John McGlone v. Jimmy Cheek

534 F. App'x 293
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit
DecidedAugust 2, 2013
Docket12-5306
StatusUnpublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 534 F. App'x 293 (John McGlone v. Jimmy Cheek) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
John McGlone v. Jimmy Cheek, 534 F. App'x 293 (6th Cir. 2013).

Opinion

BOYCE F. MARTIN, JR., Circuit Judge.

John McGlone sued several University of Tennessee at Knoxville officials, alleging that the University’s policy requiring persons unaffiliated with the University to obtain sponsorship in order to speak on campus violated his First Amendment right to free speech and his Fourteenth Amendment right to due process. McGlone also moved to enjoin the University from enforcing its sponsorship requirement. The University moved to dismiss the suit, and the district court granted the University’s motion to dismiss and denied McGlone’s preliminary-injunction motion. McGlone appeals the district court’s judgment. For the following reasons, we REVERSE the district court judgment and REMAND for further proceedings.

I.

McGlone describes himself as a committed Christian. In keeping with his Christian faith, McGlone travels to public universities to share his religious beliefs with college students. He targets outdoor spaces on campuses and shares his beliefs through dialogue, the distribution of literature, and the display of signs. McGlone’s message is that “all people need salvation because of their rebellion against God and God provides salvation to those who repent and believe in Jesus Christ.” McGlone claims that he “simply wants to expose students to the teaching of Christianity.”

In 2008, McGlone began visiting the University of Tennessee at Knoxville to engage in expression of his religious beliefs. The University of Tennessee is a large institution, with approximately 27,- *295 000 students and 8,161 faculty members. From 2008 until August 2010, McGlone visited the University’s campus five times and successfully expressed his religious beliefs without any interference from the University. He usually used an open-air amphitheater to express his beliefs. On August 25, 2010, McGlone called the University and left a voice message informing University officials of his intention to speak on campus the following day, as had been his practice for all prior visits with the exception of his first visit.

Maxine Davis, the Dean of Student Affairs, and Angi Smith, the Associate Dean of Students, returned McGlone’s call and explained that McGlone would not be permitted to use any open area of campus for expressive purposes unless he had a University sponsor. McGlone requested sponsorship from Deans Davis and Smith, both of whom declined, and McGlone then asked Dean Davis for the contact information of the University’s legal counsel. Dean Davis gave him the telephone number of Matthew Scoggins, the University Assistant General Counsel. Soon thereafter, McGlone contacted Scoggins, who told McGlone that University policy requires that all speakers who are not affiliated with the University receive sponsorship from “students, faculty, or staff’ in order to speak on campus. Scoggins told McGlone that the University had a policy limiting its campus to students, faculty, staff, and invitees and that “this policy was the source of the sponsorship requirement enforced by [the University.]” Dean Smith called McGlone later that day and explained to McGlone that she had talked to Scoggins and confirmed that in order for McGlone to speak on campus, he needed to be “sponsored by a registered student organization, staff, or faculty.”

Scoggins emailed McGlone links to two written University policies: (1) the “Access to University Property” policy; and (2) the University student handbook, which is called “Hilltopics.” The “Access to University Property” policy, or policy # 1720-1-2, which was promulgated by the University Board of Trustees in 1970 under the provisions of the Tennessee Uniform Administrative Procedures Act, TenmCode Ann. § 4-5-101, et seq., reads:

The University’s campuses and facilities shall be restricted to students, faculty, staff, guests, and invitees except on such occasions when all or part of the campuses, buildings, stadia, and other facilities are open to the general public.

A section of the student handbook entitled “Access to Campus” contains nearly identical language. The student handbook defines a guest as “[a] person invited by a university student or employee to visit the campus at a specific time, place, and occasion.”

The student handbook specifically addresses the University’s sponsorship requirement in a section entitled “Freedom of Expression and Speech,” which reads:

The University of Tennessee considers freedom of inquiry and discussion essential to educational development and recognizes the right of students to engage in discussion, to exchange thoughts and opinions, and speak freely on any subject in accord with the guarantees of our state and national constitutions.

The policy goes on to state:

To these ends, registered student organizations on campus may freely select, without prior restraints, persons they wish to invite as guest speakers. There are no restrictions to control the point of view expressed by speakers other than those imposed by local, state, and federal laws. Any person sponsored by a registered campus organization is free to speak.

*296 The Freedom-of-Expression policy also says that once a speaker receives sponsorship, no other student or University official has the power to revoke the sponsorship. In an attempt to comply with the sponsorship requirement, as he understood it, McGlone emailed ten Christian-based student organizations on April 13, 2011, requesting sponsorship. None of the organizations responded to McGlone’s request. McGlone has not returned to the University campus since failing to obtain sponsorship because, according to him, he was “deterred by the process.”

On June 6, 2011, McGlone sent a letter, by way of his attorney, to University officials expressing his belief that the University’s sponsorship requirement was unconstitutional. McGlone also asked for assurances that he would be allowed to speak on campus without having to comply with the sponsorship requirement. Scoggins responded with a letter dated June 17, 2011, in which he argued that the University’s policy regarding outside speakers is constitutional. The letter said that the University has limited “expressive activity” in the area where McGlone wanted to speak “to a certain class of speakers — students, faculty, staff, and their sponsored guests.” The letter also said that the Freedom-of-Expression policy found in the student handbook “explains the process ojj, speaker sponsorship.” Scoggins’s letter concluded by informing McGlone that he is welcome to speak on campus once he obtains sponsorship.

McGlone filed suit against Davis, Smith, and University Chancellor Jimmy Cheek. He claimed that the University’s sponsorship requirement was unconstitutionally vague, in violation of his First Amendment right to free speech as well as his Fourteenth Amendment right to Due Process. McGlone moved for a preliminary injunction, and the University moved to dismiss the complaint on the grounds that McGlone failed to state a claim upon which relief could be granted. The district court held that the sponsorship requirement was not vague, and it granted the University’s motion to dismiss and denied McGlone’s motion for a preliminary injunction.

II.

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534 F. App'x 293, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/john-mcglone-v-jimmy-cheek-ca6-2013.