Dissenting Opinion
dissеnting from the denial of rehearing en banc, with whom O’BRIEN, TYMKOVICH, and GORSUCH, Circuit Judges, join.
The court’s decision continues a troubling development in our Establishment Clause cases — the use of a “reasonable observer” who is increasingly hostile to religious symbols in the public sphere and who parses relevant context and history to find governmental endorsement of religion. See Am. Atheists, Inc. v. Duncan,
In striking down memorial crosses donated by the Utah Highway Patrol Association (“UHPA”) to commemorate fallen troopers, the court erred in several respects. First, the court’s analysis begins by effectively presuming that religious symbols on public property are unconstitutional. Such a presumption has no basis in our precedent and is unwarranted. Second, the court’s reasonable observer does not sufficiently acknowledge the totality of
Background
A brief recitation of the operative facts is necessary. In 1998 the Utah Highway Patrol Association, a private organization that supports Utah Highway Patrol (“UHP”) officers and their families, began a project to memorialize UHP troopers killed in the line of duty. Am. Atheists,
In striking down the memorial crosses under the Establishment Clause, the court employed Justice O’Connor’s endorsement test. Am. Atheists,
In my view, the court’s application of the endorsement test is incorrect to the extent it: (1) effectively imposed a presumption of unconstitutionality on religious symbols in the public sphere; (2) employed a “reasonable observer” who ignored certain facts of the case and instead drew unsupported and quite odd conclusions; and (3) incorrectly focused on the religious nature of the crosses themselves, instead of the message they convey.
Discussion
A. Presumption of Unconstitutionality.
The court’s application of the “endorsement test” begins with the correct and unremarkable observation that the Latin cross is “unequivocally a symbol of the Christian faith.” Am. Atheists,
This is a curious formulation of the issue. Of course, our job is to thoroughly analyze the appearance, context, and factual background of the challenged displays before deciding the constitutional question. See Lynch,
Besides being unprecedented, the court’s approach is unwarranted. While it is undoubtedly correct that governments cannot erect or maintain symbols that convey “a message of governmental endorsement of religion,” Am. Atheists,
B. The Unreasonable “Reasonable Observer. ”
As the court notes, the “reasonable observer” of our Establishment Clause jurisprudence “is kin to the fictitious reasonably prudent person of tort law.” Am. Atheists,
In the Tenth Circuit, the extent of the reasonable observer’s knowledge is vast. The reasonable observer is keenly aware of all the details of the challenged display, see Weinbaum,
Contrast this knowledge with the reasonable observer in this case: although the observer properly notices the crosses’ large size and the UHP’s beehive symbol, he fails to take account of the officer’s name and badge number painted on the crossbar in large, black letters, the officer’s picture, and the biographical plaque. Am. Atheists,
Beyond failing to acknowledge the entirety of the crosses’ physical characteristics, the court’s reasonable observer fails to adequately address the obvious and critical facts surrounding the memorial crosses — the crosses are erected near the location of the officer’s death, the crosses were erected by a private organization for the purpose of memorializing the fallen trooper, the crosses were chosen by the trooper’s family, and that Utah expressly declined to endorse the memorials. Am. Atheists,
The court’s “reasonable observer” does not merely fail to consider all relevant facts. He quickly departs from the evidence presented by the parties in favor of an unfounded and somewhat paranoid theory. Instead of concluding that the UHP adopted the crosses to memorialize the trooper whose name, picture, and biographical information is affixed to the cross — which, of course, is the conclusion supported by the record — the court’s observer “link[s]” the UHP and Christianity by way of the UHP’s beehive symbol. Am. Atheists,
The Court cites Friedman v. Board of Cnty. Comm’rs to support the reasonable observer’s fear of discrimination. However, contrary to the decision in Friedman, where the County’s seal, which was affixed to law enforcement vehicles, bore a cross surrounded by a “blaze of golden light,” a flock of sheep, and a Spanish phrase that translated to “With this, we conquer,”
In support of the decision, the court repeatedly emphasizes the crosses’ size. Am. Atheists,
Further, would the court’s “reasonable” observer be satisfied if the crosses were smaller? Not likely. After all, both small and lаrge crosses are the “preeminent symbol[s] of Christianity,” id. at 1160, and it would be difficult for the UHPA to cram all the “contextualizing facts” the court desires onto a small cross. Focusing on the crosses’ size also exacerbates an already acute problem in our Establishment Clause jurisprudence — providing governments and the public with notice of what actions violate the Constitution. If a twelve-foot cross is unconstitutional, how about eight feet? Six feet? Four? Two? And what is the guiding principle? Confronted with the court’s decision, governments face a Hobson’s choice: foregoing memorial crosses or facing litigation. The choice most cash-strapped governments would choose is obvious, and it amounts to a heckler’s veto. Some might greet that result with enthusiasm — but it is certainly not required by the Constitution.
