question, decision of which would affect only
the larceny conviction, I would dismiss the writ as improvidently
granted.
II.
Having concluded that the writ should be dismissed, I would
ordinarily not go further. However, as indicated at the outset, I
feel impelled to continue with
[395 U.S. 784, 808] some observations
respecting what can only be regarded as a complete overruling of one
of this Court's truly great decisions, and with an expression of my
views as to how petitioner's claim respecting his retrial for
larceny should fare under the traditional due process approach.
A.
I would hold, in accordance with Palko v. Connecticut,
302 U.S. 319 (1937), that the Due Process Clause of the
Fourteenth Amendment does not take over the Double Jeopardy Clause
of the Fifth, as such. Today Palko becomes another casualty in the
so far unchecked march toward "incorporating" much, if not all, of
the Federal Bill of Rights into the Due Process Clause. This march
began, with a Court majority, in 1961 when Mapp v. Ohio,
367 U.S. 643 , was decided and, before the present decision,
found its last stopping point in Duncan v. Louisiana,
391 U.S. 145 (1968), decided at the end of last Term. I have at
each step in the march expressed my opposition, see, e. g., my
opinions in Mapp v. Ohio, supra, at 672 (dissenting); Ker v.
California,
374 U.S. 23, 44 (1963) (concurring in result); Malloy v. Hogan,
378 U.S. 1, 14 (1964) (dissenting); Pointer v. Texas,
380 U.S. 400, 408 (1965) (concurring in result); Griffin v.
California,
380 U.S. 609, 615 (1965) (concurring); Klopfer v. North
Carolina,
386 U.S. 213, 226 (1967) (concurring in result); and Duncan v.
Louisiana, supra, at 171 (dissenting); more particularly in the
Duncan case I undertook to show that the "selective incorporation"
doctrine finds no support either in history or in reason.
12 Under the pressures of the closing days of
[395 U.S. 784, 809]
the Term, I am content to rest on what I have written
in prior opinions, save to raise my voice again in protest against a
doctrine which so subtly, yet profoundly, is eroding many of the
basics of our federal system.
More broadly, that this Court should have apparently become so
impervious to the pervasive wisdom of the constitutional philosophy
embodied in Palko, and that it should have felt itself able to
attribute to the perceptive and timeless words of Mr. Justice
Cardozo nothing more than a "watering down" of constitutional
rights, are indeed revealing symbols of the extent to which we are
weighing anchors from the fundamentals of our constitutional system.
B.
Finally, how should the validity of petitioner's larceny
conviction be judged under Palko, that is, under due process
standards?
A brief recapitulation of the facts first seems advisable.
Petitioner was indicted and tried simultaneously for burglary and
larceny. He was acquitted of larceny but convicted of burglary.
Petitioner appealed, and the Maryland courts remanded in light of
earlier Maryland decisions holding invalid a provision of the
Maryland Constitution requiring that grand and petit jurors declare
their belief in God. Petitioner was given the option either of
accepting the result of his trial or of demanding re-indictment and
retrial. He chose to attack the indictment, was re-indicted and
retried for both larceny and burglary, and was convicted of both
offenses.
The principle that an accused should not be tried twice for the
same offense is deeply rooted in Anglo-American
[395 U.S. 784, 810]
law.
13 In this country, it is presently embodied in the Fifth
Amendment to the Federal Constitution and in the constitution or
common law of every State.
14 The Palko Court found it unnecessary to decide "[w]hat the
answer would have to be if the state were permitted after a trial
free from error to try the accused over again or to bring another
case against him . . . ."
302 U.S., at 328 . However, I have no hesitation in stating that
it would be a denial of due process at least for a State to retry
one previously acquitted following an errorless trial. The idea that
the State's interest in convicting wrongdoers is entirely satisfied
by one fair trial ending in an acquittal, and that the accused's
interest in repose must thereafter be given precedence, is
indubitably a "`principle of justice so rooted in the traditions and
conscience of our people as to be ranked as fundamental.'" Id., at
325.
The situation in this case is not quite so simple. Had petitioner
not appealed his burglary conviction, the State would surely have
allowed him to rest on his larceny acquittal and merely serve out
his burglary sentence. However, the State argues that the burglary
and larceny counts were originally contained in a single indictment;
that upon petitioner's appeal the indictment was declared totally
void and the trial court found to have lacked jurisdiction; and that
the State could then proceed as if there had never been a previous
indictment or trial.
