Lead Opinion
These two cases arose under the Declaratory Judgment Act of June 14, 1934, 48 Stat. 955, as amended, now 28 U. S. C. (1958 ed.) §§ 2201 and 2202. The plaintiff, an educational publishing corporation, asked defendant, Vice Admiral Rickover, for leave to publish, to an undefined extent, uncopyrighted speeches he had theretofore delivered. He refused on the ground that what he claimed to be exclusive publishing rights had been sold
The Declaratory Judgment Act was an authorization, not a command. It gave the federal courts competence to make a declaration of rights; it did not impose a duty to do so. Brillhart v. Excess Ins. Co.,
In these cases we are asked to determine matters of serious public concern. They relate to claims to in tel-
The decisions of the courts below rested on an Agreed Statement of Facts which sketchily summarized the circumstances of the preparation and of the delivery of the speeches in controversy in relation to the Vice Admiral’s official duties. The nature and scope of his duties were not clearly defined and less than an adequate exposition of the use by him of government facilities and government personnel in the preparation of these speeches was given. Administrative practice, insofar as it may relevantly shed light, was not explored. The Agreed Statement of Facts was in part phrased, modified and interpreted in the course of a running exchange between trial judge and counsel. The extent of the agreement of counsel to the Agreed Statement of Facts was in part explained in the course of oral argument in the District Court. None of the undetailed and loose, if not ambiguous, statements in the Agreed Statement of Facts was subject to the safeguards of critical probing through examination and cross-examination. This is all the more disturbing where vital public interests are implicated in a requested declaration and the Government asserted no claim (indeed obliquely may be deemed not to have disapproved of the defendant’s claim) although the Government was invited to appear in the litigation as amicus curiae and chose not
Accordingly, the judgment of the Court of Appeals is vacated, with direction to return the case to the District Court for disposition not inconsistent with this opinion.
It is so ordered.
Concurrence Opinion
concurring.
It is conceded that the Declaratory Judgment Act is an authorization, not a command — a conclusion as well settled as is the proposition that the jurisdiction of federal courts is confined to “cases” or “controversies.” Aetna Life Ins. Co. v. Haworth,
At times the question of the “ripeness” of an issue for judicial review is brigaded with the appropriateness of declaratory relief. In Public Service Comm’n v. Wycoff Co.,
At other times the issue is said to be “abstract” because of the lack of immediacy in the threatened enforcement of a law. Thus, a person must risk going to jail or losing his job to get relief. That was true in Poe v. Ullman,
The list is not complete. But these cases illustrate the restrictive nature of the judge-made rules which have made the federal courts so inhospitable to litigation to vindicate private rights. At no time has the Court been wholly consistent; nor have I. Compare Connecticut Ins. Co. v. Moore,
Evers v. Dwyer,
Notes
“Back in 1923, the Court went further and held that the mere fact that a person could show he paid federal taxes made no difference in this respect and gave him no standing to challenge an act of Congress appropriating public funds. The Court recognized that an unconstitutional spending of public money might conceivably necessitate a rise in subsequent tax levies. Nevertheless it held that the causal connection between any specific expenditure and future tax rates would be too remote and uncertain to constitute an immediate
“Rulings of this kind, designed to keep peace among the departments of government, are eminently sensible as over-all policies. Yet they also provide a way to immunize a bad law from attack in the courts: one need only frame the law in such a way as to violate the basic rights of nobody in particular but everybody in general, that is, of the entire American people. Then, since no one can point to an injury that is distinguishable from his neighbors’, no one can come into court and challenge the legislation!” Edmond Cahn, How to Destroy the Churches, Harper’s Magazine, Nov. 1961, p. 36.
And see Mitchell v. United States,
“He is an American citizen free to travel, and he is entitled to go by this particular route whenever he chooses to take it and in that event to have facilities for his journey without any discrimination against him which the Interstate Commerce Act forbids.” Id., at 93.
Dissenting Opinion
dissenting.
With respect to those of Admiral Rickover’s speeches written and delivered prior to December 1, 1958,1 would affirm. The record made below and filed here is, I believe, adequate to support the judgment of the Court of Appeals that the Admiral’s practice of distributing numerous copies of his speeches, without limitations as to the persons who would receive them or the purposes to which they would be put by the recipients, and without
In the light of these views, I find it unnecessary to pass now on the questions raised in No. 36, and would dismiss that case as premature.
Dissenting Opinion
dissenting.
The basic issue which brought these cases here was whether Admiral Rickover’s speeches were copyrightable in light of the following provision of the Copyright Act: “No copyright shall subsist in . . . any publication of the United States Government.” (17 U. S. C. § 8.) As I see it, decision of that issue turns not merely on whether such speeches were made by the Admiral in the “line of duty,” but also, and in my view more fundamentally, on whether such speeches were in any event “publication [s] of the United States Government.” In my opinion the record is sufficient to require adjudication on both aspects of that issue, and on this phase of the controversy I agree with the result reached by the Court of Appeals. I also agree with its determination as to the adequacy of the copyright notice affixed to speeches delivered after December 1, 1958.
However, I consider the record inadequate to justify adjudication as to whether Admiral Rickover’s right to copyright was lost with respect to speeches delivered
The stipulation states that with respect to 20 of the 22 speeches made before December 1, 1958, “Admiral Riekover mailed some to individuals who had requested copies or who Admiral Riekover believed would be interested in the subject. Some were sent by Admiral Riekover ... to the sponsor of the speech to be made available to the press and others at the place where the speech was to be delivered.” (Emphasis added.) It appears from the stipulation that no further distribution other than for press use was ever made. Whether the foregoing publications were general enough to amount to a dedication to the public of all or any of these speeches depends on more precise information than is afforded by the stipulation.
