March v. Mills

867 F.3d 46, 2017 WL 3392706, 2017 U.S. App. LEXIS 14580
CourtCourt of Appeals for the First Circuit
DecidedAugust 8, 2017
Docket16-1771P
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 867 F.3d 46 (March v. Mills) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the First Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
March v. Mills, 867 F.3d 46, 2017 WL 3392706, 2017 U.S. App. LEXIS 14580 (1st Cir. 2017).

Opinion

BARRON, Circuit Judge.

This appeal concerns a constitutional challenge brought by a protester who opposes abortion. He seeks to enjoin the enforcement of a provision of the Maine Civil Rights Act (“MCRA”), Me. Rev. Stat. Ann. tit. 5, § 4684-B(2), that, he contends, facially violates the First Amendment’s guarantee of the freedom of speech. 1 The challenged provision bars a person from making noise that “can be heard within a building” when such noise is made intentionally, following an order from law enforcement to cease making it, and with tjie additional “intent either: (1) [t]o jeopardize the health of persons receiving health services within the building; or (2) [t]o interfere with the safe and effective delivery of *50 those services within the building.” Me. Rev. Stat. Ann. tit. 5, § 4684-B(2)(D).

The District Court ruled that the measure restricts speech based on its content rather than on the time, place, or manner of its expression. And, the District Court concluded that the measure likely cannot survive the strict constitutional scrutiny to which such content-based speech restrictions are subject. Thus, the District Court concluded that the plaintiff was likely to succeed on the merits of his contention that the measure is unconstitutional on its face and granted his request for a preliminary injunction. We now reverse.

I.

We begin by providing some background regarding the MCRA and the noise restriction that it sets forth. We also describe the relevant procedural history.

A.

The Maine legislature enacted the MCRA in 1989. 1989 Me. Legis. Serv. 582. The MCRA creates a cause of action that the Attorney General of Maine or any “aggrieved” person may bring against any person who, “whether or not acting under color of law, intentionally interferes or attempts to intentionally interfere” with another person’s rights secured by the United States or Maine Constitutions or state or federal law. Me. Rev. Stat. Ann, tit. 5, §§ 4681, 4682.

In 1995, the Attorney General proposed a bill to amend the MGRA. The proposed amendment sought to “add[] to the protections already contained in the [MCRA] for persons seeking services from reproductive health facilities and for persons providing services at those facilities.”

The Attorney General indicated at the time that the impetus for the proposed amendment, which contained a number of distinct provisions of which this lawsuit concerns only one, was a concern that “the most extreme violence tends to occur in situations where less serious civil rights violations are permitted to escalate,” because “[wjhen the rhetoric of intolerance and the disregard for civil rights do, in fact, escalate, then some people at the fringes of society will take that atmosphere as a license to commit unspeakable violence.” The amendment, as a whole, was thus intended to “represent!] a commitment on the part of both sides of the abortion debate to reduce tensions in order to lessen the chances of tragic violence.”

In the course of- the legislative process, the District Court noted, the proposed amendment was expanded “to cover conduct outside all buildings, rather than just reproductive health facilities.” March v. Mills, No. 2:15-CV-515-NT, 2016 WL 2993168, at *2 (D. Me. May 23, 2016). The expansion sought to ensure that the measure would cover, in addition to “reproductive health facilities,” “crisis pregnancy centers, pro-life groups’ headquarters and offices, etc.” Id.

A broad range of interested parties, including both proponents and opponents of abortion rights, supported the amendment. Supporters included the Maine Pro-Choice Coalition—a coalition of twenty-five pro-choice organizations—and the Maine Life Coalition, which consisted of the Maine Right to Life Committee, the Catholic Diocese of Portland, the Christian Civic League, and Feminists for Life of Maine.

A representative of Feminists for Life of Maine testified to the Maine legislature in support of the proposed amendment by stating that “it is the consensus of the Maine Life Coalition ... and the Attorney General’s Office that this legislation further secures protection for both pro-life and pro-choice individuals.” The representative specifically noted that, “[f]or the *51 first time in Maine and perhaps the nation, legislation has been developed with pro-life and pro-choice activists participating with the Attorney Generals’ [sic] Office.” In addition, a representative of the American Civil Liberties Union of Maine—at that time known as the Maine Civil Liberties Union—testified in support of the bill by noting that “this Act protects important constitutionally guaranteed rights, and does not in any way run afoul of the free speech provisions of the Maine and United States Constitutions.”

Maine enacted the amendment in 1995. The amendment makes it a violation of the MCRA, as the District Court usefully summarized, “to interfere or attempt to interfere with a person’s civil rights by: (1) physically obstructing the entrance or exit of a building; (2) making repeated telephone calls to disrupt activities in a building; (3) setting off any device that releases ‘noxious and offensive odors’ within a building; or (4) making noise” in a certain way and for certain reasons. March, 2016 WL 2993168 at *2 (quoting Me. Rev. Stat. Ann. tit. 5, § 4684-B(2)).

This last part of the amendment, subsection (D) of section 4684-B, is the only part of the MCRA that is at issue here. We shall refer to that part, for ease of reference, as the Noise Provision. The Noise Provision defines the “conduct,” see Me. Rev. Stat. Ann. tit. 5, § 4684-B(2), that may give rise to an action under the MCRA as follows:

D. After having been ordered by a law enforcement officer to cease such noise, intentionally making noise that can be heard within a building and with the further intent either:
(1) To jeopardize the health of persons receiving health services within the building; or
(2) To interfere with the safe and effective delivery of those services within the building.

Id. § 4684-B(2)(D). 2

B.

The plaintiff in the case before us is Andrew March. He is a “co-founder of a church in Lewiston, Maine called Cell 53.” March, 2016 WL 2993168 at *1. A part of the church’s mission “is to plead for the lives of the unborn at the doorsteps of abortion facilities.” Id. In keeping with that mission and with March’s personal belief that “abortion is the killing of unborn citizens” and “harms women,” March makes known his opposition to abortion *52 outside ' the Planned Parenthood Health Center on Congress Street in Portland, Maine. Id.

March filed his suit pursuant to 42 U.S.C.

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Bluebook (online)
867 F.3d 46, 2017 WL 3392706, 2017 U.S. App. LEXIS 14580, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/march-v-mills-ca1-2017.