JOHN R. BROWN, Circuit Judge:
This free-speech case comes before this court for the third time. It all started when the owners of the
North Mississippi Times
brought suit against the DeSoto County Board, alleging that, in violation of the First Amendment, the Board withheld county advertising in retaliation for the
Times’
publication of negative stories about the Board. Because of this court’s actions on earlier appeals, the sole issue now before this court is whether the district court properly applied
Mt.
Healthy’s
burden-shifting analysis to the
Times
§ 1983 claim.
We conclude that it did not. We reverse in favor of the
Times
and remand for further findings.
Because the long series of events leading up to this dispute have been thoroughly examined in this court’s two earlier opinions, we see no need to recite them in detail yet another time.
Briefly, the
Times
is a weekly newspaper in DeSoto County, owned by North Mississippi Communications, Inc. The DeSoto County Board was responsible for awarding by bid the county’s general legal advertising, which consisted of county board proceedings and legal notices. The advertising had gone largely to the
Times
before 1976. In 1976, both the
Times
and the
Olive Branch Tribune,
another much smaller, weekly county newspaper, bid for the right to publish county advertising. For the first time, the Board required the newspapers to submit their circulation lists for review. Although the
Times
won the bid for publication of the Board proceedings, the Board determined that it would place legal notices in either paper at its discretion.
The district court found that in 1976, the
Times
and
Tribune
received approximately the same number of legal notices. From mid-1977 forward, however, the evidence at trial clearly showed that the Board opted to give almost all its legal notice business to the
Tribune.
In 1977, the
Times
received 41 notices through June 30 and none thereafter; and the
Tribune
received 73 during the first half of 1977 and 113 in the second half. In 1978, the
Times
received only 14 legal notices, while the
Tribune
received 291.
It is undisputed that from 1975 forward, the
Times
published highly critical articles and letters about the Board’s questionable activities. The
Times
claimed that the Board withheld county advertising in retaliation for the Board’s negative publications in violation of the
Times’
First Amendment rights. Admittedly, the Board’s placement of legal notices was discretionary. The
Times,
however, did not assert breach of contract, but instead a § 1983 constitutional violation. Indeed, the district court
wholeheartedly agreed with the premise that if the Board withheld legal notice business in retaliation for the
Times’
publication of critical articles, the Board has violated the
Times
’ civil rights under the First Amendment.
Round I: NMCI I
With respect to the
Times’
§ 1983 claim, the district court found only that the Board’s withholding of county legal advertisements did not threaten to put the
Times
out of business. On appeal, we held that this finding did not dispatch the
Times’
§ 1983 claim and remanded this claim to the district court for further findings. Specifically, in
NMCI I,
we directed that the district court determine whether the Board denied some or all of its legal advertising to the
Times
in retaliation for the
Times’
critical news stories and editorials.
The court, without a jury, conducted a “second trial”
and again found in favor of the Board, concluding that “even though a pri-ma facie case of a constitutional violation was presented in the plaintiffs case in chief, the rebuttal evidence of the Board was just as persuasive that other legitimate reasons existed for favoring the
Tribune
over the Times.’’
The court ultimately held: “There is a possibility that the Board wished to retaliate against the
Times
for its editorial positions ... however, the court cannot say that the evidence preponderates toward that finding. The other reasons for favoring the
Tribune
heretofore described appear just as probable.”
If At First You Don’t Succeed; Try, Try Again: NMCI II
The
Times
again appealed, claiming that the failure to apply the
Mt. Healthy
burden-shifting analysis to their § 1983 claim constituted reversible error. Because this claim involved a purely legal question, we justifiably considered it in
NMCI II,
even though the
Times
had raised it for the first time on its second appeal.
Mt. Healthy
involved the alleged refusal to re-employ a public school teacher because of the teacher’s exercise of his free-speech rights. This case gave birth to the two-step burden-shifting rule, which has now become standard fare in discrimination cases. The Supreme Court held that (i) the plaintiff must first show that his constitutionally protected conduct was a substantial or motivating factor in the defendant’s decision; and (ii) if the plaintiff carries this burden, the burden shifts to the defendant to prove by a preponderance of the evidence that it would have made the same decision even in the absence of the protected conduct.
