Court Opinion

ID: 9430948
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2023-08-02 23:30:59.44298+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T17:23:26.437790
License: Public Domain

Justice Scalia,
concurring.
I join the Court’s opinion with regard to harmless error because I think it implausible that a community standard embracing the entire State of Illinois would cause any jury to convict where a “reasonable person” standard would not. At least in these circumstances, if a reviewing court concludes that no rational juror, properly instructed, could find value in the magazines, the Constitution is not offended by letting the convictions stand.
I join the Court’s opinion with regard to an “objective” or “reasonable person” test of “serious literary, artistic, political, or scientific value,” Miller v. California, 413 U. S. 15, 24 (1973), because I think that the most faithful ássessment of what Miller intended, and because we have not been asked to reconsider Miller in the present case. I must note, however, that in my view it is quite impossible to come to an objective assessment of (at least) literary or artistic value, there being many accomplished people who have found literature in Dada, and art in the replication of a soup can. Since *505ratiocination has little to do with esthetics, the fabled “reasonable man” is of little help in the inquiry, and would have to be replaced with, perhaps, the “man of tolerably good taste” — a description that betrays the lack of an ascertainable standard. If evenhanded and accurate decisionmaking is not always impossible under such a regime, it is at least impossible in the cases that matter. I think we would be better advised to adopt as a legal maxim what has long been the wisdom of mankind: De gustibus non est disputandum. Just as there is no use arguing about taste, there is no use litigating about it. For the law courts to decide “What is Beauty” is a novelty even by today’s standards.
The approach proposed by Part II of Justice Stevens’ dissent does not eliminate this difficulty, but arguably aggravates it. It is a refined enough judgment to estimate whether a reasonable person would find literary or artistic value in a particular publication; it carries refinement to the point of meaninglessness to ask whether he could do so. Taste being, as I have said, unpredictable, the answer to the question must always be “yes” — so that there is little practical difference between that proposal and Part III of Justice Stevens’ dissent, which asserts more forthrightly that “government may not constitutionally criminalize mere possession or sale of obscene literature, absent some connection to minors, or obtrusive display to unconsenting adults.” Post, at 513 (footnote omitted).
All of today’s opinions, I suggest, display the need for reexamination of Miller.