MONTEREY COUNTY DEMOCRATIC CENTRAL COMMITTEE; Alice Ellis;
and Dorothy Lund, Plaintiffs-Appellants,
v.
UNITED STATES POSTAL SERVICE; William F. Bolger, Postmaster
General; Joseph R. Caraveo, Regional Postmaster;
Manuel Subia, District Manager; and
Terry Williams, Postmaster,
Defendants-Appellees.
No. 85-1685.
United States Court of Appeals,
Ninth Circuit.
Argued and Submitted Dec. 12, 1985.
Decided March 17, 1987.
Douglas R. Young, San Francisco, Cal., for plaintiffs-appellants.
Edward R. Cohen, Washington, D.C., for defendants-appellees.
Appeal from the United States District Court for the Northern District of California.
Before TANG and BRUNETTI, Circuit Judges, and CURTIS, District Judge.*
BRUNETTI, Circuit Judge:
The Monterey County Democratic Central Committee and two of its members (the Committee) challenge a district court order denying the Committee's request for an injunction of a United States Postal Service guideline prohibiting voter registration by partisan groups on postal premises. We affirm.
FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND
In December 1983 the United States Postal Service (Postal Service) promulgated a guideline permitting voter registration on postal premises under certain conditions and only by certain groups. Postal Bulletin 21434, 12-1-83 at 9, reproduced in Appendix A, infra. Section (A)(1) of the guideline defines permissible registrars as "government agencies or non-profit civic leagues or organizations that operate for the promotion of social welfare but do not participate or intervene in any political campaign on behalf of any candidate for any public office."
In July 1984 the Committee sought permission to register voters at the Post Office in Carmel Valley, California (Post Office). The Committee proposed to seat its members at tables located on a covered walkway adjacent to the Post Office. The walkway is separated from municipal sidewalks by the Post Office parking area. Photographs reproduced in Appendix B, infra. Terry Williams, Postmaster of the Carmel office, denied the Committee's request, finding that the Committee was a partisan group not authorized to conduct voter registration under section (A)(1).
The district court preliminarily enjoined enforcement of the guideline but later granted summary judgment in favor of the Postal Service. We review an order of summary judgment de novo. Ashton v. Cory,
DISCUSSION
The Committee contends that by excluding partisan groups from voter registration activities on Post Office property, the guideline deprives them of their first amendment right of free expression and fifth amendment equal protection guarantees.
A. The Public Forum Doctrine and the First Amendment
The parties do not dispute that voter registration is speech protected by the first amendment to the United States Constitution. This protection, however, is not in all cases absolute. See Heffron v. Int'l Society for Krishna Consciousness, Inc.,
Fora are grouped into three categories. The first includes places which "by long tradition or government fiat" have been utilized for assembly and debate. Perry Education Assoc. v. Perry Local Educators' Assoc.,
A second category of forum includes public property opened and designated by the state for the public as a place of expressive activity. Id. The government does not create a public forum through unconscious, unspoken practices or by permitting limited discourse, but "only by intentionally opening a non-traditional forum for public discourse." Cornelius v. NAACP Legal Defense and Education Fund, Inc.,
Public fora by designation often will be narrowly defined. Thus, when limited discourse is permitted by select groups, a public forum open to indiscriminate use by all is not created. Cornelius,
The third category consists of nonpublic fora. In describing the government's powers to regulate these places, the Supreme Court has stated: "the State may reserve the forum for its intended purposes, communicative or otherwise, as long as the regulation on speech is reasonable and not an effort to suppress expression merely because public officials oppose the speaker's view." Id.
It is the Committee's position that the walkway is a traditional public forum. The guideline, they argue, furthers no compelling government interest and thus cannot withstand the heightened scrutiny applied to regulations of public fora. We disagree.
