The Oyez Project Virtual Tour of the Supreme Court Building

Abstract

Argument: Thursday, November 19, 1964
Decision: Monday, March 1, 1965
Issues: First Amendment, Miscellaneous

Advocates

Felix J. Bilgrey (Argued the cause for the appellant)
Thomas B. Finan (Argued the cause for the appellee)

Facts of the Case

Maryland required that all films be submitted to a board of censors before being exhibited. The board could disapprove films that were obscene, debased or corrupted morals, or tended to incite crime. There was no time limit on the decision-making process. Ronald Freedman challenged the law as unconstitutional due to the procedures to obtain approval. He did not suggest that prior approval itself was unconstitutional.

Question

Did the the Maryland law violate the freedom of expression protected by the First Amendment?

Conclusion

The Court found the Maryland law to be invalid. The Court decision reflected a concern that the statute provides the danger of "unduly suppressing protected expression." The board was allowed overly broad licensing discretion with a lack of statutory provisions for judicial participation in the the procedure to prohibit a film. The Court established three guidelines as adequate safeguards to protect against the "undue inhibition of protected expression." These guidelines are to: (1) place the burden of proving the film is unprotected expression on the censors, (2) require judicial determination to impose a valid determination, and (3) require prompt determination "within a specified time period."

Supreme Court Justice Opinions and Votes (by Seniority)

Sort by Ideology
(More information here)
Decision: 9 votes for Freedman, 0 vote(s) against
Legal Provision: Amendment 1: Speech, Press, and Assembly
Voted with the majority
Warren
Voted with the majority, joined Douglas' concurrence
Black
Wrote a special concurrence
Douglas
Voted with the majority
Clark
Voted with the majority
Harlan
Wrote the majority opinion
Brennan
Voted with the majority
Stewart
Voted with the majority
White
Voted with the majority
Goldberg
Full Opinion by Justice William J. Brennan, Jr.

Cite this page

The Oyez Project, Freedman v. Maryland, 380 U.S. 51 (1965),
available at: <http://www.oyez.org/cases/1960-1969/1964/1964_69/>
(last visited ).