Lead Opinion
ORDER
The majority opinion filed on March 3, 1993 is amended as follows:
[Editor’s Note: Amendments have been incorporated into published opinion.]
A majority of the panel voted to deny the petition for rehearing and to reject the suggestion for rehearing en banc. Judge Boo-chever would grant the petition for rehearing and recommended acceptance of the suggestion for rehearing en banc.
The full court was advised of the en banc suggestion. An active judge of the court requested an en banc vote. The case failed to receive a majority of the votes of the non-recused active judges. Fed.R.App.P. 35. With the above amendments, the petition for rehearing is DENIED and the suggestion for rehearing en banc is REJECTED.
OPINION
This appeal squarely presents a conflict between two of our most deeply cherished liberties: freedom of speech and freedom of religion. The question we must decide is whether the City of San Diego may, consistent with the Establishment Clause of the United States Constitution, permit a private group to erect a religious display in a public park during the Christmas season. Because the park is a traditional public forum removed from the seat of government, we hold that the City may permit the display provided it does so in a non-discriminatory manner.
I
San Diego’s Balboa Park is a 1200-acre public park containing recreational facilities ranging from theatres, museums, and a zoo to picnic areas and sporting fields. Every year during the Christmas holiday season, Balboa Park is the site of a holiday display. The City, in conjunction with a private nonprofit group known as the Community Christmas Center Committee (“the Committee” or “the Christmas Committee”), sponsors a secular holiday display, which includes a Santa Claus, reindeer, a Christmas tree,
Some 250 feet away from the secular display, and partially separated from it by a wall and a road, is a small, open-air amphi-theatre known as the Organ Pavilion. Each year, the Christmas Committee is granted a permit to set up a display consisting of scenes from the New Testament in the Organ Pavilion. The Committee’s display, which remains in place for approximately six weeks from late November through early January, includes eight scenes, four of which are placed on each side of the Pavilion’s stage. Each scene is housed in a palm-covered booth ten feet high and fourteen feet wide. Each contains life-size statuary depicting a biblical scene from the life of Christ, a painted backdrop, and a descriptive sign. Seven of the eight scenes also include gospel passages in English and Spanish. As described by the signs, the eight scenes and their accompanying biblical passages are as follows:
Scene The Annunciation
[no description; Mary and Joseph being turned away from the inn.] Angel appearing before the shepherds
The birth of Christ
Wise Men on their way to Bethlehem
The Flight into Egypt
Christ in the Temple Suffer the little children to come unto me
Biblical Quotation “Fear not Mary: for thou hast found favour with God; and behold, thou shalt bring forth a son, and shalt call his name Jesus.” Luke 1:30-31
“there was no room for them at the Inn;” Luke 2:7
“The shepherds said, let us now go ... and they came with haste and found both Mary and Joseph, and the babe lying in a manger.” Luke 2:15-16
[text does not appear in record] “Behold, wise men from the east came to Jerusalem saying, Where is he that is born King of the Jews? ... for we are come to worship him.” Matt. 2:1-2
“Arise and take the young child and his mother, and flee into Egypt, for Herod will seek the young child to destroy him, and Joseph took them by night.” Matt. 2:13-14
[no text] “But Jesus said, Suffer the little children to come unto me, and forbid them . not; for to such belongeth the Kingdom of God.” Mark 10:14
The Committee pays no fee for its use of the Organ Pavilion. The City ordinarily charges organizations who wish to reserve the Pavilion for exclusive use a fee varying from $440 to $1,325 per day, depending upon the nature of the use and the user. City regulations allow waiver of these fees for nonprofit community services organizations, defined as “recognized group[s], club[s], agencies] or organization^] whose activities are of a service or character building nature, who give service to the community as a whole, and ... where no portion of the net earnings are used for or inure to the benefit of any individual or member of the group.”
The City explains that it charges no fee for the Committee’s display because the Committee’s use of the Organ Pavilion is “nonexclusive.” Other groups and individuals can and do use the Pavilion while the display is in place. The City represents that, if another user so requests, it will require the Committee to cover the display while any overlapping exclusive use permit is in effect.
The Committee’s Biblical display has been an annual tradition in Balboa Park since 1953. The Committee has always owned the statuary and booths. Before 1988, the display was erected and removed each year by City employees, and stored on City property. In the wake of an opinion issued by the City Attorney to the effect that the City’s involvement was unconstitutional, the Committee now erects, removes, and maintains the display itself, and stores it on private property. The Committee reimburses the City $150 for the estimated cost of electricity used by the display. The City provides no other services in connection with the display.
To help defray the costs of the display, the Committee maintains donation barrels at the site. It also maintains a stock of small pamphlets, which contain a schedule of concerts and events to be held at the Pavilion during the Christmas season, a brief history of the Christmas Committee, and a plea for donations to support the Committee’s activities.
Acting pro se, appellant Howard Kreisner filed suit in the federal district court seeking to prevent the City from allowing the Committee to erect the display on public property. Kreisner alleged that the City’s decision to permit the display in Balboa Park violated the religion clauses of both the federal and state constitutions. His complaint requested declaratory and injunctive relief, as well as punitive and other damages.
The parties agreed that no material facts were in dispute, and submitted cross motions for summary judgment. On November 8, 1989, Judge Enright granted judgment for the City on the federal claim and dismissed the state claim.
After the appeal was argued before this panel, it became obvious that the parties disagreed about the nature of the City’s permit policy in Balboa Park. They submitted competing declarations and affidavits describing the policy to us. To resolve the dispute, we remanded to the district court for entry of factual findings.
We solicited additional briefing from the parties, and postponed submission pending the decision of the Supreme Court in Lee v. Weisman, — U.S. -,
II
A
The First Amendment provides that “Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion_” U.S. Const. amend. I. Although written as a limitation upon congressional power, this clause also operates, through the Fourteenth Amendment, to constrain the power of state governments. See Everson v. Board of Educ.,
Like most cherished social values, the principle of religious freedom that is embodied in the Establishment Clause is easy to proclaim but difficult to define: “Candor compels acknowledgment ... that we can only dimly perceive the lines of demarcation in this extraordinarily sensitive area of constitutional law.” Lemon v. Kurtzman,
means at least this: Neither a state nor the Federal Government can set up a church. Neither can pass laws which aid one religion, aid all religions, or prefer one religion over another. Neither can force nor influence a person to go or to remain away from church against his will or force him to profess a belief or disbelief in any religion. No person can be punished for entertaining or professing religious beliefs or disbeliefs, for church attendance or nonattendance. No tax in any amount, large or small, can be levied to support any religious activities or institutions, whatever they may be called, or whatever form they may adopt to teach or practice religion.
Everson,
In the course of adjudicating specific cases, [the Supreme Court] has come to understand the Establishment Clause to*780 mean that government may not promote or affiliate itself with any religious doctrine or organization, may not discriminate among persons on the basis of their religious beliefs and practices, may not delegate a governmental power to a religious institution, and may not involve itself too deeply in such an institution’s affairs.
County of Allegheny v. ACLU (“Allegheny County”),
On the other hand:
The First Amendment does not prohibit practices which by any realistic measure create none of the dangers which it is designed to prevent and which do not so directly or substantially involve the state in religious exercises or in the favoring of religion as to have meaningful and practical impact. It is of course true that great consequences can grow from small beginnings, but the measure of constitutional adjudication is the ability and willingness to distinguish between real threat and mere shadow.
