Cases citing this case: Supreme Court
Cases citing this case: Circuit Courts
U.S. Supreme Court
SECRETARY OF STATE OF MD. v. J. H. MUNSON CO., 467 U.S. 947 (1984)
467 U.S. 947
SECRETARY OF STATE OF MARYLAND v. JOSEPH H. MUNSON CO., INC.
CERTIORARI TO THE COURT OF APPEALS OF MARYLAND
No. 82-766.
Argued October 31, 1983
Decided June 26, 1984
A Maryland statute prohibits a charitable organization, in
connection with any fundraising activity, from paying expenses of more
than 25% of the amount raised, but authorizes a waiver of this
limitation where it would effectively prevent the organization from
raising contributions. Respondent is a professional fundraiser whose
Maryland customers include various chapters of the Fraternal Order of
Police, at least one of whom was reluctant to contract with respondent
because of the statute's percentage limitation. Respondent brought
suit in a Maryland Circuit Court for declaratory and injunctive
relief, alleging that it regularly charges an FOP chapter in excess of
the 25% limitation, that petitioner Secretary of State had informed it
that if it refused to comply with the statute it would be prosecuted,
and that the statute violated its right to free speech under the First
and Fourteenth Amendments. Without addressing petitioner's argument
that respondent lacked standing to assert its claims, the Circuit
Court upheld the statute, and the Maryland Court of Special Appeals
affirmed. The Maryland Court of Appeals reversed, holding that
respondent had standing to challenge the statute's facial validity,
that the statute was unconstitutional, and that its flaws were not
remedied by the waiver provision.
Held:
1. Respondent has standing to challenge the statute. Not only
does respondent satisfy the "case" or "controversy" requirement of
Art. III, because it has suffered both threatened and actual injury
as a result of the statute, but there also is no prudential reason
against allowing respondent to challenge the statute. Where the
claim is that the statute is overly broad in violation of the First
Amendment, the Court has allowed a party to assert the rights of
another without regard to the ability of the other to assert his own
claim. The activity sought to be protected is at the heart of the
business relationship between respondent and its customers, and
respondent's interests in challenging the statute are completely
consistent with the First Amendment interests of the charities it
represents. Petitioner's concern that respondent should not have
standing to challenge the statute as overbroad because it has not
demonstrated that the statute's overbreadth is "substantial," is
more properly [467
U.S. 947, 948] reserved for the determination of
respondent's challenge on the merits. Pp. 954-959.
2. Regardless of the waiver provision, the statute is
unconstitutionally overbroad, its percentage restriction on
charitable solicitation being an unconstitutional limitation on
protected First Amendment solicitation activity. Schaumburg v.
Citizens for a Better Environment,
444 U.S. 620 . Pp. 959-970.
(a) The waiver provision does not save the statute. Charitable
organizations whose high solicitation and administrative costs are
due to information dissemination, discussion, and advocacy of public
issues, rather than to fraud, remain barred by the statute from
carrying on those protected First Amendment activities. Pp. 962-964.
(b) This is not a "substantial overbreadth" case where the
plaintiff must demonstrate that the statute "as applied" to him is
unconstitutional. Here there is no core of easily identifiable and
constitutionally proscribable conduct that the statute prohibits.
The statute cannot distinguish organizations that have high
fundraising costs not due to protected First Amendment activities
from those that have high costs due to protected activity. The flaw
in the statute is not simply that it includes some impermissible
applications but that in all its applications it operates on a
fundamentally mistaken premise that high solicitation costs are an
accurate measure of fraud. Where, as here, a statute imposes a
direct restriction on protected First Amendment activity and where
the statute's defect is that the means chosen to accomplish the
State's objectives are too imprecise, so that in all its
applications the statute creates an unnecessary risk of chilling
free speech, the statute is properly subject to facial attack. Pp.
964-968.
(c) Whether the statute regulates before-or after-the-fact is
immaterial. Whether the charity is prevented from engaging in
protected First Amendment activity by lack of a solicitation permit
or by knowledge that its fundraising activity is illegal if it
cannot satisfy the percentage limitation, the chill on the protected
activity is the same. The facts that the statute restricts only
fundraising expenses and not other expenses and that a charity may
elect whether to be bound by its fundraising percentage for the
prior year or to apply the 25% limitation on a campaign-by-campaign
basis, do nothing to alter the fact that the significant fundraising
activity protected by the First Amendment is barred by the
percentage limitation. And the fact that the statute regulates all
charitable fundraising and not just door-to-door solicitation, does
not remedy the fact that the statute promotes the State's interests
only peripherally. Pp. 968-970.
294 Md. 160, 448 A. 2d 935, affirmed.
[467 U.S. 947, 949]
BLACKMUN, J., delivered the opinion of the Court, in which BRENNAN,
WHITE, MARSHALL, and STEVENS, JJ., joined. STEVENS, J., filed a
concurring opinion, post, p. 970. REHNQUIST, J., filed a dissenting
opinion, in which BURGER, C. J., and POWELL and O'CONNOR, JJ., joined,
post, p. 975.
Diana G. Motz, Assistant Attorney General of Maryland, argued the
cause for petitioner. With her on the briefs were Stephen H. Sachs,
Attorney General, and James G. Klair and Robert A. Zarnoch, Assistant
Attorneys General.
Yale L. Goldberg argued the cause for respondent. With him on the
brief was Donald E. Sinrod.
*
[
Footnote * ] A brief of amici curiae urging reversal was filed for
the State of Connecticut et al. by Francis X. Bellotti, Attorney
General of Massachusetts, and Catharine W. Hantzis, Leslie G.
Espinoza, and Dana L. Mason, Assistant Attorneys General, Joseph I.
Lieberman, Attorney General of Connecticut, Neil F. Hartigan, Attorney
General of Illinois, Robert T. Stephan, Attorney General of Kansas,
Irwin I. Kimmelman, Attorney General of New Jersey, Robert Abrams,
Attorney General of New York, LeRoy S. Zimmerman, Attorney General of
Pennsylvania, Mark Meierhenry, Attorney General of South Dakota, and
William M. Leech, Jr., Attorney General of Tennessee.
Briefs of amici curiae urging affirmance were filed for the
American Civil Liberties Union et al. by Robert B. Hummel, Thomas J.
McGrew, Charles S. Sims, and Arthur B. Spitzer; for Independent Sector
et al. by Adam Yarmolinsky, Stephen T. Owen, and Michael B. Jennison;
and for Box Office, Inc., by Barry A. Fisher, Robert C. Moest, and
David Grosz.
JUSTICE BLACKMUN delivered the opinion of the Court.
In Schaumburg v. Citizens for a Better Environment,
444 U.S. 620 (1980), this Court, with one dissenting vote,
concluded that a municipal ordinance prohibiting the solicitation of
contributions by a charitable organization that did not use at least
75% of its receipts for "charitable purposes" was unconstitutionally
overbroad in violation of the First and Fourteenth Amendments. The
issue in the present case is whether a Maryland statute with a like
percentage limitation, but with provisions that render it more
"flexible" than the [467
U.S. 947, 950] Schaumburg ordinance, can withstand
constitutional attack. The Court of Appeals of Maryland concluded
that, even with this increased flexibility, the percentage restriction
on charitable solicitation was an unconstitutional limitation on
protected First Amendment solicitation activity. We agree with that
conclusion and affirm the judgment of the Court of Appeals.
I
Joseph H. Munson Co., Inc. (Munson), an Indiana corporation,
instituted this action in the Circuit Court for Anne Arundel County,
Md., seeking declaratory and injunctive relief against the Secretary
of State of Maryland (Secretary). Munson is a professional for-profit
fundraiser in the business of promoting fundraising events and giving
advice to customers on how those events should be conducted. Its
Maryland customers include various chapters of the Fraternal Order of
Police (FOP).
Section 103A et seq., Art. 41, Md. Ann. Code (1982),
1 concern charitable organizations. Section 103D prohibits such an
organization, in connection with any fundraising activity, from paying
or agreeing to pay as expenses more than 25% of the amount raised.
2 Munson in its complaint alleged that it
[467 U.S. 947, 951]
regularly charges an FOP chapter an amount in excess of 25%
of the gross raised for the event it promotes. App. 4. Munson also
alleged that the Secretary had informed it that it was subject to 103D
and would be prosecuted if it failed to comply with the provisions of
that statute. App. 5.
In its initial complaint, filed March 7, 1978, Munson took the
position that its contracts with the FOP should not be subject to 103A
et seq. The Circuit Court dismissed that challenge for failure to
exhaust administrative remedies. The court concluded, however, that
Munson could attack the statutes as an improper delegation of
legislative authority, in
[467 U.S. 947, 952] violation of the
Maryland Constitution. App. 13. Munson then amended its complaint to
allege that the statutes effected an unconstitutional infringement on
its right to free speech and assembly under the First and Fourteenth
Amendments of the United States Constitution. Id., at 26.
The Secretary questioned Munson's standing to assert its claims. He
urged that 103D is directed to acts of charitable organizations and,
therefore, that only an organization of that kind can challenge the
statute's constitutionality. The Secretary also urged that Munson's
claims presented no actual controversy, because Munson had failed to
exhaust its administrative remedies and, consequently, there had been
no binding determination that the statute would apply to Munson's
contracts. App. 29.