We are keenly aware that
Mt. Healthy
has never before been applied to a set of facts involving the denial of public patronage. Nevertheless, this court in
NMCI II
saw no reason why
Mt. Healthy
should not be applied in this context and remanded this case to the district court for the second time for further findings as required by
Mt. Healthy.
We reject the district court’s assessment that the application is a strained one. To the contrary,
Mt. Healthy’s
rule is broad enough potentially to lend itself to a wide variety of fact patterns.
NMCI III
Upon remand, the district court, conscientiously, but reluctantly, heeding our mandate to apply the
Mt. Healthy
burden-shifting analysis, again held for the Board, asserting reasons why
Mt. Healthy
could
not work here.
Without hearing any additional evidence, the court first held that the
Times
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JOHN R. BROWN, Circuit Judge:
This free-speech case comes before this court for the third time. It all started when the owners of the
North Mississippi Times
brought suit against the DeSoto County Board, alleging that, in violation of the First Amendment, the Board withheld county advertising in retaliation for the
Times’
publication of negative stories about the Board. Because of this court’s actions on earlier appeals, the sole issue now before this court is whether the district court properly applied
Mt.
Healthy’s
burden-shifting analysis to the
Times
§ 1983 claim.
We conclude that it did not. We reverse in favor of the
Times
and remand for further findings.
Because the long series of events leading up to this dispute have been thoroughly examined in this court’s two earlier opinions, we see no need to recite them in detail yet another time.
Briefly, the
Times
is a weekly newspaper in DeSoto County, owned by North Mississippi Communications, Inc. The DeSoto County Board was responsible for awarding by bid the county’s general legal advertising, which consisted of county board proceedings and legal notices. The advertising had gone largely to the
Times
before 1976. In 1976, both the
Times
and the
Olive Branch Tribune,
another much smaller, weekly county newspaper, bid for the right to publish county advertising. For the first time, the Board required the newspapers to submit their circulation lists for review. Although the
Times
won the bid for publication of the Board proceedings, the Board determined that it would place legal notices in either paper at its discretion.
The district court found that in 1976, the
Times
and
Tribune
received approximately the same number of legal notices. From mid-1977 forward, however, the evidence at trial clearly showed that the Board opted to give almost all its legal notice business to the
Tribune.
In 1977, the
Times
received 41 notices through June 30 and none thereafter; and the
Tribune
received 73 during the first half of 1977 and 113 in the second half. In 1978, the
Times
received only 14 legal notices, while the
Tribune
received 291.
It is undisputed that from 1975 forward, the
Times
published highly critical articles and letters about the Board’s questionable activities. The
Times
claimed that the Board withheld county advertising in retaliation for the Board’s negative publications in violation of the
Times’
First Amendment rights. Admittedly, the Board’s placement of legal notices was discretionary. The
Times,
however, did not assert breach of contract, but instead a § 1983 constitutional violation. Indeed, the district court
wholeheartedly agreed with the premise that if the Board withheld legal notice business in retaliation for the
Times’
publication of critical articles, the Board has violated the
Times
’ civil rights under the First Amendment.
Round I: NMCI I
With respect to the
Times’
§ 1983 claim, the district court found only that the Board’s withholding of county legal advertisements did not threaten to put the
Times
out of business. On appeal, we held that this finding did not dispatch the
Times’
§ 1983 claim and remanded this claim to the district court for further findings. Specifically, in
NMCI I,
we directed that the district court determine whether the Board denied some or all of its legal advertising to the
Times
in retaliation for the
Times’
critical news stories and editorials.
The court, without a jury, conducted a “second trial”
and again found in favor of the Board, concluding that “even though a pri-ma facie case of a constitutional violation was presented in the plaintiffs case in chief, the rebuttal evidence of the Board was just as persuasive that other legitimate reasons existed for favoring the
Tribune
over the Times.’’
