Lead Opinion
In this case, we must decide whether Oklahoma’s depiction of a Native American shooting an arrow towards the sky on its standard vehicle license plates compels Appellant Keith Cressman to speak in violation of his First Amendment rights.
In a prior appeal, we determined that Mr. Cressman had alleged sufficient injury to confer standing and that he had stated a plausible compelled-speech claim at the motion-to-dismiss stage. See Cressman v. Thompson,
I
A
In 2007, the Oklahoma legislature created the Oklahoma License Plate Design Task Force to update the design of the standard Oklahoma vehicle license plate. See Okla. Stat. tit. 47, § 1113.3. This change was motivated by the public-safety concern that the old license plates were difficult to read. However, the task force also viewed the redesign as an opportunity to “market Oklahoma as a tourist destination.” Aplt.App. at 171 (Okla. State Senate Press Release, dated Nov. 27, 2007). In 2008, the task force chose a design that included an image of a Native American man shooting an arrow towards the sky (the “Native American image”).
Mr. Cressman, an Oklahoma resident, professes “historic Christian beliefs,” including monotheism and the view that “Jesus Christ is the mediator between all people and God.” Id. at 91-92 (Trial Tr., dated Jan. 9, 2014). He learned about the new license plate design, the Sacred Rain Arrow sculpture, and the Native American legend that inspired Mr. Houser’s work from various news stories covering the redesign. He objected to the Native American image because, in his view, it conveys “the same message as the [Sacred Rain Arroio ] statue,” which he believes teaches that there are “multiple gods” and that “the arrow is an intermediary for prayer.” Id. at 97.
Finding the license plate image to be irreconcilable with his beliefs, Mr. Cress-man tried various means to avoid displaying it. He initially covered up the Native American image on the standard license plates affixed to his vehicles. However, he was advised by a tag agency that obscuring any part of the license plate might be illegal.
In March 2010, Mr. Cressman sent letters to the Attorney General of Oklahoma and various other state officials indicating that he no longer wished to pay the extra charge for the specialty plates and asking that he be allowed “either to cover up the image of the ‘Sacred Rain Arrow’ sculpture on a standard license plate or ... obtain a vanity plate free of charge.” ApltApp. at 169 (Letter, dated Mar. 10, 2010). He did not receive a response to these requests.
B
Mr. Cressman filed the present 42 U.S.C. § 1983 civil-rights lawsuit in November 2011, alleging that he was forced to display the Native American image— and thereby communicate its allegedly pantheistic message — in violation of his free-speech, free-exercise, and due-process rights under the First and Fourteenth Amendments.
On appeal, in Cressman I, we confirmed that Mr. Cressman did indeed meet the requirements for Article III standing. See
After the case was remanded to the district court, the parties engaged in discovery and filed cross-motions for summary judgment and a joint stipulation of uncontested facts. The district court granted partial summary judgment to defendants Thomas Kemp, Jr., Jerry Johnson, and Dawn Cash (collectively, the “Tax Commission defendants”), concluding that it lacked subject-matter jurisdiction under the Tax Anti-Injunction Act to compel the Tax Commission to issue Mr. Cressman a specialty license plate at the same cost as a standard license plate.
The district court ultimately concluded that the Native American image, in isolation, did not provide a basis for Mr. Cressman’s First Amendment claim because:
a reasonable observer would not be likely to conclude that an identifiable message was conveyed simply from the inclusion of the image on the standard state license plate. Without further research, it is simply a depiction of an Indian shooting a bow and arrow. A reasonable observer, even one living in Oklahoma, would not be likely to know of All[a]n Houser’s intentions or thoughts in creating the “Sacred Rain •Arrow” statue or of the legend behind it, even if the observer assumed the image was an exact replica of the statue.
