Opinion
Appellant Prisoners Union is a nonprofit organization concerned with the welfare of prisoners and their families. By this action for declaratory and injunctive relief, it and certain of its members challenge the power of state prison officials to ban it from distributing informational literature to visitors of inmates in a public parking lot located on prison property but outside prison walls. We hold that such activity is protected by the federal and state Constitutions, and that it cannot be banned absent a showing that such activity would pose an overriding threat to prison security, or to another similar state interest. Since we find no such showing on this record, we conclude that appellants are entitled to the relief which they seek.
The prison at issue is the Correctional Training Facility known as Soledad, located two miles north of the town of Soledad in Monterey County. Two of the three facilities at Soledad, North and Central, share a common parking lot outside the entrance building to the prison. The lot is open to members of the general public wishing to visit a prisoner or to purchase cráfts in the prison hobby shop located in the entrance building. No security check or clearance is required as it is for entry into the prison itself. On weekends, it is common for several hundred persons to come to the entrance building, via cars or buses, to visit prisoners. The only prisoners allowed in the parking lot are those classified as “minimum B custody” (i.e., prisoners with low assaultive tendencies who are shortly due to be released) who are assigned to maintain the area. Organizations representing employees of the prison are permitted to use the parking lot as a forum for communicating with those employees.
In March 1980, several members of the Prisoners Union attempted to distribute literature within the entrance building to the prison, but they *933 were told to leave, and were escorted off prison-owned property. They recommenced their activity at the gate to the prison property, just off the county frontage road, but sheriff’s deputies instructed them to leave because stopping cars created a traffic hazard.
In April 1980, the Prisoners Union wrote the Soledad prison superintendent, requesting permission to set up a card table in the corner of the visitors parking lot to give information and literature to the visitors of the prisoners as they are leaving the institution. The letter stated that the union wished to keep families of prisoners informed of numerous bills being considered in the Legislature, and that there was no other way of doing it. It offered to inform prison authorities in advance of any such activity, to provide identifications of persons who would come on the grounds, to limit the number of persons who would come, and to stay within a designated area.
The superintendent at Soledad denied the union’s request without explanation, and the union then referred it to the Director of Corrections. She responded that it was the policy of the department that, except for recognized employee organizations, private organizations were not permitted “to enter institution grounds to further their aims.” Appellants then instituted this action for declaratory and injunctive relief.
At the hearing on the order to show cause, Dennis Martell, program administrator at Soledad, was asked to explain the reason for the ban on informational activity by nonemployee organizations. He stated: “The administration at Soledad believes it’s counterproductive and it threatens the safety and security of the institution .. . there are a number of issues that are raised or provided to the visitors coming into the institution that we feel either excites or agitates or develops some unrest among the inmates that could have some detrimental effects.” He also stated that the department is concerned with such activity “being a front for organizing within the institution by the Prisoners’ Union.” Finally, he testified that the parking lot is a busy, congested area with minimal security, in which contraband such as weapons and narcotics are found, and that if tower guards were to survey activities in the parking lot they would have to take their attention away from other areas, such as the fence around the prison.
The trial court found the evidence insufficient to establish any prior breach of prison security by members of the Prisoners Union or their agents, but it also found that “to allow members of the public, whether it be the Prisoners’ Union or any other group, to distribute literature as requested by the Prisoners’ Union herein, would create a ‘public forum’ *934 on prison grounds and substantially increase security problems at the prison,” and that “[o]ther reasonable means of distribution are available including off-grounds distribution, direct distribution to inmates, and distribution to inmate families by mail or otherwise.” Based on these findings, and what it considered to be applicable legal principles, the trial court denied the requested preliminary injunction. Upon request by appellants, the trial court entered judgment denying a permanent injunction and declaratory relief, and it is from that judgment that this appeal is pursued.
Discussion
I.
The peaceful pamphleteering appellants propose to engage in is a form of expression protected by the First Amendment to the United States Constitution
(Organization for a Better Austin
v.
Keefe
(1971)
Respondents contend that the prohibition against use of the prison parking lot is ipso facto a reasonable regulation as to place because such an area is not and cannot be made to be a “public forum” for the purpose of communication. Indeed, they suggest that analysis need proceed no further than that simple proposition. The trial court’s findings reflect, at least in part, a similar view of the matter.
