Appellants in this action are individuals who were denied entrance to a Carson City, Nevada government building after refusing to remove clothing bearing symbols of motorcycle organizations. They appeal the district court’s order denying their request for a preliminary injunction in their 42 U.S.C. § 1983 suit against Ap-pellees, the First Judicial Court, the County of Carson City, and related agencies and individuals. Appellants’ underlying suit claims that a court policy banning individuals who are wearing such clothing from two floors of the government building violates the First Amendment. Because Appellants have demonstrated both probable success on the merits and irreparable harm, we reverse.
I. Background
The relevant facts are not in dispute. This suit arises out of three related incidents at the Carson City Public Safety Complex (“the Complex”), a three-story building. On the first floor of the Complex are the marriage license office, the recorder’s office, and the officе that receives payments for municipal court fines. Visitors do not have to pass through security to gain access to this floor. On the second floor are two courtrooms for the Justice Court of Carson City Township, the clerk’s office for that court, the chambers of two justices of the peace, the office of the misdemeanor probation officer, the office of the coordinator for volunteer services, the office of the Advocate to End Domestic Violence, and the office of the Carson City District Attorney. On the third floor are two courtrooms for the First Judicial District Court of the State of Nevada, the clerk’s office, and the chambers of two judges' of that court. In order to gain access to the second and third floors, members of the public must pass through a security station and metal detector in the lobby of the first floor.
The first of the three incidents occurred on March 9, 2001, whеn Appellant Steven Dominguez went to the Complex for a summoned court appearance arising out of a traffic citation. His friend, Appellant Scot Banks, accompanied him. Both men are members of The Branded Few motorcycle club, and both were wearing leather motorcycle clothing with patches identifying them as members of the club. When they tried to pass through the security station, security personnel asked them to remove their jackets, which they refused to do. Security personnel contacted the Carson City Sheriffs Department, and the responding deputy sheriff told Dominguez and Banks that they could remove their jackets and go to the second floor, or they could leave the building. When they refused to do either, they were arrested and charged with criminal trespassing. Upon their release, they were ordered to return to the court on March 26, 2001 to be arraigned on the trespassing сharges.
The second incident occurred on March 26, when ten other individuals, also Appellants, 1 came to the Complex to support Dominguez and Banks. These Appellants wore jackets and vests bearing the logos of various motorcycle clubs, including The Branded Few, His Royal Priesthood, and Hells Angels. All ten were told that they would be denied admission unless they removed the clothing; all refused, arguing that they had a constitutional right to enter while wearing the clothing. All were charged with criminal trespass when they *963 refused to leave. Appellees have submitted an affidavit from a security guard at the Complex, who stated that the group that gathered on March 26 “blocked the entrance and made it difficult for people to enter and exit,” and that some members of the public asked to be escorted out of the budding because they were afraid of the group. An affidavit from Dominguez and Banks’ attorney, who was present, disputes both statements.
No written policy governing clothing at the Complex existed at the time of the March 9 and March 26 incidents. Appel-lees contend that security personnel were following an unwritten policy, passed on to them by the state district court judges who work in the Complex. They contend in their brief that the unwritten policy directed security personnel not to permit individuals to proceed to the second or third floor if they were wearing “clothing having symbols, markings or words indicating an affiliation with street gangs, biker or similar organizations which could be disruptive and/or intimidating.” They further contend that the unwritten policy barred the “use of words, pictures, or symbols which are degrading or offensive to any ethnic, racial, social or political group.”
