LSO,
LTD. v. STROH, 205
F.3d 1146 (9th Cir. 2000)
LSO,
LTD., a California corporation, Plaintiff-Appellant-Cross-Appellee,
v.
JAY STROH, Director of the California Department of Alcoholic
Beverage
Control, in his official and individual capacities; MANUEL
R.
ESPINOZA, Chief Deputy Director of the California Department of
Alcoholic
Beverage Control, in his official and individual capacities;
DAVID
E. GILL, District Supervisor, Rancho Mirage District Office
Department
of Alcoholic Beverage Control, in his official and
individual
capacities, Defendants-Appellees-Cross-Appellants.
Nos.
98-56093, 98-56349, 98-56465
UNITED
STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE NINTH CIRCUIT
Argued
and Submitted December 7, 1999 — Pasadena, California
Filed
March 6, 2000
[EDITORS'
NOTE: THIS PAGE CONTAINED HEADNOTES AND HEADNOTES
ARE NOT
AN OFFICIAL PRODUCT OF THE COURT, THEREFORE
THEY ARE NOT DISPLAYED.]
[EDITORS'
NOTE: THIS PAGE CONTAINED HEADNOTES AND HEADNOTES
ARE NOT
AN OFFICIAL PRODUCT OF THE COURT, THEREFORE
THEY ARE NOT DISPLAYED.]
COUNSEL
Peter J.
Eliasberg, ACLU Foundation of Southern California,
Los Angeles,
California, for the plaintiff-appellant-cross-appellee.
Dana Thaddeus
Cartozian, Deputy Attorney General, Los Angeles,
California,
for the defendants-appellees-cross-appellants.
Appeals from
the United States District Court for the Central
District of
California, Dickran M. Tevrizian, District Judge,
Presiding,
D.C. No. CV-97-05569-DT.
Before: Dorothy
W. Nelson, Robert Boochever, and Thomas G.
Nelson, Circuit
Judges.
T.G. NELSON,
Circuit Judge:
OVERVIEW
[2] This litigation
arises from the efforts of Appellant Lifestyles
Organization,
Limited ("LSO") to hold its annual Erotic Art
Exhibition
and Trade Show in Palm Springs, California,
in 1997. According
to LSO's complaint, defendants Jay Stroh, Manuel
R. Espinoza
and David E. Gill, all officials of the California
Department
of Alcoholic Beverage Control ("ABC"), (collectively
the "Officials")
attempted to prevent LSO from holding the
exhibition.
They allegedly did this by threatening the Palm
Springs Convention
Center (the "Center") and other businesses
with sanctions
— up to and including loss of their liquor
licenses —
if they allowed LSO to display its art on their
premises.
The Officials based these threats on a California
law prohibiting
the display of certain sexual images, whether
or not legally
obscene, on the premises of establishments with
liquor licenses.
After the federal district court issued a temporary
restraining
order ("TRO") against the Officials, LSO held
its event.
On appeal, we must decide if LSO has standing
to seek prospective
and declaratory injunctive relief preventing
the Officials
from interfering with future LSO art exhibitions.
We must
also decide if the Officials are entitled to
qualified immunity
in a suit seeking damages for their actions
against the 1997
exhibition. We have jurisdiction under 28
U.S.C. § 1291.
We hold
that LSO has standing and that the Officials
were not entitled
to qualified immunity.
[3] FACTS
AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY
[4] LSO is
a California corporation that operates a membership
organization
consisting of approximately 30,000 members.
It has held
a convention every year since 1973, and at least
seventeen of
these have been in California. Since 1991, LSO's
annual convention
has included a Sensual and Erotic Art Exhibition.
This event,
according to LSO, is "the premiere exhibition
devoted to erotic
art in the United States." In addition to the
art exhibition,
the conventions include a trade show typically
featuring
a wide variety of exhibitors, including artists
and art galleries,
members of the travel industry, and publishers.
In recent
years, several thousand people have attended
each convention.
[5] LSO planned
to hold its 1997 convention in Palm Springs.
It chose
the Center, a facility owned and operated by
the City of Palm
Springs, to host most of the events related
to the convention.
It contracted with the Center for exclusive
use of the
Convention Center, including all corridors and
public areas, for
July 30 through August 2, 1997.
According to LSO, its employees
and agents invested considerable time and effort
to prepare
for the organization's convention, especially
the art exhibition.
LSO planned to follow its longstanding practice
of prohibiting
alcohol in the area where the art exhibition
and trade
show were taking place.