The State's contention that petitioner's first trial was a
complete nullity because the trial court "lacked jurisdiction"
[395 U.S. 784, 811]
is unconvincing. As has been noted, it appears that the
State would willingly have seen petitioner serve out the burglary
sentence imposed in consequence of that trial. Under state
procedure, petitioner could avail himself of the "jurisdictional"
defect only by appealing his conviction. The crucial issue,
therefore, is what legitimate interest had the State in compelling
petitioner to jeopardize his larceny acquittal as a condition of
appealing his burglary conviction?
I can perceive no legitimate state interest. Certainly it is the
purest fiction to say that by appealing his burglary conviction
petitioner "waived" his right not to be retried for larceny or
"consented" to retrial on that charge. The notion of "waiver" was
first employed in United States v. Ball,
163 U.S. 662 (1896), to justify retrial of an accused for the
same offense following reversal of a conviction on appeal. The
"waiver" doctrine was more fully articulated in Trono v. United
States,
199 U.S. 521 (1905), where it was held that retrial and
conviction for murder following a successful appeal from a
manslaughter conviction did not violate the Double Jeopardy Clause.
15 Trono apparently dictated the result in Brantley v. Georgia,
217 U.S. 284 (1910), in which the Court held in a brief per
curiam, without citing any authority, that a Georgia retrial and
conviction for murder following the reversal on appeal of an earlier
manslaughter conviction did not amount to "a case of twice in
jeopardy under any view of the Constitution of the United States."
Id., at 285.
16 We have since
[395 U.S. 784, 812] recognized that the "waiver"
rationale is a "conceptual abstraction" which obscures rather than
illuminates the underlying clash of societal and individual
interests. See United States v. Tateo,
377 U.S. 463, 466 (1964). Accordingly, I do not think that the
reasoning in Trono or the apparent holding in Brantley, insofar as
they would require affirmance of petitioner's larceny conviction,
can any longer be regarded as good law.
Nor did the State in the present case have the sorts of interests
which have been held to justify retrial for the same offense after a
conviction has been reversed on appeal by the accused and in the
more unusual case when an acquittal has been set aside following an
appeal by the State.
17 When the accused has obtained a reversal on appeal, the
societal interest in convicting the guilty has been deemed too
weighty to permit every such accused to be "granted immunity from
punishment because of any defect sufficient to constitute reversible
error in the proceedings leading to conviction." United States v.
Tateo, supra, at 466. The rationale for allowing the State to appeal
an acquittal has been that the State, like the accused, is entitled
to assure itself of a trial "free from the corrosion of substantial
legal error" which might have produced an adverse verdict. See Palko
v. Connecticut, supra, at 328.
18 [395 U.S.
784, 813]
In the present case, the State did not appeal, and the defect in
the composition of the grand jury could not have affected
petitioner's subsequent acquittal at trial. Society's legitimate
interest in punishing wrongdoers could have been fully vindicated by
retrying petitioner on the burglary count alone, that being the
offense of which he was previously convicted. The State had no more
interest in compelling petitioner to stand trial again for larceny,
of which he had been acquitted, than in retrying any other person
declared innocent after an error-free trial. His retrial on the
larceny count therefore, in my opinion, denied due process, and on
that ground reversal would be called for under Palko.
[
Footnote 1 ] See Memorandum for the United States as Amicus
Curiae 20-23. Counsel for the Government estimated during oral
argument that the concurrent sentence doctrine is employed in the
disposition of about 10% of all federal criminal appeals.
[
Footnote 2 ] See, e. g., Carrington, Crowded Dockets and the
Courts of Appeals: The Threat to the Function of Review and the
National Law, 82 Harv. L. Rev. 542 (1969).
[
Footnote 3 ] Like the Court, see ante, at 791, n. 7, I express
no view on the question whether collateral consequences may
constitutionally be imposed on account of a conviction which was
denied review on direct appeal because of the concurrent sentence
doctrine.
[
Footnote 4 ] This Court said in dictum in Hoag v. New Jersey,
356 U.S. 464, 471 (1958): "Despite its wide employment, we
entertain grave doubts whether collateral estoppel can be regarded
as a constitutional requirement. Certainly this Court has never so
held." See also id., at 470-471; Sealfon v. United States,
332 U.S. 575 (1948); United States v. Oppenheimer,
242 U.S. 85, 88 (1916).
[
Footnote 5 ] See also Restatement, Judgments 68 (1).