The court also notes that, in briefing and in oral argument, Utah took the position that it would permit memorial crosses but not other religious symbols. Am. Atheists,
C. Religious Symbolism of the Memorial Crosses.
Throughout the opinion, the court implies that the memorial crosses cannot simultaneously be religious symbols and survive challenge under the Establishment Clause. See Am. Atheists,
These statements are both confusing and troubling. Just as the Establishment Clause does not “compel the government to purge from the public sphere all that in any way partakes in the religious,” Van Orden,
Likewise, in this case the Defendants did not face the impossible task of producing evidence “that the cross has been universally embraced as a marker for the burial sites of non-Christians or as a memorial for a non-Christian’s death.” American Atheists,
The court also concludes that the crosses did not “convey[] in this context a secular meaning that can be divorced from its religious significance.” Id. at 1162. The court’s inability to ascertain a nonreligious message is remarkable. Recently, a plurality of the Supreme Court recognized precisely what the court did not — that the white, Latin cross is a “symbol that ... has complex meaning beyond the expression of religious views.” Salazar v. Buono, - U.S. -,
While Buono does not directly control the case before us, the plurality’s opinion supports the common-sense perception that the memorial crosses did indeed have a “secular meaning that [could] be divorced from their religious significance.” Am. Atheists,
Dissenting Opinion
joined by PAUL KELLY, JR., Circuit Judge, dissenting from the denial of rehearing en banc.
I respectfully dissent from denial of rehearing en banc. Judge Kelly outlines several reasons why this decision is worthy of the full court’s attention. I write to note two more.
I
Our court has now repeatedly misapplied the “reasonable observer” test, and it is apparently destined to continue doing so until we are told to stop. Justice O’Con-nor instructed that the reasonable observer should not be seen as “any ordinary individual, who might occasionally do unreasonable things, but ... rather [as] a
In this case, our observer starts with the biased presumption that Utah’s roadside crosses are unconstitutional. Panel Op. at 1120-21. He does so despite the fact a plurality of the Supreme Court only this year held that “[a] cross by the side of a public highway marking, for instance, the place where a state trooper perished need not be taken as a statement of governmental support for sectarian beliefs.” Salazar v. Buono, — U.S. -,
But that’s not the end of things. It seems we must also take account of our observer’s selective and feeble eyesight. Selective because our observer has no problem seeing the Utah highway patrol insignia and using it to assume some nefarious state endorsement of religion is going on; yet, mysteriously, he claims the inability to see the fallen trooper’s name posted directly above the insignia. Id. at 1121.
And feeble because our observer can’t see the trooper’s name even though it is painted in approximately 8-inch lettering across a 6-foot cross-bar — the same size text used for posting the words “SPEED LIMIT” alongside major interstate highways. See Federal Highway Administration, Manual on Uniform Traffic Control Devices for Streets and Highways 46 (2009); Federal Highway Administration, Standard Highway Signs 1-10 (2004). What’s more, many of Utah’s memorials aren’t even on highways: four of the thirteen are adjacent to side-streets where “55-plus” speeds aren’t common — including two in front of a Utah Highway Patrol field office. All the same, our observer plows by, some combination of too blind and too fast to read signs adequate for interstate highway traffic. Biased, selective, vision impaired, and a bit of a hot-rodder our observer may be, but the reasonable observer of Justice O’Connor’s description he is not.
