SOUTHERN OREGON BARTER FAIR, Plaintiff-Appellant,
v.
JACKSON COUNTY, OREGON; Jackson County Board of Commissioners; Jackson County Sheriff's Department; Ric Holt; Jack Walker; Sue Kupillas; Robert Kennedy, Defendants, and
State of Oregon, Defendant-Intervenor-Appellee.
No. 02-35560.
United States Court of Appeals, Ninth Circuit.
Argued and Submitted November 5, 2003.
Filed June 24, 2004.
COPYRIGHT MATERIAL OMITTED Brian Michaels, Eugene, OR, for the plaintiff-appellant.
Christina Hutchins, Assistant Attorney General, Kelly Knivila, Assistant Attorney General, Salem, OR, for the defendant-intervenor-appellee.
Appeal from the United States District Court for the District of Oregon; John P. Cooney, Magistrate Judge, Presiding. D.C. No. CV-96-03067-CO.
Before: ALARCÓN, RAWLINSON, and BYBEE, Circuit Judges.
OPINION
BYBEE, Circuit Judge:
The Southern Oregon Barter Fair is a nonprofit corporation that held an annual fair in Oregon between 1978 and 1996. The Fair describes its event as a religious gathering, a "harvest celebration and gathering of ... `new age,' `back-to-the-land' hippies and friends," and a "counterculture crafts fair" where artisans and vendors set up booths for people to buy crafts. In order to hold several previous events, most recently the 1996 event, the Fair had to obtain a permit from Jackson County, Oregon, under the Oregon Mass Gathering Act, OR. REV. STAT. §§ 433.735-.770, 433.990(6) (2001). This appeal presents the question whether, as the Fair contends, the Act is facially unconstitutional under the First Amendment.
Oregon's Mass Gathering Act is similar to mass gathering statutes found in various other states. The Oregon Legislative Assembly passed the Act in 1971, finding "that the uncontrolled outdoor gatherings of large groups of persons for extended periods of time have necessitated a need for the establishment of reasonable health and safety rules to regulate such outdoor mass gatherings." Id. § 433.740. The Act regulates any "outdoor mass gathering," defined as a gathering of more than 3,000 persons in an open space for more than 24 hours but fewer than 120 hours.1 The Act prohibits such gatherings "on real property the organizer[2] owns, leases or possesses" unless the county governing body for the location where the gathering is planned (here, the Jackson County Board of Commissioners) has issued a permit. Id. § 433.745(2).3
The organizer must submit to the governing body a permit application containing the applicant's name and address, a legal description of the place, the date, the estimated attendance, and the nature of the proposed gathering, as well as "[s]uch other appropriate information as the county governing body may require in order to insure compliance with rules of the Department of Human Services." Id. § 433.750(1). The governing body "shall issue a permit ... when the organizer demonstrates compliance with or the ability to comply with the health and safety rules governing outdoor mass gatherings to be regulated according to the anticipated crowd and adopted by the Department of Human Services." Id. § 433.750(1).4 The Act authorizes the Department of Human Services to promulgate rules with respect to various health and safety issues at mass gatherings, including adequate water supply, drainage and sewage facilities, toilet facilities, refuse storage and disposal facilities, food, sanitary food service, emergency medical facilities, fire protection, security personnel and traffic control. Id. § 433.760. The Health Division of the Oregon Department of Human Services has accordingly promulgated regulations prescribing detailed requirements for each of the above specific health and safety issues. OR. ADMIN. R. 333-039-0005 to 333-039-0055.
The Act contemplates input from local law enforcement and health and safety officials in the application process. It requires the county governing body to send notice of an application to the county sheriff, the county health officer, and the chief of the relevant fire district. OR. REV. STAT. § 433.750(2). The county governing body must also hold a public hearing on the proposed gathering's compliance with the Act, and must publish notice of the hearing in specified places at least 10 days before the hearing. Id. § 433.750(4). Each county officer (police, health, and fire) who has received notice of the application may submit written comments and recommendations to the county governing body no later than the date of the hearing. Id. § 433.750(3). Furthermore, in reviewing an application, the county governing body "may require such plans, specifications and reports as it may deem necessary for proper review and it may request and shall receive from all public officers, departments and agencies of the state and its political subdivisions such cooperation and assistance as it may deem necessary." Id. § 433.755(1).
