Thе defendant was charged with a violation of G. L. c. 56, § 41, which makes a crime of the writing, printing, posting or distribution of anonymous circulars and posters which are designed to aid or to defeat any candidate for nominаtion or election to any public office or any question submitted to the voters. 1
The defendant wrote a four page tabloid circular under the name “Saugus News Enquirer,” devoted to commentary generally critical of incumbent selectmen of Saugus who were candidates for reelection. The defendant arranged for the printing and distribution without charge of the circular two days before the election. The *94 dеfendants name and address did not appear on the circular, nor did the name of any other person or organization responsible for the publication. Rather, it stated that the “Saugus News Enquirer is owned by the Assоciation of Concerned Taxpayers, Box 54, Saugus, Mass.” There was no such organization or any Box 54 in Saugus in the name of such an association.
Prior to trial in the Superior Court, the defendant moved to dismiss the cоmplaint on the ground that § 41 violated art. 16 of the Declaration of Rights of the Constitution of the Commonwealth and the First and Fourteenth Amendments to the Constitution of the United States. The motion was denied. The case was triеd on a statement of agreed facts before a judge without a jury. The defendant was found guilty and sentenced to three months in a house of correction. He argues here his exception to the denial of his motion to dismiss the complaint.
The defendant argues that § 41 violates the First Amendment rights of nonvoters. 2 Assuming that § 41 applies to nonvoters, as literally it appears to do, a nonvoter who wishes to write, print, post or distributе a publication of the class described in § 41 must obtain some voter who will be “responsible therefor,” and whose name and residence must appear on the publication. There is no requirement that the nonvoter’s name appear on the publication with that of the voter. Thus any purpose of § 41 to disclose the source of all campaign related literature is not achieved. In fact, the statute аs applied to a nonvoter seems to encourage, or at least permit, a misrepresentation of the true source of the publication. More importantly, however, for First *95 Amendment purposes, § 41 imposes an unconstitutional prior restraint on a nonvoter’s exercise of First Amendment rights by requiring him to obtain the assent of a voter before publishing election literature. 3 Thus, even if the State properly could compel disclosure of the source of all such literature, § 41 restricts free expression by nonvoters. In this respect § 41 is unconstitutionally over-broad.
The defendant is entitled to argue the unconstitutional ovеrbreadth of § 41 as applied to nonvoters, even if he is a registered voter and even if his particular conduct in misrepresenting the source of his publication could be proscribed without violating any First Amendment rights. See
Broadrick
v.
Oklahoma,
If, in order to avoid its apparent overbreadth, we were to construe § 41 as applicable only to voters’ publications, the classification thereby created would be arbitrаry and, as the defendant argues, in violation of the defendant’s constitutional right to equal protection of the laws. There is no rational purpose served by requiring voters to identify their campaign literature while permitting non
*96
voters to express themselves anonymously. See
Hall-Omar Baking Co.
v.
Commissioner of Labor
&
Indus.
This view of the unconstitutionality of § 41 is the same as that adopted by the Supreme Court of California in
Canon
v.
Justice Court for the Lake Valley Judicial Dist. of El Dorado County,
Although from what we have said it is apparent that the defendant’s exception to the denial of his motion to dismiss the complaint must be sustained, we believe it appropriate to indicate that there are significant First Amendment problems with any statute which requires the author of a publication to reveal his identity.
In
Talley
v.
California,
Since the
Talley
decision, several courts have arrived at similar conclusions concerning statutes designed to compel
*97
the disclosure of the source of communications. See
Huntley
v.
Public Util. Commn. of Cal.
It seems clear that аny public interest in revealing the source of a communication so that the recipient may assess its content in light of that source does not furnish a constitutionally sufficient justification for a prohibition of all anonymous campaign literature.
In the Talley case, the Supreme Court left open the question whether a State constitutionally might require disclosure of the source of any printed material which was offensive, advocated unlawful conduct or was fraudulent or libellous. The statute before us deals with disclosure in connection with electioneering. It is not limited, however, to written material critical of a candidate or thе sponsors of a question to be voted on. It applies to all election related writings, including those which are wholly laudatory, and thus it clearly violates the teaching of the Talley case.
Some courts have indicated that carefully restricted disclosure legislation relating only to electioneering would survive a First Amendment challenge. See
Canon
v.
Justice Court for the Lake Valley Judicial Dist. of El Dorado County,
There is, however, significant authority that a disclosure requirement relating to election pamрhlets cannot survive a First Amendment challenge. See
Zwickler
v.
Koota,
In order to justify a restraint on protected expression, such as compulsory disclosure of the source of a political leaflet, the State must demonstrate that there is a compelling State interest in such a restraint.
Thomas
v.
Collins,
Exceptions sustained.
Notes
General Laws c. 56, § 41, as most recently amended by St. 1950, c. 88, reads as follows: “No candidate for nomination or election to public office or any other person shall write, print, post or distribute, or cause to be written, printed, posted or distributed, a circular or poster designed to aid or defeat any candidate for nomination or election to any public office, or designed to aid or defeat any question submitted to the voters, unless there appears upon such circular or poster in a conspicuous place either the names of the chairman and secretary, or of two officers, of the political or other organization issuing the same, or of some voter who is responsible therefor, with his name and residence, and the street and number thereof, if any.
“Violation of this section shall be punished by imprisonment for not more than six months.”
Although the statement of agreed facts does not state whether the defendant was a registered voter, it makes no difference because of the view we take of § 41.
The defendant relies on art. 16 of the Declaration of Rights in his argument, but advances no separate contentions under the State Constitution.
To construe § 41 to permit a nonvoter to satisfy the obligations of this criminal statute by disclosing his own name and residence would be plainly inconsistent with the language of § 41.
We note that G. L. c. 56, § 39, as amended by St. 1973, c. 1226, presents the same problem as § 41.
Prior to the
Talley
decision, several State courts upheld disclosure statutes somewhat similar to § 41. In
State
v.
Freeman,