ApltApp. at 227 (Order, filed Jan. 14, 2014) (footnote omitted). Instead, the court found that, in the context of the license plate as a whole, the meaning a reasonable observer would likely perceive from the image was something “akin to
II
In a matter involving First Amendment rights, we review the district court’s decision de novo, conducting “an independent examination of the whole record in order to make sure that the judgment does not constitute a forbidden intrusion on the field of free expression.” Citizens for Peace in Space v. City of Colo. Springs, 477 F.3d 1212, 1219 (10th Cir.2007) (quoting Bose Corp. v. Consumers Union of U.S., Inc.,
Because we have previously considered and resolved certain questions in this case, we are bound by the findings of the previous panel in Cressman I regarding those issues under the law of the case doctrine. Under this doctrine, “the decision of the appellate court establishes the law of the case and ordinarily will be followed by both the trial court on remand and the appellate court in any subsequent appeal.” Zinna v. Congrove,
Ill
As a preliminary matter, we briefly address the defendants’ contention that we need not rule on the merits of Mr. Cress-man’s First Amendment claim at all. Specifically, they assert that Mr. Cressman lacks standing to assert his First Amendment challenge and that, in any event, the Native American image on the license plate is government speech excepted from First Amendment scrutiny.
By way of preface to our detailed analysis below, we note that our court has already rejected these arguments in Cress-
A
The defendants argue that Mr. Cressman lacks Article III standing because he has not owned a vehicle with the standard Oklahoma license plate since 2009 and because he was never “threatened with a ticket or prosecuted for violating” the statutory prohibition on concealing license plates. Aplee Br. at 27. Therefore, the defendants claim that any alleged injury is merely speculative.
Addressing standing in Cressman /, we held that Mr. Cressman’s “alleged injuries are sufficient to support the first element [i.e., the injury-in-fact element] of Article III standing.”
Even if we were not bound by the law of the case that Cressman I establishes, we would still conclude that the defendants’ arguments are meritless. It is well-established that a plaintiff need not “first expose himself to actual arrest or prosecution to be entitled to challenge a statute that he claims deters the exercise of his constitutional rights.” Steffel v. Thompson,
The fact that Mr. Cressman does not currently possess a standard Oklahoma license plate containing the Native American image is of no consequence to his standing. He owned vehicles with standard plates at the time of the redesign and subsequently covered up the Native American image, thus exposing himself to the threat of prosecution. In addition, he still suffers an injury in fact because he is forced to buy a more expensive specialty plate rather than the standard plate. Requiring an additional fee or tax for a government service is the kind of “indirect discouragement” we have recognized as an injury in the First Amendment context. Axson-Flynn v. Johnson,
B
The defendants also claim that “[t]he Native-American on Oklahoma’s official standard license plate does not implicate the First Amendment free-speech clause because it is government speech ... exempt from free-speech analysis.” Aplee. Br. at 47 (emphasis omitted). By way of helpful reference, the Supreme Court has recently offered insight regarding the content of the government-speech doctrine:
When government speaks, it is not barred by the Free Speech Clause from determining the content of what it says. That freedom in part reflects the fact that it. is the democratic electoral process that first and foremost provides a check on government speech. Thus, government statements (and government actions and programs that take the form of speech) do not normally trigger the First Amendment rules designed to protect the marketplace of ideas. Instead, the Free Speech Clause helps produce informed opinions among members of the public, who are then able to influence the choices of a government that, through words and deeds, will reflect its electoral mandate.
Walker v. Tex. Div., Sons of Confederate Veterans, Inc., — U.S. -,
However, as we held in Cressman I, on these facts, the defendants’ government-speech “argument misses the mark.”
Furthermore, even if we were to consider this argument afresh, we would not reach a different outcome. The defendants primarily rely on Johanns v. Livestock Marketing Association, which involved the use of taxes collected from beef producers to market beef and beef products through government advertisements. See
The Supreme Court’s recent decision in Walker further reaffirms our view that the issue of whether a license plate is government speech is inapposite where, as here, the central question presented is whether an individual has been compelled to speak. In Walker, the Supreme Court held that Texas’s specialty license plate
In short, the government-speech and compelled-speech doctrines are concerned with different things: the former focuses on the government’s interest in expressing its own views, while the latter “involve[s] the government putting particular messages in the mouths of private speakers.” Note, The Curious Relationship Between the Compelled Speech and Government Speech Doctrines, 117 Harv. L.Rev. 2411, 2422 (2004). Compare Rosenberger v. Rector & Visitors of Univ. of Va.,
IV
Turning to the substance of Mr. Cressman’s appeal, the sole issue before us is whether he has been unconstitutionally compelled to speak by Oklahoma’s requirement that he either display the Native American image on his vehicle license plate or pay an extra fee for a specialty plate.