[
Footnote 6 ] The Court also suggests that the concurrent
sentence doctrine should not be applied for the additional reason
that the eventual length of petitioner's burglary sentence is "still
in some doubt." See ante, at 793. Petitioner received a 10-year
sentence following his first burglary conviction and a 15-year
sentence after his second conviction. The latter sentence was
subsequently vacated and resentencing ordered by a federal district
court. See Benton v. Copinger, 291 F. Supp. 141 (1968). The State
has appealed. Whatever the outcome of that appeal, I consider that
the probability of petitioner's burglary sentence being reduced
below five years, so as to make the concurrent sentence doctrine
inoperative, is manifestly negligible.
[
Footnote 7 ] Cf., e. g., Sibron v. New York,
392 U.S. 40, 55 -56 (1968).
[
Footnote 8 ] See Supplementary Brief for Respondent 20, n. 6.
[
Footnote 9 ] So far as I have been able to discover, there is no
State in which petitioner's larceny conviction could have habitual
offender consequences.
[
Footnote 10 ] See, e. g., Cichos v. Indiana,
385 U.S. 76 (1966); Hamm v. City of Rock Hill,
379 U.S. 306 (1964); Bell v. Maryland,
378 U.S. 226 (1964); Machinists v. Street,
367 U.S. 740 (1961); Rice v. Sioux City Cemetery,
349 U.S. 70 (1955).
[
Footnote 11 ] See, e. g., United States v. Gainey,
380 U.S. 63 (1965); Barenblatt v. United States,
360 U.S. 109 (1959).
[
Footnote 12 ] In the interest of strict accuracy, it should be
pointed out that MR. JUSTICE STEWART cannot and does not fully join
in the above sentence of this opinion. He joined my dissenting
opinion in Duncan v. Louisiana, supra, but wrote a separate
memorandum in Mapp v. Ohio, supra, at 672; joined the opinion of Mr.
Justice Clark in Ker v. California, supra; joined MR. JUSTICE
WHITE'S dissenting
[395 U.S. 784, 809] opinion in Malloy v. Hogan, supra,
at 33; wrote an opinion concurring in the result in Pointer v.
Texas, supra, at 409; wrote a dissenting opinion in Griffin v.
California, supra, at 617; and separately concurred in the result in
Klopfer v. North Carolina, supra, at 226.
[
Footnote 13 ] The "double jeopardy" concept has been an
established part of the English common law since at least 1700, and
was contained in the constitutions or common law of many American
jurisdictions prior to 1787. See J. Sigler, Double Jeopardy 1-37
(1969); Bartkus v. Illinois,
359 U.S. 121, 151 -155 (1959) (BLACK, J., dissenting).
[
Footnote 14 ] See Sigler, supra, at 77-117.
[
Footnote 15 ] In the federal realm, the Trono decision was, of
course, limited to its "peculiar factual setting" by Green v. United
States,
355 U.S. 184, 197 (1957), in which I joined the dissenting
opinion of Mr. Justice Frankfurter, id., at 198. MR. JUSTICE STEWART
was not a member of the Court at the time Green was decided.
[
Footnote 16 ] Trono was the only federal decision cited by the
State of Georgia in its brief in Brantley.
[
Footnote 17 ] For more detailed analyses of these interests, see
generally Mayers & Yarbrough, Bis Vexari: New Trials and Successive
Prosecutions, 74 Harv. L. Rev. 1 (1960); Van Alstyne, In Gideon's
Wake: Harsher Penalties and the "Successful" Criminal Appellant, 74
Yale L. J. 606 (1965); Comment, Twice in Jeopardy, 75 Yale L. J. 262
(1965); Note, Double Jeopardy: The Reprosecution Problem, 77 Harv.
L. Rev. 1272 (1964).
[
Footnote 18 ] However, in the federal system it has been held
that the Government may not appeal from an acquittal without placing
the accused "a second time in jeopardy for the same offense." Kepner
v. United States,
195 U.S. 100, 133 (1904). See also id., at 134-137 (Holmes, J.,
dissenting). [395 U.S.
784, 814] |