In this case, we must decide whether a professor at a state university who removes handbills publicizing an appearance of a former colleague at a conference to be held on the university campus is entitled to qualified immunity. Ironically, the subject of the conference was “Intellectual Freedom.” We have no doubt that the removal of the handbills constituted a First Amendment violation, and that at the time of the alleged conduct there was no uncertainty in the law as to this question.
I. BACKGROUND
Douglas Giebel was a professor at Montana State University-Northern until 1995, when, after an acrimonious process similar to that which frequently occurs in institutions of higher education at the time of the initial hiring of a faculty member or an award of tenure, his contract was not renewed. Stephen Sylvester was the сhairman of Giebel’s department, and one of his adversaries in the contract renewal dispute.
In the Spring of 1996, about a year after the termination of Giebel’s employment, the university sponsored a conference on “Intellectual Freedom” and arranged for the participation of about twenty-five speakers. Giebel was scheduled to be one. When the conference was publicized, Gie-bel posted his own handbills on campus bulletin boards announcing his upcoming speech.
Almost two years after his handbills were removed, Giebel filed a 42 U.S.C. § 1983 аction in federal court against Sylvester claiming a violation of his First Amendment rights and seeking a declaratory judgment and damages. Sylvester filed a motion for summary judgment, arguing that he was entitled to qualified immunity because Giebel had failed to allege a First Amendment violation, and that, even if he had, the asserted First Amendment right was not clearly established at the time of Sylvester’s actions. The district court denied Sylvester’s motion, and Sylvester filed an interlocutory appeal.
Sylvester appeals the district court’s order denying his motion for summary judgment. The “district court’s denial of a claim of qualified immunity, to the extent that it turns on an issue of law, is an appealable ‘final decision’ ... notwithstanding the absence of a final judgment.” Mitchell v. Forsyth,
III. FIRST AMENDMENT VIOLATION
In analyzing a qualified immunity defense, we must first decide whether, assuming that the facts are as alleged by the plaintiff, the defendant violated the plaintiffs constitutional rights. Wilson v. Layne,
Sylvester argues that tearing down Giebel’s handbills did not violate the First Amendment because: (1) Giebel’s handbills did not seek to communicate ideas and therefore did not contain expressive content protected by the First Amendment, and (2) the university provided Gie-bel an opportunity to speak in another forum, namely at the conference.
1. Handbills as speech.
Sylvester argues that Giebel’s handbills wеre not speech, claiming that they lacked “expressiveness of content,” and going so far as to label them “nonverbal conduct.” Because the handbills merely “announce[d] a speech,” he reasons, they are not entitled to First Amendment protection.
The argument that handbills announcing a subsequent speech are not, in and of themselves, speech protected by the First Amendment is patently wrong. Such handbills are posted for the purpose of conveying information and, to the extent that they are observed before being torn down, do so. In general, words communi-
That speech is protected by the First Amendment even if it is merely informative and does not actually convey a position on a subject matter was made clear in Village of Schaumburg v. Citizens for a Better Environment,
Giebel’s handbill, like the NAACP’s self-description, could be viewed as a mere advisory notice not designed to persuade those who read it. Still, like the NAACP’s material in Cornelius, it was designed to communicate information to the reader. It is not the role of the courts to weigh the importance of the information conveyed, and we do not do so here. Instead, we conclude that, because Giebel’s handbill was designed to convey information, it constitutes a form of speeсh protected by the First Amendment.
2. Alternative forum for Giebel’s speech.
Sylvester also argues that removing Giebel’s handbills did not violate the First Amendment because the university provided Giebel with another forum for his speech, namely the “Intellectual Freedom” conference. However, Giebel does not claim that Sylvester’s action is unlawful on the theory that he was completely deprived of a forum for his speech. Rather, he argues thаt Sylvester denied him access to a forum to which he was entitled. The fact that another forum was made available to Giebel simply has no relevance to the First Amendment issue posed here:
When the government opens a forum to the public and does not “consistently enforce[ ] ... restrictions on the use of the forum,” it creates a designated public forum. Hopper v. City of Pasco,
In general, the extent of the protection afforded by the First Amendment in designated public fora depends on whether the supрression of the speech is on the basis of the “viewpoint” expressed by the speech or the “content” of the speech. Rosenberger v. Rector & Visitors of the Univ. of Va.,
We conclude that Sylvester’s alleged actions are most appropriately treated as viewpoint discrimination, because Sylvester sought only to silence speech by a particular speaker — Giebel— rather than speech by all non-university speakers or by all speakers promoting the conference and its participants.
IV. QUALIFIED IMMUNITY
Sylvester also argues that, even if his alleged actions constitute a First Amendment violation, he is entitled to qualified immunity. He asserts that the First Amendment right at issue was not “clearly established and stated with particularity” when, in early 1996, the handbills were removed.
