United States v. Various Articles of Merchandise, Seizure No. 148

600 F. Supp. 1383, 1985 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 23643
CourtDistrict Court, N.D. Illinois
DecidedJanuary 7, 1985
Docket84 C 7997, 84 C 8129 and 84 C 8611
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 600 F. Supp. 1383 (United States v. Various Articles of Merchandise, Seizure No. 148) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, N.D. Illinois primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
United States v. Various Articles of Merchandise, Seizure No. 148, 600 F. Supp. 1383, 1985 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 23643 (N.D. Ill. 1985).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM OPINION AND ORDER

(INCLUDING FINDINGS OF FACT AND CONCLUSIONS OF LAW)

SHADUR, District Judge.

These in rem actions have been brought by the United States for forfeiture and destruction of allegedly obscene imported material seized from the United States mails by the Customs Service. 1 For the reasons stated in this opinion’s findings of fact and conclusions of law, issued as mandated by United States v. Various Articles of Merchandise, Seizure No. 170, 750 F.2d 596 (7th Cir.1984), this Court concludes all the seized materials are obscene and shall therefore be forfeited and destroyed.

*1384 This Court’s Mandate Under Seizure No. 170

In a different context this Court has had occasion to state its invariable procedure of conducting a personal review of all materials tendered in obscenity forfeiture proceedings. United States v. Miscellaneous Pornographic Magazines, 526 F.Supp. 460, 467-68 (N.D.Ill.1981) (hereinafter cited “YourStyle,” after the name of the publisher plaintiff in the consolidated action that triggered all the substantive discussion in that opinion). 2 It may be that our Court of Appeals’ decision in Seizure No. 170 was motivated at least in part by its concern lest District Courts might slight— or perhaps even eschew — the distasteful, though constitutionally mandated, task of personal review (thus Seizure No. 170, at 599, referred to the need “to provoke care on the part of the district judge”).

All the same, this Court’s own experience indicates the commendable desire of our Court of Appeals (“So that review in these cases will not be illusory ... and to bring some rationality into these proceedings,” Seizure No. 170, at 598), when translated into practice, most frequently proves unrealistic. Almost all the materials tendered to this Court in such proceedings over the years have been what might be termed Jacobellian — bringing into play the truly inspired observation (though its overuse has tended to make it commonplace) by Justice Stewart, concurring in Jacobellis v. Ohio, 378 U.S. 184, 197, 84 S.Ct. 1676, 1683, 12 L.Ed.2d 793 (1964):.

I shall not today attempt further to define the kinds of material I understand to be embraced within that shorthand description [“hard-core pornography”]; and perhaps I could never succeed in intelligibly doing so. But I know it when I see it, and the motion picture involved in this case is not that.

Whenever a case is an obvious “I know it when I see it” candidate, with the seized material compelling an equally obvious affirmative conclusion as to obscenity, it is extraordinarily difficult if not impossible to articulate any meaningful findings of fact of a kind that would ease the task of appellate review. As the Supreme Court Justices themselves have found in obscenity cases, there is no substitute for their viewing the offending materials and reaching their own conclusions as to “patent offensiveness.” And that problem is really at the hard core of the conclusion recently expressed by the Second Circuit in United States v. Various Articles of Obscene Merchandise, Schedule No. 2102, 709 F.2d 132, 136 (2d Cir.1983) (a conclusion rejected and impliedly criticized by our own Court of Appeals in Seizure No. 170, at 598) 3 :

Although appellate courts are required to exercise de novo review as to the preliminary substantive requirement that the material be “hard core” pornographic in nature, Jenkins v. Georgia, supra, 418 U.S. [153] at 160-61, 94 S.Ct. [2750] *1385 at 2754-55 [41 L.Ed.2d 642], the trier’s finding that the material is non-obscene is virtually shielded from appellate scrutiny, at least absent evidence that it is so clearly unreasonable as to amount to abuse of discretion.

One other factor that impelled our Court of Appeals to adopt its requirement for “explicit findings and conclusions” (Seizure No. 170, at 599) does not withstand analysis: its citation of United States v. Various Articles of Obscene Merchandise, Schedule No. 2098, 536 F.Supp. 50, 53 (S.D.N.Y.1981) for the proposition that “a finding of obscenity as to an article would be res judicata (in the same community, presumably) for subsequent importations of that same article” {Seizure No. 170, at 599). Even a brief rehearsal of the concept of res judicata or claim preclusion — which bars subsequent litigation between the same parties to the prior litigation — makes the suggested application of that concept to Section 1305(a) forfeitures bizarre indeed. It must be remembered the producer or distributor of the publication receives no notice of the Section 1305(a) proceedings— only the addressee of the seized copy does. 4 Obvious due process infirmities would attach to a conclusive determination of obscenity of a publication, made binding on the real party in interest who has had no notice or opportunity to litigate, with the determination having been rendered in a proceeding in which an addressee of a copy was the only party notified. In fact the same due process concerns should apply even to a later proceeding involving a different addressee of the same publication, who also has not had his or her day in court.

Merely labeling the proceeding “in rem” does not alter matters, for the subject of in rem proceedings — the property subject to destruction — is only a particular item of property (in this case a copy of a publication), not the generic class of which that item of property may be a part. That is the established wisdom in the res judicata field — or more accurately, the field of collateral estoppel or issue preclusion, for the problem with which our Court of Appeals was rightly concerned in Seizure No. 170 was the prospect of binding a different litigant in a future lawsuit involving the same publication. We need look no farther than the Restatement of Judgments to show that the unsupported “res judicata” statement in Schedule No. 2098 (referred to with apparent approval in Seizure No. 170, at 599) is not only unsupported but unsupportable in law as well as in logic. 5

This is not to minimize the practical (as distinct from legal) effect of a court’s declaration that a copy of a publication is obscene. Such a prior determination may well have a precedential influence on another District Judge who is later called upon to consider forfeiture of another copy of the same publication.

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600 F. Supp. 1383, 1985 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 23643, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-various-articles-of-merchandise-seizure-no-148-ilnd-1985.