Dеfendant appeals his conviction, after a trial to the court, for criminal trespass in the second degree. ORS 164.245. The basis for the conviction was defendant’s entering the grounds of a public school after the school’s principal had told him not to enter. Defendant asserts that he was engaged in constitutionally protected conduct on public property and that any attеmpt to exclude him was unlawful. We affirm.
We take the facts from the record, resolving any conflicts in the evidence in the state’s favor because of the verdict against defendant. State v. King,
Defendant tried to position himself on the city sidewalk so that he was in the center of the area where the school buses arrive but was not directly in front of any of the bus doors. That location put him close to the arriving students but did not interfere with their access to the school. Defendant wore a sandwich board with a religious statement and had religious literature with him. He called out to the arriving students in a raised voice, stating, among other things, that he had free passes to heaven and offering them the literature that he had brought with him. When school employees saw his activities, some came out to talk with him and to try to keep him away from the students. The school’s principal had previously directed defendant to stay away from the area when the buses were unloading, and the employees repeated that instruction.
Defеndant was charged with seven offenses arising from his conduct on this and a previous occasion. The trial court granted his motions for judgments of acquittal on four of the offenses and found him not guilty of two others. However, it found him guilty of criminal trespass, sentencing him to five years’ bench probation and 100 hours of community service. One condition of probation was that defendant not be on the sidewalk in frоnt of the school; defendant did not object to that condition at the time of sentencing.
Defendant first assigns error to the trial court’s denial of his motion for a judgment of acquittal on the criminal trespass charge. He asserts that his constitutional rights to free speech and to exercise his religion prevent the school principal and other employees from lawfully ordering him to stay оff school property when he was on it as part of his religious activities.
“(b) To fail to leavе premises that are open to the public after being lawfully directed to do so by the person in charge;
“(c) To enter premises that are open to the public after being lawfully directed not to enter the premises [.]”
There is evidence, which the court accepted, that the school’s principal had previously directed defendant to stay off school property
We first address defendant’s argument under the Oregon Constitution. See State v. Plowman,
In reviewing defendant’s conviction, we apply the analysis for deciding issues under Article I, section 8, that the Supreme Court established in State v. Robertson,
“The first Robertson category consists of laws that ‘focus on the content of speech or writing’ or arе ‘written in terms directed to the substance of any ‘opinion’ or any ‘subject’ of communication.’ State v. Plowman, supra,314 Or at 164 (quoting State v. Robertson, supra,293 Or at 412 ) (emphasis in original). Laws within that category violate Article I, section 8, ‘unless the scope of the restraint is wholly confined within some historical exception that was well established when the first American guarantees of freedom of expression were adopted and that the guarantees then or in 1859 demonstrably were not intended to reach.’ State v. Robertson, supra,293 Or at 412 . The second Robertson category consists of laws that ‘focus [ ] on forbidden effects, but expressly prohibit [] expression used to achieve those effects.’ State v. Plowman, supra,314 Or at 164 . Laws in that category ‘are analyzed for overbreadth.’ Ibid. Finally, the third Robertson category consists of laws that ‘focus [ ] on forbidden effects, but without referring to expression at all.’ Ibid. Laws within the third category are analyzed to determine whether they violate Article I, section 8, as applied. State v. Robertson, supra,293 Or at 417 .”.
