Thеse appeals require us to decide two important First Amendment questions. The first relates to whether a state agency constitutionally may ban all leafletting on a multi-purpose pier that it controls. The second relates to whether such an agency may require a person seeking to distribute handbills on public sidewalks to apply in advance for a permit.
These and other questions arise out of attempts by the New England Regional Council of Carpenters (NERCC), a labor organization, to leaflet in locations owned by the Massachusetts Port Authority (Massport), an instrumentality of the Commonwealth of Massachusetts. In one instance, NERCC applied for a permit to leaflet in front of the Exchange Conference Center (ECC), a structure located on the so-called Fish Pier. Massport policy forbids such activity in that location, and no permit was forthcoming. In the other instance, NERCC members tried to leaflet on the Massport-eontrolled public sidewalk adjacent to Northern Avenue, immediately in front of Boston’s World Trade Center (WTC). Massport prevented the leaflet-ters from distributing handbills until they applied for, and received, a permit.
Invoking 42 U.S.C. § 1983, NERCC repaired to the federal district court and sued two Massport hierarchs — its executive director and its director of public safety — in their official capacities.
1
It sought injunctive relief and a declaration that Massport’s practices violated its right to freedom of speech.
See
U.S. Const. Amend. I. While the suit was pending, Massport adopted new regulations applicable to the Northern Avenue sidewalks. The district court, acting on cross-motions for summary judgment, upheld both the outright ban on leafletting at the Fish Pier and the new regulations.
New Engl. Reg’l Council of Carpenters v. Mass. Port Auth.,
On the two principal issues, we affirm the district court’s thoughtful decision. We hold that the Fish Pier is a non-public forum, and that the leafletting ban — which is content-neutral and reasonable in light of the uses to which the pier is put — is a valid exercise of governmental authority. As to the sidewalks adjacent to Northern Avenue, we hold that Massport’s permit requirement is valid on its face: the neo-teric regulations sufficiently limit official discretion and the restrictions imposed are both content-neutral and narrowly tailored.
There are three more matters. First, we hold that NERCC’s challenge to Mass-port’s original permit policy is moot insofar as that challenge pertains to the sidewalks adjacent to Northern Avenue. Second, be *15 cause the district court did not address the question of whether Massport controls other sidewalks to which the original permit policy still attaches, we remand for fact-finding on that question. As a final matter, we hold that the district court did not abuse its discretion in denying NERCC’s application for an award of attorneys’ fees.
I. BACKGROUND
With exceptions that we shall examine in due course, the facts of this case are largely undisputed. Our mise-en-scéne begins with the Fish Pier, which was constructed by the Commonwealth almost a century ago to provide a venue for the Boston-based fishing fleet to unload, process, and auction its daily catch. Although the volume of activity has decreased markedly over time, the Fish Pier continues to serve essentially the same function today.
Geographically, the Fish Pier is located on the eastern side of Northern Avenue, directly across from Avenue D, in South Boston. It is separated from the Northern Avenue sidewalk by an iron fencе that runs the full width of the pier. The fence contains passageways for pedestrian and vehicular traffic. Just inside the entrance is a security booth, staffed twenty-four hours a day, which displays a sign that reads: “Private Property, No Trespassing.” The sign also prohibits unauthorized vehicles and warns that “drivers must obtain authorization, report name, address, purpose, and allow inspection of contents” before entering the Fish Pier.
A two-lane roadway runs the length of the Fish Pier. The road is bordered on each side by long three-story buildings. The ECC is located at the very tip of the pier, and the road loops around it (allowing large trucks to turn around easily). The outermost periphery of the Fish Pier borders on Boston Harbor. It is used for the docking, unloading, fueling, and repair of fishing boats.
There are small parking lots and sidewalks on either side of the interior road near' the entrance to the Fish Pier, but there are no sidewalks along the length of the three-story buildings. These buildings do sport raised loading dock platforms. While NERCC calls these platforms “elevated sidewalks,” that nomenclature is misleading: the photographic evidence shows that each of these platforms is appurtenant to, and part of, the adjacent building.
