Skip to main content
Article
Obscenity in the Supreme Court: A Note on Jacobellis v. Ohio
Journal Articles
  • Thomas L. Shaffer, Notre Dame Law School
  • Joseph O'Meara, Notre Dame Law School
Document Type
Case Analysis
Publication Date
1-1-1964
Disciplines
Publication Information
40 Notre Dame Law. 1 (1964).
Abstract

This article suggests that the determination of "obscenity" in cases should be sent to the jury to determine under proper instructions rather than judges because the jury reflects the community's morals and mores more truly than even the wisest of judges. The jury is the mechanism provided by the common law for determination of questions involving the presence or absence of due care, reasonableness, prudence, decency and other concepts reflecting the common sense and/or conscience of a community. Specifically, this article argues that the obscenity determination should be determined with reference to the time and place of the community of the jury.

Comments

Reprinted with permission of Notre Dame Law Review (previously Notre Dame Lawyer).

Citation Information
Thomas L. Shaffer and Joseph O'Meara. "Obscenity in the Supreme Court: A Note on Jacobellis v. Ohio" (1964)
Available at: http://works.bepress.com/thomas_shaffer/116/