Lee v. Weisman, — U.S. at -,
Applying these general tenets in the context of a particular case “remains a delicate and fact-sensitive” task. Lee v. Weisman, — U.S. at -,
In each case, the inquiry calls for line-drawing; no fixed, per se rule can be framed. The Establishment Clause like the Due Process Clauses is not a precise, detailed provision in a legal code capable of ready application. The purpose of the Establishment Clause “was to state an objective, not to write a statute.”
Lynch v. Donnelly,
In the context of religious holiday displays, the Court’s Establishment Clause jurisprudence has been particularly factbound. No clear general principles emerge from the two most recent cases considering the constitutionality of such displays. In Lynch v. Donnelly,
B
Although the Court has “repeatedly emphasized [its] unwillingness to be confined to any single test or criterion in this sensitive area,” Lynch,
The First Amendment’s Religion Clauses mean that religious beliefs and religious expression are too precious to be either proscribed or prescribed by the State. The design of the Constitution is that preservation and transmission of religious beliefs and worship is a responsibility and a choice committed to the private sphere, which itself is promised freedom to pursue that mission. It must not be forgotten then, that while concern must be given to define the protection granted to an objector or a dissenting nonbeliever, these same Clauses exist to protect religion from government interference. James Madison, the principal author of the Bill of Rights, did not rest his opposition to a religious establishment on the sole ground of its effect on the minority. A principal ground for his view was: “[Ejxperience witnesseth that ecclesiastical establishments, instead of maintaining the purity and efficacy of Religion, have had a contrary operation.”
Id. at -,
In our application of the Lemon test, we take guidance from Allegheny County,
Under the Lemon analysis, a statute or practice which touches upon religion, if it is to be permissible under the Establishment Clause, must have a secular purpose; it must neither advance nor inhibit religion in its principal or primary effect; and it must not foster an excessive entanglement with religion.
The challenged practice must survive all three prongs of the Lemon analysis in order to pass constitutional muster. Edwards v. Aguillard,
1
A government practice or statute fails the purpose prong of Lemon if its purpose is to endorse a religious custom or viewpoint. See Allegheny County,
A practice will stumble on the purpose prong “only if it is motivated wholly by an impermissible purpose.” Bowen v. Kendrick,
We have no difficulty concluding that the City’s decision to permit the Committee to erect its holiday display in Balboa Park is supported by a legitimate, sincere secular purpose. The City cites two, such purposes: (1) the promotion of holiday spirit and (2) the promotion of free expression. We need not consider the City’s first avowed purpose because the second suffices. The Supreme Court has made it clear that a policy of permitting open access to a public forum, including non-discriminatory access for religious speech, is a valid secular purpose. Board of Education v. Mergens,
The City’s past sponsorship of the display does not undercut our conclusion. It is undisputed that the City no longer acts as a sponsor. Further, the City has taken affirmative steps to disassociate itself from the Committee and the display. Under the circumstances, the City’s past conduct is not persuasive evidence of its current motives.
2
Purposes aside, Kreisner contends that the principal and primary effect of granting the Committee’s annual request for a permit is to advance one particular religion and its theological viewpoint. The test under this prong is whether “the challenged government action is sufficiently likely to be perceived by adherents of the controlling denominations as an endorsement, and by the nonadherents as a disapproval, of their individual religious choices.” School Dist. of Grand Rapids v. Ball,
We assume that, were the Committee’s display sponsored by the government, its overwhelming message of glorification of the divinity of Jesus Christ would violate the Establishment Clause. Notwithstanding its strong religious content, however, we conclude that because the display is private speech in a traditional public forum removed from the seat of government it does not have the primary effect of advancing religion. We set forth below the reasoning by which we arrive at this conclusion.
a
Essentially, the question presented here is whether placement of a private, overtly religious holiday display on public property represents government endorsement of religion. The Supreme Court has not yet squarely addressed this issue. Cf. Allegheny County,
In addressing ourselves to this difficult question, we start from the observation that Balboa Park, a public park which is held open for various expressive activities, is unquestionably a traditional public forum. See Perry Educ. Ass’n v. Perry Local Educators’ Ass’n,
It necessarily follows from the fact that Balboa Park, including the Organ Pavilion, is a traditional public forum, that the City may not enforce a content-based restriction on private speech there without a compelling interest, and that any such restriction must be narrowly tailored to achieve that interest. Perry Educ. Ass’n,
b
In evaluating the effect of the City’s grant of a permit to the Committee, we apply the standard of a “reasonable observer.” Allegheny County,
In our view, such an observer could not fairly interpret the City’s tolerance of the Committee’s display as an endorsement of religion. To paraphrase Judge Boggs writing for the en banc court at a subsequent stage of the Grand Rapids litigation:
By allowing the display ... the city merely states that it neither favors nor disfavors religious speech. In fact, [the city] does not even go so far as to “acknowledge” religion by permitting the [biblical] display; it merely sends a message that religious groups will be treated no worse than others. Anyone familiar with [Balboa Park] soon realizes that many groups use it, and that none of these groups receives special treatment from [the city].
Americans United for Separation of Church and State v. City of Grand Rapids (“Grand Rapids IF),
Again, the City’s past sponsorship of the display does not mandate a different conclusion. We will not punish the Committee for the City’s past mistakes. “Neither official disfavor nor the rebound effect of official approbation can make a difference when the Constitution puts choice in private hands. A blunder by public officials cannot restrict the scope of private speech.” Doe v. Small,
We reject Kreisner’s contention that public forum doctrine does not apply here because the Organ Pavilion is not a public forum for large unattended displays. This argument misperceives the nature of Balboa Park, which is a traditional public forum, not a public forum by designation. Designated public forums are areas opened and designated by the state for expressive activity. Cornelius v. NAACP Legal Defense and Educ. Fund,
In fact, we have grave doubts about the City’s ability, should it so choose, to withdraw the Organ Pavilion from its status as a traditional public forum. See United States v. Grace,
Kreisner relies on Kaplan,
Nor are we persuaded that under our interpretation the “public forum doctrine would swallow up the Establishment Clause.” Kaplan,
The dissent makes much of the fact that “the property on which the display rests is
In part because Balboa Park houses some “structural symbols of government,” the dissent believes a reasonable observer would think the Christmas Committee display was endorsed by the government. To support this argument the dissent lists the following structural symbols: “the United Nations Building, the Hall of Nations, the House of Pacific Relations, the Museum of Man, the San Diego Museum of Art, the Space Theater and Science Center, and the Natural History Museum.” Dissent at 1739. We have found nothing in the record which discloses the relationship of any of these buildings to the City of San Diego; the complaint contains no allegations as to them. However, even if we assume they are owned or operated by the city, they appear to have nothing to do with functions associated with the seat of government. Rather, consistent with the nature of Balboa Park itself, they involve cultural and recreational activities unrelated to core governmental functions.
In any event, even the proximity of buildings of unmistakably governmental character is a patently imperfect proxy for attributing speech that goes on there to the government. The White House, perhaps the most visible structural symbol of our government, borders Lafayette Square in Washington, D.C., yet the square itself has consistently been upheld as a public forum. See Clark v. Community for Creative Non-Violence,
We simply are not called upon to decide here whether a private religious display located in a public forum closely associated with the seat of government might be constitutionally infirm.
c
Kreisner argues that, even if the City may issue a permit for the display on a non-preferential basis, as a matter of fact it grants the Committee an unconstitutional preference. We agree with the district court that Kreisner has failed to raise a material issue of fact in this regard. The City claims that its policy is first-come, first-served, regardless of the identity of the speaker or the content of the speech.
