Archdiocese of Washington v. Washington Metropolitan Area Transit Authority

CourtDistrict Court, District of Columbia
DecidedDecember 8, 2017
DocketCivil Action No. 2017-2554
StatusPublished

This text of Archdiocese of Washington v. Washington Metropolitan Area Transit Authority (Archdiocese of Washington v. Washington Metropolitan Area Transit Authority) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, District of Columbia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Archdiocese of Washington v. Washington Metropolitan Area Transit Authority, (D.D.C. 2017).

Opinion

UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA ____________________________________ ) ARCHDIOCESE OF WASHINGTON, ) ) Plaintiff, ) ) v. ) Civil Action No. 17-2554 (ABJ) ) WASHINGTON METROPOLITAN ) AREA TRANSIT AUTHORITY, et al., ) ) Defendants. ) ____________________________________)

MEMORADUM OPINION

This case, brought by the Archdiocese of Washington, Donald Cardinal Wuerl, Roman

Catholic Archbishop of Washington, involves the plaintiff’s desire to publish an advertisement

that conveys a religious message on government property: the exterior of a public bus.

Plaintiff seeks to place the advertisement on buses operated by the Washington

Metropolitan Transit Authority (“WMATA”) as part of the Archdiocese’s “Find the Perfect Gift”

Christmas campaign. As the Secretary for Pastoral Ministry and Social Concerns for the

Archdiocese, Dr. Susan Timoney, explains in her declaration to the Court: The Find the Perfect Gift campaign is an important part of the Archdiocese’s evangelization efforts. . . . The campaign seeks to invite the public to consider the spiritual meaning of Christmas, to consider celebrating Advent/Christmas by going to Mass at one of our parishes and/or joining in one of our many outreach programs that care for the most vulnerable and poor during Advent and beyond. 1

WMATA has rejected these ads on the basis that they are inconsistent with the agency’s existing

advertising Guidelines, in particular, the Guideline that prohibits “[a]dvertisements that promote

or oppose any religion, religious practice or belief.” 2

The Archdiocese has filed a five count complaint that asks the Court to declare the

Guideline to be unconstitutional, and because the advertising campaign is specifically tied to the

liturgical season of Advent, which has already begun, it has moved for a temporary restraining

order and preliminary injunction that would direct WMATA to immediately accept the

advertisements. Emergency injunctive relief is an extraordinary remedy that may only be awarded

based on a substantial showing that the plaintiff is likely to succeed on the merits of the claims in

its lawsuit, so the Court must determine at this early stage whether plaintiff is likely to be able to

prove that its constitutional or statutory rights are being violated.

Plaintiff cannot carry that burden. The Court recognizes that plaintiff’s pursuit of the

advertising campaign is a manifestation of its faith, but the case does not turn upon whether the

message has value, or whether the Court anticipates that it will be well-received or it will offend.

The dispute must be decided in accordance with Supreme Court precedent and the binding

decisions of the D.C. Circuit, and the applicable constitutional principles are quite clear.

1 Decl. of Dr. Susan Timoney, S.T.D., Ex. 2 to Compl. [Dkt. # 1-2] ¶¶ 4–6 (“Timoney Decl.”).

2 WMATA, Guidelines Governing Commercial Advertising (2015), https://www.wmata. com/about/records/upload/Advertising_Guidelines.pdf. (“WMATA Guidelines”) 2 First, it is well-established that private religious speech is as fully protected under the Free

Speech Clause as secular private expression. And when government property is fully open to the

public as a place to express its views, the government may not discriminate among prospective

speakers based upon the subject matter they wish to address or the viewpoint they intend to convey.

But, when government property has not been designated or made available for broad public use

for communicative purposes, different rules apply. Control over access to a nonpublic or limited

forum may be based on the subject to be discussed as long as: the lines drawn are reasonable given

the purpose of the forum involved, they do not favor one viewpoint over another, and they are

consistently applied.

It is also settled as a matter of law that the exterior of a bus is not a public forum open to

anyone who wishes to address any topic. The Archdiocese conceded this at the hearing on the

motion. WMATA determined two years ago, after polling the community, that it will not accept

advertisements related to such potentially divisive topics as politics or religion. A government

agency may restrict the use of its property based on the content of the message to be broadcast as

long as the restriction is neutral and reasonable. This is not a high threshold to overcome. Since

the restriction does not silence or restrict any particular viewpoint, and it grew out of well-founded

concerns for the safety of the public and WMATA employees, as well as a desire to reduce

vandalism and the administrative burdens involved with spending significant time reviewing

proposed ads, the Guideline meets the test that it be neutral and reasonable.

Plaintiff suggests that its understated campaign, “a simple message of hope, welcoming all

to Christmas Mass or in joining in public service,” 3 is hardly objectionable, but divisive is in the

eye of the beholder, and if WMATA were to make distinctions based on its own judgment about

3 Pl.’s Mot. for TRO & Prelim. Inj. [Dkt. # 2] (“Pl.’s Mot.”) at 10. 3 which religious statements were likely to offend, it would be making the very sort of determination

that plaintiff insists that the Constitution forbids. Thus, WMATA’s decision comports with the

law that this Court is bound to follow in interpreting the Free Speech Clause of the First

Amendment.

Faced with this legal landscape, plaintiff attempts to reframe the issue by arguing that

WMATA is not enforcing a neutral content-based prohibition at all, but that it is denying the

Archdiocese the opportunity to express its particular religious viewpoint about a general topic that

others are freely permitted to discuss on bus property: Christmas. Plaintiff does not point to any

specific commercial advertisements that are currently appearing, but it posits that since WMATA

would accept commercial advertising during the Christmas season, the agency has welcomed the

expression of the secular “viewpoint” that the holiday should be commercialized, and therefore, it

cannot exclude the opposing viewpoint that members of the public should connect with the

spiritual origins of Christmas instead. While it is true that a governmental organization may not

open its doors to the discussion of a certain subject and then exclude the expression of the religious

perspective on that subject, that is not what is happening here, and WMATA’s approach is, in fact,

viewpoint-neutral.

Plaintiff’s description of both sides of this hypothetical conversation is not persuasive.

Commercial advertisements do not by definition express a viewpoint or perspective about the true

meaning of Christmas or how it should be observed; they suggest to potential shoppers – who fall

at every point along the religious spectrum, and who may choose to purchase gifts in December

4 for a multitude of faith-based or secular reasons – where to shop or what to buy. 4 And, the

Archdiocese’s proposed advertising campaign is not commentary about some other permissible

topic – a topic other than religion – from a religious perspective; it is plainly a statement about

religion from a religious perspective. Therefore, WMATA’s decision did not violate the

Archdiocese’s First Amendment right to freedom of speech.

With respect to the Archdiocese’s claim that its religious rights are being violated, it is

axiomatic that the government cannot favor one religion over another without running afoul of the

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