Johnston-Loehner Ex Rel. Johnston-Loehner v. O'Brien

837 F. Supp. 388, 1993 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 15806, 1993 WL 454345
CourtDistrict Court, M.D. Florida
DecidedFebruary 18, 1993
Docket92-1824-CIV-T-23A
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 837 F. Supp. 388 (Johnston-Loehner Ex Rel. Johnston-Loehner v. O'Brien) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, M.D. Florida primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Johnston-Loehner Ex Rel. Johnston-Loehner v. O'Brien, 837 F. Supp. 388, 1993 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 15806, 1993 WL 454345 (M.D. Fla. 1993).

Opinion

ORDER DENYING MOTION FOR PRELIMINARY INJUNCTION

MERRYDAY, District Judge.

This action is before the Court on the plaintiffs November 20,1992, motion for preliminary injunction. (Doc. 2). On December 9, 1992, the defendants filed a memorandum opposing the motion. An evidentiary hearing occurred on December 11, 1992, at which proceeding the Court heard oral argument from counsel and testimony both from the plaintiff and her minor child and from the defendant Philip O’Brien.

Background Facts

Marian Johnston-Loehner, as a representative of her minor child, Amber Johnston-Loehner, brings this action for injunctive and declaratory relief against several Polk County school officials, including the principal of Lime Street Elementary School. The plaintiff alleges that the principal and school board violated Amber’s First Amendment right to free speech by preventing Amber’s distribution of a religious tract at school. In the motion before the Court, the plaintiff seeks “a preliminary injunction to restrain the defendants from enforcing or threatening to enforce the [school board] Policy and the [student] Handbook in a manner so as to obstruct Plaintiff ... from distributing free religious literature in the public elementary school she attends.” The defendants assert that the Court should deny the plaintiffs motion because the principal’s actions were within the scope of the school’s authority to regulate the distribution of material, including religious materials, to its students.

Findings of Fact

Amber Johnston-Loehner (Amber) is an 11-year-old, fifth-grade student at Lime Street Elementary School in Lakeland, Florida. Amber testified to her occasional desire to distribute religious tracts at her school as a means of sharing her Christian faith with her classmates.

*390 The students at Lime Street Elementary-are subject to the “Student Code of Conduct” adopted on June 23, 1992, by the School Board of Polk County. Section I(2)(E) of the Code provides:

1) Students have the right to free speech, oral and written.
2) Students have the responsibility to express and publicize their opinions and ideas in such a manner so as not to offend, slander or libel others, and to avoid disrupting the orderly process of the school.

Also, the Polk County School Board has promulgated in Chapter 8, Section 6Gx53-8.005 of the School Administration and Regulations, a policy that affects the distribution of religious and secular materials. 1 Under this policy, distribution of “noncourse” religious and secular material is subject to the supervision of the Superintendent of Schools. Section 6Gx53-8.005 restricts material approved for distribution to a designated location within the school. Under the policy, the distribution of literature in the classroom, homeroom, assemblies, or any portion of school property by staff, students, or outsiders is prohibited.

On October 30, 1992, Amber brought two brochures to school to distribute to her classmates: One was entitled “Strange Facts about You, God, and Your Mother” (See Exhibit 1); the’ other described “Halloween Alternative” parties sponsored by the Carpenter’s Home Church in Lakeland, Florida (See Exhibit 2). Amber testified that, on that day, she intended to give the tracts only to the children in her classroom; however, she stated she would like permission to distribute tracts in the future to other students in the school.

Before class, Amber took the pamphlets to her homeroom teacher and asked for permission to distribute the brochures at a convenient time. The teacher contacted the school principal, Mr. Philip O’Brien, who came to the classroom and, after meeting with the teacher in the hallway, took the tracts to his office. The teacher then returned to the classroom and told Amber that Mr. O’Brien would not permit Amber to distribute the tracts. At the end of the school day, Amber went to Mr. O’Brien’s office to retrieve her papers, and he told her that he had thrown the tracts and brochures into the garbage. Amber testified that she was upset by this because she could not share the brochures with her classmates. On cross-examination, however, she agreed that she would be willing to wait to distribute other brochures so that “the grown-ups [could] ... look at this a little longer.”

On the evening of October 30, 1993, Amber’s mother, Marian Johnston-Loehner, telephoned Principal O’Brien. Mrs. Johnston-Loehner testified that Mr. O’Brien told her he would not allow religious material on the campus. She questioned Mr. O’Brien about Amber’s free speech rights, as described in the student handbook, and he again responded that he would not allow the religious material at school. Mrs. Johnston-Loehner maintains that on October 30, 1992, she was not aware of the school board policy *391 regulating the distribution of literature on school property.

Mr. O’Brien testified that he does not permit the distribution of any material that is not part of the regular school curriculum without the superintendent’s approval. He stated that he ordinarily refers all requests for distribution to the superintendent. However, in Amber’s case, he confiscated the tracts because he believed, based on a prior incident with Mrs. Johnston-Loehner, that if he returned the brochures to Amber she would disregard his instructions and distribute the brochures without approval. According to Mr. O’Brien, in September, 1992, Mrs. Johnston-Loehner distributed a flyer at a Parent-Teacher Organization meeting without permission, after Mr. O’Brien told her that the superintendent’s approval was required. A number of parents and teachers contacted Mr. O’Brien after the meeting and expressed concern about the flyers and the possible distribution of similar literature to students. Mr. O’Brien testified to his belief that school officials and parents were troubled by the distribution of religious materials to elementary students because of the malleability of the students and because of an appearance that the school endorses a particular religious belief.

Mr. O’Brien stated that he has previously applied the distribution policy to two groups: the Gideon Society and the Boy Scouts and Girl Scouts of America. Once a year, for at least the past eleven years, the school has permitted the placement of Gideon Bibles at a “designated place” outside the school’s library and after approval from the superintendent. Also, the superintendent has permitted the Boy Scouts and Girl Scouts to distribute material to children in the classrooms. Mr. O’Brien has no knowledge of any other student of Lime Street Elementary requesting an opportunity to distribute literature to classmates. However, Mr. O’Brien stated that his decision to confiscate Amber’s literature was not a final decision that Amber would never be permitted to distribute religious literature. He maintained that the policy permitting the distribution of literature at a designated place applies to students as well as outsiders; accordingly, he would allow Amber to place the same literature in a “designated place” pursuant to the school board policy, assuming permission from the superintendent.

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Related

Johnston-Loehner v. O'Brien
7 F.3d 241 (Eleventh Circuit, 1993)

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Bluebook (online)
837 F. Supp. 388, 1993 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 15806, 1993 WL 454345, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/johnston-loehner-ex-rel-johnston-loehner-v-obrien-flmd-1993.