A first-come, first-served policy, such as that employed by San Diego, is a valid means for regulating the use of a public forum. Such a policy does not vest impermissible discretion in any official. See Heffron v. International Soc’y for Krishna Consciousness,
Nor do we find it significant that the City’s first-come, first-served policy is not memorialized in the form of a written regulation.
In the absence of any allegation (much less actual proof) that [San Diego] has denied any person access to the Park, it is immaterial that [San Diego] does not have an officially stated policy of equal access, for the Constitution mandates that religious speakers may not be discriminated against in a public forum on the basis of their speech. The City of [San Diego] is required to comply with the constitutional mandate regardless of whether it has an officially stated policy of doing so, and [Kreisner] has failed to demonstrate noncompliance.
Doe v. Small,
d
Kreisner further contends that, even if the City has not violated the Constitution by permitting the display in the Organ Pavilion, it has done so by: (1) allowing the Committee to solicit donations; and (2) failing to charge a fee for the Committee’s use of the Organ Pavilion.
i
Does permitting the Christmas Community Center to solicit donations at the site — through its bins and pamphlets — have the impermissible effect of both endorsing and supporting a particular sectarian viewpoint? The regulations governing park use state that “[t]o solicit funds is prohibited by City Ordinance.” The definition of “solicitation” in the municipal code includes “[a]ny direct oral or written request for money, property or anything of value or any financial assistance of any kind,” as well as “[t]he distribution ... of letters, posters, handbills, cards, folders, pamphlets, books, or circulars for the purpose of soliciting funds.” San Diego Municipal Code section 57.01B(a), (b).
The Committee keeps a stock of pamphlets, which entreat visitors to “Help Us Keep the Community Christmas Center Go
We agree that enforcement of the non-solicitation rule against some groups, but not against others similarly situated, would im-permissibly favor some speakers. Nonetheless, on the record before us, we find no Establishment Clause violation. Although Kreisner has amply demonstrated that the Committee is permitted to solicit contributions in the park, he has not demonstrated that anyone else is prevented from engaging-in similar solicitation. The City claims that it does not regard the type of request for donations made by the Committee as within the scope of its ordinance.
We decline to assume, in the absence of any evidence, that the City ordinarily attempts to enforce its ordinance to bar this kind of solicitation of charitable contributions. The opposite interpretation might raise serious constitutional issues. Solicitation of charitable contributions is protected speech. International Soc’y for Krishna Consciousness v. Lee, — U.S. -, -,
ii
Kreisner also contends that the City’s failure to charge the Committee a permit fee constitutes an impermissible public subsidy and endorsement of religion. We disagree.
The City’s written park regulations require non-profit organizations to pay $440 per day for exclusive use of the Organ Pavilion, provided members of the public are not charged admission. If the organization does charge admission, the City’s fee doubles to $885 per day. Profit-oriented, commercial users must pay $1,325 per day.
The City’s regulations contemplate waiver of these fees only in the case of a “nonprofit community service agency or organization.” San Diego Park & Recreation Dep’t Fee Policy and Fee Schedule, § 8.2.4 (Sept. 16, 1986). The regulations define such an organization as “[a] recognized group, club, agency, or organization whose activities are of a service or character building nature, who give service to the community as a whole, and a group where no portion of the net earnings are used for or inure to the benefit of any individual or member of the group.” Id. (emphasis added). We doubt that the Committee qualifies for a waiver under the regulations, but we need not decide the issue because the City does not rely upon the waiver rules.
The City instead contends that its fee regulations do not apply to the Committee’s use of the Pavilion because that use is, in the City’s words, “non-exclusive.” The City claims that it assesses fees only for “exclusive” permits, which entitle the holder to restrict public access to the area for the duration of the permit. The Committee’s display does not occupy the stage, nor does it prevent others from gathering in the amphi-theatre. The record reveals that other groups have used the Pavilion while the display is in place. While certain other groups might be reluctant to share the Pavilion with the Committee’s indisputably religious display, the Committee in no way seeks exclusive physical control of the Pavilion during its display. Furthermore, the City represents that, should another party seeking an exclusive use permit so request, the Commit
Kreisner cites to no evidence that fees are ordinarily charged to non-exclusive users, nor does he provide any basis for challenging the City’s categorization of the Committee’s use as non-exclusive. Accordingly, we conclude that the City’s grant of a non-fee permit to the Committee is consistent with a content-neutral policy and does not violate the Establishment Clause.
3
The third and final prong of the Lemon test requires invalidation of a government practice if it fosters an excessive government entanglement with religion. Lemon,
There is no appreciable institutional entanglement in this case.
The City’s past involvement in the display was more troublesome under the entanglement prong, but that involvement has been discontinued. Assuming that the City’s past practices (particularly the supervision of the Committee’s fund-raising efforts) amounted to excessive entanglement, we do not view them as relevant to the question of whether the display as currently conducted violates the Establishment Clause.
Ill
For the foregoing reasons, we hold that the City has not violated the Establishment Clause by allowing the Christmas Committee to erect a religious display in the Organ Pavilion. We therefore need not determine whether avoiding an Establishment Clause violation would justify excluding the Christmas Committee’s religious, speech from the public forum. The City remains free to impose reasonable time, place, and manner restrictions on speech in Balboa Park, including religious speech, provided those regulations are content-neutral. We will not, however, force the City to impose such restrictions based on the content of the Committee’s speech; to do so would violate the Free Speech Clause, turning the public forum doctrine on its head.
AFFIRMED.
Notes
. Kreisner has standing to bring this action based on his allegation that the challenged display interferes with his right to use Balboa Park. See Hewitt v. Joyner, 940 F.2d 1561, 1564 (9th Cir.1991), cert. denied, — U.S. -,
. In his supplemental brief following our limited remand, Kreisner attempted to resurrect his state constitutional claim. Because he failed to challenge the district court's dismissal of that claim in his opening and reply briefs on appeal, we deem the issue waived and decline to address it. See In re Riverside-Linden Inv. Co.,
. The dissent states that because we are reviewing the district court’s grant of summary judgment we should view the evidence in the light most favorable to Kreisner, rather than adopt the findings of fact of the district court. The dissent relies on Swarner v. United States,
. But see Simon & Schuster, Inc. v. Members of the New York State Crime Victims Bd., — U.S. -,-,
. In concluding that San Diego has not endorsed the Committee’s religious views by allowing it to erect its display in the Organ Pavilion, we do not rely upon the details of the disclaimer sign, which do not appear in the record. We emphasize, however, that the presence of such a sign, while not dispositive, reinforces the reasonable observer’s perception of no government sponsorship.
. Whether certain types of government property are public fora has sharply divided the Court, see, e.g., International Soc'y for Krishna Consciousness v. Lee, — U.S. --,
. See, e.g., Kaplan,
. At oral argument, the City represented to this court that any person could get a permit to place an unattended display in any part of the park, regardless of the content of the display, on a first-come, first-served basis. The City further represented that no fee would be charged for such a display. Having made these representations, the City is now bound by them.