The Circuit Court did not address the standing argument, but upheld
the statute on the merits. App. to Pet. for Cert. 38a. It concluded
that because the statute included a provision authorizing a waiver of
the percentage limitation "in those instances where the 25% limitation
would effectively prevent a charitable organization from raising
contributions," it was sufficiently flexible to accommodate legitimate
First Amendment interests. Id., at 46a. The court also rejected
Munson's state-law claim that the statute was an impermissible
delegation of legislative authority.
Munson appealed to the Court of Special Appeals of Maryland. The
Secretary did not take a cross-appeal. The Court of Special Appeals
affirmed the judgment of the Circuit Court. 48 Md. App. 273, 426 A. 2d
985 (1981).
Both Munson and the Secretary then petitioned the Court of Appeals
of Maryland for writs of certiorari. Munson challenged the validity of
the statute and the Secretary challenged Munson's standing. The court
granted both petitions and, by a unanimous vote, reversed the judgment
of the Court of Special Appeals. 294 Md. 160, 448 A. 2d 935 (1982). It
expressed doubt about the Secretary's ability to challenge Munson's
standing when the Secretary had not taken an appeal from the Circuit
Court's judgment, but, assuming that
[467 U.S. 947, 953] the issue was properly
before the court, nonetheless concluded that Munson did have standing
to challenge the facial validity of 103D. The court found that, based
on the allegations of its complaint and under the facts as stipulated
in the trial court, see App. to Pet. for Cert. 39a, Munson clearly had
suffered injury as a result of 103D.
3 The court rejected the contention that Munson may not assert the
First Amendment rights of the FOP chapters, noting that where a
statute is directed at persons with whom the plaintiff has a business
or professional relationship, and impairs the plaintiff in that
relationship, it normally is accorded standing to challenge the
validity of the statute. 294 Md., at 171, 448 A. 2d, at 941. In
addition, as this Court in Schaumburg held,
444 U.S., at 634 , "[g]iven a case or controversy, a litigant
whose own activities are unprotected may nevertheless challenge a
statute by showing that it substantially abridges the First Amendment
rights of other parties not before the court." 294 Md., at 172, 448 A.
2d, at 942.
On the merits, the court concluded that Schaumburg required that
the Maryland statute be ruled unconstitutional. It rejected the
Secretary's argument that the statute was valid because it did not
require a permit prior to solicitation, and imposed criminal penalties
only for solicitation in violation of the statute. 294 Md., at
176-179, 448 A. 2d, at 944-945. The court also concluded that the
flaws in the statute were not remedied by the provision authorizing a
waiver of the 25% limitation whenever it would effectively prevent the
charitable organization from raising contributions. Id., at 179-181,
448 A. 2d, at 945-946. The court found that the statutory
authorization for an exemption from the percentage limitation is
"extremely narrow." It did not remedy the flaw
[467 U.S. 947, 954]
inherent in a percentage limitation on solicitation costs -
that charities that make a policy decision to use more than 25% of the
proceeds raised for purposes other than "charitable" are denied their
constitutional right to do so, and are lumped together with those
engaging in fraud. Id., at 180-181, 448 A. 2d, at 946. In sum, in the
view of the Court of Appeals, the 25% limitation, like that in the
ordinance addressed in Schaumburg, is not a "narrowly drawn
regulatio[n] designed to serve [the State's legitimate] interests
without unnecessarily interfering with First Amendment freedoms."
444 U.S., at 637 .
We granted certiorari to review both determinations of the Court of
Appeals, namely, that Munson had standing to challenge the validity of
103D, and that the statute was unconstitutional on its face.
459 U.S. 1102 (1983).
II
Standing. The first element of the standing inquiry that Munson
must satisfy in this Court is the "case" or "controversy" requirement
of Art. III of the United States Constitution. Singleton v. Wulff,
428 U.S. 106, 112 (1976).
4 Munson is a professional fundraising company. Because its
contracts call for payment in excess of 25% of the funds raised for a
given event, it is subject, under 103L, to civil restraint and
criminal liability. Prior to initiation of the present lawsuit, the
Secretary informed Munson that if it refused to comply with 103D, it
would be prosecuted. The parties stipulated before trial that the
Montgomery County Chapter of the FOP was reluctant to enter into a
contract with Munson because of the limitation imposed by 103D. Munson
has [467 U.S. 947, 955]
suffered both threatened and actual injury as a result of
the statute. See Singleton v. Wulff, supra; Simon v. Eastern Kentucky
Welfare Rights Organization,
426 U.S. 26 (1976); Linda R. S. v. Richard D.,
410 U.S. 614, 617 (1973).
In addition to the limitations on standing imposed by Art. III's
case-or-controversy requirement, there are prudential considerations
that limit the challenges courts are willing to hear. "[T]he plaintiff
generally must assert his own legal rights and interests, and cannot
rest his claim to relief on the legal rights or interests of third
parties." Warth v. Seldin,
422 U.S. 490, 499 (1975) (citing Tileston v. Ullman,
318 U.S. 44 (1943); United States v. Raines,
362 U.S. 17 (1960); and Barrows v. Jackson,
346 U.S. 249 (1953)). The reason for this rule is twofold. The
limitation "frees the Court not only from unnecessary pronouncement on
constitutional issues, but also from premature interpretations of
statutes in areas where their constitutional application might be
cloudy," United States v. Raines,
362 U.S., at 22 , and it assures the court that the issues before
it will be concrete and sharply presented.
5 See Baker v. Carr,
369 U.S. 186, 204 (1962). Munson is not a charity and does not
claim that its own First Amendment rights have been or will be
infringed by the challenged statute.
6 Accordingly, the Secretary insists that
[467 U.S. 947, 956]
Munson should not be heard to complain that the State's
charitable-solicitation rule violates the First Amendment.
The Secretary concedes, however, that there are situations where
competing considerations outweigh any prudential rationale against
third-party standing, and that this Court has relaxed the
prudential-standing limitation when such concerns are present. Where
practical obstacles prevent a party from asserting rights on behalf of
itself, for example, the Court has recognized the doctrine of jus
tertii standing. In such a situation, the Court considers whether the
third party has sufficient injury-in-fact to satisfy the Art. III
case-or-controversy requirement, and whether, as a prudential matter,
the third party can reasonably be expected properly to frame the
issues and present them with the necessary adversarial zeal. See, e.
g., Craig v. Boren,
429 U.S. 190, 193 -194 (1976).
Within the context of the First Amendment, the Court has enunciated
other concerns that justify a lessening of prudential limitations on
standing. Even where a First Amendment challenge could be brought by
one actually engaged in protected activity, there is a possibility
that, rather than risk punishment for his conduct in challenging the
statute, he will refrain from engaging further in the protected
activity. Society as a whole then would be the loser. Thus, when there
is a danger of chilling free speech, the concern that constitutional
adjudication be avoided whenever possible may be outweighed by
society's interest in having the statute challenged. "Litigants,
therefore, are permitted to challenge a statute not because their own
rights of free expression are violated, but because of a judicial
prediction or assumption
[467 U.S. 947, 957] that the statute's very
existence may cause others not before the court to refrain from
constitutionally protected speech or expression." Broadrick v.
Oklahoma,
413 U.S. 601, 612 (1973).
7
In the instant case, the Secretary's most serious argument against
allowing Munson to challenge the statute is that there is no showing
that a charity cannot bring its own lawsuit. Although such an argument
might defeat a party's standing outside the First Amendment context,
this Court has not found the argument dispositive in determining
whether standing exists to challenge a statute that allegedly chills
free speech. To the contrary, where the claim is that a statute is
overly broad in violation of the First Amendment, the Court has
allowed a party to assert the rights of another without regard to the
ability of the other to assert his own claims and "`with no
requirement that the person making the attack demonstrate that his own
conduct could not be regulated by a statute drawn with the requisite
narrow specificity.'" Broadrick v. Oklahoma,
413 U.S., at 612 , quoting Dombrowski v. Pfister,
380 U.S. 479, 486 (1965). See also Schaumburg,
444 U.S., at 634 ("Given a case or controversy, a litigant whose
own activities are unprotected may nevertheless challenge a statute by
showing that it substantially
[467 U.S. 947, 958] abridges the First
Amendment rights of other parties not before the court").
The fact that, because Munson is not a charity, there might not be
a possibility that the challenged statute could restrict Munson's own
First Amendment rights does not alter the analysis. Facial challenges
to overly broad statutes are allowed not primarily for the benefit of
the litigant, but for the benefit of society - to prevent the statute
from chilling the First Amendment rights of other parties not before
the court. Munson's ability to serve that function has nothing to do
with whether or not its own First Amendment rights are at stake. The
crucial issues are whether Munson satisfies the requirement of
"injury-in-fact," and whether it can be expected satisfactorily to
frame the issues in the case. If so, there is no reason that Munson
need also be a charity. If not, Munson could not bring this challenge
even if it were a charity.
The Secretary concedes that the Art. III case-or-controversy
requirement has been met, see Tr. of Oral Arg. 5, and the Secretary
has come forward with no reason why Munson is an inadequate advocate
to assert the charities' rights. The activity sought to be protected
is at the heart of the business relationship between Munson and its
clients, and Munson's interests in challenging the statute are
completely consistent with the First Amendment interests of the
charities it represents. We see no prudential reason not to allow it
to challenge the statute.
