This appeal concerns whether Louisiana’s prestige license plate program facially discriminates against pro-choice views in contravention of the First Amendment. The program diverts excess charges over handling and ordinary registration fees for the plates to organizations endorsed by the legislature. Because of this feature of the program, we conclude that we lack jurisdiction over the case because of the Tax Injunction Act, 28 U.S.C. § 1341.
I. BACKGROUND
A. The First Appeal
This case is on appeal for the second time. The plaintiffs originally filed suit seeking to have La.Rev.Stat. Ann. § 47:463.61, which authorized the adoption of a “Choose Life” prestige license plate, declared unconstitutional. The district court found Louisiana’s prestige license plate program created a forum for speech that was not viewpoint neutral, granted both declaratory and injunctive relief, and certified the case for interlocutory appellate review.
See Henderson v. Stalder (“Henderson
I”),
*353
On appeal, this court, sua sponte, concluded that the plaintiffs lacked standing.
See Henderson v. Stalder,
B. Remand
The Third Amended Complaint named individuals Henderson, Keeler, Loewy, and LaMothe, and organizations (National Council of Jewish Women and Planned Parenthood of Louisiana) as plaintiffs, and each attempted to establish standing.
See Henderson v. Stalder (“Henderson II”),
The defendants moved to dismiss on several grounds, and the plaintiffs responded with a motion for partial summary judgment contesting the constitutionality of the license plate program.
The district court first determined that the Fifth Circuit’s mandate did not prevent each of the plaintiffs from attempting to reassert standing. See id. at 708-09. Nevertheless, the district court dismissed all the plaintiffs, save Keeler and PPL, for lack of standing based on the reasoning the Fifth Circuit provided. See id. at 709-10. 1 As to Keeler, the court concluded that she sufficiently amended her complaint to present a viable facial challenge to the overall program. The district court also concluded that the amendments to Keeler’s complaint cured the redressability problems that were fatal to PPL’s funding claim. Furthermore, the district court dispatched the defendants’ argument that the Tax Injunction Act barred the challenge. See id. at 720 n. 12.
On the merits of Keeler’s First Amendment claim, the court again accepted Keel-er’s argument that the license plate program created a “forum” that permitted only some groups to express their chosen viewpoint. Relying on the Fourth Circuit’s decision in
Sons of Confederate Veterans, Inc. v. Commissioner, Virginia Dept. of Motor Vehicles
(“SCV”),
II. STANDARD OF REVIEW
We review the district court’s grant of summary judgment de novo, applying the same standards as did the district court.
Hodges v. Delta Airlines, Inc.,
III. DISCUSSION
The defendants raise three principal arguments on appeal: (1) the district court exceeded the scope of its mandate by allowing PPL to amend its claim; (2) the Tax Injunction Act bars the suit in its entirety; and (3) the prestige license plate program does not violate the First Amendment. For reasons that will be obvious, we do not reach the merits of the case.
A. PPL’s Standing
The defendants rightly contend that the district court exceeded the scope of this court’s mandate by permitting PPL to seek to file a complaint on remand. “[T]he mandate rule compels compliance on remand with the dictates of a superior court and forecloses relitigation of issues expressly or impliedly decided by the appellate court.”
United States v. Lee,
The district court failed to abide by this rule. “Where, as here, further proceedings in the district court are specified in the mandate of the Court of Appeals, the district court is limited to holding such as are directed.”