We hold here that Kreisner has failed to demonstrate that the City does not abide by its stated open-access policy. Should the City at any time fail to comply with that policy, a wrongfully excluded group may of course bring suit.
. After oral argument in this court, amicus ACLU attempted to "test” the City’s permit procedures. Amicus sent an employee to the City’s Parks and Recreation Department to request a permit for use of the Organ Pavilion in December 1991 for a display celebrating the bicentennial of the Bill of Rights. The ACLU had no intention of erecting such a display, and the employee was accordingly unable to supply the City with needed details concerning the size of the display. The City declined to issue the permit without such details, which were never provided. This little vignette in no way suggests that the City's claimed open-access policy is a sham.
Nor does it, as Kreisner now insists, cast doubt upon the district court’s grant of summary judgment. A litigant who has been unable to demonstrate material issues of fact prior to an adverse decision cannot thereafter create such issues by his own behavior. Moreover, Kreisner affirmatively declared below that the case was ripe for summary judgment. We will not allow him to withdraw that concession based on his dissatisfaction with the court's ruling.
. We emphasize once again that our holding does not preclude future actions against the City should the City fail to adhere to its content-neutral policy. Should the City seek to charge rental fees to another group requesting a permit to place an unattended display in Balboa Park, that group could challenge the City’s action. Furthermore, evidence that fees are assessed against similar users but not against the Committee would tend to show a City preference for or endorsement of the Committee’s religious message.
. Kreisner does not allege that political divisiveness engendered by the City's action violates Lemon's entanglement prong. While the Supreme Court has on occasion suggested that political divisiveness is relevant to the entanglement analysis, see Committee for Public Education v. Nyquist,
Concurrence Opinion
concurring:
Joe Religious Speaker comes to the City of San Diego and asks for a permit to put on a display in Balboa Park exalting the power of Zon.
“Sorry,” say the City Fathers and Mothers.
“Why not?” he asks. “Isn’t Balboa Park sort of a Hyde Park West where anybody is free to say whatever he wants? In fact, didn’t I see a Ku Klux Klan poster, a Communist Manifesto display and an Atheists United banner there?”
“Well, yes,” they respond. “Anybody can put up anything he wants there- — except religious things. We’re afraid people will think the City is sponsoring religion.”
This is a conversation that should never happen. Religious speech is speech, entitled to exactly the same protection from government restriction as any other kind of speech — no more and no less. See Widmar v. Vincent,
The Establishment Clause, as the name suggests, forbids only the establishment of religion, not the mere appearance of doing so. Many government actions are consistent with religiously-inspired values and can appear to some as endorsing religion. See, e.g., Bowen v. Kendrick,
A distinction between government and private speech is surely necessary — the government has no right to keep a citizen from, for instance, draping himself in the flag or donning an Uncle Sam suit and carrying a placard proclaiming “America is a Christian Nation.” It would not matter whether Uncle
The Establishment Clause prevents the government from treating religious speech more favorably than nonreligious speech. But both the Establishment and Free Speech Clauses prevent the government from treating religious speech less favorably. Because the district court found that the City of San Diego treated the Christmas Committee display just like any other type of speech, I join Judge O’Scannlain’s excellent opinion affirming the judgment below.
. When the government selectively adopts and promotes a private speaker's message, we treat the speech as the government's: "We turn next to the county’s créche display.” County of Allegheny v. ACLU,
Dissenting Opinion
dissenting:
San Diego has permitted a six-week, unattended, life-size display of eight scenes from the life of Jesus Christ and seven quotations from the New Testament to stand in the prominent Organ Pavilion of its Balboa Park. The City has waived over $18,000 annually in user fees for the private group sponsoring the display. San Diego has exempted the donation barrels and written requests for donations accompanying the display from its anti-solicitation ordinance. The City, which co-sponsored the display for 35 of the last 39 years, continues to award a permit to the Christmas Committee according to an unwritten, unannounced policy.
Despite the duration, size, history, and content of the display and the exemption of the Christmas Committee from the City’s fee and anti-solicitation ordinances, the majority does not believe that a reasonable observer is likely to perceive that the City of San Diego endorses the display’s Christian message. In what amounts to one paragraph of a lengthy opinion, the majority concludes that the Christmas Committee display does not have the primary effect of endorsing religion because Balboa Park is a traditional public forum removed from the seat of government. Dismissing the possibility of an Establishment Clause violation in this cursory manner erroneously implies that the Free Speech Clause trumps the Establishment Clause. Moreover, San Diego’s unwritten, unannounced policy for awarding park permits is itself a violation of the Free Speech Clause because it gives government officials unbridled discretion over speech. Finally, viewing the evidence in the light most favorable to Kreisner, as we must on an appeal from summary judgment for the City, San Diego has in fact preferred the Christmas Committee display over another, first-in-time park permit application in violation of both the Establishment and Free Speech Clauses. Accordingly, I dissent.
I. Standard of Review for Summary Judgment.
The parties in this case submitted cross motions for summary judgment. We review the district court’s decision to grant the City’s motion for summary judgment de novo. High-Tech Gays v. Defense Indus. Sec. Clearance Office,
Several facts surrounding San Diego’s park permit application process remain disputed. As detailed in Section II.B, infra, at issue is whether the City has a first-come, first-served policy for issuing park permits, what information the City requires before it issues a permit, and whether the City in fact preferred the Christmas Committee’s permit application over another, first-in-time application. The district court on remand arrived at conclusions to disputed questions after hearing contradictory testimony,
The majority justifies its departure from the long-standing rule of considering only undisputed facts in a review of summary judgment by declaring this an extraordinary case. The majority contends that because it remanded the case for an evidentiary hearing on particular issues, we must apply the clearly erroneous standard to the factual findings made in the evidentiary hearing. This argument misapprehends the nature and purpose of the remand order.
The majority’s remand order instructed the district court to make factual findings on San Diego’s policies for issuing permits for the use of Balboa Park and on any other developments which the parties regarded as “material to the issues in this appeal.” We amended the order to allow the district court to “amend its conclusions of law in light of any new factual findings.”
We are therefore faced with reviewing the factual findings underlying a second district court’s order of summary judgment. “[The] limited purpose [of findings of fact in a district court’s order of summary judgment] is to pinpoint the undisputed facts supporting the summary judgment, not to weigh the evidence in the record.” Swarner v. United States,
II. The Establishment Clause.
County of Allegheny v. ACLU,
A. Kreisner’s Motion for Summary Judgment.
1. Undisputed Facts.
In reviewing the district court’s denial of Kreisner’s motion for summary judgment, we examine the facts in the light most favorable to the City. No genuine issue of material fact is presented regarding the duration, size, or content of the Christmas Committee’s display or its prominent location in the City-owned Organ Pavilion. Also undisputed is San Diego’s historical co-sponsorship of the display, the fact that the display is unattended, and the exemption of the display from the City’s fee and anti-solicitation ordinances. We may consider these undisputed facts in determining whether the primary effect of the City’s granting a permit for the Christmas Committee display advances religion.
