Nancy HODGKINS, Colin Hodgkins, and Caroline Hodgkins, by their next friend and natural parent Nancy HODGKINS, on their own behalf and on behalf of those similarly situated, Plaintiffs-Appellants,
v.
Bart PETERSON, Mayor, in his official capacity as mayor of the City of Indianapolis, Indiana, Jack L. Cottey, Sheriff, in his official capacity as Marion County Sheriff, and Scott Newman, in his official capacity as Marion County Prosecutor, Defendants-Appellees, and
State of Indiana, Intervenor-Appellee.
No. 01-4115.
United States Court of Appeals, Seventh Circuit.
Argued May 31, 2002.
Decided January 22, 2004.
COPYRIGHT MATERIAL OMITTED COPYRIGHT MATERIAL OMITTED Kenneth J. Falk (argued), Indiana Civil Liberties Union, Indianapolis, IN, for Plaintiffs-Appellants.
Peggy D. Dallmann (argued), Office of the Corporation Counsel, Thomas M. Fisher (argued), Office of the Attorney General, Indianapolis, IN, for Defendants-Appellees.
Before HARLINGTON WOOD, Jr., COFFEY, and ROVNER, Circuit Judges.
ROVNER, Circuit Judge.
A parent and her minor children challenged Indiana's curfew law (Ind.Code §§ 31-37-3-2 and 31-37-3-3.5 ("curfew law")) claiming that the law violates the First Amendment rights of minors and impinges on the substantive due process rights of parents to raise and control the upbringing of their children. The district court denied the plaintiffs' motion for a preliminary injunction, holding that the curfew law — which contains an affirmative defense for minors arrested while participating in, going to, or returning from an activity protected under the First Amendment to the United States Constitution — did not threaten to curtail the First Amendment rights of juveniles and did not impede the due process rights of parents to direct their children's upbringing without undue interference from the government. Even with the affirmative defense, however, the new curfew leaves minors on their way to or from protected First Amendment activity vulnerable to arrest and thus creates a chill that unconstitutionally imposes on their First Amendment rights. Consequently, we reverse the decision of the district court.
I.
Shortly after 11:00 pm on August 26, 1999, Colin Hodgkins and his three friends left a Steak'n Shake restaurant in Marion County, Indiana where they had stopped to eat after attending a school soccer game.1 As they left the restaurant, police arrested and handcuffed them for violating Indiana's curfew regulation. The police took Colin and his friends to a curfew sweep processing site where he was given a breathalyser test and escorted to a bathroom where he was required to submit a urine sample to be tested for drugs. Later, both tests were determined to be negative. After the tests, a community volunteer interviewed Colin, asking him various personal questions about his friends and family including whether his family attended church. Two and a half hours later, at 1:30 a.m., a member of the Marion County Sheriff's Department went to the Hodgkins residence to inform Nancy Hodgkins that her son had been arrested and had to be picked up at the local high school. When she arrived to pick up her son, a community volunteer interviewed her and asked her personal questions about the Hodgkins family.
Colin's arrest spurred a series of legal challenges to the constitutionality of the statute, followed by subsequent revisions to the curfew law and culminating in the statute challenged in the instant case. At the time of Colin's arrest, the Indiana statute set a curfew of 11 p.m. on weekday nights and 1 a.m. on weekend nights as described below:
Children fifteen through seventeen years of age
Sec. 2. It is a curfew violation for a child fifteen (15), sixteen (16), or seventeen (17) years of age to be in a public place:
(1) between 1 a.m. and 5 a.m. on Saturday or Sunday;
(2) after 11 p.m. on Sunday, Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday, or Thursday; or
(3) before 5 a.m. on Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday, or Friday.
Ind.Code 31-37-3-2. A second statute made it unlawful for any child under the age of fifteen to be in any public place after 11 p.m. or before 5 a.m. on any day. Ind.Code 31-37-3-3. Violations of the latter provision constituted a delinquent act (Ind.Code 31-37-2-5) and could subject a parent to criminal liability. Ind.Code 31-37-2-5 (making it a crime to knowingly or intentionally encourage, aid, induce, or cause a person under eighteen years of age to commit an act of delinquency). A third statute in force at the time of Colin's arrest exempted from application of the curfew statute any child who was:
(1) accompanied by the child's parent, guardian, or custodian;
(2) accompanied by an adult specified by the child's parent, guardian or custodian; or
(3) participating in, going to, or returning from:
(A) lawful employment;
(B) a school sanctioned activity; or
(C) a religious event.