The court ultimately held: “There is a possibility that the Board wished to retaliate against the
Times
for its editorial positions ... however, the court cannot say that the evidence preponderates toward that finding. The other reasons for favoring the
Tribune
heretofore described appear just as probable.”
If At First You Don’t Succeed; Try, Try Again: NMCI II
The
Times
again appealed, claiming that the failure to apply the
Mt. Healthy
burden-shifting analysis to their § 1983 claim constituted reversible error. Because this claim involved a purely legal question, we justifiably considered it in
NMCI II,
even though the
Times
had raised it for the first time on its second appeal.
Mt. Healthy
involved the alleged refusal to re-employ a public school teacher because of the teacher’s exercise of his free-speech rights. This case gave birth to the two-step burden-shifting rule, which has now become standard fare in discrimination cases. The Supreme Court held that (i) the plaintiff must first show that his constitutionally protected conduct was a substantial or motivating factor in the defendant’s decision; and (ii) if the plaintiff carries this burden, the burden shifts to the defendant to prove by a preponderance of the evidence that it would have made the same decision even in the absence of the protected conduct.
We are keenly aware that
Mt. Healthy
has never before been applied to a set of facts involving the denial of public patronage. Nevertheless, this court in
NMCI II
saw no reason why
Mt. Healthy
should not be applied in this context and remanded this case to the district court for the second time for further findings as required by
Mt. Healthy.
We reject the district court’s assessment that the application is a strained one. To the contrary,
Mt. Healthy’s
rule is broad enough potentially to lend itself to a wide variety of fact patterns.
NMCI III
Upon remand, the district court, conscientiously, but reluctantly, heeding our mandate to apply the
Mt. Healthy
burden-shifting analysis, again held for the Board, asserting reasons why
Mt. Healthy
could
not work here.
Without hearing any additional evidence, the court first held that the
Times
did not meet its burden under prong one of
Mt. Healthy.
Second, even assuming the
Times
satisfied
Mt. Healthy’s
first prong, the court concluded that reasons other than retaliation motivated the Board to switch its advertising from the
Times
to the
Tribune.
We hold that the district court erred on both counts.
a. Mt. Healthy’s First Prong
The district court found that the
Times,
under the first prong of
Mt. Healthy,
failed to show that retaliation was a motivating factor in the Board’s denial of county business:
[T]he placing of patronage business by the Board between two newspapers in the county was possibly a mixed motive act; however, the plaintiff has not proven by credible and probative evidence as it is required to do that the placing of some ads with the
Tribune
was the result of the
Times’
criticisms of the Board.
Because this court in
NMCI II
previously determined that the
Times’
sufficiently proved that retaliation was a motivating factor, the district court’s finding clearly disregards our previous mandate and thus violates the law of the case doctrine.
In
NMCI II,
our primary concern was whether the application of the
Mt. Healthy
burden-shifting analysis was appropriate for this case. Although we recognized in
NMCI II
that the district court did not expressly find that the
Times
had proved retaliation was a motivating factor,
we also highlighted the fact that the lower court failed to find that retaliation was not a factor in the Board’s decision.
Despite the absence of this finding by the district court, we nevertheless, in light of the evidence presented on timing, hostility and admissions relating to motivation for the Board’s conduct,
went on to hold that any other conclusion would be clearly erroneous. We decided that the record evidence established the motivating factor inquiry; without this, there would be no occasion for us to remand in order to consider
Mt. Healthy.
This court’s ultimate
NMCI II
decision to remand to apply
Mt. Healthy
to this case necessarily carried with it the determination that, at the very least, this was a mixed-motives case and that the
Times
had satisfied its burden under prong one of
Mt. Healthy.
In other words, if we had not first found that the
Times
adequately proved that retaliation was a motivating factor, this court would have never instructed the lower court to apply
Mt. Healthy.