Still, if this case could be dismissed as a “one off’ misapplication of the reasonable observer test, that might make it less worthy of review. But it can’t be so easily shrugged off. Two years ago we applied a similar misconstruction of the reasonable observer test to become the only circuit court since the Supreme Court’s decision in Van Orden v. Perry,
II
And this raises an even larger question. The court’s holding does and must rest on the view that anything a putatively “reasonable observer” could think “endorses” religion is constitutionally problematic. Indeed, the result in this case could hardly be achieved under any different test. It is undisputed that the state actors here did not act with any religious purpose; there is no suggestion in this case that Utah’s monuments establish a religion or coerce anyone to participate in any religious exercise; and the court does not even render a judgment that it thinks Utah’s memorials actually endorse religion. Most Utahans, the record shows, don’t even revere the cross. Thus it is that the court strikes down Utah’s policy only because it is able to imagine a hypothetical “reasonable observer” who could think Utah means to endorse religion — even when it doesn’t.
But whether even the true reasonable observer/endorsеment test remains appropriate for assessing Establishment Clause challenges is far from clear. A majority of the Supreme Court in Van Orden declined to employ the reasonable observer/endorsement test in an Establishment Clause challenge to a public display including the Ten Commandments. See
The court today, however, declines to consider any of these developments, much as it declined to do so in Green. See
Neither is this any humdrum disagreement where uniformity of federal law may not be a pressing concern. Where other cоurts permit state laws and actions to stand, we strike them down. And the test we use to do so rests on an uncertain premise — that this court possesses the constitutional authority to invalidate not only duly enacted laws and policies that actually “respeet[] the establishment of religion,” U.S. Const, amend. I, but also laws and policies a reasonable hypothetical observer could think do so. And, in this circuit’s case, to go even a step further still, claiming the authority to strike down laws and policies a conjured observer could mistakenly think respect an establishment of religion. That is a remarkable use of the “awesome power” of judicial review, Williams v. United States,
The Utah Highway Patrol Association (“UHPA”), "with the permission of Utah state authorities, erected a number of twelve-foot high crosses on public land to memorialize fallen Utah Highway Patrol (“UHP”) troopers. Plaintiffs-Appellants, American Atheists, Inc., a Texas non-profit organization, and three individual members of American Atheists who reside in Utah, challenge the legality of these memorials under the Establishment Clause of the federal constitution and Article I of Utah’s constitution. We hold that these memorials have the impermissible effect of conveying to the reasonable observer the message that the State prefers or otherwise endorses a certain religion. They therefore violate the Establishment Clause of the federal constitution. In light of this conclusion, we need not reach the separate question of whether these displays also violate Utah’s constitution.
I. Background
UHPA, a non-profit organization that supports UHP officers and their families, initiated the memorial project in 1998. The memorials are twelve-foot high crosses with six-foot horizontal cross-bars. The fallen trooper’s name, rank, and badge number are printed in large letters on the horizontal cross-bar. Immediately underneath the place where the two bars meet hangs a large (approximately 12" high and 16" wide) depiction of the UHP’s official “beehive” symbol. Beneath that are printed the year the trooper died and a small plaque containing a picture of the trooper and some biographical information.
UHPA member and officer Lee Perry and his friend Robert Kirby came up with the idea for these memorials and designed the crosses, which UHPA approved. UHPA asserts that
[t]he purpose of these memorials is fourfold: (1) the memorials stand as a lasting reminder to UHPA members and Utah highway patrol troopers that a fellow trooper gave his life in service to this state; (2) the memorials remind highway drivers that a trooper died in order to make the state safe for all citizens; (3) the memorials honor the trooper and the sacrifice he and his family made for the State of Utah; and (4) encourage safe conduct on the highways.
(Aple. Supp. App. at 3112.) Perry and Kirby determined that “only a cross could effectively convey these weighty messages instantaneously” to motorists driving by a memorial. (Id. at 3165.) According to Perry, they chose a white Roman or Latin cross because
only a white cross could effectively convey the simultaneous messages of death, honor, remembrance, gratitude, sacrifice, and safety. I determined this because a cross is widely recognized as a memorial for a person’s death and especially respect to those who have given their lives to insure the safety and protection of others.
(Aplt. App. at 420.) Moreover, a “cross, near the highway, with the inscriptions, symbols and plaques mentioned above, conveys the unmistakable message that a Utah Highway Patrolman died near this
Because generally drivers would be passing a memorial at 55-plus miles per hour, the UHPA determined that the cross memorials “needed to prominently communicate all of this instantaneously.” (Aple. Supp. App. at 3165.) Further, to “effectively communicate these messages,” the UHPA sought “to place each cross in a location that was: (1) visible to the public; (2) safe to stop and view; and (3) as close to the actual spot of the trooper’s death as possible.” (Id.)