Massport became the proprietor of the Fish Pier during the 1970s and has continued to operate it as a commercial fishing depot. During this interval, Massport has made room for several other commercial uses. For example, the long buildings on either side of the interior road house a number of offices, including those of Mass-port itself, two law firms concentrating in admiralty practice, a business that compiles sports statistics, and the Israeli Chamber of Commerce. There are also two restaurants on the premises. The ECC is a recently-renovated facility — it was formerly the New England Fish Exchange — that is available to the general public by reservation. The ECC contains conference and meeting rooms, and can handle events for as many as 175 people.
Massport’s regulations make it unlawful to “[p]ost, distribute, or display signs, advertisements, circulars, printed or written matter” in “any area ... of the Port Properties” without written permission. Mass. Regs.Code, tit. 740, § 3.02(3)(e). The same regulation prohibits unauthorized entry into restricted аreas under Massport’s control. See id. § 3.02(2). Areas posted as being closed to the public are deemed “restricted,” id., and NERCC does not dispute that the Fish Pier is so demarcat *16 ed. 2 On that basis, Massport refuses to permit leafletting on the Fish Pier.
On December 10, 1998, NERCC applied for permission to distribute handbills in front of the ECC. It believed that the ECC was to be used six days later for a holiday party sponsored by the Tocci Building Corporation and desired to leaflet on that date to call attention to certain employment practices engaged in by the company (whose chief executive officer, John Tocci, also serves on a Massport advisory board). After NERCC’s counsel learned informally that Massport intended to deny the request and to restrict leafletting to the Fish Pier entrance on Northern Avenue, NERCC filed suit seeking injunctive relief and a declaration that Massport’s “no leaf-letting” policy violated the First Anendment. When NERCC thereafter learned that it was mistaken as to the date of the Tocci event, it withdrew the request for a preliminary injunction but chose to proceed with the constitutional challenge.
NERCC included in its complaint a pri- or permit dispute concerning a neighboring location: the sidewalk in front of the WTC. The WTC is located on Northern Avenue, proximate to the Fish Pier and to Avenues B and D. Due to massive construction efforts in that part of South Boston, some sidewalks near the WTC are isthmian corridors bounded by walls of plywood and concrete. Even where no construction is presently ongoing and makeshift arrangements do not predominate, the sidewalks are narrow. Northern Avenue is a major transportation artery, and at peak hours the entire area is congested. Constant vehicular traffic is compounded by high pedestrian traffic.
Massport owns the section of Northern Avenue that runs in front of the WTC, subject to an agreement with the City of Boston to preserve it as a public right-of-way. On November 17, 1998 — a date when John Tocci was scheduled to speak at the WTC — thirteen NERCC members attempted to leaflet at various locations in the vicinity of the building. They were threatened with arrest and told that they could not distribute handbills until they received permission from Massport. NERCC’s counsel immediately transmitted a permit application by facsimile to Massport’s director of public safety (DPS) while the union members and the police officers waited. The permit issued around four hours later. In its complaint, NERCC attacked the process on two grounds: that the issuance of the permit had been unduly delayed, and that Mass-port’s requirement for a permit, based on an essentially standardless policy, was in any event unconstitutional.
