State v. Rottman

6 Conn. Super. Ct. 427, 6 Conn. Supp. 427, 1938 Conn. Super. LEXIS 161
CourtConnecticut Superior Court
DecidedNovember 15, 1938
DocketFile #8785
StatusPublished

This text of 6 Conn. Super. Ct. 427 (State v. Rottman) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Connecticut Superior Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Rottman, 6 Conn. Super. Ct. 427, 6 Conn. Supp. 427, 1938 Conn. Super. LEXIS 161 (Colo. Ct. App. 1938).

Opinion

McEVOY, J.

This accused is informed against in the language of section 6244 of the General Statutes, Revision of 1930. The heading of this section is “Obscene literature and pictures.” It provides, substantially, that any person who shall sell, or have in his possession with intent to sell, any book, pamphlet, or paper containing obscene, indecent or impure language, printed or written matter of like character, shall be punished.

Two exceptions are made. The first is that if it appears that the possession is had with intent to aid in the suppres' sion; and the second is if the possession is had for the purpose of enforcing the provisions of the section, then there shall be no offense.

*428 This accused does not claim that he is within either exception. He admits that he had these exhibits for sale. He denies that their contents violate the law.

Obscenity was indictable at common law, on the ground that what tended to corrupt society amounted to a breach of the peace. The word obscenity cannot be said to be a technical term of the law, and is not susceptible of exact definition in its judicial uses, so it has been defined in a general sense as meaning offensive to morality or chastity, indecent, nasty. While it is not possible to define obscenity with any degree of practical certainty, the test ordinarily followed by the courts in determining whether a particular publication or other thing is obscene within the meaning of the statute is whether the tendency of the matter charged as obscene is to deprave and corrupt those whose minds are open to such immoral influences, and into whose hands a publication or other article charged as being obscene may fall. 8 R.C.L. Criminal Law §388.

The rule that a guilty intent is not an essential element of a crime that is positively prohibited by statute applies to the offense of obscenity. To constitute the crime there is no necessity for the existence of any specific intent or motive, and, in fact, although the motive and intent are of the best, this is no defense. There are only two questions in a prosecution for obscenity: (1) Is the article, publication, picture, or whatever may be the basis for the prosecution, obscene? (2) Did the defendant sell the obscene article which the statute prohibited?

The law does not permit a man to do evil that good may come of it; hence the motive of a person who is charged with obscenity does not amount to a defense. Accordingly, the fact that the authors of a particular work of art or literature did not have an impure thought, but the highest and best purpose, and that the alleged obscenity was merely an incidental element, will not amount to a defense if the work is obscene within the meaning of the statute. 8 R.C.L. Criminal Law §339.

A proper test of obscenity in a painting or statue has been held to be whether the motive of the painting or statue, so to speak, as indicated by it, is pure or impure, whether it is naturally calculated to incite in the spectator impure imaginations, and whether the other incidents and qualities, however attractive, are merely accessory to this as the primary or main *429 purpose of the representation. 8 R.C.L. Criminal Law §341.

Acceptance in other places than our own of a publication is of no great importance to us, unless the moral standard of those other countries is a replica of our own. Charm of language, subtlety of thought, faultless style, even distinction of authorship, may all have their lure for the library critic, yet these qualities may all be present and the book be unfit for dissemination to the reading public.

Aside from the purely spiritual and idealistic viewpoint, the enforcement of this section is of great materialistic concern to our government. The future of a nation depends upon its youth. Our more enlightened conception of the need of protective measures to preserve our youth is reflected in the great progress that has taken place in recent years in the enactment of laws for the protection of the health of our women and children to save them from exploitation by the unscrupulous employer, and even sometimes, though rarely, the unscrupulous parent, in order that the child may become a healthy and useful citizen, and the woman preserved for motherhood. We have the compulsory education laws; we have the laws prohibiting child labor, and when children are permitted by law to work we limit their hours of employment; we have the laws limiting the hours women may toil, and others prohibiting them from working in factories during the nighttime; we have laws insuring proper sanitary conditions under which they may be employed, the Widows’ Pension Law and many others, here unnecessary to enumerate, of the same purport.

And while their enactment was actuated largely by our enlightened conceptions of social justice and motives altruistic, yet these laws also exist because the fostering of the health of women and children is one of grave governmental concern. Just as it is of national concern and interest to protect their health, it is equally important to protect our youth against the corruption of their morals, so that we may do everything within governmental power to afford them physical, mental, and moral virility, and not have their development arrested in these respects during the formative period. It is a national duty to prevent the moral or physical weakening of the family ■—-“the nursery of mankind.” History warns us that in the wake of a moral deterioration comes physical deterioration and national destruction. Hence our interest in the strict enforcement of all laws to prevent the publication and distribution of corrupt literature. As it is the duty of our law-enforcing *430 branches of government to enforce with vigor these laws, so it is the correlative function of the courts not to narrow the law’s application by accepting tests restrictive of the common' ly accepted meaning of the words. People vs. Seltzer, 122 Misc. 329, 334, 203 N.Y.S. 809, 813.

These publications plainly, and in my judgment intention' ally, cater to a prurient taste, which it is the thinly disguised object of the authors to incite; and associated, as they are, in the publications where they appear, with other writings of a similar nature, they are capable of doing incalculable harm; all the more so because they are intended to circulate among and attract the young, to whom some of these publications are particularly addressed. It would seem to me to be clear that these publications are of the obscene, lewd, and lascivious char' acter which it was the object of our Legislature by the legisla' tion in question to suppress. The standard is not the publica' tions to which reference has been made in argument, some of which may or may not be just as bad as these, but some of which do pass muster with some people. The test is the ten' dency to deprave and corrupt the minds of those who are open to such influence, into whose hands these publications or some of them, may come.

Judge Thayer answered the question as follows: “If the effect of the pamphlet and papers as a whole would be to deprave and corrupt the minds of those into

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Related

Rosen v. United States
161 U.S. 29 (Supreme Court, 1896)
People v. Seltzer
122 Misc. 329 (New York Supreme Court, 1924)
MacFadden v. United States
165 F. 51 (Third Circuit, 1908)
United States v. Clarke
38 F. 732 (E.D. Missouri, 1889)

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Bluebook (online)
6 Conn. Super. Ct. 427, 6 Conn. Supp. 427, 1938 Conn. Super. LEXIS 161, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-rottman-connsuperct-1938.