Lead Opinion
This appeal presents the issue of whether the First Amendment's limitation on governmental restriction of free speech applies, in the circumstances of this case, to the operators of public access television channels. More specifically, the main issue is whether the Amendment applies to employees of a non-profit corporation, designated by the Manhattan Borough President to oversee public access TV channels, who are alleged to have suspended individuals involved in public access TV programming from using the corporation's facilities. This issue arises on an appeal by Deedee Halleck and Jesus Papoleto Melendez from the December 14, 2016, judgment of the District Court for the Southern District of New York (William H. Pauley III, District Judge). See Halleck v. City of New York ,
We conclude that the public access TV channels in Manhattan are public forums
Background
Statutory, regulatory, and contractual framework. The Cable Communications Policy Act of 1984 (the "Act") has special provisions for two categories of cable TV channels-leased channels and public, educational, or governmental channels. "[T]o promote competition in the delivery of diverse sources of video programming,"
The Act also authorizes cable franchising authorities to require for franchise renewal "that channel capacity be designated for public, educational, or governmental use,"
In New York, a Public Service Commission regulation requires a cable TV system with a capacity for 36 or more channels to "designate ... at least one full-time activated channel for public access use."
The City awarded cable franchises for Manhattan to Time Warner Entertainment Company, L.P. ("Time Warner"). First Amended Complaint ("FAC") ¶ 30. The franchise agreement for Northern Manhattan provides that Time Warner will provide four public access channels. The agreement recites that the Manhattan Borough President has designated a not-for-profit, nonmembership corporation to serve as the Community Access Organization ("CAO") for the borough "under whose jurisdiction the Public Access Channels shall be placed for purposes of Article 8 of this Agreement," which applies to public, educational, and governmental services. That CAO is the Defendant-Appellee MCAC, known as Manhattan Neighborhood Network ("MNN").
Allegations of First Amendment violations. Plaintiffs-Appellants Deedee Halleck and Jesus Papoleto Melendez alleged that MNN, three of its employees, and the City violated their First Amendment rights by suspending them from using MNN's public access channels because of disapproval of the content of a TV program that Halleck had submitted to
Both Halleck and Melendez have been involved in producing public access programming in Manhattan. In July 2012, MNN held an event to mark the opening of the El Barrio Firehouse Community Media Center ("El Barrio Firehouse"). Halleck and Melendez stood outside, interviewing invitees. In August or September 2012, Halleck submitted to MNN for airing on MNN's public access channels a video entitled "The 1% Visits the Barrio," based on video footage taken at the El Barrio Firehouse opening (the "1% video"). The 1% video presented the Plaintiffs' view that MNN was "more interested in pleasing 'the 1%' than addressing the community programming needs of those living in East Harlem." FAC ¶ 83. MNN aired the 1% video on public access channels in October 2012.
In a letter dated October 11, 2012, defendant Jeanette Santiago, MNN's Programming Director, informed Halleck that she was suspended for three months from airing programs over MNN's public access channels. Santiago stated that the 1% video violated MNN's program content restrictions barring "participation in harassment or aggravated threat toward staff and/or other producers." FAC ¶ 86.
In a letter dated August 1, 2013, defendant Daniel Coughlin, MNN's executive director, suspended Melendez indefinitely from all MNN services and facilities. Coughlin claimed that at an encounter in July 2013 Melendez had "pushed him over." FAC ¶ 106. The Plaintiffs allege that Melendez was suspended because of the views he expressed in the 1% video. In a letter dated August 9, 2013, Coughlin suspended Halleck for one year from all MNN services and facilities, claiming receipt of complaints about the 1% video. Although Halleck's suspension has ended, she cannot air the 1% video on any public access channels in Manhattan. By letter dated April 24, 2015, defendant Cory Brice,
District Court opinion. With respect to the Plaintiffs' First Amendment claim against MNN, the District Court recognized that the claim, pursued under
The District Court then considered whether the First Amendment might apply to MNN's actions on the theory that a public access channel is a public forum. See Perry Education Assn. v. Perry Local Educators' Assn. ,
Deeming the issue a "close call,"
With respect to the Plaintiffs' First Amendment claim against the City, the District Court noted that " 'Congress did not intend municipalities to be held liable unless action pursuant to official municipal policy of some nature caused a constitutional tort.' "
With the federal claims dismissed, the District Court declined to exercise pendent jurisdiction over the state law claims and granted the motion to dismiss the complaint.
