Bernie Galvin, Sister; Ken Butigan; Jeff Johnson, Rev.; Karen Oliveto, Rev., for themselves and others similarly situated, as a Class, Plaintiffs-Appellants,
v.
Kevin Hay, Lieut.; Hugh Irwin, Major of the United States Park Police, and the United States of America, Defendants-Appellees.
No. 00-17425.
United States Court of Appeals, Ninth Circuit.
Argued and Submitted May 17, 2002.
Filed March 18, 2004.
Amended June 8, 2004.
COPYRIGHT MATERIAL OMITTED Dennis Cunningham, San Francisco, CA, for the plaintiffs-appellants.
Robert M. Loeb and Douglas Hallward-Driemeier, Department of Justice, Civil Division, Appellate Staff, Washington, DC, for the defendants-appellees.
Appeal from the United States District Court for the Northern District of California; Charles R. Breyer, District Judge, Presiding. D.C. No. CV-99-04529-CRB.
Before: HUG, and BERZON, Circuit Judges, and LASNIK,* District Judge.
ORDER AND AMENDED OPINION
ORDER
The opinion filed on March 18, 2004 is amended as follows:
Replace the first paragraph at Slip Op. p. 3374,
"The FTCA specifically permits liability for false arrest when effected by federal law enforcement officers." See 28 U.S.C. § 2680(h). Under the Act, "[l]iability is determined by the tort law of the state where the claim arose." Gasho v. United States,
With this amendment, the panel has voted unanimously to deny appellants' petition for rehearing. Judge Berzon voted to deny the petition for rehearing en banc and Judges Hug and Lasnik so recommend.
The full court was advised of the petition for rehearing en banc, and no judge requested a vote on whether to rehear the matter en banc. Fed. R.App. P. 35.
The petitions for rehearing and rehearing en banc are DENIED.
OPINION
BERZON, Circuit Judge:
BACKGROUND
On March 9, 1997, members of the advocacy association Religious Witness with Homeless People (RWHP) conducted a protest at the San Francisco Presidio National Park (the Presidio). The demonstrators opposed a plan by the National Park Service, which administers the Presidio, to tear down 466 units of former army housing at the site, known as the Wherry Housing. The Park Service proposed restoring the area to its natural environment. RWHP campaigned for the Park Service to convert these units instead into housing for San Francisco's poor and homeless. To promote its cause, RWHP had staged three prior sit-ins at the Wherry Housing units that led to members' arrests and prosecutions for trespass.
The group's fourth demonstration is the centerpiece of this case. Shortly before March 9, lead plaintiff Sister Bernie Galvin was in contact with the United States Park Police to discuss a permit for RWHP's planned demonstration.1 Defendant Lieutenant Kevin Hay of the Park Police refused to allow RWHP members to conduct a march through the Presidio unless they promised not to engage in civil disobedience. Sister Bernie did not agree to this condition. Instead, on March 9, 150 to 200 RWHP members gathered at the Presidio site on a lawn in front of a building containing both the Park's administration offices and a Visitor Center. The building was located some distance away from the Wherry Housing. Reverend Karen Oliveto described the purpose of the protest as being to "have a witness that is highly visible so that we can draw attention to the Wherry Housing." The Park Police had prepared for the demonstration by assembling a protective force that included mounted officers.
Sister Bernie and other members of RWHP were again informed by Hay that unless they promised not to engage in civil disobedience, no permit would be issuеd for their planned march. The demonstrators again refused to make this bargain. They unfurled banners, set up a portable public address system, and began a prayer service. The police promptly informed the demonstrators that if they did not move to a location 150 to 175 yards away designated as a "First Amendment area"2 and marked out with a circle of orange traffic cones, they would be arrested. Some of the protestors complied and moved off the lawn, either to the designated area or toward a parking lot much closer than that area but separated from the lawn by a street. Eighty-three protestors remained and were arrested. Sister Bernie attempted to speak with the media but was told to leave the lawn by defendant Major Hugh Irwin, the ranking commander of the Park Police present. When she failed to do so Sister Bernie was arrested.
