OPINION
In this appeal, the Village of Glendale, Ohio challenges the district court’s entry of final judgment for Plaintiff Christopher Pagan after we issued an en banc decision Pagan’s favor.
Pagan v. Fruchey,
I.
In July 2003, Christopher Pagan, a resident of Glendale, Ohio, decided to sell his 1970 Mercury Cougar XR7, so he placed a “for sale” sign in its window and parked it on Sharon Road. Shortly thereafter, Pagan received a notice from the Glendale police that his car was in violation of Glendale Traffic Code § 76.06, which made it illegal to park a car on the street “for the purpose of displaying it for sale.” To avoid a citation, Pagan removed the sign. He then filed suit against Glendale and its Chief of Police Matt Fruchey, alleging that the law was unconstitutional because it infringed upon his First Amendment right to engage in commercial speech.
After discovery, the parties agreed that no material facts remained in dispute and filed cross-motions for summary judgment. The district court granted Glendale’s motion. Pagan appealed and a panel of this Court affirmed,
Pagan v. Fruchey,
II.
Glendale notes that the issue appealed in
Pagan I
was whether it was entitled to summary judgment and points to this Court’s decision to “reverse and remand for further proceedings consistent with this opinion” as evidence that our remand instructed the district court to “proceed! ] as if Glendale’s motion for summary judgment had never been filed.”
2
In arguing that we did not decide the merits of Pagan’s claim, Glendale misreads
Pagan I:
we did reach the merits of Pagan’s claim and we decided them in Pagan’s favor, holding section 76.06 unconstitutional. After explaining that the district court erred in failing to put the burden upon Glendale to establish the that the law “directly and materially advances its regulatory interests,”
Pagan I,
Glendale suggests that this result is somehow unfair, but it had ample opportunity to defend its law in the district court at the summary judgment stage prior to the appeal in
Pagan I.
Indeed, Glendale’s position throughout litigation was that there were no material facts in dispute.
3
Further, the legal standard we adopted in
Pagan I
was the basis for Pagan’s motion for summary judgment, and our opinion adopted Pagan’s argument that Fruchey’s affidavit was insufficient to show that the law “directly and materially” advanced Glendale’s interests.
4
Thus, Glendale was on notice to the possibility that it would have to provide evidence to defend its law, and it had a full and fair opportunity to do so. Instead, as Glendale admitted to the district court on remand, it chose not to introduce additional evidence in support of
III.
The judgment of the district court is AFFIRMED.
Notes
. Nominal damages are a symbolic recognition of harm that may be awarded without proof of actual harm and “have only declaratory effect.”
Morrison v. Bd. of Educ.,
. Glendale is correct that a simple reversal of summary judgment would not require the district court to enter judgment for Pagan, but that is not what happened here. Glendale does not dispute that the en banc Court had the authority to reach the merits of Pagan's case, nor could it. See 28 U.S.C. § 2106;
Trs. of Mich. Laborers' Health Care Fund v. Gibbons,
. The first time Glendale suggested there were material facts in dispute was on remand after our en banc decision in Pagan I.
. While perhaps controversial in its application, this standard was not new.
See Eden-field v. Fane,
