Case Information
*1 Before WOLLMAN, BRIGHT, and HANSEN, Circuit Judges.
___________
WOLLMAN, Circuit Judge.
The State of Missouri appeals from the district court’s grant of preliminary and permanent injunctions against the enforcement of section 10.715 of the Missouri code, which prevents abortion service providers from receiving state family-planning funds. We vacate the injunctions and remand with directions.
I.
Missouri appropriates funds to assist low-income residents with family planning. As a qualified family-planning service provider, Planned Parenthood has received funds since this program began in 1993. It provides both family-planning and abortion services, sometimes using the same facilities and marketing materials for both services. Until 1996, Planned Parenthood was allowed to receive program funds because it maintained accounting procedures that assured the State that no family-planning funds were spent on abortion services.
In 1996, however, the Missouri legislature decided to prohibit organizations that provide abortion services from receiving family-planning funds. According to the State, abortion service providers like Planned Parenthood were receiving indirect benefits from family-planning funds through shared revenue, marketing expenses, and fixed expenses, and through the “imprimatur of the state.” Believing that these benefits contradicted Missouri’s policy of encouraging childbirth over abortion, the Missouri legislature enacted statutes for fiscal years 1996 and 1998 that attempted to prohibit abortion service providers from receiving funds. These statutes were held to be unconstitutional by the district court, decisions which the State did not appeal. Instead, for fiscal year 1999 the Missouri legislature devised the three-tiered approach that is at issue in this case. See H.B. 1010, § 10.715, 89th Leg., 2d Sess. (Mo. 1998). *3 Tier I of section 10.715 prohibits family-planning funds from being used to perform, assist, encourage, or make direct referrals for abortions. In addition, it provides that organizations or affiliates of organizations that “provide or promote abortions” are not eligible for family-planning funds. Id.
Tier II takes effect only if Tier I is found unconstitutional. It provides funds only to organizations that qualify under specified state and federal statutes. Tier III takes effect only if both Tiers I and II are found unconstitutional. It provides family- planning funds only to the Missouri Department of Health and its subagencies. Planned Parenthood would not qualify for funds under Tier II or Tier III.
Planned Parenthood brought the present action to enjoin the enforcement of section 10.715. It claimed that the statute placed an unconstitutional condition on the receipt of state funds, violated the Equal Protection Clause, and constituted a bill of attainder. The district court found that the entire three-tiered scheme violated the Equal Protection Clause and declined to discuss the other grounds for the challenge.
II.
We review de novo the constitutionality of a statute. See United States v.
McMasters,
A. Unconstitutional Conditions
Neither Congress nor the states may condition the granting of government funds
on the forfeiture of constitutional rights. See Speiser v. Randall,
Not all funding classifications, however, can be said to actually interfere with
constitutional rights. See Rust,
The Supreme Court has attempted to demarcate a line, past which funding
conditions constitute too great an interference with the exercise of fundamental rights
to be deemed constitutional. In Maher, the Court held that states are not required to
fund abortions. The Court went on to indicate, however, that a state’s denial of all
welfare benefits to otherwise qualified women who choose to have abortions might
well be subject to strict scrutiny review.
In Rust, the Supreme Court spoke more directly about the line between constitutional and unconstitutional funding conditions. See 500 U.S. at 196-98. Legislation that simply dictates the proper scope of government-funded programs is constitutional, while legislation that restricts protected grantee activities outside government programs is unconstitutional:
Title X expressly distinguishes between a Title X grantee and a Title X project. . . . The regulations govern the scope of the Title X project’s activities, and leave the grantee unfettered in its other activities. The Title X grantee can continue to perform abortions, provide abortion- related services, and engage in abortion advocacy; it simply is required to conduct those activities through programs that are separate and independent from the project that receives Title X funds.
Id. at 196. The regulations found constitutional in Rust required abortion activities to be “physically and financially separate” from government-funded projects. Id. at 180- 81.
