R.J. Reynolds v. Shewry

CourtCourt of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit
DecidedSeptember 9, 2005
Docket03-16535
StatusPublished

This text of R.J. Reynolds v. Shewry (R.J. Reynolds v. Shewry) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
R.J. Reynolds v. Shewry, (9th Cir. 2005).

Opinion

FOR PUBLICATION UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE NINTH CIRCUIT

R.J. REYNOLDS TOBACCO COMPANY;  No. 03-16535 LORILLARD TOBACCO COMPANY; D.C. No. R. J. REYNOLDS SMOKE SHOP, INC., CV-03-00659-LKK Plaintiffs-Appellants, ORDER DENYING v. PETITIONS FOR SANDRA SHEWRY, Director of the REHEARING EN California Department of Health  BANC AND Services; DILEEP G. BAL, Acting AMENDING Chief of the Tobacco Control OPINION AND Section of the California DISSENT AND Department of Health Services; AMENDED STATE OF CALIFORNIA, OPINION AND Defendants-Appellees. AMENDED  DISSENT

Appeal from the United States District Court for the Eastern District of California Lawrence K. Karlton, Senior Judge, Presiding

Argued and Submitted May 10, 2004—San Francisco, California

Filed September 28, 2004 Amended September 9, 2005

Before: Betty Binns Fletcher, Stephen Trott and Raymond C. Fisher, Circuit Judges.

Opinion by Judge Fisher; Dissent by Judge Trott

12895 R.J. REYNOLDS TOBACCO CO. v. SHEWRY 12897

COUNSEL

H. Joseph Escher III, Howard Rice Nemerovski Canady Falk & Rabkin, San Francisco, California, for plaintiffs-appellants 12898 R.J. REYNOLDS TOBACCO CO. v. SHEWRY R.J. Reynolds Tobacco Company and R.J. Reynolds Smoke Shop, Inc., and Shannon L. Spangler and M. Kevin Underhill, Shook, Hardy & Bacon, San Francisco, California, for plaintiff-appellant Lorillard Tobacco Company.

Robert M. O’Neil and J. Joshua Wheeler, Charlottesville, Vir- ginia, for amici curiae Thomas Jefferson Center for the Pro- tection of Free Expression and the Media Institute, in support of the plaintiffs-appellants.

Daniel J. Popeo and Richard A. Samp, Washington, D.C., for amici curiae Washington Legal Foundation, in support of the plaintiffs-appellants.

Karen Leaf, Deputy Attorney General, Sacramento, Califor- nia, for the defendants-appellees.

Deborah B. Caplan and Robert S. McWhorter, Olson, Hagel & Fishburn, LLP, Sacramento, California, for amici curiae American Cancer Society, California Division, Inc., American Heart Association, Western States Affiliates, and American Lung Association of California, in support of the defendants- appellees.

ORDER

In light of the Supreme Court’s decision in Johanns v. Live- stock Marketing Ass’n, 125 S. Ct. 2055 (2005), the opinion and dissent filed on September 28, 2004, and appearing at slip op. 14,067, 384 F.3d 1126 (9th Cir. 2004), and slip op. 14,096, 384 F.3d 1126, 1142, respectively, are amended as follows:

At slip op. 14,095, line 31, insert the following postscript after “we affirm the judgment of the district court.” and before “AFFIRMED.”: R.J. REYNOLDS TOBACCO CO. v. SHEWRY 12899 POSTSCRIPT

After we filed our opinion, the Supreme Court decided Johanns v. Livestock Marketing Ass’n, 125 S. Ct. 2055 (2005), holding that the Beef Promotion and Research Act of 1985 did not violate the First Amendment by imposing an assessment on all sales and importation of cattle to fund beef promotional campaigns with which many of the assessed par- ties disagreed. The Court reasoned, as we do here, that the Act was not susceptible to a First Amendment compelled-subsidy challenge because the assessments funded government speech. Although the Johanns opinion affirms our reasoning, Judge Trott remains in dissent. He would now remand to the district court pursuant to the Court’s statement in Johanns that an as-applied challenge might lie “if it were established . . . that individual beef advertisements were attributed to respon- dents.” Id. at 2065.

Appellants have never, before us or the district court, claimed that the ads at issue in this litigation could be or were attributed to them; nor does the record reveal a material ques- tion of fact on the issue. A reasonable viewer could not believe that these anti-industry ads, expressly identified as “Sponsored by the California Department of Health Services,” were created, produced or approved by the appellants. The ad singled out by the dissent as “put[ting] [words] directly into the mouth of the tobacco industry,” for example, is unmistak- able satire. In that ad, children play in a schoolyard while cig- arettes fall like rain from the sky and a voiceover states “[w]e have to sell cigarettes to your kids. We need half a million new smokers a year . . . so we advertise near schools, at candy counters.” No reasonable viewer could overlook the satirical tenor of this ad and attribute the voiceover text to actual tobacco executives.

We also find inapposite the dissent’s analogy to our recent order in Charter v. United States Department of Agriculture, 412 F.3d 1017 (9th Cir. 2005). We remanded on the question 12900 R.J. REYNOLDS TOBACCO CO. v. SHEWRY of attribution in that case because the record indicated that the National Cattlemen’s Beef Association “routinely, before Congress, and in other public ways and in press announce- ments, states that it is the trade organization and marketing organization of America’s one million cattle producers.” Id. at 1019. The record in this case contains no evidence that the state ever attributed its ads to the appellants or that a reason- able viewer could have done so; accordingly, we reject the analogy to Charter and decline Judge Trott’s invitation to remand.

At slip op. 14,108, line 8, insert the following postscript after “is without merit.”:

POSTSCRIPT

Shortly after I circulated this dissent, the Supreme Court decided Johanns v. Livestock Marketing Ass’n, 544 U.S. ______, 125 S.Ct. 2055 (2005). For the majority of the Court, Justice Scalia wrote:

The compelled-subsidy analysis is altogether unaf- fected by whether the funds for the promotions are raised by general taxes or through a targeted assess- ment. Citizens may challenge compelled support of private speech, but have no First Amendment right not to fund government speech. And that is no less true when the funding is achieved through targeted assessments devoted exclusively to the program to which the assessed citizens object. The First Amend- ment does not confer a right to pay one’s taxes into the general fund, because the injury of compelled funding (as opposed to the injury of compelled speech) does not stem from the Government’s mode of accounting.

Id. at ______ (second emphasis added) (citations omitted). R.J. REYNOLDS TOBACCO CO. v. SHEWRY 12901 Not surprisingly, California’s Attorney General suggests that this ruling “eliminates all possible doubt about the cor- rectness” of the majority’s decision. I do not agree.

The Johanns Court suggests, while “express[ing] no view on the point,” that if it were to be shown that the challenged speech would “convince a reasonable factfinder” that “all . . . producers[ ] would be tarred with the content of each trade- marked ad,” an “as applied” First Amendment challenge might lie. Id. at __________. (emphasis added).

Writing separately, Justice Thomas advanced the same sug- gestion:

Still, if the advertisements associated their generic pro-beef message with either the individual or orga- nization respondents, then respondents would have a valid as-applied First Amendment challenge. The government may not, consistent with the First Amendment, associate individuals or organizations involuntarily with speech by attributing an unwanted message to them, whether or not those individuals fund the speech, and whether or not the message is under the government’s control. This principle fol- lows not only from our cases establishing that the government may not compel individuals to convey messages with which they disagree, . . . but also from our expressive-associate cases, which prohibit the government from coercively associating individ- uals or groups with unwanted messages.

Id. at ______. (emphasis added) (citations omitted).

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