2. Religious Displays Under the Establishment Clause.
“[W]hen evaluating the effect of government conduct under the Establishment Clause, we must ascertain whether ‘the challenged governmental action is sufficiently likely to be perceived by adherents of the controlling denominations as an endorsement, and by the nonadherents as a disapproval, of their individual religious choices.’ ” Allegheny County,
Beyond these broad proclamations, the jurisprudence surrounding the constitutionality of private religious displays on public property is splintered. In this evolving area of the law, we continue to grope for a sensible and practical framework with which to analyze the myriad factual permutations that confront us. After examining the various decisions regarding the constitutionality of religious displays, I conclude that the analysis can be organized around two principal questions. Although the cases do not specifically so hold, I believe that whether a religious display on public property has the primary effect of advancing religion in violation of the Lemon test is a function of the interplay between (1) the intensity of the religious message and (2) the nature of the government’s association with that message. Essentially, this interplay involves a sliding-scale: the more intense the religious message, the less associated the government needs to be with that message to violate the Establishment Clause. Conversely, the less intense the religious message, the closer the government may be associated without crossing the divide between church and state. Approaching the caselaw using this analytical framework helps to tame the factors that courts have found significant in determining the constitutionality of religious displays.
a. Intensity of the Religious Message.
The intensity of the religious message is a function of (1) the religious potency of the display itself; (2) whether secular symbols accompany the display; (3) whether the display is sectarian or plural; and (4) the size and duration of the display. Regarding the religious potency of the display itself, a creche depicting the Christian nativity scene, for instance, would be considered more potent than the display of a Christmas tree. Compare Lynch,
A display unaccompanied by secular symbols also conveys a more intense religious message than does a religious display which is part of a larger secular presentation. In Lynch, for instance, the creche was surrounded by, “among other things, a Santa Claus house, reindeer pulling Santa’s sleigh, candy-striped poles, a Christmas tree, carolers, cut-out figures representing such characters as a clown, an elephant, and a teddy bear, hundreds of colored lights, [and] a large banner that reads ‘SEASONS GREETINGS.’ ” 465 U.S. at 671,
Finally, a religious display that is large and long-standing more intensely communicates a religious message than a smaller, more temporary display. “[A] private religious group may so dominate a public forum that a formal policy of equal access degenerates into endorsement.... [Sjurely the City cannot allow a religious group to turn a public park into an enormous outdoor church.” Doe v. Small,
b. Nature of Government’s Association with the Religious Message.
The second principal inquiry, the nature of the government’s association with the religious message, depends upon (1) the ownership of the display; (2) the ownership of the display’s location; (3) the historical sponsorship of the display; (4) the extent to which the display is surrounded by government symbols; and (5) whether the display is unattended. Clearly, where the government owns the display itself, the government is closely associated with the content of the display. Where the display is privately owned but the government owns the property on which the display stands, the government still associates with the display’s message, although to a somewhat lesser degree. See Allegheny County,
The government’s association with a private religious display becomes more pronounced when the display’s location is not only government-owned, but also symbolic of government itself. Thus, a religious display on the grand staircase of the county courthouse, Allegheny County,
Finally, where the private religious display is unattended, the government is more closely associated with the content of the display than if the display were attended. The reasonable observer of a religious display might naturally question whether the government subscribes to the religious message. When a private party actively and personally participates in a display, the passerby can readily attribute the religious message to a private citizen and thereby disassociate the government. Thus, the evangelist who preaches in a public park is less likely to be associated with the government than would an unattended display conveying the same sermon. Although a sign disclosing the owner of the religious display may help diffuse the misconception of government sponsorship, such a sign, by itself, will not negate the perception of government support for the unattended
c. The Sliding Scale between Religious Intensity and Government Association.
Once we assess the intensity of the religious message and the nature of the government’s association with that message, the inquiry turns to the interplay between these two factors. I believe the caselaw may be construed to support the characterization of this interplay as a sliding scale.
In Allegheny County, for example, the Court drew a line between the creche depicting the Christian nativity scene, which was held unconstitutional, and the menorah/Christmas tree display, which was held constitutional. In both instances, the government association with the display remained relatively constant: both displays were privately-owned, unattended, and located at the county courthouse, a structure symbolizing government.
Similarly, other cases suggest that where the intensity of the religious message is constant, the constitutionality of a private religious display will turn on the nature of the government’s association with the display. In Chabad-Lubavitch of Georgia v. Miller,
The majority advances three arguments against the sliding scale test. First, the majority asserts that inquiring into the intensity of a religious message is similar to evaluating the centrality of a particular belief or practice to a faith, which is prohibited in analyzing a case under the Free Exercise
Evaluating to what degree a message is religious differs from determining whether a belief or practice is central to a faith. The former inquiry merely asks what is being communicated, a question that courts face daily in such contexts as defamation and contract. Indeed, if we were prohibited from asking whether a message is religious, then we could never ask whether the government endorsed a religious message. In such a world, we would have no Establishment Clause.
Moreover, the Supreme Court has recognized that the intensity of a religious message is a necessary inquiry under the Establishment Clause. See discussion of Allegheny County, supra. It is the variation in the intensity of the religious message that explains why a Christmas tree display was permitted in this very courthouse during the month of December when a creche in the same location would have been impermissible. See Allegheny County,
Regarding the question of perspective in judging the intensity of a religious display, I would not depart from the “reasonable observer” standard that we use in current Establishment Clause jurisprudence, and many other contexts for that matter. As the Court stated in Allegheny County, we must examine a display from the perspective of both adherents and nonadherents of the controlling denominations. Id. at 597,
Finally, the majority’s conclusion that the sliding scale test would result in only diluted religious messages being allowed in public forums is oversimplified. Only intensely religious displays that are closely associated with the indicia of government are disallowed. In fact, one could rephrase the majority’s concern as follows: the sliding scale test would allow government to appear to endorse only diluted or non-religious messages, but not intensely religious messages. I believe this is precisely the result the Establishment Clause was intended to achieve.
3. The Christmas Committee Display.
Applying these principles to the present case, I conclude that the Christmas Committee display is unconstitutional and that Kreis-ner is entitled to summary judgment under the Establishment Clause. The religious intensity of the display’s message is unprecedented.
Not only does the display contain potent religious imagery, it also presents a series of passages from the New Testament. Thus the religious message becomes quite literal. Indeed, the seven scriptural quotations magnify the significance the Court attached to the single Latin phrase in Allegheny County. There, the Court explained that “[t]his praise to God in Christian terms is indisputably religious — indeed sectarian — just as it is when said in the Gospel or in a church service.” Allegheny County,
Second, no secular symbols accompany the Christmas Committee display. The nearest secular symbols of the season reside in another area of the park separated by a wall, landscaping, and a road. The eight religious booths are indisputably their own display so that “[t]he presence of Santas or other Christmas decorations elsewhere ... fail[s] to negate the endorsement effect” of the display. Id. at 598-99 n. 48,
Third, the display contains no symbols of other, non-Christian religions. Finally, the display is large and enduring. Each of the eight booths contains life-size figures, with the display occupying both sides of the stage in the Organ Pavilion. The City permits the display to remain there for six weeks.
In summary, no court has been presented with a display of such blatant, denominational, and conspicuous religious intensity — a display which the majority characterizes as conveying an “overwhelming message of glorification of the divinity of Jesus Christ.” Opinion at 782.
Considering the intensity of the religious message, virtually any government association with the Christmas Committee display would break with the principles announced in the Establishment Clause. Admittedly, the symbols of the government’s association with the display may not be as pervasive as in Allegheny County or other cases in which the displays were located in the “seat of government.” Nevertheless, the undisputed facts in this case reveal that San Diego’s association with the display is more than incidental.
