Hannegan v. Esquire, Inc. was the culmination of a bitter legal battle between
Esquire magazine and the USPS that began in 1943. Taking offense to the
Varga Girl and other
pin-up style imagery, Postmaster General
Frank Comerford Walker convened a hearing board in October 1943 to determine whether
Esquire contained obscenity. A host of national figures were called in as witnesses to offer their "expertise" on whether the Varga Girl and other
Esquire content was obscene, among them
H. L. Mencken and
Rev. Peter Marshall. The press had a field-day covering the affair and ridiculing the Postmaster General and his department. When the hearing board ruled 2–1 in favor of
Esquire, Postmaster General Walker refused to accept their decision, and revoked ''Esquire's
second-class mailing privileges. Esquire
then filed suit in federal district court to enjoin the revocation order. Visiting Judge T. Whitfield Davidson ruled in favor of the Post Office in Esquire vs. Walker
. Esquire appealed to the U.S. Court of Appeals where Judge Thurman Arnold reversed the decision. Postmaster General Frank Walker (who was succeeded by Robert Hannegan in June 1945) appealed the case to the Supreme Court. In 1946 the Supreme Court handed down a unanimous decision in favor of Esquire''. == Opinion of the Court ==