Dailey v. Superior Court

44 P. 458, 112 Cal. 94, 1896 Cal. LEXIS 653
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 24, 1896
DocketS. F. No. 209
StatusPublished
Cited by77 cases

This text of 44 P. 458 (Dailey v. Superior Court) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Dailey v. Superior Court, 44 P. 458, 112 Cal. 94, 1896 Cal. LEXIS 653 (Cal. 1896).

Opinions

Garoutte, J.

One Durrant was upon trial in the city of San Francisco, charged with murder, and, while the jury was being impaneled, the petitioner, Dailey, advertised by posters and newspapers that he would produce in a certain theater in said city of San Francisco a play entitled The Crime of a Century.” Thereupon, Durrant presented an affidavit to the court wherein his trial was pending, setting forth that said play was based upon the facts of his case, as established at the preliminary examination and the coroner’s inquest, and that the production of said play during the progress of his trial would be an interference with the administration of justice, and deprive him of a fair and impartial trial. The affidavit was full and complete as to details, but we see no purpose to be subserved by a further statement of the allegations therein set out. Upon the presentation of the affidavit, the superior court made an order directing this petitioner, Dailey, to desist and refrain from giving any public performance of said play, and further ordered him to cease from advertising the same. The present proceeding is one of certiorari to review the action of the court in making the aforesaid order, it being insisted that the trial court thereby exceeded its power and jurisdiction. The record before us incidentally develops that this order was subsequently served upon petitioner, that he defied the power of the court in making it, produced the play, and was adjudged guilty of contempt; but with those matters we are not now concerned.

The production of a tragedy or comedy upon the-theatrical stage is a publication to the world by word of-mouth of the text of the author, and, as to the question here presented for our consideration, it is immaterial, whether the words be publicly spoken from the stage- or upon the hustings, or go out to the world through the channels of the printing-press. By the constitu[97]*97tional provision we are about to invoke a citizen may speak, write, or publish his sentiments with equal freedom, and this case now stands before us exactly as though one of the daily journals was threatening to publish its sentiments pertaining to the conduct of a criminal trial then pending, and the court where such trial was pending and in progress, believing such publication would interfere with the due administration of justice, had issued an order restraining and prohibiting the threatened action of the paper.

We are entirely clear that the court had no jurisdiction to make the order which forms the basis of this proceeding, for such order was an attempted infringement upon rights guaranteed to every citizen by section .9, article I, of the constitution of this state. That section provides: “Every citizen may freely speak, write,s and publish his sentiments on all subjects,being responsible for the abuse of that right; and no law shall be passed to restrain or abridge the liberty of speech or of¡ the press.” The wording of this section is terse and vigorous, and its meaning so plain that construction is not needed. The right of the citizen to freely speak, write, and publish his sentiments is unlimited, but he is responsible at the hands of the law for an abuse of that right. He shall have no censor over him to whom lie must apply for permission to speak, write, or publish, but he shall be held accountable to the law for what he speaks, what he writes, and what he publishes. It is patent that this right to speak, write, and publish, cannot be abused until it is exercised, and before it is exercised there can be no responsibility. The purpose of this provision of the constitution was the abolishment of censorship, and for courts to act as censors is directly violative of that purpose. This provision of the constitution as to freedom of speech varies somewhat from that of the constitution of the United States, and also more or less from the provisions of many state constitutions treating of this question; but, if there is a material difference in the various provisions, it works no [98]*98harm to this petitioner, for the provision here considered is the broader, and gives him greater liberty in the exercise of the right granted.

The meaning of this provision, or others of similar import, has been declared with unanimity by all commentators upon the law. Blackstone declares that the liberty of the press consists in laying no previous restraints upon publications, and not in freedom from censure for criminal matters when published. He says: Every freeman has an undoubted right to lay what sentiments he pleases before the public; to forbid this is to destroy the freedom of the press. But, if he publishes what is improper, mischievous, or illegal, he must take the consequences of his own temerity. To subject the press to the restrictive power of a licensor, as was formerly dome before and since the revolution of 1688, is to subject all freedom of sentiment to the prejudices of one man, and make him the arbitrary and infallible judge of "all controverted points in learning, religion, and government.....Thus the will of individuals is still left free; the abuse only of that free will is the object of legal punishment.”

Story, in his work upon the Constitution, section 1885, declares: “Indeed, the liberty of the press, as understood by the law of England, is the right to publish without any previous restraint or license; so that neither the courts of justice nor other persons are authorized to take notice of writings intended for the press; but are confined to those which are printed.”

DeLolme, in his Constitution of England, page 872, declares: Liberty of the press consists in this: that neither courts of justice, nor any other judges whatever, are authorized to take notice of writings intended for the press, but are confined to those which are actually printed.” In Ex parte Barry, 85 Cal. 607, 20 Am. St. Rep. 248, the foregoing doctrine is reiterated and approved.

//It would seem that the jurisdiction here attempted to be exercised would essentially belong to a court of equity; [99]*99yet, even, if this proceeding for a restraining order had been inaugurated in such a forum, it would have signally failed. In Story’s Equity Jurisprudence, section 948 a, the author says: “ But the utmost extent to which courts of equity have gone, in restraining any publication by injunction, has been upon the principle of protecting the rights of property in the book or letters sought to be published. They have never assumed, at least since the destruction of the court of star chamber, to restrain any publication which purports to be a literary work, upon the mere ground that it is of a libelous character and tends to the degradation or injury of the reputation or business of the plaintiff who seeks relief against such publication.” And this principle was declared by the learned chancellor in Brandreth v. Lance, 8 Paige, 26, 34 Am. Dec.

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Bluebook (online)
44 P. 458, 112 Cal. 94, 1896 Cal. LEXIS 653, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dailey-v-superior-court-cal-1896.