MULTIMEDIA PUBLISHING COMPANY OF SOUTH CAROLINA,
INCORPORATED; New York Times Company, Plaintiffs-Appellees,
v.
GREENVILLE-SPARTANBURG AIRPORT DISTRICT; Gary Jackson, in
his official capacity as Executive Director of the
Greenville-Spartanburg Airport
Commission, Defendants-Appellants.
No. 91-1575.
United States Court of Appeals,
Fourth Circuit.
Argued Dec. 2, 1992.
Decided April 22, 1993.
Stanley Turner Case, Butler, Means, Evins & Browne, Spartanburg, SC, argued (Edward G. Smith, on brief), for defendants-appellants.
Wallace K. Lightsey, Wyche, Burgess, Freeman & Parham, P.A., Greenville, SC, argued (Carl F. Muller, on brief), for plaintiffs-appellees.
Before PHILLIPS and WILKINS, Circuit Judges, and SPROUSE, Senior Circuit Judge.
OPINION
PHILLIPS, Circuit Judge:
The issue is whether a total ban imposed by the Greenville-Spartanburg Airport Commission (the Commission) on the placement of newspaper vending machines (newsracks) inside its airline terminal violated the First Amendment rights of two newspaper companies who challenged the ban in this action. The district court, holding that the terminal was a public forum and applying the First Amendment principles then relevant to that forum classification, declared the total ban unconstitutional and entered a remedial decree compelling the Commission to permit placement of newsracks in certain designated areas of the terminal. Though during pendency of this appeal it was established in International Soc'y for Krishna Consciousness, Inc. v. Lee, --- U.S. ----,
* Multimedia Publishing Company of South Carolina publishes the Greenville News and the Greenville Piedmont, both daily newspapers in South Carolina. The New York Times Company publishes the Spartanburg Herald-Journal, also a South Carolina daily.
The Commission oversees operation of the Greenville-Spartanburg Airport, located ten miles north of Greenville, South Carolina and fifteen miles south of Spartanburg, South Carolina. Approximately one million passengers pass through the Airport each year, and a recent renovation designed to better accommodate those passengers expanded the Airport to twice its former size. In the new facility a spacious lower lobby contains ticketing and baggage claim areas, along with a bank, a travel agency office, rental car bureaus, a large fountain, and seating areas interspersed with planters and trash containers. Escalators ascend from the lower lobby to a middle level containing a gift shop, a bar, a restaurant, public telephone booths, vending machines, and an outdoor terrace for watching planes take off and land. Two large concourses extend in opposite directions from the middle-level lobby, each containing four gates, seating areas surrounded by planters and trash containers, public restrooms, and desks with individual telephones and work areas for departing and arriving passengers. The public generally has free access to the central terminal, and all persons wishing to enter the Airport's gate area may do so if they are willing to pass through the metal detectors separating it from the central terminal.
During the fall of 1988, before renovation of the Airport began, Multimedia contacted Dick Graham, then Executive Director of the Commission, requesting permission to place newsracks in the passenger terminal building. Newspapers were then available only in the gift shop, and Multimedia had received complaints from business people in Greenville who weren't able to purchase them when arriving or departing outside the shop's hours of operation. Graham told Multimedia he didn't want to increase congestion in the small existing terminal by placing newsracks inside, but he promised to consult the renovation architects about providing newsrack space in the renovated facility and led the companies to believe they could expect to place newsracks inside it.
Although Graham did ask the architect to consider newsrack placement, neither he nor his successor, Gary Jackson, pursued the matter further. When the architect contacted Jackson after renovation was under way, Jackson told him not to worry about newsracks because they wouldn't be permitted inside the new terminal.
In November of 1989, when renovation was nearly complete, Multimedia asked Jackson when newsracks could be placed inside the new terminal. Citing aesthetic concerns, he flatly refused to permit newsracks in the Airport, although he later allowed the newspaper companies to place them in one of the Airport's several parking areas.
In pressing for permission to place newsracks inside the Airport, Multimedia had offered to customize them under the direction of the architect to avoid detracting from the new terminal's aesthetics. Specifically, Multimedia had offered to paint them special colors or place them inside wooden cabinets. Jackson never presented these offers to the Commission, and, indeed, consulted no one regarding the feasibility of customizing the newsracks to complement the Airport's decor.
