Indiana permits charitable organizations to conduct a limited number of gambling events. In 1992 the state amended its Charitable Gaming Act, adding restrictions that curtailed the bingo games being held in Misha-waka by There to Care (TTC), a charitable corporation. In October 1992 the state directed it to cease operating bingo games, giving several reasons: TTC had not been doing business in Indiana for five years (see I.C. § 4-32-6-20(a)(l)(C)); it ran bingo too frequently (the limit is three events a week, I.C. § 4-32-9-18, no more than two of which may be held in the same rented facility, I.C. § 4 — 32—9—20(b)); it rented too opulent a hall (the statute sets a limit of $200 per day, I.C. § 4-32-9-20(a)(2), and there is an administrative limit on rental paid for property used to run the game); and the same persons were conducting bingo for multiple charities (TTC had a sister charity, Extend-A-Hand Association, Inc., hold bingo games in the same hall, an obvious device to evade the weekly limit). TTC filed this suit under 42 U.S.C. § 1983, contending that the state violated the commerce clause of the Constitution by discriminating against corporations that principally do business in other states, the first amendment by limiting the effective size of the bingo operation and thus cutting down on opportunities for speech, and state law.
Invoking
Railroad Commission of Texas v. Pullman Co.,
A word is in order, before we take up the merits, about the unusual procedure the district court employed.
Pullman
permits a court to
abstain,
that is, to withhold decision while the parties present their dispute to a different forum. Parceling out issues in an ongoing case does more than inconvenience the parties by requiring them to litigate in multiple places at the same time. It creates a distinct possibility that one or the other court will render an advisory opinion. Federal courts decide
cases,
not legal issues in the abstract. Before taking up a constitutional issue, a federal court should satisfy itself that there is no available non-constitutional ground of decision.
Spector Motor Service, Inc. v. McLaughlin,
TTC does not have multiple independent claims; it has multiple legal theories supporting a single claim for relief. The state court might have resolved the whole controversy in TTC’s favor. Alternatively the state court might have interpreted Indiana law to place an insuperable obstacle in TTC’s path no matter what the district court made of its arguments under the first amendment. See
Harp Advertising Illinois, Inc. v. Chicago Ridge,
Is bingo speech? People buy cards in the hope of winning back more than they spend. A voice at the front of the hall drones “B-2” and “G-49”; after a while someone at the back of the hall shouts “BINGO!” and gets a prize. These words do not convey ideas; any other combination of letters and numbers would serve the purpose equally well. They employ vocal cords but are no more “expression” than are such statements as “21” in a game of blackjack or “three peaches!” by someone who has just pulled the handle .of a one-armed bandit. Statements promoting gambling are speech, albeit without the first amendment protection accorded to political speech, see
United States v. Edge Broadcasting Co.,
— U.S. -,
*1168
According to the complaint, TTC uses bingo games to spread the word about its activities. Posters on the walls proclaim its mission; during the games organizers recruit volunteers; net proceeds of the games support charitable endeavors that may include speech. But persons who seek to engage in speech cannot avoid the application of state laws that are neutral with regard to the content and viewpoint of their expression. The state may collect income taxes, which reduce the resources at the command of speakers, but laws indifferent to the content or even existence of speech pose no constitutional difficulties. E.g.,
Jimmy Swaggart Ministries v. California Board of Equalization,
To put this in doctrinal terms:
A regulation that serves purposes unrelated to the content of expression is deemed neutral, even if it has an incidental effect on some speakers or messages but not others_ Government regulation of expressive activity is content neutral so long as it is “justified without reference to the content of the regulated speech.”
Ward v. Rock Against Racism,
Three opinions serve as the mainstays of TTC’s case. In
Schaumberg v. Citizens for a Better Environment,
What TTC fails to appreciate, however, is that the statutes at issue in
Schaumburg
and its successors were directed only against organizations engaged in expression. Schaum-berg prohibited fundraising activities that did not return at least 75% of gross proceeds to the charities.
Charities in Indiana have a protected market in gambling. Having barred commercial enterprises from this business, and thus created some monopoly rents for the plucking, the state did not violate the first amendment by setting limits on charities’ endeavors. The statute is indifferent to the content and viewpoint of charities’ expression; no more is required.
AFFIRMED.