As we explain below, at bottom, Mr. Cressman’s claim fails because he cannot demonstrate that the Native American image is, in fact, speech to which he objects. At least in the context of its mass reproduction on Oklahoma’s standard vehicle license plate, the Native American image is not an exercise of self-expression entitled to pure-speech protection. The image may constitute symbolic speech, but the only conceivable message a reasonable observer would glean from the license plate is one to which Mr. Cressman emphatically
A
The First Amendment’s safeguard against state action “includes both the right to speak freely and the right to refrain from speaking at all.” Wooley,
The Supreme Court’s decision in Wooley v. Maynard, which dealt with compelled speech on standard license plates, is a logical starting point for our analysis. In that case, the petitioners objected to the inclusion of New Hampshire’s motto— “Live Free or Die” — on the State’s standard license plates because it was “repugnant to their moral, religious, and political beliefs” as Jehovah’s Witnesses.
Despite the similarities between Wooley and the facts of the present case, there is one critical distinction that Mr. Cressman must overcome. In Wooley, the objectionable content was printed words, which the Court had no trouble finding was speech. Here, in contrast, Mr. Cressman objects to an image — a Native American shooting an arrow into the sky. Before we can decide whether the State of Oklahoma has in fact compelled Mr. Cressman to speak, we must first determine whether the image is in fact speech and, if so, whether he objects to the message it conveys.
B
Although the First Amendment’s protections extend “beyond written or spoken words as mediums of expression,” all speech is not treated equally. Hurley,
Mr. Cressman seeks to bring the Native American image displayed on Oklahoma’s standard license plate into the fold of pure speech by characterizing it as an “image of representational art.” Aplt. Opening Br. at 22. As such, he claims, the image need not stand for something else; “[d]ue to the expressive qualities inherent [to] images,” they should be accorded the same treatment as words. Id. at 23. However, all images are not inherently expressive for purposes of pure speech. Context matters. Here, the reproduction of the Native American image on many thousands of standard license plates is not an exercise of self-expression to which full First Amendment protection is accorded.
1
The concept of pure speech is fairly capacious. According to the Supreme Court, this expanding list includes: fiction, see Hurley,
The justification for protecting these various media is “simply ... their expressive character, which falls within a spectrum of protected ‘speech’ extending outward from the core of overtly political declarations.” Nat’l Endowment for the Arts v. Finley,
Given the animating principle behind pure-speech protection—viz., safe
The context-driven nature of the inquiry helps to explain the lines courts have attempted to draw in applying pure-speech protection to images. For example, while an artist’s sale of his own original work is pure speech, this protection may not necessarily extend to reproductions of others’ artwork. See White,
In short, Judge Noonan, concurring in Anderson, aptly and succinctly summarizes the guiding principle for our approach to examining whether an image is pure speech — “Context is all.”
