Case Information
*2 Before TACHA, LOGAN, and REAVLEY, [*] Circuit Judges.
TACHA, Circuit Judge.
Plаintiffs Church on the Rock and Pastor Don Kimbro (“Church on the Rock”) brought suit under 42 U.S.C. § 1983 alleging that defendants the City of Albuquerque and its agents (“the City”) denied Church on the Rock’s First Amendment right to free expression at City Senior Centers. The district court granted summary judgment in favor of the City on all claims. Church on the Rock now appeals, arguing that the City’s policy prohibiting “sectarian instruction and religious worship” at City Senior Centers viоlates the First Amendment. We exercise jurisdiction pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 1291 and reverse.
I. Background
The City owns and operates six Senior Centers. The centers are multipurpose facilities that provide forums for lectures, classes, movies, crafts, bingo, dancing, physical exercise, and other activities. To become a member of a Senior Center, one need only fill out an application. The sole requirement for membership is that a person be at least fifty-five years old or be married to a member who is at least fifty-five years old. People who use the Senior Centers do not reside there, and all of the programs are voluntary.
Many of the programs at the Senior Centers are organized and sponsored by private individuals or organizations. Senior center policies permit non-member groups to use the centers *3 for classes and other activities if the subject matter is “of interest to senior citizens.” Alternatively, groups may use the Senior Centers without regard to this subject matter requirement if they are composed of seventy-five percent or more senior citizens. Nonmembers or persons under fifty-five years of age may conduct clаsses, and people who deliver lectures or teach classes are also permitted to distribute literature.
The range of subjects that qualify as being “of interest to senior citizens” is quite broad. The Senior Centers’ activities catalogs list many of the programs that meet this requirement, such as Amateur Radio, Ceramics, Chinese, Choral Group, Economics, El Abuelo--The Clown of Spanish Culture, Fishing, Medicare/Health Insurance Counseling, Myth of the Hanging Tree, and Plants and People of New Mexico. The catalogs also include a number of classes and presentations in which religion or religious matters are the primary focus: Bible as Literature, Myths and Stories About the Millennium, Theosophy, and A Passover Commemoration (an oratorio). The catalogs encourage “idеas for new classes and programs” as well.
On March 24, 1994, Pastor Kimbro, a citizen over the age of fifty-five, requested permission from Kathleen Stark, the supervisor of the Bear Canyon Senior Center, to show a two-hour film entitled Jesus. The film recounts the life of Jesus Christ as described in the Gospel of Luke. At the conclusion of the story, a voice-over narrator makes affirming statements such as, “Jesus is exactly who he claimed to be--the Son of the Lord, the Savior of all mankind.” The narrator then invites viewers to adopt the Christian religion and to join him in a short prayer. Kimbro also requested permission to give away giant-print New Testaments to persons attending the film.
On May 18, 1994, after reviewing the film, Mark Sanchez, the City’s Deputy Director of *4 Family and Community Services, denied Kimbro’s requests. Sanchez stated that City policy prohibited the use of Senior Centers “for sectarian instruction or as a place for religious worship.” The City adopted this policy to conform with the terms of the Older Americans Act. The Older Americans Act provides federal funding to the states for multipurpose senior centers, but requires, as a condition for receiving such funding, that the “facility will not be used and is not intended tо be used for sectarian instruction or as a place for religious worship.” 42 U.S.C.A. § 3027(a)(14)(A)(iv).
In keeping with this directive, Senior Center personnel screen programs for sectarian instruction or religious worship before allowing them at the Senior Centers. Senior Center employees also monitor presentations for religious content by sitting in on classes and entertaining objections from Senior Center members who call attention to expression falling into one of these forbidden categories. When Senior Center employees determine that presentations are too religious in nature, they intervene to stop the presentations. There are no official criteria or written standards to assist them in deciding whether or not expression constitutes “sectаrian instruction” or “religious worship.”
Church on the Rock filed this suit seeking declaratory and injunctive relief. The district court granted summary judgment in favor of the City. In its decision, the court assumed without deciding that the Senior Center is a designated limited public forum. The court stated that the purpose of the Senior Center does not include sectarian instruction, and that the primary purpose of the film Jesus is to proselytize. The court concluded that the film constitutes sectarian instruction and that the City may therefore exclude the film on the ground that its subject matter is not within the purpose of the Senior Centers. The court also held that the City’s restriction is *5 not viewpoint-based because the City does not permit sectarian instruction from any religious perspective. This appeal follоwed.
II. The Degree of First Amendment Protection Afforded to the Expression
We review the district court’s grant of summary judgment de novo. Cannon v. City and
County of Denver,
III. The Nature of the Forum
The government’s ability to restrict protected speech by private persons on government
property depends, in part, on the nature of the forum. Cornelius v. NAACP Legal Defense &
Educ. Fund,
The Bear Canyon Senior Center is a designated public forum. It may not be classified as a traditional public forum because it is not a traditional location of public debate or assembly. It is, however, a place that has been opened to the public for discussive purposes. The City has permitted lectures and classes on a broad range of subjects by both members and non-members at *7 its Senior Centers. The City limits this designated public forum in two ways. First, the City imposes an age requirement for participation, although this limitation is rather flexible where groups or spouses are involved. Second, the City limits the subject matter of presentations to topics “of interest to senior citizens.” The subject matter limitation has also been extremely flexible in practice, as evidenced by the long list of diverse topics that have been presented in the past.