Sister Bernie testified at the protestors' criminal trial3 that the reason she and other protestors did not agree to move to the "First Amendment area" was because "[w]e are Religious Witness, and witness means that we proclaim that this is an unjust situation. For us to witness in closet [sic] or a closed door or in a remote area is not to permit us to witnеss at all." Father Louis Vitale, another protest leader, added that the "First Amendment area" was "down in the boonies. It was down in the overgrowth area.... We said we want to inform. That's really why we had come there, to present our case ... and going off in the corner of a parking lot somewhere didn't make any sense."
Most of the eighty-three persons arrested were subsequently convicted of demonstrating without a permit in violation of 36 C.F.R. § 2.51. Those convicted appealed to this court, which reversed the convictions and held that the arrests violated the demonstrators' First Amendment rights. United States v. Baugh,
The district court dismissed all of the plaintiffs' claims. In its first order, the district court granted the defendants' motion to dismiss the FTCA cause of action and most of the Bivens claims. In November 2000, after the parties agreed to a stipulation of facts, the district court granted, on qualified immunity grounds, defendants' motion for summary judgment concerning the alleged constitutional tort arising from defendants' dispersal of the prayer service. The court held:
[A] reasonable officer in the defendants' position could believe that his conduct was lawful because he could believe that the NPS restrictions were narrowly tailored to serve the NPS's interests in maintaining the park and protecting its users... for a variety of reasons. First, the right to an unconditional permit was not clearly established in March 1997, so as far as these defendants knew, the no-trespassing condition was a reasonable way to be sure that RWHP's speech would not undermine NPS's interests. Second, the plaintiffs could have received permission to demonstrate either at the Visitor Center lawn or in the parking lot across the street by agreeing to the no-trespassing condition or by requesting a floating permit. Third, a floating permit would be narrowly tailored, because such a permit allows speakers to engage in expressive activity until the activity begins to harm the NPS's interests.
The district court further held:
[A] reasonable officer in the defendants' position could have believed ... that the First Amendment area was an ample alternative channel for RWHP to communicate their ideas. Several factors lead the Court to that conclusion. First, the officers were explicitly told that the First Amendment area was the designated location for protest activity. Such a direct instruction from supervisors would have led a reasonable officer to believe that he was acting lawfully.... Second, the officers knew that they could have granted a floating permit at RWHP's request. If RWHP had asked for a floating permit to demonstrate in the parking lot across the street from the Visitor Center and the officers had denied that request, a reasonable officer in that situation could not believe that the First Amendment area was an ample alternative. However, since the plaintiffs did not ask to move their protest into the parking lot, a reasonable officer could believe that the predesignated First Amendment area was an ample alternative. Third, the location of the First Amendment area relative to the Visitor Center was not so inadequate that a reasonable officer would necessarily have viewed the area as an insufficient channel for RWHP to communicate their views.
The plaintiffs appeal all aspects of the dismissal of their lawsuit. Viewing the evidence in the light most favorable to the nonmoving party, RWHP, and drawing all reasonable inferences in favor of that party, we must determine whether the district court correctly applied the relevant substantive law and whether there are any genuine issues of material fact. Balint v. Carson City,
DISCUSSION
* Qualified Immunity
Qualified immunity analysis proceeds in two stages. We must first inquire whether the plaintiffs have established a constitutional violation. If this threshold is passed, we examine whether defendants' actions violated "clearly established statutory or constitutional rights of which a reasonable person would have known." Hope v. Pelzer,
There are two discrete constitutional violations alleged by the plaintiffs: (1) the denial of a march permit without a concomitant promise on their part not to engage in civil disobedience; and (2) the dispersal of the prayer service that began as an alternative to the march. We examine these claims in turn.
A. The denial of the permit
Plaintiffs ask us to reverse the district court's ruling that, although Baugh held that it was constitutionally impermissible to require RWHP to promise not to engage in civil disobedience in return for a permit, the law on this issue was not clearly established at the time defendants acted. We decline to do so. We agree with the district court that, before Baugh, the contours of the constitutional right violated by the defendants' denial of the permit were not "sufficiently clear that a reasonable official would understand that what he is doing violates that right." Hope,
Plaintiffs cite Collins v. Jordan,
In Collins, however, San Francisco had imposed a total ban on demonstrations. In this case, the Park Police imposed a conditional limitation and were willing to grant the permit had the condition been accepted. Baugh viewed the proposed condition as a time, place, and manner restriction and analyzed it as such.
Baugh appliеd standards applicable to public fora like the Presidio, because "a public park, such as the Presidio, represents a quintessential public forum."