An affidavit from a district judge with chambers in the Complex is the only evidence submitted to the federal district court by Appellees in support of these contentions. The affidavit does not mention “biker or similar organizations” or “offensive” words, pictures or symbols, and does not refer to any building-wide policy. The affidavit states, “It has been the policy in the First Judicial District Court for security personnel to ask individuals who wear colors or gang apparel to remove the clothing prior to entering the courtrooms,” and that “[g]ang clothing or colors and attire is disruptive and intimidating and leads to problems inside the courthouse” (emphasis added). The affidavit mentions no previous incidents involving individuals wearing biker clothing, but states that “[i]t is not unusual for contentious parties and persons supporting the opposing sides or viewpoints to mingle in the hallway, and arguments and pushing and shoving incidents have occurred.” The only specific incident mentioned in the affidavit is a pending case involving Native Americans and Latinos, about which the affidavit states only that the litigants have “been cooperative and agreed not to wear aрparel or engage in demonstrations of support which increase the tensions already existing or which disrupt court proceedings.”
The third incident occurred April 9, 2001, when Appellants were barred from passing through security to their scheduled arraignments on the trespassing charges unless they removed their motorcycle club clothing. Appellant Franklin Sammartano, who is not a member of a motorcycle club, also came to the Complex that day to attend the arraignments of the other Appellants. Sammartano was wearing a denim jacket bearing both a Harley Davidson logo and a small American flag on the front next to the words “Try to burn this asshole.” He stated in an affidavit that he was required to remove his jacket in order to gain access to the top two floors of the Complex.
Between March 26 and April 9, a written list of five “Courthouse Rules of Conduct and Attire” (the “Rules”) had been drawn up for the Complex. Appellees contend in their brief, but have offered no evidence beyond the aforementioned affidavit of the district judge, that the Rules merely memorialized the policy that had already been in existence. Three of the Rules have possible application to Appellants’ behavior in this case. Rule 1 prohibits the “[u]se of words, pictures or symbols which are degrading or offensive to any ethnic, racial, social or political group.” Rule 3, on which *964 the parties and the district court have primarily focused their attention, prohibits “[c]lothing, attire or ‘colors’ which have symbols, markings or words indicating an affiliation with street gangs, biker or similar organizations,” stating that “[s]uch clothing or attire can be extremely disruptive and intimidating, especially when members of different groups are in the building at the same time.” Rule 4 prohibits “words, pictures or symbols with clearly offensive meanings. If someone wants to wear a hat sаying ‘f ... the world’ he or she can do it outside.” 2
Soon after the third incident, Appellants filed suit under 42 U.S.C § 1983 in federal district court against the First Judicial District Court, the Justice Court of Carson City, and a number of county employees. The complaint sought damages for violations of the First and Fourteenth Amendments, a permanent injunction prohibiting the defendants from refusing to admit Appellants because of their clothing, and a declaratory judgment that the Rules are unconstitutional on their face and as applied. The same day, Appellants also filed a- Motion for Preliminary Injunctive Relief, seeking to enjoin the implementation or enforcement of the Rules pending final resolution of the action in federal court. The criminal trespass charges were brought based on conduct that occurred before the Rules were drawn up, and Ap-pellees have not asserted a defense based on
Younger v. Harris,
After a hearing, the federal district court denied Appellants’ motion for a preliminary injunction. “At this preliminary stage of these proceedings,” the court wrote, “it is premature to make a final determination as to whether the Courthouse Rules at issue in this case, particularly Rule 3 which specifically applies to Plaintiffs in this action, is reasonable in light of the purposes of the property and is viewpoint neutral. It is clear to this Court, however, that Plaintiffs have not at this preliminary stage demonstrated a clear likelihood of success on the merits or irreparable injury, nor have Plaintiffs demonstrated that the balance of hardships tips decidedly in their favor on grounds of free expression when compared with the obviously strong interest of the First Judicial District Court in maintaining a safe and orderly environment within the courthouse which is equally fundamental to the court’s ability to accord to all persons[] due process, equal proteсtion of the law, and a fair trial.” The court held that the evidence in the record did “not support a factual finding that Defendants are excluding individuals from the courtrooms or courtroom floors of the courthouse on the basis of a viewpoint expressed, but rather on an arguably proper subject matter basis.” The court also rejected Appellants’ arguments that the Rules are unconstitutionally vague and overbroad, finding “no sufficient evidence in the record from which it [could] ‘predict’ or ‘assume’ that [the arguably vague Rules] are either used or intended to be used for the purpose of excluding entry of persons to the Carson City Courthouse.”
