Rushman v. City of Milwaukee

959 F. Supp. 1040, 1997 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 4053, 1997 WL 149572
CourtDistrict Court, E.D. Wisconsin
DecidedMarch 27, 1997
DocketCivil Action 95-C-1096
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 959 F. Supp. 1040 (Rushman v. City of Milwaukee) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, E.D. Wisconsin primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Rushman v. City of Milwaukee, 959 F. Supp. 1040, 1997 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 4053, 1997 WL 149572 (E.D. Wis. 1997).

Opinion

DECISION AND ORDER GRANTING PARTIAL SUMMARY JUDGMENT

REYNOLDS, District Judge.

The line between beliefs (or opinions) and facts is blurry at best. What seems like a provable fact to one person is only an opinion to another; paleontologists like Stephen J. Gould think that evolution is a scientific fact, while creationists think it is only a false belief. Throughout history, many societies have decided that the government should arbitrate truth and falsehood, fact and opinion; their record is not comforting. Doubting the government’s talent for or benefit from declaring what is true and what is not, the United States took a different approach; the First Amendment forbids the government from arbitrating truth and fiction. A person is free to write and sell books declaring the earth is flat or that one race is superior to another.

Although the First Amendment prohibits arbitrating fact and opinion, it allows the government to regulate economic transactions. Therefore, the government can outlaw fraud — false statements made to convince a person to buy an item or invest money.

The City of Milwaukee (“the City”) has an ordinance that outlaws astrology, fortune telling, and numerous other pseudo-sciences. After the City threatened to punish Carol Rushman, an astrologer, she filed this action under 42 U.S.C. § 1983, asking this court to declare that that ordinance violates the First Amendment.

Although astrology and fortune telling may be rejected by science, naive and outdated, they are beliefs; the marketplace of ideas— not the United States, not Wisconsin, and not *1042 the City of Milwaukee — decides their value. Banning those practices is not commercial regulation but censorship. If the City is attacking those who use pseudo-sciences to defraud others, the ordinance is overly broad. The City must focus on the fraud, not the subject-matter of the speech. The court grants Rushman’s motion for summary judgment and declares the ordinance unconstitutional.

SUMMARY JUDGMENT

The City has moved for summary judgment, and Rushman has moved for partial summary judgment on liability. Summary judgment is appropriate if there is no dispute as to a material fact and the moving party deserves judgment as a matter of law. Fed. R.Civ.P. 56(c). The moving party must present the proposed undisputed facts, with a separate numbered paragraph for each factual proposition. Local Rule 6.05(a) (E.D.Wis.). The nonmoving party must identify those findings it disputes; it must identify them by numbered paragraph; and it must cite to the record for support of its position. Local Rule 6.05(b). The nonmov-ing party may also submit additional facts, listed by number. Id. In its reply to the nonmovant’s facts, the moving party should only point how the record does not support the nonmoving party’s facts. Local Rule 6.05(e).

Although the City claims to dispute a number of Rushman’s proposed facts, nothing in the City’s submissions show how Rushman’s facts are disputed; rather, the City responds with additional facts.

FACTS

Milwaukee Ordinance No. 106-16 (“the Ordinance”) outlaws fortune telling, which includes solving certain problems (illness or bad luck, among others) through psychic powers, psychology, prophecy, astrology, science, and magic (among others). Those services are illegal whether free or for a fee, as is advertising those services. 1 The Ordinance does not prohibit the exercise of any religious or spiritual function. Anyone who violates the Ordinance will receive a fine of $1 to $500. Failing to pay the fine can result in up to 90 days in jail. Milwaukee Code of Ordinances § 50-66.

Carol Rushman (“Rushman”) is a full-time astrologer and has been practicing since 1970. Rushman belongs to three national organizations for astrologers: the American Federation of Astrologers Network, the American Federation of Astrologers, and the National Council for Geocosmic Research. Although Rushman has studied with other astrologers and taken classes, she has never been tested. She maintains an office in Bay-side, Wisconsin; she appears on WITI-TV 6 and on WTMJ radio as an astrologer. In addition, she advertises for clients in the Milwaukee Yellow Pages. The City (the same entity that has told her to stop practicing astrology) has used her services. 2

To practice astrology, Rushman relies on the subject’s personality, the subject’s birth date, and star charts. These star charts are based upon the constellations “orbiting the earth,” charts that may not have been updated in 2,000 years. For her clients, Rushman analyzes their personality based upon the clients’ horoscope, advises them what to do, and predicts the likelihood of certain events. For example, based on the client’s horoscope and astrological forces, Rushman might advise that the client will be vulnerable to illness or accident-prone or that the client soon will meet someone he or she might marry.

Although Rushman has never told a client that her character analysis of the client could be wrong, she has told them that her statements do not have the power of prediction. In her view, astrological energies around the client make certain actions possible, but the client still has the free will to choose what to do.

Until 1995, Rushman had no trouble with the City of Milwaukee. Since 1984, the East *1043 Town Merchants Association of Milwaukee has invited Rushman to maintain a tent at Bastille Days, which occurs in Cathedral Park in Milwaukee. In 1995, Rushman charged $15 for a reading. Each person received a ticket that said “For Entertainment Purposes Only.” On July 15, 1995, police officer Michael Denomie (“Denomie”) told Rushman that her advertising and operating of the tent violated the Ordinance. Denomie ordered the tent closed and issued Rushman a notice requiring her to appear at the city attorney’s office. Later that evening, Rushman was able to re-open her tent through the intervention of the mayor.

On Wednesday, July 19, 1995, Rushman went to the city attorney’s office. After Special Deputy Assistant City Attorney Charles Theis (“Theis”) interrogated Rushman, he told her that she could no longer participate on the radio program on WTMJ and that the police would arrest her if she attempted to practice astrology in the City.

Rushman received an invitation to appear at the 1996 Bastille Days. She filed this suit, and the City agreed to withhold prosecution pending the resolution of this case.

People often use fortune telling to defraud individuals. The con artist will predict that the client must turn money over to the con artist (or an accomplice) based upon the client’s fortune. Based on the record, Rush-man has never committed this type of fraud or been accused of it.

DISCUSSION

Rushman has standing to bring this suit because the City has threatened to prosecute her if she practices astrology at Bastille Days or appears on radio.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
959 F. Supp. 1040, 1997 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 4053, 1997 WL 149572, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rushman-v-city-of-milwaukee-wied-1997.