Ind.Code 31-37-3-1(repealed). Together, these statutes formed what we will call Indiana's prior curfew law.
Pursuant to a challenge by Colin, his mother, and a certified class of minors similarly situated, the district court determined that the statutes were constitutionally flawed as they lacked any exceptions for First Amendment activity. Hodgkins v. Goldsmith, No. IP99-1528-C-T/G,
Pursuant to Judge Tinder's holding that the prior curfew law was unconstitutional, the state legislature amended the statute to its current form. In doing so, the Indiana General Assembly repealed Ind. Code 31-37-3-1 (the statute listing exceptions to the curfew rule), kept the remainder of the statute intact, and enacted a new Ind.Code 31-37-3-3.5 which, rather than creating an exception for First Amendment activity, created an affirmative defense for those engaged in protected expressive activity:
31-37-3-3.5 Defenses
Sec. 3.5.
* * * * * *
(b) It is a defense to a violation under this chapter that the child engaged in the prohibited conduct while:
(1) accompanied by the child's parent, guardian, or custodian;
(2) accompanied by an adult specified by the child's parent, guardian, or custodian;
(3) participating in, going to, or returning from:
(A) lawful employment;
(B) a school sanctioned activity;
(C) a religious event;
(D) an emergency involving the protection of a person or property from an imminent threat of serious bodily injury or substantial damage;
(E) an activity involving the exercise of the child's rights protected under the First Amendment to the United States Constitution or Article 1, Section 31 of the Constitution of the State of Indiana, or both, such as freedom of speech and the right of assembly; or
(F) an activity conducted by a nonprofit or governmental entity that provides recreation, education, training, or other care under the supervision of one (1) or more adults; or
(4) engaged in interstate or international travel from a location outside Indiana to another location outside Indiana.
The plaintiffs, unconvinced that the new affirmative defense for First Amendment activity cured the constitutional deficiency found by the district court in Hodgkins I, sought to preliminarily enjoin the enforcement of the new curfew law. Specifically, the plaintiffs asserted that the defense offered no real protection for minor plaintiffs involved in First Amendment activity who still might be vulnerable to arrest before they could assert a defense. The plaintiffs further maintained that the new curfew law violated the Fourteenth Amendment by unlawfully denying parents the autonomy to allow their children to be in public places unaccompanied during curfew hours.
Named plaintiff Nancy Hodgkins is a resident of Indianapolis, Indiana, and is the mother of named plaintiffs Colin and Caroline Hodgkins. Ms. Hodgkins would like to allow her children to participate in the activities protected by the curfew law's First Amendment exception, however, she is concerned that if they do so, they will be subject to arrest. Ms. Hodgkins recognizes that if one of her children is arrested while participating in a First Amendment activity she and the child could later use that activity as a defense to the charges. She is nevertheless concerned about the potential expense and time involved in launching such a defense, and, we surmise, she is wary of again placing herself in a position where she will be summoned by the police in the middle of the night to come to a curfew processing center or detention center and of placing her children in a position where they will be subject to arrest, a breathalyser test, urine test, and an intrusive interview. Ms. Hodgkins states that she will certainly consider the risk of arrest when deciding whether to allow her children to participate in First Amendment activities after curfew. Consequently, she asserts that the current statute chills her children's ability to engage in these types of activities.
Furthermore, Ms. Hodgkins wishes to assert her rights as a parent to measure out more privileges and responsibilities to her children as they mature and grow more capable of acting responsibly with additional freedom. She believes that it is part of a parent's job to prepare a child for adulthood by doling out greater freedoms, including the freedom to remain out past curfew without being accompanied by an adult. She seeks a preliminary injunction against defendants Bart Peterson, in his official capacity as Mayor of the City of Indianapolis, Jack Cottey, in his official capacity as Sheriff of Marion County, and Scott Newman, in his official capacity as Prosecutor of Marion County, barring them from enforcing the new juvenile curfew law. The State of Indiana has intervened as a matter of right pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 2403(b) to defend the constitutionality of the law.3 Together, the defendants claim that the curfew law is constitutional and serves the compelling governmental interest in lowering the incidence of drug and alcohol use by youth, decreasing crime committed by and against minors, fostering parental involvement in children's conduct, and empowering parents who wish to set limits on their children's nighttime activities.