Public places of outdoor pedestrian traffic--sidewalks--long have been representative of areas held open to the public for expressive activities. United States v. Grace,
We are aided in our analysis by the Supreme Court's opinion in Greer v. Spock,
The Court in Grace, was asked to strike down a statute prohibiting certain expressive activities on the Supreme Court grounds and the sidewalk forming the perimeter. The Court distinguished Greer, finding that the sidewalks surrounding the grounds retained their public forum status because no apparent separation existed to indicate to persons stepping from the street to the curb "that they have entered some special type of enclave." Id. The Court stated that "[t]he sidewalks comprising the outer boundaries of the Court grounds are indistinguishable from any other sidewalks in Washington, D.C., and we can discern no reason why they should be treated any differently." Id.
This distinction is pivotal in the instant case. The Carmel Post Office walkway is separated from the municipal sidewalks by the Post Office parking area. The isolated nature of the building and the surrounding walkway indicate to all who approach that the walkway services postal patrons entering the building and that it is not a thoroughfare for passersby intent on other errands. This fact is sufficient to overcome the presumption of public forum status otherwise accorded sidewalks. Accordingly, we find the postal walkway analogous to the sidewalk at issue in Greer and conclude that it is not a traditional public forum.
The Committee argues that even if the walkway is not a traditional public forum, government attempts to regulate its use for expressive activities still must be analyzed under the rules applicable to public fora because the Postal Service transformed the walkway into a limited public forum by permitting certain groups to use postal premises for expressive activities. Here, again, we disagree. The Post Office property at Carmel has been used by the Red Cross for blood drives and by the Lions Club for fundraising. A political candidate once campaigned in the parking lot and a property owners association activity was permitted on the premises. At no time, however, did the Postal Service swing wide the doors to indiscriminate use by the public. The "government does not create a public forum ... by permitting limited discourse, but only by intentionally opening a non-traditional forum for public discourse." Cornelius,
Even were we to conclude that a limited public forum resulted from this history of use, a constitutional right of access would not extend to the Committee because we find that the Committee is dissimilar to the groups previously admitted to the property. Perry,
Our analysis is bolstered by the decisions of other courts previously faced with a similar situation. In American Postal Workers Union v. United States Postal Service,
Because the Carmel Valley Post Office walkway is not a traditional or limited public forum open to the Committee, we need not determine whether the regulation is supported by a compelling government interest. Rather, we apply the rules governing nonpublic fora to determine whether the regulation on speech is reasonable and whether it does not simply mask Postal Service opposition to the Committee's views.
Initially we note that government control over non-public fora includes:
[t]he right to make distinctions in access on the basis of subject matter and speaker identity. These distinctions may be impermissible in a public forum but are inherent and inescapable in the process of limiting a nonpublic forum to activities compatible with the intended purpose of the property. The touchstone for evaluating these distinctions is whether they are reasonable in light of the purpose which the forum at issue serves.
Id. at 49,
The rationale advanced for the regulation is the Postal Service's desire not to be viewed by the public as maintaining partisan associations. This desire is reasonable. The Postal Service has been directed to develop and maintain "an efficient system of collection, sorting and delivery of the mail nationwide." 39 U.S.C. Sec. 403(b)(1). In meeting this objective, the Postal Service more than any other agency of government2 daily serves a staggering number of individuals. Not surprisingly, the Postal Service is the "Nation's largest user of floor space" and is among the world's largest employers. United States Postal Service v. Council of Greenburgh Civic Assoc.,
This reason previously has been found a legitimate and reasonable justification for regulating nonpublic fora. In Cornelius, the Court stated that "avoiding the appearance of political favoritism is a valid justification for limiting speech in a nonpublic forum."
The Committee errs in attacking the guideline on the basis that less restrictive means exist to advance the Postal Service's interest. The Supreme Court in Cornelius made clear that "[t]he Government's decision to restrict access to a nonpublic forum need only be reasonable ; it need not be the most reasonable or the only reasonable limitation."
