Case Information
*2 Before SMITH, CLEMENT, and SOUTHWICK, Circuit Judges.
JERRY E. SMITH, Circuit Judge:
Thе American Humanist Association (“AHA”) and Isaiah Smith appeal a summary judgment for defendants, the Birdville Independent School District and its seven board members (collectively, “BISD”). AHA and Smith allege that BISD’s policy of inviting students to deliver statements, which can include invocations, before school-board meetings violates the First Amendment’s Establishment Clause. Because the practice falls more nearly within the re- cently reaffirmed legislative-prayer exception to the Supreme Court’s Estab- lishment Clause jurisprudence, we affirm the summary judgment in favor of the school district and, in the accompanying consolidated appeal, we reverse and render on the denial of qualified immunity to the school board members.
I.
BISD is a public school district. Smith is a 2014 graduate of Birdville High School and a member of AHA, an organization that “advocate[es] progres- sive values and equality for humanists, atheists, and freethinkers.” While a student at Birdville High School and as an alumnus, Smith attended BISD board meetings, some of which included student-led prayers. At a board meet- ing in December 2014, with a student-led invocation, Smith said that he felt affronted by the prayer and that it meant that BISD was “favoring religion over nonreligion.” Smith is and has been an adult at all relevant times.
BISD’s board holds monthly meetings in the District Administration Building, which is not located within a school. The meetings include sessions open to the public. Attendees are free to enter and leave at any time. Most attendees are adults, though students frequently attend school-board meetings to receive awards or for other reasons, such as brief performances by school bands and choirs.
Since 1997, two students have opened each session—with one leading the Plеdge of Allegiance and the Texas pledge and the other delivering some sort of statement, which can include an invocation. Those student presenters, typically either elementary- or middle-school students, are given one minute. BISD officials do not direct them on what to say but tell them to make sure their statements are relevant to school-board meetings and not obscene or otherwise inappropriate. At a number of meetings, the student speakers have presented poems or read secular statements. But according to AHA and Smith, they are usually an invocation in the form of a prayer, with speakers frequently referencing “Jesus” or “Christ.” AHA and Smith claim that sometimes the prayers are directed at the audience through the use of phrases such as “let us pray,” “stand for the prayer,” or “bow your heads.”
From 1997 through February 2015, the student-led presentations were called “invocations” and were delivered by students selected on merit. [4] In March 2015, in an apparent response to AHA’s concerns about the invocations, [5] BISD began referring to them as “student expressions” and providing disclaimers that the students’ statements do not reflect BISD’s views. [6] BISD began randomly selecting, from a list of volunteers, the students who would deliver the expressions. [7]
II.
AHA and Smith sued BISD under 42 U.S.C. § 1983 for monetary dam- ages from the individual school-board members and declaratory and injunctive relief. In their amended complaint, AHA and Smith alleged that BISD has a “policy, practice, and custom of permitting, promoting, and endorsing prayers delivered by school-selected students” at board meetings, in violation of the Establishment Clause. BISD answered that the student-led invocations either qualify as privatе speech, satisfy the conventional Establishment Clause tests, or fit within the legislative-prayer exception to those tests.
BISD moved to dismiss, alleging that AHA and Smith had failed to state a claim and that the school-board members were entitled to qualified immun- ity. The district court denied the motion. The individual-capacity defendants filed an interlocutory appeal challenging the denial of qualified immunity.
BISD moved for summary judgment. The district court granted that motion, finding that the legislative-prayer exception applies. AHA and Smith filed a separate appeal, bringing an issue of first impression to this court. [8]
III.
The Supreme Court generally applies at least one [9] of three tests under the Establishment Clause: the Lemon test, [10] the endorsement test, [11] and the coercion test. [12] But in Marsh v. Chambers , 463 U.S. 783, 784–85 (1983), a member of the Nebraska Legislature sued state officials, claiming that the practice of opening each session with a chaplain’s prayer violated the Estab- lishment Clause. The Court upheld the practice without applying any of the conventional tests, observing that “[t]he opening of sessions of legislative and other deliberative public bodies with prayer is deeply embedded in the history and tradition of this country.” Id. at 786.
The Court revisited the issue in Town of Greece v. Galloway , 134 S. Ct. 1811, 1827–28 (2014), stating unequivocally that the legislative-prayer excep- tion in Chambers extends to prayers delivered at town-board meetings. Those prayers, however, must not “denigrate nonbelievers or religious minorities, threaten damnation, or рreach conversion.” Id. at 1823. Moreover, “[t]he principal audience for these invocations is not . . . the public but lawmakers themselves, who may find that a moment of prayer or quiet reflection sets the mind to a higher purpose and thereby eases the task of governing.” at 1825.