Besides challenging Munson's standing as a "noncharity" to bring
its claim, the Secretary urges that Munson should not have standing to
challenge the statute as overbroad because it has not demonstrated
that the statute's overbreadth is "substantial." See Broadrick v.
Oklahoma,
413 U.S., at 615 . The Secretary raises a point of valid concern.
The Court has indicated that application of the overbreadth doctrine
is "strong medicine" that should be invoked only "as a last resort."
Id., at 613. The Secretary's concern, however, is one that is more
properly reserved for the determination
[467 U.S. 947, 959]
of Munson's First Amendment challenge on the merits. The
requirement that a statute be "substantially overbroad" before it will
be struck down on its face is a "standing" question only to the extent
that if the plaintiff does not prevail on the merits of its facial
challenge and cannot demonstrate that, as applied to it, the statute
is unconstitutional, it has no "standing" to allege that, as applied
to others, the statute might be unconstitutional. See Parker v. Levy,
417 U.S. 733, 760 (1974); United States v. Raines,
362 U.S., at 21 . See generally Monaghan, Overbreadth, 1981 S. Ct.
Rev. 1. We therefore move on to the merits of Munson's First Amendment
claim.
III
The Merits. In Schaumburg v. Citizens for a Better Environment,
supra, the Court struck down a municipal ordinance that required every
charitable organization, which utilized door-to-door solicitation, to
apply for a permit obtainable only on "`[s]atisfactory proof that at
least seventy-five per cent of the proceeds of such solicitations will
be used directly for the charitable purpose of the organization.'"
Id., at 624. The question before us is whether the distinctions
between the Schaumburg ordinance and the Maryland statute are
sufficient to render the statute constitutionally acceptable. To
answer that question, we reexamine the bases for the conclusion the
Court reached in Schaumburg.
A
The Court in Schaumburg determined first that charitable
solicitations are so intertwined with speech that they are entitled to
the protections of the First Amendment:
"Prior authorities, therefore, clearly establish that charitable
appeals for funds, on the street or door to door, involve a variety
of speech interests - communication of information, the
dissemination and propagation of views and ideas, and the advocacy
of causes - that are within the protection of the First Amendment.
Soliciting [467 U.S.
947, 960] financial support is undoubtedly subject to
reasonable regulation but the latter must be undertaken with due
regard for the reality that solicitation is characteristically
intertwined with informative and perhaps persuasive speech seeking
support for particular causes or for particular views on economic,
political, or social issues, and for the reality that without
solicitation the flow of such information and advocacy would likely
cease." Id., at 632.
8
Because the percentage limitation restricted the ways in which
charities might engage in solicitation activity, the Court concluded
that it was a "direct and substantial limitation on protected activity
that cannot be sustained unless it
[467 U.S. 947, 961] serves a sufficiently
strong, subordinating interest that the Village is entitled to
protect." Id., at 636. In addition, in order to be valid, the
limitation would have to be a "narrowly drawn regulatio[n] designed to
serve [the] interes[t] without unnecessarily interfering with First
Amendment freedoms." Id., at 637.
Although the Court in Schaumburg recognized that the Village had
legitimate interests in protecting the public from fraud, crime, and
undue annoyance, it rejected the limitation because it was not a
precisely tailored means of accommodating those interests. The
Village's asserted interests were only peripherally promoted by the
limitation and could be served by measures less intrusive than a
direct prohibition on solicitation.
In particular, although the Village's primary interest was in
preventing fraud, the Court concluded that the limitation was simply
too imprecise an instrument to accomplish that purpose. The
justification for the limitation was an assumption that any
organization using more than 25% of its receipts on fundraising,
salaries, and overhead was not charitable, but was a commercial,
for-profit enterprise. Any such enterprise that represented itself as
a charity thus was fraudulent.
The flaw in the Village's assumption, as the Court recognized, was
that there is no necessary connection between fraud and high
solicitation and administrative costs. A number of other factors may
result in high costs; the most important of these is that charities
often are combining solicitation with dissemination of information,
discussion, and advocacy of public issues, an activity clearly
protected by the First Amendment and as to which the Village had
asserted no legitimate interest in prohibiting. In light of the fact
that the interest in protecting against fraud can be accommodated by
measures less intrusive than a direct prohibition on solicitation,
9 the Court concluded that the limitation was
[467 U.S. 947, 962]
insufficiently related to the governmental interests asserted
to justify its interference with protected speech.
10
B
Schaumburg left open the primary question now before this Court -
whether the constitutional deficiencies in a percentage limitation on
funds expended in solicitation are remedied by the possibility of an
administrative waiver of the limitation for a charity that can
demonstrate financial necessity. The Court there distinguished a case
in which a percentage limitation on solicitation costs had been
upheld, see National Foundation v. Fort Worth, 415 F.2d 41 (CA5 1969),
cert. denied,
396 U.S. 1040 (1970), noting that under the ordinance in Fort
Worth, a charity had the opportunity to demonstrate that its
solicitation costs, though high, nevertheless were reasonable. See
444 U.S., at 635 , n. 9.
Section 103D has a provision similar to that in the Fort Worth
ordinance. It directs the Secretary of State to "issue rules and
regulations to permit a charitable organization to pay or agree to pay
for expenses in connection with a fundraising activity more than 25%
of its total gross income in those instances where the 25% limitation
would effectively prevent the charitable organization from raising
contributions." See n. 2, supra. Having now considered the question
left open in Schaumburg, however, we conclude that the waiver
provision does not save the statute.
The Court of Appeals concluded that the exception in 103D was
"extremely narrow," being confined to instances "where the 25%
limitation would effectively prevent the charitable
[467 U.S. 947, 963]
organization from raising contributions," 294 Md., at 180,
448 A. 2d, at 946, and of no avail to an organization whose high
fundraising costs were attributable to legitimate policy decisions
about how to use its funds, rather than to inability to raise funds.
Under the Court of Appeals' interpretation, the Secretary has no
discretion to determine that reasons other than financial necessity
warrant a waiver. The statute does not help the charity whose
solicitation costs are high because it chooses, as was stipulated
here, see App. to Pet. for Cert. 39a, to disseminate information as a
part of its fundraising. Thus, the organizations that were of primary
concern to the Court in Schaumburg, those whose high costs were due to
"`information dissemination, discussion, and advocacy of public
issues,'"
11
444 U.S., at 635 , quoting from
[467 U.S. 947, 964] Citizens for a Better
Environment v. Schaumburg, 590 F.2d 220, 225 (CA7 1978), remain barred
by the statute from carrying on those protected First Amendment
activities.
12
C
The Secretary urges that even though there may remain charities
whose First Amendment activity is limited by the statute, we should
not strike down the statute on its face because, with the waiver
provision, it no longer is "substantially overbroad." We are not
persuaded.
"Substantial overbreadth" is a criterion the Court has invoked to
avoid striking down a statute on its face simply because of the
possibility that it might be applied in an unconstitutional manner.
It is appropriate in cases where, despite some possibly
impermissible application, the "`remainder of
[467 U.S. 947, 965]
the statute . . . covers a whole range of easily
identifiable and constitutionally proscribable . . . conduct . . .
.' CSC v. Letter Carriers,
413 U.S. 548, 580 -581 (1973)." Parker v. Levy,
417 U.S., at 760 . See also New York v. Ferber,
458 U.S. 747, 770 , n. 25 (1982). In such a case, the Court has
required a litigant to demonstrate that the statute "as applied" to
him is unconstitutional. Id., at 774.
This is not such a case.
13 Here there is no core of easily identifiable and
constitutionally proscribable conduct that the
[467 U.S. 947, 966]
statute prohibits. While there no doubt are organizations
that have high fundraising costs not due to protected First Amendment
activity and that, therefore, should not be heard to complain that
their activities are prohibited, this statute cannot distinguish those
organizations from charities that have high costs due to protected
First Amendment activities. The flaw in the statute is not simply that
it includes within its sweep some impermissible applications, but that
in all its applications it operates on a fundamentally mistaken
premise that high solicitation costs are an accurate measure of fraud.
14 That the statute in some of its applications actually prevents
the misdirection of funds from the organization's purported charitable
goal is little more than fortuitous.
15 [467 U.S. 947,
967] It is equally likely that the statute will restrict
First Amendment activity that results in high costs but is itself a
part of the charity's goal or that is simply attributable to the fact
that the charity's cause proves to be unpopular. On the other hand, if
an organization indulges in fraud, there is nothing in the percentage
limitation that prevents it from misdirecting funds. In either event,
the percentage limitation, though restricting solicitation costs, will
have done nothing to prevent fraud.
Where, as here, a statute imposes a direct restriction on protected
First Amendment activity,
16 and where the defect
[467 U.S. 947, 968] in the statute is that
the means chosen to accomplish the State's objectives are too
imprecise, so that in all its applications the statute creates an
unnecessary risk of chilling free speech, the statute is properly
subject to facial attack. Schaumburg,
444 U.S., at 637 ; First National Bank of Boston v. Bellotti,
435 U.S. 765, 786 (1978). See also Central Hudson Gas & Electric
Corp. v. Public Service Comm'n of N. Y.,
447 U.S. 557, 565 , n. 8 (1980); City Council of Los Angeles v.
Taxpayers for Vincent,
466 U.S. 789, 800 , n. 19 (1984) ("[W]here the statute
unquestionably attaches sanctions to protected conduct, the likelihood
that the statute will deter that conduct is ordinarily sufficiently
great to justify an overbreadth attack," citing Erznoznik v. City of
Jacksonville,
422 U.S. 205, 217 (1975)).
The possibility of a waiver may decrease the number of
impermissible applications of the statute, but it does nothing to
remedy the statute's fundamental defect. We conclude that, regardless
of the waiver provision, Schaumburg requires that the percentage
limitation in the Maryland statute be rejected.