In the early stages of the litigation, the district court expressed concern that Massport’s original policy requiring a permit to distribute leaflets on a public sidewalk lacked adequate safeguards. The court wisely offered Massport time to consider its position. Massport proceeded to crystallize its policy by promulgating a directive amending Mass. Regs.Code, tit. 740, § 3.02(3)(e) with respect to the portions of Northern Avenue under its control. These amended regulations are reproduced in an appendix to the lower court’s opinion,
see Massport I,
Under the new regime, all persons desiring to distribute leaflets, picket, demon- *17 state, or conduct similar expressive activity on those portions of Northern Avenue under Massport’s control must furnish the agency with advance notice describing the activity, its time and location, and the number of people who will engage in it. The notice also must contain the name, address, and telephone number of a contact person. The filing of this information allows the applicant to engage in the described activity, but Massport may modify, revoke, or deny the permit on a number of grounds either prior to or during the course of the activity. Pertinently, Mass-port may take such a step if the DPS determines that the activity “presents a danger to public safety or would impede the convenient passage of pedestrian or vehicular traffic” (subparagraph E.l); or if either the DPS or a police officer determines that the activity is being conducted in an unsafe or unreasonably dangerous manner, exceeds the scope of the notice, or violates time, place, and manner restrictions delineated elsewhere in the regulation (subparagraph E.2); or if Massport has taken apprоpriate measures to “close the pertinent area for purposes of construction or to ensure safe and convenient travel to an event” (subparagraph E.3).
Focusing on Northern Avenue, the district court rejected NERCC’s facial challenge to these regulations and entered summary judgment for the defendants. The court found, inter alia, that the permit provisions were not an unconstitutional prior restraint because they sufficiently limited official discretion.
Massport I,
The district court also ruled in Mass-port’s favor on the Fish Pier claim. The court held that the Fish Pier is a nonpublic forum, id. at 91, and that the ban on leafletting is reasonable in light of the nature of the premises, id. at 94. In a subsequent rescript, the court noted that Massport’s promulgation of the revised regulations had not been judicially decreed and, therefore, concluded that NERCC could not collect attorneys’ feеs as a prevailing party under 42 U.S.C. § 1988. NERCC v. Buckingham, No. 98-12538 (D.Mass. June 4, 2001) (unpublished order). These appeals followed.
II. JUSTICIABILITY
We pause at the outset to determine whether the issues that NERCC raises are properly before us.
Section 1983 guards against violations of federal rights by state actors, and there is no dispute that Massport, for our purposes, qualifies as such.
See generally
Mass. Gen. Laws ch. 91, §§ 1-2;
Opinion of the Justices,
The question of standing is somewhat less pellucid. It is black-letter law that:
The basic requirements for Article III standing are that the petitioner is someone who has suffered or is threatened by injury in fact to a cognizable interest, that the injury is causally connected to the defendant’s action, and that it can be abated by a remedy the court is competent to give.
*18
Save Our Heritage, Inc. v. FAA,
To be sure, that injury was redressable when NERCC commenced this litigation. But time did not stand still, and Massport subsequently revised the policy applicable to Northern Avenue. This revision rendered the as-applied portion of the Northern Avenue claim moot.
See Becker v. FEC,
NERCC concedes that the original permit policy no longer applies to Northern Avenue, but asserts that it continues to apply to other public streets under Mass-port’s control. This allegation falls short of salvaging the as-applied challenge: the bare possibility that Massport may attempt to enforce its original policy in other locations is insufficient to invoke the narrow exception for cases capable of repetition yet evading review.
See Cruz v. Far-quharson,
This case does not fall into the exception to mootness articulated in
City of Mesquite v. Aladdin’s Castle, Inc.,
This does not mean, of course, that NERCC’s claim regarding other Mass-port-owned streets is completely eclipsed. NERCC has alleged that the original policy still applies in those venues, and it has challenged that policy
on its face.
“It is well established that in the area of freedom of expression an overbroad regulation may be subject to facial review....”
Forsyth County v. Nationalist Movement,
505
*19
U.S. 123, 129,
We thus conclude that four issues are properly before us: (1) the constitutionality of Massport’s ban on leafletting at the Fish Pier; (2) the facial validity of Mass-port’s newly-promulgated leafletting regulations vis-a-vis Northern Avenue; (3) the facial validity of Massport’s original leaf-letting policy vis-á-vis streets and sidewalks apart from Northern Avenue; and (4) the correctness of the district court’s denial of attorneys’ fees.