Appellants appeal the denial of their motion for a preliminary injunction.
II. Jurisdiction and Standard of Review
We have jurisdiction under 28 U.S.C. § 1292. We will reverse a denial of a preliminary injunction where the district court abused its discretion or based its decision on an erroneous legal standard -or on clearly erroneous findings of fact.
See Desert Citizens Against Pollution v. Bisson,
III. Analysis
“Preliminary injunctive relief is available to a party who demonstrates either (1) a combination of probable success on the merits and the possibility of irreparable harm; or (2) that serious questions are raised and the balance of hardships tips in its favor.”
A & M Records,
A. Probability of Success on the Merits
Appellants contend that the Rules run afoul of the First Amendment’s requirements of reasonableness and viewpoint neutrality, and that the Rulеs are also impermissibly overbroad and vague. Because, we hold that Appellants have demonstrated a probability of success on the first basis, we do not reach the questions of overbreadth and vagueness.
In assessing a First Amendment claim relating to speech on government property, the first step is to “identify the nature of the forum, because the extent to which the Government may limit access depends on whether the forum is public or nonpublic.”
Cornelius v. NAACP Legal Defense
&
Educ. Fund,
This circuit has never explicitly addressed the question of whether judicial and municipal complexes like the one in this case are public fora, but under the tests set forth for determining the nature of a forum, it seems clear that they are not. While public places “historically associated with the free exercise of expressive activities,” such as streets, sidewalks and parks, are considered public fora, “not all publicly owned property becomes a public forum simply because the public is permitted to come and go at the site.”
Jacobsen v. Bonine,
Other courts that have considered the question have held that similar buildings are nonpublic fora.
See, e.g., Claudio v. United States,
The Rules at issue here are aimed squarely at expressive conduct in the Complex, specifically limiting the “words,” “pictures,” “symbols” and “markings” that people may wear within the building. The test for determining the constitutionality of limitations on speech in a nonpublic forum (and therefore the test to be applied in determining the probability of Appellants’ success on the merits for purposes of a preliminary injunction) is the two-part test set forth by the Court in
Cornelius:
Rеstrictions on free expression in a nonpublic forum are constitutional only if the distinctions drawn (1) are “reasonable in light of the purpose served by the forum” and (2) are “viewpoint neutral.”
Cornelius,
1. Reasonableness
The “reasonableness” requirement for restrictions on speech in a nonpublic forum “requires more of a showing
*967
than does the traditional rational basis test;
ie.,
it is not the same as establishing] that the regulation is rationally related to a legitimate governmental objective, as might be the case for the typical exercise of the government’s police power.”
Tucker v. State of California Dept. of Educ.,
Appellants specifically argue that Rule 3, banning “[c]lothing, attire or ‘colors’ which have symbols, markings or words indicating an affiliation with street gangs, biker or similar organizations,” is not reasonable in light of the purpose served by the forum. It is uncontested that the Complex has a legitimate need to preserve an orderly and safe place to conduct the public’s business. However, because a review of the record reveals almost no evi-dentiary support for an argument that this need is reasonably served by Rule 3(or by Rules 1 and 4), we agree with Appellants.
The facts of this case are similar to those in
Tucker,
in which we recently found a regulation of speech in a nonpublic forum to be unreasonable.
See
First, we held that the evidence in the record simply did not show that the asserted risks were real. See id. There was nothing in the record to suggest that the public ever went into the office areas in question. There was also “nothing in the record to indicate that religious materials are more likely to disrupt harmony in the workplace than any other materials on potentially controversial topics[.]” Id. at n. 8. In that respect, we noted, the case differed significantly from Cornelius, “where there was evidence in the record— thousands of letters complaining about the inclusion of advocacy groups in[a] fund drive — that supported the inference that the restriction in question would serve the government’s legitimate concern about disruption[.]” Id.