Baugh's conclusions have firm support in the case law relied upon. Nonetheless, there was no case at that juncture that had addressed the question whether conditioning a marсh permit on a promise to abide by the law when there was a history of organized civil disobedience by the same group along the same route is an insufficiently tailored manner restriction.
The Park Police's determination to impose the condition, while mistaken under the First Amendment, was at the time (although it would not be now) a legal error that reasonable officials could make in light of then-existing precedents. Nor, as in Hope, where "[a]rguably, the violation was so obvious that [the Court's] own Eighth Amendment cases gave the respondents fair warning that their conduct violated the Constitution,"
We conclude that the district court was correct in granting defendants' motion for summary judgment for the permit denial on the ground of qualified immunity.
B. The dispersal of the prayer service
Applying the two-prong Saucier qualified immunity standard to the second claim of constitutional violation beforе us, the dispersal of the prayer service, is less straightforward. As will appear, Baugh did not decide on the merits this First Amendment issue as it is presented now, so we must first inquire for ourselves whether the plaintiffs have proven a constitutional violation. Only if we answer that question in the affirmative — which we do — can we then turn to the second issue, whether "in the light of pre-existing law the unlawfulness [is] apparent." Hope,
1. First Amendment Protection Accorded Choice of Location of Speech
As Baugh recognized, "the First Amendment applies with particular force here," because "[p]arks ... have immemorially been held in trust for the use of the public and, time out of mind, have been used for purposes of assembly, communicating thoughts between citizens, and discussing public questions."
The way in which the prayer service issue is presented with regard to qualified immunity in this case implicates a slightly different time, place, and manner issue from the one we most often encounter: "The propriety of a place for use as a public forum does turn on the relevance of the premises to the protest, but this relation may be found in two ways. In some situations the place represents the object of protest, the seat of authority against which the protest is directed. In other situations, the place is where the relevant audience may be found." Wolin v. Port of N.Y. Auth.,
In most cases concerning time, place, and manner restrictions on protest activity in public fora, including most recent cases from this court, the demonstrators or leafletters are trying to present their point of view to an audience composed of individuals who gather at the site in question, the second Wolin category. Either the location is one where many people habitually gather, providing an inexpensive way for individuals with a message to communicate to reach a general audience composed of a cross-section of their community,6 or the location is one at which the particular audience the speаker seeks to reach is present.7
Bay Area Peace Navy v. United States,
In this case, however, despite plaintiffs' heavy reliance on Bay Area Peace Navy, it has become clear that they were not trying to communicate with an on-site audience. Plaintiffs' complaint noted that "there was no vehicle traffic to speak of in that area or the park as a whole at that time[and] that next to no one was visiting the visitors center." Consistent with this representation, counsel stated at oral argument: "[N]obody's there. It's a Sunday. It's the thing, the symbolic presence in front of the building ... which is the seat of the power they're protesting against, is important.... They just thought they can have this prayer service ... an observance, a witness that they do in front of the seat of power." When it was suggested to counsel that "[t]here's no audience here that was being denied the message," he replied: "That's sort of true .... [t]here weren't people around."8 Plaintiffs' opening brief corroborates this statement: "[T]he park was dead empty and quiet that whole day."
That the protestors selected the location of their "witness" within a traditional public forum area not bеcause of the audience present but because of the significance of the location for the content of their message does not detract from their strong First Amendment interest in speaking at the place they chose. In common experience, speakers rely upon location to inform the content of their speech. Television news reporters, for instance, routinely travel to locations that are illustrative of their stories even though they could read the same texts from their studios. Doing so does not change their intended audience. But speaking in front of a relevant backdrop gives greater force to the messages conveyed to that audience.
In other instances, as here, the significance of the location is primarily relevant to the speakers themselves, affecting the shared meaning of the ceremony for its participants. Cf. White House Vigil for the ERA Comm. v. Clark,
As these illustrations show, individual choice of both communicative aspects, message and manner of presentation, is critical. The Supreme Court has so recognized, making clear that "[t]he First Amendment mandates that we presume that speakers, not the government, know best both what they want to say and how to say it." Riley v. Nat'l Fed'n of the Blind,
The Court has recognized that location of speech, like other aspects of presentation, can affect the meaning of communication and merit First Amendment protection for that reason. In City of Ladue v. Gilleo, the question was whether citizens may display message-carrying signs from their own residences. Said the Court:
Displaying a sign from one's own residence often carries a message quite distinct from placing the same sign someplace else, or conveying the same text or picture by other means.... A sign advocating "Peace in the Gulf" in the front lawn of a retired generаl or decorated war veteran may provoke a different reaction than the same sign in a 10-year-old child's bedroom window or the same message on a bumper sticker of a passing automobile. An espousal of socialism may carry different implications when displayed on the grounds of a stately mansion than when pasted on a factory wall or an ambulatory sandwich board.