We quickly dispense with the third issue. The district court never focused on this claim — although preserved, it was not emphasized below — and the record is simply too sketchy to tell whether Massport controls any other public streets or sidewalks. Massport denies such ownership, but a map of its South Boston properties appears to indicate that other streets, including Avenue D, traverse them. Whether Massport controls those streets, and whether sidewalks run alongside, are even more enigmatic questiоns on this record. Due to this pervasive uncertainty, we think that the course of prudence is to remand this issue to the district court for factfind-ing. Accordingly, we do not address it further.
III. STANDARD OF REVIEW
Summary judgment is appropriate only “if the pleadings, depositions, answers to interrogatories, and admissions on file, together with the affidavits, if any, show that there is no genuine issue as to any material fact and that the moving party is entitled to a judgment as a matter of law.” Fed.R.Civ.P. 56(c). Thus, the trial court must resolve all disputed facts in favor of the non-moving party and draw all reasonable inferences to that party’s benefit.
See, e.g., Dynamic Image Techs., Inc. v. United States,
On appeal, we utilize the same framework. In that process, we afford de novo review to orders granting or denying summary judgment.
E.g., Suarez v. Pueblo Int'l, Inc.,
IV. THE CONSTITUTIONAL STANDARDS
Leafletting is a respected tradition in our democratic society, and it ranks as one of the core free speech activities shielded by the First Amendment.
United States v. Grace,
A forum can be a traditional public forum, a designated public forum (sometimes called a limited public forum), or a non-public forum. In a traditional or designated public forum, content-neutral restrictions on the time, place, and manner of expression must be narrowly tailored to serve some substantial governmental interest, and must leave open adequate alternative channels of communication.
Id.
at 45-46,
Some spaces — such as public streets, sidewalks, and parks — are presumptively public fora, and in most cases no particularized inquiry into their precise nature is necessary.
See, e.g., Frisby v. Schultz,
In addition to this taxonomy, the case at hand also requires an understanding of the doctrine of prior restraints. This venerable doctrine guards against the threat of government censorship by requiring that public licensing and permit schemes contain adequate substantive and procedural safeguards against arbitrary (or content-based) State action.
See, e.g., FW/PBS, Inc. v. Dallas,
Until very recently, it was unclear whether the
Freedman
formulation applied to content-neutral permit schemes designed to ensure public safety in a traditional public forum.
Compare, e.g., Southeastern Promotions, Ltd. v. Conrad,
V. THE FISH PIER BAN
We divide our discussion of the outright ban on leafletting imposed in respect to the Fish Pier proper into two segments. See supra note 4. We grapple first with the status of the Fish Pier and then ponder the validity of the ban.
*22 A. Status of the Fish Pier.
We consider the Fish Pier to be a property separate and apart from the abutting section of Northern Avenue.
See ISKCON,
NERCC contends that the Fish Pier is a traditional public forum, or, alternatively, a designated public forum. In determining whether either of those labels applies, we must consider both the nature of the property and its past uses.
See ISKCON, SOS
U.S. at 680-82,
Although space on the piеr is no longer limited to activities directly related to receiving, storing, and shipping fish — the Fish Pier is now home to a conference center, two eateries, and several offices— the dominant character of the property is still that of a commercial fishery. Space on the seaward side is used for unloading fish; the two long buildings are used to store the catch; and the central area is used for loading fish onto trucks, which circle around the ECC (formerly known as the Fish Exchange) and exit through the gate onto Northern Avenue. The site is notable for the absence of either sidewalks or other design characteristics that might be viewed as welcoming the general public.
NERCC points out, correctly, that there is an interior roadway on the Fish Pier, and that members of the public enter the premises for a variety of purposes. Furthermore, NERCC has sought to cast doubt upon Massport’s contention that the Fish Pier is a closed facility limited to authorized persons by proffering affidavits of NERCC members who assert that they entered the Fish Pier without being stopped or questioned. But Massport has taken appropriate steps to restrict access to the site; and even if Massport’s policy of restricted access is erratically enforced, the fence, gate, security booth, and signage hardly add up to an open invitation for the public to enter.