The named plaintiffs seek to assert their constitutional claims not merely on their own behalf, but on behalf of the following two classes as well: Class A — all residents of Marion County, who are under the age of eighteen, and Class B — all parents and legal guardians of persons who are residents of Marion County and who are under the age of eighteen. The District Court certified both classes on August 31, 2001.4
Holding that the plaintiffs had failed to make a clear showing of a likelihood of success on the merits of either of their claims, the district court denied the plaintiffs' motion for a preliminary injunction. Hodgkins v. Peterson,
II.
In reviewing the district court's denial of a preliminary injunction, we review the court's findings of fact for clear error, and its legal conclusions de novo. Jones v. InfoCure Corp.,
As the Second Circuit recently noted, juvenile curfew laws have existed throughout our nation's history, and state and local governmental attempts at enacting constitutional curfew statutes have met with varying degrees of success. See Ramos v. Town of Vernon,
We must begin by exploring the baseline question: Do minors have a fundamental right to freedom of expression worthy of constitutional protection? The Supreme Court answered this question affirmatively in Tinker v. Des Moines Indep. Cmty. Sch. Dist.,
The strength of our democracy depends on a citizenry that knows and understands its freedoms, exercises them responsibly, and guards them vigilantly. Young adults, as Judge Tinder pointed out, are not suddenly granted the full panoply of constitutional rights on the day they attain the age of majority. We not only permit but expect youths to exercise those liberties — to learn to think for themselves, to give voice to their opinions, to hear and evaluate competing points of view — so that they might attain the right to vote at age eighteen with the tools to exercise that right. Am. Amusement Mach. Assoc. v. Kendrick,
The Hodgkins maintain that the revisions to the curfew law have not cured the constitutional defect found in the previous version of the law which was struck down by the district court in Hodgkins I. The affirmative defenses added to the revised curfew law, they argue, do not adequately protect minors' First Amendment rights, as the curfew law requires them to subject themselves to arrest — including the possibility of breathalyser tests, urine tests and intrusive questioning abut their family life — and then prove at a later time that the activity they were engaging in fell within the affirmative defense for First Amendment activity. They assert that the consequences of violating the curfew law are so burdensome and intrusive that, rather than risk arrest, they will be discouraged from participating in expressive activity during curfew hours. In other words, the plaintiffs claim that the curfew regulation creates a "chill" that imposes on their First Amendment rights. The Supreme Court has often noted that a realistic threat of arrest is enough to chill First Amendment rights. City of Houston, Texas v. Hill,
Most often in this context, plaintiffs launch First Amendment challenges pursuant to the overbreadth doctrine. The overbreadth doctrine allows an attack on the facial validity of a statute even though the conduct of the person attacking the statute could be regulated by a statute drawn with the requisite narrow specificity. Dombrowski v. Pfister,
Having determined that the statute is one that is eligible for facial attack, our next task is to decide through which of the many First Amendment lenses we will analyze the constitutionality of the curfew law. The plaintiffs do not maintain that the legislature's purpose in enacting the ordinance was to regulate the content of their expressive activity and indeed it seems clear that it was not. The curfew ordinance was enacted to regulate conduct (minors in public at night), but could be seen as having the incidental effect of burdening speech and is therefore subject to the four-prong analysis established in United States v. O'Brien,
These intermediate scrutiny tests can be applied only to governmental regulation of conduct that has an expressive element or to regulations directed at activity with no expressive component but which nevertheless impose a disproportionate burden on those engaged in protected First Amendment activity. Arcara v. Cloud Books, Inc.,
We agree that the Indiana curfew ordinance does not disproportionately impact First Amendment rights. As Colin Hodgkins can attest, it burdens minors who want to attend soccer games as much as it burdens those who wish to speak at a political rally. See Nunez,
Despite this extensive regulation, the State of Indiana argues that the curfew law is a general regulation of conduct and not a regulation of expressive conduct. The State likens this case to Arcara,
Similarly, the recent Supreme Court decision in Hicks,
In order not to offend the First Amendment, a statute that regulates the time, place, and manner of expression must be (1) content neutral, (2) narrowly tailored to serve a significant governmental interest, and (3) allow for ample alternative channels for the expression. Ward,
The district court found that the curfew law advanced the important governmental interest in providing for the safety and well-being of children and combating juvenile crime. Hodgkins II,
The question remains, however, whether the nexus between the curfew law and those significant governmental interests is close enough to pass constitutional muster. Whether we call it "narrowly tailored" or "no more burden-some than is essential" is of no moment. See Ward,
Under the "no more restrictive than necessary" standard, the "[g]overnment may not regulate expression in such a manner that a substantial portion of the burden on speech does not serve to advance its goals." Ward,
an officer would not have probable cause to arrest children who appear to be under the age of 18 and who also appear to be participating in an early morning protest at the Governor's residence. Similarly, an officer would not have probable cause to arrest children apparently under the age of 18 attending Midnight Mass at the Cathedral. In those cases, the officer would have knowledge of facts and circumstances which would conclusively establish the First Amendment activity affirmative defense; the officer would not have to conduct any investigation into the defense as it would be readily apparent that the children were engaging in protected activity.
