Lead Opinion
MARTIN, C.J., delivered the opinion of the court, in which MOORE, J., joined. O’MALLEY, D.J. (pp. 880-883), delivered a separate dissenting opinion.
OPINION
Upon the legalization of gambling in Detroit, the City enacted an ordinance establishing how it would issue three licenses for the operation of its new casinos. Everyone interested in this opportunity
I.
Defendants Atwater Entertainment Associates and Greektown Casino organized petition drives to lift Michigan’s ban on off-reservation gambling. First, they helped place two initiatives on the Detroit city ballot that, in tandem, would authorize casinos within the city limits so long as voters statewide approved as well. When the Detroit initiatives passed, Atwater and Greektown proceeded to organize the necessary statewide referendum, widely known as “Proposal E.” Proposal E also passed. As a result, casino gambling in Detroit became legal.
Next, the Michigan state legislature passed the Michigan Gaming Control and Revenue Act, permitting the mayor of Detroit to choose three casino licensees. The city’s related ordinance, the subject of this case, governed the mayor’s selections. In numerous respects, the ordinance rewards Atwater and Greektown for their efforts during the state and local referenda campaigns. For example, the ordinance includes a “statement of intent” declaring that “it is in the best interest of the City to provide a preference to those developers who took the initiative to facilitate the development of casino gaming in the City of Detroit by proposing a casino gaming proposal approved by the voters of the City, and who actively promoted and significantly supported the State initiative authorizing gaming.” Detroit City Code, § 18 — 13—l(i). Another portion expressly prefers casino developers who, assuming they meet the other eligibility criteria, were “initiator[s] of a casino gaming proposal which was approved by the voters of this City prior to January 1, 1995; and ... made significant contributions to the development of gaming within the City by actively promoting and significantly supporting a state initiative authorizing gaming.” Detroit City Code, § 18-13-6(a)(2). Unsurprisingly, the mayor ultimately awarded Atwater and Greektown two of the three licenses, and both companies currently operate casinos in Detroit.
II.
An Indian tribe that offers gambling on its Michigan reservation, the Lac Vieux Desert Band of Lake Superior Chippewa Indians, sued because of the obvious handicap it and all other prospective off-reservation operators faced in the Detroit licensing process. Essentially, the Lac Vieux claims that the ordinance’s preference provisions discriminate against it for having not taken Atwater and Greektown’s particular political position in the casino legalization debate. According to the Lac Vieux, the ordinance’s licensing procedure thus violates the guarantees of the First Amendment as well as of the Fourteenth Amendment’s Equal Protection Clause.
In granting Detroit summary judgment on October 31, 1997, the district court held that the Lac Vieux lacked standing to bring its claims and that, even if the Lac Vieux did have standing, the claims lacked merit. The Lac Vieux appealed. We reversed the district court on all these issues, holding in particular that the district court’s exceptionally deferential review of the ordinance, considering only whether Detroit conceivably could have had any rational reason to enact it as it had, was inappropriate. See Lac Vieux Desert Band v. Michigan Gaming Control Board,
III.
The doctrine of the law of the case requires us to honor the prior rulings of this Court in this litigation. Although we acknowledge that there are limited exceptions to this general principle, we are satisfied that none of them apply now. See United States v. Todd,
Applying the analytic framework that Lac Vieux I sets forth, we first ask whether Detroit can demonstrate that the ordinance serves a compelling governmental interest. It can. We accept that the preference promotes the stability of Detroit’s political and tax systems, and these interests are indeed compelling under the First Amendment. See Hernandez v. Commissioner,
Given that the ordinance serves these “compelling” interests in some measure, we next ask if the ordinance is necessary in order for the interests to be served at all. Likewise, with regard to the First Amendment problem that Lac Vieux I has already decided exists, we look at whether the ordinance is the least restrictive possible way of serving those interests. Here, Detroit’s arguments become unpersuasive. Were we to agree that the ordinance is theoretically capable of ensuring for Detroit a stable political system and a sound tax system, the proper inquiry remains whether those things cannot exist without the current ordinance on the books. Detroit stresses that the City’s electorate had rejected proposals that would have legalized casino gaming on five prior occasions, and projects that it would also have rejected this one without some indication of the likelihood that the casinos would be
Accordingly, the preference renders the ordinance invalid. Absent the provision, we are confident that Detroit’s interests could be served without intruding upon the Lac Vieux’s First Amendment rights. The district court apparently decided otherwise because Detroit previously had rejected a means more restrictive than the preference, giving Atwater and Greektown an outright guarantee that casino licenses would be theirs. This was erroneous. As the Lac Vieux has put it, the district court effectively turned this aspect of strict scrutiny “on its head,” failing to recognize that Detroit’s ordinance must do the least damage to the First Amendment, not just avoid doing the most damage. A less restrictive means of serving the interests Detroit has identified is simply leaving the preference out.
