Lewis H. Sword v. James W. Fox

446 F.2d 1091, 1971 U.S. App. LEXIS 9169
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit
DecidedJuly 1, 1971
Docket15391
StatusPublished
Cited by26 cases

This text of 446 F.2d 1091 (Lewis H. Sword v. James W. Fox) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lewis H. Sword v. James W. Fox, 446 F.2d 1091, 1971 U.S. App. LEXIS 9169 (4th Cir. 1971).

Opinion

DONALD RUSSELL, Circuit Judge.

This is a class action, brought on behalf of all the students at Madison College, for a declaratory judgment that certain regulations governing demonstrations at such college were constitutionally invalid as overbroad and vague and as impermissible restraints on freedom of speech and assembly. Madison College is a State-supported institution, located at Harrisonburg, Virginia, with a student body of approximately 4,000, mostly women.

The regulations under attack, which were adopted three years before the incidents involved here and which are included in the Student Handbook made available to all students on matriculation, 1 are concerned with student protests and demonstrations on the college campus. After setting forth a definition of demonstrations, the regulations require generally that any proposed demonstration “be registered with the Office of Student Activities 48 hours in advance”. Other than this requirement of registration, the regulations impose no direct restrictions except the one specifically involved here, i. e., that “Demonstrations are forbidden in the areas of the Health Center, inside any buildings and congregating in the locations of fire hydrants”. (Italics added) Thus, the president of the college stated without contradiction that, to his knowledge, the regulations had never been applied “to prohibit the desire of students to meet and demonstrate in areas of the campus”. 2 One of the witnesses called by the plaintiffs, a student who had engaged in the “sit-ins” involved in this action, testified that, while written application to register a demonstration was required, the registrant did not set forth thereon the purpose of the demonstration, only the time the demonstration was to begin and the areas where it was to be held; and that except for “making a few changes in some of the areas where the demonstration was to be held”, “automatic approval” of the registration followed. 3 Thus the regulations, neither by their language nor by their application, are instruments for censoring or controlling the purpose or content of a demonstration.

The situation which generates this controversy began on Thursday evening, April 23, when a group of students organized a mass meeting of students to protest the termination of the services of certain teaching personnel at the college. Such protest meeting was duly registered in conformity with the college rules. After the meeting, however, a group of students determined to move on to Wilson Hall, a combination administration and classroom building, in which the office of the college president was located, and, as a part of their protest demonstration, to remain there overnight, engaging in “a sleep-in in front of the President’s office”. Some had brought sleeping bags; others sat or lounged about on benches or chairs. About an hour and a half afterwards, the Dean of Student Services *1094 came to the building, advised the group that they were violating the college regulations by a demonstration in Wilson Hall and warned them of the sanctions provided in the Student Handbook for demonstrations within a college building. Some of the students left; others remained until given a second warning about an hour later. On the next day, a group of students sought to register a “vigil” as they described it, to be held 48 hours later in Wilson Hall. The Dean of Student Services refused to register it because it would constitute “a demonstration inside a building” impermissible under the college regulations. Despite this denial, the students staged a “sit-in” on the night of April 26 in Wilson Hall. College officials came to the building on three occasions, requested the students to leave, and warned of the consequences should they fail to leave. After, the first request to leave, some of the students departed but a substantial number remained. Other students joined the group in the building and a large number gathered in front of the building. There was singing and chanting, both from within the building and from the group that had gathered outside, but no violence or destruction of property. Finally, the police were called and a number of students engaged in the “sit-in” were arrested and charged with trespass under-.State law. 4 Disciplinary action was begun against some of the students involved in the “sit-in” and one, it seems was suspended and others were subjected to some type of disciplinary action. Three days later, the appellees and others had a demonstration on the campus to protest both the punishment of the appellees and the failure to continue the employment of certain members of the faculty. This subsequent demonstration was registered without any difficulty, and there was no attempt by the college authorities to censor its content or to control or limit its purposes.

By this proceeding, the plaintiffs sought a declaratory judgment that the regulations proscribing their “sit-ins” in Wilson Hall were constitutionally invalid and for an injunction prohibiting the college from imposing any punishment on account of such “sit-ins”. The District Court, on motion for summary judgment, granted the relief sought. We reverse.

It should be recalled at the outset, that, according to the uncontradicted testimony 5 of the college’s president, the college, acting under these regulations, had never denied any student group the right to demonstrate nor were the students involved in the “sit-ins” with which this action is concerned ever denied the right to demonstrate in protest. As has been pointed out, these students actually did demonstrate, after registration of their demonstration, as required-under these regulations, both before and after the “sit-ins” in Wilson Hall. 6 Nor *1095 was any attempt made to control or even influence the purpose of their demonstrations or, so far as the record shows, any other demonstrations on campus; indeed, the form of registration required to be filed with the Director of Student Activities, did not request information with reference to the demonstration’s purpose. 7 What was denied these students — and all that was denied them— was the right to demonstrate by a “sit-in” specifically in Wilson Hall. It is thus not the right to protest but the place of protest that was regulated and is involved in this appeal. 8 The 48-hour registration requirement under the regulations, though referred to in the briefs filed by the parties, is similarly not in issue. 9 That regulation was not invoked against the appellees; 10 in fact, it seems to have been liberally enforced.

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Bluebook (online)
446 F.2d 1091, 1971 U.S. App. LEXIS 9169, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lewis-h-sword-v-james-w-fox-ca4-1971.