Case Information
*3 Bеfore MORRIS SHEPPARD ARNOLD, RICHARD S. ARNOLD, and FAGG,
Circuit Judges.
___________
RICHARD S. ARNOLD, Circuit Judge.
Adam Steele appeals the District Court’s adverse grant of summary judgment as to some claims, and the dismissal of other claims, in this suit brought under 42 U.S.C. §§ 1983, 1985, and 1986; the Sherman Antitrust Act; and state law. We affirm in part and reverse in part.
Steele and Northern Herald, Inc., filed an amended complaint naming the City of Bemidji, City Attorney Alan Felix, City Manager Phil Shealy, Chief of Police Robert Tell, and Police Officers Michael Porter and Jon Hunt (the “City defendants”); the County of Beltrami, County Attorney Tim Favor, and Assistant County Attorney David Frank (the “County defendants”); and twenty-one private individuals and businesses (the “non-government defendants”). Viewed in the light most favorable to plaintiffs, the record establishes the following.
The Northern Herald is a periodical containing political reporting, other news, and advertising. Plaintiffs publish the Northern Herald and have three means of distribution: for-profit sales through existing retailers, complimentary distribution, and direct curbside sаles on public streets and sidewalks. In February 1998, Steele was distributing papers near a mall, when a police officer ordered him to stop doing so. Steele discussed the matter with the City Manager, who (after a discussion with the *4 Chief of Police) confirmed that Steele could not sell the Northern Herald at that location. After Steele complained to the City, he received a letter from City Attorney Felix stating that Steele’s use of public property to “advertise and sell [his] alleged publication” without a solicitation permit and an obstruction permit violated, respectively, City Code sections 6.39 and 10.31. Felix explained that a section 10.31 permit was conditioned upon the provision of adequate insurance and bond, and that in light of Steele’s recent bankruptcy, the City was concerned with his ability to provide adequate financial security. Felix warned Steele that the City would rеquire “at a minimum public liability coverage with policy limits equal to those required of the City,” and that given Steele’s “past history of non-payment, a substantial bond [would be] mandatory.” Finally, Felix pointed out that a violation of either ordinance was a misdemeanor and suggested that Steele find “willing local, private outlets” to distribute his paper, commenting that “in light of this community’s apparent unwillingness to embrace your ideas, another option may be your consideration of relocation to another community . . . more willing to embrace your way of thinking.”
Several days after receiving Felix’s lettеr, Steele was standing by the sidewalk in front of the Bemidji Post Office--giving away copies of the Northern Herald, and wearing a sign that said “FREE -- TODAY ONLY”--when a City police officer threatened to arrest him for “soliciting.” Steele responded that he was giving, not selling, the paper; the officer said he would discuss the mattеr with Felix and then take Steele “to jail, today” if appropriate. Steele stopped distributing the paper and called Felix, who concurred with the police officer because distributing the paper from the sidewalk violated the City’s “obstruction” ordinance (even though Steele hаd been holding all of the copies, and had not deposited them on public property). City officials continued to threaten to arrest Steele if he distributed the paper on public property in the City without first obtaining the requisite solicitation and obstruction permits.
Plaintiffs asserted further in their cоmplaint that, after Steele notified City police of the theft of a stack of complimentary Northern Herald newspapers from a local *5 business, the police merely referred the matter to the County Attorney’s Office, which refused to prosecute the theft; that certain named рersons and businesses had disrupted distribution of the Northern Herald by refusing to sell the paper, by refusing to allow Steele to leave complimentary copies of it at their businesses, or by threatening to boycott stores that distributed it; and that business owners had denied service to Steele at restaurants and bars, a landlord had threatened a tenant (a friend of Steele’s) with eviction if the tenant continued her relationship with Steele, and a printing press refused to print the Northern Herald.
Upon defendants’ motions to dismiss or for summary judgment, the District
Court held that (1) Steele (a non-lawyer) could not represent the Northern Herald in
these proceedings; (2) Steele failed to state a claim against the non-government and
County defendants; and (3) City defendants were entitled to summary judgment
because the City ordinances were constitutional, and because the individual City
defendants were entitled to qualified immunity. See Steele v. City of Bemidji, 114 F.
