delivered the opinion of the. Court.
No. 55 (hereafter
Mail
Box) draws into question the constitutionality of 39 U. S. C. §4006-(now 39 U. S. C. § 3006, Postal Reorganization Act,
†
84 Stat. 747), under
39 U. S. C. § 4006 provides in pertinent part:
“Upon evidence satisfactory to the Postmaster Genéral that a person is obtaining or attempting to obtain remittances of money or property of any kind through the mail for an obscene . . . matter ..., or is depositing or causing to be deposited in the United States mail information as to where, how, or from whom the. same may be obtained, the Postmaster General may—
“(1) direct postmasters at-the office at which registered letters or other letters- or mail arrive, addressed to such a person or to his representative, to return the registered letters or other letters or mail to the sender marked 'Unlawful’; and
“(2) forbid the payment by a postmaster to such a person or his representative of any money order or postal note drawn to the order of either and provide for the return to the remitters of the sums named in the money orders or postal notes.”
Proceedings under ■ § 4006 are conducted according to departmental regulations. A proceeding js begun by the General Counsel of the Post Office Department by written complaint and notice of hearing. 39 CFR §§ 952.5, 952.7,- 952.8. The Judicial Officer of the Department holds a trial-type hearing at which a full record is transcribed. He renders an opinion -which includes findings
“In preparation for or during the pendency of proceedings under [§4006] of this title, the UnitedStates district court in the district in which the defendant receives his mail shall, upon application therefor by the Postmaster General and upon a showing of probable cause to believe the statute is being violated, enter a temporary restraining order and preliminary injunction pursuant to rule 65 of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure directing the detention of the defendant’s incoming mail by the postmaster pending the conclusion of the statutory proceedings and any appeal therefrom. .The district court may provide in the order that the- detained mail be open to examination by the defendant, and such mail be delivered as is clearly not connected with the alleged unlawful activity. An action taken by a court hereunder does not affect or determine any fact at issue in the statutory proceedings.” 2
In
Book Bin,
the Postmaster General applied to the District Court for the Northern District of Georgia for a § 4007 order, pending the completion of § 4006 proceedings against Book Bin.
3
Book Bin counterclaimed, asserting that both §§ 4006 and 4007 were unconstitutional and that their énforcement should be enjoined. A three-judge court was convened and held both sections unconstitutional. It agreed with the three-judge court in
Mail Box
that the procedures of § 4006 were fatally deficient under
Freedman
v.
Maryland,
We noted probable jurisdiction of the Government’s appeals.
Our discussion appropriately begins with Mr. Justice Holmes’ frequently quoted admonition that, “The United States may give up the Post Office when it sees fit, but while it carries it on the use of the mails is almost as much a part of free speech as the right to use our tongues . . . .”
Milwaukee Social Democratic Pub. Co.
v.
Burleson,
The procedure established by § 4006 and the imple- ■ menting regulations omit those “sensitive tools” essential to satisfy the requirements of the First Amendment. The three-judge courts correctly held in these cases that our decision in
Freedman
v.
Maryland,
These safeguards are lacking in the administrative censorship scheme created by §§4006, 4007, and the regulations. 4
The scheme has no statutory provision requiring gov-ernmentally-initiated judicial participation in the pro
Moreover, once a § 4006 administrative order has been entered against the distributor, there being no provision for judicial review, the Postmaster may stamp as “Unlawful” and immediately return to the sender orders for
The authority of the Postmaster General under § 4007 to apply to a district court for an order directing the detention of the distributor’s incoming mail pending the conclusion of the § 4006 administrative proceedings and any appeal therefrom plainly does not remedy the defects in § 4006. That section does not provide a prompt proceeding for a judicial adjudication of the challenged ob
The appellees here not only were not afforded “prompt judicial review” but they “can only get full judicial review on the question of obscenity — by which the Postmaster would be actually bound — after lengthy administrative proceedings, and then only by [their] own initiative. During the interim, the prolonged threat of an adverse
The judgments of the three-judge courts in Nos. 55 and 58 are
Affirmed.
Notes
The codification of the Act will appear in. the 1970 edition of the United States Code. This opinion treats the old Code sections as current.
