28 F. Cas. 112 | S.D.N.Y. | 1843
(charging jury). It is said by counsel that if you exclude every article which is in itself of an indecent character, you - must necessarily prevent the importation of many of the fine arts. But let us look at what was the evident intent of the legislature in passing this law. It does not say that articles merely indelicate or indecent shall be confiscated. It-says something more. It says, “All indecent and obscene paintings,” &c. No language could be more significant to mark out the limits intended by the legislature, or to show more manifestly that they meant only productions offensive-to modesty, and subversive of morality, and that they did not intend to prohibit the productions of a higher order in the fine arts. If, for instance, it was a painting or statue of the human figure, although perfectly naked, and so far, in a limited acceptation of the word, indecent, yet it could not be called obscene. But if, when the case is given to the jury, they say that the painting