The Supreme Court has addressed the degree of independence that funding
conditions may require of grantees’ privately funded, protected conduct in non-
abortion cases. In F.C.C. v. League of Women Voters, the Court found the Public
Broadcasting Act unconstitutional because it prohibited grantees from editorializing,
even if such activities were conducted outside the scope of the government program.
See 468 U.S. 364, 400 (1984). The Court held that the statute would have been
constitutional, however, had it allowed grantees to establish affiliates to editorialize.
Id. In Regan v. Taxation With Representation, the Court held that a refusal to fund
grantees’ lobbying activities was constitutional because it allowed them to engage in
the protected conduct through independent affiliates. See 461 U.S. 540, 544-45
(1983). See also National Endowment for the Arts v. Finley,
The question before us, then, is whether the legislation in the present case constitutionally restricts the use of funds within the State family-planning program or unconstitutionally restricts grantee activities outside the program. Specifically, we must decide whether section 10.715 prohibits grantees from engaging in abortion services through independent affiliates.
Tier I of section 10.715 designates funds to the Department of Health: For the purpose of funding family planning services, pregnancy testing and follow-up services, provided that none of these funds may be expended for the purpose of performing, assisting or encouraging for abortion, and further provided that none of these funds may be expended to directly or indirectly subsidize abortion services or administrative expenses, as verified by independent audit. None of these funds may be paid or granted to organizations or affiliates of organizations which provide or promote abortions. None of the funds may be expended for directly referring for abortion, however nondirective counseling relating to the pregnancy may be provided and nothing in this section requires an *7 agency receiving federal funds pursuant to Title X of the Public Health Services Act to refrain from performing any service required pursuant to Title X, regulations adopted pursuant to Title X or the Title X Program Guidelines for Project Grants for Family Planning Services as published by the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services in order to remain eligible to receive Title X funds, to be eligible to receive state funds pursuant to this section.
H.B. 1010, § 10.715(1), 89th Leg., 2d Sess. (Mo. 1998).
Although Tier I provides that “organizations or affiliates of organizations which provide or promote abortions” are not eligible for family-planning funds, nothing in Tier I expressly prohibits grantees from maintaining an affiliation with an abortion service provider, so long as the affiliated abortion service provider does not directly or indirectly receive State family-planning funds. Tier I is therefore facially ambiguous regarding whether an organization that receives State funds may be affiliated with an abortion service provider. Several factors weigh in favor of interpreting Tier I to allow such affiliations, however.
Although it does not define the term “promote abortions,” Tier I expressly prohibits only “assisting or encouraging for abortion” and “directly referring for abortion.” It specifically allows grantees to provide “nondirective counseling relating to the pregnancy.” Furthermore, the State has acknowledged that Tier I allows grantees to advocate in favor of abortion outside of any patient relationship and so long as that speech occurs with private funds and outside the scope of the program. See Appellant’s Br. at 14.
In addition, Tier I would cross the line established in Rust, League of Women Voters, and Regan, and hence be an unconstitutional condition, if we interpreted it to prohibit grantees from having any affiliation with abortion service providers. We interpret statutes to avoid serious constitutional problems, so long as the statutory *8 language is fairly susceptible to a constitutional construction. Accordingly, we construe the language of Tier I to allow a grantee to maintain an affiliation with an abortion service provider, so long as that affiliation does not include direct referrals for abortion. Under this construction, Tier I is not an unconstitutional condition, because it allows grantees to exercise their constitutionally protected rights through independent affiliates.
