Lead Opinion
Plaintiff-Counter-Defendant-Appellee Michael A. Lebron petitions for rehearing of this Court’s decision in Lebron v. National Railroad Passenger Corp. (Amtrak),
1. The sentence at 658 slip op. 8511, lines 21-25, is deleted.
2. The sentence at 659 slip op. 8512, lines 15-22, is amended to read as follows:
Because Lebrón insisted that TDI display his proposed advertisement only on the Spectacular, his attempt to attack Amtrak’s policies regarding the acceptance of advertisements in Penn Station generally, rather than on the Spectacular, amounts, in substance, to a facial challenge to those policies as they might be applied to advertisements other than Lebron’s and to locations not at issue.
3. The two sentences at 660 page 8515, lines 12-16, are replaced by the following:
We reverse the judgment of the district court and remand for consideration of Le-bron’s contract claim and TDI’s counterclaim for a declaratory judgment that it is entitled to terminate the Lease. Because initial subject matter jurisdiction over Le-bron’s federal claim is now clear, and a full trial has been “conducted on an expedited basis, upon written submissions,” Lebrón I, 811 F.Supp. [993] at 994, the interests of judicial economy and fairness to the parties counsel that this litigation be completed in federal court.
We note the assertion in Chief Judge Newman’s dissent from this disposition of the petition for rehearing that we now approve an inconsistent Amtrak policy because, “as the District Court found, advertisements falling within a broad category of political messages had been displayed in Penn Station.” Judge Leval concluded only that a handful of the advertisements shown in Penn Station over the years had been “arguably ‘political.’” Lebron v. National R.R. Passenger Corp. (Amtrak),
We rely upon Lebrón I with respect to our analysis of the forum issue. See id., at 655-58.
Dissenting Opinion
dissenting:
I respectfully dissent from the denial of the petition for rehearing.
When the Court first issued its opinion on the merits of Lebron’s First Amendment challenge, it premised substantial portions of its ruling on the view that Amtrak’s advertising policy on political messages, whatever the policy’s content, was limited in geographic scope to the one large billboard in Penn Station known as “the Spectacular.” Le-bron’s petition for rehearing challenges that premise, pointing out unrefuted contrary evidence in the record, a contrary assumption, if not a finding, underlying the District Court’s analysis, and the acknowledgement by Amtrak in its appellate brief that its policy “applies to all advertising in Amtrak’s facilities.” Brief for Appellant at 7. The Court responds to Lebron’s petition by amending its opinion to delete the two passages of the opinion as originally issued that had asserted that Amtrak’s policy against political advertisements is limited to the Spectacular.
Though the deletions are fully justified, they leave the Court’s legal analysis of Lebron’s First Amendment challenge even more vulnerable than I thought it was at the time of the original opinion. See Lebron I,
Perhaps the majority now means to rest its ultimate conclusion solely on its view that the relevant forum for purposes of public forum analysis is only the Spectacular. I previously set forth my reasons for thinking that that view is not legally sound. See id. at 660-61. With the factual underpinning of the majority’s view as to the scope of the Amtrak policy now discarded, I simply note that the public forum view of the majority, even if correct, is irrelevant since, no matter what the scope of the forum, a governmental entity violates the First Amendment when it bars display of political messages pursuant to a “policy” that has been found by a fact-finder, with abundant evidentiary support, to be vague, unwritten, undisseminated, unclear to those
I agree with the majority that the state law issues are properly returned to the District Court for further consideration, but I would grant the petition for rehearing.
Notes
. The majority again notes, as it did in the initial opinion on the merits, that my dissent from the very first Lebrón ruling had observed that Penn Station “has not become a forum for ads of such pointed political content as Lebron’s [proposed ad for the Spectacular.]”