[6] It is
undisputed that LSO's exhibitions do not include
art that is
legally obscene. Nonetheless, much of the art
LSO intended to display
in 1997 plainly fell within the proscriptions
of California
Administrative Code, Title 4, Section 143.4,
which prohibits,
on any premises holding a liquor license,
[t]he showing
of film, still pictures, electronic reproduction
or other
visual reproductions depicting:
(1) Acts
or simulated acts of sexual intercourse,
masturbation,
sodomy, bestiality, oral copulation,
flagellation
or any sexual acts which are prohibited by law.
(2) Any person
being touched, caressed or fondled on the
breast, buttocks,
anus or genitals.
(3) Scenes
wherein a person displays the vulva or the anus
or
the genitals.
(4) Scenes
wherein artificial devices or inanimate objects
are employed
to depict, or drawings are employed to portray,
any of the
prohibited activities described above.
[7] In May
1997, appellee Gill, the District Supervisor
at the ABC's
Rancho Mirage District Office, convened a meeting
of representatives
of several ABC licensees, including the Center
and several
of the hotels which were to host events of the
convention.
LSO's president, Robert L. McGinley, and an
attorney for
LSO, Paul Murray, also attended.
[8] Although
the parties' versions of what happened at the
meeting differ
in some respects, they agree that, at a minimum,
Gill read aloud
from Section 143.4 and told the assembled representatives
that ABC regulations
applied to all parts of licensed facilities,
even if no
alcohol was being served in the precise area
within the
premises; that the ABC licensees were responsible
for any violations
of ABC regulations occurring on licensed premises;
and that
the ABC licensees were subject to sanctions
ranging from a warning
to revocation of its license.
[9] Because
the Center had a liquor license, LSO's representatives
became concerned
that Section 143.4 might prevent LSO from
holding the
exhibition there in the event a violation occurred.
Attorney Murray
offered to designate the parts of the Center
where the
trade show and art exhibition were to take place
as alcohol-free
zones during those events, on the theory that,
in such
a case, the ABC regulations would not apply
there. The Officials
ultimately rejected this proposal, maintaining
it was not
possible to "de-license" an area within the
physical limits of
a larger licensed area for the purposes of engaging
in conduct otherwise
prohibited by the liquor laws. Gill later mailed
the text
of Section 143.4 to the licensees. A letter
accompanying the statute
said: "Please be advised that the activity listed
in these
statutes cannot occur at any time on any portion
of your licensed
premises."
[10] On June
24, 1997, McGinley and Murray met with Espinoza,
who was
ABC's Chief Deputy Director; Stroh, ABC's Director;
and Kenton
Byers, ABC's chief counsel. At this meeting
appellee Espinoza
allegedly expressed the view that the art exhibition
would violate
ABC regulations. LSO attempted to negotiate
with the
Officials, but the parties were unable to reach
an agreement that
would allow the exhibition to go forward at
the Center without
risk of ABC-imposed sanctions.
[11] During
the same time period, Gill had numerous conversations
with
Jim Dunn, general manager of the Center, which
included discussion
of LSO's planned art exhibition and ABC regulations.
Gill told
Dunn that the Center faced a threat of disciplinary
action if
displays in violation of the regulations were
permitted.
Dunn sent numerous letters to LSO discussing
his concerns
over the exhibition and the possibility of sanctions
from ABC.
He suggested that
the exhibition be moved to a tent area across
the street from the Center,
but LSO refused.
On July 23, 1997, Dunn notified LSO
by letter that he had decided to bar the art
exhibition from the Center
because of fear that the Center would face sanctions
from the Officials
if the exhibition went on as planned. The Center
sent an addendum
to the original contract that called for relocating
the exhibition
to the tent area.
[12] On July
28, 1997, LSO filed suit against ABC and several
of its officials
in federal district court seeking injunctive
relief that
would allow its 1997 exhibition to take place
at the Convention
Center. The following day, the district court
issued a TRO
forbidding the Officials from interfering with
the art exhibition.
The exhibition and trade show took place as
scheduled at
the Convention Center between July 31 and August
2, 1997. After
the event, the district court vacated its order
to show cause
regarding a preliminary injunction.
[13] Soon
after that, LSO filed an amended complaint seeking
declaratory
relief, damages and injunctive relief under
42 U.S.C. § 1983.
LSO sought
damages and declaratory relief with respect
to the
Officials' alleged interference with its 1997
convention preparations.
It sought injunctive and declaratory relief
to prevent
future interference by the Officials with the
exhibitions and
trade shows LSO intends to hold in the future.