We do not believe that these attributes are enough to convert the Fish Pier into a traditional public forum.
See ISKCON, 505
U.S. at 680,
Nor is the Fish Pier a designated public forum. At most, the circumstances suggest that Massport tolerates the presence of some members of the public on the
*23
Fish Pier, including persons attending ECC events, restaurant patrons, and an occasional passerby bent on contemplating the harbor’s scenic beauty. Such tolerance is not tantamount to an affirmative act—and an affirmative act of a gоvernmental body is required to support a finding that the authorities have designated a forum as a place for public expression.
ISKCON,
The proof of the pudding is in the case law. On balance, the Fish Pier is far less of a public space than, say, the airport terminal at issue in
ISKCON
or the post office sidewalk at issue in
Kokinda,
neither of which was found to be a public forum.
See id.
at 683,
B. The Validity of the Ban.
Because the ban on leafletting, as written, is clearly content-neutral, and there is absolutely no record evidence to support an inference that Massport has applied it unevenly, we turn next to the reasonableness of the ban.
At the expense of belaboring the obvious, we reiterate that leafletting is one of the most highly respected (and, therefore, highly protected) ways in which citizens may exercise First Amendment rights.
See Grace,
NERCC bases much of its argument on the fact that the
ISKCON
Court invalidated a ban on leafletting in an airport. However, NERCC’s attempts tо reason from that analogy are unpersuasive.
ISKCON
did not go so far as to suggest that a ban on leafletting is always unconstitutional. To the contrary, the case suggests that we should refrain from basing a reasonableness determination on any single factor (such as whether a ban involves leafletting or whether a non-public forum is a multi-purpose facility), encouraging us instead to weigh all the factors that point in favor of allowing speech against those that support the need for restrictions.
See ISKCON,
We proceed from the general to the particular. As said, the Fish Pier accommodates multiple uses, and thus is distinguishable from the sidewalk in
Ko-kinda
and from other single-purpose fora.
See ISKCON,
This brings us to Massport’s rationale for barring the distribution of handbills on the Fish Pier. 7 Massport has offered several reasons supporting the ban. Some of these reasons are of uncertain force in the First Amendment calculus (e.g., Mass-port’s insistence that it may legitimately exclude leafletters from the Fish Pier because they are undesirable to tenants or because the Fish Pier is classified as a restricted area), and we do not dwell on them. Rather, we go directly to Mass-port’s principal rationale: that public safety would be endangered if leafletting were allowed at the entrance to the ECC.
As an abstract matter, this rationale stands on solid legal footing.
See Hill,
In an effort to parry this thrust, NERCC argues that Massport has exhibited a general disregard for pedestrian safety by allowing pedestrians to walk the length of the pier to attend events at the ECC (or, sometimes, merely to gaze at the harbor). NERCC’s factual premise is sound: a pedestrian must traverse the interior roadway to reach and enter the ECC. But NERCC’s suggested conclusion — that Massport cares not a fig for pedestrian safety — does not follow.
At most, NERCC’s allegations suggest that a leafletting ban would not solve every safety problem on the Fish Pier. But even in a public forum, “partial solutions” may be acceptable.
Globe Newspaper Co. v. Beacon Hill Arch’l Comm’n,
Here, there is such a basis for differentiating between leafletters and ordinary pedestrians. Given the peculiar setting of the ECC entrance, leafletters run a serious risk of obstructing vehicular traffic and distracting pedestrians as they traverse the roadway.
*25 We have said enough on this score. Massport’s public safety concerns pass the reasonableness screen. Accordingly, we hold that Massport’s interest in public safety in the context of a commercial fishery and truck depot justifies the outright ban on leafletting activity that it has imposed (at least in front of the ECC, see supra note 7).
