The Communist Party of the United States of America appeals its conviction under § 7 and § 15 of the Subversive Activities Control Act
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for failure to comply with an order of the Subversive Activities Control Board. That order, entered in proceedings commenced some thirteen years ago, found the Party to be a Communist-action organization within the meaning of § 3(3) of the Act and required it to register and submit information under § 7 of the Act. The Supreme Court sustained the order. Communist Party v. Subversive Activities Control Board,
The Act requires each organization found by the Board to be a Communist-action organization to register as such with the Attorney General [§ 7(a)], and file an accompanying statement [§ 7(d)] containing its name and the address of its principal office, the names of its officers and members during the preceding year (together with their aliases), an account of money received and spent during the preceding year (including sources *810 and purposes), and a list of the organization’s printing presses. Both the registration and the statement must be completed on forms prescribed by the Attorney General; by present regulation, 28 C.F.R. §§ 11.200-11.207, these forms are IS-51a (registration) and IS-51 (information). Also by regulation, the completed forms must be signed, either by an officer of the organization, or by a “member, employee, attorney, agent, or other person.” If a non-officer signs, he must certify that the organization authorized him to complete and submit the forms. 3 Failure to register or file the statement within thirty days after the order becomes final [§ 7(c) (3)] subjects the organization to a fine of up to $10,000 [§ 15(a) (1)], with each day of failure to register counting as a separate offense [§ 15(a)],
After the Board’s order in this case became final upon entry of the Supreme Court’s mandate on October 20, 1961, the Party had until November 19 to register without penalty. Before then, the Attorney General received a letter on Party stationery, dated November 10 and signed only with the Party seal, stating that the Party’s officers declined, for fear of self-incrimination, to submit the forms or to authorize anyone to submit them:
These declinations are made by each officer in the exercise of his privilege under the Fifth Amendment to the Constitution not to be a witness against himself. The officers have adopted this means of asserting their respective constitutional privileges because a claim of privilege made in the name of an officer would tend to incriminate him and might constitute a waiver of his privilege.
The Attorney General replied by telegram on November 17, rejecting the claims of privilege contained in the Party’s letter and also rejecting the letter as compliance with the order to register. The Party took no further action.
On December 1, the indictment herein was returned. It charged the Party with eleven counts of failing to register
(one
for each day between November 20 and November 30), and one count of failing to file the statement. At trial, the Party’s failure to register and to file the statement was stipulated. The Government called only one witness. He testified that he had attended a press conference on June 8, 1961 (immediately after the Supreme Court’s decision) at which Gus Plall announced the Party’s intention not to comply.
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The Party called no witnesses. Before trial the Party moved to dismiss the indictment, and at the end of the trial it moved for a judgment of acquittal. In both these motions the Party argued,
inter alia,
that its failure to comply was legally justified because the regulations accompanying § 7 require the registration and information forms to be signed by a natural person, and under Patricia Blau v. United States,
The motions to dismiss and for acquittal were denied. The jury was instructed that no issue of self-incrimination was before it, the critical question being whether the Party’s failure to comply was intentional rather than accidental or inadvertent. A verdict of guilty was returned on all twelve counts. The court imposed the maximum sentence, fines totaling $120,000, and the Party brought this appeal. We disagree with the trial court’s disposition of the self-incrimination issues. 5
The regulations accompanying § 7 of the Act imposed a duty upon the Party to file certain forms signed by a natural person. To sustain a criminal charge for failure to comply, it must appear that someone was available who was either legally bound or willing to sign. Ordinarily, proof of this essential element may be supplied by presumptions that (1) an organization’s legal obligation devolves upon its officers, whose failure to execute the obligation makes the organization liable; and (2) if an officer has legal justification for refusing to act, the organization can provide someone else who will act for it. The question before us is whether these presumptions apply in the circumstances of this case.
This problem must be viewed against the background of American history during the past generation. That history shows that the Communist Party does not stand before the law as an ordinary political group. The Party’s special status does not arise from the unpopularity of its views, or the public opprobrium attaching to it and its adherents. See Communist Party v. Subversive Activities Control Board,
Most critical for present purposes are the criminal sanctions. Since 1940, the *812 Smith Act has threatened with fine and imprisonment anyone who:
“organizes or helps or attempts to organize any society, group, or assembly of persons who teach, advocate, or encourage the overthrow or destruction of any [government in the United States] by force or violence ; or becomes or is a member of, or affiliates with, any such society, group, or assembly of persons, knowing the purposes thereof.” [18 U.S.C. § 2385] 9
And with the successful application of the membership clause in Scales v. United States, supra, it is not necessary to prove that a defendant himself has taught, advocated, or encouraged the overthrow or destruction of a government by force or violence. It must be shown that the organization advocates the overthrow, see Noto v. United States,
Sec. 2. “The Congress finds and declares that the Communist Party of the United States, although purportedly a political party, is in fact an instrumentality of a conspiracy to overthrow the Government of the United States. * * * Therefore, the Communist Party should be outlawed. [50 U.S.C. § 841]
And the Act proceeds:
Sec. 3. “The Communist Party of the United States * * * [is] not entitled to any of the rights, privileges, and immunities attendant upon legal bodies created under the jurisdiction of the laws of the United States or any political subdivision thereof.” [50 U.S.C. § 842]
“It shall be unlawful for any person knowingly to combine, conspire, or agree with any other person to perform any act which would substantially contribute to the establishment within the United States of a totalitarian dictatorship * * * the direction and control of which is to be vested in, or exercised by or under the domination or control of, any foreign government, foreign organization, or foreign individual * * *.» 50 U.S.C. § 783(a).
