Master U.S. Supreme Court decision establishing the 'fighting words' doctrine as an unprotected category of speech under the First Amendment. with this comprehensive case brief.
Chaplinsky v. New Hampshire is the foundational case articulating the 'fighting words' doctrine—one of the earliest and most frequently cited categorical exclusions from First Amendment protection. Decided in 1942, the case upheld a conviction for face-to-face epithets that the Court deemed likely to provoke immediate violence, and in doing so, it announced that certain narrowly defined classes of speech are not constitutionally protected because they have 'no essential part of any exposition of ideas' and are of such slight social value that any benefit is clearly outweighed by the social interest in order and morality.
For law students, Chaplinsky is essential both as a starting point and a cautionary tale: it lays down a broad taxonomy of unprotected speech (including lewd and obscene, profane, libelous, and insulting or 'fighting' words), yet its practical reach has been sharply narrowed by subsequent cases. Understanding Chaplinsky’s original holding and rationale, and how later decisions like Cohen, Gooding, and R.A.V. reined it in, is crucial to mastering modern free speech doctrine.
Chaplinsky v. New Hampshire, 315 U.S. 568 (1942)
Walter Chaplinsky, a Jehovah’s Witness, was distributing religious literature and denouncing organized religion as a 'racket' on a public street in Rochester, New Hampshire. His speech attracted a hostile crowd. After police arrived and attempted to escort him to the station for his safety and to address the disturbance, Chaplinsky directed face-to-face insults at the city marshal, calling him 'a God-damned racketeer' and 'a damned Fascist.' He was charged and convicted under a New Hampshire statute (Pub. Laws, ch. 378, § 2) making it a misdemeanor to address 'any offensive, derisive or annoying word' to any person lawfully in a public place or to call him by any 'offensive or derisive name.' On appeal, the New Hampshire Supreme Court narrowed the statute’s scope to cover only words inherently likely to provoke the average addressee to violence—what it characterized as 'fighting words'—and affirmed his conviction. Chaplinsky argued that the law, as applied, violated his First Amendment rights (incorporated via the Fourteenth Amendment) to free speech and free exercise.
Does the application of a state statute criminalizing offensive name-calling and epithets, as construed to cover only 'fighting words' likely to provoke an immediate breach of the peace, violate the First Amendment’s Free Speech Clause as applied to the states through the Fourteenth Amendment?
The First Amendment does not protect certain 'well-defined and narrowly limited classes of speech,' including the lewd and obscene, the profane, the libelous, and the insulting or 'fighting' words—those which, by their very utterance, inflict injury or tend to incite an immediate breach of the peace. Because such speech is of slight social value and has no essential part in the exposition of ideas, states may, consistent with the Constitution, regulate or punish its use to protect public order, so long as the statute is appropriately limited in scope and reasonably applied.
No. The conviction was affirmed. As narrowed by the state court to reach only 'fighting words,' the New Hampshire statute does not violate the First Amendment, and Chaplinsky’s face-to-face epithets to the city marshal constituted unprotected fighting words.
The Court began by reiterating that the right to free speech is not absolute and has historically permitted regulation of certain categories of low-value speech. It accepted the New Hampshire Supreme Court’s authoritative narrowing construction that the statute applies only to words which, when addressed face-to-face to an ordinary citizen, are inherently likely to provoke a violent reaction—'fighting words.' Under that limiting construction, the statute was neither vague nor overbroad in a constitutional sense, because it targeted a precise class of utterances with little or no social value and a direct tendency to cause immediate breaches of the peace. In the Court’s view, fighting words are not integral to the exposition of ideas and their minimal value is outweighed by the state’s compelling interest in maintaining public order and civility. Applying the statute as construed, the Court concluded that Chaplinsky’s statements—'a God-damned racketeer' and 'a damned Fascist'—were direct, personal epithets hurled at the city marshal in a tense, face-to-face confrontation in a public setting, and thus were likely to provoke an average addressee to retaliate. Because the conviction rested on these words, and not on Chaplinsky’s religious views or general criticism of religion, any Free Exercise or broader Free Speech concerns were not implicated. The Court therefore upheld the statute’s application as a valid exercise of the state’s police power to prevent immediate breaches of the peace.
Chaplinsky established the fighting words doctrine and announced a categorical approach to unprotected speech that influenced mid-20th-century First Amendment jurisprudence. For students, it is pivotal both as a doctrinal anchor and as a benchmark against which later cases narrowed the doctrine: Cohen v. California protected offensive political slogans not directed as face-to-face insults; Gooding v. Wilson and Lewis v. New Orleans struck down overbroad 'abusive language' statutes; and R.A.V. v. City of St. Paul held that even within unprotected categories, the government cannot make content- or viewpoint-based distinctions. Modern courts rarely sustain fighting-words convictions, requiring direct, personal, face-to-face insults likely to provoke an immediate violent response, not merely offensive or profane speech.
Fighting words are face-to-face, personally abusive epithets that by their very utterance are likely to provoke an ordinary addressee to an immediate violent response or breach of the peace. They are directed at a specific person in a confrontational setting, not merely offensive or provocative speech in the abstract.
The U.S. Supreme Court accepted the state court’s authoritative narrowing construction that the statute criminalized only fighting words. That construction cured potential vagueness and overbreadth concerns by limiting the law to a precise, low-value category of speech. The federal Court then assessed the statute as so limited and upheld Chaplinsky’s conviction.
In Cohen, the defendant wore a jacket reading 'Fuck the Draft' in a courthouse corridor. The Supreme Court reversed his conviction because the message, while crude, was not a face-to-face personal insult likely to provoke violence; it was political expression in a public forum that passersby could avoid. Chaplinsky, by contrast, involved direct personal epithets delivered face-to-face in a volatile setting.
Chaplinsky’s list remains a historical touchstone, but modern doctrine refines it. Obscenity, defamation, and incitement remain unprotected under their own tests; 'profane' speech as such is not categorically unprotected (Cohen); and the fighting-words category has been narrowed to personal, face-to-face insults likely to provoke immediate violence. Additionally, R.A.V. limits content and viewpoint discrimination even within unprotected categories.
It would be a close question and context-dependent. Modern courts demand a clear showing of direct, personal, face-to-face insults likely to provoke an immediate violent reaction by an average person. The epithets at a police officer—who is expected to exercise restraint—may weigh against finding 'fighting words' today, and many 'abusive language' statutes have been struck down as overbroad.
Fighting words are personal epithets likely to provoke immediate retaliation by the addressee. Incitement (under Brandenburg) targets advocacy intended and likely to produce imminent lawless action by listeners. True threats involve serious expressions of intent to commit unlawful violence against a particular person or group. Each category has distinct elements and constitutional tests.
Chaplinsky v. New Hampshire anchors the fighting-words doctrine, recognizing a narrow class of personally abusive, face-to-face insults as outside the First Amendment’s protection. The decision reflects an early categorical approach to low-value speech, emphasizing the state’s interest in preventing immediate breaches of the peace.
Yet the doctrine’s modern application is far narrower than Chaplinsky’s original language might suggest. Subsequent cases stress that offensiveness alone does not strip speech of protection, and content or viewpoint favoritism is impermissible even within unprotected categories. For law students, Chaplinsky is both a doctrinal origin point and a reminder to trace how categorical exceptions evolve through narrowing constructions and later precedents.