The ownership of the display is private, but the property on which the display rests is owned and maintained by San Diego’s taxpayers. The City has an historical involvement with the display. Prior to 1988, City employees erected, removed, and stored the
Any remaining doubts of an Establishment Clause violation are shattered when one considers the City’s exemption of the Christmas Committee display from its fee regulations and anti-solicitation ordinance. Ordinarily, the City’s park regulations require a nonprofit or charitable organization to pay $440 per day for use of the Organ Pavilion, provided that the organization does not charge admission to members of the public who attend the function. The City waives the fee only for “a nonprofit community service agency or organization.” Such an organization is defined as “[a] recognized group, club, agency, or organization whose activities are of a service or character building nature, who give service to the community as a whole, and a group where no portion of the net earnings are used for or inure to the benefit of any individual or member of the group” (emphasis added).
The City argues, and the majority asserts, that the regulations require payment of user fees only for “exclusive use” of the Organ Pavilion and that the Christmas Committee display is a “non-exclusive use.” Although San Diego has few written regulations governing its park permit application process, it does have a detailed, written policy governing park fees and fee waivers. Nowhere in that policy does the City ever mention exclusivity as a prerequisite for imposing fees or “non-exclusive” use as a criterion for a fee waiver. This is yet another example of the City’s ad hoc approach to administering park permits, discussed in Section II.B, infra. I cannot join the majority in reading an exclusivity requirement into the City’s user fee regulations or in sanctioning the City’s departure from its own written fee policy. Indeed, it is the opinion of the City Attorney’s office itself that the City’s fee waiver is unconstitutional.
I agree with the City Attorney’s office that allowing the Christmas Committee to forego paying more than $18,000 in fees per year violates the Establishment Clause. It is questionable that the Christmas Committee is a “service or character building” organization, other than in the sense that any religious denomination considers itself to further such goals. It is unquestionable that the Christmas Committee’s intensely sectarian message does not serve “the community as a whole.” Indeed, the record shows that every other religious organization who used the Organ Pavilion between September 1987 and September 1989 paid a user fee.
Finally, the City’s exempting the Christmas Committee from its anti-solicitation ordinance further manifests an endorsement of religion. A regulation and municipal ordinance both prohibit solicitation in San Diego’s public parks. Nevertheless, the City permits the Christmas Committee to place donation barrels and fliers soliciting contributions at the display.
The City maintains that these barrels and fliers do not meet its definition of “solicitation.” The relevant ordinance defines “solicitation” to “mean and include ... any direct oral or written request for money, property, or anything of value or any financial assistance of any kind.” San Diego’s claim is specious given this definition. The flier asks visitors to “Help Us Keep the Community Christmas Center Going!” and explains that “[t]o insure the continuing operation of the Community Christmas Center, voluntary contributions are essential.” The flier goes on to request that visitors make their checks payable to the Christmas Committee Center in pre-selected “membership categories” of $10, $25, $50, and $100. It concludes by instructing contributors to put the donations in the barrels or mail them to a given address. I find it difficult to imagine a more “direct ... written request for money.”
We should order that summary judgment be granted to Kreisner based upon the undisputed facts. “[T]he Establishment Clause prohibits precisely what occurred here: the government’s lending its support to the communication of a religious organization’s religious message.” Allegheny County,
B. The City’s Motion for Summary Judgment.
For the same reasons that Kreisner is entitled to summary judgment, we should reverse the summary judgment for San Diego under the Establishment Clause based on the undisputed facts. The disputed facts, however, present additional reasons for reversing the City’s summary judgment.
The parties agree on, or do not deny, the following facts pertaining to the City’s park permit application practice. At oral argument before this court, counsel for San Diego represented for the first time in this appeal that the City grants park permits for long-term, unattended displays on a first-come, first-served basis. Betty Wheeler, Legal Director of the ACLU in San Diego, attended the oral argument. Wheeler was surprised by the City Attorney’s representations. She had worked regularly with attorneys and others whom she thought would be familiar with the City’s alleged first-come, first-served policy, yet neither she nor any of the colleagues she contacted were aware of such a policy.
Wheeler decided to test the veracity of the City’s representations.
Bergo delivered the letter to and met with Penny Scott, the City’s district manager for Balboa Park, on April 4, 1991. Bergo showed Scott a poster illustrating what the panels would look like. Scott was genuinely enthusiastic about the display until she realized that it might conflict with the Christmas Committee display. Scott said that she wanted to know “more details about how [the display] would look” and that she “needed to talk to her boss or the city attorney to work this out.” Bergo asked whether the ACLU would be able to have the location requested for the display. Scott responded that the Christmas Committee’s display was “always there.”
Bergo telephoned Scott later that same day. The parties disagree over the content of this telephone conversation. We must therefore accept Kreisner’s account of the conversation in reviewing the grant of the City’s summary judgment motion.
According to Kreisner, Bergo clarified during her telephone conversation with Scott that the size of the display would be the same as that of the Christmas Committee display. Scott responded that both the ACLU’s requested display and the Christmas Committee display could not possibly be at the same location simultaneously. Bergo asked whether the requested location had already been reserved. Scott responded, “Oh, yes, the Nativity scenes have come back for 20 to 25 years. It’s already booked. They will be there every year until they decide not to do it again.” In fact, the Christmas Committee did not request the Organ Pavilion until September 1991, almost five months later. Bergo then asked how soon she would need to contact the City about reserving the location for the next year. Scott again replied that the Christmas Committee was “always there.”
The majority- accepts the district court’s conclusion that the ACLU’s permit application ultimately was rendered inactive because it lacked “specifies.” The only “specific” that was ever mentioned was the size of the display. However, after Bergo’s April 4 telephone conversation with Scott, it appears, accepting Kreisner’s account of the conversation, that Scott understood how large the ACLU display would be. When Bergo told Scott that the display would be the same size as the Christmas Committee’s display, Scott responded, “Oh, my god, those things are booths; they’re over your head; those are really big.” Indeed, Scott knew precisely that this meant each display would be 12 feet square. These were virtually the same dimensions that Wheeler provided to Scott in her October 2, 1991, follow-up letter. Oddly, this letter, mailed after the City had granted the permit to the Christmas Committee, satisfied Scott’s “need” for specifics, but the same information provided before the Christmas Committee received its permit would not suffice.
The remaining series of events surrounding the ACLU’s permit application are undisputed. Bergo again contacted Scott by telephone in July 1991 to ask whether the ACLU’s permit had been granted. Scott responded that she needed some information and had taken no action. Wheeler also wrote to Scott in October 1991 inquiring about the status of the permit application. Scott responded in writing that the ACLU’s permit
Considering these facts in the light most favorable to Kreisner, as we must, it becomes even clearer that the district court’s grant of summary judgment to the City was improper. Whether the City in fact had a first-come, first-served policy for long-term, unattended displays, whether the City embellished the policy with ad hoc requests for “specifics,” and whether the City favored the Christmas Committee’s application over the ACLU’s first-in-time application at minimum are triable issues of material fact. If we assume Kreisner’s version of the disputed facts, San Diego reserved the Organ Pavilion for the Christmas Committee display despite the ACLU’s first-in-time application, and used its request for “specifics” as a subterfuge to render the ACLU’s application inactive.
