MEMORANDUM and ORDER
Plаintiffs had been concerned during the week commencing May 4, 1969, in the public exhibition of a motion picture film entitled “Odd Triangle” at the Hollis Cinema Theatre (operated by the corporate plaintiff). By May 7, 1969, plaintiffs had interrupted their planned one-week run оf “Odd Triangle,” and they were exhibiting another film, “The Singles.” That fact was evident from the marquee advertising. Nevertheless, on May 7, 1969, the print of “Odd Triangle” was still in the theater, and on that day plaintiff Rockman was arrested on an obscenity chai'ge under Penal Law, McKinney’s Consоl.Laws, c. 40, § 235.05, and the print of “Odd Triangle” was seized under a warrant issued pursuant to Code of Criminal Procedure § 791 et seq. When the present action was commenced and the present motion made, plaintiff Rockman was awaiting further hearing in Queen’s Criminal Court on the misdemeanor charge of Section 235.05. It appears that another print of the “Odd Triangle” was seized in Nassau County from a different theater on the preceding night and it is indicated that the Nassau arrest and seizure influenced plaintiffs to interrupt their showing of the film.
By the present action plaintiffs seek the return of the print of “Odd Triangle,” an injunction against the state prosecution, and a declaration that Penal Law § 235.05 is invalid in terms and as applied to plaintiff in connection with Code of Criminal Procedure § 791 et seq. Plaintiffs now mоve for a preliminary injunction requiring return of the film, and restraining the defendant from prosecuting plaintiffs and others similarly situated and from seeking to enforce Penal Law § 235.05. A three judge court is sought under 28 U.S.C. § 2281. The complaint suggests that the defendant is embarked on a coursе of action designed to deprive plaintiff and others of their rights of free speech, but no facts are referred to that could give support to the
The point presented is that as a matter of constitutional principle no print of a film may be seized until after there has been an adversary hearing (see, e. g. Metzger v. Pearcy, 7th Cir. 1968,
Here, however, the substantive statute involved is as assuredly valid as a statute can be when it must be drafted in the light of the First Amendment. Mishkin v. New York, 1966,
It follows that if the present film is found obscene, its exhibition will have been criminal misconduct and punishable if it occurred in the circumstаnces set out in Section 235.05 and if guilt is adequately proved at a trial. The State, however, must prove its case, and it cannot do so without proving the content of the film. The film, then, could well be both the “property used * * * as the means of committing [an alleged] crime” and the “property constituting evidence of [the alleged] crime,” and, for purposes of the present case, it must be assumed that the Criminal Court Justice had probable cause to believe that the film was obscene by the statutory definition and was at the place of search, and that its exhibition was criminal. Cf. Code of Criminal Procedure §§ 792, 793. As the case has been presented, there can be no contention here that the film was such that a magistrate could not constitutionally find that there was no prоbable cause to believe it obscene. Contrast Redrup v. New York, supra,
The seizure in this case was the minimum seizure needed to support prosecution of the precise alleged offense. Contrast People v. Rothenberg, supra,
It is argued that seizure of a print of film is, like the seizure of an entire edition of a book or the total local stock of a book, a forbidden prior restraint since no adjudication of obscenity in an adversary hearing preceded seizurе. It is not fairly possible to deny that Metzger v. Pearcy, 7th Cir. 1968,
With defеrence, the two cases overlook the central emphasis of the line of cases culminating in Quantity of Copies of Books v. Kansas on the presence in the eases of a manifest abuse of search and seizure procedures as a mode of stifling communication. Moreover, the result of Metzger v. Pearcy and Tyrone — continuance of the prosecutions with authorization to use in evidence the very film found to have been illegally seized — is an index that the Courts reduced the whole issue to the level of a motion to restore the custody of the film to the exhibitor upon the giving of adequate assurance of its availability for use in evidence at the criminal trial. Such relief, it would seem, is appropriately available in the state court if and to the extent that the seized film is needed to continue dissemination of its lesson, or, to put it another way, if there is ground to apprehend that retention (as distinguished from seizure) of the film could operate as a prior restraint or a suppression of constitutionally significant scope. Indeed, the motion is proper if the District Attorney’s retention of the film could impose a mere inconvenience on the defendant that could be averted by returning the film without sacrifice of its availability as evidence. The First Amendment baсkground functions in such a context only to assure that the disposition of such a motion is not a matter of judicial discretion but of firmly founded legal right if the evidence is that retention of the film may materially stifle the utterance of its content before there has beеn any adjudication of obscenity in an adversary hearing. See Code of Criminal Procedure, § 804, indicating that property lawfully seized is under the control by its order of the court in which the case is to be tried. In this case, for all that appears, many prints are аvailable to the lessor of the film, and through him to the plaintiffs, who can hardly be expected to go on with their lease without a copy of the film to show. Nor is it clear that the film will not be returned so long as its intact evidentiary availability is assured; in fact it would not be impossible to suppose that the two Counties might find that one print sufficed for both Counties.
It appears, too, that the plaintiffs’ exhibition of the film ceased before the seizure and, possibly, as a consequence of the Nassau County arrest. Certainly the merе existence of a valid criminal statute punishing the exhibition of obscene films must tend to cow the exhibit- or required to decide whether or not a film is utterly devoid of social value; and surely evidence of vigorous enforcement of such a law can tend to рroduce a bias toward widespread exhibitor rejections of the marginal film. But that effect of all criminal statutes is of their essence, and it explains the insistence that criminal laws be lucid and not vague or over-broad, particularly where the conduct they prohibit closely borders on other conduct that in its better manifestations is positively encouraged, and clothed with immunity. But against the inhibition arising out of vigorous law enforcement there can be no relief so long as it is the law that narrowly drafted obscenity statutes are valid.
Thus no substantial federal question is now presented. Nothing in the current history of New York's administration of its obscenity law suggests that plaintiffs' constitutional rights are not in good hands or will be to any degree jeopardized by the state court proceedings. It follows that the convening of a three judge court would not be in order. Swift & Co. v. Wickham, 1965,
The facts have not been fully presented and they have been found, to the extent that the record permits, as set forth above. While it is unlikely that they can be much expanded on the points relevant in this Court by a trial, paragraph 5 of the amended complaint, although very mildly, could be taken to suggest that, as locally applied by the particular defendant, the statutes have been made a means of supprеssing constitutionally protected speech. That prevents, at this stage, the granting of the Attorney General’s cross-motion for judgment.
Accordingly, it is
Ordered that plaintiffs’ motion for the convening of a three-judge court, and for an order directing return of the film, enjoining prosecution of the criminal charge and declaring Penal Law § 235.05 invalid is denied in all respects and the defendant’s cross-motion for judgment is denied.
