Coalition for the Abolition v. City of Atlanta

219 F.3d 1301
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Eleventh Circuit
DecidedJuly 27, 2000
Docket99-11385
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 219 F.3d 1301 (Coalition for the Abolition v. City of Atlanta) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Eleventh Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Coalition for the Abolition v. City of Atlanta, 219 F.3d 1301 (11th Cir. 2000).

Opinion

PUBLISH

IN THE UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FILED FOR THE ELEVENTH CIRCUIT U.S. COURT OF APPEALS ELEVENTH CIRCUIT JULY 27 2000 _______________ THOMAS K. KAHN CLERK No. 99-11385 _______________

D. C. Docket No. 96-00407-CV-1-JEC

COALITION FOR THE ABOLITION OF MARIJUANA PROHIBITION, PAUL D. CORNWELL, II,

Plaintiffs-Appellants,

versus

CITY OF ATLANTA,

Defendant-Appellee.

______________________________

Appeal from the United States District Court for the Northern District of Georgia ______________________________ (July 27, 2000)

Before COX, BIRCH and BARKETT, Circuit Judges. BIRCH, Circuit Judge:

The Coalition for the Abolition of Marijuana Prohibition (“CAMP”) and its

national coordinator, Paul D. Cornwell, II, (collectively, the appellants) appeal the

district court’s judgment finding the City of Atlanta Outdoor Festivals Ordinance of

1994, codified at Atlanta. Ga., Code §§ 138-186 through 138-208 (1994), (the “1994

Festival Ordinance”), repealed by Atlanta Outdoor Festivals Ordinance of 2000,

Atlanta, Ga. Code § 99-O-1020 (2000), to be, in part, facially unconstitutional and

enjoining the future application of those unconstitutional portions of the ordinance.

The appellants appeal the district court’s determination that portions of the festival

ordinance were constitutional. For the reasons that follow, we AFFIRM the holding

of the district court.

BACKGROUND

CAMP is a non-profit organization focused primarily on forming alliances

and associating with other groups concerned with marijuana issues. Additionally,

CAMP sponsors the Great Atlanta Pot Festival (the “Pot Festival”), a direct action

event advocating changes in the laws governing marijuana.

CAMP held the Pot Festival in Atlanta’s Piedmont Park from 1990 through

1995. Prior to 1995, the appellants erected a stage with a cover, stage lights and

barricades for the use of speakers and musical performers during the Pot Festival.

2 During the Pot Festival, CAMP distributed printed information regarding the uses

of marijuana and the hemp plant and advocating the repeal of all laws prohibiting

the use of marijuana. CAMP also sold products, such as t-shirts, bearing messages

about marijuana. Other vendors sold food and drinks.

In 1995, the City of Atlanta requested that CAMP apply for an outdoor

festival permit.1 The City explained that, because the Pot Festival had evolved into

a larger, more commercial event, attracting approximately 30,000 attendees and

featuring concerts, political speeches, and vendors selling food and merchandise, it

now fell within the 1994 Festival Ordinance’s definition of an “outdoor festival.”2

1 The City had determined in 1991 that the Pot Festival should have been treated as an outdoor festival within the scope of the festival ordinance and requested that CAMP apply for a festival permit. CAMP refused and brought the matter before a Fulton County Court. That court allowed the event to proceed without a festival permit. The City did not request that CAMP apply for a festival permit again until 1995. 2 The 1994 Festival Ordinance defined “outdoor festival” under § 138-187 as the following:

an outdoor public celebration or gathering which involves the use either of public parks or public streets and which includes entertainment, dancing, music, dramatic productions, art exhibits, parades or the sale of merchandise, food or alcohol or any combination of such and which of necessity requires for its successful execution the provision and coordination of municipal services to a degree significantly over and above that which the city routinely provides under ordinary everyday circumstances. The definition of outdoor festival does not include events which are solely parades, footraces or political demonstrations unless such parade, footrace or political demonstration is proposed as an integral part of a larger festival.

R1-3-Ex. A at 1-2.

3 When the appellants complied with the City’s request and applied for a festival

permit, their application was denied because the City determined that “‘the

previous history of this event indicates to a reasonable certainty that public safety

would be compromised substantially.’” R2-37-5 (quoting Labovitz Dep., Ex. 1,

Letter of February 14, 1995, from Steven Labovitz to Paul Cornwell at 1). The

mayor’s chief of staff explained that the permit was denied based on the

recommendation of the Atlanta Police Department. The police department had

estimated that in 1994 at least half of the Pot Festival attendees openly smoked

marijuana in blatant defiance of the law and therefore, “[i]n the opinion of police

officials monitoring this event, any attempt to enforce the law on such an occasion

would require unusually large numbers of police officers and would be likely to

provoke a civil disturbance.” Id.

Upon denial of their application for a festival permit, the appellants

exhausted the administrative appeals process defined in § 138-208 of the 1994

Festival Ordinance. The appellants then filed for a preliminary injunction,

requiring the City of Atlanta to grant them a festival permit. The district court

determined that the appellants’ First Amendment rights were not being infringed

because they could hold a political demonstration and concert without a festival

4 permit. Accordingly, the district court denied the request for a preliminary

injunction.

After the 1995 Pot Festival, the appellants filed suit alleging that the 1994

Festival Ordinance was unconstitutional on its face and as applied to the Pot

Festival. Specifically, the appellants argued that the 1994 Festival Ordinance was

unconstitutional on its face because it provided unfettered discretion to the mayor’s

chief of staff and other public officials when deciding whether to issue a festival

permit. After conducting a two-day trial on the issues, the district court held that

“while parts of the Festival Ordinance pass constitutional muster, other parts, on

their face, constitute an impermissible prior restraint on First Amendment

expression.” Id. at 6-7.

The district court determined that the 1994 Festival Ordinance was a prior

restraint on protected speech, but was content-neutral on its face. The district court

then assessed each section of the 1994 Festival Ordinance individually to

determine whether it passed constitutional muster. First, the district court found

that the definition of an outdoor festival found in § 138-187 did not grant

unfettered discretion, was narrowly tailored to serve a significant government

interest, and, therefore, was constitutional. Nonetheless, the district court ordered

the City “to set out more specifically those attributes that would bring an event

5 within the definition of outdoor festival” when revising the 1994 Festival

Ordinance. Id. at 26 n. 13.

The district court next considered § 138-203 of the 1994 Festival Ordinance3

and determined that certain provisions within that section lacked sufficiently

objective and definite standards to limit the discretion of the chief of staff when

3 Section 138-203 of the1994 Festival Ordinance provides:

(a) The chief of staff shall be charged with the responsibility of determining whether or not a particular applicant shall be granted an outdoor festival permit pursuant to this article, in consultation with the special events coordinator.

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Bluebook (online)
219 F.3d 1301, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/coalition-for-the-abolition-v-city-of-atlanta-ca11-2000.