Discussion
I. First Amendment Claim Against MNN and Its Employees
Because MNN is a private corporation, the viability of the Plaintiffs' First Amendment claim against it and its employees depends on whether MNN's actions can be deemed state action. A nominally private entity can be a state actor in several different circumstances. See Brentwood Academy v. Tennessee Secondary School Athletic Assn. ,
Our consideration of whether the public access channels in the pending appeal are public forums must begin with the Supreme Court's decision in Denver Area , a case that generated six opinions spanning 112 pages of the United States Reports. The case concerned the constitutionality of three provisions of the Cable Television Consumer Protection and Competition Act of 1992 ("1992 Act"), Pub. L. No. 102-385, §§ 10(a), 10(b), and 10(c),
The Supreme Court ruled section 10(a) constitutional, and sections 10(b) and 10(c) unconstitutional. See Denver Area ,
Pertinent to the pending appeal, five Justices expressed differing views on whether public access channels were public forums. Justice Kennedy, with whom Justice Ginsburg concurred, said, "A public access channel is a public forum."
On the other hand, Justice Thomas, with whom Chief Justice Rehnquist and Justice Scalia concurred, said that a public access channel is not a public forum. His reason:
Justice Thomas acknowledged the Supreme Court's statement that "a public forum may consist of 'private property dedicated to public use.' "
In reply, Justice Kennedy explained, "[I]n return for granting cable operators easements to use public rights-of-way for their cable lines, local governments have bargained for a right to use cable lines for public access channels.... [N]o particular formalities are necessary to create an easement.... [W]hen a local government contracts to use private property for public expressive activity, it creates a public forum."
In Part II of Denver Area , Justice Breyer, with whom Justices Stevens, O'Connor, and Souter concurred, explicitly declined to express a view as to whether a public access channel is a public forum. See
In view of the statutory, regulatory, and contractual framework under which this case arises and the purpose for which Congress authorized public access channels, we are persuaded by the conclusion reached by Justices Kennedy and Ginsburg. A public access channel is the electronic version of the public square. Without determining whether a public access channel is necessarily a public forum simply by virtue of its function in providing an equivalent of the public square, we conclude that where, as here, federal law authorizes setting aside channels for public access to be "the electronic marketplace of ideas," state regulation requires cable operators to provide at least one public access channel, a municipal contract requires a cable operator to provide four such channels, and a municipal official has designated a private corporation to run those channels, those channels are public forums.
Because facilities or locations deemed to be public forums are usually operated by governments, determining that a particular facility or location is a public forum usually suffices to render the challenged action taken there to be state action subject
The non-municipal defendants invoke our decision in Loce v. Time Warner Entertainment Advance/Newhouse Partnership ,
We note that the defendant in Loce was Time Warner, the operator of a cable system carrying the leased channel, not, as in this case, the entity operating the public access channels. And, we noted in Loce , "The record offer[ed] no evidence that Time Warner and the municipal franchising authorities jointly administer leased access channels."
We acknowledge that other courts have not considered public access channels to be public forums. In Alliance for Community Media v. FCC ,
Several District Courts have considered whether a public access channel is a public forum and have reached conflicting results. Compare Egli v. Strimel , No. 14-cv-6204,
With all respect to those courts that have expressed a view different from ours, we agree with the view expressed by Justices Kennedy and Ginsburg in Denver Area. Public access channels, authorized by Congress to be "the video equivalent of the speaker's soapbox" and operating under the municipal authority given to MNN in this case, are public forums, and, in the circumstances of this case, MNN and its employees are subject to First Amendment restrictions.
II. Municipal Liability
We agree with the District Court that the complaint does not allege actions by the City that suffice to make it liable for the Plaintiffs' federal claims. Municipal liability under section 1983 arises when the challenged action was taken pursuant to a municipal policy. See Monell ,
Conclusion
The judgment of the District Court is reversed as to MNN and its employees, affirmed as to the City, and remanded for further proceedings.
Notes
Justice Kennedy further explained, "Under many franchises, educational channels are controlled by local school systems, which use them to provide school information and educational programs. Governmental access channels are committed by the cable franchise to the local municipal government, which uses them to distribute information to constituents on public affairs." Denver Area ,
The letter quoted Melendez's statement in the 1% video that "People of color work in this building and I have to wait until people get fired, they retire or someone kills them so that I can come and have access to the facility here." FAC ¶ 87. Santiago said the letter "incited violence and harassment towards staff and was in direct violation of MNN's 'zero tolerance on harassment.' "
The name was misspelled "Bryce" in the FAC.
Section 10(a) permits a cable operator to prohibit "patently offensive" programming. 1992 Act § 10(a). Section 10(b) requires the Federal Communications Commission to promulgate regulations that require cable operators to segregate "indecent" programming, place it on a single channel, and block access unless a viewer requests access.
