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The
People of the State of New York, Plaintiff, v. John Most, Defendant.
(Court
of Special Sessions of the City of New York, First Division)
Misdemeanor
-- Publication of an anarchical article is an act endangering the
peace and outraging public decency, within Penal Code, § 675.
The
publication and distribution, through the mail and to a local
news company, of a German newspaper, circulated in the city and
county of New York, reproducing an article, headed in display
type "Murder vs. Murder", originally written by another
person fifty years ago against crowned heads, teaching the doctrine
of anarchy and declaring that all rulers are enemies of mankind
who should be hunted and destroyed through blood and iron, poison
and dynamite, make the publisher of the newspaper guilty of a
misdemeanor within Penal Code, § 675, providing that "A
person who wilfully and wrongfully commits any act * * * which
seriously endangers the public peace * * * or which openly outrages
public decency, for which no other punishment is expressly prescribed
by this code, is guilty of a misdemeanor" -- and this although
it be not shown that the publication of the article was followed
by any overt act of physical injury to anyone.
Moses Herrman,
Assistant District Attorney, for People.
Hillquit & Hillquit, for defendant.
HINSDALE, J. When the men framed the
Penal Code of the State of New York, they undertook to specify all
the crimes known to the law, to state their character, whether felonies
or misdemeanors, and provide a penalty in each class of crimes by
naming a minimum and maximum penalty in most cases. The attempt
to thus codify the criminal law was declared by many able jurists
an impossible undertaking. It was argued that the system of laws
called the common law was the accumulated wisdom of ages, that it
was flexible and able to adapt itself to every new manifestation
of crime that might appear, keeping within the spirit of established
principles of justice, but always able to cope with any form of
crime that might develop. That there was great force to this objection
was felt by the codifiers and by all jurists. They knew the infirmity
of language and the fallibility of the human intellect in undertaking
to define in precise terms every crime. On the other hand, the common
law of crimes was in many respects overgrown with a multitude of
precedents and decisions, and its roots ran back through so many
centuries of time that it was only to be learned by wading through
a mass of books so great that there was much difficulty in some
cases in determining what was the common law. After framing 674
sections of the Penal Code, specifying crimes and punishments as
completely and fully as the codifiers were able to state them, they
framed the 675th section, which contains these words:
"A person who wilfully and wrongfully commits any act which
seriously injures the person or property of another, or which seriously
disturbs or endangers the public peace or health, or which openly
outrages public decency, for which no other punishment is expressly
prescribed by this code, is guilty of a misdemeanor."
The plain and obvious intent of this was to leave in the Code a
little of the flexibility of the common law to meet cases which
they had failed to specify in the preceding sections. That the words
of this section are general is just what might be expected from
the nature of the case. The purpose of the section is to try offenders
for something not "expressly prescribed by this Code."
If the offense was one expressly prescribed by the Code, then clearly
the offender must be tried under the section prescribing it. It
is only offenses not prescribed in the Code that can be tried under
this section. This section is the legislative mandate and warrant
for courts to look outside of all the other sections of the Code
to discover offenses not specified in the Code. Otherwise the section
is meaningless. It is fair to presume that the Legislature thought
that crimes would crop up that would "seriously injure the
person or property of another," or "seriously disturb
or endanger the public peace," or "openly outrage public
decency," that were not mentioned in the body of the Code,
and so this commission was issued to the courts to explore such
new fields of crime as they may appear from time to time.
We are therefore brought face to face with the question whether
the acts charged in the information in this case are criminal acts
within the spirit and intent of this section. That the section is
general in its words, and not specific, was a necessity of the purpose
of this enactment. That the crimes that come within the range of
this law are comparatively new and novel to the law is to be expected.
If it were otherwise they would have been specified in the body
of the Code. The acts that might be committed to produce the results
condemned by the section were not common acts then generally known
to criminal laws. If the conditions of "injuries to persons
or property," or "serious disturbance and danger to the
public peace," or "openly outrage public decency"
are found to exist, it then becomes the duty of courts to find the
author of those conditions and punish him as the law directs.
We hold that the teachings of the doctrine of anarchy "seriously
disturb or endanger the public peace" and also "openly
outrage public decency." To give this construction to the law
in no way abridges the liberty of conscience in matters of religion,
nor the freedom of speech on all questions of government or of social
life, nor does it in any way trespass upon the proper freedom of
the press. The point and pith of the offense of anarchists is that
they teach the doctrine that the pistol, the dagger and dynamite
may be used to destroy rulers. The teaching of such horrid methods
of reaching an end is the offense. It is poor satisfaction when
one of their dupes has consummated the results of their teaching
to catch him and visit upon him the consequences of his acts. The
evil is untouched if we stop there. In this class of cases the courts
and the public have too long overlooked the fact that crimes and
offenses are committed by written or spoken words. We have been
punishing offenders in other lines for words spoken or written without
waiting for an overt act of injury to persons or property. The press
is restrained by the law of libel from the too free use of words.
Individuals can be punished for words spoken or written, even though
no overt act of physical injury follow. It is the power of words
that is the potent force to commit crimes and offenses in certain
cases. No
more striking illustration of the criminal power of words could
be given, if we are to believe the murderer of our late President,
than that event presents. The assassin declares that he was instigated
and stimulated to consummate his foul deed by the teachings of Emma
Goldman. He is now awaiting execution for the crime, while she is
still at large in fancied security. A person may advocate any change
of our government by lawful and peaceful means, or may criticise
the conduct of its affairs and get as many people to agree with
him as he can, so long as he does not advocate the commission of
crime as the means through which he is to attain his end. If he
advocates stealthy crime as the means of reaching his end he, by
that act, commits a crime for which he can be punished. The distinction
we have tried to point out has been too long overlooked.