City of Eugene v. Miller,
In City of Eugene v. Lee,
The disorderly conduct ordinance in Lee proscribed certain effects — as applied to the defendant, unreasonable noise, obstruction of traffic, and violent or threatening behavior — and did not expressly include expression as a means of achieving those effects. Thus, the
In City of Eugene v. Lincoln,
As in Lee, the defendant in Lincoln made an as-applied challеnge to the application of the criminal trespass ordinance to her actions. In evaluating that challenge, we noted both that a person cannot immunize himself or herself from the application of a speech-neutral law by enmeshing otherwise illegal conduct with expressive activity and that government cannot automatically regulate otherwise protected speech under the guise of a speech-neutral law. Rather, the question was whether the city’s objective was to prevent some harm that it had the power to prevent or simply to interfere with protected speech. Lincoln,
Those cases suggest that a conviсtion that was based on defendant’s presence on the sidewalk in front of the school would be problematic, a point that the state appears to concede. However, the state also observes that cases such as Stranahan v. Fred Meyer, Inc.,
In our view, the parties frame the issues too sharply. Lee and Lincoln make clear that the state’s authority to regulate expression on public property is not necessarily coextensive with a private party’s authority to control expression on private property. On the other hand, the mere fact of public ownership does not authorize any person to go on public property for any expressive purpose at any time without regard to the use to which the public has put the property. It is not a coincidence that in Lee and Lincoln the defendants were on property that was intended for use as a public thoroughfare or other place of public gathering. That characteristic was essential to the limited authority of the police to restrict the defendants’
In that regard, defendant’s argument is limited. Defendant does not argue that the principal’s restriction on his speech was unreasonable. Rather, he argues that the principal hаd no lawful authority to restrict his speech at all — an unsupportable assertion in light of decisional law concerning the permissibility of certain content-neutral regulation of speech. At least for that reason, under Article I, section 8, of the Oregon Constitution the trial court did not err in denying defendant’s motion for a judgment of acquittal.
We turn to defendant’s arguments under the First Amendment. He relies primarily on thе Ninth Circuit’s decision in American Civ. Lib. Union, NV v. City of Las Vegas,
American Civ. Lib. Union, NV, does not help defendant’s case. Under the criteria that the Ninth Circuit described, the school grounds are not a public forum. The school uses its property for school purposes, in this case providing a route for students to take from their buses to the school; defendant’s activity is not part of that use. Unlike the sidewalk, the walkway between the school entrance and the sidewalk is not a public thoroughfare but is designed for those who are entering and leaving the school. Although defendant’s actions at the precise location where he intruded may not have directly interfеred with the use of the property for the school, that is the general purpose for all of the school property. The principal’s direction and the legislature’s provision for expressive uses make it clear that defendant
Defendant’s second and third assignments of error, which respectively challenge on separate constitutional grounds the condition of probation that he “not be on north sidewalk of Lincoln Street between 6th ave and 8th ave in Hillsboro,” and the durаtion of his probationary term, are unpreserved. For the first time in his reply brief on appeal, defendant attempts to explain why those challenges are reviewable as error apparent on the face of the record. However, even then, defendant fails to address the factors governing the exercise of this court’s discretion to review asserted plain errоr. See Ailes v. Portland Meadows, Inc.,
Affirmed.
Notes
The evidence suggests that the principal ordered defendant to stay away from the entire area, including the sidewalk, not just from the portion that is school property. Because the trial court based its verdict on defendant’s presence on the school grounds, the parties treat the instruction as limited to that area.
The state argues that defendant did not preserve this issue in the trial court. After reviewing the record we conclude that, although defendant could have madе his arguments in support of his motion for judgment of acquittal more clearly, both the court and the state knew that that was the basis for that motion.
The principal qualifies as a “person in charge” under the definition in ORS 164.205(5); unless defendant’s constitutional claims are correct, the principal’s instruction that defendant not enter the school grounds was lawful.
Defendant also asserts rights under Article I, sectiоns 2 and 3, which protect freedom of worship and the free exercise of religious opinions. Defendant does not explain how those sections might give him more protection in this context than does Article I, section 8. Accordingly, we do not consider those arguments further.
Article I, section 8, prohibits both the adoption of statutes that expressly restrain free expression and the aрplication of otherwise valid statutes in ways that have that effect. “A facial challenge asserts that lawmakers violated the constitution when they enacted the [statute]; an as-applied challenge asserts that executive officials * * * violated the constitution when they enforced the [statute]. Both challenges equally attack the constitutionality of the [statute].” City of Eugene v. Lincoln,
Although we have referred to a “public forum” in Lee and other cases, see, e.g., Higgins v. DMV,
Defendant does not discuss American Civ. Lib. Union, NV, in depth, but he appears to rely on the Ninth Circuit’s discussion of a public forum. For that reason, we do not consider whether the walkway was a designated public forum or a nonpublic forum or whether defendant would have any rights if it were.