IV
Our conclusion is not altered by the presence of other distinctions
the Secretary urges between this statute and the ordinance at issue in
Schaumburg.
The Secretary points out, for example, that 103D does not impose a
prior restraint on protected activities. An organization may register
as a charity and solicit funds without first demonstrating that it
satisfies 103D. The statute, it is said, regulates only after the
fact. We are unmoved by the claimed distinction. As the Court of
Appeals noted, several elements of the regulatory scheme suggest the
possibility [467 U.S.
947, 969] of a "before-the-fact" prohibition on
solicitation. Section 103D requires that every contract or agreement
between a professional fundraiser and a charitable organization shall
be filed with the Secretary of State prior to any solicitation. Under
103F, no solicitation may begin until the Secretary "shall approve the
registration" of a professional fundraiser counsel or professional
solicitor. And the Secretary is to approve the professional
fundraiser's registration only if she finds that the application is in
conformity with the requirements of the subtitle as well as the rules
and regulations of the Secretary.
More important, whether the statute regulates before- or
after-the-fact makes little difference in this case. Whether the
charity is prevented from engaging in First Amendment activity by the
lack of a solicitation permit or by the knowledge that its fundraising
activity is illegal if it cannot satisfy the percentage limitation,
the chill on the protected activity is the same. See Chaplinsky v. New
Hampshire,
315 U.S. 568, 572 , n. 3 (1942).
The Secretary also points out that 103D restricts only fundraising
expenses and not the multitude of other expenses that are not spent
directly on the organization's charitable purpose, and that the
charity may elect whether to be bound by its fundraising percentage
for the prior year or to apply the 25% limitation on a
campaign-by-campaign basis. Those distinctions, however, mean only
that the statute will not apply to as many charities as did the
ordinance in Schaumburg. They do nothing to alter the fact that
significant fundraising activity protected by the First Amendment is
barred by the percentage limitation.
Finally, the fact that the statute regulates all charitable
fundraising, and not just door-to-door solicitation, does not remedy
the fact that the statute promotes the State's interest only
peripherally. The distinction made in Schaumburg was between
regulation aimed at fraud and regulation aimed at something else in
the hope that it would sweep fraud in
[467 U.S. 947, 970] during the process. The
statute's aim is not improved by the fact that it fires at a number of
targets.
We agree with the Court of Appeals of Maryland that 103D is
unconstitutionally overbroad. The judgment of that court therefore is
affirmed.
Footnotes
[
Footnote 1 ] Effective July 1, 1984, the Maryland Legislature has
revised its charitable organizations law. See 1984 Md. Laws, ch. 787.
No changes are made in 103D, but changes are made in the definitional
section and in the registration requirement imposed on professional
fundraisers. Those changes do not affect this case.
[
Footnote 2 ] Section 103D reads in full:
"(a) A charitable organization other than a charitable salvage
organization may not pay or agree to pay as expenses in connection
with any fundraising activity a total amount in excess of 25 percent
of the total gross income raised or received by reason of the
fund-raising activity. The Secretary of State shall, by rule or
regulation in accordance with the `standard of accounting and fiscal
reporting for voluntary health and welfare organizations' provide
for the reporting of actual cost, and of allocation of expenses, of
a charitable organization into those which are in connection with a
fund-raising activity and those which are not. The Secretary of
State shall issue rules and regulations to permit a charitable
organization to pay
[467 U.S. 947, 951] or agree to pay for expenses in
connection with a fund-raising activity more than 25% of its total
gross income in those instances where the 25% limitation would
effectively prevent the charitable organization from raising
contributions.
"The 25% limitation in this subsection shall not apply to
compensation or expenses paid by a charitable organization to a
professional fund-raiser counsel for conducting feasibility studies
for the purpose of determining whether or not the charitable
organization should undertake a fund-raising activity, such
compensation or expenses paid for feasibility studies or preliminary
planning not being considered to be expenses paid in connection with
a fund-raising activity.
"(b) For purposes of this section, the total gross income raised
or received shall be adjusted so as not to include contributions
received equal to the actual cost to the charitable organization of
(1) goods, food, entertainment, or drink sold or provided to the
public, nor should these costs be included as fund-raising costs;
(2) the actual postage paid to the United States Postal Service and
printing expense in connection with the soliciting of contributions,
nor should these costs be included as fund-raising costs.
"(c) Every contract or agreement between a professional
fund-raiser counsel or a professional solicitor and a charitable
organization shall be in writing, and a copy of it shall be filed
with the Secretary of State within ten days after it is entered into
and prior to any solicitations."
Other related Maryland statutes require that a charity intending to
solicit contributions within or without the State file a registration
statement with the Secretary of State providing information about its
purpose and its finances, 103B, and that professional fundraisers
register with and be approved by the Secretary, 103F. Section 103L(a)
subjects both the charitable organization and the professional
fundraiser to criminal liability for wilfully violating the statutory
requirements.
[
Footnote 3 ] The court also rejected the Secretary's claim that
Munson could not question the validity of the statute because there
had been no final administrative determination that the statute was
applicable to Munson. The court concluded that Munson did not need to
exhaust administrative remedies in order to attack the statute on its
face. 294 Md., at 171, 448 A. 2d, at 941. The Secretary does not
challenge that determination here.
[
Footnote 4 ] The Court of Appeals concluded that Munson had
suffered sufficient injury as a result of 103D to have standing to
challenge the statute. The Secretary does not dispute that
determination. Nevertheless, because the "case" or "controversy"
requirement is jurisdictional here, we must satisfy ourselves that the
requirements of Art. III are met. Doremus v. Board of Education,
342 U.S. 429, 434 (1952).
[
Footnote 5 ] As the various formulations of the
prudential-standing limitations illustrate, the second factor
counseling against allowing a litigant to assert the rights of third
parties is not completely separable from Art. III's requirement that a
plaintiff have a "sufficiently concrete interest in the outcome of
[the] suit to make it a case or controversy." Singleton v. Wulff,
428 U.S. 106, 112 (1976). The prudential limitations add to the
constitutional minima a healthy concern that if the claim is brought
by someone other than one at whom the constitutional protection is
aimed, the claim not be an abstract, generalized grievance that the
courts are neither well equipped nor well advised to adjudicate. See
Warth v. Seldin,
422 U.S. 490, 500 (1975); Schlesinger v. Reservists To Stop the
War,
418 U.S. 208, 217 -222 (1974).
[
Footnote 6 ] In the Circuit Court, Munson claimed that 103D
intruded upon its own First Amendment rights. Now, however, it focuses
its argument solely on its ability to assert the First Amendment
rights of Maryland charities.
[467 U.S. 947, 956] Because of our
disposition of the Secretary's standing challenge, we have no occasion
to address the extent to which Munson might assert its own First
Amendment right to disseminate information as part of a charitable
solicitation. It is clear that the fact that Munson is paid to
disseminate information does not in itself render its activity
unprotected. See New York Times Co. v. Sullivan,
376 U.S. 254, 266 (1964).
[
Footnote 7 ] See also Bates v. State Bar of Arizona,
433 U.S. 350, 380 (1977) ("The use of overbreadth analysis
reflects the conclusion that the possible harm to society from
allowing unprotected speech to go unpunished is outweighed by the
possibility that protected speech will be muted"); Eisenstadt v.
Baird,
405 U.S. 438, 445 (1972) (in determining whether a litigant should
be able to assert third-party rights, a crucial factor is "the impact
of the litigation on the third-party interests"); id., at 445, n. 5
("Indeed, in First Amendment cases we have relaxed our rules of
standing without regard to the relationship between the litigant and
those whose rights he seeks to assert precisely because application of
those rules would have an intolerable, inhibitory effect on freedom of
speech. E. g., Thornhill v. Alabama,
310 U.S. 88, 97 -98 (1940). See United States v. Raines,
362 U.S. 17, 22 (1960)").
[
Footnote 8 ] The types of speech regulated by the Maryland statute
clearly encompass the types of speech determined in Schaumburg to be
entitled to First Amendment protection. The statute defines "solicit"
as meaning "to request, directly or indirectly, money, credit,
property, a credit card contribution . . . or other financial
assistance in any form on the plea or representation that the money,
credit, property, a credit card contribution . . . or other financial
assistance will be used for a charitable purpose. It includes:
"(2) An announcement to the news media for further dissemination
by it of an appeal or campaign seeking contributions from the public
for one or more charitable purposes.
