Any appellate tribunal which ventures into the realm of obscenity does so with trepidation. The conscience of the Federal commu *557 nity as interpreted by the United States Supreme Court must be petrified to obscenity by now. It has said about the four-letter word in question here:
"For, while the particular four-letter word being litigated here is perhaps more distasteful than most others of its genre, it is nevertheless often true that one man’s vulgarity is another’s lyric.” Cohen, infra, at 25.
Obscenity is thus cast as subjective — a relative matter.
Defendants Tova Klein and Jane Williams were convicted on September 21, 1972, by a 50th District Court jury of violating Pontiac Ordinance No. 728, § 2A(20a), which prohibits the use of "indecent, profane, or obscene language in the presence of others”. They were sentenced to pay a fine and now appeal to this Court from the affirmance of their convictions and sentences by the Oakland County Circuit Court. The appeal is by leave granted pursuant to GCR 1963, 803.3; 806.2.
After the testimony had been completed, the defendants submitted several written requests for jury instructions to the trial judge. One of the requested instructions would have told the jury that they could not convict the defendants without first finding that they had uttered "fighting words” as that term is used in
Chaplinsky v New Hampshire,
*558
We are of the unanimous opinion
1
that the trial judge instructed on the law as it should be but not as it is. It is ridiculous to perpetuate an artificial characterization of obscenity as constituting "fighting words”. We would ordinarily be disposed to take judicial notice that many members of society are not fighters. Does this illusive concept require motivation to combat from all who are exposed to the utterance? We think not but we are told by the highest court that "God damned mother fucking police” must be determined by the trier of fact to be fighting words to sustain a conviction for violation of a breach of peace ordinance.
Lewis v New Orleans,
While there are several types of speech which may properly be punished by the states, it appears that the "fighting words” classification is the only one which might properly have been applied to the defendants’ conduct in the present case.
Cohen v California,
We do not, however, strike down the ordinance itself. Rather, we hold that the interpretation employed by the trial judge was too broad. Therefore, the plaintiff city may, if it chooses, once again bring the defendants to trial under the *559 ordinance. However, at any future trial, an instruction as requested by the defendants at their first trial must be given.
Reversed.
Notes
Our personal opinions are irrelevant.
Grand Rapids City Attorney v Bloss,