2-
At issue here is a mass-produced image based on Allan Houser’s sculpture. As an initial matter, the fact that the image depicts another artist’s work does not necessarily remove it from the realm of pure speech. The Supreme Court has recognized that the First Amendment does not require “a speaker to generate, as an original matter, each item featured in [a] communication.” Hurley,
But it is the reproduction of the image on thousands of Oklahoma license plates that militates toward a different result here. That is because, in this context, the image no longer implicates concerns about self-expression. Bereft of the size, dimensions, spatial relations, and other features of the Sacred Rain Arrow sculpture, the depiction can hardly be said to convey Mr. Houser’s perception of the “strength, dignity, beauty and spirituality
Mr. Cressman suggests that courts have treated widely-reproduced images as pure speech without regard to whether the reproduction is a creative act. However, the two cases he points to — Center for Bio-Ethical Reform, Inc. v. City of Springboro,
Neither court provided any analysis of why the images themselves were speech. Instead, both courts dealt with the images in the context of the accompanying provocative text and thus assumed that the images were communicative. Id. at 1211 (analyzing the images as part of the anti-smoking label “incorporat[ing] the textual warnings, a corresponding graphic image, and the ‘1-800-QUIT-NOW cessation hotline number”); Ctr. for Bio-Ethical Reform,
Ultimately, we cannot conclude that the “heavy machinery of the First Amendment is to be deployed in every case” involving images. Kleinman v. City of San Marcos,
C
Even if an image is not protected as pure speech, it may nonetheless fall within the First Amendment’s purview as symbolic speech. However, because of the danger that “an apparently limitless variety of conduct can be labeled ‘speech,’” United States v. O’Brien,
1
The test to determine whether a display is sufficiently communicative to warrant First Amendment protection was originally articulated in two seminal free-speech cases, Spence v. Washington and Texas v. Johnson. In Spence, a student displayed a United States flag upside down with a peace symbol attached to both sides. See
In Johnson, a demonstrator was prosecuted under a Texas law after he burned the American flag outside the Republican National Convention. See
Subsequently, the Supreme Court revisited this area of First Amendment jurisprudence. Specifically, six years after Johnson, the Court’s decision in Hurley “suggested the Spence-Johnson factors are not necessarily prerequisites for First Amendment protection for symbolic speech.” Cressman I,
Our sister circuits have taken divergent approaches to reconciling Hurley with the requirements of the Spence-Johnson test. At one end of the spectrum, the Second Circuit has “interpreted Hurley to leave intact the Supreme Court’s test for expressive conduct in Texas v. Johnson.” Church of Am. Knights of the Ku Klux
We have thus far refrained from articulating a precise post-Hurley symbolic-speech test and have “merely observe[d] that Hurley suggests that a Spence-Johnson ‘particularized message’ standard may at times be too high a bar for First Amendment protection.” Cressman I,
2
Mr. Cressman initially asserts that the message he objects to is “simple enough: [a] Native American crouched down and shooting an arrow into the clouds.” Aplt. Opening Br. at 34. This is the meaning, he claims, that he does not wish to convey. However, his argument appears to stretch the word “message” beyond recognition. If, as Mr. Cressman asserts, a description of the display is sufficient to constitute a message, this would defeat the very purpose of symbolic-speech analysis — viz., to determine whether a display has underlying communicative or expressive qualities.
We have previously concluded that Hurley is “consistent with Spence and Johnson in granting First Amendment protection for symbolic acts or displays that are sufficiently imbued with elements of communication.” Cressman I,
Our sister circuits’ post-Hurley decisions likewise do not suggest that a display itself constitutes a message for symbolic-speech purposes. While it is difficult to draw a common standard from their differing approaches, at a minimum they require that the display be of such a character that a viewer could draw an identifiable inference from it. See, e.g., Kaahumanu v. Hawaii,
Thus, the Spence-Johnson test— even if modified by Hurley — would oblige Mr. Cressman to articulate some inference drawn from the image that a viewer would perceive. A description of the image is not a message — particularized or general — for symbolic-speech purposes.
3
Mr. Cressman next suggests that it is “[e]minently reasonable” for anyone viewing the Native American image to associate it specifically with the legend of the Apache warrior or more broadly with ritualistic prayer and pantheism. Aplt. Opening Br. at 36. This is so, he claims, because of various matters of “common knowledge.” Id. at 35. First, he opines that the publicity surrounding the license plate redesign clearly linked the image to Houser’s Sacred Rain Arrow, and he notes that many of the news articles described the Apache warrior legend on which the statue is based. Second, Mr. Cressman suggests that any Oklahoman viewing the sculpture would connect it with Houser, a famous Oklahoma artist, and Sacred Rain Arrow, one of his most famous works. Finally, he claims that the “image itself conveys th[e] idea” (that is, the story) of the Apache warrior legend and related pantheistic notions: viz., the “Native American shoots the arrow from a kneeling position, recognized as a prayerful posture,” ostensibly indicating that he is not pursuing a practical or utilitarian purpose — such as hunting or shooting targets for practice — but, instead, a religious or spiritual one. Id. at 36-37.
