- NEWSLETTERS
- MOBILE APPS
-
ADD TIME NEWS
Press: Louisiana Lawyer
From Sandy Hook to Seal Rocks last week, U. S. publishers hailed with delight the U. S. Supreme Court's unanimous decision outlawing the punitive State tax on gross advertising revenue by which the late Huey Long hoped to make all Louisiana newspapers with a weekly circulation above 20,000 toe his political line. In the office of the New Orleans Item-Tribune the tone of the jubilation was almost personal, for the Item-Tribune pridefull) credited a major share of the victory to the patience and acumen of its own lawyer, 38-year-old Eberhard P. Deutsch. Seldom is a newspaper's lawyer a hero in its editorial rooms. Even more seldom does a local barrister achieve note among the platoon of silk-hatted, wing-collared striped-trousered counsel which is attracted to an important constitutional case. Lawyer Deutsch, son of a Cincinnati pedagog, got a job in the circulation department of the Item-Tribune, went to Tulane University's law school at night, was admitted to the bar in 1925, has been the paper's counsel ever since. When Dictator Long cracked down on the "lying newspapers" of his State, which were almost solidly against him, seven law firms were mustered by the nine publishers most affected to seek a permanent injunction restraining the State Public Accounts Supervisor from levying the tax. At the preliminary conferences to decide the legal strategy of combating the Louisiana tax, majority sentiment favored a fight along the line that the tax was discriminatory in that it applied to no "general class" of business. Up spoke the Item-Tribune's Deutsch in behalf of a broad-gauge contest for freedom of the press as guaranteed under the First Amendment. Lawyer Deutsch was permitted to take several months off, browse along his own path in Northern and European libraries. Setting up the thesis that the power to tax was the power to destroy, the Deutsch brief quoted the late great Justice Holmes's observation that "a page of history was worth a volume of logic," traced the sorry history of newspaper taxation. He began in 1644 with John Milton's AreopagiticaA Speech for the Liberty of Unlicensed Printing, caught Queen Anne levying the first taxes against newspapers, discovered that the American Revolution "really began in 1765" when the first batch of newspaper duty stamps was shipped out to the Colonies from England, deduced that the Louisiana tax law was not only unconstitutional but historically unsound. Last autumn three U. S. District Court judges sitting at Baton Rouge found for the publishers on the discrimination plea presented by Lawyer Esmond Phelps, a New Orleans Times-Picayune director, passed over Lawyer Deutsch's libertarian thesis. When Public Account Supervisor Alice Lee Grosjean took the case to Washington, however, Lawyer Elisha Hanson was assigned to urge the freedom-of-the- press angle. His brief substantially followed Lawyer Deutsch's original. So, to everyone's surprise, did Associate Justice George Sutherland's opinion, which threw the Louisiana tax out not on the basis of discrimination but on the basis of the First Amendment. In a decision which surpassed even the famed Minnesota Gag Law case for liberality, Mr. Justice Sutherland also traced the history of newspaper taxation from Milton, through Queen Anne to the Revolution. Then he established a resounding precedent for freedom of
- 1
- 2
- NEXT PAGE »
Most Popular »
- Are the Bible's Stories True? Archaeology's Evidence
- Who Were the First Americans?
- Obama and Counterterrorism: The Debate Moves Right
- Spain's Troubled Economy: Why Europe Is Worried
- Toyota's Safety Problems: A Checkered History
- Asian Carp in the Great Lakes? This Means War!
- What Is Robert Gates Really Fighting For?
- A Tree Carving in California: Ancient Astronomers?
- U.S. Troops Prepare to Test Obama's Afghan War Plan
- Are the Bible's Stories True? Archaeology's Evidence
- Obesity in Kids: Three Lifestyle Changes that Help
- What Is Robert Gates Really Fighting For?
- Asian Carp in the Great Lakes? This Means War!
- Stuck Elevators Close Dubai Skyscraper
- Trying to Revitalize a Dying Small Town
- What Asia Can Really Teach America
- Egypt's New Challenge: Sinai's Restive Bedouins
- In Marriage, Worse First Can Mean Better Later
- Prescription for a Turnaround





RSS