Lead Opinion
Vаcated and remanded by published opinion. Judge DAVIS wrote the majority opinion, in which Judge LUTTIG joined.
Chief Judge WILKINSON wrote a dissenting opinion.
OPINION
Appellant Robert Burke, an artist working in South Carolina, challenges the constitutionality of a City of Charleston historic preservation ordinance that governs proposed alterations to exteriors of structures located within historic areas of 'the city. Burke painted a mural on the exterior wall of a restaurant located in an historic area, but the city’s Board of Architectural Review invoked the ordinance and denied the restaurant owner a permit to display the mural. Burke filed suit, and the district court, after a non-jury trial, entered judgment in favor of the city. Burke appeals.
We do not reach the merits of Burke’s constitutional challenge because we find that Burke lacks standing to assert a First Amendment claim. Burke relinquished his First Amendment rights when he sold his mural to the restaurant owner, who alone has the right to display the mural. Thus, lacking a legally cognizable interest in the display of his work, Burke has not suffered an injury sufficient to satisfy the constitutional requirements for standing. Moreover, even were we to conclude that Burke has suffered injury-in-fact, a decision from this Court in Burke’s favor would not redress directly, if at all, the injury Burke presumably suffers. Accordingly, we vacate the judgment and remand with instructions to dismiss the complаint.
I.
Ron Klenk (who is not a party to this appeal) owns a late federal style building located at 348 King Street in Charleston, South Carolina. Klenk operated a night club on the second floor of his building. Klenk decided to open a bar and grill on the first floor of the building. Impressed with the “world of creatures” Burke had created and displayed at an art show held in the night club, Klenk commissioned Burke to paint a mural depicting the creature wоrld on the exterior masonry wall of the building, which is visible from King Street. .At the time of the commission, a mural depicting a willow tree adorned the exterior wall. Burke painted over the willow tree mural with his “colorful cartoon of imaginary characters, including smiling mountains, flying creatures with un-practically small wings and tiny yellow bipeds.” Through the mural, Burke attempts to convey a message of tolerance for diversity by showing different creatures coexisting peacefully.
Klenk’s property is located within the Old and Historic District (“District”) of Charleston. The District boasts the largest collection — numbering approximately 2800 — of historically significant buildings in the United States. The District is the heart of tourist interest in Charleston. In 1931, to further the establishment of an architecturally harmonious environment throughout the District, Charleston enacted its historic preservation ordinances and established its Board of Arсhitectural Review (“BAR”); The BAR reviews all proposed exterior or fixed structural alterations, signs, murals, or other exterior changes to structures in the District before they are effected. The BAR’s purpose is to ensure that alterations are complementary in style, form, color, proportion, texture, and material. Thus, those seeking to make such alterations must submit to the BAR an application for a permit and a рroposal describing the work to be done.
Neither Burke nor Klenk applied for a permit before Burke began to paint the mural. The BAR discovered Burke’s mural while Burke was painting it, and issued a stop work order. Subsequently, Klenk — not Burke — filed an application for a permit. The parties agreed to cover the mural with plywood pending approval of Klenk’s permit .application. Subsequently, they agreed to keep the mural covered for the duration of this litigation.
Burke, but not Klenk, filed suit in district court, alleging that the BAR’s decision to deny Klenk’s permit, the lack of articulable standards for approving work, and the use of a vagué and overbroad ordinance, violated Burke’s free - sрeech and equal protection rights under the first and fourteenth amendments. In its answer, the city raised Burke’s lack of standing as an affirmative defense. Later, however, the city voluntarily abandoned this defense. At the conclusion of a non-jury trial, the district court issued its findings of fact and conclusions of law in a thoughtful and carefully-reasoned opinion. Burke v. City of Charleston,
The district court addressed the issue of standing, noting the Second Circuit rule that an artist who sеlls his work to the government relinquishes his right to have his work displayed. See Serra v. United States Gen. Serv. Admin.,
II.
‘“[Ejvery federal appellate court has a special obligation to “satisfy itself not only of its own jurisdiction, but also that of the lower courts in a cause under review,” even though the parties are prepared to concede it.’” Arizonans for Official English v. Arizona,
“Article III of the United States Constitution limits federal courts to resolving actual cases and controversies.” Finlator v. Powers,
The Supreme Court has articulated various rules which govern the justiciability of disputes. The standing requirement, “perhaps the most important” condition of justiciability, Allen v. Wright,
Thus, “a plaintiff generally must assert his own legal rights and interests, and cannot rest his claim to relief on the legal rights or interests of third parties.” Warth v. Seldin,
III.
Application of these principles to the case at hand persuades us that Burke lacks standing. The speech being regulated or infringed upon in this case is the speech of the owner of 348 King Street; only that person or entity might elect whethеr to “ex-
Burke has failed to demonstrate injury-in-fact. Whether or not the district court’s conclusion that the presence of a legal restraint (as compared with an owner’s countervailing aesthetic) genuinely distinguishes this case from Serra, we fail to discern how the operation of the ordinance in respect to Burke’s right to artistic expression amounts to a concrete injury, rather than a mere tangential effect, at best. Klenk commissioned Burke to create a work of art, and Klenk had little, if аny input, into the creative process. Nevertheless, the legally cognizable injury arising from the Charleston ordinance falls upon the party who alone has the right to display the work, not the person who creates it. Put differently, as a matter of Article III standing, the ordinance must be viewed as a regulation of what is displayed in the District, not as a regulation of the colors or content of unexposed bricks and mortar. On the present record, in respeсt to the exterior wall of 348 King Street, that person is Klenk and only Klenk.