Ultimately, the New York Times Company joined Multimedia's efforts, and the newspaper companies brought this action. Jackson, acting alone, then prepared a list of justifications for banning newsracks. He claimed that they would mar the aesthetics of the terminal, cause gift-shop revenues to decrease, pose a pedestrian safety hazard, and constitute a security risk because they might hold bombs. He also said newsracks were unnecessary because adequate alternative means of distributing newspapers existed.1
In a non-jury trial the district court found that the First Amendment protects distribution of newspapers through newsracks. Multimedia Publishing Co. v. Greenville-Spartanburg Airport Dist.,
We first heard oral argument in this appeal on October 29, 1991, but placed the case in abeyance pending the Supreme Court's decision in Lee. Following the entry of that decision which held, among other things, that public airports aren't public forums, see --- U.S. at ----,
II
To determine the constitutionality of the Commission's newsrack ban involving restrictions on the use of public property, we first have to decide whether the distribution of newspapers through newsracks located on that property is entitled to First Amendment scrutiny at all. Cornelius v. NAACP Legal Defense & Educ. Fund, Inc.,
* The Commission argues that its regulation of newsrack distribution in the Airport doesn't implicate First Amendment protections in the first place. All this ban concerns, says the Commission, is state regulation of a particular mode of commercial distribution involving physical invasion of public property.
Things aren't so simple. It's long been settled that the First Amendment protects distribution as well as publication of protected material. Lovell v. City of Griffin,
B
Although the question whether public airport terminals are public fora was open when we first heard argument in this case, the Supreme Court has since resolved the question, holding that they are not. Lee, --- U.S. at ----,
C
The First Amendment's protection extends beyond the public forum, however, and the government's power to regulate expressive activity on public property not having that quality--like the Greenville-Spartanburg Airport--is still limited. The relevant constraints are identified in Perry Educ. Ass'n v. Perry Local Educators' Ass'n,
While the Commission's decision to restrict protected First Amendment activity in the nonpublic forum must be reasonable, "it need not be the most reasonable or the only reasonable limitation." Cornelius,
There are several obvious considerations in such an assessment. The degree and character of the impairment of protected expression involved, discounted by any mitigating alternatives that remain to the aggrieved party, must be considered. See Lee, --- U.S. at ----,
We now turn to that assessment.
* The Commission's blanket ban on the placement of newsracks within the terminal substantially burdens the newspaper companies' expressive conduct within that public space. In fact, were no alternative channels for newspaper distribution available in the general area, no heavier burden would be conceivable. But two alternative channels are available: the Airport gift shop and racks in one of the Airport's parking facilities. Their actual utility as alternatives is, however, limited in critical ways.
The Airport's gift shop concession does sell newspapers, but its hours of operation (presently 6:30 a.m. to 9:00 p.m.) are limited, and about a dozen flights arrive or depart outside them. Moreover, while passengers arriving at or departing from Concourse B must pass by the shop, passengers using Concourse A may not see it at all. If they don't, no signs will lead them to it; there aren't any. The gift shop is also a substantial distance from the gate areas, making the quick access often essential to air travellers difficult, even for patrons who know where it is. These shortcomings are compounded by the gift shop's practice of displaying the papers flat and in the back of the shop.
Papers are also available from newsracks in the parking garage. But the garage is only one of several parking options for Airport patrons, and arriving or departing passengers who park elsewhere, as well as the many who don't park at all, won't see the racks. The only notice of the racks' existence is a sign displayed by the gift shop when it is closed. Moreover, even those arriving passengers who do use the garage and see the racks may not think to purchase a newspaper before they enter the Airport, particularly if they haven't used it before and aren't aware of the limited availability of newspapers within.
Despite these two alternatives, then, the Commission's newsrack ban makes newspapers hard to come by for many patrons of the Greenville-Spartanburg Airport and impossible for others, thereby placing a heavy burden on the newspaper companies' protected distribution activity. This burden is enhanced by the tightly contained character of the Airport environment. If a governmental entity imposed a similar ban on newsrack placement on city streets and sidewalks, those desiring a paper might find private vendors on nearby private property taking advantage of a newly created market; but the Airport's ban offers no similar opportunity for patrons or vendors. The Commission administers all the surrounding property readily accessible to Airport patrons, and market forces don't operate on its one retail monopoly.
2
Although the burden on protected expression imposed by the Commission's ban is a heavy one, the Commission might nonetheless be able to advance sufficiently powerful governmental interests to justify it. Before considering the Commission's asserted interests, however, we need to address a preliminary dispute concerning the appropriate standard for reviewing the district court's factual findings respecting those interests. The Commission argues that Bose Corp. v. Consumers Union,
We agree with the newspaper companies. The Bose requirement of independent review doesn't apply to the Commission's claim that it has been wrongly prevented from restricting speech. See Planned Parenthood Ass'n/Chicago Area v. Chicago Transit Auth.,
The Commission has advanced four governmental interests to justify its ban: aesthetics, revenue, convenience and safety, and security.
To advance these interests, the Commission need not have adduced specific factual evidence that its interests were advanced by the ban or that the expressive activity banned did interfere with the forum's intended use; it was entitled to advance its interests by arguments based on appeals to common sense and logic. Perry,
The Commission argues that placing newsracks inside the terminal would generate visual clutter inconsistent with the aesthetic design of the Greenville-Spartanburg Airport, but it presented no articulable aesthetic design to the court or the newspaper companies. The district court rejected this justification as inconsistent with the evidence adduced at trial, which made clear that "[n]ewsracks may be located and designed so as not to detract from the aesthetics of the Airport" but that no effort to do so had been made.