As speakers may generally control the presentation of their message by choosing a location for its importance to the meaning of their speech, they may ordinarily — absent a valid time, place, and manner restriction — do so in a public forum. The public forum doctrine stems from the recognition that "one who is rightfully [in a public forum] carries with him there as elsewhere the constitutional right to express his views in an orderly fashion." Jamison v. Texas,
This court and other courts of appeal have so recognized, applying traditional public forum analysis to protest activity where "the place represents the object of protest, the seat of authority against which the protest is directed," as well as where "the place is where the relevant audience may be found." Wolin,
Similarly, in Olivieri v. Ward,
In sum, there is a strong First Amendment interest in protecting the right of citizens to gather in traditional public forum locations that are critical to the content of their message, just as there is a strong interest in protecting speakers seeking to reach a particular audience.
2. Application of Time, Place, and Manner Standard
The interesting constitutional issue presented by this case is the application of the time, place, and mannеr framework to a situation in which the protestors' interest in remaining at a particular location stems from the importance of that location to the content of their message, rather than their interest in reaching an audience likely to gather at that location. As the time, place, and manner standard evolved with more precision in recent years, that standard has been stated as the three-part test we quoted earlier: "To qualify as a permissible restriction, the regulation must be content neutral, narrowly tailored to serve a significant governmental interest, and leave open ample alternative channels for communication of the message." Baugh,
a. Narrow Tailoring
The narrow tailoring requirement has been refined since it was first announced in three respects: First, as long as the government's interest in a regulation of speech in a public forum is substantial, the regulation "need not be the least restrictive or least intrusive alternative." One World One Family Now v. City and County of Honolulu,
In this instance, Baugh recognized that "[t]he government had a significant interest in protecting the Presidio's facilities and its users, including the protesters."
If we considered only the quantity of RWHP's speech impaired by the defendants, as Ward and other cases suggest,10 we might conclude that the requirement that the prayer service reconvene at the "First Amendment area" did not burden substantially more speech than was necessary to meet the government's significant interests and was therefore valid. In conducting their prayer vigil, RWHP members, as noted, were not trying to reach an on-site audience. So if the "quantity" of speech refers to the ability of speakers to communicate the text of their message to their intended listeners, then there was essentially no burden on RWHP's speech. The аudience was other protestors, and the protestors could have seen and heard each other in the "First Amendment area."
That view of the protection accorded speech in a public forum, however, cannot suffice to protect public forum speech of the kind we have here, namely, speech in which a chosen location is a critical aspect of the message communicated by speakers amongst themselves. We do not read any of the earlier cases as addressing this precise issue, or as mandating a quantitative approach to the narrow tailoring inquiry when that approach does not capture the First Amendment interest asserted. Instead, where, as here, "the location[is] an essential part of the message sought to be conveyed," Nationalist Movement,
With that focus in mind, we conclude that the requirement for RWHP to use the "First Amendment area" did burden its speech to a substantially greater degree than was needed to achieve the government's purposes. One can see the Visitor Center from the "First Amendment area" but the sight line was partially obstructed by trees, and the view is from a distance equivalent to two city blocks (assuming 20 blocks to a mile).11 In addition, the view from the "First Amendment area" was at an oblique angle rather than head-on, yet another feature hardly conducive to RWHP's message concerning the authority represented by the building.
Hay testified that the protestors, had they asked, would have been allowed to use the much closer parking lot just across the street, directly in front of the Visitor Center. That obvious alternative would have distorted RWHP's witnessing considerably less, as the connection between the Visitor Center and the protest activity would have been maintained. Multiple obvious alternatives can inform the tailoring inquiry. See Project 80's,
By way of comparison, the restriction we upheld in Griefen involved a different and stronger governmental interest: "Faced with a clear аnd present threat to health and safety and property, the Forest Service appropriately established a limited security zone around the danger area."
