William R. Baird v. Thomas S. Eisenstadt, as He is Sheriff of Suffolk County, Massachusetts

429 F.2d 1398, 1970 U.S. App. LEXIS 8311
CourtCourt of Appeals for the First Circuit
DecidedJuly 6, 1970
Docket7578_1
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 429 F.2d 1398 (William R. Baird v. Thomas S. Eisenstadt, as He is Sheriff of Suffolk County, Massachusetts) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the First Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
William R. Baird v. Thomas S. Eisenstadt, as He is Sheriff of Suffolk County, Massachusetts, 429 F.2d 1398, 1970 U.S. App. LEXIS 8311 (1st Cir. 1970).

Opinion

*1399 ALDRICH, Chief Judge.

Petitioner Baird brings this petition for habeas corpus to attack his conviction for viola*'on of Mass.G.L. c. 272 § 21, Commonwe* ’th v. Baird, 1969 Mass. A.S. 727, 247 iCE.2d 574, cert, denied 396 U.S. 1029, 90'S.Ct. 580, 24 L.Ed.2d 524, hereinafter L}aird, on the ground that the statute, insofar as it is directed against contraceptives, is unconstitutional. The facts aiS these. In April 1967 petitioner, pursi int to an invitation, addressed a group of students at Boston University on the subject of contraception. On a demonstration board he exhibited various contraceptive devices, and at the close of his talk he invited members of the audience to come and help themselves. He personally handed to an unmarried adult womáñ a' package of vaginal foam, a publicly advertised contraceptive. He was thereupon arrested and charged with a) exhibiting, and b) delivering, a contraceptive article. 1

Following a trial, and a finding of guilty on both counts, the Superior Court pursuant to a Massachusetts procedural statute requested review by the Supreme Judicial Court of the constitutionality of the statute. That court unanimously held that the conviction for exhibiting contraceptive articles violated petitioner’s First Amendment rights. By a 4-3 majority it upheld the constitutionality of the provision against delivery, holding, inter alia, that this went beyond free speech, and that the statutory proscriptions were severable. The court ruled that forbidding delivery of contraceptive articles was supportable as a legitimate protection of public health. Significantly, the majority said nothing on the subject of morals. Nor did the court address itself to the question why a married woman’s health was to be protected by requiring medical assistance, and an unmarried woman’s by denying it, a question more pressingly raised in Sturgis v. Attorney General, post.

The petition for habeas corpus was dismissed by the district court, with opinion. 310 F.Supp. 951. We issued a certificate of probable cause for appeal, and ordered petitioner released on bail.

Petitioner attacks the statute on a number of grounds. The first two need not detain us. £Ffis extensive argument that the First Amendment entitled him to deliver a contraceptive article as “symbolic speech” is less persuasive than the defendant’s claim in United States v. O’Brien that he could emphasize an anti-war speech by burning his draft card. Even there the Supreme Court, as well as, in this respect, ourselves, was unimpressed by the argument that the right of free speech justifies the performance of an act which ,has been reasonably prohibited on independent substantive grounds. United States v. O’Brien, 1968, 391 U.S. 367, 88 S.Ct. 1673, 20 L.Ed.2d 672. Equally unsupportable is the contention that the elimination of a small part of the statute, the provision against exhibition, destroys the statute as a whole. This is not an instance of judicial excision making the remainder difficult to interpret. Nor is this one of those “rarest of cas *1400 es” where the statute has been so reduced in scope as to leave it pointless. See United States v. Raines, 1960, 362 U.S. 17, 23, 80 S.Ct. 519, 4 L.Ed.2d 524. The excision argument did not persuade the Massachusetts court, whose interpretation of the statute controls; nor does it us.

Petitioner’s more substantive claims need considerable rephrasing. The issue before us is whether the statute “bears a real and substantial relation to the public health, safety, morals, or some other phase of the general welfare.” Sperry & Hutchinson Co. v. Director, 1940, 307 Mass. 408, 418, 30 N.E.2d 269. Or, in the Commonwealth’s words, it must be shown that the statute “does not bear a reasonable relationship to a proper legislative purpose, or * * * js * * * arbitrary and discriminatory.” Nebbia v. New York, 1934, 291 U.S. 502, 537, 54 S.Ct. 505, 78 L.Ed. 940; Meyer v. Nebraska, 1923, 262 U.S. 390, 399-400, 43 S.Ct. 625, 67 L.Ed. 1042.

The Commonwealth asserts two general purposes, health and morals. In resting its decision on the former the court said in Baird,

“The Commonwealth has a legitimate interest in preventing the distribution of articles designed to prevent contraception which may have undesirable, if not dangerous, physical consequences.” 1969 Mass. A.S. at 733, 247 N.E.2d at 578.

More recently the court has occasion to expand upon this statement. In Sturgis v. Attorney General, Mass.1970, 260 N. E.2d 687, plaintiffs, two qualified physicians specializing in gynecology, sought under Massachusetts practice a declaratory judgment that the statute is unconstitutional in that it prevents them from furnishing contraceptive assistance to their unmarried patients. The court, Justices Cutter and Spiegel dissenting as to the outcome, stated,

“[T]he Legislature is free to conclude that some harm may conceivably attend the employment of contraceptive devices * * [Hence] the prohibition against their distribution bears a real and subs'jtntial relation to the legislative purpose.”

The court went on t<r say that Griswold v. Connecticut, 1965, ,381 U.S. 479, 85 S. Ct. 1678, 14 L.Ed.2^ 510, post- affirmed “beyond doubt” the" right of the state “to enact statute?,,regulating the private sexual livés of, single persons.” 2 The court, without more, upheld the statutq in its full scppe, as “protecting the public health.”'

While we agree with the court’s observations as statements of principle, we are unable to find the statute to be an application thereof. Alternatively, if it could be thought to be intended for a proper purpose, we could not find, in the words of the Commonwealth quoted earlier, that it bears “a reasonable relationship” thereto, but, rather, we would find it “arbitrary and discriminatory.” We reach these conclusions both because of the statute’s total exclusion of the unmarried, and because of its palpable overbreadth with respect to the married.

So far as health is concerned, as Justices Whittemore and Cutter, dissenting in Baird, pointed out, “If there is need to have a physician prescribe (and a pharmacist dispense) contraceptives, that need is as great for unmarried persons as for married persons.” 1969 Mass. A.S. at 738, 247 N.E.2d at 581. But not only are their needs the same, their physical characteristics, and their individual responses to contraceptives must be the same. If the purpose is health, the court’s quoted statement in Sturgis

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Bluebook (online)
429 F.2d 1398, 1970 U.S. App. LEXIS 8311, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/william-r-baird-v-thomas-s-eisenstadt-as-he-is-sheriff-of-suffolk-ca1-1970.