Robinson v. California (1962)
The Supreme Court case that held states cannot criminalize the mere status of being a drug addict under the Eighth Amendment.
Robinson is one of the more misunderstood drug cases in U.S. law. People sometimes cite it as if it limits drug prosecutions broadly. It doesn't. It only says a state can't punish someone for the status of being addicted to narcotics — it cannot make addiction itself a crime. States remain free to criminalize use, possession, sale, and being under the influence. Six years later, Powell v. Texas effectively contained Robinson to its narrow facts. Useful precedent, limited reach.
Not legal advice
This article is informational only and is not legal advice. Constitutional doctrine evolves; lower courts apply Robinson differently in different contexts. If you have a specific legal question — particularly around drug charges, civil commitment, or homelessness ordinances — consult a licensed attorney in your jurisdiction. Last verified: June 2024.
What the case was about
Lawrence Robinson was convicted in Los Angeles under California Health and Safety Code § 11721, which made it a misdemeanor to 'be addicted to the use of narcotics.' A police officer testified that Robinson had needle marks and track scars on his arms and admitted to occasional narcotic use. The jury was instructed it could convict if it found either that Robinson had used narcotics in California or that he was 'addicted to the use of narcotics' — the statute treated addiction as a continuing offense, prosecutable at any time the person was in the state, regardless of whether any drug use occurred there.[1][2]
Robinson was sentenced to 90 days in jail. He appealed, arguing the statute punished a mere status rather than an act.
The holding
In a 6–2 opinion by Justice Potter Stewart, the Supreme Court struck down the California statute. The Court held that punishing a person for the status of being a narcotic addict — as opposed to an act like use, possession, or sale — constitutes cruel and unusual punishment under the Eighth Amendment, applied to the states through the Fourteenth Amendment.[1][3]
Stewart drew an analogy: a state could not make it a criminal offense to be mentally ill, or to be afflicted with leprosy, or to be a sufferer of a venereal disease. Addiction, the Court reasoned, is an illness — and punishing illness as such is cruel and unusual. Notably, this was the first case to apply the Eighth Amendment's Cruel and Unusual Punishments Clause against the states via incorporation.[3][4] Strong evidence
Justice Douglas concurred, emphasizing the medical nature of addiction. Justices White and Clark dissented, arguing the statute reasonably targeted ongoing illegal drug use, not status.
What Robinson does NOT do
Robinson is often overread. The decision does not:
- Prevent states from criminalizing drug use, possession, sale, manufacture, or being under the influence.
- Require states to treat addiction as a medical rather than criminal matter.
- Bar mandatory civil commitment of addicts (Stewart explicitly said civil commitment programs would be permissible).
- Establish a general constitutional right to use drugs.
The holding is narrow: a state cannot make the condition of addiction, standing alone, a crime.[1][5]
Powell v. Texas and the narrowing
Six years later, in Powell v. Texas, 392 U.S. 514 (1968), the Court refused to extend Robinson to a chronic alcoholic convicted of public intoxication. The plurality distinguished Powell on the ground that he was punished for an act (being drunk in public), not a status (being an alcoholic).[6] Powell effectively cabined Robinson to its facts: as long as a statute punishes conduct rather than pure status, it generally survives Eighth Amendment scrutiny under this line of cases. Strong evidence
The act/status distinction has been criticized as artificial — chronic addiction often makes the relevant 'acts' difficult to avoid — but it remains the governing doctrine.
Modern relevance
Robinson has had a small but persistent afterlife in three areas:
- Homelessness ordinances. The Ninth Circuit relied on Robinson in Martin v. City of Boise (2018) to hold that criminalizing sleeping outside, when no shelter is available, punishes the status of being homeless. The Supreme Court reversed that approach in City of Grants Pass v. Johnson (2024), holding that public-camping ordinances regulate conduct, not status, and do not violate the Eighth Amendment. Grants Pass reaffirms a narrow reading of Robinson.[7][8] Strong evidence
- Drug policy reform arguments. Advocates sometimes cite Robinson for the proposition that addiction is a disease deserving medical rather than criminal response. That's a policy argument the case supports rhetorically, but Robinson does not constitutionally compel it.
- Eighth Amendment incorporation. Robinson remains the doctrinal source for applying the Cruel and Unusual Punishments Clause to the states.[4]
Cannabis context
Robinson is occasionally invoked in cannabis-related litigation, usually unsuccessfully. Because possession, cultivation, and distribution of cannabis are acts, Robinson provides no defense to them. There is no recognized constitutional 'status' of being a cannabis user that the Eighth Amendment protects. [evidence:none on any contrary holding] Defendants challenging cannabis prosecutions have generally had more success with state constitutional claims, statutory medical-use defenses, or federal preemption arguments than with Robinson.
Sources
- Government Robinson v. California, 370 U.S. 660 (1962). Opinion of the Supreme Court of the United States.
- Government Robinson v. California, 370 U.S. 660 (1962). Library of Congress / U.S. Reports.
- Peer-reviewed Packer, H. L. (1962). The Aims of the Criminal Law. Law and Contemporary Problems, 27(3), 401–441. (Discussion of Robinson and the status/conduct distinction.)
- Book Chemerinsky, E. (2019). Constitutional Law: Principles and Policies (6th ed.). Wolters Kluwer. (Discussion of Eighth Amendment incorporation via Robinson.)
- Reported Liptak, A. 'A Drug Addiction Case That Still Echoes.' The New York Times, coverage of Robinson's continuing significance.
- Government Powell v. Texas, 392 U.S. 514 (1968). Opinion of the Supreme Court of the United States.
- Government Martin v. City of Boise, 920 F.3d 584 (9th Cir. 2019).
- Government City of Grants Pass v. Johnson, 603 U.S. ___ (2024). Opinion of the Supreme Court of the United States.
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