Here, the "First Amendment area" was more than three times as far removed from the Visitor Center as were the protestors in Griefen from their chosen location. See id. at 1260 ("The protestors were not ejected from the forest or even from the vicinity of the construction site, only from 150 feet to each side of the center of the work zone."). Unlike in Griefen, where the protestors were free to encircle the object of their expression at will, RWHP members were given only one option. As the "First Amendment area" was located so that the visual connection with the Visitor Center was partially obstructed, remote, and oblique, the protestors' message of confronting the authority represented by the building was inhibited to an extent greatly exceeding that permitted in Griefen.
We therefore conclude that the relegation of the prayer service to the "First Amendment area" burdened the plaintiffs' speech to a substantially greater degree than necessary to achieve the Park Service's purposes.
b. Ample Alternative
The third prong of the time, place, and manner standard as traditionally stated asks whether the "First Amendment area" restriction left "open ample alternative channels for communication of the information." ACLU of Nevada,
Ward's use of the term "channels" of communication suggests such an audience-focused approach, perhaps. See
We so assumed in Griefen without explicitly flagging the issue. In Griefen, we did not ask, as in Bay Area Peace Navy and similar cases, whether the regulation in question preserved the ability to convey the message to an intended, on-site audience. Instead, our inquiry was whether the "tailoring left [the protestors] with ample opportunities in the Nez Perce Forest and elsewhere lawfully to express their views."
Applying that standard here, there are strong arguments both favoring a conclusion that First Amendment rights were violated and opposing that conclusion. On the one hand, as noted with regard to the narrow tailoring issue, the protestors' relegation to the "First Amendment area" seriously distorted the intended incorporation of the location into RWHP's message. On the other hand, the demonstrating RWHP members retained some ability to connect their message to the venue that was critical to its content; the building was visible from the area where they were permitted to speak, although faintly, obliquely, and with partial obstruction.
Ultimately, we need not decide whether the defendants left ample alternatives for expression of RWHP's message, as the defendants' directive in any event failed the narrow tailoring inquiry for reasons already surveyed. The directive was therefore a violation of plaintiffs' free speech rights.
c. Clearly Established Law
There is qualified immunity for the narrow tailoring violation if the law at the timе of the events in question was not "sufficiently clear that a reasonable official would understand that what he is doing violates that right." Hope,
In the context of the case law established in March 1997, the application of the time, place, and manner standard to circumstances in which location rather than audience is essential to the message being conveyed compels the conclusion that a reasonable official would not have had sufficiently clear legal guidance to avoid violating the plaintiffs' constitutional rights. As explicated above, cases prior to Griefen that applied the time, place, and manner standard emphasized the communication of a message to an audience, rather than the content-related impact of a chosen location, and took a quantitative rather than qualitative approach to the narrow-tailoring inquiry. Although the defendants were wrong in their assumption that terminating the prayer service was a narrowly tailored response to the threatened governmental interests, their error was not unreasonable given the law as clearly established in March 1997. A reasonable official could have distinguished Bay Area Peace Navy's prohibition of a 75 yard restriction on protest targeting an intended audience on the ground that RWHP had no apparent audience, so that the relocation of their prayer service did not substantially burden their speech. It was not until our decision in Griefen that we analyzed time, place, and manner restrictions as they apply to site-specific expressive interests without regard to the opportunity to reach an on-site audience. Until then, the constitutional right violated by the defendants was not clearly established. The defendants are therefore entitled to qualified immunity for the narrow tailoring violation.
Moreover, even if we were to hold that the "First Amendment area" did not provide an "ample alternative" for the communication of RWHP's message, this violation would not lead to liability for the defendants either. "`Clearly established' for purposes of qualified immunity means that the contours of the right must be sufficiently clear that a reasonable official would understand that what he is doing violates that right." Beier v. City of Lewiston,
The central difference between the plaintiffs' claim and that accepted in cases such as Bay Area Peace Navy is the absence of communication with an on-site audience. See Bay Area Peace Navy,
The defendants are therefore entitled to qualified immunity on the plaintiffs' First Amendment Bivens cause of action.