Additionally, the Act allows the county to charge an application fee and require the applicant to obtain insurance in appropriate circumstances. Specifically, the Act provides that a county governing body "may charge permit applicants a fee reasonably calculated to reimburse the county for its reasonable and necessary costs in receiving, processing and reviewing applications for permits to hold outdoor mass gatherings." Id. § 433.750(6). The Act limits the amount of the fee as follows: "a fee authorized by this subsection shall not exceed $5,000 and shall not be charged when the governing body finds, by a preponderance of the evidence presented to the governing body, that the applicant is unable to reimburse the governing body." Id.5 As for insurance, the county governing body may, if it determines that the proposed gathering "creates a potential for injury to persons or property, ... require organizers to obtain an insurance policy in an amount commensurate with the risk, but not exceeding $1 million." Id. § 433.755(1). The policy "shall provide coverage against liability for death, injury or disability of any human or for damage to property arising out of the outdoor mass gathering" and shall name the county as an additional insured. Id.
Finally, "[a]ny decision of a county governing body on an application for a permit to hold an outdoor mass gathering may be appealed to a circuit court for the county" under procedures specified elsewhere. Id. § 433.750(5).
In accordance with the Act, the Fair applied to the Jackson County Board of Commissioners for, and received, permits for its 1994 and 1995 events. The 1996 application process, however, was tumultuous. The Fair applied for a permit, but received one only after a delay of several months; and even then, the permit contained numerous conditions that the Fair considered unreasonable, including a required security deposit of nearly $18,000 (consisting of over $3,600 for administrative expenses in relation to the application, over $11,700 for the cost to the county sheriff of providing neighborhood security, and other county expenses).
Accordingly, before the 1996 event took place, the Fair brought suit in federal district court in Oregon against Jackson County, the Jackson County Board of Commissioners, and the Jackson County Sheriff. Among other things, the complaint alleged that the Act on its face violated the First Amendment, and sought injunctive and declaratory relief against enforcement of the Act. The district court6 granted a preliminary injunction against some of the permit conditions, including the fee.
The State of Oregon intervened and moved for summary judgment on the claims challenging the facial constitutionality of the Act. In a careful opinion, the district court granted the state's motion and dismissed the Fair's facial challenge, holding that the Act is a proper content-neutral time, place, and manner regulation. The court certified the relevant claims for appeal under FED. R. CIV. P. 54(b). Thus, only the facial challenge is before us. We are not concerned here with the Fair's remaining claims, which included as-applied challenges to the county commissioners' and sheriff's allegedly discriminatory enforcement of the Act against the Fair.7
* At the outset, we must determine whether the case is moot. The state argued to the district court that the Fair has not applied for a mass gathering permit, or engaged in any other preparations for a mass gathering, since 1996, and that the case was therefore moot. The district court rejected this contention, but the state raises it again on appeal.8 Mootness is a question of law reviewed de novo. See Oregon Advocacy Ctr. v. Mink,
To avoid mootness, the court must determine that the issues in a case remain live and that the parties continue to have a legally cognizable interest in the outcome throughout the proceeding. City of Erie v. Pap's A.M.,
This proceeding would be moot if the Fair had entirely ceased to operate, left the business, and no longer sought or intended to seek a license. City News & Novelty, Inc. v. City of Waukesha,
We conclude that the Fair, unlike the business in City News, has a sufficient ongoing interest in the outcome of the case to preclude mootness. There is no contention that the Fair has ceased to exist as a corporate entity, or that it no longer seeks to hold another gathering. The state rescinded the Fair's corporate status in 1998, apparently because the Fair failed to pay an administrative fee, but the Fair successfully requested reinstatement. The Fair has not actually held a major event since 1996, because it lacks funding and an appropriate site. However, it held a smaller event in 1997 in an attempt to raise funds, and since then has continued to seek a site for a full-sized event through discussions with the County and with private landowners. So far as the record reflects, these discussions have not yet yielded an appropriate site.