As distinguished from legislative-prayer cases, however, the Supreme
Court, in school-prayer cases such as
Santa Fe Independent School District v.
Doe
,
particular risk” of unconstitutional coercion. The Court distinguished Weis- man from Chambers , noting that the legislative-prayer exception does not apply in “the public school context.” Id. at 597. In ACLU , the Court opined that “state-sponsored prayer in public schools” is “unconstitutional.”
The key question, then, is whether this case is essentially more a legislative-prayer case or a school-prayer matter. Like Galloway , this dispute is about the constitutionality of permitting religious invocations at the open- ing, ceremonial phase of a local deliberative body’s public meetings. But like Santa Fe , this case is about school-district-sanctioned invocations delivered by students on district property.
We agreе with the district court that “a school board is more like a legis- lature than a school classroom or event.” The BISD board is a deliberative body, charged with overseeing the district’s public schools, adopting budgets, collecting taxes, conducting elections, issuing bonds, and other tasks that are undeniably legislative. T EX . E DUC . C ODE § 11.1511. In no respect is it less a deliberative legislative body than was the town board in .
The invocations are аppropriately “solemn and respectful in tone.”
Gal-
loway
,
AHA and Smith advance three colorable theories for why this should be understood as a school-prayer case. First, they claim that legislative prayers must be “internal acts” that are “entirely” for the benefit of lаwmakers. As BISD acknowledges, its invocations are meant to benefit students and other attendees at school-board meetings, not just board members. But in Galloway , id. at 1825, the Court explained that lawmakers were merely the “principal audience” for the invocations, suggesting that the audience may be made up of various groups, as well as unaffiliated individuals, so long as lawmakers are the main one. In its brief, BISD explains that the bоard members are the invocations’ primary audience. AHA and Smith have not shown otherwise.
Second, AHA and Smith claim that BISD’s invocation policy does not fit
within the legislative-prayer exception because it lacks a “unique history.” In
Galloway
,
id.
at 1819, the Court drew on historical evidence, describing its
inquiry as “determin[ing] whether the prayer practice . . . fits within the tradi-
tion long followed in Congress and the state legislatures.” In
Chambers
,
School-board prayer presumably does not date back to the Constitution’s
adoption, since “free public education was virtually nonexistent at the time.”
Edwards v. Aguillard
,
We do not overlook AHA and Smith’s notion that the presence of students
at BISD board meetings distinguishes this case from
Chambers
and
Galloway
.
That is significant, because courts must consider “both the setting in which the
prayer arises and the audience to whom it is directed.”
Galloway
, 134 S. Ct.
at 1825. Children are especially susceptible to peer pressure and other forms
of coercion. ,
e.g.
,
Weisman
,
practice is consistent with the historical practice, given that, historically, legislative invoca-
tions were delivered by chaplains.
See Chambers
,
Although chaplains may be better at giving appropriately solemnizing invocations, the fact of their institutional religious affiliations risks the perception that the governmental body responsible for inviting them is affiliating itself with institutional religion. Allowing a student to give a Jewish prayer does not create the same perception of institutional entangle- ment that might result from a prayer from a rabbi. Thus, BISD’s practice of allowing stu- dents to deliver invocations fits within the legislative-prayer exception, notwithstanding its departure from the historical practice of chaplain-led invocations. See also id. at 786 (stating that “[t]he opening of sessions of legislative and other
deliberative public bodies with prayer is deeply embedded in the history and tradition of this
country.”).
,
of Boy Scout troops and other student groups have led the Pledge of Allegiance, and high
school students may fulfill a state-mandated сivics requirement necessary for graduation by
the legislative-prayer exception. Moreover, here, as in
Galloway
, “the prayer
is delivered during the ceremonial portion of the . . . meeting.”
Galloway
,
IV.
Although the Supreme Court has not addressed whether the legislative-
prayer exception applies to school-board invocations, two circuits have. Both
found that the legislative-prayer exception doеs not apply. In
Coles ex rel.
Coles v. Cleveland Board of Education
,
The court in
Doe v. Indian River School District
,
Coles
and
Indian River
prеdate and are factually, and there-
fore legally, distinguishable from the circumstance at BISD.
Coles
involved
going to Board meetings.”).
See Galloway
,
cern that “ordinary citizens (and even children!) are often present” at town-board meetings).
Establishment Clause cases often hinge on facts peculiar to each situation.
Weisman
,
a school board that always had at least one student member.
Coles
, 171 F.3d
at 383. In
Indian River
, student representatives attended board meetings “in
their formаl role as student government representatives.”
Indian River
,
At least two other circuit-court decisions―including one by this court― have touched on these issues. [22] Both predate Galloway and turn on an argu- ment the Court rejected there.
