Bridges v. California

E362106

Bridges v. California is a 1941 U.S. Supreme Court decision that significantly expanded First Amendment protections by limiting the power of courts to punish out-of-court publications as contempt.

All labels observed (3)

How this entity was disambiguated

Statements (49)

Predicate Object
instanceOf First Amendment case
United States Supreme Court case
contempt of court case
freedom of speech case
appliesLegalTest clear and present danger test
aroseFrom contempt citations issued by California courts
clarifiedDoctrine clear and present danger standard in contempt context
concernsAmendment First Amendment to the United States Constitution
concernsRight freedom of speech
freedom of the press
hasAreaOfLaw constitutional law
contempt of court
media law
hasArgumentDate 1941-10-13
1941-10-14
hasChiefJusticeAtDecision Justice Harlan F. Stone
surface form: Harlan F. Stone
hasCitation 314 U.S. 252
hasCompanionCase Bridges v. California self-linksurface differs
surface form: Times-Mirror Co. v. Superior Court
hasCountry United States of America
surface form: United States
hasCourt Supreme Court of the United States
hasDecisionDate 1941-12-08
hasDecisionType majority opinion
hasDocketNumber No. 451
hasFullCaseName Bridges v. California self-linksurface differs
surface form: Bridges v. State of California
hasHolding Out-of-court publications may not be punished as contempt unless they pose a clear and present danger to the administration of justice.
First Amendment to the United States Constitution
surface form: The First Amendment limits the power of courts to punish out-of-court publications as contempt.
hasJurisdiction United States of America
surface form: United States
hasLanguage English
hasMajorityAuthor Hugo L. Black
hasMajorityOpinionBy Hugo L. Black
surface form: Justice Hugo Black
hasPage 252
hasParallelCitation 159 A.L.R. 1346
62 S. Ct. 190
86 L. Ed. 192
hasPetitioner Harry Bridges
hasReporter United States Reports
hasRespondent California, United States
surface form: State of California
hasTimePeriod 1940s
hasVolume 314
involvesIssue judicial contempt power
limits on punishing criticism of pending cases
out-of-court publications
involvesParty Harry Bridges
Los Angeles Times
isLandmarkFor expansion of First Amendment protections
protection of criticism of the judiciary
limitsPowerOf judges to punish criticism as contempt
state courts
overturnedLowerCourt Supreme Court of California

How these facts were elicited

Referenced by (3)

Full triples — surface form annotated when it differs from this entity's canonical label.

Bridges v. California hasFullCaseName Bridges v. California self-linksurface differs
this entity surface form: Bridges v. State of California
Bridges v. California hasCompanionCase Bridges v. California self-linksurface differs
this entity surface form: Times-Mirror Co. v. Superior Court