LAMBERT v. CALIFORNIA
No. 47
Supreme Court of the United States
December 16, 1957
Restored to the docket for reargument June 3, 1957
355 U.S. 225
Samuel C. McMorris argued and reargued the cause and filed a brief for appellant.
Warren M. Christopher reargued the cause, as amicus curiae, in support of the appellant, at the invitation of the Court, 354 U. S. 936, and also filed a brief.
Philip E. Grey argued and reargued the cause for аppellee. With him on the briefs was Roger Arnebergh.
Clarence A. Linn, Assistant Attorney General of California, reargued the cause and filed a brief for appellee pursuant to an invitation of the Court, 353 U. S. 979. With him on the brief was Edmund G. Brown, Attorney General.
Section 52.38 (a) of the Los Angeles Municipal Code defines “сonvicted person” as follows:
“Any person who, subsequent to January 1, 1921, has been or hereafter is convicted of an offense punishable as a felony in the State of California, or who has been or who is hereafter convicted of any offense in any place other than the State of California, which offense, if committed in the State of California, would have been punishable as a felony.”
Section 52.39 provides that it shall be unlawful for “any convictеd person” to be or remain in Los Angeles for a period of more than five days without registering; it requires any person having a place of abode outside the city to register if he comes into the city on five occasions оr more during a 30-day period; and it prescribes the information to be furnished the Chief of Police on registering.
Section 52.43 (b) makes the failure to register a continuing offense, each day‘s failure constituting a separate offense.
Appellant, arrested on suspicion of another offense, was charged with a violation of this registration law.* The evidence showed that she had been at the time of her arrest a resident of Los Angeles for over seven years. Within that period she had been convicted in Los Angeles of the crime of forgery, an offense which California punishes as a felony. Though convicted of a crime punishable as a felony, she had not at the time of her arrest rеgistered under the Municipal Code. At the trial, appel
The registration provision, carrying criminal penalties, applies if a person has been convicted “of an offense punishable as a felony in the Statе of California” or, in case he has been convicted in another State, if the offense “would have been punishable as a felony” had it been committed in California. No element of willfulness is by terms included in the ordinance nor read into it by the California court as a condition necessary for a conviction.
We must assume that appellant had no actual knowledge of the requirement that she register under this ordinance, as she offered proof of this dеfense which was refused. The question is whether a registration act of this character violates due process where it is applied to a person who has no actual knowledge of his duty to register, and where no showing is made оf the probability of such knowledge.
Reversed.
MR. JUSTICE BURTON dissents because he believes that, as applied to this appellant, the ordinance does not violate her constitutional rights.
MR. JUSTICE FRANKFURTER, whom MR. JUSTICE HARLAN and MR. JUSTICE WHITTAKER join, dissenting.
The present laws of the United States and of the forty-eight States are thick with provisions that commаnd that some things not be done and others be done, although persons convicted under such provisions may have had no awareness of what the law required or that what they did was wrongdoing. The body of decisions sustaining such legislation, including innumerаble registration laws, is almost as voluminous as the legislation itself. The matter is summarized in United States v. Balint, 258 U. S. 250, 252: “Many instances of this are to be found in regulatory measures in the exercise of what is called the police power where the emphasis of thе statute is evidently upon achievement of some social betterment rather than the punishment of the crimes as in cases of mala in se.”
Surely there can hardly be a difference as a matter of fairness, of hardship, or of justice, if onе may invoke it, between the case of a person wholly innocent of wrongdoing, in the sense that he was not remotely conscious of violating any law, who is imprisoned for five years for conduct relating to narcotics, and the сase of another person who is placed on probation for three years on condition that she pay $250, for failure, as a local resident, convicted under local law of a felony, to register under
But what the Court here does is to draw a constitutional line between a State‘s requirement of doing and not doing. What is this but a return to Year Book distinctions between feasance and nоnfeasance—a distinction that may have significance in the evolution of common-law notions of liability, but is inadmissible as a line between constitutionality and unconstitutionality. One can be confident that Mr. Justice Holmes would have been the last to draw such a line. What he wrote about “blameworthiness” is worth quoting in its context:
“It is not intended to deny that criminal liability, as well as civil, is founded on blameworthiness. Such a denial would shock the moral sense of any civilized community; or, to рut it another way, a law which punished conduct which would not be blameworthy in the average member of the community would be too severe for that community to bear.” (This pas-
If the generalization that underlies, and alone can justify, this decision were to be given its relevant scope, a whole volume of the United States Reports would be required to document in detail the legislation in this country that would fall or be impaired. I abstain from entering upon a consideration of such legislation, and adjudications upon it, because I feel confident that the present decision will turn out to be an isоlated deviation from the strong current of precedents—a derelict on the waters of the law. Accordingly, I content myself with dissenting.
