The three named defendants were convicted, after a jury trial, on eight counts of an indictment charging them with knowing use of the mails for carriage of obscene non-mailable matter, in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 1461. They were also convicted at the same trial on eight counts charging them with knowing use of the mails for the carriage of non-mailable matter containing advertisements giving information as to where obscene matter might be obtained, also in violation of section 1461.
The matter found to be obscene consisted for the most part of printed booklets containing photographs and illustrations pertaining to nudity, masochism, flagellation, and lesbianism, together with accompanying text material. One count pertained to a phonograph record entitled “Tortura, the Sounds of Pain and Pleasure.”
Defendants’ primary argument on this appeal is that the materials in question are not obscene or unlawful when considered against proper constitutional standards. 1 This contention involves the *1053 Free Speech Guaranty of the First Amendment to the United States Constitution.
As initially stated in Roth v. United States,
“(a) the dominant theme of the material taken as a whole appeals ,to a prurient interest in sex; (b) the material is patently offensive because it affronts contemporary community standards relating to the description or representation of sexual matters; and (c) the material is utterly without redeeming social value.”383 U.S. at 418 ,86 S.Ct. at 977 .
In a close case, evidence of pandering may be considered in determining whether any or all of these elements of the test have been met. Ginzburg v. United States,
At the outset of the trial the Assistant United States Attorney who tried the case stated that he and defendants’ counsel were in agreement that “ * * * there is no case without pandering.” In further explanation of his position, the prosecutor stated that the reason the materials are obscene “ * * * is because of the pandering element involved in this case * * Later, during the first morning of the trial, Government counsel told the trial court that the materials in question “became obscene when pandered.” Government counsel also expressly stipulated in open court that the photographic and textual materials pertaining to bondage and flagellation are not obscene “to the averge person.”
We need not decide whether the Government was well-advised in so limiting the scope of its case. The fact is that it did so, and in presenting their defense, defendants were entitled to rely thereon. Thus the trial proceeded on the agreed proposition that because of uncertainty as .to whether the three enumerated requirements of the obscenity test had been met, the Government could prevail only if there was sufficient evidence of pandering to resolve all ambiguity and doubt against defendants. See Ginzburg v. United States,
We find very little evidence of pandering in the record; certainly nothing approaching the evidence of that kind which tipped the scales in favor of conviction in Ginzburg. We are therefore compelled to conclude that, in view of the Government’s concessions and stipulation at the outset of the trial, the record before us does not support a jury determination in this case that the materials here in question are obscene in the constitutional sense.
In reaching this conclusion we have been guided by several recent decisions of the Supreme Court which indicate what types of activities do not constitute pandering in the
Ginzburg
sense. In one of these decisions, Redrup v. New York,
Other activities which the Supreme Court evidently does not consider to be
*1054
pandering are demonstrated in a series of one-sentence reversals citing
Redrup
as authority. Aday v. United States,
In Grant v. United States,
Under the special circumstances of this case, as described above, and in the light of the controlling Supreme Court decisions which we have cited, we hold the convictions of defendants under 18 U.S.C. § 1461 cannot stand. Therefore, without reaching any additional arguments advanced by defendants on this appeal (see note 1), we reverse the judgments and remand the cause for dismissal of the indictment.
Notes
. On appeal defendants also presented the following arguments: (1) The Government produced no evidence that the materials affront contemporary national standards relating to the description or representation of sexual matters; (2) the Government prosecutor was guilty of prejudicial misconduct at the trial in reading from exhibits during cross-examination without asking questions concerning the items read; (3) the trial court failed to conform to Rule 30, Federal Rules of Criminal Procedure, when it omitted frpm an instruction material which the court had previously advised counsel should be included; (4) the trial court erroneously told the jury that the materials were obscene if, in the judgment of the jury, “ * * * they offend the common conscience of the community by present-day standards * * * ”; (5) the trial court erred in permitting the prosecution to read from the materials piecemeal and not as a whole; (6) the trial court erred in refusing to permit defendants to offer evidence of United States Supreme Court rulings on comparable material; and (7) the evidence does not support a finding that defendants knew the materials to be obscene.
. See also, Mishkin v. New York,
. For additional federal eases see Central Magazine Sales, Ltd. v. United States,
. Mazes v. Ohio,