Justice Breyer, writing for himself and Justices Stevens and Souter, voted to invalidate section 10(c) because "the Government cannot sustain its burden of showing that § 10(c) is necessary to protect children or that it is appropriately tailored to secure that end." Denver Area ,
Justice Kennedy, writing for himself and Justice Ginsburg, acknowledged that Congress has "a compelling interest in protecting children from indecent speech," but voted to invalidate section 10(c) because it was not "narrowly tailored to serve a compelling interest."
Justice O'Connor voted to uphold section 10(c) on the ground that it was a "permissive," sufficiently "tailored" provision that served "the well-established compelling interest of protecting children from exposure to indecent material."
Justice Thomas, writing for himself and Chief Justice Rehnquist and Justice Scalia, voted to uphold section 10(c) on the ground that the public access programmers could not challenge a scheme that restricted the free speech rights of cable operators.
As to leased channels, Justice Breyer said, "[I]t is unnecessary, indeed, unwise, for us definitively to decide whether or how to apply the public forum doctrine to [them]."
We note that a State regulation permits the cable operator to prohibit obscenity or other content unprotected by the First Amendment. See N.Y. Com. Codes R. & Regs. tit. 16, § 895.4(c)(8).
In Wilcher v. City of Akron ,
Concurrence Opinion
I fully agree with the majority opinion. I write separately to add only that in the specific circumstances of this case we might also rely on the public function test to conclude that MNN and its employees are state actors subject to First Amendment restrictions when they regulate the public's use of the public access channels at issue here. "Under the public function test, state action may be found in situations where an activity that traditionally has been the exclusive, or near exclusive, function of the State has been contracted out to a private entity." Grogan v. Blooming Grove Volunteer Ambulance Corps,
But the distinction between entertainment and public speech is perilous as a matter of constitutional law and in this case unfounded as a matter of fact.
"The Free Speech Clause exists principally to protect discourse on public matters, but ... it is difficult to distinguish politics from entertainment, and dangerous to try." Brown v. Entm't Merchs. Ass'n,
One look at MNN's website reveals that MNN's public access channels largely offer "the video equivalent of the speaker's soap box or the electronic parallel to the printed leaflet." Denver Area Educ. Telecomms. Consortium, Inc. v. FCC,
As the majority suggests without saying it outright, New York City delegated to MNN the traditionally public function of administering and regulating speech in the public forum of Manhattan's public access channels. For this reason, on this record, I agree that MNN and its employees are subject to First Amendment restrictions.
Concurrence in Part
I join the opinion of the Court in affirming the dismissal of the claims against the municipal defendants: the complaint fails to allege actions by the city that amount to "municipal policy." Op. at 308; Monell,
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"[T]he United States Constitution regulates only the Government, not private parties." United States v. Int'l Bhd. Of Teamsters,
MNN is a private corporation. A private entity may become a state actor only under the following limited conditions:
"(1) the entity acts pursuant to the 'coercive power' of the state or is 'controlled' by the state ('the compulsion test'); (2) when the state provides 'significant encouragement' to the entity, the entity is a 'willful participant in joint activity with the state,' or the entity's functions are "entwined" with state policies ('the joint action test' or 'close nexus test'); or (3) when the entity "has been delegated a public function by the state," ('the public function test')."
Sybalski v. Independent Group Home Living Program, Inc.,
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MNN cannot be cast as a state actor by application of the tests for compulsion or joint action.
Compulsion. "Action taken by private entities with the mere approval or acquiescence of the State is not state action." Am. Mfrs. Mut. Ins. Co. v. Sullivan,
Joint Action. The "decisive factor" in entwinement analysis is the "amount of control [the municipality] could potentially exercise over the [private corporation's] 'internal management decisions'." Grogan,
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This leaves the "public function" test as the only remaining vehicle by which MNN's activities may be considered state action. Judge Lohier's concurring opinion undertakes to establish state action under the "public function" test.
A private entity performs a "public function" when its specific conduct at issue in the complaint has historically been "an exclusive prerogative of the sovereign." Grogan v. Blooming Grove Volunteer Ambulance Corp.,
Consideration of MNN's status as a state actor therefore requires an examination of its function, guided by these principles. Instead, the opinion of the Court proceeds as follows: private property leased by the Government for public expressive activity creates a public forum, Op. at 306-07; a facility deemed to be a public forum is usually operated by Government, id.; action taken at a facility determined to be a public forum usually is state action, id. at 17; the First Amendment applies to a person acting at such a facility if the person has a sufficient connection to Government authority to constitute state action, id.; and here, the Borough President's designation of MNN to administer the public-access station is sufficient. The opinion of the Court thus drops a link: that the private entity (MNN) performs a function that has been the exclusive (or near-exclusive) function of Government.