Before erecting any memorial, the UHPA obtained the consent of the fallen trooper’s family. None of these families have evеr objected to the use of the cross as a memorial or requested that the UHPA memorialize their loved one using a different symbol. However, “[bjecause [the UHPA] exist[s] to serve family members of highway patrolmen, the UHPA would provide another memorial symbol if requested by the family.”
UHPA erected its first memorial cross in 1998 on private property located approximately fifty feet from a state highway. Later, UHPA obtained permission from the State of Utah to erect additional memorial crosses on public property, including the rights-of-way adjacent to the State’s roads, roadside rest areas, and the lawn outside a UHP office in Salt Lake County.
Between 1998 and 2003, the UHPA erected a total of thirteen memorials. The memorials are all privately funded; UHPA retains ownership of the memorials and maintains them, while the State continues to own and control the state land on which some of the memorials are located. Local businesses and Boy Scout troops have aided the UHPA in funding, building and maintaining the memorial crosses.
II. This litigation
Plaintiffs brought this suit under 42 U.S.C. § 1983 and Article I of the Utah Constitution against several state employees who were responsible for authorizing the UHPA to incorporate the UHP logo on the memorial crosses and to place of some of thеse crosses on state land.
Upon the parties’ cross-motions for summary judgment, the district court denied Plaintiffs’ motions and granted summary judgment for all Defendants, holding that these memorial crosses did not violate the federal or state constitution. See American Atheists, Inc. v. Duncan,
III. Analysis
A. Standing
As a threshold matter, we must determine whether Plaintiffs have Article III standing to bring this case. See O’Connor v. Washburn Univ.,
“To demonstrate standing, a plaintiff must allege actual or threatened personal injury, fairly traceable to the defendant’s unlawful conduct and likely to be redressed by a favorable decision of the court.” Foremaster v. City of St. George,
Here, the individual named plaintiffs allege to have had “direct personal and unwelcome contact with the crosses.” (Aplt. App. at 587, 596, and 682.) Under O’Connor,
Because the individual named plaintiffs here have standing, this court does not need to determine whether American Atheists would also have standing in its own right. See Watt v. Energy Action Educ. Found.,
B. Whether the district couri abused its discretion in striking the declarations of O. Salah and D. Chatterjee
The district court ordered the parties, when submitting declarations, to identify which motion those declarations supported. The court further warned the parties that “[f]ailure to identify the declarations in this manner will result in their being stricken and not considered by the court.” (D. Ct. doc. 132.) Subsequent to the district court’s order, Plaintiffs submitted to the court the declarations of O. Salah and D. Chatterjee, but failed to identify the motion Plaintiffs sought to support with those declarations. The district court, therefore, struck them. The court did not abuse its discretion in doing so.
C. Whether the Free Speech Clause Protects these Cross Memorials from Establishment Clause Scrutiny
As an initial matter, UHPA argues that the displays at issue in this case are UHPA’s private speech, not the expression of the state of Utah and, therefore, that the Free Speech Clause, not the Establishment Clause, should govern our analysis in this case. Further, UHPA asserts that Utah would violate the Free Speech Clause by prohibiting the displays at issue in this case and, therefore, that the Establishment Clause cannot mandate the prohibition of these displays. The UHPA is supported in this position by amici curiae, the States of Colorado, Kansas, New Mexico, and Oklahoma, and The Becket Fund for Religious Liberty. These arguments fail in light of the Supreme Court’s recent decision in Pleasant Grove City v. Summum,
In Pleasant Grove City, the Supreme Court held that “[j]ust as government-commissioned and government-financed monuments speak for the government, so do privately financed and donated monuments that the government accepts and displays to the public on government land.” Id. at 1133. Thus, the Court concluded, “as a general matter, [the Free Speech Clause’s] forum analysis simply does not apply to the installation of permanent monuments on public property.” Id. at 1138.