The conclusion is inescapable that the Communist Party is sui generis. The legislative array facing the Party virtually makes it a criminal conspiracy per se. Confirmation of this status is contained in a series of Supreme Court cases holding that mere association with the Communist Party presents sufficient threat of criminal prosecution to support a claim of the privilege against self-incrimination. Patricia Blau v. United States,
By assuming office in an organization one does not waive his privilege against self-incrimination, even in matters closely related to the organization’s affairs. Curcio v. United States,
Other cases indicate strongly that when the mere act of producing information is incriminating, the privilege is available even if it malíes the information unavailable. Thus, although an officer who produces books and records may be required to supply “auxiliary information,” such as authentication of the items produced, United States v. Austin-Bagley Corp.,
Russell v. United States,
This does not exhaust the Party’s responsibility. The regulations permit the forms to be signed by a “member, employee, attorney, agent, or other person.” And it has been held in cases involving the duty of an organization to provide information that if the person selected by the organization to act on its behalf claims the privilege against self-incrimination, it must select someone else who can act without incriminating himself:
“It will thus be the clear duty of the corporation to select an officer or agent for the above purpose, who will not have personally participated in anywise in any such questionable transaction, and who thus cannot be incriminated by such answers. This the corporation can easily do under its broad corporate powers, using even its attorney, for instance, whose duty it would then be to “furnish such information as is available to the party.”
United States v. 42 Jars,
We must therefore consider who has the burden of such proof. Ordinarily the government must prove beyond a reasonable doubt each element of the offense charged. But where the pertinent information is much more readily available to the defendant than to the government, the burden may be shifted to him, provided this can be done “without subjecting the accused to hardship or oppression.” Morrison v. California,
The government presented no evidence that a volunteer was available. Gus Hall’s statement that the Party would not comply with the Act and the Party’s letter saying the officers refused to authorize anyone to execute the forms, tended to establish only that the Party did not wish to comply and did not try to get someone to act on its behalf. Where, as here, an element of the offense requires proof that the defendant could have complied, it is not established merely by proof that the defendant had no intention of complying.
In Heikkinen v. United States,
We do not hold that an organization may claim the privilege against self-incrimination, nor that an individual may claim the privilege on behalf of an organization or its members. We express no opinion concerning the Communist Party’s duty to submit the data demanded. We hold only that the availability of someone to sign the forms was an element of the offense; that the officers, who should otherwise have signed, were unavailable by reason of their valid claim of the privilege against self-incrimination; that the government had the burden of showing that a volunteer was available; and that its failure to discharge this burden requires reversal of the conviction. Because the issues are novel, it seems “just under the circumstances,” 28 U.S.C. § 2106, to afford the government an opportunity to present the proof required by our holding. The ease is remanded to the District Court “with instructions to grant a new trial if the Government shall request it; or, absent such request, to enter a judgment of acquittal.” Wright v. United States,
So ordered.
Notes
. Title I of the Internal Security Act of Sept. 23, 1950, 64 Stat. 987, 50 U.S.C. § 781 et seq. (1958).
. Tlie full course of the litigation may be traced through the following citations:
. When the 1961 Communist Party case was decided, and until October 7, 1961, a single form, ISA-1, was prescribed for both registration and information. This form required the signatures of all “partners, officers, and directors, including the members of the governing body of the organization.” It did not include the alternative of signing by an “other person.”
. Seated with Gus Hall at the press conference were Benjamin Davis and Elizabeth Gurley Flynn. Although the Government alleges that all three occupy positions of leadership in the Party as a matter of “common knowledge,” there is nothing in the record to indicate their status other than the tenor of Gus Hall’s remarks and testimony that the press conference took place at Communist Party headquarters.
. In the 1961
Communist Party
case, the Party argued that its inability to register unless someone incriminated himself by signing the prescribed registration forms made the Act unconstitutional. But the Supreme Court refused to consider any self-incrimination issues until there was an actual claim of the privilege. And, the Court added, if no claim was made because of fear that a claimant would incriminate himself merely by revealing his identity, the issue would be reached if and when the Party raised it to avoid concrete legal harm, “when enforcement proceedings for failure to register are instituted against the Party.”
. See, e.
g.,
Shaughnessy v. United States ex rel. Mezei,
. See,
e. g.,
Flemming v. Nestor,
. See,
e. g.,
Adler v. Board of Education,
. Compare § 4(a) of the Subversive Activities Control Act:
. Section 4(f) of the Subversive Activities Control Act, the immunity provision, is inadequate since it prevents only introduction of the fact of registration into evidence at a criminal trial and does not prevent the Government from using knowledge gained from registration to acquire evidence which can be introduced. Counselman v. Hitchcock,
. We need not decide whether the Communist Party has standing to “assert the [privilege] of its officers,” see Communist Party v. Subversive Activities Control Board,
. Yet a volunteer not intimately associated with the Party might perhaps make his availability known to the government.
. In Boyd v. United States,
. In United States v. Fleischman,
. 39 Stat. 890 (1917), as amended, 8 U.S.C. § 1252(e).
. Although the word “willful” does not appear in § 15, we think willfulness is a necessary element of the crime of failing to register, as the government recognized in the indictment.
