Majority opinion Writing for the majority, Justice
Reed wrote that individual rights must be balanced against competing rights of the state. He asserted that the fact that a person is engaged in disseminating religious materials does not place his action above regulation by the state. When people choose to use the vending of their religious books and tracts as a source of funds, the financial aspects of their transactions need not be wholly disregarded. To subject any religious or didactic group to a reasonable fee for their money-making activities does not require a finding that the licensed acts are purely commercial. It is enough that money is earned by the sale of articles. When traditional means of distribution are used by religious groups, they can be held to the same standards as non-religious groups. The court held that Jones had no standing to challenge that part of the statute because he did not have a license that was revoked arbitrarily by the state.
Dissenting opinions The two principal dissenting opinions, by Chief Justice
Harlan Stone and Justice
Frank Murphy, examined both the unlimited discretion of the authorities in Opelika to withdraw a license as well as the amount of fees charged in order to get a license. The majority had considered that the amount of fees ($25.00 annually in some cases or $2.50 per day in others) was irrelevant because the issue had not been argued earlier, but the dissenters thought the amount to be relevant. Justices
Hugo Black,
William O. Douglas, and Murphy also penned a separate opinion, denoted as a dissent, in which they argued that they now believed the Supreme Court's decision in
Minersville School District v. Gobitis was now wrongly decided. The three justices stated that "our democratic form of government, functioning under the historic Bill of Rights, has a high responsibility to accommodate itselfto the religious views of minorities, however unpopular and unorthodox those views may be," and that "[t]he First Amendment does not put the right freely to exercise religion in a subordinate position. One year later, the Court overruled
Gobitis in
West Virginia Board of Education v. Barnette. == Effects ==