Supp. 2d 838 (D. Minn. 2000). This appeal followed, in which we review de novo
both the District Court’s grant of the motions to dismiss and its grant of summary
judgment. See Double D Spotting Serv., Inc. v. Supervalu, Inc.,
Turning to the merits of Steele’s action, we agree with the District Court that
Steele cannot maintain an action against the non-government defendants under sections
*6
1983, 1985, or 1986, see Bray v. Alexandria Women’s Heаlth Clinic
,
Steele also contends, as he did below, that the non-government defendants’
alleged “boycott” is per se illegal under the Sherman Antitrust Act. We disagree. A
boycott is a narrow category of per se violation “limited to cases in which firms with
market power boycott suppliers or сustomers in order to discourage them from doing
business with a competitor.” See FTC v. Ind. Fed. of Dentists ,
As to Steele’s First Amendment challenge, the parties agree that his claims turn on the constitutionality of the City ordinances. Section 6.39 prohibits any “peddler, business solicitor, contribution solicitor . . . or transient merchant” from engaging in “any such business” without obtaining a permit. To obtain a permit, an аpplicant must provide, among other things, his name; date of birth; physical description and photograph; address; a description of “the nature of the business and goods to be sold”; the length of time for which the right to do business is desired; two references to certify the applicant’s “good chаracter,” or other evidence of good character and business responsibility; a statement of whether the applicant was convicted of any crimes; and fees as established by the City Council. After conducting any investigation deemed necessary, the Chief of Police, within five days, must certify that the applicant’s good character and business reputation is “satisfactory” or state his reasons for denying the permit. An applicant can appeal the Chief of Police’s denial to the City Council, although the ordinance does not specify standards for the Council’s reviеw. If the Chief of Police endorses the application, it is put on the agenda for the City Council’s consideration at its next meeting. Upon Council approval, the applicant must submit a $1,000 bond or certified/cashier’s check before receiving a permit. The permit expires sixty days after issuance.
Section 10.31 makes it unlawful for anyone to “place, deposit, display or offer for sale any fence, goods or other obstructions upon, over, across or under any public property without first having obtained a written permit from the Council.” Before granting any permit, the Council “may impose such insurance or bonding conditions thereon as it, considering the projected danger to public or private property or to *8 persons, deems proper.” The ordinance does not specify how soon the Council must consider a permit application, nor does it state the duration of the permit.
Neither ordinance on its face proscribes
giving away
newspapers that the donor
is
holding
while standing on a City sidewalk. Nevertheless, the City has applied, and
apparently wants to continue to apply, the ordinances to Steele, whether or not he
attempts to sell his newspapers and whether or not he places them on City prоperty.
The City’s permit schemes are prior restraints on protected speech, but the City
argues--and the District Court agreed--that they are constitutional as valid time, place,
and manner restrictions. See Ward v. Rock Against Racism,
First, the permit schemes vest the City Council with too much discretion to
discriminate against disfavored speech or unpopular speakers. See City of Lakewood
v. Plain Dealer Pub. Co., 486 U.S. 750, 755-59 (1988) (licensing scheme giving
government unlimited discretion is facially unconstitutional; mere existence of such
discretion, combined with power of prior restraint, intimidates speakers into censoring
themselves even if discretion and power are never actually abused); Shuttlesworth v.
City of Birmingham,
Second, section 6.39 requires a $1,000 bond or certified check before the
applicant can receive a solicitation permit, and a section 10.31 obstruction permit is
subject to “such insuranсe or bonding conditions” as the City Council may impose
“considering the projected danger to public or private property or to persons.” In this
regard, Felix’s letter stated that Steele would need “a substantial bond” and “public
liability coverage with policy limits equal to those required of thе City.” These
requirements cannot be imposed as a prior restraint on protected speech. See Forsyth
County, Ga. v. Nationalist Movement,
Third, neither ordinance imposes a time limit on the City Council’s decision to grant or deny a permit. See Riley v. Nat’l Fed’n of the Blind of N.C., Inc., 487 U.S. 781, 802 (1988) (regulation prohibiting speech until speaker obtains license must *10 provide that licensor will “within a specified brief period, either issue a license or go to court”) (citation and internal quotation omitted).
Accordingly, we reverse the District Court’s grant of summary judgment as to Steele’s First Amendment claims against the City defendants. We leave the question of qualified immunity to the District Court on remand. In all other respects, we affirm the judgment of the District Court.
A true copy.
Attest:
CLERK, U.S. COURT OF APPEALS, EIGHTH CIRCUIT.