In
Bacus v. Palo Verde Unified School District Board of Education
,
V.
BISD board members often stand and bow their heads during the
student-led invocations. AHA and Smith claim that violates the Establish-
ment Clause regardless of whether the invocation policy itself is constitutional.
They point to
Doe v. Duncanville Independent School District
,
This cаse, by way of stark contrast, concerns legislative prayers. It is distinguishable from Duncanville for that reason alone. Legislative prayers are recited for the benefit of legislative officers. It would be nonsensical to permit legislative prayers but bar the legislative officers for whom they are being primarily recited from participating in the prayers in any way. Indeed, the Supreme Court did not take issue with the fact that Town of Greece board members bowed their heads during invocations. , 134 S. Ct. at 1826.
Feb. 27, 2017), which also involved the legislative-prayer exception. Bormuth concerned a county board whose members personally delivered religious invocations and “affirmatively excluded non-Christian prayer givers.” Id. at 287. The record suggests that board members “singled out [the plaintiff] for opprobrium” and may have denied him a spot on a particular committee in retaliation for his criticisms of the board’s invocation policy. at 286. We do not reach BISD’s arguments that the student-led invocations are private
VI.
“[L]egislative prayer lends gravity to public business, reminds law-
makers to transcend petty differences in pursuit of a higher purpose, and
expresses a common aspiration to a just and peaceful society.” ,
Notes
[1] American Humanist Association, https://americanhumanist.org (last visited Mar. 17, 2017).
[2] Of the 101 meetings from February 2008 to June 2016, elementary- and middle- school students delivеred the presentations 84 times.
[3] According to AHA and Smith, these requests typically come from the student speak-
ers, though on occasion a board member or other school official has asked the audience to
stand for the invocation. At the summary-judgment stage, “we must assume the facts as
alleged by the [plaintiff].”
Oncale v. Sundowner Offshore Servs.
,
[4] Each BISD campus selected students on a rotational basis (school-board members did not pаrticipate in the selection process). Campus officials took into account academic achievement, leadership, citizenship, extracurricular activities, and other factors.
[5] In late 2014, AHA sent BISD a letter complaining of the invocations and asking BISD to provide “written assurances that prayer will not be included in future School Board meetings.” BISD’s associate superintendent later testified that he recommended the policy changes so that the district “wouldn’t be subject to litigation.”
[6] The published policy, in its entirety, reads, The subject of the student introductions must be related to the purpose of the event and to the purpose of marking the opening of the event; honoring the occasion, the participants, and those in attendance; bringing the audience to order; and focusing the audience on the purpose of the event. A student must stay on the sub- ject, and the student may not engage in obscene, vulgar, offensively lewd, or indecent speech. The District shall treat a student’s voluntary expression of a religious view- point, if any, on an otherwise permissible subject in the same manner the District treats a student’s voluntary expression of a secular or other viewpoint on an other- wise permissible subject аnd may not discriminate against the student based on a religious viewpoint expressed by the student on an otherwise permissible subject.
[7] Though student speakers are chosen randomly from a pool of volunteers, that pool may not be representative of the BISD student body: It consists only of members of the stu- dent leadership at the respective campuses.
[8] The qualified-immunity and summary-judgment appeals have beеn consolidated. Because there is no constitutional violation, we do not address qualified immunity except summarily to reverse the denial of immunity.
[9]
Lynch v. Donnelly
,
[10] Under the
Lemon
test, for a government practice to be constitutional, it must
(1) have a secular purpose, (2) have a primary effect that neither advances nor inhibits
religion, and (3) not foster excessive government entanglement with religion.
Lemon v.
Kurtzman
,
[11] Under the endorsement test, a “[g]overnment unconstitutionally endorses religion
whenever it appears to take a position on questions of religious belief, or makes adherence to
a religion relevant in any way to a person’s standing in the political community.”
Ingebretsen
ex rel. Ingebretsen v. Jackson Pub. Sch. Dist.
,
[12] Under the coercion test, unconstitutional coercion occurs where “(1) the government directs (2) a formal religious exercise (3) in such a way as to oblige the participation of
[14]
ACLU
,
[15] Marie Elizabeth Wicks, Prayer Is Prologue: the Impact of Town of Greece on the Constitutionality of Deliberative Public Body Prayer at the Start of Schoоl Board Meetings ,
[22] Two district courts (in addition to the court
a quo
) have discussed the issue. In
Freedom from Religion Foundation v. Chino Valley Unified School District Board of Educa-
tion,
[23] The en banc court vacated that decision for lack of standing.
[24] BISD’s case is factually distinguishable from
Bormuth v. County of Jackson
,