[14] Though
the district court issued numerous orders, LSO
appeals only
some of them. First, it appeals the district
court's orders holding
that LSO lacked standing to seek injunctive
and declaratory
relief. Second, LSO objects to the district
court's
order granting
summary judgment to the Officials on the ground
of qualified
immunity. Third, LSO objects to the district
court's award
of costs to the Officials. The Officials cross-appeal,
objecting
to the district court's award of fees to LSO
with respect
to the TRO.
DISCUSSION
I. Standing
A. The District
Court's Orders
[15] The district
court, in its orders of September 22, 1997,
and February
17, 1998, concluded that LSO lacked standing
to seek prospective
injunctive and declaratory relief, and therefore
dismissed
LSO's claims seeking this relief. The court
relied on our
decision in Nelsen v. King County, 895
F.2d 1248,
1254 (9th Cir.
1990), in holding that LSO's claim for injunctive
relief was "based
upon speculative, future harm, rather than the
requisite `credible
threat of future harm,'" and that LSO lacked
standing because
it had not demonstrated "a specific injury that
will result
from specific, imminent conduct of the Defendants."
The court
also found that future events were "too hypothetical"
to support
standing for declaratory relief. We review de
novo the district
court's decision that the LSO lacks standing.
See Abboud v.
INS, 140 F.3d 843,
847 (9th Cir. 1998).
B. Discussion
[16] Under
Article III of the Constitution, a federal court
lacks jurisdiction
unless the plaintiffs present an actual "case
or controversy."
Allen v. Wright, 468 U.S. 737,
750 (1984). To satisfy
this requirement, plaintiffs must have, inter
alia, standing.
See American-Arab Anti-Discrimination Comm.
v. Thornburgh,
970 F.2d 501,
506 (9th Cir. 1991). As the party seeking
to invoke federal jurisdiction, LSO bears the
burden of establishing
its standing. See San Diego Gun Rights Comm.
v. Reno,
98 F.3d 1121,
1126 (9th Cir. 1996). To do so, it "must
demonstrate
three elements constituting the `irreducible
constitutional
minimum' of Article III standing." Id. First,
LSO must
show that it has suffered an "`injury-in-fact'
to a legally protected
interest that is both `concrete and particularized'
and `actual
and imminent,' as
opposed to `conjectural' or `hypothetical.'"
Id. Second, it must show a causal
connection between the injury and the conduct
complained of. Third, it
must be "likely" — not merely speculative
— that its injury will
be "redressed by a favorable decision." See
id.
[17] Here,
the controversy turns on whether LSO has alleged
an injury-in-fact.
1. Whether
LSO alleges a "generalized grievance"
[18] The Officials
argue that, since the regulatory threats at
issue were
directed at liquor licensees and not LSO itself,
LSO alleges a
generalized grievance and not a particularized
injury. It is, of
course, well settled that a party with a generalized
grievance about
government conduct lacks standing to sue. See
Valley Forge Christian
College v. Americans United for Separation of
Church & State,
454 U.S. 464,
475-76 (1982). We conclude, however, that
this is not
such a case.
[19] In so
doing, we are guided by the Supreme Court's
decision in Bantam
Books, Inc. v. Sullivan, 372 U.S. 58
(1963). In Bantam, four
New York book publishers sued the State of Rhode
Island to challenge
the practices of a state commission created
to "educate"
the public concerning literature it considered
to be obscene
or corrupting. See id. at 59-61. The commission
had established
a practice of notifying book distributors on
its official
stationery whenever books or magazines sold
by the distributors
were found objectionable by the commission.
See id. at
61. The notice typically contained a reminder
to the distributor
of the commission's duty to bring purveyors
of obscenity
to the attention of the Attorney General. See
id. at 62.
The particular bookseller involved in the Bantam
case would then
immediately stop distributing the listed publications,
refuse to
fill orders for the books, retrieve unsold copies
already in
bookstores, and return unsold copies to the
publishers.
See id. at 63. The distributor testified that
he cooperated
with the commission in order to avoid "some
sort of a court
action." Id.
[20] Even
though the actions of Rhode Island were directed
at the distributors
and not the publishers, the Court harbored no
doubts concerning
the publishers' standing to bring suit. The
Court explained
that, even though the commission's letters were
sent to distributors
and not publishers, and the commission did not
purport to
regulate the publishers, the publishers had
suffered a "palpable
injury" because circulation of their books was
impaired.
