Defendants appeal a judgment of the District Court finding a City of Cincinnati ordinance to be an impermissible content-based restriction on the exercise of First Amendment rights and enjoining the City from denying рlaintiffs a permit to erect a cross on a public forum. For the following reasons we AFFIRM.
I.
On November 17, 1993, plaintiffs, Knight Riders of the Ku Klux Klan, applied to the City of Cincinnati (“City”) for a permit to display a frеe-standing “Christian Cross” bearing the words “John 3:16”
No person may communicate on Fountain Square any obscenity, defamаtion, or “fighting words” including, but not limited to, a symbol, object, appellation, characterization, oral communication, or graffiti which injures a person or group of persons or is likely to cause an immediate act of violence by the listener' or observer.
A permit for the special use of Fountain Square shall be denied or revoked where it is apparent that а proposed event, display, exhibit or structure will violate the prohibition of obscenity, defamation or “fighting words.”
Plaintiffs appealed this decision to the city manager’s office and, аfter a hearing, the decision to deny plaintiffs’ permit was upheld on the grounds that plaintiffs’ proposed cross constituted injurious “fighting words.”
On December 14, 1993, plaintiffs filed this action seeking a preliminаry injunction to enjoin the City from applying § 713-2(b) on grounds that it violated the First Amendment. Plaintiffs prevailed, and the District Court ordered the City to grant the permit. Knight Riders of the Ku Klux Klan v. City of Cincinnati,
The parties filed cross-motions for summary judgmеnt and on August 31, 1994, the District Court granted plaintiffs a permanent injunction preventing the City from denying them or others similarly situated a permit to erect a cross on the Square. Knight Riders of the Ku Klux Klan v. City of Cincinnati,
II.
The City argues that the cross, because it is sponsored by the plaintiffs, injures the reasonably informed observer and tends to incite an immediate breach of the peace. The intervenor argues that summary judgment was inappropriate because there are genuine issues of material fact as to the exact nature of the speech communicated by the cross, the potential for immediate breach of the peace it creates, and whether sufficient injury is inflicted by the cross for it to constitute fighting words. The intervenor also argues that this court should uphold the ordinanсe as a content-based prohibition on oppressive and subordinating speech.
Plaintiffs respond that, as a matter of law, a free-standing Latin cross bearing the words “John 3:16” does not сonstitute fighting words, and that the ordinance is thus an unconstitutional content-based restriction on speech.
The District Court held that the cross did not constitute fighting words and ordered that plaintiffs be granted a permit to erect their cross.
III.
It is well established that Fountain Square is a traditional public forum. Cow-
Fighting words is a small class of expressive conduct that is likely to provoke the average person to retaliate, and thereby cause a breach of the peace. Chaplinsky,
Plaintiffs’ cross does not fit within the Supreme Court’s narrow definition of fighting words and thus may not be regulated as such by the City.
Nor does display of the cross in Fountain Square prompt a breach of the peace. Defendants do not argue, nor could they, that the cross itself would elicit a violent response. Their argument is that plaintiffs’ sponsorship of the cross, indicated by the permit application and a sign accompanying the crоss,
We need only briefly address the arguments of the intervening defendant, the Homeless Hotline of Greater Cincinnati. First, we reject the argument that summary judgment was inappropriate because оf the existence of genuine issues of material fact. The parties, including the intervenor, submitted the case to the District Court upon a joint stipulation of facts and agreed that the material facts were not in dispute and that the ease was appropriate for summary disposition in accordance with Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 52. Knight Riders of the Ku Klux Klan,
Finally, since there is no violation of the ordinance, we do not address its constitutionality, and we do not consider the intervening defendant’s invitation to forge new First Amendment law by upholding the ordinance as a valid explicit content-based prohibition on oppressive and subordinating speech.
IV.
For the foregoing reasons, thе decision of the District Court holding that the cross does not constitute fighting words is hereby AFFIRMED. Because § 713 of the Cincinnati Municipal Code was amended, the decision of the District Court holding it to be an unconstitutional prior restraint is moot and that portion of the District Court’s judgment is VACATED.
Notes
. This passage from the New Testament reads: "[F]or God so loved the world that he gave his only Son so that anyone who believes in Him shall not perish, but have everlasting life.” Only
. The District Court also struck down § 713 as an unconstitutional prior restraint оn speech because it lacked the necessary procedural safeguards. However, on September 28, 1994, the City Council amended the City Code to require prompt judicial review of an intended denial of a permit on the grounds that the message sought to be communicated was defamatory, obscene, or "fighting words.” Cincinnati Municipal Code § 713 — 1(h). Thus, the issue of whether the pre-amendment § 713 procedural deficiency was an unconstitutional prior restraint is now moot. We vacate that portion of the District Court's decision.
. Indeed, this court is aware of only one case, Chaplinsky itself, where the Supreme Court has upheld a restriction on speech as fighting words.
. City rules provide that “All permitted displays, exhibits or structures shall be accompanied by a sign indicating ownership or sponsorship, and that the display, exhibit or structure is not supported or paid for with public funds. The sign must be legible from at least ten feet in distance." The record does not contain the exact text of the sign accоmpanying plaintiffs' cross.
. We are mindful of the fact that twenty-four persons were arrested in 1992 for attempting to knock down the unattended Klan-sponsored cross on Fountain Square. Neverthеless, we agree with the District Court that the lawless acts of a few are insufficient, under these circumstances, to warrant the suppression of nonviolent expressive conduct as fighting words. Knight Riders of the Ku Klux Klan v. City of Cincinnati,