Section 4006 was enacted in 1950. 64 Stat. 451. In 1956 the Postmaster General sought and obtained the power himself to enter an order, pending administrative proceedings under § 4006, that all mail' addressed to the defendant in the § 4006 proceeding be impounded. The order was to expire at the end of 20 days unless the Postmaster General sought in a federal district court, an order continuing the impounding. 70 Stat. 699. In 1959, extensive hearings, were held in the House on the Post Office’s request that the 20-day period be extended to 45 days, and that the standard of necessity be changed to “public interest.” Hearings on Obscene Matter Sent Through the Mail .before the Subcommittee on Postal Operations of the House Committee on Post Office and Civil Service, 86th Cong., 1st Sess., pts. 1, 2, and 3 (1959); Hearings on-Detention of Mail for Temporary Periods before the House Committee on Post Office and Civil 'Service, 86th Cong., 1st Sess. (1959). Instead, Congress enacted § 4007 which stripped, the Postmaster General of his power to issue an interim order for toy period, and directed him to seek such an order in a federal district court. One Senate Report expressed misgivings when the Postmaster General-had originally sought the impounding power: “The committee recognizes .that even' in its present form the bill gives the Postmaster General extraordinary and summary powers to impose a substantial penalty by impounding a person’s mail for up to 20 days in advance of any hearing or any review by the courts. Such power is directly contrary to the letter and spirit of normal due process, as exemplified by the Administrative Procedure Act, which requires a hearing before any penalty may be imposed. The Post Office Department has made
Section 4007 also authorizes the Postmaster General to apply for an impounding order during the pendency of proceedings under 39 U. S. C. §4005 (1964 ed., Supp. V), now §3005. Section 4005, as amended (82 Stat. 1153), permits the return to the sender of any mail sent to the perpetrator of what the Postmaster General finds to be a scheme for .obtaining money by means of false representations. That section has been upheld against First Amendment attack.
Donaldson
v.
Read Magazine,
The order was sought with respect to a' single issue of one
We therefore have no occasion to consider the argument of ap-pellees that
Stanley
v.
Georgia,
In 1962,- three Justices of the Court stated: “[We have] ... no doubt that Congress could constitutionally authorize a noncriminal process in the nature of a judicial proceeding under closely defined procedural safeguards. But the suggestion that Congress may constitutionally authorize any process other than a fully .judicial one immediately raises the gravest doubts.”
Manual Enterprises
v.
Day,
The Judicial Officer is appointed by the Postmaster General to “perform such quasi-judicial duties as the Postmaster General may designate.” 39 U. S. C. § 308a. He functions as hearing examiner in many proceedings in addition to those under § 4006. The appellants argue that the Judicial Officer enjoys “many of the insulations that judges enjoy.” What the Constitution requires, however, is that a noncriminal censoring process require govemmentally initiated full judicial participation. ■ Clearly, § 4006 does not so provide.
The Court said in
Freedman
v.
Maryland
that the procedure considered in
Kingsley Books, Inc.
v.
Brown,
This provision was added at the request of Postmaster General Summerfield who desired it expressly to forestall judicial review pending completion of the administrative proceeding. ' “This would guarantee that counsel for a mailer will not be able to raise successfully a bar to all further administrative proceedings in a case in which the Government failed to prevail .on its motion for a preliminary injunction.” Letter from Arthur E. Summerfield, Postmaster General, to Senator Olin D. Johnston, Chairman, Senate Committee on Post Office and Civil Service, U. S. Code Cong. & Admin. News, 86th Cong., 2d Sess., 3249 (1960), In 1959, Postmaster General Summer-field had testified:
“In spite of the frustrations and the legal complications, and even the court decisions [which the Postmaster General had described as handing down 'the'very broad definition of obscenity’], I feel, a responsibility to the public to attempt to prevent the use of the mails for indecent material, and to seek indictments and prosecutions for
Appellants point out that orders under §§ 4006 and 4007 generally allow the addressee to open his mail at the post office and receive any first class mail demonstrated clearly not to be connected with the allegedly unlawful use. This provision is provided in light of 39 U. S. C. § 4057 which provides that “[o]nly an employee opening dead mail by authority of the Postmaster General, or a person holding a search warrant authorized by law may open any letter or parcel of the first class which is in the custody of the Department.” See also 39 CFR § 117.1. But, query whether such provision of the order requires an “official act,”
viz.,
examining the mail, which constitutes an unconstitutional limitation on the addressee’s First Amendment rights.
Lamont
v.
Postmaster General,