Id. at 64 n. 6. The Court emphasized that the
publishers
did not stand as "mere proxies arguing another's
constitutional
rights," because the publishers had a right
to circulate
their books and this right was implicated by
the commission's
activities. Id. Finally, the Court noted that
pragmatic
considerations played a role in its standing
inquiry, because
a book distributor prevented from selling a
few titles would
probably not suffer enough economic harm to
justify suing, while
a publisher would. See id. The Court concluded
that "[u]nless
[the publisher] is permitted to sue, infringements
of freedom
of the press may too often go unremedied." Id.
[21] Here,
the facts, and the policies implicated, are
very similar to
those in Bantam. LSO contends that the Officials
censored its art
exhibition by applying pressure and threats
to a necessary conduit:
the licensees whose facilities LSO must rent
in order to hold
its shows.
Thus, LSO
alleges injury to its own constitutional rights.
Moreover, like the
book distributors in Bantam, none of the licensees
involved in this case
would be likely to litigate this issue simply
because it is prevented from
hosting a convention event or two.
[22] We are
not persuaded by the Officials' attempt to distinguish
Bantam Books
on the ground that the publishers in that case
had suffered
an actual injury — lost book sales —
while LSO "never suffered
an injury" because it ultimately was able to
hold its 1997
convention. LSO points out that it incurred
various costs arising
from the Officials' alleged interference with
the 1997 convention,
notwithstanding the fact that the convention
was finally
held. Moreover, it alleges that the prospect
of future interference
by the officials burdens its First Amendment
rights. Given
the particularized nature of the harms alleged,
we do not believe
the instant case is distinguishable from Bantam
Books. Thus,
we hold that LSO's claim does not allege a generalized
grievance.
2. Whether
LSO faces a realistic threat of future interference
[23] Next
we consider whether LSO lacks standing because
its concerns
regarding future actions by the Officials are
speculative
or hypothetical. See San Diego Gun Rights Comm.,
98 F.3d
at 1126. We conclude that LSO's pleadings were
sufficient to overcome
a motion to dismiss under Rule 12.
[24] "The
difference between an abstract question and
a `case and controversy'
is one of degree, of course, and is not discernible
by any precise
test." Babbitt v. United Farm Workers Nat'l
Union, 442 U.S. 289,
297 (1979). Nonetheless, some general principles
exist. The
Supreme Court and this court have often emphasized
that, when
plaintiffs seek to establish standing to challenge
a law
or regulation that is not presently being enforced
against them,
they must demonstrate "a realistic danger of
sustaining a direct
injury as a result of the statute's operation
or enforcement."
Id. at 298;
Bland v. Fessler, 88 F.3d 729,
736-37 (9th
Cir. 1996). In making standing determinations
in such cases,
we are cognizant of the fact that several unpredictable
factors may
determine whether an actual controversy involving
the plaintiff
and the challenged law will ever come about.
As Justice Brennan
explained in the context of a threatened criminal
prosecution:
Because the
decision to instigate a criminal prosecution
is
usually discretionary with the prosecuting authorities,
even a
person with a settled intention to disobey the
law can never be
sure that the sanctions of the law will be invoked
against him.
Further, whether or not the injury will occur
is to some extent
within the control of the complaining party
himself, since he
can decide to abandon his intention to disobey
the law. For
these reasons, the maturity of such disputes
for resolution
before a prosecution begins is decided on a
case-by-case basis,
by considering the likelihood that the complainant
will disobey
the law, the certainty that such disobedience
will take a
particular form, any present injury occasioned
by the threat of
prosecution, and the likelihood that a prosecution
will
actually ensue.
[25] Blanchette
v. Connecticut Gen. Ins. Corps., 419
U.S. 102,
143 n. 29
(1974).
[26] It is
clear that a plaintiff "does not have to await
the consummation
of threatened injury to obtain preventive relief."
Id. at 143.
It is sufficient for
standing purposes that the plaintiff intends
to engage in "a course of conduct
arguably affected with a constitutional interest"
and that there is
a credible threat that the challenged provision
will be invoked against the
plaintiff. See Farm Workers, 442 U.S. at 298.
By contrast, "persons having
no fears of state prosecution except those that
are imaginary or speculative,
are not to be accepted as appropriate plaintiffs."
Younger v. Harris,
401 U.S. 37,
42 (1971).
[27] In considering
whether a plaintiff faces a realistic threat,
we consider
a variety of factors. It is well settled that
evidence of
past instances of enforcement is important in
a standing inquiry.
