Newton v. LePage

700 F.3d 595, 2012 U.S. App. LEXIS 24559, 2012 WL 5936046
CourtCourt of Appeals for the First Circuit
DecidedNovember 28, 2012
Docket12-1472
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 700 F.3d 595 (Newton v. LePage) 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
Newton v. LePage, 700 F.3d 595, 2012 U.S. App. LEXIS 24559, 2012 WL 5936046 (1st Cir. 2012).

Opinion

LYNCH, Chief Judge.

The question presented is whether the governor of Maine violated the First Amendment by removing a large state-owned mural, commissioned by the former administration, from its location on the walls of a small waiting room for visitors to the Maine Department of Labor (“MDOL”). The governor’s initial stated reason was that he agreed with complaints that the mural did not convey a message of evenhanded treatment toward both labor and employers and so the mural was inappropriate for that particular setting at MDOL. At the same time, he said the mural would be placed into a different public building, the Portland City Hall. Later, the governor added that he objected to the mural’s remaining at the MDOL location because the mural had been paid for from government funds which would better have been used for the state unemployment fund. To be clear, the governor’s stated objections were to the location of the mural on the MDOL walls; he stated the mural would be reinstalled in another building.

Whatever the wisdom of the decision to remove the mural from that location, the accountability for that decision lies in the political process. The district court correctly entered judgment for defendants on plaintiffs’ claims of a First Amendment violation. Newton v. LePage, 849 F.Supp.2d 82 (D.Me.2012).

I.

In 2007, the administration of Maine Governor John Baldacci commissioned Judy Taylor, a Maine painter, to produce a mural for the small public waiting room of the MDOL’s offices in Augusta. The sign on the waiting room stated:

Maine Department of Labor

Commissioner of Labor

Employment Service

Rehabilitative Services

Labor Standards (Safety Works)

Unemployment Compensation

Administrative Hearings

Center for Workforce

Research and Information

Contested administrative workers’ compensation hearings between employers and employees were held in the offices, as well as other activities. MDOL rented these offices in a privately owned building that also housed the offices of private entities.

Under the contract between MDOL and Taylor, MDOL paid Taylor $60,000 for a “Maine Labor Mural” consisting of “panels depicting selected episodes in the history of Maine labor” whose “permanent location” was the “Department of Labor, Augusta, Maine.” The mural appears to be about six feet high and thirty feet long spanning two walls. The contract provided that “[ojfficial sole ownership [by the state] of the work occurs when a letter of final acceptance is sent by the contracting agency to the artist,” and that:

The work will be placed in the location for which it was selected. The contracting agency agrees that the artist and the Commission will be notified if, for any reason, the work has to be removed or moved to a new location. The artist and the Commission have the right to advise or consult with the contracting agency or its designee regarding this treatment of the work.

The contract plainly contemplated that the mural could be shown in a different location and the artist’s consent was not required.

*598 The mural was paid for using both Maine and federal funds from the federal Reed Act, 42 U.S.C. § 1103 (regarding employment security funds); the Bureau of Labor Standards; the Bureau of Rehabilitation Services; the Center for Workforce Research and Information; and the MDOL Overhead account in the Commissioner’s Office. The mural was not funded by Maine’s public arts program, the Percent for Art program, 1 and was not a Percent for Art project.

On August 9, 2008, the completed mural was installed in an anteroom at the MDOL where visitors typically waited before meetings with MDOL staff. The mural contained panels which depicted a shoemaker teaching an apprentice, child laborers, women textile workers, workers casting secret ballots, the first Labor Day, woods workers, the 1937 shoe strike in Lewiston and Auburn, labor reformers, women workers during World War II, the 1987 strike at the International Paper Mill in Jay, and the future of Maine labor. Next to the mural was a plaque stating:

Judy Taylor

History of Maine Labor

Oil Paint Mural, Eleven Panels

Commissioned for the Department of Labor and

Administered by the Maine Arts Commission

“building Maine communities through the arts”

The waiting room measures twelve feet by twenty-six feet in area. The mural covered two contiguous walls above a knee wall. Three sides of the waiting room are lined with nine chairs, and on the fourth side is a receptionist behind a security window. The waiting room also, at the time the mural was present, displayed a framed 19th century pamphlet urging employers to oppose the passage of a child labor bill. It, too, was later removed.

Inside the MDOL offices, but not in the waiting room, there were framed pictures in the “Frances Perkins” conference room, nearly all of which depicted Perkins. 2 There were no bulletin boards or other locations for members of the public to post materials in the MDOL waiting room or in the corridor leading to it.

On January 5, 2011, Paul LePage was sworn in as Governor of Maine. One of his advisors, John Butera, had visited the MDOL waiting room before January of 2011 on business and considered the mural to be overwhelming, pro-labor, and anti-business. On February 28, 2011, the Office of the Governor received an anonymous letter complaining that the mural was “propaganda” meant to further the union movement and asking Governor Le-Page to take the mural down. The governor’s press secretary, Adrienne Bennett, *599 also stated that several unnamed business officials had complained about the mural.

On March 22, 2011, Laura Boyett, the Acting Commissioner of MDOL, sent an email to MDOL staff stating that:

We have received feedback that the administration building is not perceived as equally receptive to both businesses and workers — primarily because of the nature of the mural in the lobby and the names of our conference rooms. Whether or not the perception is valid is not really at issue and therefore, not open to debate. If either of our two constituencies perceives that they are not welcome in our administration building and this translates to a belief that their needs will not be heard or met by this department, then it presents a barrier to achieving our mission.
I will be seeking a new home for the mural and we will be renaming the conference rooms in our administrative office at Commerce Drive in Augusta.

Word of the removal reached the media. On March 22, 2011, Taylor learned from a reporter about Governor LePage’s intention to remove the mural. Later that week, Adam Fisher, the communications director for MDOL, telephoned Taylor and informed her that the mural was going to be removed.

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Bluebook (online)
700 F.3d 595, 2012 U.S. App. LEXIS 24559, 2012 WL 5936046, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/newton-v-lepage-ca1-2012.