B. Equal Protection Guarantees
Our first amendment analysis also resolves the second issue raised in this appeal: whether the Postal Service's application of the guideline operates to deprive the Committee of equal protection guarantees under the fifth amendment. While distinctions between classes of speech may unconstitutionally burden equal protection rights, see Police Department of Chicago v. Mosley,
The Committee can lay no claim to a fundamental right of access here because the applicable forum is nonpublic. In such cases, regulations of government property which affect expressive conduct will be upheld if they "rationally further a legitimate state purpose." Id. As we have explained, the test is met here with little difficulty; the reason advanced by the Postal Service for the guideline is legitimate and rationally furthered by the regulation.
The decision of the district court is AFFIRMED.
TANG, Circuit Judge. Concurring in the judgment:
I agree with the majority that the Postal Services guideline, as it has been applied to the Carmel Valley Post Office, does not offend first amendment principles. I write separately only to stress that this result is mandated by the particular physical layout of the walkway on the postal service premises in Carmel Valley. I do not find our conclusion to be bolstered by the result in American Postal Workers Union v. United States Postal Service,
My reading of Supreme Court precedent is that sidewalks are presumptively public fora unless they are (1) located within government property "dedicated to a use other than as a forum for public expression" and (2) "separated from the streets and sidewalks of any municipality." United States v. Grace,
In this case, because the Carmel Valley Post Office walkway is enclosed within the postal service premises and clearly separated from the municipal sidewalks in the area, Grace and Greer support the conclusion we reach, that the regulation does not offend the first amendment. I think it is important to acknowledge that, in thus applying Grace and Greer, we allow forum analysis to turn on the placement of sidewalks on Post Office property, rather than on legal title to the premises. I am aware that this analysis might appear to create an arbitrary rule so that another Post Office, with a different arrangement of sidewalks and parking facilities, might have to permit unrestricted voter registration on its sidewalks. This decision of course does not decide the outcome of any other challenge to this regulation. However, it is logical and reasonable to distinguish, for purposes of first amendment analysis, between sidewalks separated from municipal sidewalks by a parking lot and sidewalks indistinguishable from municipal sidewalks. Considering the principles implicated by the first amendment, it is reasonable to grant the Post Office greater regulatory control over sidewalks which appear to a lay person to be within Post Office premises, than we permit it to exercise over sidewalks which appear only to border those premises. Such a delineation of Post Office control, based on the nature of the forum, rather than legal ownership of the premises, comports with the Postal Service's professed concern with preserving neutrality in the public eye.
APPENDIX A
USE OF POSTAL PREMISES FOR VOTER REGISTRATION
Postmasters approached regarding the use of postal premises for registration ... purposes should use the following guidelines:
A. Voter Registration. A postmaster may approve voter registration requests provided all the following conditions are met.
(1) The registration must be conducted by government agencies or nonprofit civic leagues or organizations that operate for the promotion of social welfare but do not participate or intervene in any political campaign on behalf of any candidate for any public office.
(2) Absolutely no partisan or political literature will be available, displayed, or handed out. This includes photographs or likenesses and cartoons of elected officials and candidates for public office.
(3) Postal employees must not participate in any voter registration activity conducted on Postal Service premises.
(4) The registration must not interfere with the conduct of usual postal business, postal customers, or postal operations.
(5) The organizations will provide and be responsible for any equipment and supplies.
(6) Contributions may not be solicited.
(7) Access to the workroom floor is prohibited.
(8) Voter registration activities will not become permanent, but will be limited to an appropriate period before an election.
Postal Bulletin 21434, 12-1-83
fe
APPENDIX B
NOTE: OPINION CONTAINS TABLE OR OTHER DATA THAT IS NOT VIEWABLE
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Notes
Honorable Jesse W. Curtis, United States District Judge, Central District of California, sitting by designation
The court of appeals endorsed the district court's commendable constitutional analysis of section (A)(1) of the guideline,
Although the Postal Service was a creature of Congress and to that extent purely a government entity, it subsequently was transformed into a government-owned corporation in an effort to stem a tide of deficits and shortcomings. See Council of Greenburgh,
We note that the Committee does not contend that no alternative channels of communication exist