See San Diego Gun Rights Comm., 98 F.3d at 1128
(noting absence
of any past prosecutions under the challenged
provision and
finding lack of standing); American-Arab, 970
F.2d at 507 (noting
past prosecution of plaintiffs under challenged
provision and
finding standing).
[28] However,
enforcement history alone is not dispositive.
Courts have
found standing where no one had ever been prosecuted
under the
challenged provision. See Farm Workers, 442
U.S. at 302; see also
Bland, 88 F.3d at 737. Conversely, we also have
explained that
evidence of past prosecution is not sufficient
to gain standing
"if unaccompanied by any continuing, present,
adverse effects."
American-Arab, 970 F.2d at 507. Thus, we could
not automatically
conclude that LSO has standing simply because
the Officials
interfered with their convention plans in 1997.
[29] Courts
have also considered the Government's failure
to disavow application
of the challenged provision as a factor in favor
of a finding
of standing. See, e.g., Farm Workers, 442 U.S.
at 302 (noting
the Government's failure to disavow application
of the challenged
provision against parties like plaintiffs, and
concluding
that plaintiffs "are thus not without some reason
in fearing
prosecution"); Bland, 88 F.3d at 737 ("The Attorney
General of
California has not stated affirmatively that
his office
will not enforce the . . . statute."); American-Arab,
970 F.2d
at 508 (noting that Government dropped charges
against plaintiff
"not because they were considered inapplicable,
but for tactical
reasons.")
[30] The Officials
have not disavowed their intent to impose
sanctions
if the exhibit is held on licensed premises.
While we cannot
go so far as to say that a plaintiff has standing
whenever the
Government refuses to rule out use of the challenged
provision,
failure to disavow "is an attitudinal factor
the net effect
of which would seem to impart some substance
to the fears of
[plaintiffs]." Id.
[31] Finally,
when the threatened enforcement effort implicates
First Amendment
rights, the inquiry tilts dramatically toward
a finding
of standing. Thus, when the State of Virginia
passed a law
banning the display of certain sexually-explicit
material where
juveniles could examine it, the Supreme Court
found that booksellers
had standing to object, even though the law
had not yet
been enforced. See Virginia v. American Booksellers
Ass'n, Inc.,
484 U.S. 383,
386, 392-93 (1988). The Court explained:
We are not
troubled by the pre-enforcement nature of this
suit.
The State has not suggested that the newly enacted
law will not
be enforced, and we see no reason to assume
otherwise. We
conclude that plaintiffs have alleged an actual
and well-founded
fear that the law will be enforced against them.
Further, the
alleged danger of this statute is, in large
measure, one of
self-censorship; a harm that can be realized
even without
actual prosecution.
[32] Id. at
393. Accordingly, we have noted that the tendency
to find standing
absent actual, impending enforcement against
the plaintiff
is stronger "in First Amendment cases, `[f]or
free expression
— of transcendent value to all society,
and not merely to
those exercising their rights — might
be the loser." Bland, 88 F.3d
at 736-37 (quoting Dombrowski v. Pfister,
380 U.S. 479,
486 (1965)). Accord Navegar, Inc. v. United
States, 103
F.3d 994,
999 (D.C. Cir. 1997) ("Federal courts
most frequently
find pre-enforcement challenges justiciable
when the challenged
statutes allegedly `chill' conduct protected
by the First Amendment.").
[33] Here
all of the salient factors point to a finding
of standing. LSO
has demonstrated a realistic threat that the
Officials again will
wield Section 143.4 in a manner infringing upon
LSO's constitutional
rights. It appears from the record and the briefs
that ABC enforced
or threatened to enforce Section 143.4 against
licensees
involved with LSO's conventions in 1996 and
1997. LSO
asserts in its pleadings on information and
belief that ABC has
in the past conducted raids on licensed premises
and forced the
removal of art it believes conflicts with its
regulations. LSO
has indicated that it intends to hold erotic
art exhibitions annually
in the future. Finally, LSO pleads that the
possibility that
the Officials will again apply the regulations
in a way that could
deny it a venue inhibits it from planning future
conventions
in California, thus chilling its freedom of
expression
within the state.
Indeed, LSO has already engaged in
self-censorship. It indicated in its pleadings
that it canceled
plans to show some of the art from the 1997
exhibition elsewhere
in California because of the Officials' posture
regarding
Section 143.4.
[34] We are
not persuaded by the Officials' contention that
LSO was required
to plead that a particular ABC licensee had
in fact refused
to lease premises to LSO for a particular exhibition
or trade
show, and that it did so because of fear of
ABC sanctions. It
was sufficient for LSO to plead, as it did,
that the threat of enforcement
of Section 143.4 was likely to impede LSO's
ability to
find venues for future exhibitions and trade
shows within California.