Hodgkins II,
But there is no reason to think that the minors whom the affirmative defense will shield from arrest represent most or even many of those who are at risk of being stopped by the police. A police officer has probable cause to arrest when "the facts and circumstances within the officer's knowledge ... are sufficient to warrant a prudent person, or one of reasonable caution, in believing, in the circumstances shown, that the suspect has committed, is committing, or is about to commit an offense." Michigan v. DeFillippo,
Thus, a police officer who actually sees a sixteen-year-old leaving a late-night religious service or political rally could not properly arrest the youth for staying out past curfew. But, as Judge Tinder held, the statute's affirmative defenses do not compel the officer to look beyond what he already knows in order to decide whether one of the affirmative defenses applies. Hodgkins II,
To be sure, an officer observing a child who appears to be under the age of 18 out walking during curfew hours does not have to investigate the child's assertion that he is returning from or going to a religious or political activity. So, children who appear to be under the age of 18 who are out during curfew hours walking to the Governor's residence to protest an early morning execution might be arrested. This is because the officer might have to investigate whether the children are in fact walking to the Governor's residence to the protest, and the officer is not required to undertake such an investigation in determining probable cause.
Hodgkins II,
Consequently, because the defense imposes no duty of investigation on the arresting officer, as a practical matter it protects only those minors whom the officer has actually seen participating in protected activity. This strikes us as a small subset of minors participating in late-night First Amendment activities, and therefore we conclude that the statute reaches a substantial amount of protected conduct. Most religious and political events occurring during curfew hours are organized and attended by adults, so even assuming that police routinely monitor such events, they would have no reason to suspect that any particular juvenile taking part in one of these events is doing so unaccompanied by a parent or other responsible adult. Only when the minor is observed by himself or solely in the company of other minors would a police officer have reason to believe that he is in public after hours unaccompanied by a responsible adult. Indeed, if an unaccompanied minor comes to the attention of the police at all, it is much more likely that he will do so while traveling the relatively deserted public way to or from the late-night First Amendment activity, not in the midst of the activity itself.
Furthermore, we think the district court took too narrow a view when determining that the curfew law left open adequate alternative channels of communication. Judge Tinder noted that minors could engage in protected activity during the ample non-curfew hours, during curfew hours under the shield of the affirmative defense, when accompanied by an authorized adult, or within the confines of their home by telephone or through the internet. No doubt many if not most of the participants would find it more convenient to exercise their First Amendment rights other than in the dead of night. It is by no means a coincidence, however, that so many of the expressive activities we illustrated above occur late in the evening. In some instances, the late hour of the activity may be dictated by necessity — as, for example, when citizens wish to observe or influence a legislative session that extends into the late hours, or a down-to-the-wire election postpones a celebration for the winning candidate until the wee hours of the morning. More often, however, the late hour is closely linked with the purpose and message of the activity. Take Back the Night marches and rallies frequently extend to and after midnight in order to protest the crimes that jeopardize the security of women at night. Executions of prisoners on death row often are carried out shortly after midnight or in the early hours of the day, and so are routinely attended by all-night vigils held by those for and against the death penalty. Kristallnacht (Night of Glass) is commemorated with late-night prayers and vigils because it was after midnight one evening sixty-five years ago when Nazi hooligans looted and destroyed Jewish businesses, homes, and synagogues in Germany. In the final days of Ramadan, mosques remain open all night so that Muslims may mark Lailat al-Qadr (Night of Power), the night when the prophet Mohammed first received revelations from the angel Jibra'el (Gabriel), by holding vigil in prayer, Qur'anic reading, and contemplation. And it was after midnight one evening in October 1998 when young Matthew Shepard was beaten, burned, and lashed to a fence, and left for dead outside of Laramie, Wyoming; and so it is that candlelight vigils were and are held in the middle of the night to protest the homophobia that motivated his killers. Thus, to the extent that the curfew prevents a minor from being outside of the home during curfew hours, it does not mean simply that she must shift the exercise of her First Amendment rights to noncurfew hours or to the telephone or internet; it means that she must surrender her right to participate in late-night activities whose context and message are tied to the late hour and the public forum. There is no internet connection, no telephone call, no television coverage that can compare to attending a political rally in person, praying in the sanctuary of one's choice side-by-side with other worshipers, feeling the energy of the crowd as a victorious political candidate announces his plans for the new administration, holding hands with other mourners at a candlelight vigil, or standing in front of the seat of state government as a legislative session winds its way into the night. "The 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 of N.C., Inc.,