As permanent monuments erected on public land,
Both at oral argument and in a letter submitted pursuant to Fed. R.App. P. 28(j), the state amici and the Becket Fund for Religious Liberty attempt to distinguish this case from Pleasant Grove City, arguing that even in light of the Court’s opinion in Pleasant Grove City, the displays at issue in this case should be treated as private speech. They argue that Pleasant Grove City can be distinguished from our case in three ways: (1) in Pleasant Grove City, the city took ownership of the displays at issue, while in this case, the UHPA has retained ownership of the memorial crosses; (2) Utah has distanced itself from the message conveyed in these displays by issuing a statement that the Utah Department of Transportation “neither approves or disapproves the memorial marker” (Aplt. App. at 2303); and (3) unlike the displаys at issue in Pleasant Grove City, these displays are not really permanent because both Utah and the UHPA retain the right to remove the display at any time. These distinctions are unpersuasive.
The fact that the UHPA retains ownership over these displays does not materially affect our analysis of whether the displays at issue in this case constitute government speech. In Pleasant Grove City, the Supreme Court noted that the city had taken ownership of “most of the monuments in the Park.”
Similarly, Utah’s attempt to distance itself from the message conveyed by these memorial crosses, by stating that it neither “approves or disapproves” them, falls flat in light of the Supreme Court’s discussion in Pleasant Grove City. In Pleasant Grove City, the Court explicitly rejected the respondent’s argument that, in order for a monument to constitute government speech, the state must formally adopt the message conveyed by the display. The Court noted that the City’s decision to display that permanent monument on its property “provided a more dramatic form of adoption than the sort of formal endorsement that respondent would demand....” Id. at 1134. Conversely, the government’s actions in this case — allowing these memorial crosses to be displayed with the official UHP insignia primarily on public land — cannot be overshadowed by
Finally, we reject the state amici’s contention that, because the UHPA and Utah each retained the right to remove these displays, they are not “permanent” and, therefore, the Court’s decision in Pleasant Grove City does not cover this case. This project began more than ten years ago, and there is no evidence that any of the memorial crosses erected since that time have been removеd. We think that is permanent enough to constitute government speech. See id. at 1138 (contrasting the “permanent” displays at issue in that case with the “temporary” sixteen-day display at issue in Capitol Square Review and Advisory Board v. Pinette,
D. Federal Establishment Clause claim
1. Standard of Review
This court reviews de novo a district court’s decision in a First Amendment case, O’Connor,
2. The Lemon/Endorsement Test
“The first clause of the First Amendment provides, ‘Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion.... ’ U.S. Const, amend. I. This substantive limitation applies also to the ‘legislative power of the States and their political subdivisions’ as a result of the Fourteenth Amendment.” Weinbaum,
Although the Supreme Court is sharply divided on the standard governing Establishment Clause cases, see Green,
The Court in Lemon established three general tests to determine whether a state has violated the principles protected by the Establishment Clause: “First, the statute must have a secular legislative purpose; second, its principal or primary effect must be one that neither advances nor inhibits religion; finally, the statute must not foster an excessive government entanglement with religion.” Lemon,
Addressing the first and second Lemon tests, “[t]his court ‘interprets] the purpose and effect prongs of Lemon in light of Justice O’Connor’s endorsement test.’ ” Weinbaum,
3. Plaintiffs Have Failed to Establish a Violation of the Purpose Prong of the Lemon Test
The question presented by the first prong of the Lemon test, then, is “whether the government conduct was motivated by an intent to endorse religion.” Weinbaum,
Here, we can discern a plausible secular purpose. Considering first the evidence of the UHPA’s motivation, that organization has, throughout the course of this project, consistently asserted that its intent in erecting these memorials is only secular: to honor fallen troopers and to promote safety on the State’s highways. The secular nature of the UHPA motive is bolstered by the fact that the memorials were designed by two individuals who are members of the Mormon faith, the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Saints (“LDS Church”), a religion that does not use the cross as a religious symbol. These men explained that they were inspired to use the Latin cross for the fallen trooper memorials because of the presence of such crosses in military cemeteries, which honor fallen service members for their sacrifice, and roadside memorials found where traffic fatalities have occurred. Plaintiffs are unable to point to any evidence suggesting that the UHPA’s motive is other than secular.