Thus, if we viewed the ordinance, or the Board’s enforcement of it, as does the dissent, as a cause-in-fact of Burke’s having to “stop work,” we might well be persuaded that Burke has Article III standing to seek relief.
Ironically, Burke’s own testimony below demonstrated that he lаrgely (if unknowingly) shares this vision of the legal landscape. See, e.g., SuppApp. at 97 (“I believe the government should be involved, but not as far as making laws. I think [the government] should allocate funds to save historic buildings. I think [the government] should help preservationists be organized. But I don’t think [the government has] the right to tell someone what they can and can’t do, aesthetically, to their store front or to their house”) (emphases added). What is at issue in this case is Klenk’s right to display what he wishes on his “store front,” whoever the artist might be.
The district court identified injury from Burke’s testimony that another building owner in the District might, absent the ordinance, commission Burke to paint a mural on his exterior wall. The testimony upon which this finding was based is not included in the Appendices filed with the parties’ briefs. Such a potential arrangement — a mere expectancy — does ' not amount to a concrete, palpable injury. Otherwise, a plaintiff could create standing through the expedience of self-serving declarations amounting to little more than argument rather than demonstrable harm. Standing should not be found on this ephemeral foundation. In any event, as set forth above, Burke is not a house painter, but an artist. His inchoate interest in the display of a work he creates but then sells to another does not confer Article III standing sufficient to challenge an ordinance burdening the right of the owner to display the work.
Moreover, even аssuming this testimony constitutes evidence sufficient to show injury, an order that the ordinance is unconstitutional would not likely redress Burke’s grievance that the King Street mural cannot be displayed in the District. No interested build
The federal courts are not “publicly funded forums for the ventilation of public grievances or the refinemеnt of jurisprudential understanding.” Valley Forge Christian College,
IV.
For the reasons discussed above, the judgment of the district court is
VACATED AND REMANDED WITH DIRECTIONS TO DISMISS THE COMPLAINT.
Notes
. Unquestionably, the Wellman rale of strict enforcement of the standing requirement has continued vitality. Raines v. Byrd, - U.S. -, -,
. In some instances, courts will relax the prudential limitations because they are outweighed by competing considerations. Among those weightier considerations within the context of the First Amendment is the danger of chilling free speech. Joseph H. Munson, Inc.,
All the members of the panel agree that this is not a proper case for the aрplication of third party standing doctrine.
. Apparently, the mural was substantially complete when Burke ceased work on it. See Supp. App. at 93-94.
. Indeed, for all that appears in the present record, Klenk, as a property owner in the District, might well be supportive of the constitutionality of the preservation ordinance, and would limit his challenge (were he to make one) to its application in a particular case. No doubt, similar real world considerations should inform interpretation of the Article III standing requirement; federal courts have no warrant, and we ought not, to adjudicate disputes resting on speculation over such matters.
Dissenting Opinion
dissenting:
The majority would deny standing to every artist whose commissioned work was suppressed by the state. I believe Burke does possess standing to challenge Charleston’s historic preservation ordinance. He was commissioned to рaint a mural on the exteri- or wall of a building in historic downtown Charleston. Charleston’s Board of Architectural Review (“BAR”) learned of the project and, pursuant to the preservation ordinance, directed Burke to stop work on his mural. The owner of the building applied to BAR for a permit that would allow completion of the work. Burke agreed to cover the unfinished mural with plywood pending BAR’s decision. BAR eventually denied the permit application on the ground that the mural was aesthetically incompatible with Charleston’s historic district. Because display is not permitted, Burke’s mural remains under plywood.
This course of events unequivocally gives Burke standing to challenge the city ordinance. Because of the ordinance, Burke has suffered the concrete injury of having to stop work and board up his mural, shielding it from view. An order from this court invalidating the ordinance that keeps the mural under plywood would certainly redress this injury. See Lujan v. Defenders of Wildlife,
But of course a plaintiff need not even suffer economic injury in order to protest the suppression of speech by the state. Plaintiffs protesting infringement of intellectual property interests by another private party often advance allegations of economic loss. See 15 U.S.C. § 1117 (trademark); 17 U.S.C. § 107 (copyright); 35 U.S.C. § 284 (patent). By contrast, plaintiffs asserting First Amendment challenges to state action have relied upon the intrinsic value of speech in
The majority holds that artists have no First Amendment rights once they sell their work. The majority says this is so because only the owner then has the right to display the art. Display of a piece of art may well be “speech” by its owner, as the majority suggests, but I am unwilling to hold that it wholly ceases to be speech by the artist the second it is sold. In fact, “[i]t is well settled that a speaker’s rights are not lost merely because compensation is received; a speaker is no less a speaker because he or she is paid to speak.” Riley v. National Fed’n of the Blind,
The majority makes much of the indisputable fact that the owner may freely raze the building (and the mural painted thereon) for any reason. But two critical facts distinguish the rights of the owner from the powers of the government. First, the city does not stand in the shoes of the building owner visa-vis the mural because the government has not bought and paid for the owner’s right to dispose of the mural. Therefore the'majority’s reliance on Serra v. United States Gen. Seros. Admin.,
Both parties present able arguments directed at the merits of Burke’s First Amendment challenge. Burke asserts a core First Amendment interest in artistic speech. Charleston counters with its interest in maintaining the aesthetic integrity of its historic district and the related interests of protecting property values and promoting tourism. Those arguments deserve to be addressed by this court just as they were by the district court. Though I express no view on the constitutionality of Charleston’s historic prеservation ordinance, I cannot accept the majority’s denial of standing. The restrictive rule of standing imposed upon this artist ill befits the Constitution’s concern for free expression and speech. Secretary of State of Maryland v. J.H. Munson Co., Inc.,