Though we conclude that the Native American image is in fact symbolic speech, this does not avail Mr. Cressman’s compelled-speech claim. That is because the image’s message is one Mr. Cressman has explicitly indicated is not objectionable to him — that is, a message conveying Oklahoma’s Native American culture and heritage.
The district court and the parties have invoked the Establishment Clause’s “reasonable-observer test” as a guidepost for applying the symbolic-speech analysis. See, e.g., Aplt.App. at 226 (“[T]he essential question is what a reasonable observer of the image on the license plate would understand from it.”). In cases construing the Establishment Clause, courts have frequently employed the reasonable-observer test to discern “whether a ‘reasonable observer,’ aware of the history and context of the community in which the conduct occurs, would view the practice as communicating a message of government endorsement or disapproval” of religion. Bauchman ex rel. Bauchman v. W. High Sch.,
As the contours of the Establishment Clause’s reasonable-observer test have been sketched over the years, it has become clear that this reasonable observer is not the everyday casual gawker. See, e.g., Weinbaum v. City of Las Cruces,
Similarly, in the symbolic-speech context, the reasonable person focuses on “context [to] give meaning to [a] symbol” and is cognizant of the “then-current domestic and foreign affairs of his government,” “issue[s] of intense public concern,” the “environment” in which an expressive act occurs, and the reasons for the speaker’s expression. Spence,
We are not obliged to (nor do we) definitively determine here whether the extent of congruence between the Establishment Clause’s reasonable-observer test and symbolic-speech jurisprudence makes that test the appropriate one to apply in every instance in symbolic-speech cases like this one. Given both parties’ invocation of the test and its seeming compatibility with symbolic-speech caselaw, it is sufficient for us to conclude that, in resolving this case, guidance is appropriately and helpfully sought from judicial decisions applying the Establishment Clause’s reasonable-observer test.
b
Here, the reasonable observer— though not omniscient — would have a much broader awareness than the selective knowledge Mr. Cressman attributes to him. Certainly, he would scrutinize the details and symbolism of the Native American image, and he would be acquainted with the Houser sculpture and the Apache warrior legend that inspired it. However, he would also be cognizant of many other contextual factors. Most obviously, he would be aware that the image was placed on Oklahoma’s standard-issue license plates by legislators who in no small measure had a secular tourism-promotion purpose in mind; they viewed license plates as potential “billboards for [the] state.” Aplt. App. at 171. A central feature of that tourism-promotion purpose relates to Oklahoma’s Native American history and cultural heritage. And the reasonable observer would known about those key aspects of the State. Cf. Weinbaum,
Based on this wealth of background information — notably, the pertinent facts and history of the license plate redesign process — a reasonable observer viewing Oklahoma’s standard license plate would not conclude that the Native American image communicates the Sacred Rain Arrow legend. Indeed, even if we were to assume that Hurley diminishes the particularized-message requirement of the standard Spence-Johnson test, a reasonable observer would not conclude that the image, chosen by a legislative task force, with input from the public and various government agencies, was meant to generally advance pantheism or ritualistic prayer.
That said, the image does convey one identifiable message to a reasonable observer — namely, that Oklahoma’s history and culture has been strongly influenced by Native Americans. Indeed, this is the message that the task force wanted to convey by selecting this image. And because the image is sufficiently communicative in this regard, we conclude that it qualifies as symbolic speech.
4
The concurrence of our thoughtful and esteemed colleague suggests that we need not decide whether the Native American image is either pure or symbolic speech. Instead, it finds that the image is speech based on the Supreme Court’s decision in Walker, which treated license plates as government speech. After determining that we are dealing with speech — and deeming it “government speech,” Concurrence at 966 — the concurrence then purports to apply “traditional” compelled-speech principles, id. at 966, and concludes that Mr. Cressman has not been compelled to speak because no “third parties would interpret the graphic as a message promoting pantheism, the message with which he disagrees,” id. at 968. However, we are not persuaded that we can so deftly sidestep the question of whether the Native American image is pure speech or symbolic speech.
