State v. Buchanan

436 P.2d 729, 250 Or. 244, 1968 Ore. LEXIS 546
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 24, 1968
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 436 P.2d 729 (State v. Buchanan) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Oregon Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Buchanan, 436 P.2d 729, 250 Or. 244, 1968 Ore. LEXIS 546 (Or. 1968).

Opinion

GOODWIN, J.

This is an appeal from a judgment of contempt of court. The only issue is whether freedom of the press gives a newspaper reporter the constitutional right to preserve the anonymity of an informer in the face of a court order requiring disclosure.

Conceding that neither she nor her informers had *246 statutory or common-law privileges, Annette' Buchanan, a writer for a student newspaper, asserted on constitutional- and professional-ethics grounds that she had the right, after a publication, to refuse to disclose the identity of her source of information.

The issue arose upon á court order in aid of a grand-jury investigation into the use of marijuana in Lane County. Miss Buchanan had promised seven persons who claimed to be marijuana users that if they permitted her to interview them for publication she would under no circumstances reveal their names. Miss Buchanan .reported the results of the interviews, using fictitious names. This publication produced a well-publicized confrontation with the then district *247 attorney culminating in the proceedings which led to this appeal.

In the trial court, • testimony and argument were addressed to the social value and professional desirability of the asserted privilege. The trial court, however, was of the opinion that the asserted privilege was not a right of constitutional stature and that the public-policy questions were of a kind that should be left to the Legislative Assembly. A fine of $300 was imposed.

Miss Buchanan seeks reversal on the ground that the constitutionally protected freedom of the press necessarily includes freedom to gather news. Since certain news stories cannot be obtained unless the reporter can promise' anonymity to a confidential informer, she argues that a judicial order requiring disclosure abridges a protected freedom. The social values which favor a free press, she argues, should be judicially balanced against those which favor the discovery and prosecution of law violators. It may be true, as the defendant argues, that some balancing of *248 values occurs when district' attorneys ignore-, the reports in the popular press based upon anonymous confessions concerning drug use, abortions, and other activities'in which law violátiohs may have played a part. This social phenomenon, however, is not relevant ■ to the defendant’s underlying assumption that the “press” has a right to gather information superior to that which other members of society can assert. While the government from time to time' extends to selected representatives of news media privileges (such as access to war zones and seats on a presidential aircraft) not accorded the general public, it has not been suggested that these privileges'-are necessarily' rights conferred by the Constitution solely upon those who can qualify as members of the press.

On the contrary, it has been held that those claiming to be news gatherers have' no constitutional right to information which is not accessible to the public generally.

In' thé decisions dealing with the reporter’s asserted right to refuse to disclose his source of information, the courts have held that rights of privacy, freedom of association, and ethical convictions are subordinate to the duty of every citizen to testify in court.

Indeed, it would be difficult to rationalize a rule that would create special constitutional rights for *249 those possessing credentials as news gatherers which would not conflict with the equal-privileges and equal-protection concepts also found in the Constitution. Freedom of the press is a right which belongs to the public;"it is not the private preserve of those who possess the- implements of publishing. See Note, 46 Or L Eev 99 (1966).

Apart from the definitional difficulties in attempting to give constitutional status to a privilege for qualified news gatherers which presumably would be denied to less favored classes, there is another objection to discrimination between news gatherers and other persons. Such a practice would be potentially destructive of the very freedom that is sought to be preserved by this appeal. After the lessons of colonial times, the First Amendment required the federal government to resist the normal temptation of rulers to' regulate, license, or otherwise pass upon the credentials of those claiming to be .authors and publishers. An invitation to the government to grant a special privilege to a special class of “news gatherers” necessarily draws after it an invitation to the government to define the membership of that class. We doubt that *250 all news writers would want the government to pass lipón the qualifications of those seeking to enter their field.

The seope-of-employment test contemplated . by typical statutes creating such privileges appears to approach the problem from two sides: (a) the person claiming the privilege is “engaged in the work of gathering,” and (b) the material being gathered is “news.” Statutory distinctions may or may not' be made among the media to be used for dissemination. The statutes generally omit any guidance as to what is “work” and what is “news.”

Assuming that legislators are free to experiment with such definitions, it would be dangerous business for courts, asserting constitutional grounds, to extend to an employe of a “respectable” newspaper a privilege which would be denied to an employe of a disreputable newspaper; or to an episodic pamphleteer; or to a free-lance writer seeking a story to sell on the open market; or, indeed, to a shaggy nonconformist who wishes only to write out his message and nail it to a tree. If the claimed privilege is to be found in the Constitution, its benefits cannot be limited to those whose credentials may, from time to time, satisfy the government.

Since we decline to attempt a constitutional definition of “news” and “news reporters,” we have not dis *251 cussed a secondary argument-advanced in this appeal: that wé should fashion for those eligible to enjoy it a privilege limited to cases in which secrecy is an aid to social criticism aimed at reforming the law.

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Bluebook (online)
436 P.2d 729, 250 Or. 244, 1968 Ore. LEXIS 546, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-buchanan-or-1968.