Crowe v. Smith,
B. Tax Injunction Act
The defendants next contend that the Tax Injunction Act (“TIA”) bars Keeler’s First Amendment challenge to the prestige license plate program. The TIA prohibits a federal court from “enjoining, suspending or restraining the assessment, levy or collection of any tax under State law where a plain, speedy and efficient remedy may be had in the courts of such state.” 28 U.S.C. § 1341. Keeler’s goal in this suit, and the remedy ordered by the district court, in fact enjoined the state’s collection of revenue for its entire specialty license plate program. Nevertheless, the TIA would not deprive federal courts of jurisdiction if (a) the “fees” charged by the state are not taxes for purposes of TIA, or if (b)
Hibbs v. Winn,
A review of the program’s operation will illuminate further discussion. Under Louisiana Law, the Secretary of the Department of Public Safety and Corrections (“Secretary” and “DPS”) is charged with the task of issuing license plates for private passenger vehicles. See La.Rev.Stat. Ann. § 47:463(A)(3)(a). This legislation also permits the Secretary to issue “special prestige license plates” if the Legislature so authorizes and certain administrative requirements are satisfied. Id. A few rudimentary administrative requirements apply to all prestige plates. 3
Other varying preconditions are included in the specific legislation authorizing the individual prestige license plates. For instance, there are monetary differences. More than half of the specialty plates are distributed in exchange for additional charges above the handling charge, and in many cases, like that of the “Choose Life” plates, the charges so collected are distributed to organizations as determined by the legislature.
See Henderson I,
Other distinctions less critical to this case exist among the statutes authorizing specialty plates. The statutes differ in the measure of editorial and aesthetic discretion afforded to the recipients and the Secretary. 4 Some, but not all, of the statutes require that a minimum number of *356 purchasers apply for the specialty plates prior to their production. See, e.g., id. at § 47:463.13 (no minimum applicant requirement for special plates honoring Congressional Medal of Honor recipients); § 47:463.58 (conditioning the Life Center Full Gospel Baptist Cathedral plate on a minimum of one thousand applicants); § 47:463.61 (conditioning the “Choose Life” plate on a minimum of one hundred applicants). Finally, beyond administrative and monetary distinctions, the statutes mandate different eligibility criteria to obtain specialty plates. 5
From Keeler’s standpoint, the first basis for sustaining federal jurisdiction is that the additional charges Louisiana citizens incur for specialty plates, above the handling charges and ordinary vehicle registration taxes, are fees, not taxes, hence the program is not covered by the TIA. The district court so held, in part because the state statutes characterize the additional charges for the specialty plates as fees. On the contrary, what is a “tax” for purposes of the TIA is a question of federal law on which a state’s legislative label has no bearing.
Home Builders Ass’n of Miss. Inc. v. City of Madison, Miss.,
The classic tax sustains the essential flow of revenue to the government, while the classic fee is linked to some regulatory scheme. The classic tax is imposed by a state or municipal legislature, while the classic fee is imposed by an agency upon those it regulates. The classic tax is designed to provide a benefit for the entire community, while the classic fee is designed to raise money to help defray an agency’s regulatory expenses.
Home Builders, id.
(omitting internal citations). This court added that a broad construction of “tax” is necessary to honor Congress’s goals in promulgating the TIA, including that of preventing federally-based delays in the collection of public revenues by state and local governments.
Id.
(citing
Tramel v. Schrader,
A few brief examples flesh out the distinction between a TIA-covered tax and regulatory fees. In
Hager v. City of West Peoria,
Acknowledging this tax/fee distinction, Keeler relies on
Neinast v. Texas,
Keeler advances three reasons, allegedly rooted in Neinast, to support her contention that the specialty plate program involves the payment of fees. First, she contends that because the program is administered by the Motor Vehicle Unit of the Department of Public Safety and Corrections, the fees are “charged” by a regulatory agency. Second, the charges are imposed “only upon those that the scheme regulates,” rather than upon the community as a whole or even the entire vehicle-owning community. Third, she asserts that the additional specialty plate fees are not simply imposed for revenue-raising purposes but are earmarked for very specific organizations and thus “defray the cost of moneys expended to these special programs, which are not intended for the benefit of the entire community.” These arguments are either logically attenuated from the facts or inconsistent with our governing caselaw.