To begin, labeling speech as “government speech” only identifies the proponent of the message; it does not describe the type of speech at issue. The Supreme Court has recognized a clear distinction between symbolic speech and pure speech, see Johnson,
In this regard, to the extent that the concurrence relies on Walker, it is significant that the Supreme Court found the approval of specialty license plate graphics not just to be “government speech,” but also to be “expressive conduct,”
In any event, we recognized in Cress-man I that the question of whether the speech conveys the government’s message (i.e., constitutes government speech) “misses the mark,”
Notably, the question that the concurrence elides — whether the speech at issue is pure or symbolic — arguably does matter to the compelled-speech inquiry. While it is certainly true that an individual is protected from being compelled to speak, irrespective of whether the speech being compelled is pure speech or symbolic speech, it is also clear that the burden a compelled-speech plaintiff bears in an allegedly symbolic-speech case differs from the burden such a plaintiff bears in an allegedly pure-speech case. Specifically, a court will only find symbolic speech where a plaintiff can identify a message that a reasonable onlooker would perceive. See Johnson,
More specifically, like the concurrence, we believe that to state a proper compelled-speech claim, a plaintiff must object to a message conveyed by the speech he is required to utter. See Walker,
The concurrence fails to grapple with the foregoing important matters. Indeed, the concurrence’s analysis illustrates the flaw in its suggestion that we need not identify the kind of speech at issue in this case. Far from applying “standard” compelled-speech principles, Concurrence at 967-68, the concurrence in effect conducts a symbolic-speech analysis in the compelled-speech context. It concludes that Mr. Cressman has not been compelled to speak because “third parties would [not] interpret the graphic as a message promoting pantheism, the message with which he disagrees.” Id. at 968. By invoking the perspective of “third parties,” id., the concurrence appears to apply a version of the reasonable-observer test, which is a commonplace feature of symbolic-speech analysis. Indeed, the cases the concurrence cites for support, see id., look to third parties’ interpretation of a symbol in order to determine whether any allegedly objectionable matter that is ostensibly being compelled may properly be classified as speech. See, e.g., Cressman I,
Ultimately, because it is arguably unclear whether the compelled-speech analysis would proceed in the same manner regardless of whether the Native American image
D
Having determined that the Native American image is sufficiently- expressive to qualify as symbolic speech, we now turn to determining whether, in relation to this speech, Mr. Cressman has established that the State has compelled him to adhere to a “view he finds unacceptable.” Wooley,
Mr. Cressman alternatively suggests that he can object to the Native American image just because it is speech required by the government — arguing that “[b]y requiring a disinclined person to speak any message, the government is treating that person like a puppet.” Aplt. Opening Br. at 49 (emphasis added). However, merely objecting to the fact that the government has required speech is not enough; instead, a party must allege some disagreement with the viewpoint conveyed by this speech. See Walker,
Because Mr. Cressman must identify some message that he finds objectionable, and because he in fact does not object to the only message reasonably conveyed by the Native American image, we hold that he has not been compelled to speak in violation of his First Amendment rights.
V
For the foregoing reasons, we AFFIRM the district court’s judgment in favor of the defendants.
APPENDIX
[[Image here]]
Oklahoma License Plate Design (size reduced to fit page). Aplt. App. at 164
Notes
. We have appended a picture of the Oklahoma license plate design at issue to the end of this opinion. See Appendix, infra.
. The motto "Native America” had also been displayed on the old license plates, and representatives from the Department of Tourism and Recreation recommended retaining the phrase “because of the ongoing success of promotional campaigns associating the State of Oklahoma and the phrase 'Native America.' ” Aplt.App. at 172 (Progress Report of Okla. License Plate Design Task Force, dated Dec. 31, 2007).
. Allan Houser was an award-winning Chiricahua Apache sculptor whose work is displayed in numerous major art collections worldwide. Sacred Rain Arrow is one of Mr. Houser’s more prominent sculptures. Castings of the statue have been displayed at the 2002 Winter Olympic Games, the meeting room of the U.S. Senate Select Committee on Indian Affairs, the Smithsonian’s National Museum of the American Indian, and the Gilcrease Museum in Tulsa, Oklahoma.