Second, we held that even if those interests had been supported by the record, “a total ban on posting religious information of any kind is an unreasonable means of obviating” such concerns. Id. The rule was unreasonable, not only because it targeted one kind of speech, but also because it “ban[ned] a vast amount of material without legitimate justification.” Id. The state had “simpler and far less restrictive alternatives available to it,” such as limiting postings to regulated bulletin boards or issuing a narrower order that banned only items that might reasonably convey an impression of state endorsement. Id. at 1216. We held “that it is not reasonable to allow employees to post materials around the office on all sorts of subjects, and forbid only the posting of religious information and materials,” and thus that *968 the rale violatеd the First Amendment, even under the more lenient standards applicable to nonpublic fora. Id. at 1215.
Both of these principles from
Tucker
support a finding that Rule 3 is unreasonable. First, while reasonableness “must be assessed in light of the purpose of the forum and all the surrounding circumstances,”
Cornelius,
It is important to note, at this stage of review, that not only was there no evidence of any prior disruption, but Appel-lees also made no argument in the district court, either in the briefing or at the hearing on the Motion for Preliminary Injunc-tive Relief, that further factual development was necessary concerning the past existence or future likelihood of such disruption. Indeed, when questioned directly by the district court about the factual record supporting the reasonableness of Rule 3, counsel for Appellees could say only that such articles of clothing “tend to incite problems in the courthouse, both in the courtroom and in the hallways.” Given the lack of support in the present record for the assertion that a limitation on this clothing will serve the purported governmental interest, our holding in
Tucker
requires that we find Rule 3 unreasonable.
See A & M Records,
The second
Tucker
principle likewise indicates that Rule 3 is not reasonable. Appellees’ asserted interests in preserving a “safe, dignified and fair environment in which to resolve disputes,” in “maintaining proper order and decorum in the courtroom,” and in avoiding potentially dangerous conflicts between members of various wаrring motorcycle clubs are clearly legitimate. However, those interests are specific to the courtroom setting and to particular (apparently hypothetical) cases involving rival organizations. Rule 3, however, does not differentiate between courtrooms and other public areas of the second and third floors, and it does not differentiate among visitors to the Complex. That is, Rule 3 is not tailored to the legitimate concerns of the Complex. As in
Tucker,
a total ban on this expressive activity, applying to a visitor to the volunteer services office or the office of the Advocate to End Domestic Violence and even to individuals who will do no more than walk in the Complex halls, is “an unreasonable means of obviating” the concerns articulated by Appellees.
Id.
at 1215. This is especially so given the far
*969
less restrictive alternative of specific rules or orders concerning permissible clothing or behavior limited to courtrooms or limited to individuals in particular cases or circumstances.
See Zal v. Steppe,
Appellees also appear to argue that Rule 3 is a reasonable regulation of expression in the Complex because the presence of individuals with motorcycle club symbols on their clothing may offend or alarm other individuals who have a right to use the services provided in the building. Similar concerns for the sensitivities of other visitors to the Complex undergird Appellees’ reasonableness arguments as to Rules 1 and 4, which ban, respectively, the use of “words, pictures or symbols which are degrading or offensive to any ethnic, racial, social or political group” and “[w]ords, pictures or symbols with clearly offensive meаnings.” These arguments in support of Rules 1, 3 and 4 are unavailing, under the rationale of
Cohen v. California,
In
Cohen,
a defendant who walked through a courthouse corridor wearing a jacket bearing the words “Fuck the Draft” was convicted under a state statute prohibiting disturbing the peace by offensive conduct. The Court held that “the mere presumed presence of unwitting listeners or viewers does not serve automatically to justify curtailing all speech capable of giving offense,” and that those who might be offended could “avoid further bombardment of their sensibilities by averting their eyes.”