"(3) The distribution, circulation, posting, or publishing of any
handbill, written advertisement, or other publication which,
directly or by implication, seeks contributions by the public for
one or more charitable purposes; and
"(4) The sale of, or offer or attempt to sell, any advertisement,
advertising space, book card, tag, coupon, device, magazine,
membership, subscription, ticket, admission, chance, merchandise, or
other tangible item in connection with which (i) an appeal is made
for contributions to one or more charitable purposes, or (ii) the
name of a charitable organization is used or referred to as an
inducement to make such a purchase, or (iii) a statement is made
that the whole or any part of the proceeds from the sale is to be
used for one or more charitable purposes. A solicitation is deemed
to have taken place when the request is made, whether or not the
person making it actually receives a contribution." 103A(i).
[
Footnote 9 ] The Court noted, for instance, that the Village could
punish fraud directly and could require disclosure of the finances of
a charitable [467 U.S.
947, 962] organization so that a member of the public
could make an informed decision about whether to contribute.
Schaumburg v. Citizens for a Better Environment,
444 U.S., at 637 -638.
[
Footnote 10 ] The Court also found little connection between the
percentage limitation and the protection of public safety or
residential privacy. Both goals were better furthered by provisions
addressed directly to the asserted interest - such as a prohibition on
the use of convicted felons as solicitors and a provision allowing
homeowners to post signs barring solicitors from their property. Id.,
at 638-639.
[
Footnote 11 ] The regulations make clear that public education
activity is included in the solicitation costs regulated by the 25%
limitation. Section 01.02.04.04A(3) of the Code of Maryland
Regulations (1983) provides: "The expenses of public education
materials and activities, which include an appeal, specific or
implied, for financial support, shall be fully allocated to
fund-raising expenses."
In light of the clarity of the regulation and the absence of any
indication by the State that the regulation is not consistent with the
statute, we can only wonder at the basis for the dissent's conclusion
that 103D(a) appears to call for a pro rata allocation between
advocacy and fundraising expenses, with advocacy and education
expenses exempted from the statute's reach. The statute itself gives
no indication that such an exemption is envisioned. It imposes a cap
on "expenses in connection with any fund-raising activity" and
includes within that activity "[t]he distribution, circulation,
posting, or publishing of any handbill, written advertisement, or
other publication which, directly or by implication, seeks
contributions by the public for one or more charitable purposes." See
nn. 2 and 8, supra. And the State's own highest court, interpreting
the reach of 103D, apparently found no basis for a presumption that
advocacy and education expenses would be exempted. In any event, while
the notion of a pro rata allocation sounds appealing, it ignores the
"reality," recognized by the Court in Schaumburg, that solicitation is
intertwined with protected speech. See
444 U.S., at 632 . Written materials, for example, no doubt serve
both purposes. A public official would have to be charged with the
responsibility of determining how expenses should be allocated, which
publications should be licensed, and which restricted by the statute.
See n. 12, infra.
[
Footnote 12 ] The Secretary disagrees with the Court of Appeals'
interpretation of the scope of her discretion. She urges that she has
discretion to grant a waiver "whenever necessary" and that she has
done so "in an extremely liberal manner, with special care shown for
the rights of advocacy groups." Brief for Petitioner 33. We have no
reason to second-guess the Court of Appeals' interpretation of its own
state law. But even if the Secretary were correct, and the waiver
provision were broad enough to allow for exemptions "whenever
necessary," we would find the statute only slightly less troubling.
Our cases make clear that a statute that requires such a "license" for
the dissemination of ideas is inherently suspect. By placing
discretion in the hands of an official to grant or deny a license,
such a statute creates a threat of censorship that by its very
existence chills free speech. See Thornhill v. Alabama,
310 U.S. 88, 97 (1940); Schneider v. State,
308 U.S. 147 (1939); Lovell v. Griffin,
303 U.S. 444, 451 (1938). See also Schaumburg,
444 U.S., at 640 -643 (dissenting opinion). Under the Secretary's
interpretation, charities whose First Amendment rights are abridged by
the fundraising limitation simply would have traded a direct
prohibition on their activity for a licensing scheme that, if it is
available to them at all, is available only at the unguided discretion
of the Secretary of State. Particularly where the percentage
limitation itself is so poorly suited to accomplishing the State's
goal, and where there are alternative means to serve the same purpose,
there is little justification for straining to salvage the statute by
invoking the possibility of official dispensation to engage in
protected activity.
[
Footnote 13 ] The dissenters suggest that striking down the
Maryland statute on its face is a radical departure from the Court's
practice and that it is done only in overbreadth cases. Post, at
977-978. But as the Court recognized earlier this Term, legislation
repeatedly has been struck down "on its face" because it was apparent
that any application of the legislation "would create an unacceptable
risk of the suppression of ideas." City Council of Los Angeles v.
Taxpayers for Vincent,
466 U.S. 789, 797 (1984). See, e. g., Stromberg v. California,
283 U.S. 359 (1931); Lovell v. Griffin,
303 U.S. 444 (1938). See also New York v. Ferber,
458 U.S. 747, 303 U.S. 444 (1938). See also New York v. Ferber,
458 U.S. 747, 768 , n. 21 (1982); Freedman v. Maryland,
380 U.S. 51 (1965); Teitel Film Corp v. Cusack,
390 U.S. 139 (1968); Saia v. New York,
334 U.S. 558 (1948); Cantwell v. Connecticut,
310 U.S. 296 (1940); Schneider v. State,
308 U.S. 147 (1939); Hague v. CIO,
307 U.S. 496, 516 (1939) (plurality opinion). In those cases a
litigant has claimed that his own activity was protected by the First
Amendment, and the Court has not limited itself to refining the law by
preventing improper applications on a case-by-case basis. Facial
challenges also have been upheld in contexts other than the First
Amendment. See, e. g., Kolender v. Lawson,
461 U.S. 352 (1983); Smith v. Goguen,
415 U.S. 566 (1974) (vagueness challenge to criminal statute);
Sniadach v. Family Finance Corp.,
395 U.S. 337 (1969)(due process challenge to garnishment statute);
Lanzetta v. New Jersey,
306 U.S. 451 (1939) (vagueness challenge to criminal statute). In
addition, though the dissenters are loath to admit it, the State's
highest court has had an opportunity to construe the statute to avoid
constitutional infirmities and has been unable to do so. Cf. Erznoznik
v. City of Jacksonville,
422 U.S. 205, 216 (1975).
The dissenters appear to overlook the fact that "overbreadth" is
not used only to describe the doctrine that allows a litigant whose
own conduct is unprotected to assert the rights of third parties to
challenge a statute, even though "as applied" to him the statute would
be constitutional. E. g., New York v. Ferber, supra. "Overbreadth" has
also been used to describe a challenge to a statute that in all its
applications directly restricts
[467 U.S. 947, 966] protected First
Amendment activity and does not employ means narrowly tailored to
serve a compelling governmental interest. Schaumburg,
444 U.S., at 637 -639; First National Bank of Boston v. Bellotti,
435 U.S. 765, 786 (1978); Zwickler v. Koota,
389 U.S. 241, 250 (1967). Cf. City Council of Los Angeles v.
Taxpayers for Vincent, supra (recognizing the validity of a facial
challenge but suggesting that it should not be called "overbreadth");
Central Hudson Gas & Electric Corp v. Public Service Comm'n of N. Y.,
447 U.S. 557, 565 , n. 8 (1980) (same).
It was on the basis of the latter failing that the Court in
Schaumburg struck down the Village ordinance as unconstitutional.
Whether that challenge should be called "overbreadth" or simply a
"facial" challenge, the point is that there is no reason to limit
challenges to case-by-case "as applied" challenges when the statute on
its face and therefore in all its applications falls short of
constitutional demands. The dissenters' efforts to chip away at the
possibly impermissible applications of the statute do nothing to
address the failing that the Schaumburg Court found dispositive - that
a percentage limitation on fundraising unnecessarily restricts
protected First Amendment activity.
[
Footnote 14 ] The state legislature's announced purpose in
enacting the 1976 revision of the charitable organization provisions
of Md. Ann. Code, Art. 41, was to "assure that contributions will be
used to benefit the intended purpose." Preamble to 1976 Md. Laws, ch.
679. The State's justification therefore may be read as an interest in
preventing mismanagement as well as fraud. The flaw in the statute,
however, remains. The percentage limitation is too imprecise a tool to
achieve that purpose.
[
Footnote 15 ] The Secretary's own records illustrate the tenuous
connection between low fundraising costs and a valid charitable
endeavor. Between October 14, 1980, and June 29, 1982, the Secretary
apparently granted 13 of 16 applications for exemption from the 25%
limitation. The lowest one contemplated fundraising costs of 48% of
receipts. Five were between 70% and 77.1%. Another five were between
80% and 85%. Five of the applications granted were from lodges of the
FOP; their solicitors were other than Munson. Exhibits to Brief for
Petitioner A.6.
[
Footnote 16 ] The dissenters' suggestion that, because the
Maryland statute regulates only the economic relationship between
charities and professional fundraisers, it is not a direct restriction
on the charities' First Amendment activity is perplexing. Post, at
978-980. Any restriction on the amount of money a charity can pay to a
third party as a fundraising expense could be labeled "economic
regulation." The fact that paid solicitors are used to disseminate
information did not alter the Schaumburg Court's conclusion that a
limitation on the amount a charity can spend in fundraising activity
is a direct restriction on the charity's First Amendment rights. See
444 U.S., at 635 -636. Whatever the State's purpose in enacting
the statute, the fact remains that the percentage limitation is a
direct restriction on the amount of money a charity can spend on
fundraising activity.
