I was just rereading one of my favorite court opinions — Justice Jackson’s dissent in United States v. Ballard, 322 U.S. 78 (1944) — and I enjoyed it so much that I thought I’d blog it. Here’s the background, from the majority:
Respondents were … convicted for using … the mails to defraud … by organizing and promoting the I Am movement through the use of the mails. The charge was that certain designated corporations were formed, literature distributed and sold, funds solicited, and memberships in the I Am movement sought “by means of false and fraudulent representations, pretenses and promises.” The false representations charged … covered respondents’ alleged religious doctrines or beliefs…. The following are representative:
“that Guy W. Ballard, now deceased, alias Saint Germain, Jesus, George Washington, and Godfre Ray King, had been selected and thereby designated by the alleged ‘ascertained masters,’ Saint Germain, as a divine messenger; and that the words of ‘ascended masters’ and the words of the alleged divine entity, Saint Germain, would be transmitted to mankind through the medium of the said Guy W. Ballard;
“that Guy W. Ballard, during his lifetime, and Edna W. Ballard, and Donald Ballard, by reason of their alleged high spiritual attainments and righteous conduct, had been selected as divine messengers through which the words of the alleged ‘ascended masters,’ including the alleged Saint Germain, would be communicated to mankind under the teachings commonly known as the ‘I Am’ movement;
“that Guy W. Ballard, during his lifetime, and Edna W. Ballard and Donald Ballard had, by reason of supernatural attainments, the power to heal persons of ailments and diseases and to make well persons afflicted with any diseases, injuries, or ailments, and did falsely represent to persons intended to be defrauded that the three designated persons had the ability and power to cure persons of those diseases normally classified as curable and also of diseases which are ordinarily classified by the medical profession as being incurable diseases; and did further represent that the three designated persons had in fact cured either by the activity of one, either, or all of said persons, hundreds of persons afflicted with diseases and ailments.” …
[T]he indictment … alleged: “At the time of making all of the afore-alleged representations …, … the defendants … well knew that [the] representations were false … and were made with the intention on the part of the defendants … to obtain from persons intended to be defrauded by the defendants, money, property, and other things of value ….” …
The majority reasoned, I think quite correctly, that a court couldn’t inquire in such a fraud case whether the defendants’ religious beliefs were true, but it could inquire into whether they were sincerely believed. This is still the legal rule, and it may well be correct. Among other things, courts would have to decide the sincerity of religious belief in at least some situations, for instance when people are claiming some religious or conscientious exemptions (say, to the draft), whether those exceptions are constitutionally mandated or statutorily provided.
Still, I think that Justice Jackson’s dissent, whether you agree with it, is a model of clear, concrete, plainspeaking eloquence. Anyone who’s interested in how to use facts and everyday experiences in crafting an argument (not an argument that won any other adherents on the Court, but I think still an excellent one) should read it:
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