VI. THE NORTHERN AVENUE PERMIT
We next address NERCC’s challenge to Massport’s newly-adopted regulations (which pertain to leafletting on Northern Avenue, in the vicinity of the WTC). Two things are clear: the sidewalks along Northern Avenue constitute a traditional public forum,
see Frisby,
A. The Adequacy of the Standards.
NERCC charges that the regulations afford Massport unbridled discretion to deny leafletting requests. It seems obvious, however, that certain provisions contained in the regulations, specifiсally, the notice and “automatic permit” provisions, are purely ministerial. Those provisions involve no affirmative action on Massport’s part.
The fact that permits issue automatically does not end our inquiry. The regulations do identify several instances in which either Massport officials or police officers may deny or revoke permits by acting affirmatively. We look closely at those provisions.
Subparagraph E.2 allows Massport to revoke a permit based on particular conduct by leafletters. Because this proviso grants discretion to limit activity at the time when it occurs, it is not a prior restraint on speech, but, rather, a means through which public safety personnel .may terminate an activity that becomes dangerous or comes to violate the time, place, and manner restrictions contained in the regulations. As such, the proviso constitutes an unremarkable and ubiquitous safeguard, constitutional on its face. Whether the power that it vests in public officials may, at some future date, be applied in an unconstitutional manner is not now before us.
Subparagraphs E.l and E.3 are a different breed. Those provisions are pri- or restraints on speech because each of them envisions revocation of a permit
before
the leafletting event begins.
8
Consequently, these rules may be sustained only if they contain “narrow, objective, and definite” criteria.
Shuttlesworth,
Subparagraph E.l gives the DPS power to deny or revoke a permit if the proposed activity would present “a danger to public safety or would impede the con
*26
venient passage of pedestrian or vehicular traffic.” Subparagraph E.3 authorizes Massport to bar access to an area “for purposes of construction or to ensure safe and convenient travel to an event” by issuing a specific written directive explaining the extent of, and justification for, the closure. Public safety and convenience are paradigmatically permissible considerations in the issuance of permits.
See, e.g., Cox v. New Hampshire,
A more difficult question is whether these regulations are sufficiently definite to limit official discretion.
See Thomas,
534 U.S. at -,
B. Narrow Tailoring.
This leaves the status of the notice and permit revocation provisions as time, place, and manner restrictions. Massport contends that the information supplied in the notice allows it to allocate security resources appropriately and to accommodate competing requests for the use of limited space. Relatedly, it points to the narrow, thronged sidewalks of Northern Avenue and insists that the ability to modify, coordinate, and sometimes revoke permits is necessary to protect public safety and convenience there.
NERCC does not challenge Massport’s version of the underlying facts: the area is congested; the sidewalks are crowded; and there is not much space for movement. NERCC also concedes that requirements such as those contained in the regulations may very well address substantial governmental interests in the case of disruptive uses of the space (e.g., parades or rallies). It persists, however, in claiming that the regulations are not narrowly tailored because they encompass even solitary leaflet-ting.
*27
NERCC’s argument on this point hinges primarily on its reading of the Supreme Court’s decision in
Lovell v. City of Griffin,
In
Lovell,
the Court struck down a permit requirement that applied to the distribution of handbills on municipal sidewalks.
Id.
at 451,
To reconcile these competing interests, our constitutional jurisprudence applies different tests depending on whether a particular location—whatever its use—is deemed to be a traditional public forum, a designated public forum, or a non-public forum.
Compare id.
at 838,
What we have said does not mean that the particular type of speech activity is immaterial in evaluating the legitimacy of restrictions. It is the function of the narrow tailoring inquiry to determine whether the State’s articulated rationale actually supports restrictions placed on particular conduct.
See McGuire v. Reilly,
Relying principally on
Community for Creative Non-Violence v. Turner,
*28
In
CCNV,
the D.C. Circuit held that a similar regulation failed the narrow tailoring test because it affected many incidents of free expression that posed little or no threat to the safety and convenience of persons in a public forum.
Id.
at 1392. Other courts reached similar conclusions on particular facts.