For similar reasons, it is the dissent that "simply misses the
point" when it urges that there is an element of "fraud" in a
professional fundraiser's soliciting money for a charity if a high
proportion of those funds are expended in fundraising. Post, at 980,
and n. 2. The point of the Schaumburg Court's conclusion that the
percentage limitation was not an accurate measure of fraud was that
the charity's "purpose" may include public education. It is no more
fraudulent for a charity to pay a professional fundraiser to engage in
legitimate public educational activity than it is for the
[467 U.S. 947, 968]
charity to engage in that activity itself. And concerns about
unscrupulous professional fundraisers, like concerns about fraudulent
charities, can and are accommodated directly, through disclosure and
registration requirements and penalties for fraudulent conduct.
JUSTICE STEVENS, concurring.
With increasing frequency this Court seems prone to disregard the
important distinctions between cases that come to us from the highest
court of a State and those that arise in the federal system. The
discussion of standing by the majority and the dissent illustrates the
point.
What may loosely be described as the "standing" issue in this case
actually encompasses three distinct question: (1) Is the dispute
between the Secretary of State of Maryland and Munson Co. a "case" or
"controversy" within the meaning of Art. III of the United States
Constitution; (2) are there "prudential reasons" for refusing to allow
Munson to base its claim for relief on the fact that the statute is
unconstitutional as it applies to the company's potential clients; and
(3) is this a proper case for overbreadth analysis? The fact that this
case comes to us from the Court of Appeals of Maryland is of critical
significance with respect to the first two issues, but is of less
importance with respect to the third. The three separate questions,
however, clearly merit separate discussion.
I
Respondent unquestionably has "standing" in a jurisdictional sense.
The Court appears to be unanimous on the "case" or "controversy"
issue.
1 The case-or-controversy requirement, of course, relates only to
the jurisdiction of this
[467 U.S. 947, 971] Court and has no
bearing on the jurisdiction of the Maryland courts. Nothing in Art.
III of the Federal Constitution prevents the Maryland Court of Appeals
from rendering an advisory opinion concerning the constitutionality of
Maryland legislation if it considers it appropriate to do so.
2 Thus, the decision of the Maryland Court of Appeals that it had
jurisdiction to decide this case is one we have no power to review.
If we were persuaded that there is no Art. III "standing" in this
case, we would have a duty to dismiss the writ of certiorari and allow
the judgment of the Maryland Court of Appeals to remain in effect. No
Member of the Court, however, argues that we must follow that course.
Since every Member of the Court has expressed an opinion concerning
the constitutionality of the Maryland law, it is difficult to perceive
the relevance of the fact that the Framers of Art. III of the Federal
Constitution elected not to give the federal judiciary a "roving
commission" to render advisory opinions. Post, at 976.
3 In all events, there is little real dispute concerning standing
in the jurisdictional sense.
[467 U.S. 947, 972]
II
Whether respondent has "standing" to assert the constitutional
rights of its potential customers is not a jurisdictional issue. As
the Court correctly notes, in addition to the constitutional
constraints on this Court's jurisdiction, this Court has "developed,
for its own governance in the cases confessedly within its
jurisdiction, a series of rules under which it has avoided passing
upon a large part of all the constitutional questions pressed upon it
for decision." Ashwander v. TVA,
297 U.S. 288, 346 (1936) (Brandeis, J., concurring). We may
require federal courts to follow those rules, but we have no power to
impose them on state courts.
Thus, the rule that a litigant generally must assert his own legal
rights and interests, and cannot rest his claim to relief on the legal
rights and interests of third parties, see ante, at 955, post, at 977,
is a judge made rule. Rules of that kind that we fashion for our own
governance, or indeed in the exercise of our supervisory powers over
other federal judges, are not necessarily applicable to the work of
state judges. Those judges may, of course, elect to follow our
example, but there is no reason why they must do so. Instead, I
believe they are free to adopt prudential standing rules that differ
from ours - and surely they may allow more latitude for third-party
attacks on state laws than we might consider appropriate.
In this case, even if we might deny a fundraiser prudential
standing to attack a statute on the basis of its impact on a charity
in a case arising in a declaratory judgment action in federal court,
the state court was perfectly willing to hear such a challenge to the
Maryland statute. If we should conclude in this case that we are
unwilling to listen to Munson's arguments about the impact of the
Maryland statute on the rights of its clients, it surely does not
follow that we can deny the Maryland Court of Appeals the power to
decide that it will listen to those arguments. Thus, it seems quite
clear to me that our analysis of the prudential standing issue should
serve only the function of determining whether this case is
[467 U.S. 947, 973]
one that is appropriate for the exercise of our discretionary
certiorari jurisdiction.
4
If, as the dissent implies,
5 Munson is not a proper party to advance a constitutional
challenge to a statute of this type, then surely we should not review
a judgment of the state court that was based on that party's
arguments. In that event, the proper course would be a dismissal of
the writ as having been improvidently granted.
In my opinion, while the writ of certiorari should have never
issued in this case, there are sufficient reasons for finding that
Munson's "third-party" standing is proper as a prudential matter that
the writ does not need to be dismissed as improvidently granted.
Whether a particular litigant has a sufficiently significant stake in
the outcome of a constitutional challenge to a statute based on its
application to individuals not before the court to render him an
appropriate party to make the challenge on their behalf is a question
of the degree of his interest and the nature of the relationship
between him and the individuals whose rights are allegedly infringed.
Munson has been threatened with criminal sanctions under the
statute, but Munson does not contend that its own First Amendment
rights are violated by that threat. The fact of that threat is
relevant, however, to assessing whether Munson is a proper party to
litigate the constitutional question
[467 U.S. 947, 974] for prudential
purposes. The fact that Munson has been actually, but indirectly,
injured in fact by the effect of the statute on its potential clients
is not enough, standing alone, to permit it to litigate the
constitutionality of the statute in this Court. The Court properly
recognizes that more is required and pinpoints the crucial facts that
the "activity sought to be protected is at the heart of the business
relationship between Munson and its clients, and Munson's interests in
challenging the statute are completely consistent with the First
Amendment interests of the charities it represents." Ante, at 958.
Those factors are sufficient to assure us that Munson will vigorously
litigate the question in this Court, thus providing this Court with
the basis for informed decisionmaking. That is the primary prudential
question for this Court in a case coming to us from a state court,
which may permit third-party actions for declaratory relief that
federal district courts might not necessarily entertain.
III
Once it is determined that Munson may assert the First Amendment
rights of its clients, it follows that Munson may challenge the
statute on any ground that they might assert. Munson does not argue
that the statute would be unconstitutional as applied to the Fraternal
Order of Police, even though on this record a successful challenge on
that ground would appear to redress Munson's injury. Instead, it
attacks the statute on overbreadth grounds. The fact that this case
comes to us from a state court is relevant to our consideration of the
merits of the overbreadth challenge to some extent as well. We need
not construe the statute for ourselves, compare post, at 984, and n.
5; the state court has authoritatively done so. That construction
greatly aids an informed analysis of the merits of the First Amendment
overbreadth question. The state court's judgment that the illegitimate
sweep of the state statute is substantial in relationship to its
legitimate applications surely merits serious
[467 U.S. 947, 975]
consideration by this Court to the extent that issue turns on
a quantitative assessment of future applications of the statute.
In summary, while I am persuaded that this Court should have
declined to exercise its certiorari jurisdiction in this case - surely
it had no business granting certiorari to review the determination
that "Munson had standing to challenge the validity of 103D", see
ante, at 954 - I concur in the Court's opinion.
[
Footnote 1 ] Since the dissent does not argue that Munson lacks
Art. III standing, the ode to Art. III in the dissenting opinion would
seem to be totally gratuitous in what the dissent apparently agrees is
a "case or controversy." The dissent does not express the opinion that
the writ of certiorari should be dismissed for want of jurisdiction.
[
Footnote 2 ] Indeed, the Maryland Court of Appeals' discussion of
standing in this case indicates it is unclear whether the issue of
standing may be waived under the Maryland practice, see 294 Md. 160,
168-170, 448 A. 2d 935, 940-941 (1982), and hence suggests that the
Maryland courts may be willing to render advisory opinions.
[
Footnote 3 ] At the outset of the dissenting opinion we are
reminded that federal courts have no "roving commission" to survey the
statute books and pass judgments on laws prematurely, and that "[m]usings"
regarding the constitutionality of "hypothetical" statutes "may be
fitting for the classroom and the statehouse, but they are neither
wise nor permissible in the courtroom." Post, at 976. While there is a
case or controversy concerning the validity of 103D, which makes it a
crime for a charity to pay more than 25% of the receipts from a
fundraising activity on expenses, there is no case or controversy
concerning a Maryland statute which "regulated only the rates charged
by professional fundraisers to charitable organizations," post, at 981
- no such Maryland statute exists. The dissent, ignoring the wisdom
espoused early in its opinion, provides us with an advisory opinion on
such a hypothetical statute: "The statute would be clearly
constitutional." Ibid.
[
Footnote 4 ] It is revealing that the dissent cites a major
abstention case, Younger v. Harris,
401 U.S. 37 (1971), at the outset of its opinion discussing
judicial review. Post, at 976. The hodgepodge of concerns expressed by
the dissent with respect to entertaining this case were sound reasons
for this Court to abstain from exercising our discretionary certiorari
jurisdiction in this case coming from a state court, but those
concerns simply do not defeat our jurisdiction to hear it nor
respondent's standing to litigate it.