If our conclusions are sound, it is the teachers of the doctrine
who can and ought to be punished. It is not necessary to trace and
establish the connection between the teaching of anarchy and a particular
crime of an overt nature.
It is a strange
spectacle in this age for a great nation to stand mute and paralyzed
in the presence of teachers of crime that are advocated only for
the purpose of destroying such nation, and it have no power to defend
against such internal enemies. We do not believe the arm of the
law is too short to reach those offenders against the life of the
nation or too paralyzed to deal with them. The liberty of conscience,
the freedom of speech, the freedom of the press, do not need such
concessions to save to the fullest extent unimpaired those sacred
rights of a free people.
In the case at bar every fact stated in the information was conceded
on the trial. The article published in the newspaper called the
Freiheit,
annexed to the information, was printed in the German language,
but the
translation of it was admitted by the defendant to be correct. It
was also admitted that the paper was published and circulated in
the city and county of New York, and that on the 7th day of September,
1901, the date of the issue containing the article in question,
the defendant was the publisher of said newspaper. That the article
was published and circulated before the assault on the late President
of the United States. It was contended that the defendant was not
the author of said article, that the same was written and published
by one Carl Heinzen about fifty years ago and was reprinted by the
defendant in the Freiheit,
on March 14, 1885. That the defendant, John Most, as soon as he
learned of the assault upon our late President, made all possible
efforts to withdraw the newspaper containing the article in question
from circulation. That, with the exception of those which had been
sent through the mail and delivered to the International News Company,
no more copies had been sold, so far as known to the defendant.
It was also admitted that the copy of said newspaper attached to
the information was purchased by the complainant from the International
News Company.
The article
was the leading one on the editorial page of the paper, and it is
headed "Murder vs. Murder" in display type. The article
begins: "As Heinzen said, nearly fifty years ago (this is true
even to-day), there are various technical expressions for the important
manipulation by which one human being destroys the life of another.
These expressions are: 'To kill, to destroy, to murder, to shoot,
to slay, to poison, to put out of the world, deport to Cayenne,
get out of the way, to behead, to strangle, to cut down, to be killed
by the sword, to execute by shooting, to imprison for life, to execute,
&c.' The means, the pretext and the reasons are various, but
the purpose is always the same. The destruction of a life that is
hostile or a hindrance. * * * It would be a senseless weakness to
disguise by sentimental lamentations the frightful fact that the
best means of historical development has been murder, and in fact
murder in the most colossal shape, and this is still true. * * *
Let murder be our study, murder in every form. In this one word
lies more humanity than in all our theories. * * * The despots are
outlawed; they are in human society what the tiger is among animals;
to spare them is a crime. As despots permit themselves everything,
betrayal, poison, murder, etc., in the same way all this is to be
employed against them. Yes, crime directed against them is not only
right, but it is the duty of everyone who has an opportunity to
commit it, and it would be a glory to him if it was successful.
Only towards mankind is there a moral of consideration, the moral
towards beasts is destruction. * * * Murder as a necessary defense
is not only permissible but it is sometimes a duty towards society
when it is directed against a professional murderer. * * * The way
of humanity leads over the summit of barbarism. This is just the
law of necessity dictated by reaction. We cannot get around it,
as we do not wish to renounce the future. If we wish to design,
we must also wish the means; if we wish the life of the peoples,
we must wish for the death of their enemies; if we wish for humanity,
we must wish for murder. * * * It would be quite a new war policy
if, in the circus, the panther permitted the buffalo to prescribe
to him that he should defend himself with horns against horns and
that he should not immediately spring upon his back from behind.
The buffalo militarism request that the revolutionists disarm to
the skin, should march openly against him, after declaration of
war, in optima, forma
militari, with cannons and ammunition wagons, with cavalry
and infantry, after the people had been disarmed. We do not suffer
from such weakness; we say murder for murderers, save humanity through
blood and iron, poison and dynamite."
The above are a few extracts from the translation of the article
in question. It is impossible to read the whole article without
deducing from it the doctrine that all rulers are enemies of mankind,
and are to be hunted and destroyed through "blood and iron,
poison and dynamite." It is no answer to the evil and criminal
nature of this article to claim that it was written for the purpose
of destroying crowned heads. It inculcates and enforces the idea
that murder is the proper remedy to be applied against rulers. The
fact that it was published fifty years ago and again republished
about fifteen years ago only emphasizes and gives added point to
the criminality of republishing it at any time. It shows a deliberate
intent to inculcate and promulgate the doctrine of the article.
This we hold to be a criminal act. It is not necessary to trace
any connection in this article with the assassination of the late
President. The offense here, in the eye of the law, is precisely
the same as if that event had never occurred. The murder of the
President only serves to illustrate and illuminate the enormity
of the crime of the defendant in teaching his diabolical doctrines.
Such articles and doctrines have no proper place in this free country.
They stimulate the worst possible political ideas and passions,
and carried to their logical conclusion would destroy the government.
It was said by a distinguished English judge, in the celebrated
Somerset slave case, that "No slave can breathe the free air
of England." It would be well if the laws of this country were
such that it could be said truthfully, that no anarchist can breathe
the free air of America.
HOLBROOK and WYATT, J.J., concur.
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