By employing the preference, Detroit basically sought to end the high-stakes competition for two of the three Detroit casino licenses before it really began. This we cannot allow. Barring governments from endorsing or punishing political activity, or the lack of it, is among the paramount functions of the First Amendment’s Free Speech Clause. See NAACP v. Claiborne Hardware Co.,
Notes
. Under Lac Vieux I, the ordinance also implicates the Equal Protection Clause by employing a classification that affects “a constitutionally protected fundamental right, the right to freedom of speech,” Lac Vieux I,
Dissenting Opinion
dissenting.
The majority reverses the district court based on two conclusions: (1) the Detroit ordinance is constitutional only if it survives “strict scrutiny;” and (2) the ordinance does not pass this rigorous test. I agree with the second conclusion — as the Supreme Court has noted, “it is the rare case in which ... a law survives strict scrutiny.” Burson v. Freeman,
The majority notes that, in Lac Vieux I,
Of course, the district court would have been unwise to ignore the suggestions made in Lac Vieux I on how to proceed. I disagree, however, that this Court is constrained by the law of the case doctrine to follow that same suggestion. As the Lac Vieux I panel expressly stated, at that juncture, neither the parties nor the district court had addressed the critical issue of the appropriate level of constitutional review. As noted, the district court below and the parties on appeal in Lac Vieux I focused on whether the plaintiff had standing to assert its claims at all and whether, if so, those claims were even cognizable under the First Amendment-legal questions that were hotly disputed. To the extent the Lac Vieux I panel expressed an opinion on anything beyond those threshold questions, accordingly, it did so without the benefit of briefing, argument, or a lower court decision on the issue. In contrast, the briefing before this panel contains substantial argument regarding the proper constitutional standard to be applied in the circumstances presented here. I do not believe we should relegate the analysis of this critical question to a one-sentence reference in a prior opinion, out of an unnecessary desire to adhere to the law of case doctrine. Indeed, I do not believe the Lac Vieux I panel would feel bound by its own dicta, or expect this panel to be bound by it.
Furthermore, even if Lac Vieux I did establish the law of this case to be that the Detroit ordinance must be narrowly drawn to serve a compelling state interest, I still believe we should not be bound by this pronouncement. “A court has the power to revisit prior decisions of its own or of a coordinate court in any circumstance, although as a rule courts should be loathe to do so in the absence of extraordinary circumstances such as where the initial decision was ‘clearly erroneous and would work a manifest injustice.’ ” Christianson v. Colt Industries Operating Corp.,
In Board of County Comm’rs, Wabaunsee Cty., Kansas v. Umbehr,
The Pickering balancing test, in turn, calls for weighing the plaintiffs “right to speak on a matter of public concern against ‘the interest of the State, as an employer, in promoting the efficiency of the public services it performs through its employees.’ ” Hardy v. Jefferson Community College,
Indeed, even this Umbehr/Pickering balancing test may be too stringent. The Supreme Court in Umbehr was careful to note the “limited nature” of its decision, stating that, because the plaintiffs lawsuit “concern[ed] the termination of a •pre-ex-isting commercial relationship with the government, [the Court did] not address the possibility of suits by bidders or applicants for new government contracts who cannot rely on such a relationship.” Id. at 685,
Laudably, the panel in Lac Vieux I tried to give the district court some guidance on how to measure the constitutionality of the Detroit ordinance. As the panel admitted, however, “the district court and the parties have provided [us with] little guidance on the question” of the correct standard of constitutional review. Lac Vieux I,
On remand, the district court struggled to reconcile the panel’s reference to strict scrutiny with the Supreme Court’s recognition in Umbehr and O’Hare of the circumscribed nature of the right at issue in these circumstances. The district court did so by finding that the right rested at the fringes of any strict scrutiny concern and that the level of review should be more deferential to the state than normally required when strict scrutiny applies. While as the majority concludes, that approach may be inappropriate, it is understandable given the obvious tension between the strict scrutiny reference in Lac Vieux I and the Supreme Court’s contrary holdings in Umbehr and O’Hare.
While the majority is correct that strict scrutiny is not flexible enough to support the district court’s conclusion on remand, I believe that, by accepting strict scrutiny as the standard to be applied in this case, the majority is committing error and forcing a manifest injustice on the parties. Even worse, I am not at all clear precisely what that injustice might be; the majority opinion does not explain what the district court should actually do, now, on remand. Should it “determine whether the offending provisions are severable from the remainder of the ordinance?” Lac Vieux I,
With all due respect to the panel in Lac Vieux I, and to my co-jurists in the majority who feel bound by Lac Vieux I, I believe the standard of constitutional review employed in this case is incorrect. To adopt it puts us at odds with binding Supreme Court precedent and our sister Circuit Courts of Appeals. See, e.g., McClintock,
Accordingly, I dissent, and suggest that this issue might be suitable for further review.
. Lac Vieux Desert Band v. Michigan Gaming Control Board,
. The Lac Vieux I panel concluded that the appellant had carried its “burden on summary judgment" of showing it was “ready and able to submit a proposal and that it was willing and able to pay the associated fees.”
