R. K. O. Pictures, Inc. v. Hissong

123 N.E.2d 441, 68 Ohio Law. Abs. 493, 1954 Ohio Misc. LEXIS 360
CourtCourt of Common Pleas of Ohio, Franklin County, Civil Division
DecidedJuly 31, 1954
DocketNo. 189797
StatusPublished

This text of 123 N.E.2d 441 (R. K. O. Pictures, Inc. v. Hissong) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Common Pleas of Ohio, Franklin County, Civil Division primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
R. K. O. Pictures, Inc. v. Hissong, 123 N.E.2d 441, 68 Ohio Law. Abs. 493, 1954 Ohio Misc. LEXIS 360 (Ohio Super. Ct. 1954).

Opinion

[496]*496OPINION

By BARTLETT, J.

The plaintiffs seek to restrain the enforcement of the Motion Picture Censorship Laws of Ohio. (Secs. 3305.01— 3305.99, inclusive, R. C.) These statutes require each motion picture film shall be submitted to the defendant for examination and censorship prior to public exhibition in Ohio; and provide that “only such films as are, in the judgment and discretion of the department of education, of a moral, educational, or amusing and harmless character shall be passed and approved by such department.” The fees required to be paid for such examination, are $3.00 for each 1000 linear feet which fee is imposed upon each film examined, regardless of duplication of films of the same picture, with a criminal penalty by way of fine for each violation of such laws.

Appellant, R. K. O. Pictures, Inc., is a corporation of the State of Delaware, engaged in producing and distributing motion pictures for exhibition in Ohio and elsewhere; appellant, Independent Treatre Owner's of Ohio is a non-profit corporation of said state, owned and operated by numerous theatre owners of Ohio, organized to protect their interests in the motion picture industry; and the other two appellants are members of the Ohio corporation, who own and operate theatres for the exhibition of such motion pictures, and are residents and taxpayers of Ohio.

Plaintiffs make the following attack upon the Censorship Laws of Ohio:

(1) This state has no power to authorize censorship, and, therefore, cannot levy or collect fees for such censorship;

(2) Such fees are a tax upon free speech and free press, and are invalid as a prior restraint thereof;

(3) To require such a tax is a denial of equal protection and due process of law;

(4) The United States Supreme Court has declared censorship laws completely unconstitutional.

Plaintiffs do not confine their complaint to the effect of censorship on the showing of any particular film, nor to the validity of any particular part of such laws; but boldly challenge the constitutionality of the entire structure of the censorship laws, lock, stock and barrel.

In other words, plaintiffs now advance the argument that the sovereign state of Ohio has been relegated to the helpless state of being limited in its authority solely to the remedy of criminal prosecution after the fact for any abuse of the privileges of free speech and free publication, regardless of the potential evil of any particular motion picture They assert their legal right with impunity to exhibit publicly [497]*497any motion picture even though it be known or even admitted that such exhibition will be harmful to the public welfare.

Can the plaintiffs in good conscience, so insist on their legal right regardless of the public interest?

“A Court of Equity sits as a court of conscience and will never grant an injunction when it is unconscionable to do so, even though the plaintiff may show a legal right that is about to be violated.” * * *
“A mere legal right in the plaintiff will not move the chancellor.”

Parsons v. Ohio Pail Co., 6 C. C. (N. S.) 116, 120, affirmed 74 Oh St 464, without opinion; Beach on Modern Equity; Powers appeal, 126 Penn., 175.

“A party appealing to a Court of Equity must make a case which can commend itself to the conscience of the court.”

Kellog v. Ely, 15 Oh St 64, 66; Snyder v. City of Alliance, 41 Oh Ap 48, 52.

“An application for an injunction is addressed to the sound discretion of the judge who allows it,”

and is not a matter of absolute legal right. Burnett v. Corp. of Cincinnati, 3 Ohio 73, 88; McCord et al v. Iker, 12 Ohio 387.

Plaintiffs accuse the defendant of a desire to exercise totalitarian power even though the censorship laws have clearly been held invalid by the United States Supreme Court, as the defendant still insists on infringement of the civil and property rights of the plaintiffs and others similarly situated.

Such an accusation is not only unfounded but is clearly refuted by Exhibit D of the stipulation of facts herein which discloses that the defendant sought the advice of the Attorney General of Ohio as to the procedure to be followed by the Division of Film Censorship in reviewing motion pictures in the light of the recent decisions of the Supreme Court of the United States. Such a request not only fails to show a desire to cling to any arbitrary or unauthorized power to infringe on the legal rights of interested parties, but clearly indicates a desire on the part of the defendant merely to carry out the legal duties of the Division of Film Censorship.

The Director of the Department of Education. Hon. Clyde Hissong, as Superintendent of the Division of Film Censorship, is to be commended, under the circumstances, in seeking the advice of the Attorney General; and the distinguished Attorney General, Hon. C. William O’Neill, accepted his responsibility in a magnifieient manner, by rendering a painstaking and exhaustive opinion on the difficult subject at hand.

The conclusions reached by the Attorney General surely invited a vast amount of labor for his office, as evidenced by the instant case, when he might easily have shirked his duty to [498]*498the citizens of Ohio, by merely taking the position that the censorship law in Ohio was a dead pigeon.

The State of Ohio need not apologize for the conduct of either of these state officials in the matter at issue in the instant case.

While accusing the defendant of grasping for unwarranted power, it might well be noted that the plaintiffs’ absolute demand of the right to publicly exhibit any and all films, without prior restraint, regardless of their effect on the publie welfare, does not carry the same inspiration as the magic peal of Patrick Henry’s eloquence — “Give me Liberty or give me Death.”

It was said in the Burstyn case, 343 U. S. 495:

“(b) That the production, distribution and exhibition of motion pictures is a large scale business conducted for private profit does not prevent motion pictures from being a form of expression whose liberty is safeguarded by the First Amendment.”

Even under this sound statement of the law, an offensive commercial exploitation of the great freedoms guaranteed by the supreme law of the land, will not excite the conscience of a Court of Equity, like the inspiring words of Patrick Henry when he spoke for all mankind.

The mere invasion of a private right does not stir the conscience of a Court, of Equity. Burns v. Cols. Citizen Tel. Co. et al., 10 C. C. (N. S.) 307; Domscke v. Railway, 148 N. Y. 337.

“We are asked to decide this case by choosing between two mutually exclusive alternatives: that motion pictures may be subjected to unrestricted censorship, or that they must be allowed to be shown under any circumstances. But only the tyranny of absolutes would rely on such alternatives to meet the problems generated by the need to accommodate the diverse interests affected by the motion pictures in compact modern communities.”

Justice Frankfurter concurring opinion in the Burstyn case, supra.

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Bluebook (online)
123 N.E.2d 441, 68 Ohio Law. Abs. 493, 1954 Ohio Misc. LEXIS 360, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/r-k-o-pictures-inc-v-hissong-ohctcomplfrankl-1954.