Scull v. Virginia Ex Rel. Committee on Law Reform & Racial Activities

359 U.S. 344, 79 S. Ct. 838, 3 L. Ed. 2d 865, 1959 U.S. LEXIS 1762
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedMay 4, 1959
Docket51
StatusPublished
Cited by52 cases

This text of 359 U.S. 344 (Scull v. Virginia Ex Rel. Committee on Law Reform & Racial Activities) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of the United States primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Scull v. Virginia Ex Rel. Committee on Law Reform & Racial Activities, 359 U.S. 344, 79 S. Ct. 838, 3 L. Ed. 2d 865, 1959 U.S. LEXIS 1762 (1959).

Opinion

Opinion of the Court by

Mr. Justice Black,

announced by Mr. Justice Harlan.

David H. Scull was convicted of contempt in the Circuit Court of Arlington County, Virginia, for refusing to obey a decision of that court ordering him to answer a number of questions put to him by a Legislative Investigative Committee of the Virginia Géneral Assembly. On *345 appeal the Virginia Supreme Court of Appeals affirmed without opinion. . Scull contended at the Committee hearings, in the courts below, and in this Court that the Virginia statute authorizing the investigation, both on its face and as applied, violated the Fourteenth Amendment to the United States Constitution. He claimed, among other things, that: (1) The Committee was “established and given investigative authority, as part of a legislative program of ‘massive resistance’ to the United States Constitution and the Supreme Court’s desegregation decisions, in order to harass, vilify, and publicly embarrass members of the NAACP and others who are attempting to secure integrated public schooling in Virginia.” (2) The questions asked him violated his rights of free speech, assembly and petition by constituting an unjustified restraint upon his associations with others in “legal and laudable political and humanitarian causes.” (3) “The information sought from [him] was neither intended to, nor could reasonably be expected to, assist the Legislature in any proper legislative function.” (4) Despite his requests, repeated at every stage of the proceedings, the Committee failed to inform him “in what respect its questions were pertinent- to the subject under inquiry . . . .” We granted certiorari to consider these constitutional challenges to the validity of petitioner’s contempt conviction. 357 U. S. 903. After careful consideration, we find it unnecessary to pass on any of these constitutional questions except the last one because we think the record discloses an. unmistakable cloudiness in the testimony of the Committee Chairman as to what was sought of Scull, as well as why it was sought. Scull was therefore not given a fair opportunity, at the peril of contempt, to determine whether he was within ,his rights in refusing to answer and consequently his conviction must fall under the procedural requirements of the Fourteenth Amendment.

*346 Scull is a printer and calendar publisher in Annandale, Virginia, where he has been a long-time resident active in religious, civic and welfare groups. Soon after this Court’s decision in Brown v. Board of Education, 347 U. S. 483, holding segregation in the public schools to be unconstitutional, SculLbegan to advocate compliance with the requirements of the Brown case. In December of 1954, Scull and a group of other citizens met at a church in Alexandria to consider and discuss “the part which concerned and conscientious citizens can best play in helping to achieve the community adjustments necessary to protect the educational and constitutional rights of all citizens as recently defined and interpreted by the Supreme Court of the United States.” The group decided to prepare and publish through a “Citizens Clearing House On Public Education” information about the Virginia educational program and to report on the progress made 15y various Parent-Teacher Associations in Northern Virginia in developing programs for “orderly integration.”

One of the newsletters published by the Clearing House was obtained by the Fairfax Citizens’ Council, a group which vigorously opposed any desegregation of Virginia schools. The Council republished a large part of the letter in a pamphlet entitled “The Shocking Truth!” It called attention to the fact that the newsletter was being “disseminated through Box 218, Annandale, Va. (David Scull),”' and' stated .that “communications with the N. A. A. C. P., Southern Regional Council, Clearing House, B’nai B’rith, Council on Human Relations, American Friends and many other pro-integration groups are tunneled through Box 218, Annandale, Va., and membership is encouraged if not actually suggested by the P. T. A. Federation.”,

The pamphlet came to the attention of Delegate James M. Thomson, Chairman of the Virginia Committee on *347 Law Reform and Racial Activities, who promptly subpoenaed Scull to appear and testify. This group, commonly called the “Thomson Committee,” was established a few months after the Virginia General Assembly adopted a resolution attacking the Brown decision and pledging that the Legislature would take all constitutionally available measures to resist desegregation in the public schools. 1 The bill setting up the “Thomson Committee” was one of a series relating to segregation passed on the same day. Among these were bills establishing, a pupil-assignment' plan, providing for the withdrawal of state funds from integrated schools and • forbidding barratry, champerty and maintenance. 2 While they did not mention the NAACP by name, Chairman Thomson testified below that in the course of the “legislative battle” over them he had stated that with “this set of bills . . . ‘we can bust that organization . . . wide open.’ ”

Scull appeared before the Thomson Committee, as ordered. He answered several questions about his publishing business, and then was asked whether he belonged “to an organization known as The Fairfax County Council on Human Relations.” He replied that “on advice of counsel I wish to state that the language of the subpoena delivered to me was so broad and vague . . . that before going further I wish to ask you to tell me the specific subject of your inquiry today, so that I may judge which of your questions are pertinent.” Chairman Thomson told him that the general subjects under inquiry were “threefold”: (1) the tax status of racial organizations and of contributions to them; (2) the effect of integration or its threat on the public schools of Virginia and on the State’s. general welfare; and (3) the violation of certain statutes *348 against “champerty, barratry, and maintenance, or the unauthorized practice of the law.” 3 He told Scull, however, that several of these subjects “primarily do not deal with you.” Scull then filed a statement of his objections to the questioning and emphasized that he had not been “properly informed of the subject of inquiry.” Without clarifying Chairman Thomson’s ambiguous statement or specifying which of the “several” subjects did not apply to Scull, the Committee proceeded to ask the 31 questions listed in the footnote below. 4

*349 ' It is difficult to see how some of these questions have any relationship to the subjects the Committee was •authorized to investigate, or how Scull could possibly discover any such relationship from the Chairman’s state *350 ment. 5 .

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Bluebook (online)
359 U.S. 344, 79 S. Ct. 838, 3 L. Ed. 2d 865, 1959 U.S. LEXIS 1762, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/scull-v-virginia-ex-rel-committee-on-law-reform-racial-activities-scotus-1959.