This is a qualified immunity claim by municipal officials relating to censorship of posters in bus shelters. The district judge wrote a sound and well articulated decision with which we agree.
Facts.
This is an appeal from denial of a motion to dismiss for failure to state a claim, under Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 12(b)(6), so we assume for purposes of decision that the facts are as stated in the complaint. The facts below are as alleged, and have not been proved. The reason that we have jurisdiction, despite the interlocutory nature of the decision, is that the motion was by public officials to obtain the benefit of qualified immunity from suit, and they have appealed under Mitchell v. Forsyth,
Metro Display is in the business of leasing bus shelter advertising space. It spent hundreds of thousands of dollars building bus shelters for the City of Victorville, with 76 sign spaces in 38 shelters. In exchange, its contract with the City of Victorville entitled Metro to use the shelters it built for advertisements.
Metro Display’s standard policy is to sell advertising space throughout southern California to “all comers.” Space is regularly used by local and national advertisers for commercial, noncommercial, religious, charitable and public service communications, which change regularly.
Metro’s contract with the ■ City of Victor-ville contained limitations on indecent and vulgar advertisements, and on advertisements for the competition within one block of a business. Also, Metro could not display anything likely to mislead traffic, and it had to give the municipality one free panel for every ten shelters. None of these contractual restrictions are in dispute. The city does not claim that it had any contractual right to impose the restrictions it did. Though the contract was terminable at will, the custom in the industry is that such contracts are renewed automatically. And so this contract was, for the first few years.
Then an agency hired Metro to place five advertisements on behalf of a union protesting labor practices of a Victorville supermarket chain. Some representatives of the grocery chain complained to the municipality about the hostile ads in the bus shelters. Mayor Caldwell and Councilman Diaz said in city council meetings that they could not control content of advertising directly because of “First Amendment problems,” but they would do it indirectly.
The mayor and councilman said that if Metro did not get rid of the ads, they would make sure Metro’s contract was not renewed. Then the third named defendant, Director of Public Works Patterson, told Metro that if Metro did not remove the union ads, the city would find a pretext to cancel the contract.
Metro responded by asking the union for permission to remove the ads. The union stood on its contractual right to have at least some of the ads displayed and threatened suit if Metro breached. But Director of Public Works Patterson told Metro that all the union ads would have to be removed immediately, or the city would find a pretext to cancel the contract. Then Metro began receiving a vast increase in maintenance complaints from the city, with threats of immediate cancellation if the maintenance was not taken care of immediately. Metro could not satisfy the city, which indicated intent to nonrenew.
ANALYSIS
“[Gjovernment officials performing discretionary functions .generally are shielded from liability for civil damages insofar as their conduct does not violate clearly established statutory or constitutional rights of which a reasonable person would have known.” Harlow v. Fitzgerald,
The city officials argue that under Lehman v. City of Shaker Heights,
In Lehman v. City of Shaker Heights,
These cases offer no shelter to the City of Victorville officials in the case at bar. Among the reasons are that Lehman says the government restrictions on advertising “must not be arbitrary, capricious, or invidious.” Id. at 303,
The bus shelters in the case at bar arguably could be treated as traditional public forums, because they are on the street. Streets have “ ‘immemorially been held in trust for the use of the public and, time out
The government cannot regulate a private individual’s speech in order to promote or restrain promotion of that individual’s viewpoint. “It is axiomatic that the government may not regulate speech based on its substantive content or the message it conveys.” Rosenberger v. Rector and Visitors,
The officials’ fallback argument is that even if Metro Display did have a constitutional right to run the pro-union ad, the law was not so clearly established that they should have realized that. We see nothing to that argument. As the city officials’ recognition of “First Amendment problems” revealed, neither did they. The First Amendment is not a problem. It is a solution to a problem. The problem is government officials trying to abridge the liberty of private individuals to say what they like. Lehman and Krishna Consciousness do not establish public transportation facilities as liberty-free zones; they provide a nuanced arrangement of regulatory discretion which can in no event empower the government to engage in viewpoint discrimination among private speakers.
The officials argue that their subjective recognition of “First Amendment problems” is irrelevant because Harlow v. Fitzgerald,
The officials also argue that because of Lehman, and the absence of a case on all fours holding that city officials could not constitutionally regulate the viewpoint of bus shelter advertisements, the law was not so “clearly established” as to deprive them of qualified immunity. “The Supreme Court and our case law do not require that degree of specificity.” Hyland v. Wonder,
When the Court said it was “axiomatic” that the government could not regulate speech based upon the message it conveys, Rosenberger v. Rector and Visitors,
AFFIRMED.