It appears from our analysis of the cases, however, that the principles governing the right to free expression in public places, including grounds of a prison to which the public has access, cannot be contained within such a rigid formulation. The term “public forum,” which originated in a dissenting opinion by Justice Douglas in
Adderley
v.
Florida
(1966)
These are not the only areas where speech has received constitutional protection, however. Rather, as the Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit has observed: “A hierarchy of forums emerges from the cases. At one extreme—and most protected from any form of regulation—are areas such as public streets . .. and parks, traditionally recognized as centers for the public communication of ideas. Less protected are facilities such as libraries and schools, where the government has the power to limit speech to maintain the order required to carry on the purpose of those institutions. Least shielded from regulation are public institutions which do not perform speech-related functions at all—such as hospitals, jails or military bases. Here the government is free to exclude even peaceful speech and assembly which interferes in any way with the functioning of those organizations.
The basic thrust of these cases is to limit regulation to that which proscribes expression that is ‘basically incompatible with the normal activity of a particular place at a particular time.''” (United States
v.
Douglass
(9th Cir. 1978)
The Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit recently relied upon
Groyned
for a similar analysis: “[W]hen the state restricts speech in some way, the court must look to the special interests of the government in regulating speech in the particular location. [Citation.] The focus of the court’s inquiry must be whether there is a
basic incompatibility
between the communication and the primary activity of an area. [Citation.]”
(American Future Systems
v.
Pa. State University
(3d Cir. 1980)
When the government institution at issue is not engaged in speech-related functions and there is a showing that speech or assembly would interfere with the functions that are performed there, it is necessary to consider whether alternative channels for communication exist
{Tribe, supra,
at pp. 690-691). Relevant to that consideration is the relationship between the speech and the premises, as where “the place represents the object of protest, the seat of authority against which the protest is directed ... [or] where the relevant audience may be found.”
(Wolin
v.
Port of New York Authority
(2d Cir. 1968)
Jones
v.
North Carolina Prisoners’ Union
(1977)
The union’s equal protection claim was based upon evidence that other organizations, such as Alcoholics Anonymous and the Jaycees, were permitted to engage in activities within the prison.
1
In rejecting that claim, the Supreme Court criticized the district court for treating the case “as if the prison environment were essentially a ‘public forum.’” (
*938
The court in
Jones
was careful to limit its opinion to communications among inmates “within the prison walls.” (
Thus,
Jones
does not constitute authority for a categorical ban on communication among free citizens in a public parking lot, simply because the parking lot is located on prison property.
2
The question is not merely whether the parking lot is or is not a “public forum.” Rather, the question is “one of balancing, based on the nature of the forum, the governmental interest in enforcing the restrictions against the inhibitions the restrictions impose on the speech-related activity.”
(Concerned Jewish Youth
v.
McGuire, supra,
California authorities uphold the right of expression in public places on the basis of principles which are at least as protective of speech as those we have considered, and in some respects more protective. To the extent that greater protection is afforded by California authorities, it is justified by article I, section 5 of the California Constitution, “[a] protective provision more definitive and inclusive than the First Amendment.”
(Robins
v.
Pruneyard Shopping Center, supra,
*939
In
In re Hoffman, supra,
II.
In reviewing respondents’ policy, the trial court appears to have accepted respondents’ all-or-nothing approach: the prison parking lot cannot be termed a “public forum” because, if it were, there would be no way to protect the prison’s security interests from the flood of potential users. This reasoning is reflected in the court’s finding that “to allow members of the public, whether it be the prisoners’ union or any other group, to distribute literature as requested by the Prisoners’ Union herein, would create a ‘public forum’ on prison grounds and substantially increase security problems at the prison.” As the court observed in its notice of intended decision, “one card table inevitably leads to another.”