Granted, Indiana's curfew does not forbid minors from exercising their First Amendment rights during curfew hours, but it does forcefully discourage the exercise of those rights. The First Amendment defense will shield a minor from conviction, assuming that she can prove to the satisfaction of a judge that she was exercising her First Amendment rights, but, as discussed, it will not shield her from arrest if the officer who stops her has not actually seen her participating in a religious service, political rally, or other First Amendment event. Hodgkins II,
The only way that a minor can avoid this risk is to find a parent or another adult designated by his parent to accompany him. See Ind.Code. § 31-37-3-3.5(b)(1), (2).6 But that alternative itself burdens a minor's expressive rights: adults may be reluctant or unable to accompany the minor to a late-night activity; a seventeen-year-old attending college away from home may be unable to recruit a parent or designated adult; and the minor himself may decide that participation is not worth the bother if he must bring a parent or other adult along with him. To condition the exercise of First Amendment rights on the willingness of an adult to chaperone is to curtail them. Am. Amusement Mach. Ass'n,
In sum, we hold that the curfew law, even with the new affirmative defenses for First Amendment activity, is not narrowly tailored to serve a significant governmental interest and fails to allow for ample alternative channels for expression. The statute restricts a minor's access to any public forum during curfew hours, and the affirmative defense for participating in First Amendment activities does not significantly reduce the chance that a minor might be arrested for exercising his First Amendment rights. Under these circumstances, a facial challenge is both appropriate and necessary. As-applied review would require a minor to suffer arrest and the attendant consequences before a court would consider the constitutionality of the curfew; and neither a minor nor his parents should have to pay that penalty before mounting a challenge to the statute. See generally Hicks,
Although this disposition renders it unnecessary to reach the plaintiff parents' due process claim, the nature of the curfew's affirmative defenses leads us to make one final observation about that claim. The premise of the due process claim is that parents have a right to make decisions about their children's upbringing without undue interference by the state. Courts sustaining curfew laws against this type of claim typically cite the laws' exceptions and defenses as evidence that the laws interfere only minimally with parental authority. See Hutchins,
REVERSED AND REMANDED.
Notes:
Notes
The facts described in this paragraph are those that gave rise to the Hodgkins' first challenge to the Indiana Curfew lawSee Hodgkins v. Goldsmith, No. IP99-1528-C-T/G,
After the district court declared the initial state curfew law unconstitutional, the City of Indianapolis enacted a curfew ordinance which Ms. Hodgkins challenged in a separate action solely on a due process claimHodgkins v. Peterson, No. IP-00-1410-C-T/G,
We refer to the State and local defendants together as "the defendants" or "the government."
Although Colin, who was born on August 6, 1983, is no longer under the age of eighteen and thus subject to the limitations of the curfew law, it is well established that "[a] properly certified class has a legal status separate from and independent of the interests asserted by the named plaintiff."Whitlock v. Johnson,
Other courts that have reviewed curfew laws challenged on Equal Protection grounds and the right to travel or to free movement have struggled to decide whether minors' constitutional rights should be subject to strict scrutiny, intermediate scrutiny, or an amalgam of bothSee Ramos,
Like participation in activity protected by the First Amendment, being out past curfew with a parent or other designated adult is an affirmative defense to a curfew violation, rather than an exception from the prohibition. Ind.Code. § 31-37-3-3.5(b)(1), (2). But the risk of arrest in that situation is obviously slight, for an officer who sees the minor in the company of an adult would typically have no reason to believe that the affirmative defense does not apply
The defendants ask this Court to revisit the question of whether a First Amendment affirmative defense is necessary at all. Our conclusion in this case should put that issue to rest. We note, as Judge Tinder did when considering the original version of the curfew statute, that in every reported federal case which has upheld curfew laws against various constitutional challenges the curfew has contained a broad exemption for First Amendment activitiesSee, e.g., Ramos,