Although there may be room to debate the meaning of the Establishment Clause at its fringes, the core of its protection remains indubitable: the government can “effect no favoritism among [religious] sects or between religion and nonreligion.” School Dist. of Abington Township v. Schempp,
III. The Free Speech Clause.
Besides forbidding the government from making laws respecting the establishment of religion, the First Amendment also prohibits the government from making laws “abridging the freedom of speech.” U.S. Const, amend. I. Two doctrines that emerge from this clause are relevant to the case at hand. First, the public forum doctrine allows content-based regulation of speech in a public forum only where the “regulation is necessary to serve a compelling state interest and ... is narrowly drawn to achieve that end.” Widmar v. Vincent,
For purposes of analyzing whether the Free Speech Clause is violated, the Supreme Court uses the categories of traditional public, designated public, and non-public forum to determine whether government may prohibit speech in a particular location. Perry Educ. Ass’n v. Perry Local Educators’ Ass’n,
There is no question that the Christmas Committee display would be unconstitutional if it stood within a county courthouse or in front of City Hall. In both cases, the display would violate the Establishment Clause. See Allegheny County,
In holding that “because the [Christmas Committee] display is private speech in a traditional public forum removed from the seat of government it does not have the primary effect of advancing religion,” Opinion at 782, the majority frames its Establishment Clause discussion in terms of public forum doctrine and thereby suggests that the resolution of an Establishment Clause challenge is dependent on the resolution of the public forum issue — in other words, that the Free Speech Clause trumps the Establishment Clause. The concurrence brings this point into sharp relief. According to the concurrence, “[r]eligious speech is speech, ... no more and no less.” Judge Kozinski, concurring, at 790. This statement ignores the Establishment Clause. As Justice Kennedy wrote for the majority in Lee v. Weisman, — U.S. -,
*804 The First Amendment protects speech and religion by quite different mechanisms. Speech is protected by insuring its full expression even when the government participates, for the very object of some of our most important speech is to persuade the government to adopt an idea as its own.... In religious debate or expression the government is not a prime participant, for the Framers deemed religious establishment antithetical to the freedom of all.... [T]he Establishment Clause is a specific prohibition on forms of state intervention in religious affairs with no precise counterpart in the speech provisions. The explanation lies in the lesson of history that was and is the inspiration for the Establishment Clause, the lesson that in the hands of government what might begin as a tolerant expression of religious views may end in a policy to indoctrinate and coerce. A state-created orthodoxy puts at grave risk that freedom of belief and conscience which are the sole assurance that religious faith is real, not imposed.
Id. at ---,
I agree with the majority that the Organ Pavilion is a traditional public forum. The
Thus the critical question remains whether San Diego’s relationship with the Christmas Committee display violates the Establishment Clause. Having found an Establishment Clause violation, I conclude that a content-based injunction against the display does not offend the public forum doctrine. Holding the government to its obligations under the Establishment Clause constitutes a compelling state interest. Moreover, a prohibition limited to long-standing displays of solitary religious symbols on public property adjoining prominent city structures would be narrowly tailored to serve this interest. See Smith,
B. The Prior Restraint Doctrine.
San Diego’s licensing scheme regulating the use of long-term, unattended displays in Balboa Park is a prior restraint of speech. “[I]t is the sort of system in which an individual must apply for multiple licenses over time, or periodically renew a license.” Lakewood,
The City’s scheme for regulating long-term, unattended displays is an unconstitutional prior restraint of speech if it “vests unbridled discretion in a government official over whether to permit or deny expressive activity.” Id. at 755,
1. The Nature of San Diego’s Permit Policy.
Viewing the facts in the light most favorable to San Diego, the City’s permit policy does not confine discretion. The City purports to take a “first-come, first-served” approach to issuing park permits. Further examination of the City’s statements, however, reveals unwritten, unannounced embellishments to the policy: according to the district court’s findings, which coincide with the City’s assertions, the request to use the park must be “reasonable,” the applicant must furnish “specifics” regarding the desired display, and the applicant must comply with the Park and Recreation Department’s permit requirements. What is “reasonable”? What
That a permit request be “reasonable” is itself an unconstitutional invitation of unbridled discretion. See, e.g., Lakewood,
Given the City’s intimate involvement with the display over the past several decades and the rebuttable presumption that systems of prior restraint are unconstitutional, it was incumbent upon the City to craft and articulate a narrow, objective, and definite park permit policy. San Diego has failed to do so.
2. San Diego’s Failure to Articidate its Permit Policy.
Even if San Diego’s purported first-come, first-served policy with its accompanying embellishments were constitutional by nature, the policy must be evident in a binding text, judicial or administrative opinion, or a well-established practice. The City’s permit policy for long-term, unattended displays is found in neither a binding text nor a judicial or administrative opinion. Although the City contends that its policy is a matter of well-established practice, this fact is disputed. Accordingly, a triable issue of material fact is presented, and we should reverse the summary judgment for the City.
As for binding texts, San Diego admits in its response to Kreisner’s interrogatories that there are no “documents which describe the official criteria and standards which are applied to applications for use of the [Balboa Park Organ Pavilion].” The district court on remand stated, and it is not disputed, that beyond the Park and Recreation Department’s fees and charges schedule, “the City has not presented any evidence of a written policy regarding the issuance of permits.” Findings at 4. The fees and charges schedule says nothing about the method or prerequisites for obtaining any kind of park permit. Moreover, neither the standard application form for obtaining a park permit nor the City’s Rules and Regulations Governing Park Permits contains anything regarding the City’s first-come, first-served policy or the specifics that applicants must furnish.
Furthermore, it is undisputed that no judicial or administrative opinion prescribes the City’s permit policy. The majority takes comfort in the fact that future applicants can go to court if the City fails to follow its purported permit policy so that, in effect, future judicial opinions will circumscribe the City’s discretion. Opinion at 786, n. 7. The Supreme Court, however, has stated explicitly that “[e]ven if judicial review [of a denied permit] were relatively speedy, such review cannot substitute for concrete standards to guide the decisionmaker’s discretion.” Lakewood,
*806 Proof of an abuse of power in the particular case has never been deemed a requisite for attack on the constitutionality of a statute purporting to license the dissemination of ideas.... It is not merely the sporadic abuse of power by the censor but the pervasive threat inherent in its very existence that constitutes the danger to freedom of discussion.
In fact, the City’s well-established practice seems to negate its claim to a strict first-come, first-served permit policy. As noted earlier, according to the ACLU’s version of its experience with the City, Scott stated that the Christmas Committee display was a tradition and that it would be in the Organ Pavilion until the Committee decided not to erect the display again. Moreover, despite the City’s co-sponsorship and intimate involvement with the holiday display for 35 of the last 39 years, the City Council has not explicitly articulated its permit policy for long-term, unattended displays. This undermines its claim of having a well-established first-come, first-served policy.