“[Precedent directly on point is not necessary to demonstrate” that a right is clearly established. Id. at 255. Rather, if “the unlawfulness [is] apparent in light of preexisting law,” then the standard is met. Id. at 254. In addition, even if there is no closely analogous case law, a right can be clearly established on the basis of “common sense.” DeBoer v. Pennington,
Both common sense and closely analogous case law lead us to conclude that it was clearly established long before 1996 that Giebel’s handbills were a form of speech protected by the First Amendment. Since the earliest days of the Republic, it has been understood that information conveyed in handbills on matters of public interest is speech within the ambit of First Amendment protection. For those without the resources to purchase advertisements in newspapers or time on television, the handbill has been an indispensable means of informing the public of upcoming public events, including discussions of important issues. The Supreme Court has сonsistently tried to make it clear that the First Amendment protects the rights of all persons to proclaim their views for all to hear without interference by the state. Indeed, prohibitions on the distribution of pamphlets “engendered the struggle in England which eventuated in the establishment of the doctrine of the freedom of the press embodied in our Constitution.” Schneider v. State of New Jersey,
Almost thirty years ago, in a case considering the right of university students to organize a chapter of the Students for a Democratic Society, the Supreme Court expressly discussed the critical importance of the function that public notices serve. See Healy v. James,
V. CONCLUSION
The district court’s order denying qualified immunity for Sylvester is affirmed. We conclude that, accepting Giebel’s version of the evidence and viewing it in the light most favorable to him, Sylvester violated Giebel’s clearly established First Amendment right to post handbills informing the public of his upcoming speech at the “Intellectual Freedom” conference.
AFFIRMED.
Notes
. Because we are reviewing an order that resolves a summary judgment motion, all evidence must be viewed in the light most favorable to the non-moving party, Margolis v. Ryan,
. The hiring dispute is the subject of another action that was before this court. See Giebel v. Sylvester, No. 99-35261,
. The posters read in their entirety as follows:
"Former MSU-NORTHERN Faculty Mеmber DOUG GIEBEL Will Speak on the topic The Regents, The Plan and Academic Responsibility The Second Annual Conference on Intellectual Freedom Donaldson Commons Friday, April 19 9:00 a.m.”
. The record does include an affidavit from Sylvester explaining that one bulletin board in the building in which he works was restricted, and that notices posted there required prior approval. This opinion does not consider the legality of the removal of any notices from thаt board.
. Sylvester also contests Giebel’s factual assertions, but neither his summary judgment motion nor this appeal requires the resolution of any factual dispute.
. Giebel argues that this court lacks jurisdiction because the district judge did not actually decide whether Sylvester was entitled to qualified immunity. He is correct that the district court's order denying Sylvester’s motion does not discuss the question whether qualified immunity should be granted, and instead appears to deny the motion either on the basis that an underlying factual dispute exists, or that a constitutional violation occurred. Notwithstanding the fact that the district court dismissed Sylvester’s motion without expressly analyzing his qualified immunity argument, the order plainly denied the qualified immunity motion, and therefore 'necessarily determined that certain conduct attributed to petitioner (which was controverted) constituted a violation of clearly established law." Behrens v. Pelletier,
.Sylvester also argues that by holding only that if he committed the alleged conduct he "may” have violated Giebel's First Amendment rights, the district court erred by failing actually to decide whether the alleged facts state a First Amendment violation. He may be correct. See Wilson,
. In R.A.V., the Supreme Court noted that even speech traditionally considered “outside” of the First Amendment is аctually subject to some First Amendment protection.
. In Cornelius, the Court ultimately concluded that the government’s charitable contributions pamphlet was not a public forum and that the exclusion of the NAACP's material from the pamphlet did not violate the First Amendment.
. The coherence of the distinction between "content discrimination'' and "viewpoint discrimination” is tenuous. See Robert C. Post, Between Governance and Management: The History and Theory of the Public Forum, 34 UCLA L.Rev. 1713, 1751 & n. 155 (1987). While the former describes the subject matter of speech, and the latter the specific positions taken on the matter, id., Lhe level at which "subject matter” is defined can control whеther discrimination is held to be on the basis of content or viewpoint. For example, should a library’s decision to exclude all books concerning astrology be treated as content discrimination, because astrology is a subject matter about which astrologers (and others) may have different views, and the library has excluded all discussion of that subject matter? Or should such a policy be treated as viewpoint discrimination because with respect to the subject matter of the study of the heavens, the library affords preferential treatment to the science of astronomy and bans the study of astrology'? Whether or not the content-viewpoint distinction can withstand rigorous scrutiny, the Supreme Court continues to rely on it, and accordingly we do the same in this opinion.
. Under some circumstances, of сourse, prohibiting notices of particular conferences could constitute viewpoint discrimination. For example, state university administrators could not bar notices of a conference regarding Democratic party politics while permitting notices of a similar conference regarding the Republican party.
. In fact, were we to view the issue in the philosophical framеwork within which Bishop Berkeley discussed the oft-repeated tree-falling-in-the-forest question, we might ask whether the speaker was even able to express any views, were no-one around to hear him.
. Even were we to treat Sylvester’s action as content-based, it would still be unlawful. In a designated public forum, any "content-based prohibition[s] must be narrowly drawn to effectuate a compelling state interest.” Perry,
. Sylvester also asserts that the district court relied on only one case to demonstrate that the law was clearly established, and that the case relied on was decided after the handbills were removed. (In fact, the district court’s order denying Sylvester’s summary judgment motion cites no cases at all.) Furthermore, he claims that the lack of relevant authority offered by the (pro se) plaintiff to support his argument that the law is clearly established is a ground for reversal. In fact, when determining whether qualified immunity is appropriate, this court must consider "all relevant precedents, not simply those cited to, or discovered by, the district court.” Elder v. Holloway,