The law of the case doctrine dictates that a prior decision of this court will be followed without re-examination, both on the remand to the district court and on subsequent appeals to this court,
unless (i) the evidence on a subsequent trial was substantially different, (ii) controlling authority has since made a contrary decision of the lav/ applicable to such issues, or (iii) the decision was clearly erroneous and would work manifest injustice.
Because of our previous holding in
NMCI II,
the district court’s subsequent contrary finding violates the law of the case doctrine. None of the exceptions to the rule afford relief: (i) new or different evidence was not introduced, since the district court did not conduct a third trial; (ii) the Board has not cited, nor are we otherwise aware of, any decisions by other courts rejecting
Mt. Healthy
since our mandate in
NMCI II;
and (iii) the Board has not sufficiently convinced us that our prior decision results in manifest injustice. We therefore hold that the district courts’ finding is contrary to our decision and violates the law of the case doctrine.
b. Second Prong of Mt. Healthy
Under our mandate, the burden shifted to the Board to show that it would have withdrawn its legal notice business from the
Times
even in the absence of the
Times’
unconstitutional retaliation. Because of its erroneous interpretation of
NMCI II,
the district court devoted little, if any, attention to the second question of whether the Board would have made the same decision to shift its business to the
Tribune
in the absence of the unconstitutional retaliation. The closest the district court came to finding that the Board met its burden was its following reasoning:
It is clear that the Board proved in rebuttal that it would have given the
bulk
of its legal ads to the
Tribune
anyway, regardless of the protected conduct of the
Times,
because of the two broken bid agreements by the
Times
stating that no business from the county would be sought and suggesting the business should go to the
Tribune.
[Emphasis added.]
? now give this question the close scrutiny it deserves. The district court’s assessment that the Board “would have given the
bulk
of its legal ads to the
Tribune
anyway, regardless of the protected conduct of the
Times
” is not sufficient to satisfy
Mt. Healthy.
The district court implicitly determined that the Board need only show that a “bulk” of the legal notices would have been denied to the
Times
notwithstanding its unconstitutional retaliation. We disagree.
Mt. Healthy
instead requires that the Board prove that
none
of the county advertising was withheld from the
Times
in retaliation for its critical publications.
The Board complains that it can not possibly “prove by a preponderance of the evidence that
each
of the 252 advertisements would have been awarded to the
Tribune
even in the absence of the criticisms of the
Times,”
adopting the district court’s view that “[s]uch a Herculean task would be an impossible burden to meet and be manifestly unjust.”
Despite the potential difficulty of determining whether any of the 252 advertisements were denied to the
Times
on the basis of retaliation, we cannot escape the conclusion that the trial court’s finding rests upon an erroneous view of
Mt. Healthy.
The Board’s denial of publication of just one county legal notice based upon the
Times
'unconstitutional retaliation constitutes a violation of the First Amendment.
We reiterate the United States Supreme Court’s mandate that in a mixed-motives case, the defendant may not prevail “by offering a legitimate and sufficient reason
for its decision if that reason did not motivate it at the time of the decision;” nor may it prevail “by merely showing that at the time of the decision it was motivated only in part by a legitimate reason.”
The defendant is required to make this showing by a preponderance of the evidence.
The district court failed to apply this test to the award of each and every advertisement.
When a trial court has made a fact finding upon an erroneous view of the law, the factual determination loses all vitality, requiring a remand.
Because the
Times
is entitled to a determination of how many ads it lost due to the Board’s unconstitutional retaliation (and the
Mount Healthy
burden is on the Board), we regretfully remand this case for the fourth time in order that the trial court find exactly which advertisements, if any, were the subject of the Board’s retaliation.
Accordingly, we reverse and remand this case to the district court for the following limited purposes: 1) to find whether the Board established by a preponderance of the evidence that each and every ad would have been awarded to the
Tribune
regardless of the
Times’
protected conduct; if not, then to further find 2) the specific ads withheld as a result of the protected conduct; 3) damages with respect to the withheld advertising; and 4) reasonable attorneys’ fees for the
Times.
REVERSED and REMANDED.