Lead Opinion
The New York Board of Regents has a rule, some forty-seven years old, which prohibits “soliciting funds from the pupils in the public schools.”
More specifically, on February 6 and 9, 1970, plaintiffs distributed in the high school corridors a one-page leaflet entitled “Join the Conspiracy.” In it they decried the prosecution of eight defendants then on trial in the District Court for thе Northern District of Illinois and solicited funds for the “activists’ ” defense. The leaflet stated:
“More than $33,000 per month is spent on their defense. Money is desperately needed to give these people a just trial. Money is needed to pay for transcripts. PLEASE contribute and/or buy a button from Jane Katz, Carey Marvin, Greg Gottlieb or anyone else who is helping out.”
The dissemination of leaflets occurred before the school day began, and the аffidavits of school officials contain no evidence of a specific instance of interference by the plaintiffs with the operation of the school or of any demonstrable collision with the rights of other studеnts to be let alone. Nonetheless, school officials warned plaintiffs that their circulation of leaflets violated the Board of Regents rule and a local Board of Education rule forbidding any “outside organization * * * to use this School * * * for the dissemination or release of information by flyers * * * ” without first obtaining written approval of the Board.
Asserting the First Amendment over-breadth of both rules,
An applicаtion for a preliminary injunction is addressed to the judicial discretion of the district court, and this court will not set aside the disposition of such an application unless erroneous as a matter of law or the result of an abuse of judicial discretion. Hurwitz v. Directors Guild of America, Inc.,
The constitutional guarantee of free speech limits state power to regulate the personal intercommunication of secondary school pupils. Tinker v. Des Moines Independent Community Sсhool District,
Assuming that plaintiffs’ activity was “speech” within the meaning of the First Amendment, school officials had the burden of showing governmental interests whiсh might justify their interference with that “speech.” NAACP v. Alabama,
Though the skeletаl evidentiary matter before the trial court disclosed minimal potential interference at most, the probability that plaintiffs’ over-breadth contention would prevail at trial is so slight that the denial of preliminary relief cannot be held to have constituted an abuse of discretion. Unlike the amorphous “regulations” in Sullivan v. Houston Independent School District,
Pupils are on sсhool premises in response to the statutory requirement that they attend school for the purpose of formal education. Where outside organizations or individuals espousing various causes seek to take advantage of the required assemblage of secondary school pupils, as a captive audience, to solicit funds, either directly or through the agency of some of the pupils, for their particular projеct or cause, they are in effect in competition for the time, attention and interest of the pupils with those who are seeking to administer the school system. Whether it is done a few minutes before school opens or a few minutes after, its effect is not so limited in time and it is plainly harmful to the operation of the public schools. If there is no regulation against it, literally dozens of organizations and causes may importune pupils to sоlicit on their behalf; and it is foreseeable that pressure groups within the student body are likely to use more than polite requests to get contributions even from those who are in disagreement with the particular cause оr who are, in truth, too poor to afford a donation. The Board’s regulation appears to be reasonable and proper and has a rational relationship to the orderly operation of the sсhool system.
The rule’s focus upon a demonstrable harm rather than an undifferentiated fear of disturbance distinguishes plaintiffs’ action from Scoville v. Board of Education,
Becаuse the Board of Regents’ rule afforded a sufficient basis for the denial of preliminary relief; we do not reach the same questions with respect to the local Board of Education rule upon which defendants may аlso have relied.
Affirmed.
Notes
. The Journal of Regents’ Meetings records the adoption January 25, 1923 of a resolution prohibiting all solicitation of public school pupils. This resolution was modified in 1940 to permit solicitation of funds by the Junior Red Cross if that organization obtained the consent of local school authorities. The modified resolution is not included in the official Rules of the Regents but has been adopted by the Ardsley School Board as having binding effect.
. Plaintiffs also claimed school officials had discriminated against their solieitation by permitting (1) the Junior Red Cross to solicit contributions and (2) the New York Times to sell its newspapers on school premises. The district court found the second contention frivolous and denied preliminary relief on the first upon the affidavit of the Superintendent of Schools to the effect that all solicitations of funds had been, and would continue to be, prohibited. Wе find no error in the denial of relief based upon allegedly discriminatory enforcement of the Board of Regents’ rule.
. The district court was willing to presume, as are we, that irreparable harm is manifest where it is alleged that First Amendment rights have been chilled as the result of governmental action. See Schnell v. Chicago,
. The affidavit of the Superintendent of Schools states that some 75 to 100 requests to use school properties for soliсitation of funds have been denied in the past twelve years.
. This action is distinguishable as well from two lower court opinions filed after the denial of plaintiffs’ motion. In the first of these, Eisner v. Stamford Board of Education,
The second decision, New Left Education Project v. Board of Regents, Civil No. A-69-CA-106 (W.D.Tex. Sept. 3, 1970), invalidated anti-solicitation rules regulating the conduct of university students. For purposes of this appeal, however, we proceed on the premise that a state may decide that the appropriate discipline which requires the restriction of cеrtain communicative actions may differ in the cases of university students from that called for in the eases of the younger secondary school pupils in relatively similar circumstances.
Dissenting Opinion
I respectfully dissent. I agree that thеre are possibilities of, embarrassment and disruption of school functions in solicitation of school students which might justify regulation not sustainable as to the public at large. But I think that when related to public issues such as that involved in this сase, solicitation of funds is an integral part of the propagandizing, as in the case of the religious colporteurs, and freedom to do one includes freedom to do the other, at least in the absence оf a showing of gross disruption, so that complete prohibition as opposed to reasonable regulation, as of time and place, cannot be sustained. See Cantwell v. Connecticut,