We think it follows logically from LSO's pleadings
that few,
if any, businesses will be willing to risk their
liquor license
in order to do business with LSO, and that this
state of affairs
burdens LSO's freedom of expression. Moreover,
LSO needed only
to plead that the threat of enforcement stood
as one barrier to
the exercise of its First Amendment rights.
It was not required
to show that Section 143.4 was the only barrier
to finding
a venue in California or that LSO would, in
fact, find a venue
within California but for the threat of enforcement.
See Northeastern
Fla. Chapter of the Assoc. Gen. Contractors
of Am. v.
City of Jacksonville, 508 U.S. 656,
666 (1993). A plaintiff needs
only to plead general factual allegations of
injury in order
to survive a motion to dismiss, for "we presume
that general
allegations embrace those specific facts that
are necessary
to support the claim." Lujan v. Defenders of
Wildlife, 504 U.S. 555,
561 (1993) (quotations omitted). Finally, we
note that
our finding of a reasonable threat of prosecution,
for standing
purposes, dispenses with any ripeness problem.
See Adult Video,
960 F.2d at 786.
[35] Accordingly,
we reverse the district court's orders dismissing
LSO's claims
seeking prospective relief and remand for further
proceedings.
II. Qualified
Immunity
A. The District
Court's Orders
[36] With
respect to LSO's claim for damages, the district
court granted
summary judgment to the Officials on the basis
of qualified
immunity. The court reasoned that because the
U.S. Supreme
Court's decision in 44 Liquormart, Inc. v. Rhode
Island, 517 U.S. 484
(1996), was ambiguous and because the California
Constitution
prohibits state officials from refusing to enforce
a law
on constitutional grounds unless an appellate
court has struck
down the law,
a reasonable official might not have
understood
that the Officials' actions violated LSO's rights.
We review
de novo a district court's decision to grant
summary judgment
on the ground of qualified immunity. See Blueford
v. Prunty,
108 F.3d 251,
253 (9th Cir. 1997).
B. Discussion
[37] State
officials are entitled to qualified immunity
in performing
discretionary functions if their conduct did
"not violate
clearly established statutory or constitutional
rights of which
a reasonable person would have known." Harlow
v. Fitzgerald,
457 U.S. 800,
818 (1982). Once the defense of qualified
immunity is raised by the defendant, the plaintiff
bears the
burden of showing that the rights allegedly
violated were
"clearly established." See Shoshone-Bannock
Tribes v. Fish & Game
Comm'n, 42 F.3d 1278,
1285 (9th Cir. 1994). If that burden
is satisfied,
the defendant must prove that his conduct was
"reasonable."
See id.
[38] "[T]he
first step [in qualified immunity analysis]
is to identify
the exact contours of the underlying right said
to be violated."
County of Sacramento v. Lewis, 118 S.Ct. 1708,
1714 n. 5
(1998). "[I]t is only then that a court should
ask whether the right
allegedly implicated was clearly established
at the time of the
event in question." Id.
[39] Thus,
a qualified immunity determination involves
three inquiries:
(1) identification of the right that has allegedly
been violated,
(2) the determination of whether that right
was clearly
established such that a reasonable official
would have known
of it, and (3) the determination of whether
a reasonable officer
would have believed that the challenged conduct
was lawful.
Shoshone-Bannock Tribes, 42 F.3d at 1285. "The
first two questions
are issues of law; the third, although ultimately
a legal
question, may require fact finding as well."
Id. at 1285-86.
[40] 1. The
contours of the right allegedly violated
[41] In Anderson
v. Creighton, 483 U.S. 635
(1987), the Supreme Court
observed that the outcome of the "clearly established
rights" inquiry
in each case "depends substantially upon the
level of generality
at which the relevant `legal rule' is to be
identified."
See id. at 639. The Court directed that the
inquiry into
whether rights were clearly established should
be conducted in
a "particularized" manner, rather than a general
one. See id. at
640. This court followed that directive in Camarillo
v. McCarthy,
998 F.2d 638
(9th Cir. 1993), in which an HIV-positive
prison inmate
argued that being separated from the general
prison population
violated his rights to freedom of association
under the
First Amendment. See id. at 640. We concluded
that the proper question
was not whether the First Amendment was clearly
established,
but whether it was clearly established that
"inmates [were]
entitled to be free from prison regulations
that restrict their
association with members of the general prison
population." Id.