[
Footnote 5 ] The dissent does not argue that the writ should be
dismissed as improvidently granted on the ground that this case is an
unwise vehicle for adjudicating the constitutional question presented.
Cf. New York v. Uplinger, ante, at 249 (STEVENS, J., concurring).
Indeed, the dissent is perfectly willing to adjudicate the
constitutionality of the statute and is quite confident that it does
not violate the First Amendment.
JUSTICE REHNQUIST, with whom THE CHIEF JUSTICE, JUSTICE POWELL, and
JUSTICE O'CONNOR join, dissenting.
Four Terms ago, the Court struck down an ordinance of the Village
of Schaumburg, Illinois, which prohibited "the solicitation of
contributions by charitable organizations that do not use at least 75
percent of their receipts for `charitable purposes,' those purposes
being defined to exclude solicitation expenses, salaries, overhead,
and other administrative expenses." Schaumburg v. Citizens for a
Better Environment,
444 U.S. 620, 622 (1980). Today, on the authority of that
decision, the Court strikes down a markedly different Maryland
statute, whose primary and legitimate effect is to prohibit
professional fundraisers from charging charities a fee of more than
25% of the amount raised. The Court, invoking the doctrine of "overbreadth,"
reaches this result not at the behest of any affected charity, but at
the behest of a professional fundraising organization. Believing that
in this case the overbreadth doctrine is not merely "strong medicine,"
Broadrick v. Oklahoma,
413 U.S. 601, 613 (1973), but "bad medicine," I dissent.
Recently, this Court reaffirmed its commitment to "[t]he
traditional rule" that, except in the rarest circumstances, "a person
to whom a statute may constitutionally be applied may not challenge
that statute on the ground that it may conceivably be applied
unconstitutionally to others in situations not before the Court." New
York v. Ferber,
458 U.S. 747 , [467
U.S. 947, 976] 767 (1982).
1 This commitment is in keeping with the fact that the courts in
our federal system do not have a roving commission "to survey the
statute books and pass judgment on laws before the courts are called
upon to enforce them," Younger v. Harris,
401 U.S. 37, 52 (1971). The Constitutional Convention specifically
rejected a proposal to have Members of the Supreme Court render advice
concerning pending legislation. See 1 M. Farrand, Records of the
Federal Convention of 1787, p. 21 (1911). And through the "case or
controversy" requirement of Art. III, all federal courts are
restricted to the resolution of concrete disputes between the parties
before them. Musings as to possible applications of a statute to third
parties in hypothetical situations may be fitting for the classroom
and the statehouse, but they are neither wise nor permissible in the
courtroom.
The very power of the judiciary to declare a law unconstitutional
depends upon a "flesh-and-blood" dispute in which the application of
the law comes into conflict with the superior authority of the
Constitution. As Chief Justice Marshall explained in Marbury v.
Madison, 1 Cranch 137, 178 (1803):
"So if a law be in opposition to the constitution; if both the
law and the constitution apply to a particular case, so that the
court must either decide that case conformably to the law,
disregarding the constitution; or conformably to the constitution,
disregarding the law; the court must determine which of these
conflicting rules governs the case. This is of the very essence of
judicial duty." (Emphasis added.)
The crucial corollary of this justification for judicial review is
the principle that constitutional rights are personal and
[467 U.S. 947, 977]
may not be asserted vicariously. McGowan v. Maryland,
366 U.S. 420, 429 -430 (1961). When a litigant challenges the
constitutionality of a statute, he challenges the statute's
application to him. He claims, for example, that his activities, which
the statute seeks to regulate, are protected by the First Amendment.
If he prevails, the Court invalidates the statute, not in toto, but
only as applied to those activities. The law is refined by preventing
improper applications on a case-by-case basis. In the meantime, the
interests underlying the law can still be served by its enforcement
within constitutional bounds.
A successful overbreadth challenge, on the other hand, suspends
enforcement of a statute entirely. The interests underlying the law,
however substantial, are simply negated until the statute is either
rewritten by the legislature or "reinterpreted" by an authorized court
to serve those interests more narrowly. The litigant is permitted to
raise the rights of third parties not before the court in order to
forestall even legitimate applications of the law.
The advantages of the first approach are obvious. It is less
intrusive on the legislative prerogative and less disruptive of state
policy to limit the permitted reach of a statute only on a
case-by-case basis. Such restraint also allows state courts the
opportunity to construe a law to avoid constitutional infirmities. New
York v. Ferber, supra, at 768. Finally, the decision itself is likely
to be more sound when based on data relevant and adequate to an
informed judgment. The facts of the case focus and give meaning to the
otherwise abstract and amorphous issues the court must decide. "Facts
and facts again are decisive." Frankfurter & Landis, A Note on
Advisory Opinions, 37 Harv. L. Rev. 1002, 1005 (1924).
One might as a matter of original inquiry question whether an
overbreadth challenge should ever be allowed, given that the
Declaratory Judgment Act and the availability of preliminary
injunctive relief will usually permit a litigant to discover
[467 U.S. 947, 978]
the scope of constitutional protection afforded his activity
without subjecting himself to criminal prosecution. Be that as it may,
however, our cases at least indicate that the doctrine is to be used
sparingly. "[W]e have recognized that the overbreadth doctrine is
`strong medicine' and have employed it with hesitation, and then `only
as a last resort.'" New York v. Ferber, supra, at 769 (quoting
Broadrick v. Oklahoma,
413 U.S., at 613 ). We have insisted that the overbreadth of a
statute be "substantial" in relation to its legitimate sweep before
the statute will be invalidated on its face. "[P]articularly where
conduct and not merely speech is involved," Broadrick, supra, at 615,
we are hesitant to paralyze the legitimate enforcement efforts of the
States based solely on predictions as to potential chill.
These considerations apply with special force in this case. The
challenged Maryland statute functions primarily as an economic
regulation setting a limit on the fees charged by professional
fundraisers. The purpose and effect of the statute are, therefore,
altogether different from those of the Village ordinance invalidated
in Schaumburg, supra. Schaumburg's ordinance provided that "[e]very
charitable organization, which solicits or intends to solicit
contributions from persons in the village by door-to-door solicitation
or the use of public streets and public ways, shall prior to such
solicitation apply for a permit." Schaumburg Village Code, Ch. 22,
Art. III, 22-20 (1975). The application for that permit was required
to contain "[s]atisfactory proof that at least seventy-five per cent
of the proceeds of such solicitations will be used directly for the
charitable purpose of the organization." 22-20(g). Excluded from the
definition of "charitable purpose" were all solicitation expenses,
salaries, overhead, and other administrative expenses. Ibid.
Thus, Schaumburg's ordinance was primarily directed at controlling
the nature and internal workings of charitable organizations seeking
to solicit in the Village, and its prime failing was that it
effectively prohibited any solicitation by "organizations that are
primarily engaged in research, advocacy,
[467 U.S. 947, 979]
or public education and that use their own paid staff to
carry out those functions as well as to solicit financial support."
Schaumburg,
444 U.S., at 636 . Such advocacy organizations are likely to have
high administrative expenses which would make it impossible for them
to qualify for a permit.
Maryland's statute, on the other hand, is primarily directed at
controlling the external, economic relations between charities and
professional fundraisers. Such fundraisers are required by 103F to
register with the Secretary, furnish certain information, pay an
annual fee, file a bond and, most important of all, comply with the
requirements of the subtitle, including 103D. Section 103D provides in
relevant part:
"(a) A charitable organization . . . may not pay or agree to pay
as expenses in connection with any fundraising activity a total
amount in excess of 25 percent of the total gross income raised or
received by reason of the fund-raising activity. . . ."
As to Munson and other professional fundraisers who are not
themselves engaged in speech activities, 103D, read in conjunction
with 103F, is merely an economic regulation controlling the fees the
firm is permitted to charge. A similar regulation governing, for
example, the fees charged by an employment agency would be judged and
approved under the minimum rationality standard traditionally applied
to economic regulations. See, e. g., Ohralik v. Ohio State Bar Assn.,
436 U.S. 447, 460 (1978); Williamson v. Lee Optical Co.,
348 U.S. 483 (1955). Of course, a ceiling on the fees charged by
professional fundraisers may have an incidental and indirect impact on
protected expression - as would, for example, a ceiling placed on the
fees charged by literary agents - in that marginal producers could be
forced out of the market. In other words, price controls might tend to
make these services less available, much as rent control is thought to
make rental housing less available. But such an indirect
[467 U.S. 947, 980]
and incidental impact on expression is not sufficient to
subject such regulation to strict First Amendment scrutiny. Otherwise,
national forest legislation would be equally suspect as tending to
raise the price and limit the quantity of paper.
Even if limitations on the fees charged by professional fundraisers
were subjected to heightened scrutiny, however, those limitations
serve a number of legitimate and substantial governmental interests.