The state contends that the possibility that the Fair will actually obtain funding and a site is speculative. On this record, however, we cannot conclude that the barriers to the Fair's staging another event are "insurmountable" and therefore enough to moot the case. Clark v. City of Lakewood,
II
We conclude, contrary to the State's suggestion, that the Fair may bring a facial challenge to the Act. Whether the Act is subject to facial attack is a question of law reviewed de novo. See Roulette v. City of Seattle,
Accordingly, to be subject to facial challenge, a licensing law "must have a close enough nexus to expression, or to conduct commonly associated with expression, to pose a real and substantial threat" of the risks of censorship. Lakewood,
The Oregon Mass Gathering Act regulates gatherings of large numbers of people overnight in open spaces. The fact that the Act regulates gatherings does not automatically mean that the Act implicates the First Amendment freedoms of speech or assembly. The First Amendment protects "expressive association" — that is, association for the purpose of "speech, assembly, petition for the redress of grievances, and the exercise of religion" — but there is no "generalized right of social association" protecting "chance encounters in dance halls" and the like. Conti v. City of Fremont,
Moreover, the Supreme Court, this court, and others have entertained the merits of facial challenges to similar statutes and regulations. Thomas v. Chicago Park Dist.,
III
The Fair argues that, because the district court issued a preliminary injunction against enforcement of some of the terms of the permit, the court was bound by the law of the case doctrine to grant summary judgment in the Fair's favor. The law of the case doctrine ordinarily precludes a court from reexamining an issue previously decided by the same court or a higher court in the same case. Old Person v. Brown,
Decisions on preliminary injunctions require the district court to assess the plaintiff's likelihood of success on the merits, not whether the plaintiff has actually succeeded on the merits. See City of Anaheim v. Kleppe,
In addition, even if the law of the case doctrine did apply, a court properly exercises its discretion to reconsider an issue previously decided if there has been an intervening change in the law. Thomas v. Bible,
IV
The Fair argues that the Act is constitutionally defective on its face because it confers unbridled discretion on the County in the permitting process, enabling the County to disfavor applicants with whose message the County disagrees. The facial challenge rests on three particular arguments: (1) the Act lacks a deadline for the local governing body to act on permit applications, (2) the Act lacks a provision for prompt judicial review of permit application denials, and (3) the Act gives the governing body unconstrained discretion to set the amount of the permit application fee. The first two arguments are related; we will discuss them together, followed by the third.
* As the Fair argues, the Act contains no time limit within which the County must issue a decision on a permit application. As for judicial review, the Act does provide that any decision of a county governing body on a permit application may be appealed to a circuit court for the county, see OR. REV. STAT. § 433.750(5); but the Fair contends that there is no assurance that such review will be prompt. In essence, then, the Fair's argument over judicial review, like its claim about processing permit applications, is an argument that the Act is constitutionally flawed without time limits.
In Freedman v. Maryland,
In Thomas v. Chicago Park Dist., however, the Supreme Court clarified that none of the Freedman safeguards are required of content-neutral time, place, and manner permit schemes.
Because it is content-neutral, the Act need not contain the procedural safeguards required of content-based regulations. The Act need not include either a deadline for consideration by the governing body or a provision for prompt judicial review. See Thomas,
We acknowledge the theoretical possibility that, without a deadline, Jackson County could effectively shut down gatherings by delaying permit decisions indefinitely. See Grossman v. City of Portland,
In discussing why the content-neutral ordinance in Thomas adequately limited the discretion of the decision-maker, the Court observed that the ordinance required the municipality to process applications within 28 days.
Here, the overnight mass gatherings the state seeks to regulate raise special health and safety issues because of their size and duration. The state has an eminently valid interest in ensuring the health and safety of its residents and visitors at such large, lengthy events. Cf. Grossman,
B
The Fair's remaining contention is that the Act confers excessive discretion on the governing body to set permit application fees. As noted above, a time, place, and manner restriction must "contain adequate standards to guide the official's discretion and render it subject to effective judicial review." Thomas,
This principle is subject to an important limitation: the regulation must provide objective standards that do not leave the amount of the fee to the whim of the official, enabling the official to favor some speakers and suppress others. Forsyth,
Here, as noted above, the Act provides that a county governing body "may charge permit applicants a fee reasonably calculated to reimburse the county for its reasonable and necessary costs in receiving, processing and reviewing applications for permits to hold outdoor mass gatherings." OR. REV. STAT. § 433.750(6). The fee "shall not exceed $5,000 and shall not be charged when the governing body finds, by a preponderance of the evidence presented to the governing body, that the applicant is unable to reimburse the governing body." Id. The Fair argues that, because the statute states that the governing body "may" charge the fee, rather than "shall" or "must" charge the fee, the provision allows the governing body to charge or not to charge at its whim, in violation of Forsyth.
