State v. Wicklund

589 N.W.2d 793, 1999 Minn. LEXIS 136, 1999 WL 126690
CourtSupreme Court of Minnesota
DecidedMarch 11, 1999
DocketC7-97-1381
StatusPublished
Cited by54 cases

This text of 589 N.W.2d 793 (State v. Wicklund) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Minnesota primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Wicklund, 589 N.W.2d 793, 1999 Minn. LEXIS 136, 1999 WL 126690 (Mich. 1999).

Opinion

OPINION

STRINGER, Justice.

We granted review to consider whether an anti-fur protest staged in the common area *795 adjacent to Macy’s Department Store inside the Mall of America (MOA) is constitutionally protected speech. We agree with the court of appeals that it is not, and therefore affirm.

The essential facts are not in dispute. Just before noon on Sunday, May 19, 1996, appellants Freeman Algot WicMund, Althea Ruth Schaffer, Peter Benson Eckholdt, and Allissa Ifetayo Eggert and approximately six others distributed leaflets and carried placards illustrating cruel treatment of animals by the fur trade and urging a boycott of Macy’s — a retailer of fur products. The protesters stood inside the MOA in the second-floor courtyard area in front of Macy’s as they attempted to engage passers-by in conversation about the ethics of producing and selling fur products. The protest was at all times peaceful and nonconfrontational. The protesters were each warned several times by MOA security guards that they were on private property and that if they continued their activities they would be arrested. Several of the protesters chose to put away their placards and leave, but the four appellants refused to leave and were peacefully arrested by Bloomington police officers and charged with misdemeanor trespass in violation of Minn.Stat. § 609.605, sub. 1(b)(3) (1998).

Appellants moved to dismiss the charges against them claiming they have a “claim of right” which precluded the state from proving the trespass charges. See State v. Bre-chon, 352 N.W.2d 745, 750 (Minn.1984) (state’s burden to prove beyond reasonable doubt that defendants had no claim of right). Although appellants initially based their claim of right on the free speech provisions of the First Amendment of the Federal Constitution, at the suggestion of the trial court their primary argument is now that their conduct is protected by Article I, Section 3 of the Minnesota Constitution, which provides that “all persons may freely speak, write and publish their sentiments on all subjects, being responsible for the abuse of such right.”

Substantial evidence about the MOA was presented at a pretrial evidentiary hearing, including that the MOA is the largest shopping mall in the United States encompassing 4.2 million square feet of space and attracting 37.5 million visitors annually. Its tenants include four anchor stores, including Macy’s, in addition to some 400 other retail establishments, movie theatres and entertainment venues, the nation’s largest indoor amusement park, a wedding chapel, a post office, a police substation, and an alternative school. It is promoted as an exciting vacation destination and sponsors promotional events aimed at attracting specific groups of consumers such as senior citizens and families.

Extensive evidence was also presented as to how the MOA was developed. The Bloom-ington Port Authority (BPA), an economic development agency for the City of Bloom-ington (City), purchased the site of the old Metropolitan Stadium and solicited proposals for development. The BPA issued approximately $105 million in tax increment financing (TIF) bonds pursuant to Minn.Stat. § 469.178 (1987) — a popular form of financing local developments utilizing increased tax dollars generated by a project to repay the bonds. See Richard Briffault, The Rise of Sublocal Structures in Urban Governance, 82 Minn. L.Rev. 503, 512 (1997) (outlining development of tax increment financing). The bonds financed the site preparation including utilities, parking ramps, access roads between the MOA and the ramps, and pedestrian bridges linking the ramps to the mall itself. The BPA’s current involvement in the MOA is limited to monitoring the bond indebtedness. Its bonds will be repaid by the year 2015 , or sooner by “capturing” property taxes paid by the MOA and by a liquor and hotel/motel tax imposed by the City. Construction ’of the balance of the project was financed by the Mall of America Company, a subsidiary of two privately-owned shopping center development corporations, at a cost of approximately $700 million.

In addition to the BPA TIF financing, the Minnesota legislature enacted legislation giving the City of Bloomington permission to issue $80 million 1 in bond financing to cover *796 the eo§t of highway reconstruction surrounding the MOA in time for its opening. Roads surrounding the site were already on the state’s list of highway improvements but were not scheduled for construction for another eight years. The evidence adduced at the hearing indicated that public financing contributed $186 million of the total development cost of $886 million, or approximately 21% of the total cost of the MOA’s development, and will decrease to zero as the bonds are repaid.

The trial court also heard testimony about the MOA’s management. The MOA employs 150 full-time security guards to patrol its common areas and assist in individual stores as requested. Their duties include enforcing the MOA’s code of conduct for patrons which prohibits, among other things, unauthorized petitioning, handbilling and picketing. 2 If a patron violates the code, the patron is informed by a MOA security guard of the violation and given, the choice of conforming to the code or leaving the premises, and is told that if the patron does neither, arrest will follow. It is only then that the Bloom-ington police are summoned and a citizen’s arrest is made by the MOÁ guard.

The police substation at the MOA consists of a room available for police use in the subbasement but no staff is assigned to this location. The MOA also hires off-duty police officers to provide contractual police services, including traffic control and heightened security when needed — a service available to any private entity in the City. The off-duty police officers are at all times supervised by the Bloomington Police Department, which in turn is reimbursed for its services by the MOA. Mac/s received notice in the form of a national press release that protestors would be targeting its stores on May 19, 1996. Mac/s requested contractual police services and six Bloomington police officers were assigned to the location.

Following the evidentiary hearing, the trial court issued a 62-page order in which it accompanied its findings of fact with 57 “General Principles of State Constitutional Construction.” The trial court, applying sua sponte Minnesota’s free speech constitutional protection, concluded that the MOA was public property because the public was generally invited onto the property and public financing was involved in the MOA’s development. The court characterized the interior of the MOA “as public as any city thoroughfare, as any government grounds” because it “was born of a union with government.” Consequently, appellants’ speech would be constitutionally protected, so the trial court concluded, but appellants’ failure to “test the Mall’s willingness to honor the Constitution” was fatal to their motion to dismiss.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
589 N.W.2d 793, 1999 Minn. LEXIS 136, 1999 WL 126690, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-wicklund-minn-1999.