This approach is not in accord with the constitutional principles we have discussed. Leaving to one side the special interest the Prisoners Union has in utilizing this particular location as a forum, and accepting for purposes of analysis the somewhat dubious hypothesis that if the Prisoners’ Union is allowed to distribute literature in this rather remote
*940
location all manner of organizations will seek similar privileges, it does not follow that such privileges must be granted without limitation. On the contrary, it is quite clear that prison authorities would be entitled to impose reasonable restrictions as to time, place, and manner of use; and these might well include a rationing of use on some content-neutral basis as required by security or other legitimate governmental interests. (See
Wirta
v.
Alameda-Contra Costa Transit Dist.
(1967)
Even as to communications among inmates
within
a prison, regulations must be drafted “no more broadly than they need be to meet the perceived threat.”
(Jones
v.
North Carolina Prisoners’ Union, supra,
Only three proffered reasons for the policy at issue appear in the record. Two of these relate peculiarly to the Prisoners Union, and thus do not support the broad ban on distribution by all nonemployee organizations. These are (1) that visitors raise with inmates the issues discussed in appellants’ leaflets, and this in turn may develop unrest within the prison; and (2) that the activities proposed may be a “front” for organizing within the prison. No evidence was offered in support of either conjecture, nor did prison authorities suggest any reason for distinguishing in these respects between the activities proposed by appellants and other activities which are permitted. Prison authorities permit direct communications between the Prisoners Union and inmates, both by correspondence and through individual visitation. (See
In re Price
(1979)
The remaining reason offered by respondents in support of the ban was that the parking lot is a congested area, in which contraband such as weapons and narcotics are found. Precisely how the limited activity proposed by appellants would add to problems of contraband was not indicated, nor was there any showing that problems of congestion were such as to pose risks to security or other institutional interests beyond adequate control through regulations as to time, place, and manner. 4
Since there was no substantial evidence of interference, inquiry as to alternative means of communication was not required.
(In re Hoffman, supra,
*942
We do not attempt here to decide what limitations might be placed upon the distribution of literature by the Prisoners Union or other organizations in the parking lot upon an adequate showing of governmental interest. We conclude only that neither the trial court’s findings nor the record establish a state interest sufficient to justify the absolute prohibition of expression contained in respondents’ policy.
5
This conclusion is supported by the federal authorities we have discussed. It is mandated as well by California constitutional free speech principles which are even ‘“more definitive and inclusive than the First Amendment.’”
(Robins
v.
Pruneyard Shopping Center, supra,
The judgment is reversed, and the matter remanded to the trial court with directions to enter an injunction in accordance with the views expressed in this opinion.
Miller, J., and Smith, J., concurred.
A petition for a rehearing was denied October 15, 1982, and the opinion was modified to read as printed above. Respondents’ petition for a hearing by the Supreme Court was denied December 1, 1982. Newman, J., did not participate therein. Mosk, J., and Richardson, J., were of the opinion that the petition should be granted.
Notes
Though employee organizations are excused from the policy under review, appellants assert no equal protection claim.
Nor is
Adderley
v.
Florida, supra,
In
Robins
v.
Pruneyard Shopping Center, supra,
Respondents insist that the record reflects a broader concern for security on the part of prison authorities. They point to testimony by Mr. Martell that, “The administration at Soledad believes it’s counterproductive and it threatens the safety and security of the institution,” and to his characterization of the parking lot as “an area where we find contraband such as weapons, narcotics, anything that you can imagine, alcohol, activities in the parking lot that threaten our safety and security.” (Respondents’ italics.)
Invocation of a general concern over unidentified threats to safety or security cannot substitute, however, for evidence that the activities of appellants would endanger the safety or security of the prison in some specific way. We are mindful of Mr. Martell’s testimony (ante, p. 933) that activities in the parking lot cannot readily be supervised by tower guards; but there is no evidence linking that testimony to specific threats posed by the proposed activities.
In their petition for rehearing, respondents apparently concede that it is their burden to establish that the proposed activity would interfere in some way with the functioning of the prison. They contend that this court, by its reference to an “overriding threat to prison security, or to another similar state interest” (ante, p. 932), and by its reference to the “basically incompatible” language in Grayned (ante, p. 936) has established a different, and inappropriate, standard. To the extent that there is more than a semantic difference among these formulations, the difference is inconsequential for purposes of this case. We find no substantial evidence in this record to support a finding of interference.