To remain truly “independent,” however, any affiliate that provides abortion
services must not be directly or indirectly subsidized by a section 10.715 grantee. This
will ensure that State funds are not spent on an activity that Missouri has chosen not
to subsidize. See Regan,
This interpretation of Tier I respects the State’s valid policy decision to remove
its imprimatur from abortion services and to encourage childbirth over abortion. By
requiring abortion services to be provided through independent affiliates, Tier I ensures
that abortion service providers will not receive benefits in the form of marketing, fixed
expenses, or State family-planning funds from section 10.715 grantees. It respects
Planned Parenthood’s constitutional rights by allowing it to establish an independent
affiliate to provide abortion services outside the government program. See Rust, 500
U.S. at 198; Regan, 461 U.S. at 545. The Constitution does not guarantee that
*9
recipients of State funds will not be required to “expend effort” to comply with funding
restrictions. See Legal Aid of Hawaii,
B. Equal Protection
Planned Parenthood also argues that Tier I violates the Equal Protection Clause
by discriminating against organizations that provide abortion services. This argument
is based on the notion that physicians and clinics have a fundamental constitutional
right to provide abortion services. Generally, “where fundamental rights and liberties
are asserted under the Equal Protection Clause, classifications which might invade or
restrain them must be closely scrutinized and carefully confined.” Harper v. Virginia
State Bd. of Elections,
Any constitutional right of clinics to provide abortion services, however, is
derived directly from women’s constitutional right to choose abortion. See Planned
Parenthood v. Casey,
A statute that affects the right to abortion is an undue burden if it has the
“purpose or effect of placing a substantial obstacle in the path of a woman seeking an
abortion.” Casey,
The district court made limited factual findings regarding the purpose and effects of section 10.715. See Order of July 17, 1998; Order of June 27, 1996. With respect to legislative purpose, the district court found that the legislature intended to discriminate against abortion service providers in granting State family-planning funds. See Order of July 17, 1998, at 5-6 (citing Order of June 27, 1996). Rather than focusing on this discrimination, however, which is plainly allowed under cases such as Maher, Harris, and Rust, see supra Part II.A, the district court should have focused on whether the legislature intended to place an undue burden in the path of women seeking abortions. The district court could not have found that the legislature intended section 10.715 to be an undue burden on women’s access to abortion, because nothing in the record demonstrates such a motive.
To the contrary, the record suggests that the legislature was aware that denying Planned Parenthood’s family-planning funds would not affect Planned Parenthood’s ability to provide abortion services. Consistent with our interpretation of Tier I in Part II.A above, the comments of the legislators show that discriminating against abortion providers in granting state funds was primarily intended to remove the imprimatur of the State from abortion services. See Statements of Rep. from Jasper County, Appellant’s Appx. at 454-55, 476; Statement of Sen. from Boone County, Appellant’s Appx. at 401; Statement of Rep. from Buchanan County, Appellee’s Appx. at 362; Statement of Sen. from Texas County, Appellant’s Appx. at 362.
Nor would Tier I have the effect of placing an undue burden on women seeking abortion services, for the statute would have at most an extremely attenuated effect upon the availability of abortion services. Under Casey, incidental effects are not enough to render unconstitutional a regulation touching on abortion.
Moreover, Planned Parenthood has consistently maintained that State family- planning funds do not subsidize abortion services in any way. Instead, abortion services are funded through independent private sources. Because nothing in section 10.715 restricts Planned Parenthood’s use of private funds, it cannot claim that denying it family-planning funds would unduly burden women’s access to abortion services.
Tier I is fundamentally different from the statute at issue in Atchison, which we found to serve “no purpose other than to make abortions more difficult.” See 126 F.3d at 1049. The statute is intended to effectuate the State’s constitutionally permissible decision to favor childbirth over abortion, and any effects limiting women’s access to abortion services are strictly incidental and do not constitute an undue burden on a woman’s right to abortion.
C. Bills of Attainder
Finally, Planned Parenthood argues that section 10.715 is an unconstitutional
bill of attainder because it imposes “punishment” without a trial. See Selective Serv.
Sys. v. Minnesota Pub. Interest Res. Group,
To rise to the level of “punishment” under the Bill of Attainder Clause, harm
must fall within the traditional meaning of legislative punishment, fail to further a
*12
nonpunitive purpose, or be based on a congressional intent to punish. See id. at 852
(citing Nixon v. Administrator of Gen. Servs.,
III.
Because section 10.715, as we have construed it, passes constitutional muster, we vacate the preliminary and permanent injunctions entered by the district court, and we remand the case with directions that the complaint be dismissed.
A true copy.
Attest:
CLERK, U.S. COURT OF APPEALS, EIGHTH CIRCUIT.