Id.
at 21,
Cohen pre-dates the Supreme Court’s articulation of its forum-based approach to First Amendment questions, and it involved an application of a broad criminal statute rather than the enforcement of rules of conduct for a single facility. But it nevertheless undermines any assertion that Rule 3 could be rendered constitutional by a governmental interest in preventing apparel that officials merely presume could “incite problems in the courthouse.” It likewise undermines any argument in support of the reasonableness of Rule l’s ban on words, pictures or symbols because of their “degrading or offensive” nature and of Rule 4’s prohibition of those with “clearly offensive meanings.”
The same “reasonableness” rationale now set forth by Appellees was rejected by the
Cohen
Court as “plainly untenable.”
Id.
at 23,
We therefore conclude that Appellants have demonstrated a high probability of success on the merits of their claim that Rules 1, 3 and 4 are not “reasonable in light of the purpose served by the forum.”
2. Viewpoint Neutrality
Even if Rules 1, 3 and 4 could be found to be reasonable, at least Rule 3 does not comply with the First Amendment’s requirement that regulation of speech in a nonpublic forum be viewpoint neutral. We freely admit that the Supreme Court’s concept of viewpoint neutrality in First Amendment jurisprudence has not been easy to understand. As one commentator has put it, the concept has been “confusing in both definition and application, and has been selectively applied in many contexts.” Marjorie Heins, Viewpoint Discrimination, 24 Hastings Const. L.Q. 99, 103 (1996). The difficulty largely results from an elusive distinction drawn in the caselaw between discrimination on the basis of subject matter and discrimination on the basis of viewpoint.
In a traditional or designated public forum, restrictions on expression based on subject matter are subject to strict scrutiny under a compelling state interest test.
See Cornelius,
Control over access to a nonpublic forum can be based on subject matter and speaker identity so long as the distinctions drawn are reasonable in light of the purpose served by the forum and are viewpoint neutral. Although a speaker may be excluded from a nonpublic forum if he wishes to address a topic not encompassed within the purpose of the forum, or if he is not a member of the class of speakers for whose especial benefit the forum was created, the government violates the First Amendment when it denies access to a speaker solely to suppress the point of view he espouses on an otherwise includible subject.
Id.
at 806,
Rule 3 excluded Appellants from the forum because their clothing indicated affiliations with biker organizations. The parties dispute whether the rule draws its lines of inclusion and exclusion based on the larger (and permitted) category of “subject matter” or the smaller (and forbidden) subcategory of “viewpoint.” On the one hand, Appellees argue that Rule 3 is a constitutionally appropriate restriction on the subject-matter class of wearers of “symbols, markings or words indicating an affiliation with ... biker or similar organizations.” Within that subject-matter category, they argue, no distinctions are made as to viewpoints; that is, all biker and similar organizations are excluded. On the other hand, Appellants argue that the appropriate subject-matter class is people who wish to visit the Complex. Such people might belong to a wide variety of clubs and organizations, not limited to biker organizations. That Appellants’ expression of their connection with a particular group is singled out, they argue, demonstrates that Rule 3 discriminates on the basis of viewpoint.
Even though the line between subject and viewpoint is “a difficult one to draw,”
Tucker,
Second, as the Seventh Circuit has noted, because “classifying a particular viewpoint as a subject rather than a viewpoint
on a subject
will justify discrimination against the viewpoint,” courts must carefully scrutinize such classifications.
Grossbaum v. Indianapolis-Marion Cty. Bldg. Auth.,
“Courts do have a hard call to make when they review content-based speech regulations because the government could be shutting out some viewpoints by labeling them as subjects.”
Urossbaum,
3. Summary
If we knew that the record in this case would not be supplemented, we would, based on the foregoing analysis, simply find Rules 1, 3 and 4 unconstitutional. We would not need to go on to the second step of the test for a preliminary injunction because if the probability of Appellants’ success on the merits is one hundred percent, a balancing of the hardships is unnecessary.