.In Oklahoma, tag agents are private persons or entities that are self-employed independent contractors who are supervised by the State and charged with collecting and reporting to the State all motor vehicle taxes. See Okla. Stat. tit. 47, § 1140(B) (describing the appointment process for motor license agents and stating that "[a]ll motor license agents shall be self-employed independent contractors and shall be under the supervision of the [Oklahoma] Tax Commission”); Marton v. State,
. This provision of the Oklahoma Vehicle License and Registration Act states, in relevant part, that "[t]he operation of a vehicle in this state, regardless of where such vehicle is registered, upon which the license plate is covered, overlaid or otherwise screened with any material, whether such material be clear, translucent, tinted or opaque, shall be a violation of this paragraph.” Okla. Stat. tit. 47, § 1113(A)(2).
. The additional fee varies based on the type of specialty license plate. See Okla. Stat. tit. 47, §§ 1135.1-.6.
. Mr. Cressman also asserted a violation of the Oklahoma Religious Freedom Act ("ORFA").
. Because we found that Mr. Cressman had alleged sufficient facts to establish a plausible symbolic-speech claim under the traditional Spence-Johnson analysis, we did not decide whether the Supreme Court’s subsequent decision in Hurley v. Irish-American Gay, Lesbian and Bisexual Group of Boston, Inc.,
. The district court subsequently granted the Tax Commission defendants' motion for judgment on partial findings under Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 52(c) at the close of Mr. Cressman's evidence. The court determined that the Tax Commission had no role in the enforcement of Okla. Stat. tit. 47, § 1113, and, because it lacked subject-matter jurisdiction to order the Tax Commission to issue a specialty plate at the same cost, it concluded that the Tax Commission defendants were not proper defendants in the case.
. The court only summarily discussed its rationale for concluding that the image was not pure speech, stating that:
The court disagrees with plaintiff’s suggestion that an image like that displayed here is "pure speech.” The Tenth Circuit’s discussion of the circumstances in this case [in Cressman I ] does not suggest any such view and it is difficult to see how, as a categorical matter, depicting an image of something can be viewed as necessarily different from depicting some other sort of "symbol.”
Aplt.App. at 223 n. 8 (emphasis omitted).
. The district court appropriately concluded that the law of the case governed when the defendants raised the issue of Mr. Cressman’s standing on remand, questioning why they would make such an argument when it was contrary to "the Court of Appeals’ determination,” Aplt.App. at 57 n. 8 (Order, filed Dec. 31, 2013), and affirming that "the factual matters addressed in [the] defendants’ [summary-judgment] motion do not appear to undercut the basis for the standing determination previously made,” id. at 57.
. Under Texas’s specialty license plate program, designs were submitted by individuals and organizations and were subject to approval by the Texas Department of Motor Vehicles Board. See Walker,
. Mr. Cressman does not challenge the district court’s ruling regarding its jurisdiction under the Tax Anti-Injunction Act or the grant of the Oklahoma Tax Commission defendants’ Rule 52(c) motion. These claims are therefore deemed abandoned and effectively waived. See Wyoming v. Livingston,
. The Bery court recognized that this context-specific inquiry would “prove difficult at times,”
, Mr. Cressman points out an apparent inconsistency between the symbolic-speech and compelled-speech doctrines. Under Spence, Johnson, and even Hurley, there must be an "intent to convey” a message. Johnson,
. Although we have steadfastly adhered to the reasonable-observer test in the Establishment Clause context, we recognize that it has been subject to some criticism. See, e.g., Cty. of Allegheny v. ACLU,
. The concurrence takes the position that we should look at the license plate as a whole, rather than focusing on the Native American image. See Concurrence at 966 n. 2. However, "we rely on the parties to frame the issues,” Greenlaw v. United States,
. Because we resolve Mr. Cressman’s compelled-speech claim on the basis that he does not object to the message conveyed by the Native American image, we need not decide whether the operation of Okla. Stat. tit. 47, § 1113, and the cost of specialty license plates combined to coerce him into displaying the image.
