Walter C. Royal was arrested nearly six years ago while wearing upside down upon his sleeve a small American flag that was partly covered by another patch. He was convicted under New Hampshire’s then flag desecration statute, N.H.Rev.Stats.Ann. ch. 573:4 (1955).
1
These events took place at a time when the flag was “ ‘an object of youth fashion and high camp’ ”,
Smith v. Goguen,
The rather meager facts before us pertaining to Royal’s offense appear in a stipulation in the district court, as follows: 4
“1. On October 8, 1970, at approximately twelve o’clock midnight, Walter C. Royal was a passenger in a motor vehicle operated in Portsmouth, New Hampshire, the motor vehicle having been stopped by Police Officer Paul S. Herrmann of the Portsmouth Police Department for a possible motоr vehicle violation. Mr. Royal got out of the motor vehicle. Officer Herrmann observed Mr. Royal to be wearing an Army fatigue jacket, on the right sleeve of which was attached a flag of the United States of America. Under the flag was a hole in the jacket. The flag was attached to the jacket in an upsidе down position. Another patch was sewn partially over the flag.
2. On the date of his arrest, Mr. Royal, having been informed of his rights stated that he had sewn the flag on the sleeve of his jacket as a patch. Mr. Royal further stated that he did this because he ‘thought it was cool.’
3. The flag sewn on Mr. Royal’s jacket contained 49 stаrs and 13 stripes.”
(citations omitted) By a Portsmouth District Court complaint petitioner was charged with “Mutilation of the United States flag” in violation of chapter 573:4. 5 The complaint alleged that he had worn
“on the right sleeve of his outergarment the flag of the United States of America, said flag being used for the sole purpose as a patch to cover a hole in said outer-garment, said flag being upside down and with another patch sewn partially over it.” 6
He was found guilty, first by the Portsmouth District Court and then, after a jury-waived trial de novo, by the Rockingham County Superior Court. The Superior *1086 Court declared, “It is found that the respondent publicly defiled, and he also publicly cast contempt upon, the flag of the United States of America. It is found that the defendant is guilty as charged.” 7 Sentence was stayed pending appeal.
The New Hampshire Supreme Court overruled Royal’s exceptions and confirmed the conviction.
State v. Royal,
“Royal wore the flag as a patch over a hole in the sleeve of his jacket. Since another patch was sewn partially over the flag, the flag was thus mutilated and defaced contrary to the prohibitions of the statute.”
Id. at 680. 10
Following the appeal, Rоyal was sentenced to one week in prison and a fine of $150, with execution stayed pending his filing of this federal habeas corpus petition. The district court thereafter denied the petition,
Royal v. Superior Court,
While agreeing with much in the district court’s opinion, we disagree that the New Hampshire Supreme Court’s curative efforts after Royal’s conviction were able to offset chapter 573:4’s fatal vagueness as to him. Accordingly we reverse on the ground that Royal was denied due process of law, having beеn charged and convicted under a statute so vague as not to have provided, in *1087 advance, an intelligible standard against which to measure his guilt or innocence.
It should be remarked that there was confusion throughout the state proceedings as to what statutory prohibition or prohibitions Royal was chargеd with and found guilty of violating. The complaint charged him with flag “mutilation”. However, the Superior Court and the state Supreme Court apparently took “mutilation” to be a generic term that embraced both mutilation as such and all the other prohibited acts of trampling upon, defiling, defacing, and casting contempt uрon the flag. The Supreme Court explained this approach by calling “mutilation” the “title of the statute,”
Be that as it may, the Superior Court, taking a general view of the charge, mentioned defilemеnt and casting contempt, not mutilation, as the acts of which Royal was guilty. 11 The Supreme Court then upheld the conviction, saying, however, that the evidence showed mutilation and defacement. This shift of grounds on appeal is difficult to explain. Presumably the state Supreme Court did not intend to put the conviction on a new factual basis without regard for the trial court’s findings, 12 but rather viewed mutilation and defacement as forms of casting contempt, as it interpreted that term in its opinion, and meant to uphold the conviction on that theory. 13 In any case the shifting theories underlying the charge, the conviction, and the decision on appeal, leave considerable doubt as to the precise nature of Royal’s offense and of the proof and legal arguments that might have been able to establish innocence.
If we add to the foregoing uncertainties the plain and acknowledged infirmity of the statute as written, we find it hard to say that Royal was charged and convicted under a statute providing a reasonably ascertainable standard of guilt. The “cast contempt” language of chapter 573:4 was, as all now concede, unconstitutionally vague, and, at the time of Royal’s trial and conviction that language was as yet devoid of any nаrrowing state court construction. “Statutory language of such a standardless sweep allows policemen, prosecutors, and juries to pursue their personal predilections. Legislatures may not so abdicate their responsibilities for setting the standards of the criminal law.”
Goguen,
supra, at 575,
“To be sure, there are statutes that by their terms or as authoritatively construed apply without question to certain activities, but whose application to other behavior is uncertain. The hard-core violator concept makes some sense with regard to such statutеs. The present statute, however, is not in that category. This criminal provision is ‘vague not in the sense that it requires a person to conform his conduct to an imprecise but comprehensible normative standard, but rather that no standard of conduct is specified at all.’ Coates v. City of Cincinnati,402 U.S. 611 , 614,91 S.Ct. 1686 , 1688,29 L.Ed.2d 214 , [217] (1971). Such a provision simply has no core. . . . ”
Id.
at 577-78,
We are urged by appellee to fоcus on the New Hampshire Supreme Court’s later construction of the casting contempt provision in determining whether that provision gave adequate guidance to satisfy due process.