First, the fees for Louisiana specialty plates are directly set by the legislature, even though they are collected by a state agency’s motor vehicle unit. Neinast concluded that an analogous feature of the handicapped parking fees suggested a TIA-covered tax.
Second, the fact that specialty plate charges are paid by some, though not all, purchasers, much less all license plate purchasers, is suggestive of Neinast, which held that the charge for handicapped placards represented in this respect a fee rather than a tax. On the other hand, this court has held that special assessments imposed on a limited subgroup of the population, were TIA “taxes” because their revenue was used for community improvements. See Home Builders; Tramel. Thus, this factor, whether the charges are imposed “only upon those that the scheme regulates,” is ultimately interrelated with the purpose of the charge assessed against a limited subgroup.
Finally, Keeler’s argument that specialty plate fees cannot be taxes because they do not serve the general community welfare, inasmuch as they are earmarked for special recipient organizations, is unpersuasive. The fees in question exceed the ordinary motor vehicle registration fees (which are based on a vehicle’s value) and an additional handling charge; they are not tied to vehicle regulation as such. As *358 Neinast noted, the question is not where the money is deposited, but the purpose of the assessment. The Louisiana legislature decreed that the excess charges would be used for a number of purposes, ranging from (but not limited to) park development to university education to adoption support. None of these purposes is “regulatory” as to the specialty plate purchasers. Keeler’s view of the public benefit served by these expenditures may differ from that of the Louisiana legislature, but it does not transform the additional charges for specialty plates into fees designated for a “regulatory” purpose.
The district court emphasized two features of the specialty plate program in concluding that the additional charges (above the handling fee and registration tax) are fees rather than taxes. The additional charges, it pointed out, are paid voluntarily by vehicle owners, whereas taxes are normally considered involuntary charges. Further, the charges are not imposed uniformly even among purchasers of specialty plates. The court inferred from the inconsistency of the policy that the legislature was benefiting only a few groups rather than the community at large. Both points merit discussion.
The voluntariness of the vehicle owner’s payment constitutes, in our view, at most a superficial distinction for purposes of the TIA. Voluntariness is an overinclusive term in this context: Any party who pays special assessments to the government does so “voluntarily” in order to engage in particular activity, whether that activity is homebuilding, engaging in a regulated industry, or obtaining permission to park in handicapped spots. The same can be said of purchasing a “Choose Life” or “Knights of Columbus” or any other specialty license plate logo. A taxpayer “voluntarily” pays the state’s ordinary vehicle registration tax for the privilege of legally owning a car, yet that charge is indisputably a tax. It is thus not the taxpayer’s motivation but the government’s purpose in exacting the charge (here, the additional amount above the handling cost and ordinary vehicle registration tax) that distinguishes taxes from non-TIA-covered regulatory fees.
The variability of the additional charges among purchasers of specialty plates caused the district court to conclude that in many instances, the state is acting as a “collection agency for private charities.”
To fulfill the purposes of the Tax Injunction Act, and because the specialty plate charges cannot under these facts constitute regulatory fees, we are persuaded that the additional charges for specialty plates must be characterized as taxes.
Even though the specialty plate charges may be considered taxes within the scope of TIA, the federal courts may entertain Keeler’s suit if it falls within the Supreme Court’s recent discussion of the TIA in
Hibbs.
There, the Supreme Court confronted an Establishment Clause challenge to an Arizona statute that authorized “income-tax credits for payments to organizations that award educational scholarships and tuition grants to children attending private schools.”
Keeler’s First Amendment attack on Louisiana’s prestige license plate program satisfies only the first part of Hibbs. Her success, however, flies in the face of Hibbs’s second prong: in enjoining the program’s operation, Keeler’s judgment has placed the federal courts in the position of reducing state tax revenues. Hibbs affords no support for Keeler’s demand to eliminate the revenues generated by the specialty plate program.