Nevertheless, the focus of this first Lemon test is on the government’s purpose, and not that of a private actor. See Green,
Furthermore, in light of this evidence, there is no reason to conclude that the Defendants’ proffered secular explanations were a sham. See Weinbaum,
4. UHPA’s Memorial Crosses Violate the Effect Prong of the Lemon/Endorsement Test
Next, we consider whether the State Defendants violated the second Lemon test. The Establishment Clause “mandate[s] governmental neutrality between religion and religion, and between religion and non-religion.” Weinbaum,
[governments may not “mak[e] adherence to a religion relevant in any way to a person’s standing in the political community.” County of Allegheny v. Am. Civil Liberties Union Greater Pittsburgh Chapter,492 U.S. 573 , 594 [109 5. Ct. 3086,106 L.Ed.2d 472 ] (1989) (quoting Lynch,465 U.S. at 687 [104 S.Ct. 1355 ] (O’Connor, J., concurring)). And actions which have the effect of communicating governmental endorsement or disapproval, “whether intentionally or unintentionally, ... make religion relevant, in reality or public perception, to status in the political community.” Lynch,465 U.S. at 692 ,104 S.Ct. 1355 (O’Connor, J., concurring).
Green,
When determining whether a display has the impermissible effect “of communicating a message of governmental endorsement or disapproval” of religion, Green,
look[ ] through the eyes of an objective observer who is aware of the purpose, context, and history of the symbol. The objective or reasonable observer is kin to the fictitious “reasonably prudent person” of tort law. See Gaylor [ v. United States ], 74 F.3d [214,] 217 [ (10th Cir. 1996) ]. So we presume that the court-created “objective observer” is aware of information “not limited to ‘the information gleaned simply from viewing the challenged display.’ ” O’Connor,416 F.3d at 1228 (quoting Wells v. City & County of Denver,257 F.3d 1132 , 1142-43 (10th Cir.2001)).
Weinbaum,
a. Purpose
Separate from Lemon’s first test, courts also consider the Government’s purpose in undertaking the challenged conduct as illustrative of the effect that that conduct conveys. See Weinbaum,
b. Context and history
Context can determine the permissibility of displays of religious symbols on public property. See Allegheny County,
This case involves memorials using a Latin cross, which “is unequivocally a symbol of the Christian faith.” Weinbaum,
Here, we conclude that the cross memorials would convey to a reasonable observer that the state of Utah is endorsing Christianity. The memorials use the preeminent symbol of Christianity, and they do so standing alone (as opposed to it being part of some sort of display involving other symbols). That cross conspicuously bears the imprimatur of a state entity, the UHP, and is found primarily on public land.
The fact that the cross includes biographical information about the fallen trooper does not diminish the governmental message endorsing Christianity. This is especially true because a motorist driving by one of the memorial crosses at 55-plus miles per hour may not notice, and certainly would not focus on, the biographical information. The motorist, however, is bound to notice the preeminent symbol of Christiаnity and the UHP insignia, linking the State to that religious sign.
Moreover, the fact that all of the fallen UHP troopers are memorialized with a Christian symbol conveys the message that there is some connection between the UHP and Christianity. This may lead the reasonable observer to fear that Christians are likely to receive preferential treatment from the UHP — both in their hiring practices and, more generally, in the treatment that people may expect to receive on Utah’s highways.
Defendants point to four contextualizing facts that, they argue, render these cross memorials sufficiently secular to pass constitutional muster: (1) these displays аre clearly intended as memorials; (2) they are located in areas where similar memorials have long been displayed; (3) many of the designers and producers of these displays do not revere the cross as a symbol of their faith; and (4) a majority of Utahns do not revere the cross as a symbol of their faith. Although we agree that some of these contextual elements may help reduce the message of religious endorsement
i These Displays are Clearly Intended as Memorials
Defendants argue that the placement of these displays, in combination with the troopers’ names emblazoned on the crosses and the biographical information included in these displays, clearly conveys the message, instead, that these crosses are designed as memorials and, therefore, that they do not convey a message of religious endorsement. We agree that a reasonable observer would recognize these memorial crosses as symbols of death. However, we do not agree that this nullifies their religious sectarian content because a memorial cross is not a generic symbol of death; it is a Christian symbol of death that signifies or memorializes the death of a Christian. The parties agree that a cross was traditionally a Christian symbol of death and, despite Defendants’ assertions to the contrary, there is no evidence in the record that the cross has been widely embraced as a marker for the burial sites of non-Christians or as a memorial for a non-Christian’s death. The UHPA acknowledges that when it asserts that it would honor the request made by a Jewish state trooper’s family to memorialize him with a Star of David rather than a cross.