While the government's interest in aesthetics is undoubtedly legitimate, Members of City Council v. Taxpayers for Vincent,
The Commission also presses its interest in preserving revenue derived from its concession on sales of newspapers at the Airport gift shop. The government's interest in preserving revenue generally has been recognized as legitimate, Lehman v. City of Shaker Heights,
Even if it were, however, we note the Commission's other options. It was under no obligation to preserve revenue at the gift shop, J.A. at 337-54, and it could have exacted a concession for papers sold from newsracks equal to that assessed against the shop, as long as the concession didn't exceed that levied for other types of goods sold in the Airport. See Minneapolis Star & Tribune Co. v. Minnesota Comm'r of Revenue,
The Commission next contends that placement of newsracks in its facility poses a threat to patron safety and convenience by interposing obstacles to free movement within the Airport. Once again, we agree with the district court's conclusion: "Based on considerations of traffic flow and space available, there are numerous locations in the Airport where newsracks could be placed."
The Commission's final justification for its newsrack ban is airport security. The district court found this justification specious, and we think its findings are compelling:
The Airport has never experienced a terrorist incident or had a bomb exploded in it. There is no evidence that a newsrack has ever been used in any airport in the United States for the placement of a bomb. Newsracks are subject to random and frequent access by the public and by the newspaper distributors, in contrast with other containers in public areas in the Airport where explosives could be hidden and not discovered quickly.... In the highly unlikely event that someone would choose this Airport as the target of a bombing, it is extremely unlikely that he would place the bomb in a newsrack.
The district court did not err in determining that the governmental interests asserted as justification for the ban were post hoc, pretextual creations, which were not shown to have been significantly threatened by the conduct banned.
3
Expressive activity in nonpublic fora doesn't stand on the same footing as expressive activity in traditional public fora or the private arena. Nonpublic fora are primarily intended for the accomplishment of particular governmental purposes, and within their confines society's interest in free speech must sometimes yield to those purposes. If the threat of interference with the Airport's intended use posed by newsrack placement were sufficiently great, it might be possible to sustain the Commission's newsrack ban despite the insubstantiality of the specific justifications advanced by the Commission. We consider this possibility here.
"In contrast to a public forum, a finding of strict incompatibility between the nature of the speech or the identity of the speaker and the functioning of the nonpublic forum is not mandated." Cornelius,
With respect to a nonpublic forum's intended use, the proof is in the pudding. We look not simply at the government's assertions of purpose, but also at the facility's actual operation. See Lee, --- U.S. at ----,
Nothing in the evidentiary record of this case, or in the Commission's arguments, suggests that a reasonably controlled placement of a limited number of newsracks in this terminal would significantly, if at all, interfere with either the primary or secondary intended purposes of its operation. That they would be relatively "permanent" does not appear at all relevant on that point. In many ways their inanimate, unobtrusive nature is bound to be much less disruptive of passenger sensibilities and physical movement than are the assertive leafletting activities held in Lee to be protected against airport ban.
III
Taken together, the above inquiries demonstrate that the Commission's complete ban on newsracks in the Airport terminal violates the First Amendment. The ban impairs important expressive activity but fails to protect effectively the Airport's appearance, revenue, convenience, or security. This imbalance is in no way rectified by the Commission's preeminent interest in preserving its nonpublic forum for the intended use, because the Commission has shown no incompatibility at all between use of the Airport for its intended mission and reasonable placement of newsracks. Its position, really the position of its Executive Director, represents nothing more than the "bureaucratic unwillingness to explore alternatives" found by the district court.
IV
We therefore affirm the district court's decision declaring that the ban violates the First Amendment and must be lifted. We are concerned, however, that the remedial portion of the district court's decree was entered without benefit of the Commission's suggestion of possible alternatives to the specific decree entered. We are aware that this may have resulted from a deliberate decision by the Commission to stand on its position that no alternative to the complete ban was warranted. And we are aware that it would be perfectly fair and proper, if that were the case, to let the decree stand unless and until the Commission sought by motion in the cause to have it modified. In view, however, of the circumstances of this case's development, we believe justice will be better served by vacating the remedial portion of the decree and remanding the case for reconsideration of the proper remedial decree following an opportunity by both parties to be heard on its proper form in light of this opinion and of Lee's discussion of the nature of the airport forum as that may bear upon the issue. And it is so ordered.
AFFIRMED IN PART, VACATED AND REMANDED IN PART.
Notes
Though Jackson came up with these justifications after the fact without consulting his superiors or any advisors, both parties relied upon them at trial as the Commission's official assertion of the governmental interests justifying the ban, and the district court accordingly so treated them
The opinion of the Court reported at --- U.S. ----,