We reject this argument for two reasons. First, unlike in Forsyth, we lack actual evidence of a pattern of abuse. Second, the Supreme Court rejected a similar argument in Thomas, which followed Forsyth. In Thomas, the petitioners argued that the use of the word "may" in the provision at issue allowed the permitting authority to waive the permit requirements for favored speakers, but not for others.
As for the decision how much to charge, the provision does leave some discretion over the amount of the fee to the governing body, but the discretion is not so broad that the statute fails the test of Thomas and Forsyth. In Forsyth, the ordinance, in authorizing the administrator to "adjust the amount to be paid [between zero and $1,000] in order to meet the expense incident to the administration of the Ordinance and to the maintenance of public order in the matter licensed,"
Finally, the statutory standard leaves no possibility of a heckler's veto. That is, the standard does not allow the governing body to gauge the reaction the applicant's message will generate and set the fee according to the projected costs of policing hostile listeners, a feature the Supreme Court disapproved in Forsyth as impermissibly content-based.
In sum, we uphold the challenged provisions of the Act as consistent with the First Amendment.
AFFIRMED.
Notes:
Notes
The full definition is:
"Outdoor mass gathering," unless otherwise defined by county ordinance, means an actual or reasonably anticipated assembly of more than 3,000 persons which continues or can reasonably be expected to continue for more than 24 consecutive hours but less than 120 hours within any three-month period and which is held primarily in open spaces and not in any permanent structure.
OR. REV. STAT. § 433.735(1).
"Organizer" is defined to include "any person who holds, stages or sponsors an outdoor mass gathering and the owner, lessee or possessor of the real property upon which the outdoor mass gathering is to take place." OR. REV. STAT. § 433.735(2)
In full, "No organizer shall hold, conduct, advertise or otherwise promote an outdoor mass gathering or allow an outdoor mass gathering to be held on real property the organizer owns, leases or possesses unless a permit to hold such outdoor mass gathering has been issued by the county governing body in which the outdoor mass gathering is to take place." OR. REV. STAT. § 433.745(1)
Gatherings of more than 120 hours are subject to additional requirements geared to ensure compatibility with existing land uses. OR. REV. STAT. § 433.763
The Oregon Court of Appeals has held that § 433.750(6) simply authorizes a county governing body to charge a fee for the services described in that statute; it does not preclude the governing body from charging, as authorized by local ordinance or regulation, other fees for services provided to a mass gatheringFence v. Jackson County,
The parties consented to a magistrate judge's conduct of all proceedings in the case. 28 U.S.C. § 636(c)(1); FED. R. CIV. P. 73(a), (b). The parties further consented that any appeal from a final judgment by the magistrate judge would proceed directly to this court. 28 U.S.C. § 636(c)(3); FED. R. CIV. P. 73(c)
Specifically, the Fair asserted, under 42 U.S.C. § 1983, that the county commissioners and the sheriff violated the First Amendment by requiring unlawful sums of money from the Fair, failing to act on the permit application in a timely fashion, denying the Fair adequate time for judicial review of the decision on the application, subjecting the permit to unlawful conditions, and attacking the event with a disproportionate and unnecessary number of law enforcement officers. Again, those claims remained before the district court and are not before us. According to counsel for the state at oral argument, the claims were tried to a jury, the jury gave a verdict for the Fair, and the claims were subsequently settled
The Fair contends in its reply brief that the state may not raise either mootness or the appropriateness of the facial challenge (an issue discussed below) without having filed a cross-appeal. That is incorrect. A prevailing party need not cross-appeal to defend a judgment on any ground properly raised below, as long as it seeks to preserve rather than to change the judgmentRivero v. City & County of San Francisco,