See, e.g., Douglas v. Brownell,
Aside from the possibility of a chilling effect (a possibility that we already have considered and discounted, see supra Part VI(A)), the only burden that the permit revocation provision imposes is on those against whom it is improperly invoked. This means, in practice, that Massport may have significantly more ability to limit large parades or demonstrations than small-scale leafletting. That is more an issue of application than a drafting requirement: Massport is not under any mandate to adopt regulations that, on their face, are specific to each form of expression.
This leaves only the question of adequate alternative modes of communication. NERCC, though ably represented, has made no developed argument that the regulations, аs applied to Northern Avenue, leave it without adequate alternative modes of communication. The point is, therefore, forfeited.
See United States v. Zannino,
NERCC has one final string to its bow: it attacks the “written notice” requirement on the ground that this condition mandates self-identification (and, thus, burdens a leafletter’s right to anonymity). This argument derives from
McIntyre v. Ohio Elections Comm’n,
McIntyre
will not support the weight that NERCC consigns to it. That case dealt with a public identification requirement for each leafletter,
As a fallback, NERCC sings the praises of
Rosen v. Port of Portland,
Collins
is not controlling here. That case dealt with labor organizing, not leaf-letting, and did not imply — nor is there any reason to believe' — that a registration requirement burdens leafletters more than it burdens parade organizers or would-be solicitors.
See Rescue Army v. Mun. Court of Los Angeles,
Massport insists that the notice requirement allows it not only to allocate security resources properly but also to deal with competing applications for limited space. Given the physical characteristics of the area and the uses to which it is put, these concerns ring true. This locale accommodates a significant volume of pedestrian traffic, which, when coupled with the narrow sidewalks and ubiquitous road construction, results in rampant congestion. Northern Avenue itself is a major thoroughfare, and vehicular traffic is correspondingly heavy. In light of these idiosyncrasies, it appears reasonable for Massport to require advance notice of leaf-letting events in this location so that security officers may ensure that all leafletters comply with the time, place, and manner restrictions established in the interests of public safety.
That ends this aspect of the case. We find that the challenged regulations meet the narrow tailoring requirement. We therefore uphold them as content-neutral time, place, and manner restrictions insofar as they pertain to Northern Avenue.
VII. ATTORNEYS’FEES
The Fees Act, 42 U.S.C. § 1988, provides a vehiсle for the recovery of attorneys’ fees by prevailing parties in cases brought pursuant to 42 U.S.C. § 1983.
*30
See, e.g., Lipsett v. Blanco,
In the district court, NERCC relied on the so-called catalyst theory to support this claim.
See New Hampshire v. Adams,
Buckhannon was decided while the district court had NERCC’s fee application under advisement. The court considered, sua sponte, whether NERCC could pass the Buckhannon test and concluded that it could not. NERCC now reshapes its argument to suggest that the demands of Buckhannon have been satisfied here because the district court virtually ordered Massport to revise its regulations.
We review a district court’s grant or denial of attorneys’ fees for manifest abuse of discretion, mindful that the district court has an “intimate knowledge of the nuances of the underlying case.”
Gay Officers Action League v. Puerto Rico,
We have carefully examined the transcript of the pivotal proceeding — the hearing held on January 26, 2000. That transcript reveals an extended colloquy in which the district court discussed the possibility of ordering Massport to reduce its regulations to writing and to infuse them with a greater degree of specificity. In the end, however, the court eschewed an order and gave Massport sixty days within which to decide what (if anything) it wished to do, reserving the рossibility that the court might enter an order at a later date.
Within the sixty-day period, Massport submitted a revised policy to the court. That policy was the subject of comments by the court and by NERCC’s counsel at a hearing held on August 16, 2000. The court then gave Massport a further extension of time to fine-tune its proposal. Massport adopted the new regulations, in final form, on August 28, 2000.
The district court did not compel Mass-port to adopt the regulations. Under the Buckhannon rule, that ends the matter. Because the district court entered no explicit order compelling, or even leading to, Massport’s adoption of the regulations, we cannot say that the district court’s refusal to award attorneys’ fees constituted an abuse of discretion.