The appellants contend that MNN is a "state actor" under the public function test because a public access channel is a public forum. This approach is inconsistent with our Loce precedent that administering leased access channels does not constitute state action. The holding in Loce applies with (at least) equal analytical force to the administration of public-access channels:
The fact that federal law requires a cable operator to maintain leased access channels and the fact that the cable franchise is granted by a local government are insufficient, either singly or in combination, to characterize the cable operator's conduct of its business as state action. Nor does it suffice that cable operators, in their management of leased access channels, are subject to statutory and regulatory limitations.
The opinion of the Court distinguishes Loce largely on the basis that there is a fee for leased access whereas public-access is free. That seems to be the whole of it: "Leased channels concern economics. Public access channels concern democracy." Op. at 307; see also Concurring Op. at 309. But not every well-turned phrase is good law. The grant of access to facilities at no cost by non-commercial entities does not transform property into a public forum. Perry Educ. Ass'n v. Perry Local Educators' Ass'n,
We have not expressly applied Loce to the administration of public-access channels; but the Sixth Circuit has. In Wilcher v. City of Akron,
As the Sixth Circuit concluded, the logic of Loce applies with equal force to public-access programming. Cable operators are equally obligated to provide both "forums": federal law requires them to set aside a portion of their capacity for leased access,
The D.C. Circuit reached the same result in Alliance for Community Media v. F.C.C. ("ACM"),
The in banc court also held that there was no state action under a compulsion theory because the government did not coerce cable operators to act; rather, the law authorized but did not require the prohibition of "indecent" programming. Id. at 116 ("Rather than coerce cable operators, section 10 gives them a choice."), 118 (rejecting that mere "encouragement" by
When that case was reversed in part and affirmed in part, sub nom. Denver Area Educ. Telecommunications Consortium, Inc.,
Petitioners think that by calling leased access and [public access] channels "public forums" they may avoid the state action problem and invoke the line of First Amendment decisions restricting governmental control of speakers because of the location of their speech. But a "public forum," or even a "nonpublic forum," in First Amendment parlance is government property. It is not, for instance, a bulletin board in a supermarket, devoted to the public's use, or a page in a newspaper reserved for readers to exchange messages, or a privately owned and operated computer network available to all those willing to pay the subscription fee. The Supreme Court uses the "public forum" designation, or lack thereof, to judge "restrictions that the government seeks to place on the use of its property." International Soc'y for Krishna Consciousness v. Lee,, [ 505 U.S. 672 , 112 S.Ct. 2701 ] (1992) (italics added). State action is present because the property is the government's and the government is doing the restricting. 120 L.Ed.2d 541
ACM,
In its discussion of Denver Area, the opinion of the Court parses and weighs the dicta of individual Justices on an issue that the Court did not disturb: the D.C. Circuit's holding that public forum analysis was inapplicable to leased and public cable access channels. On that score, the D.C. Circuit's holding is consonant with the approach to cable access channels in the Second and Sixth Circuits. Moreover, the exchanges among the various Supreme Court opinions adumbrate support for that holding rather than otherwise.
As the opinion of the Court observes, Justice Kennedy, writing for himself and one other Justice, would have held that a public-access channel is a public forum. But three justices would have held that they are not. Four justices in the plurality observed that it was "unnecessary, indeed, unwise" to decide the question; but one reason they adduced for avoiding the question is suggestive: "[I]t is not at all clear that the public forum doctrine should be imported wholesale into the area of common carriage regulation."
At least four district judges in this circuit have taken up this issue, three of them in unrelated cases brought by a single busy pro se litigant. In Glendora v. Cablevision Systems Corp.,
Loce, which in my view controls, was issued after ACM and Denver Area, and after the cases of Glendora, Glendora and Glendora.
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A ruling in favor of MNN will be consistent with our precedent in Loce. The majority conclusion that MNN is a state actor opens a split with the Sixth Circuit; considerably worse, it opens a split with the Second Circuit.
Judge Lohier's observation that public speech blends into entertainment is valid, and increasingly so. I do not suggest otherwise. Our point of respectful disagreement is whether, under the public function test, the administration of a cable access channel (whatever its offerings) is a traditional prerogative of sovereignty. The balance of courts hold that it is not; and the Second Circuit in Loce is one of them.