See Baby Tam,
In this case, Appellees did not argue in the district court that they needed any larger or different record than they had compiled. On the view of the case taken by the district court, Appellees were right, for they prevailed based on the existing record. However, now that we have held that, on the current record, Rules 1, 3 and 4 are unconstitutional, Appellees may wish to rethink their position. The district court will be in the best position to determine whether the Appellees should be allowed to supplement the record, and we will remand to allow it to make that determination. Because, at this stage of the litigatiоn, we cannot say that the district court will forbid Appellants to supplement the record, and we cannot say that a supplemented record will necessarily result in another holding of unconstitutionality, we do not say that the Appellants have demonstrated a one hundred percent possibility of success on the merits.
We do hold, however, that at this stage of the proceedings Appellants have demonstrated at least a high probability of success on the merits. Where plaintiffs seeking a preliminary injunction demonstrate a
*973
high probability of success on the merits, they need demonstrate only the possibility of irreparable harm as part of the balancing of the hardships.
See Bernard v. Air Line Pilots Ass’n, Int’l.,
B. Irreparable Harm and the Balance of the Hardships
The district court rejected Appellants’ arguments that the balance of the hardships tips in their favor and that the failure to enjoin enforcement of the Rules will cause them irreparable injury. It emphasized “the obviously strong interest of the First Judicial District Court in maintaining a safe and orderly environment within the courthouse, which is equally fundamental to the court’s ability to accord to all persons[ ] due process, equal protection of the law, and a fair trial.” Appellees argue to us that the banned clothing “tends to create interference or disruption with the orderly administration of justice” and that the harm that would be done by an injunction against the enforcement of the Rules outweighs any inconvenience that Appellants might suffer.
As discussed above, there is insufficient evidence in the current record to support the argument that Appellants’ clothing will, in fact, cause such interference or disruption. We agree with Aрpellees that the interest in keeping a government building accessible and safe is both legitimate and significant. But absent a showing in the record of actual (or realistic threat of) interference or disruption, the demonstrated hardship imposed upon Ap-pellees by the barring of enforcement of the Rules is minimal. This is especially so given the continuing ability of the individual judges to maintain decorum in their courtrooms or in particular cases, which is not at issue in this case.
On the other side of the equation, Appellants have shown that irreparable injury to their protected interests will occur if the relief is
not
granted. The Supreme Court has made clear that “[t]he loss of First Amendment freedoms, for even minimal periods of time, unquestionably constitutes irreparable injury” for purposes of the issuance of a preliminary injunction.
Elrod v. Burns,
We therefore hold that Appellants have demonstrated that they would experience irreparable harm if the preliminary injunction is denied, and that this harm is much more serious than the hardship Appellees have shown they would endure if the injunction were granted.
See Ebel v. City of Corona,
C. The Public Interest
Finally, our precedent requires that we examine the public interest in determining the appropriateness of a preliminary injunction. While we have at times subsumed this inquiry into the balancing of the hardships,
see, e.g., Caribbean Marine Services Co. v. Baldrige,
The public interest inquiry primarily addresses impact on non-parties rather than parties. The potential for impact on nonparties is plainly present here. Courts considering requests for preliminary injunctions have consistently recognized the significant public interest in upholding First Amendment principles.
See Homans v. Albuquerque,
The public interest in maintaining a free exchange of ideas, though great, has in some cases been found to be overcome by a strong showing of other competing public interests, especially where the First Amendment activities of the public are only limited, rather than entirely eliminated.
See, e.g., Hale v. Dep’t of Energy,
Conclusion
Our examinations of Appellants’ probability of success on the merits, the balance of the hardships, and the public interest lead us to conclude that Appellants have a right to preliminary injunctive relief. Accordingly, the district court’s order denying such relief is
REVERSED and this case is REMANDED for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