II
Federal Tort Claims Act
The government argues that we lack jurisdiction over plaintiffs' FTCA claim because the United States has not waived its sovereign immunity from lawsuits, invoking the "discretionary function" exception to FTCA jurisdiction. See 28 U.S.C. § 2680(a); Nurse v. United States,
The FTCA specifically permits liability for false arrest when effected by federal law enforcement officers. See 28 U.S.C. § 2680(h). Under the Act, "[l]iability is determined by the tort law of the state where the claim arose." Gasho v. United States,
The defendants argue that they properly arrested the RWHP members, who were violating 36 C.F.R. § 2.51(a)'s prohibition against demonstrations without a permit. Given our conclusion above that the defendants' permit denial was not a violation of clearly established law, the officers "had reasonable cause to believe the arrest was lawful." Cal. Pen.Code § 847(b)(1). We therefore affirm the district court's dismissal of the FTCA claim.14
CONCLUSION
For the foregoing reasons we affirm the district court's rulings on qualified immunity and liability under the FTCA. We therefore affirm the grant of summary judgment.
AFFIRMED.
Notes:
Notes
The Honorable Robert S. Lasnik, United States District Judge for the Western District of Washington, sitting by designation
The relevant regulations, unchallenged here, are found at 36 C.F.R. § 2.51 and provide in relevant part:
(a) Public assemblies, meetings, gatherings, demonstrations, parades and other public expressions of views are allowed within park areas, provided a permit therefor has been issued by the superintendent.
. . .
(c) The superintendent shall, without unreasonable delay, issue a permit on proper application unless:
(1) A prior application for a permit for the same time and place has been made that has been or will be granted and the activities authorized by that permit do not reasonably allow multiple occupancy of that particular area; or
(2) It reasonably appears that the event will present a clear and present danger to the public health or safety; or
(3) The event is of such nature or duration that it cannot reasonably be accommodated in the particular location applied for, considering such things as damage to park resources or facilities, impairment of a protected area's atmosphere of peace and tranquillity, interference with program activities, or impairment of public use facilities.
. . .
(e) The superintendent shall designate on a map, that shall be available in the office of the superintendent, the locations available for public assemblies. Locations may be designated as not available only if such activities would:
(1) Cause injury or damage to park resources; or
(2) Unreasonably impair the atmosphere of peace and tranquillity maintained in wilderness, natural, historic or commemorative zones; or
(3) Unreasonably interfere with interpretive, visitor service, or other program activities, or with the administrative activities of the National Park Service; or
(4) Substantially impair the operation of public use facilities or services of National Park Service concessioners or contractors; or
(5) Present a clear and present danger to the public health and safety.
The Park Service's Compendium of Regulations for the Presidio sets out the location of these predesignated areasSee United States v. Baugh,
All references to testimony in this opinion are taken from the protestors' criminal trial
Although the plaintiffs brought this action "as a class," there has been no certification of the class. It appears that all four of the plaintiffs were arrested and convictedSee Baugh,
Thomas v. Chicago Park District,
See, e.g., Heffron v. Int'l Soc. for Krishna Consciousness, Inc.,
See, e.g., Schenck v. Pro-Choice Network,
The court inBaugh regarded "[t]he Park Service officials and the public ... at the Visitor Center" as the intended audience and held that the 150 to 175 yard distance between the Visitor Center and the First Amendment area was too great to allow RWHP to reach that audience.
Several Supreme Court cases from the era of the civil rights movement implicitly recognized this critical connection between message and public locationsSee, e.g., Brown v. Louisiana,
See Ward,
Our analysis is somewhat hampered by the parties' agreement at oral argument in the district court "that the Court should incorporate its knowledge [of the layout of the Presidio and the area comprising the Visitor Center and the First Amendment area] into the legal conclusion regarding whether a reasonable officer in the defendants' position could believe that his conduct was lawful." This stipulation creates a dilemma for us as a reviewing court, as we have no means of determining exactly what the district judge knows about the layout of the Presidio. The judge's "familiarity" informed his legal conclusion, yet we are constrained to reviewde novo the court's grant of summary judgment on the qualified immunity question. See Balint,
See, e.g., Bay Area Peace Navy,
See also Thames Shipyard & Repair Co. v. United States,
While the district court's ruling, rendered beforeNurse was decided, was based on an analysis of the discretionary function exception to the FTCA, we may affirm on any ground supported by the record. Serrano v. Francis,
