Dott WASHEGESIC, as next friend of Eric Pensinger; Eric
Pensinger, with Dott Washegesic as next friend of,
Plaintiffs-Appellees,
v.
BLOOMINGDALE PUBLIC SCHOOLS, a Michigan Corporation;
Bloomingdale Public School Board, Defendants-Appellants.
No. 93-1248.
United States Court of Appeals,
Sixth Circuit.
Argued June 6, 1994.
Decided Sept. 6, 1994.
Rehearing and Suggestion for
Rehearing En Banc Denied Nov. 18, 1994.
Laurie L. Wightman, Susan M. Fall (briefed), Gemrich, Moser, Bowser, Fette & Lohrmann, Kalamazoo, MI, Paul Denenfeld (argued), Detroit, MI, for plaintiffs-appellees.
David R. Melton (argued and briefed), Grandville, MI, for defendants-appellants.
Before: MERRITT, Chief Judge; NORRIS, Circuit Judge; and GUY,* Senior Circuit Judge.
MERRITT, Chief Judge, delivered the opinion of the court. RALPH B. GUY, Jr., Senior Circuit Judge (pp. 684-85), delivered a separate concurring opinion. NORRIS, Circuit Judge, concurred in both the opinion of the court and the separate concurrence.
MERRITT, Chief Judge.
The defendants appeal an injunction from the district court requiring them to remove a portrait of Jesus Christ that has been hanging alone in the hallway of the Bloomingdale Secondary School for the last thirty years. Plaintiff, a student at the school, filed suit alleging that the display of the portrait violated the Establishment Clause of the First Amendment. After the district court's decision, plaintiff graduated. The issues presented are whether the appeal should be dismissed as moot and whether the display of the portrait violates the Establishment Clause.
The facts of the case are undisputed. Eric Pensinger, then a senior, brought suit to remove a copy of Warner Sallman's famous portrait, "Head of Christ," from being displayed in a hallway outside the gymnasium and the principal's office of the Bloomingdale Secondary School. Bloomingdale is a small rural community near Kalamazoo, Michigan. The portrait, originally donated to the school, is not part of a group of paintings nor is it used in conjunction with any class or educational program. Nearby in the same hallway are trophy cases, a painting of the school mascot and a bulletin board, but as Judge Gibson noted, "these seem to have no relation to the picture and do not add to or detract from the impression it makes." Washegesic v. Bloomingdale Pub. Sch.,
The Mootness Claim
Eric Pensinger graduated on June 3, 1993. The defendants argue that there is no longer a case or controversy because plaintiff has no stake in the outcome of the case. Defendants cite cases that a plaintiff's graduation can moot a claim against a school, Board of School Comm'rs of Indianapolis v. Jacobs,
In Jacobs and Ahmed the plaintiffs ceased to have any interest in the challenged policy and could not be affected by it after they were no longer students. The rules could no longer harm them. Here, conversely, the portrait of Jesus affects students and non-students alike. Status as a student is not necessary for standing in such cases. Pensinger still visits the school and will confront the portrait whenever he is in the hall. His girlfriend is a student, and he attends sporting events, dances and other social functions in the gym and at the school. Thus, plaintiff claims that this case is not moot because he continues to suffer actual injury.1
Mootness is "the doctrine of standing set in a time frame." United States Parole Comm'n v. Geraghty,
In Hawley, citizens challenging the lease of space for a chapel at the Cleveland airport were denied taxpayer standing but were granted standing for their actual injury when they used the airport. Id. at 740. The injury which conferred standing was the "impairment of their beneficial use of a public facility which they frequently use." Id. In this case, similarly, the portrait affects in some measure Pensinger's use of the school. His graduation does not end the case because the portrait does not affect students only--it potentially affects any member of the public who attends an event at the school. A member of the PTA or a member of the public would have standing if she attended events in the gymnasium and took the portrait as a serious insult to her religious sensibilities. Cf. Jager v. Douglas County School District,
The cases are in some conflict and the doctrine is somewhat confused. Although it may be true that psychological harm alone is not always a sufficient injury for standing purposes when contact is indirect, Valley Forge Christian College v. Americans United for Separation of Church and State,
Defendants rely heavily on the language in Valley Forge that the "psychological consequence presumably produced by observation of conduct with which one disagrees" is not sufficient to confer standing. Valley Forge,
In Jacobs and Ahmed, the policies affected certain students because and only because they were students. Upon leaving school, the alleged injury ceased to exist. Here, any parent, employee or former student who uses the school facilities and suffers actual injury would have standing to sue. This case is not moot.
The Merits
In a well-reasoned decision, Judge Gibson held that the school's display of the portrait violated the Establishment Clause. To satisfy the requirements of the Establishment Clause, the district court applied the test set forth in Lemon v. Kurtzman,
The display here fails all three prongs of Lemon. The portrait is moving for many of us brought up in the Christian faith, but that is the problem. The school has not come up with a secular purpose. The portrait advances religion. Its display entangles the government with religion.