The State Defendants point to the use of crosses as markers for fallen soldiers as evidence that the cross has become a secular symbol of death. However, the evidence in the record shows that the military provides soldiers and their families with a number of different religious symbols that they may use on government-issued headstones or markers. Even in the American military cemeteries overseas, which include rows and rows of white crosses, fallen Jewish service members are memorialized instead with a Star of David. Thus, while the cross may be a common symbol used in markers and memorials, there is no evidence that it is widely accepted as a secular symbol.
Defendants and some of the amici urge this court to treat memorial crosses in much the same way as the Supreme Court has treated Christmas trees and historical displays that include depictions of the Ten Commandments. These arguments are unpersuasive. Courts have consistently treated Christmas as both a religious and secular holiday, and many courts have cited Justice Blackmun’s statement that “[a]lthough Christmas trees once carried religious connotations, today they typify the secular celebration of Christmas.” County of Allegheny,
Similarly, the memorial crosses at issue here cannot be meaningfully compared to the Ten Commandments display that the Supreme Court upheld in Van Orden. The display at issue in Van Orden was part of a historical presentation of various legal and cultural texts and, in that context, the “nonreligious aspects of the tablets’ message [ ] predominate^]” over any religious purpose or effect.
ii. Roadside Memorials Often Use the Symbol of the Cross and, in that Context, Crosses are not Seen as Religious Symbols
Defendants argue that crosses are a fairly common symbol used in roadside memorials and, in that context, they are seen as secular symbols. However, the mere fact that the cross is a common symbol used in roadside memorials does not mean it is a secular symbol. There is no evidence that non-Christians have embraced the use of crosses as roadside memorials. Further, there is no evidence that any state has allowed memorial crosses to be erected on public property that, like the memorials at issue in this case, display the official insignia of a state entity. Finally, even if we might consider a roadside cross generally to be a secular symbol of death, the memorial crosses at issue in this case appear to be much larger than the crosses typically found on the side of public roads. Defendants provided a statement from a representative of the Montana American Legion White Cross Highway Fatality Marker Program in support of their claim that roadside crosses are common, recognizable symbols of highway fatalities. The cross memorials at issue here are ten times as large as those crosses, which are only between twelve and sixteen inches in height. The massive size of the crosses displayed on Utah’s rights-of-way and public property unmistakably conveys a message of endorsement, proselytization, and aggrandizement of religion that is far different from the more humble spirit of small roadside crosses.
Hi. The Designers and Producers of These Displays do not Revere the Cross as a Symbol of their Faith
Nor are we persuaded of the significance of the fact that many of the designers and producers of these displays do not revere the cross as a symbol of their faith. As the Supreme Court recently explained, “[b]y accepting a privately donated monument and placing it on [state] property, a [state] engages in expressive conduct, but the intended and perceived significance of that conduct may not coincide with the thinking of the monument’s donor or creator.” Pleasant Grove City,
Similarly, the fact that cross-revering Christians are a minority in Utah does not mean that it is implausible that the State’s actions would be interpreted by the reasonable observer as endorsing that religion. In County of Allegheny, the Supreme Court held that Pittsburgh did not violate the Establishment Clause by placing a Channukah menorah on its property. However, in a vote-counting exercise, Justice Blackmun explained, in a portion of the opinion which no other Justice joined, that his conсlusion that this “display cannot be interpreted as endorsing Judaism alone does not mean, however, that it is implausible, as a general matter, for a city like Pittsburgh to endorse a minority faith.”
[rjegardless of the plausibility of a putative governmental purpose, the more important inquiry here is whether the governmental display of a minority faith’s religious symbol could ever reasonably be understood to convey a message of endorsement of that faith. A menorah standing alone at city hall may well send such a message to nonadherents, just as in this case the creche standing alone at the Allegheny County Courthouse sends a message of governmental endorsement of Christianity....
Id. at 634,
This appears to be especially true in this case because members of the majority LDS Church “may not necessarily share the same sensitivity to the symbol [of the cross] as a Jewish family.” American Atheists,
These factors that Defendants point to as secularizing the memorials do not sufficiently diminish the crosses’s message of government’s endorsement of Christianity that would be conveyed to a reasonable observer. Therefore, the memorials violate the Establishment Clause.
IV. Conclusion
Accordingly, we REVERSE the district court’s decision granting summary judgment for Defendants, and REMAND the case to the district court to enter judgment for Plaintiffs consistent with this opinion.