Kreisner’s account of the City’s rejecting the ACLU’s permit application for the proposed Bill of Rights display demonstrates the dangers inherent in giving government officials unbridled discretion over speech. Among the risks that the prior restraint doctrine seeks to minimize are government censorship, self-censorship by speakers, and the unreviewability of constitutional challenges to licensing schemes. Lakewood,
First, the prohibition of unbridled discretion is designed to control government censorship of speech. Id. at 757,
Second, the City’s unwritten, unannounced permit policy raises the possibility that would-be sponsors of long-term, unattended displays in Organ Pavilion at Christmas time are censoring themselves. This is a constitutionally significant concern. “[T]he mere existence of the licensor’s unfettered discretion, coupled with the power of prior restraint, intimidates parties into censoring their own speech, even if the discretion and power are never actually abused.” Lakewood,
Finally, San Diego’s invisible permit criteria make this case difficult to review. These
[T]he absence of express standards makes it difficult to distinguish ... between a licensor’s legitimate denial of a permit and its illegitimate abuse of censorial power. Standards provide the guideposts that check the licensor and allow courts quickly and easily to determine whether the li-censor is discriminating against disfavored speech. Without these guideposts, post hoc rationalizations by the licensing official and the use of shifting or illegitimate criteria are far too easy, making it difficult for courts to determine in any particular case whether the licensor is permitting favorable, and suppressing unfavorable, expression.
Id. at 758,
At bottom,
[i]n the instant case we are met with no ordinance or statute regulating ... the use of the park; all that is here is an amorphous ‘practice,’ whereby all authority to grant permits for the use of the park is in the Park Commissioner and the City Council. No standards appear anywhere; no narrowly drawn limitations; no circumscribing of this absolute power; no substantial interest of the community to be served. It is clear that all that has been said about the invalidity of such limitless discretion must be equally applicable here.
Niemotko,
CONCLUSION
“The lessons of the First Amendment are as urgent in the modern world as in the 18th Century when it was written. One timeless lesson is that if citizens are subjected to state-sponsored religious exercises, the State disavows its own duty to guard and respect that sphere of inviolable conscience and belief which is the mark of a free people.” Lee, — U.S. at -,
Furthermore, there is a triable issue under both the Establishment and Free Speech Clauses as to whether San Diego in fact favored the Christmas Committee over another, first-in-time permit applicant. Accordingly, I would reverse San Diego’s summary judgment for this additional reason.
. Based upon the testimony of Penny Scott, the District Manager of San Diego's Park and Recreation Department, and Jack Krasovich, the Deputy Director of the Central Division for the City of San Diego, the district court concluded that the City granted park permits on a first-come, first-
The district court also concluded from disputed evidence that the City "reasonably requires specific information regarding the display, such as size and dimension before issuing a permit.” Findings at 5. The court reached this conclusion despite the absence of any requirement for such information in the City’s permit applications or its Park and Recreation Rules and Regulations. Once again, therefore, the district court based its conclusion on the credibility of the City’s witnesses.
. The majority’s decision to remand the case to the district court for further factual findings itself suggests that the district court’s granting summary judgment in favor of the City was inappropriate. A genuine issue of material fact must have existed to warrant an additional factual inquiry.
. We remanded this case to address the City’s assertion, raised for the first time at oral argument before this court, that it had a first-come, first-served policy for issuing park permits. The full text of the amended order remanding the case to the district court is as follows:
Submission is VACATED until further order of the court.
This appeal is REMANDED to the district court for sixty days from the date of this order for the limited purpose of making further factual findings. Specifically, the district court shall determine what are the policies of the City of San Diego with respect to granting permits for the use of Balboa Park. The court shall attach to its findings copies of any documents setting forth such policies. If it is contended that there are oral or partially oral policies, the court shall specify any evidence indicating the establishment of such policies and any evidence indicating that the public has been made aware of such policies. The court may make any further findings on factual developments which the parties regard as material to the issues in this appeal. The district court also may amend its conclusions of law in light of any new factual findings.
Upon receipt of the order making further factual findings and (if applicable) amending the conclusions of law, the clerk shall immediately deliver copies of such order to this panel.
Judge Boochever dissents from the order of remand and would decide the case on the present record before the panel.
SUBMISSION VACATED and TEMPORARILY REMANDED.
. Although the majority characterizes this approach as a new Establishment Clause test, I emphasize that I do not intend to replace the Lemon test but merely to refine the “effects” prong of Lemon in the limited context of judging the constitutionality of religious displays on government property. I believe my characterization of this approach finds support in the Establishment Clause jurisprudence as is evident in my citations throughout this discussion.
. The sign read: "During this holiday season, the City of Pittsburgh salutes liberty. Let these festive lights remind us that we are the keepers of the flame of liberty and our legacy of freedom." Id.
. Photographs of the Organ Pavilion and two booths representative of the display are included in the Appendix to this dissent.
I have found only one case, Doe v. Small,
Doe is also distinguishable because the court never addressed whether the religious display at issue violated the Establishment Clause. Id. at 617, 622 (parties did not appeal Establishment Clause issue). Indeed, the Doe court was "not in agreement as to whether the City violated the Establishment Clause in its conduct." Id. at 617. Hence, to the extent that the religious paintings in Doe are similar to the religious display in this
. Although it is contended that the display contains a disclaimer sign attributing its sponsorship to the Christmas Committee, the content of the sign does not appear in the record. As noted earlier, however, such a sign cannot dissolve the perception of government support for the religious message of the display.
. The only possible exception is a fee waiver given to St. Augustine High School for a concert on May 6, 1989. This fee waiver, however, was consistent with waivers given to the other high schools who held concerts throughout the two-year period.
. The majority suggests that Kreisner and the ACLU inappropriately "create[d]” issues of material fact after the district court’s grant of summary judgment. I disagree. That San Diego had a first-come, first-served policy for issuing park permits for long-term, unattended displays was first asserted by the City at oral argument before this court. Thus, if any party “created” the issue, the City did. Indeed, the majority instructed the district court on remand to "make any further findings on factual developments which the parties regard as material to the issues in this appeal” (emphasis added). Accordingly, the district court appropriately heard testimony regarding the City’s purported first-come, first-served policy and the ACLU's experience suggesting that no such policy existed.
. The majority’s statement that "the ACLU had no intention of erecting such a display” conflicts with Ms. Wheeler's sworn statement that she obtained a commitment from her executive di
. Although the factual issues underlying the pri- or restraint doctrine were addressed by the district court on remand and argued by the parties in the supplemental briefing to this court, Kreis-ner, who appeared pro se in the original proceedings, did not state his case in terms of the prior restraint doctrine until he, when represented by counsel, filed his supplemental reply brief.
Whether the City had unbridled discretion to issue park use permits is integral to analyzing whether the City in fact favored the Christmas Committee display over that of the ACLU in
To the extent that the prior restraint doctrine is considered an issue not presented to the district court, we have held that "[ejxceptional cases or particular circumstances may prompt a reviewing court, where injustice might otherwise result or where public policy requires, to consider questions neither pressed nor passed upon below.” Nuelsen v. Sorensen,
The constitutional right of free expression is powerful medicine in a society as diverse and populous as ours. It is designed and intended to remove governmental restraints from the arena of public discussion, putting the decision as to what views shall be voiced largely into the hands of each of us, in the hope that use of such freedom will ultimately produce a more capable citizenry and more perfect policy and in the belief that no other approach would comport with the premise of individual dignity and choice upon which our political system rests.
Cohen v. California,
. The concurrence challenges this sentence, arguing that the Establishment Clause "forbids only the establishment of religion, not the mere appearance of doing so.” Judge Kozinski, concurring, at 790. The Supreme Court clearly supports my reading of the content of the Establishment Clause. Allegheny County,
Moreover, although the concurrence asserts that the endorsement test applies only to situations where "the government is speaking,” Judge Kozinski, concurring, at 790, Allegheny County rejects such a narrow interpretation of the Establishment Clause.
