When this case was last before us, we granted certiorari, vacated the judgment holding petitioners guilty of breach of the peace, and remanded the case to the Supreme Court of South Carolina “for further consideration in light of
Edwards
v.
South Carolina,
The South Carolina Supreme Court correctly concluded that our earlier remand did not amount to a final determination on the merits. * That order did, however, indicate that we found Edwards sufficiently analogous and, perhaps, decisive to compel re-examination of the case.
We now think
Edwards
and
Fields
control the result here. As in those cases, the petitioners here, while at a place where the State’s law did not forbid them to be, were engaged in the “peaceful expression of unpopular views.”
Edwards
v.
South Carolina,
Edwards
established that the “Fourteenth Amendment does not permit a State to make criminal the peaceful expression of unpopular views.”
Ibid.
As in
Edwards,
the South Carolina Supreme Court has here “defined a criminal offense so as to permit conviction of the petitioners if their speech 'stirred people to anger, invited public dispute, or brought about a condition of unrest. A conviction resting on any of those grounds may not stand.’
[Terminiello
v.
Chicago,
Notes
The South Carolina Supreme Court intimated that the rule of Edwards was designed to guide us in determining our review of state action. But Edwards states a rule based upon the Constitution of the United States which, under the Supremacy Clause, is binding upon state courts as well as upon federal courts.