[42] Not surprisingly,
the parties propose rather different formulations
of the right
at issue in this case. LSO contends that
the right
at issue is "the right to be free from content-based
discrimination."
The Officials state that the issue is whether
there was law
clearly establishing that they "would violate
LSO's freedom of expression
by advising LSO of the existence of the ABC
regulations, and further
advising that said regulations apply to conduct
on ABC-licensed premises."
[43] LSO's
proposed formulation is too general, for as
we have said, "the
right referenced by the [qualified immunity]
test is not a general
constitutional guarantee . . . but its application
in a particular
context." Todd v. United States, 849
F.2d 365,
370 (9th
Cir. 1988). Likewise, the Officials' formulation
is too particularized.
To phrase the "right allegedly violated" in
such detail
and in terms so closely paralleling what allegedly
happened here
"would be to allow [the Officials], and future
defendants,
to define away all potential claims." Kelly
v. Borg, 60 F.3d 664,
667 (9th Cir. 1995).
[44] Our goal
is to define the contours of the right allegedly
violated in
a way that expresses what is really being litigated.
[45] In this
case we are not called upon to decide if, in
1997, the
Government generally had the power to censor
speech based on content,
or whether an official generally could inform
someone of the
existence of a particular state law without
violating the First
Amendment. Indeed, the Officials here do not
seriously dispute
that content-based regulation of expression
by the Government,
even of indecent expression, is prohibited unless
necessary
to meet a compelling government interest, see
e.g., Sable
Communications v. F.C.C., 492 U.S. 115,
126 (1989), or that prior
restraint of speech is strongly disfavored and
rarely upheld,
see, e.g., Southeastern Promotions, Ltd. v.
Conrad, 420 U.S. 546,
558-59 (1975); Collins v. Jordan, 110
F.3d 1363,
1372 (9th
Cir. 1996). Nor does LSO contend that its rights
were violated
merely because the Officials "informed" them
of the content
of Section 143.4. Instead, the Officials argue
that they could
reasonably have believed in 1997 that liquor
regulations were
subject to an exception to the general rules
of the First Amendment,
such that LSO's right to display artwork that
violated Section
143.4 on the premises of an ABC licensee was
questionable.
Thus, we are asked to decide whether, under
the circumstances,
it was clear that LSO had the right to exhibit
non-obscene
art on the premises of an ABC licensee free
of interference
from state officials, even though some of the
art fell
within the proscriptions of a state liquor regulation
governing
expressive content at licensed establishments.
[46] 2. Whether
the law was clearly established
[47] The Officials
contend that in 1997 there was some question
as to
whether liquor authorities could constitutionally
regulate the content
of expression, including non-obscene expression,
on the premises
of establishments holding liquor licenses. They
argue that
because the Supreme Court, in 44 Liquormart
did not explicitly
disavow its earlier holding in California v.
LaRue, 409 U.S. 109
(1972), it was unclear whether Section 143.4
could be
constitutionally employed to punish the display
of non-obscene art.
We disagree.
[48] In LaRue,
the Supreme Court upheld against a facial challenge
the California
regulations that were precursors to today's
Section 143.4.
See id. at 118-19, 93
S.Ct. 390. These regulations were enacted partly
in response to live sex
shows and sexual contact between nude performers
and patrons. See id. at
111. While acknowledging that some of the regulated
conduct fell "within
the limits of the constitutional protection
of freedom of expression,"
the Court nonetheless concluded that such regulation
was permissible
because of the "critical fact" that the rules
applied only
in establishments licensed to sell liquor. See
id. at
118. Explicitly, the Court stated that the Twenty-first
Amendment
required an "added presumption in favor of the
validity of
state regulation in this area." Id. at 118-119.
[49] The Court
in 44 Liquormart revisited LaRue and concluded
that "the
Court's analysis in LaRue would have lead to
precisely the same
result if it had placed no reliance on the Twenty-first
Amendment."
517 U.S. at 515. This was because the state
could have
prohibited "the kind of `bacchanalian revelries'
described in
the LaRue opinion" by invoking its general police
powers and without
resorting to the Twenty-first Amendment. Id.
The Court stated
that while it was not questioning the holding
in LaRue, it was
disavowing "its reasoning insofar as it relied
on the
Twenty-first
Amendment." Id. at 516. It concluded by holding
that "the
Twenty-first Amendment does not qualify the
constitutional prohibition
against laws abridging the freedom of speech
embodied in
the First Amendment." Id.