IV. The Nature of the City’s Restriction
Having classified the type of forum involved, we now turn to the type of restriction that
the City has imposed. The Senior Center Policies and Procedures Manual from the City’s Office
of Senior Affairs includes the following directive: “It is prohibited to use any OSA facility for
sectarian instruction or as a plaсe for religious worship.” The City contends that this policy is a
restriction based upon content, not viewpoint, because it disallows all sectarian instruction and
religious worship in its Senior Centers, regardless of the particular religion involved. The
Supreme Court, however, has rejected similar arguments. In Lamb’s Chapel, for example, the
Court noted that the mere fact that a regulatiоn categorically treats all religions alike does not
answer the critical question of whether viewpoint discrimination exists between religious and
non-religious expression.
Moreover, even if the City had not previously opened the Senior Centers to presentations on religious subjects, its policy would still amount to viewpoint discrimination. Any prohibition of sectarian instruction where other instruction is permitted is inherently non-neutral with respect to viewpoint. Instruction becomes “sectarian” when it manifests a preferеnce for a set of religious beliefs. Because there is no nonreligious sectarian instruction (and indeed the concept is a contradiction in terms), a restriction prohibiting sectarian instruction intrinsically favors secularism at the expense of religion. Therefore, we conclude that the City’s policy constitutes viewpoint discrimination.
V. The Appropriate Level of Judicial Scrutiny
The government bears a particularly heavy burden in justifying viewpoint-based
restrictions in designated public forums. Viewpoint discrimination is “an egregious form of
content discrimination.” Rosenberger,
The necessities of confining a forum to the limited and legitimate purposes for which it was created may justify the State in reserving it for certain groups or for the discussion of certain topics. . . . [I]n determining whether the State is acting to preserve the limits of the forum it has created so that the exclusion of a class of speech is legitimate, we have observed a distinction between, on the one hand, сontent discrimination, which may be permissible if it preserves the purposes of that limited forum, and, on the other hand, viewpoint discrimination, which is presumed impermissible when directed against speech otherwise within the forum’s limitations.
VI. The City’s Justifications for its Policy
The City offers three justifications for its policy prohibiting religious expression. First,
the City asserts that the policy ensures conformity with the First Amendment’s prohibition
against state establishment of religion. While adherence to the Establishment Clause is a
compelling government interest that may justify restrictions on speech in designated public
forums, Rosеnberger,
Second, the City asserts that its policy is necessary to remain in compliance with the
Older Americans Act. To that end, the policy mirrors the language of the Older Americans Act,
which requires as a condition for receiving federal funding assurances that a “facility will not be
used and is not intended to be used for sectarian instruction or as a place for religious worship,”
42 U.S.C. § 3027(a)(14)(A)(iv). The fact that the City’s policy is designed to conform with
federal statutory requirements, hоwever, does not shelter it from constitutional scrutiny. A city
or state’s desire for federal funds is not a compelling government interest. Thus, compliance
with the Older Americans Act does not justify this viewpoint-based restriction on expression. In
the context presented here, no government entity may permissibly control the viewpoint being
expressed. See Rosenberger,
Third, the City asserts that its policy is necessary to protect the senior citizens who use its
centers. The City argues that the senior citizens who use the Senior Centers are members of a
“captive audiеnce” who are “vulnerable” to “religious proselytizing and coercion.” Br.
Appellees 27. This claim is at best tenuous, and at worst insulting to senior citizens. People in
this age group are not in need of special insulation from invitations to adopt a religious faith; nor
are they, as a class, more likely than other citizens to be intimidated by such invitations.
Moreover, the showing of the Jesus film and the distribution of giant-print New Testaments can
hardly be construed as intimidating or coercive. People who choose to attend presentations at the
Senior Centers do not become part of a captive audience: attendance at such programs is purely
voluntary, and people are free to come and go as they please. Nor is there any implicit coercion
to attend. This is not a situation akin to the school graduation ceremony at issue in Lee v.
Weisman, where those who chose to absent themselves paid the price of missing “one of life’s
most significant occasions.”
VII. Tilton v. Richardson
Finally, we address the City’s contention that Tilton v. Richardson,
VIII. Conclusion
The City of Albuquerque has failed to show a compelling interest that justifies its policy prohibiting sectarian instruction and religious worship at its Senior Centers. For that reason, we hold that thе policy is an unconstitutional restriction on expression. We therefore REVERSE the judgment of the district court and enjoin the City from barring the showing of the film Jesus and the distribution of New Testaments at its Senior Centers. We also award reasonable attorney’s fees to the appellants in the district court and on appeal, as provided under 42 U.S.C. § 1988, and remand this matter to the district court for the determination of appropriate fee amounts.
Notes
[*] The Honorable Thomas M. Reavley, Senior Circuit Judge, United States Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit, sitting by designation.