14
But even if as construed chapter 573:4 became “a precise, narrowly drawn statute which proscribes certain specific behavior,”
Cox
v.
Louisiana,
“[W]here an accused is tried and convicted under a broad construction of an Act which would make it unconstitutional, the conviction cannot be sustained on appeal by a limiting construction which eliminates the unconstitutional features of the Act, as the trial took place under the unconstitutional construction of the Act.”
Ashton v. Kentucky,
Nor can the trial court’s finding that Royal also “publicly defiled” the flag be viewed as a “distinct alternative basis” on which the conviction can be sustained.
Coonan v. Commanding Officers,
Vacated and remanded with directions to grant the writ.
Notes
. The statute provided:
“573:4 Mutilation, etc. No person shall publicly mutilate, trample upon, defile, deface, or cast contempt upon, either by words or acts, any of said flags [of the United States or of any state of evidently purporting to be *1085 such] . . . whether the same are public or private property.”
N.H.Rev.Stats.Ann. ch. 573:4 (1955). The maximum penalty was set at thirty days’ imprisonment plus a fifty dollar fine. Id. ch. 573:5.
. Chapter 573:4 was repealed as part of a general revision of the flag-protection provisions in November, 1973. The flag desecration provision now reads:
“A person is guilty of misdemeanor if he
IV. purposely or knowingly mutilates or defiles any such flag [of the United States or of any state] . . ..”
N.H.Rev.Stats.Ann. ch. 646:1 (Supp.1975).
. The Massachusetts statute considered in Goguen provided in relevant part:
“Whoever publicly mutilates, tramples upon, defaces or treats contemptuously the flag of the United States . . ., whether such flag is public or private property . ., shall be punished by a fine of not less than ten nor more than one hundred dollars or by imprisonment for not more than one year, or both.”
Mass.Gen.Laws Ann., ch. 264, § 5,
quoted in Smith v. Goguen,
We see no constitutionally significant difference between the “treats contemptuously” language of the Massachusetts statute and the “cast contempt” language of chapter 573:4.
. Neither the state trial transcript nor petitioner’s jacket, which was the state’s Exhibit 1, is included in the record. From the state courts we have a document summarizing the state trial proceedings, Reserved Case,
State v. Royal
(Rockingham County Superior Court, 1971), and the New Hampshire Supreme Court’s published opinion,
State v. Royal,
. Reserved Case, State v. Royal, at 1 (Rocking-ham County Superior Court, 1971).
. Id. at 1-2; Stipulation of Facts, [[ 4.
. Reserved Case, at 2.
. Royal’s appeal was consolidated with that of one Morrissette, who, like the petitioner in
Smith v. Goguen,
. The court stated:
“No words are alleged and there is no evidence that either defendant spoke so that neither conviction could have in any part been based on the use of words. Cf. Street v. New York,394 U.S. 576 ,89 S.Ct. 1354 ,22 L.Ed.2d 572 (1969).”
. The court also found sufficient evidence to support Morrissette’s conviction:
“Morrissette was wearing a flag on the seat of her trousers. This was an act similar to those specifically prohibited which ordinary men would all agree casts contempt upon the flag. State v. Kasnett,30 Ohio App.2d 77 ,283 N.E.2d 636 (1972).”
. We interрret the trial court’s finding that Royal was “guilty as charged” to be a conclusion, drawn from the specific findings of defiling and casting contempt, that Royal was guilty of violating chapter 573:4. There is no indication that the trial court found the specific act of mutilation; its only reference was to the two other of the statute’s prohibitions.
.
Cf. State v. Inselburg,
“In reviewing on appeal a trial court’s determination, the question presented is whether there is evidence in the record from which a reasonable person could reach the conclusion which the trial court did.”
Id.
at 461.
See also Hoffman v. United States,
. The following passage supports this view:
“The words ‘cast contempt’ are directed to the effect of the prohibited acts and not at the intention of the actor. . . . The specific acts prohibited or any similar acts upon the flag which ordinary men would know cast contempt upon it are within the orbit of the prohibition without regard to the purpose of the person committing the act. Our statute therefore avoids the difficulties found in the unconstructed Massachusetts statute which punished onе who ‘treats contemptuously’ the flag. Goguen v. Smith,471 F.2d 88 , 104 (1st Cir. 1973), aff’d,415 U.S. 566 ,94 S.Ct. 1242 ,39 L.Ed.2d 605 (1974).”
. The New Hampshire Supreme Court’s construction is, of course, binding upon us.
Pollard v. Dwight,
. The danger of vagueness on the face of a statute is more obviously cured when, as here, the offending language is removed by legislative repeal. See note 2 supra. However, while a repeal eliminates the danger of future selective law enforcement, it may also underscore the selectivity of such enforcement as has occurred. Here we observe that there have been only two reported convictions in the period from 1899 to 1973. We note also that the wearing of a small flag emblem on a sleeve even upside down and partially covered by another patch, is hardly conduct so patently illegal as to require no definition at all.
.
See Smith v. Goguen,
. We cannot tell, for example, whether the patch that “partially covered” the flag was neatly sewn along one border of the flag, or whether it was itself a symbol of some sort, as in
Spence v. Washington,