[50] The Officials
argue that because the Supreme Court did not
disavow the
actual holding of LaRue, it was not clear that
the ABC
regulations were invalid. However, the Court
made clear in 44 Liquormart
that the Twenty-first Amendment does not authorize
states to
enact liquor regulations that would otherwise
be prevented
by the First Amendment in other contexts. See
id.
[51] The Court
decided 44 Liquormart on May 13, 1996. See id.
at 484.
The incidents in question here occurred in 1997.
Thus, at the
time that the Officials warned the Center's
management that hosting
LSO's art exhibition might subject the Center
to sanctions,
it was clearly established that liquor regulations
could not
be used to impose restrictions on speech that
would otherwise
be prohibited under the First Amendment. Thus,
LSO's right
was "clearly established."
[52] 3. Whether
a reasonable official could have believed that
the conduct
of the Officials was lawful
[53] The remaining
question is whether reasonable people in the
Officials'
position could have believed that their conduct
was lawful.
The officials argue that, even if it was clear
in 1997 that
applying Section 143.4 to deny LSO a venue for
its exhibition
was unconstitutional, they were nonetheless
required to
enforce the regulation because of Article III,
Section 3.5, Subdivision
(a), of the California Constitution. This provision
states that
an administrative agency has no power to "refuse
to enforce
a statute[] on the basis of it being unconstitutional,
unless an
appellate court has made a determination that
such statute
is unconstitutional." Cal. Const. art. III,
§ 3.5(a).
Thus, the Officials contend, since no appellate
court had
yet struck down Section 143.4, they could have
reasonably
thought that they were required to enforce the
law.
[54] This
argument, however, takes no account of the Supremacy
Clause of
the United
States Constitution. It is a long-standing principle
that a state may
not immunize its officials from the requirements
of federal law. See Martinez
v. California, 444 U.S. 277,
284 (1980). To adopt the
Officials' contention would be to eliminate
any obligation on the part of
state officials to draw even the most obvious
conclusions from well-settled
federal case law until the precise state law
at issue is struck
down. Such a result would be untenable. "Conduct
by persons acting under
color of state law which is wrongful under 42
U.S.C. § 1983 or
§ 1985(3) cannot be immunized by state
law. . . . [T]he supremacy clause
of the Constitution insures that the proper
construction may be enforced."
See id. at 284 n. 8 (quoting Hampton v. Chicago,
484 F.2d 602,
607 (7th Cir. 1973)).
[55] The Officials
cite F.E. Trotter, Inc. v. Watkins, 869
F.2d 1312,
1315 (9th
Cir. 1989), for the proposition that
"[g]overnment
officials are not `charged with predicting the
future course
of constitutional law.'" However, the Officials
ignore another
statement from the same case: "The very action
in question
need not have previously been held unlawful,
but in light
of existing law, its unlawfulness must be apparent."
Id. Here,
there was no need for the Officials to predict
future developments
in constitutional law because 44 Liquormart
made clear
that state liquor regulations are subject to
the First Amendment
just like any other state enactments.
[56] We conclude
that in 1997 no reasonable official could have
believed that
Section 143.4 could constitutionally be employed
to impede
LSO's right to display non-obscene art on the
premises of an
ABC licensee. Thus, we reverse the district
court's grant of summary
judgment to the Officials on the ground of qualified
immunity.
III. Fees
and Costs
A. The District
Court's Orders
[57] The Officials
appeal from the district court's order entered
on July
7, 1998, awarding attorney's fees to LSO with
respect to the TRO.
The district court reasoned that because LSO
obtained a TRO and
therefore was able to hold its 1997 convention,
it was the "prevailing
party" with respect to the TRO for the purposes
of a fee
award under 42 U.S.C. § 1988(b).
The district court also found
that the Officials were the prevailing party
on the other claims
raised by LSO and awarded them costs. LSO appeals
this award.
[58] We review
the district court's award of fees pursuant
to 42 U.S.C. § 1988
for abuse of discretion. See Barjon v. Dalton,
132 F.3d 496,
500 (9th Cir. 1997) We also review an award
of costs for
abuse of discretion. See EEOC v. Pape Lift,
Inc., 115 F.3d 676,
680 (9th Cir.
1997).
B. Discussion
[59] A party
"prevails" for the purposes of a fee award if
it succeeds
"on any significant issue in litigation which
achieves some
of the benefit [it] sought in bringing suit."
Hensley v. Eckerhart,
461 U.S. 424,
433 (1983). "[T]o be considered a prevailing
party within the meaning of § 1988, the
plaintiff must be
able to point to a resolution of the dispute
which |