They insure that funds solicited from the public for a charitable
purpose will not be excessively diverted to private pecuniary gain. In
the process, they encourage the public to give by allowing the public
to give with confidence that money designed for a charity will be
spent on charitable purposes. The legislature could conclude that fees
charged by professional fundraisers must be kept within moderate
limits to coincide with the contributors' expectations that their
contributions will go primarily to the charitable purpose. There is an
element of "fraud" in soliciting money "for" a charity when in reality
that charity will see only a small fraction of the funds collected.
2 But even if a fundraiser were to fully disclose to every donor
that half of the money collected would be used for "expenses," so that
there could be no question of "fraud" in the common-law sense of that
word, the State's interest is not at an end. The statute, as the Court
concedes, is also directed against the incurring of excessive costs in
charitable solicitation even where the costs are fully disclosed to
both potential donors and the charity. Such a law protects the
charities themselves from being overcharged by unscrupulous
professional fundraisers.
[467 U.S. 947, 981]
The Court, therefore, is simply mistaken when it claims that "there
is no core of easily identifiable and constitutionally proscribable
conduct that the statute prohibits." Ante, at 965-966. The rates
charged by professional fundraisers are in fact both "easily
identifiable" and "constitutionally proscribable." If Maryland's
statute regulated only the rates charged by professional fundraisers
to charitable organizations, this would be an easy case. The statute
would be clearly constitutional.
But of course the statute also applies to solicitation expenses
other than those spent on professional fundraisers. To that extent,
therefore, the statute directly regulates the solicitation activities
of charities and is subject to more intense scrutiny. Schaumburg,
supra, at 632. Even as applied directly to charities, however, the
statute serves legitimate objectives insofar as it regulates
fundraising costs not attributable to public education or advocacy.
Again, donor confidence is enhanced by such a regulation, and the
intended objects of the public's bounty are benefited. The real
question before the Court, then, is whether the overbreadth of the
statute - the extent to which it might infringe on constitutionally
protected expression - is substantial judged in relation to the
statute's plainly legitimate sweep. Broadrick v. Oklahoma,
413 U.S., at 615 .
The Court today echoes the concern of Schaumburg that some
charities will incur fundraising costs higher than the 25% limitation
not because the costs are essential to fundraising, but because the
charity seeks to raise funds in a manner that serves other educational
and advocacy goals. See ante, at 963-964. Unlike Schaumburg, however,
it is not at all clear that the Court's concern is well founded in
this case. In baldly claiming that advocacy organizations "remain
barred by the statute from carrying on those protected First Amendment
activities," ante, at 964, the Court simply ignores or slights some
crucial differences between this statute and the ordinance at issue in
Schaumburg. [467 U.S.
947, 982]
First of all, administrative and overhead costs that are not
attributable to fundraising are not included in the 25% calculation of
103D(a). Thus, the salaries of researchers, policymakers and technical
support staff, as well as general overhead expenses, do not count as
fundraising costs. "[O]rganizations that spend large amounts on
salaries and administrative expenses," Schaumburg,
444 U.S., at 638 , will therefore be largely unaffected by the
statute. To take but one obviously pertinent example, Citizens for a
Better Environment, the plaintiff in Schaumburg, reportedly spent
23.3% of its income on fundraising in 1975 and 21.5% on
administration. In 1976, these figures were 23.3% and 16.5%,
respectively. Id., at 626. Thus, although that organization was
prohibited from soliciting door-to-door by the Village ordinance in
Schaumburg, it would be readily accommodated by Maryland's more
carefully drawn statute.
Second, 103D(b) specifically excludes from the definition of
fundraising costs many of the costs associated with combined advocacy
and fundraising activities. The section provides:
"(b) For purposes of this section, the total gross income raised
or received shall be adjusted so as not to include contributions
received equal to the actual cost to the charitable organization of
(1) goods, food, entertainment, or drink sold or provided to the
public, nor should these costs be included as fund-raising costs;
(2) the actual postage paid to the United States Postal Service and
printing expense in connection with the soliciting of contributions,
nor should these costs be included as fund-raising costs."
Thus, unlike the ordinance in Schaumburg, the costs of receptions,
picnics and other social events at which advocacy organizations seek
converts are not included in the fundraising calculus. Nor are costs
associated with printing and mailing advocacy literature. Again, the
statute is more [467
U.S. 947, 983] carefully designed to accommodate the
protected expression of such organizations. Sections 103D(a) and (b)
together largely eliminate the concerns of Schaumburg.
Third, 103D(a) directs the Secretary to "issue rules and
regulations to permit a charitable organization to pay or agree to pay
for expenses in connection with a fund-raising activity more than 25%
of its total gross income in those instances where the 25% limitation
would effectively prevent the charitable organization from raising
contributions." The Maryland Court of Appeals has said that this
waiver provision is "extremely narrow," but it should still suffice to
alleviate the Court's concern that "unpopular" charities will be
precluded from soliciting. Ante, at 967. A charity unable to meet the
25% limit due to the unpopularity of its cause would clearly be
entitled to a statutory exemption.
3
Finally, even for those activities which mingle fundraising and
advocacy, but do not fall within the exceptions of 103D(b), 103D(a)
appears to call for a pro rata allocation of expenses into those
expenses attributable to the fundraising portion of the activity and
those attributable to the advocacy portion.
"The Secretary of State shall, by rule or regulation in
accordance with the `standard of accounting and fiscal reporting for
voluntary health and welfare organizations' provide for the
reporting of actual cost, and of allocation of expenses, of a
charitable organization into those which
[467 U.S. 947, 984]
are in connection with a fund-raising activity and
those which are not."
If such a pro rata allocation is required by the statute, then
expenses associated with door-to-door solicitation by a member of the
organization,
4 which involves advocacy and education as well as an appeal for
financial support, could not be charged entirely to fundraising.
5 If that is correct, the statute is not overbroad at all.
Expenses associated with advocacy and public education would be
completely excluded from the fundraising calculus. The crucial point
is that we cannot know precisely how such activities will be
accommodated unless we first give Maryland a chance to face the
question in concrete situations.
It would be foolish to claim that these four statutory safeguards
will ensure that the statute will never be applied in such a way as to
improperly inhibit the protected expression of any advocacy
organization. No statute bears an absolute guarantee that it will
always be applied within constitutional bounds; consequently, no such
guarantee can be demanded. The question before the Court, we must
remember, is whether the likely overbreadth of the statute is
substantial in relation to its legitimate sweep.
[467 U.S. 947, 985]
The differences noted above between this statute and the ordinance
condemned in Schaumburg serve to minimize any potential overbreadth.
And given the extensive legitimate application of this statute, both
to fundraising expenses not attributable to public education or
advocacy and to the fees charged by professional fundraisers who, like
Munson, are not themselves engaged in advocating any causes, I see no
basis for concluding that the Maryland statute is substantially
overbroad. Nor does the Court offer any reason to so believe. As
noted, the Court simply misunderstands the primary purpose and effect
of the statute and then proceeds to speculate about how it might be
improperly applied. Unfortunately, such misunderstanding and
ungrounded speculation are the natural hazards of overbreadth
analysis. When the Court's sights are not focused on the actual
application of a statute to a specific set of facts, its vision proves
sadly deficient.
I dissent.
[
Footnote 1 ] See also United States v. Raines,
362 U.S. 17, 21 (1960); Carmichael v. Southern Coal & Coke Co.,
301 U.S. 495, 513 (1937); Yazoo & M. V. R. Co. v. Jackson Vinegar
Co.,
226 U.S. 217, 219 -220 (1912); Supervisors v. Stanley,
105 U.S. 305, 311 -315 (1882); Austin v. The Aldermen, 7 Wall.
694, 698-699 (1869).
[
Footnote 2 ] The Court simply misses the point when it dismisses
this legitimate interest with the observation that "there is nothing
in the percentage limitation that prevents [an organization] from
misdirecting funds." Ante, at 967. The concern is not that someone may
abscond to South America with the funds collected. Rather, a high
fundraising fee itself betrays the expectations of the donor who
thinks that his money will be used to benefit the charitable purpose
in the name of which the money was solicited.
[
Footnote 3 ] The Court itself acknowledges that "[t]he possibility
of a waiver may decrease the number of impermissible applications of
the statute," but feels that this fact "does nothing to remedy the
statute's fundamental defect." Ante, at 968. As noted, however, the
Court simply ignores the extent to which the statute directly and
legitimately regulates both the fees charged by professional
fundraisers and those fundraising costs not attributable to public
education or advocacy. Properly viewed, any decrease in the number of
impermissible applications of the statute is extremely significant as
tending to decrease overbreadth in relation to the statute's
legitimate sweep.
[
Footnote 4 ] The statute specifically excludes from the definition
of professional fundraiser a "bona fide salaried officer or employee
of a charitable organization which maintains a permanent office in the
State." 103A(g).
[
Footnote 5 ] The Court rightly points out, ante, at 963, n. 11,
that one of the Secretary's regulations provides that any public
education activity which includes "an appeal, specific or implied, for
financial support, shall be fully allocated to fund-raising expenses."
Code of Maryland Regulations 01.02.04.04A(3) (1983). But that
regulation is not necessarily consistent with the statutory scheme. It
has yet to be tested and we therefore do not know if it would be
upheld by the Maryland courts. At any rate, possible constitutional
failings in the regulations passed pursuant to a statute do not form a
basis for holding the statute itself unconstitutional. A far less
drastic solution would be, in an appropriate case, to strike down the
regulation. [467 U.S.
947, 986]


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