VIII. CONCLUSION
We summarize succinctly. Because Massport’s original permit policy no longer *31 governs Northern Avenue, we dismiss as moot NERCC’s as-applied challenge with respect to the leafletting incident that occurred there. We remand to the district court for consideration of what, if any, other public streets and sidewalks are controlled by Massport; if so, for a determination as to whеther the original permit policy still governs those streets and sidewalks; and if so, for an adjudication of the constitutionality of that policy. We caution that nothing contained in our opinion should be construed to preclude the possibility that if the original policy applies to other public sidewalks, that policy may be unconstitutional.
We uphold the district court’s finding that the Fish Pier is a non-public forum, and, thus, we affirm the court’s determination that the total ban on leafletting in front of the ECC is constitutional. We also uphold, as against NERCC’s facial challenge, the permit scheme contained in Massport’s newly-revised regulations pertaining to the sidewalks adjacent to Northern Avenue. 11 In that respect, we note that these regulations are content-neutral, vest no excessive discretion in Massport, and constitute a narrowly tailored restriction on speech. Finally, we affirm the lower court’s denial of NERCC’s application for attorneys’ fees, and direct that costs be taxed in favor of Massport.
So Ordered.
Notes
. In the proceedings below the defendants named were Virginia Buckingham (Mass-port’s executive directоr) and Joseph M. Lawless (Massport’s director of public safety). By the time these appeals were argued, other individuals had succeeded to these offices. We have substituted the incumbents as defendants and appellees pursuant to Fed. R.App. P. 43(c). Inasmuch as they are sued only in their official capacities, we refer to them throughout as “Massport.”
See Am. Policyholders Ins. Co. v. Nyacol Prods., Inc.,
. NERCC does question whether the restrictions on entry to the Fish Pier are enforced, but its counsel made clear at oral argument that this factual dispute is only relevant to whether the Fish Pier is a public forum We shall return to that question shortly. See infra Part V(A).
. Even if
City of Mesquite
applied, the Court has made clear that, under these circumstances, the granting of equitable relief is discretionary.
See City of Mesquite,
. In
Jews for Jesus, Inc. v. Mass. Bay Transp. Auth.,
. The
ISKCON
Court upheld a ban on solicitation within an airport terminal. In a companion case, the Court struck down a concomitant ban on leafletting, basing that decision on the reasons stated in the concurrences and dissent in
ISKCON. Lee v. Int’l Soc’y for Krishna Consciousness, Inc., 505
U.S. 830, 831,
. It does not require citation of authority to acknowledge that
Thomas,
which comes to us with the imprimatur of the Supreme Court, supersedes any contrary intimation contained in our earlier precedent, namely,
Jews for Jesus, Inc. v. Mass. Bay Transp. Auth.,
. Although the regulations cover the Fish Pier as a whole and apply not only to leafletting but also to other First Amendment activities, the parties focus on leafletting in the vicinity of the ECC. Accordingly, we limit our holding to that activity and place.
. To be sure, the automatic issuance of permits negates one potential concern about the regulations, namely, that officials could effectively deny permits by dragging their feet.
See FW/PBS,
. To be sure, the Court has, in certain contexts, rejected particular justifications for a leafletting ban, e.g.,
Schneider v. State (Town of Irvington),
. While we have grave doubts about the validity of a blanket registration requirement for leafletters anywhere in view of the relatively few problems intrinsic to leafletting,
see ISK-CON,
. We read the amended regulations to apply to the stretch of Northern Avenue running between B and D streets (roughly a city block), which stretch contains the WTC. Throughout, our discussion of the amended regulations and our holding concerning leaf-letting are limited by that understanding of the geography. If, on remand, it appears that Massport controls sidewalks adjacent to other portions of Northern Avenue, then the district court is free to entertain challenges to whatever permit requirement(s) Massport may seek to impose in such locations.