The district court pointed to several precedents. Stone v. Graham,
These cases and Stein v. Plainwell Community Schools,
The defendants argue that the picture has meaning to all religions and that it is not inherently a symbol of Christianity. The case would be different if the school had placed representative symbols of many of the world's great religions on a common wall. But Christ is central only to Christianity, and his portrait has a proselytizing, affirming effect that some non-believers find deeply offensive. Though the portrait, like school prayers and other sectarian religious rituals and symbols, may seem "de minimis" to the great majority, particularly those raised in the Christian faith and those who do not care about religion, a few see it as a governmental statement favoring one religious group and downplaying others. It is the rights of these few that the Establishment Clause protects in this case.
Finally, the defendants also argue weakly that the school hallway is a limited public forum. Judge Gibson properly rejected this argument and treated the case under standard Establishment Clause case law. The hallway is not a limited public forum because the school maintains the right to control what is posted there and does not offer space to other religions and causes. The focus must be on the preference of individuals, not the preference of the school itself. Board of Educ. of Westside Community Sch. v. Mergens,
For these reasons, the defendants' motion to vacate, remand and dismiss is DENIED. The order of the district court requiring defendants to remove the portrait of Jesus is AFFIRMED.
RALPH B. GUY, Jr., Senior Circuit Judge, concurring.
Although I have labeled my participation in this decision a concurrence, as will readily become apparent, it is much more akin to a dissent. It is a concurrence only because I believe a case can be made that this result is dictated by the decision in Lemon v. Kurtzman,
As the majority notes, the "offending" religious artifact here is a reproduction of a famous portrait.2 Copies of this painting can be found all over the United States as well as abroad. Most persons have seen a copy dozens of times in various and sundry locations, probably without paying it any particular heed. It no more conveys the notion of the "establishment" of a religion than a statue of Robert E. Lee in a park suggests we should dissolve the Union.
It has hung on the school wall for 30 years, and the only result that is evident is that the school population has become more religiously diverse over time as has our entire Country. For me at least, a discussion of "psychological damage" resulting from viewing this picture does implicate an "establishment"--but not one of religion. What is established is a class of "eggshell" plaintiffs of a delicacy never before known to the law. I can well understand that someone (perhaps this plaintiff) in some sense could be offended by this portrait, but "injured" is another matter. In this multicultural world that young persons are entering today, I would hope our schools are turning out people with a little more resiliency than is evidenced here.
Earlier I said that "a case can be made" that the result here is dictated by Lemon, but that is as far as I would want to go with it. Lemon is much criticized and appears to be applied differently from case to case, or not applied at all. If the Supreme Court ever gets around to abandoning Lemon, and there is certainly significant impetus within the Court to do so, I would hope the new test would have a "de minimis" prong to it.
I do not mean to suggest that the "appropriateness" of this picture in the school is not a legitimate issue for discussion, but it ought to be resolved within the school context. In this age, this picture hanging alone might reflect some insensitivity to the diversity that is now America. But let us tackle the problem with some good old Yankee ingenuity--lobby for a course in comparative religions; put a picture of Martin Luther King on the wall; form a Zen Buddhist club; wear a t-shirt proclaiming the virtues of agnosticism; but, if I am permitted to use the expression, for heaven's sake, stay out of the courthouse and quit trivializing the Constitution!
Notes
The Honorable Ralph B. Guy, Jr. assumed senior status on September 1, 1994
Plaintiff originally alleged these facts, arguing that this case is not moot because it is "capable of repetition yet evading review." Two criteria must be satisfied to apply this exception to the mootness doctrine. Plaintiff must show that the duration of the dispute is too short to be fully litigated and that there is a reasonable expectation that the same plaintiff will be subjected to the same action again. Weinstein v. Bradford,
In Plainwell Community Schools we explained the principle of accommodation as follows:
From the beginning of the colonial period to the present, American churches have taken their various religious differences seriously, and under the Free Exercise and Establishment clauses taken together, we have generally accepted and settled on an accommodation: The concept of the equal liberty of conscience is our guiding principle. In our national and community life, we can never be sure whether our particular religious, sectarian and moral convictions will be in the majority or the minority. So as a diverse people we have rejected the notion of a confessional state that supports religion in favor of a neutral state designed to foster the most extensive liberty of conscience compatible with a similar or equal liberty for others. To those who act or argue against this principle of equal liberty of conscience on grounds that their duty is to use the state in support of their particular beliefs, we answer that we cannot expect others to accept an inferior liberty. To those who say that the principle of equal liberty of conscience has the effect of rejecting the absolute nature of their religious beliefs, we reply that if any principle can be agreed to, it can only be that of an equal liberty of conscience for all.
In his inaugural address on March 4, 1869, President Ulysses S. Grant said: "I know no method to secure the repeal of bad or obnoxious laws so effective as their stringent execution."
Is there no room under the Constitution for a famous portrait to stand on its own as a work of art? Some of the most famous and now priceless paintings in the world depict religious scenes, many of them using Christian figures and symbols. According to an article in the March 3, 1994, Chicago Sun-Times, Sallman's "Head of Christ" has been reprinted 500 million times
