Rev. B. Elton COX, Appellant, v. STATE OF LOUISIANA, Appellee.
No. 22657.
United States Court of Appeals Fifth Circuit.
June 29, 1965.
348 F.2d 750
Judgment affirmed as to amount of tax assessments and interest thereon, reversed and remanded for trial as to fraud penalties and interest thereon.
Nils R. Douglas, New Orleans, La., Murphy W. Bell, Baton Rouge, La., for appellant.
Ralph L. Roy, Asst. Dist. Atty., Baton Rouge, La., for appellee.
Before HUTCHESON, BROWN, and WISDOM, Circuit Judges.
WISDOM, Circuit Judge:
The Reverend B. Elton Cox, defendant in a criminal cause pending in the 19th Judicial District for the Parish of East Baton Rouge, Louisiana, removed the cause to the United States District Court for the Eastern District of Louisiana, Baton Rouge Division. The district court remanded the cause to the state court. Cox applied to this Court for a stay of the remand order pending his appeal of the order. We find that the peti
The allegations of the petition for removal must be accepted as true for purposes of determining whether the petition states a good claim for removal. These allegations show a “planned prosecutorial misuse of a [state criminal] statute“.1
In 1961 Cox, a Negro minister active in the civil rights movement, was arrested the day following a civil rights demonstration in Baton Rouge. The State indicted Cox on a number of charges, one of which was that he had obstructed justice by demonstrating near the courthouse in violation of Louisiana law.2
As the petition sets forth, in 1965, shortly after the Supreme Court decided Cox v. State of Louisiana the district attorney for the Parish of East Baton Rouge, Louisiana, filed in the original proceeding a new bill of information against Cox, this time charging him with “attempting” to obstruct justice. The bill is based on the identical conduct that in 1961 led to the arrest and conviction of Cox on the charge of “obstructing justice“.
In Cox v. State of Louisiana, the Supreme Court set aside this conviction on the ground that it violated due process of law. The Court found that the “record here clearly shows that the [police and city] officials * * * gave permission for the demonstration to take place across the street from the courthouse“. The Court stated emphatically that nothing in its opinion should be “interpreted as sanctioning riotous conduct in any form“. There “can be no question that a State has a legitimate interest in protecting its judicial system from the pressures which picketing near a courthouse
In the teeth of this holding, the district attorney is renewing the charges against Cox. The State now seeks to prosecute the petitioner for the alleged crime of “attempting” to do what the Supreme Court, on the merits, decided was not a violation of the law.
The second prosecution is without any hope of success. The district attorney‘s transparent purpose is to harass and punish the petitioner for his leadership in the civil rights movement, and to deter him and others from exercising rights of free speech and assembly in Louisiana—in this instance, by advocating integration of public accommodations.
A civil complaint asserting such an abuse of the prosecutorial function would state a claim under the Civil Rights Act,
The general principle, basic to American Federalism, that United States courts usually should refrain from interfering with state courts’ enforcing local laws is unassailable. But the sharp edge of the Supremacy Clause cuts across all such generalizations. When a State, under the pretext of preserving law and order uses local laws, valid on their face, to harass and punish citizens for the exercise of their constitutional rights or federally protected statutory rights, the general principle must yield to the exception: the federal system is imperiled.
This Court, in many different contexts, has faced up to the reality that a narrowly drawn, non-discriminatory, apparently constitutional criminal law, or other local law, or rule of court, may have been designed to provide a subtle means of discrimination or may be subverted by being unconstitutionally applied. Prompt access to the federal court may be the only relief that will make meaningful to the individual the rights placed in jeopardy.5 Moreover, the effect of arrest and prosecution and perhaps a long sentence unfitted to the crime will extend far beyond the individual defendant.6 In these circumstances there is no basis for the application of comity as a principle of federalism.7 And no reason for a court to be bound by obsolete standards for determining discrimination prevailing at the time the early removal cases were decided.8
In the context of the removal statute,
Rachel involved prosecutions of sit-in demonstrators under a Georgia anti-trespass statute. The statue was valid on its face and there was no showing that the defendant would not have a fair trial in the Georgia courts. Relying on Hamm v. City of Rock Hill, 1964, 379 U.S. 306, 85 S.Ct. 384, 13 L.Ed.2d 300, we allowed removal under
“Congress, while carving out rights and immunities in the area of civil rights, has provided a jurisdictional basis for efficiently and appropriately protecting those rights and im
munities in a federal forum. The provision of this protective forum is not limited by the States’ obligation, under the Supremacy Clause, to protect federally guaranteed civil rights as zealously as would a federal court. That there is such an obligation on State tribunals is true, and vital, but it is irrelevant here. Theoretically, there is no need for any federal jurisdiction at all—except that of the Supreme Court—because State courts are required to protect federally created rights. Nevertheless, the power of Congress to provide a federal forum also to protect such rights is undoubted. Such power was exercised in enacting § 1443(1) .”
Peacock extended the Rachel principle to a state statute discriminatorily applied, contrary to the United States Constitution. In Peacock the defendants were charged with obstructing public streets in violation of a narrowly drawn Mississippi statute valid on its face. We held that the petition stated a good claim for removal on the ground that if the statute were being applied as alleged, convictions under the statute would violate the equal protection clause. Judge Bell, for the Court, said:
“The rationale of Rachel is inescapably applicable here, since both cases involve the denial of equal rights through statutory applica
tion, rather than through some infirmity appearing on the face of the state statute. * * * In short, we do not read [Kentucky v. Powers and other early] cases as establishing that the denial of equal civil rights must appear on the face of the state constitution or statute rather than in its application where the alleged denial of rights, as here, had its inception in the arrest and charge. They dealt only with the systematic exclusion question, a question which in turn goes to the very heart of the state judicial process, and federalism may have indicated that the remedy in such situations in the first instance should be left to the state courts. We would not expand the teaching of these cases to include state denials of equal civil rights through the unconstitutional application of a statute in situations which are not a part of the state judicial system but which, on the contrary, arise in the administration of a statute in the arresting and charging process. * * * We therefore hold that a good claim for removal under § 1443(1) is stated by allegations that a state statute has been applied prior to trial so as to deprive an accused of his equal civil rights in that the arrest and charge under the statute were effected for reasons of racial discrimination. * * * However, we deal here only with what allegations are sufficient to prevent remand without a hearing. * * * It follows that the District Court erred in remanding these cases to the state court without a hearing.”
Cox‘s petition presents a strong case for removal. Once Cox was over the hurdle of the city and police officials’ approval of the location of the demonstration, Cox‘s conduct was protected by the Civil Rights Act, as was Rachel‘s conduct, and by the equal protection clause of the Constitution, as was Peacock‘s conduct. What makes Cox‘s petition particularly strong is that apparently the parish district attorney is deliberately attempting to frustrate the protective mandate of the United States Supreme Court. This case therefore presents a sharper challenge to the Supremacy Clause than Rachel and Peacock presented. In addition, in the Georgia cases there was no indication of a prosecution in bad faith and no assertion that the defendants would be unable, as Cox alleges, to vindicate their rights in the state courts.9
There is a common denominator in Rachel, Peacock, and Cox: the defend
In Rachel, Peacock, and Cox, and in similar cases, there is no federal invasion of states’ rights. Instead, there is rightful federal interposition under the Supremacy Clause of the Constitution to protect the individual citizen against state invasion of federal rights.
HUTCHESON, Circuit Judge (concurring specially):
I concur in the result.