Concurrence Opinion
concurring:
I concur in many respects with the majority’s thoughtful and nuanced discussion of a difficult topic. But because I do not agree the resolution of this case turns on whether the license plate at issue consti
The majority first decides the graphic image of a kneeling Native American on the Oklahoma standard license plate is “not an exercise of self-expression entitled to pure-speech protection.” Maj. Op. at •950. It next considers whether the graphic is entitled to protection under the Supreme Court’s symbolic speech jurisprudence and concludes it is “sufficiently communicative” to qualify as symbolic speech. Id. at 960. It then holds that, because Mr. Cressman does not object to the only identifiable message a reasonable observer would glean from the graphic and because he is required, at least in the symbolic speech context, to identify some message he finds objectionable, his compelled speech claim fails. Id. at 963-64. Thus, the majority concludes that “symbolic speech” can be compelled more readily under the First Amendment than “pure speech.” I do not agree.
In my opinion, the analytical framework adopted by the majority and in our prior decision in this matter, Cressman v. Thompson,
My conclusion that the Oklahoma license plate at issue here is speech is based on the Supreme Court’s recent decision in Walker. ■ There, the Court considered whether the Texas Department of Motor Vehicles Board’s (the Board) rejection of a specialty license plate requested by the Sons of Confederate Veterans (SCV) violated the First Amendment. SCV argued that because the Board’s rejection of the proposed plate design was based on the depiction of a Confederate flag, it constituted impermissible viewpoint discrimination. See Walker,
Where the Supreme Court has concluded the graphics and slogans contained on specialty plates proposed by private individuals — but approved and adopted by the State of Texas — constitute government speech, it follows that the graphic and slogan on the standard plate adopted by Oklahoma to convey a message promoting the state also constitute government speech. And I agree with the majority’s thoughtful conclusion that the message conveyed by the standard plate is the promotion of Oklahoma’s Native American heritage.
Having determined the license plate is speech, I would conclude that this case turns not on whether Mr. Cressman objects to the image, as opposed to the words, depicted on the license plate, but rather on the application of traditional First Amendment principles governing compelled speech. See Texas v. Johnson,
In sum, I would hold the Oklahoma standard license plate contains a slogan and graphic that together communicate a message from the Oklahoma government promoting the state’s Native American heritage — government speech. To determine whether Mr. Cressman can be compelled to carry that message on his personal automobile, I would turn to standard principles governing the restrictions on compelled speech.
Typically, government speech is exempt from scrutiny under the First Amendment. See Summum,
As the majority has explained in detail, Mr. Cressman does not disagree with the message Oklahoma intended to convey with its standard license plate. Maj. Op. at 963-64. And he has directed us to no evidence supporting his assertion that third parties would interpret the graphic as a message promoting pantheism, the message with which he disagrees. See Cressman I,
Therefore, I join in the majority’s conclusion that under the facts before us, Mr. Cressmaris compelled speech claim fails. See Glickman,
. The district court reached a similar conclusion when it considered the license plate as a whole. See Cressman v. Thompson, No. CIV-11-1290-HE,
. I part ways with the majority's decision to focus solely on the graphic image of the kneeling Native American in determining the meaning third parties would draw from the license plate. The State of Oklahoma chose to deliver its governmental message through the use of words and the graphic. Although Mr. Cressman raises no objection to the slogan, “Native America,” a fair understanding of the message communicated by the government and perceived by third parties can be gleaned only by considering the government's speech on its standard plate as a whole. Cf. Riley v. Nat’l Fed'n of the Blind of N.C., Inc.,
. Although I agree with the majority's underlying premise that courts treat words differently from images or symbols, in my view, they do so only in the context of determining whether a particular incidence of expression is speech protected by the First Amendment. For example, the majority relies on Texas v. Johnson,
Here, the Supreme Court has answered the first question by holding in Walker, that a state’s approval of slogans and graphics for display on its license plates is speech. Thus, I would proceed directly to the second question and hold that an individual, like Mr. Cressman, cannot be compelled to deliver a message with which he disagrees. But Mr. Cressman’s compelled speech challenge fails because he has expressly limited the basis of his disagreement to a message he has not shown the license plate was intended or understood to convey.