Notes
. Photos of some of these displays are attached to this opinion.
. Notwithstanding the UHPA’s position, the State Defendants, in oral argument before the district court and in their briefs and argument before us, asserted that they would not allow any change in the memorial, whether to accommodate other faiths or otherwise.
. A photo depicting the lawn outside this UHP office, where all of one and part of the other of these two memorial crosses are visible, is attached to this opinion.
. UHPA asserts that federal courts do not have subject matter jurisdiction to consider Establishment Clause claims asserted under 42 U.S.C. § 1983. This court, however, has previously rejected that argument. See Green v. Haskett County Bd. of Comm'rs,
. This court delayed issuing this opinion, awaiting the Supreme Court's decision in Salazar v. Buono, - U.S. -,
. In striking these declarations, the district court also noted that D. Chatterjee’s declaration appears to be an attempt by Plaintiffs "to submit expert testimony under the guise of lay opinion testimony. The Chatterjee declaration is inadmissible because he was never identified as an expert and his testimony does not fit any other admissible category.” (Aplt. App. at 2904-05.) We need not address the propriety of this additional reason for striking Chatterjee's declaration because the district court was justified in striking both declarations due to Plaintiffs' failure to identify which motions these declarations were intended to support.
. Although it appears that at least one memorial is located on private land, the UHPA does not base its argument on that fact.
. Al oral argument, the state amici also argued that this case is distinguishable from Pleasant Grove City because the memorials in this case were erected in places like the sides of the road, where space is less scarce than in public parks. We also find this distinction unpersuasive. Surely, the memorials placed in front of the UHP office are on land that is no less scarce than the land in most parks. Further, as the record in this case demonstrates, the State tightly controls the displays placed on the rights-of-way near its roads and, although those rights-of-way may cover a larger geographic area than the state's parks (an allegation we are unwilling to accept on the amici’s say so), safety concerns and statutes like the federal Highway Beautification Act, 23 U.S.C. § 131, severely limit the area where memorials or other monuments could be displayed.
. We reject Plaintiffs’ argument that any time government conduct involves the use of a Latin cross, there is an Establishment Clause violation.
. Plaintiffs argue that the State Defendants failed to present any evidence of their actual motive in permitting UHPA to use the UHP insignia and to place some of the memorials on public land. But Plaintiffs bear the burden of proving that the State Defendants have violated the Establishment Clause. See Brooks v. City of Oak Ridge,
. Here we deal with context and history together because there is no evidence of relevant historical factors apart from context information.
. The record indicates that at least one, and perhaps several, of these memorials are located on private land near a state highway. That fact does not change our analysis, however, because those crosses, even though on private land, still bear the UHP insignia, which UHPA was authorized by UHP to use.
. The connection between the UHP and Christianity is perhaps even more strongly conveyed by the two memorial crosses located immediately outside the UHP office. We are deeply concerned about the message these crosses would convey to a non-Christian walking by the UHP office or, even more troubling, to a non-Christian walking in against his will.
. In fact, the massive size of these displays is such a deviatiоn from the normal memorials of death seen on the sides of roads that they may convey to the reasonable observer a Christian religious symbol. Defendants assert the crosses must be as large as they are so motorists passing by at 55-plus miles per hour can see them. But the size far exceeds the size necessary to be seen from the highway. And, not all of the memorials are located near a highway. For example, several are located near a UHP office. The size of those crosses is particularly troubling.
Lead Opinion
ORDER
This matter is before the court on defendants/appellees’ Petition For Rehearing With Suggestion For Rehearing En Banc. Also before the court is the Utah Highway Patrol Association’s Petition For Rehearing En Banc. We also have responses to both petitions from the plaintiffs/appellants.
Upon consideration, the requests for panel rehearing are granted in part. Specifically, the original panel opinion is amended at line 12 of page 29 [
Both suggestions for rehearing en banc were submitted to all of the judges of the court who are in regular active service and who are not recused in this matter. A poll was requested, and a majority voted to deny the en banc suggestion.
Judges Kelly, O’Brien, Tymkovich and Gorsuch would grant rehearing en banc. Judges Kelly and Gorsuch write separately, and those are attached to this order. Judge Kelly is joined by Judges O’Brien, Tymkovich, and Gorsuch, and Judge Gorsuch is joined by Judge Kelly.