As a footnote to this discussion, we observe our disagreement that the injunction obtained by Keeler is constitutionally appropriate. On the contrary, in other cases in which a plaintiff has objected to her exclusion from a state-sponsored forum, the Supreme Court’s remedy has not been to close down the forum and censor the speech of others, but to approve injunctions opening up the forum to the plaintiff. 7 Had Keeler sought such forum-open *360 ing relief, and had she succeeded on the merits (a hypothetical exercise on this record), the proper relief would have entailed an increase of state revenues and would not conflict with Hibbs or the TIA. We are bound, however, by Keeler’s tactical choice and the district court’s actual remedy.
For the foregoing reasons, the Tax Injunction Act applies to Keeler’s challenge to the Louisiana specialty plate program, and federal courts have no jurisdiction to entertain it. The judgment is accordingly VACATED and the case is REMANDED WITH INSTRUCTIONS TO DISMISS.
VACATED; REMANDED WITH INSTRUCTIONS TO DISMISS.
Notes
. Plaintiffs Henderson, Loewy, LaMotte and the NCJW have not appealed the district court’s dismissal of their claims.
. PPL's funding and Establishment Clause claims were therefore rendered moot.
See Henderson II,
. See, e.g., La.Rev.Stat. Ann. § 47:463(A)(3)(a) (“AH prestige plates issued after August 15, 1999 shall include a handling charge of three dollars and fifty cents to offset the administrative costs of the department for the issuance of such plates.”); La.Rev.Stat. Ann. § 47:463(A)(3)(b) ("No prestige plate shall be established after January 1, 2002, until the department has received a minimum of one thousand applications for such plate.”).
. Louisiana appears to be deliberate about the measure of creative discretion it delegates to the identified groups and how much it retains. The legislature specifically adopted the "Choose Life” statement, allowing only aesthetic decisions to the Choose Life Council. To well-established organizations, the Legislature entrusts the design of the license plate, subject to compliance with certain statutory standards. See, e.g., LaRev.Stat. Ann. § 47:463.71 ("The license plate shall be of a color and design selected by the Boy Scouts of America, provided that it is in compliance with R.S. 47:463(A)(3).”) In other instances, the state imposes more restrictive instructions. See, e.g., id. at § 47:463.75 ("In addition, the plate shall bear the inscription 'SONS OF CONFEDERATE VETERANS' and the logo of the Sons of Confederate Veterans. The department shall approve any logo, symbol, or design before such plate is produced.”). As for plates recognizing diffuse interests, Louisiana retains all content-based discretion. See, e.g., id. at § 47:463.112 ("The secretary shall design the plate [recognizing foster and adoptive parenting].”).
. In some instances, eligibility is based on membership in a particular association or participation in a seminal event. See, e.g., id. at § 47:463.7 (former prisoners of war of World War I, World War II, the Korean Conflict, and the Vietnamese Conflict); § 47:463.13 (U.S. Reserve Forces); § 47:463.20 (Pearl Harbor survivors); § 47:463.22 (Shriners); § 47:463.32 (Knights of Columbus). Other plates express support for a particular institution or entity and therefore do not require membership in a particular organization. See, e.g., id. at § 47.463.67 (“I Support River Region Cancer Center”); § 47:463.110 ("Support 4-H Youth Development”). Still other plates allow citizens to express their support for a certain cause or point of view. See, e.g., id. at § 47:463.40 ("Think Safe Kids”); § 47:463.60 ("Animal Friendly”); § 463.61 ("Choose Life”); § 47:463.69 ("Don’t Litter Louisiana”); § 47:463.95 ("Unlocking Autism”).
. See Harvard Law Review, The Supreme Court, 2003 Term — Leading Cases: Tax Injunction Act, 118 Harv. L.Rev. 486, 489-90 (2004); Martin A. Schwartz, Challenging The Constitutionality Of State Tax Policies In Federal Court, N.Y.L.J., Oct. 19, 2004, at 3.
.
See, e.g., Rosenberger v. Rector and Visitors of Univ. of Virginia,
