John Satawa v. Macomb County Road Commission , 689 F.3d 506 ( 2012 )


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  •                           RECOMMENDED FOR FULL-TEXT PUBLICATION
    Pursuant to Sixth Circuit Rule 206
    File Name: 12a0236p.06
    UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
    FOR THE SIXTH CIRCUIT
    _________________
    X
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    JOHN SATAWA,
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    Plaintiff-Appellant,
    -
    -
    No. 11-1612
    v.
    ,
    >
    MACOMB COUNTY ROAD COMMISSION; FRAN -
    -
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    GILLETT, individually and in her official
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    capacity as Chairperson, Macomb County
    -
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    Road Commission; ROBERT HOEPFNER,
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    individually and in his official capacity as
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    Chairperson, Macomb County Road
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    Commission,
    Defendants-Appellees. N
    Appeal from the United States District Court
    for the Eastern District of Michigan at Detroit.
    No. 2:09-cv-14190—Gerald E. Rosen, Chief District Judge.
    Argued: May 30, 2012
    Decided and Filed: August 1, 2012
    Before: BOGGS and COLE, Circuit Judges; and OLIVER, District Judge.*
    _________________
    COUNSEL
    ARGUED: Robert Joseph Muise, AMERICAN FREEDOM LAW CENTER, Ann
    Arbor, Michigan, for Appellant. Benjamin J. Aloia, ALOIA & ASSOCIATES, P.C.,
    Mount Clemens, Michigan, for Appellees. ON BRIEF: Robert Joseph Muise,
    THOMAS MORE LAW CENTER, Ann Arbor, Michigan, for Appellant. Benjamin J.
    Aloia, ALOIA & ASSOCIATES, P.C., Mount Clemens, Michigan, for Appellees.
    Steven W. Fitschen, THE NATIONAL LEGAL FOUNDATION, Virginia Beach,
    Virginia, for Amicus Curiae.
    *
    The Honorable Solomon Oliver, Jr., Chief United States District Judge for the Northern District
    of Ohio, sitting by designation.
    1
    No. 11-1612            Satawa v. Macomb County Rd. Comm’n, et al.                      Page 2
    _________________
    OPINION
    _________________
    BOGGS, Circuit Judge. The Macomb County Road Commission faced a
    dilemma. The Freedom From Religion Foundation, an organization dedicated to
    “protect[ing] the fundamental constitutional principle of separation of church and state,”
    had written a letter objecting to a private citizen’s placing a crèche on a sixty-foot-wide
    median at Christmas time, as the citizen and his family had done for more than sixty
    years. The county immediately ordered the crèche removed. In response, the Thomas
    More Law Center, an organization dedicated to “restor[ing] and defend[ing] America’s
    Judeo-Christian heritage,” took up the citizen’s cause and applied for a formal permit to
    display the crèche. After seeking legal advice, the county denied the permit because, it
    stated, the crèche “clearly displays a religious message, [and thus displaying it on the
    median] would be a violation of the Establishment Clause of the First Amendment.” The
    citizen filed suit, claiming that denial of the permit violated his free-speech rights, the
    Establishment Clause, and his equal-protection rights. During litigation, the county
    changed its explanation for denying the citizen’s permit, claiming that safety, not the
    crèche’s religious connotation, was—and had always been—the reason for its decision.
    Relying on this explanation, the district court granted summary judgment for the county.
    For the reasons outlined below, we affirm the district court’s grant of summary judgment
    on Satawa’s Establishment Clause claim, but reverse on all other grounds.
    I
    In 1945, Frank Krause and Joseph Satawa built a manger to house a set of
    statutes donated to St. Anne’s Parish in Warren, Michigan. The statues depicted the
    birth of Jesus Christ. With the Village’s permission, Krause and Satawa put the manger,
    with the statues inside, on a public median at the intersection of Mound Road and
    Chicago Road.1 They did so each year until their deaths in the late 1940s and 1965,
    1
    The manger and figures, together, are called a nativity scene, or crèche.
    No. 11-1612              Satawa v. Macomb County Rd. Comm’n, et al.                                   Page 3
    respectively. Joseph Satawa’s son and son-in-law, John Satawa2 and Lawrence Green,
    continued this practice, assembling the crèche in the same place every year at Christmas
    time.3 They asked for, and received, permission from Warren officials to build the
    display in the late 1970s, 1994, and 1995. Satawa and Green have not sought permission
    since 1995, however, because a City of Warren police officer “inform[ed] [Satawa] that
    the [police] department was well aware of the nativity scene tradition and its presence
    on the median in Warren and that it was not necessary to send any letters in the future.”
    The median that houses the crèche separates four lanes of northbound traffic
    from four lanes of southbound traffic on Mound Road.4 It is sixty feet wide, and
    landscaped with grass, trees, and flowers. The Board of County Road Commissioners
    of Macomb County (“the Board”) has jurisdiction over the median because Mound
    Road is a Macomb County road.5 The site of the crèche itself is just south of Mound
    Road’s intersection with Chicago Road, a two-lane, east-west street with a thirty-mile-
    per-hour speed limit. Traffic lights regulate the intersection from every direction.
    The crèche is nine-and-one-half feet tall, eight feet wide, and eight feet deep.6
    It has front and back windows, and is illuminated at night. On the crèche is a sign that
    reads: “A Blessed Christmas, St. Anne Parish,” and inside there is a plaque, with the
    words: “In Memory of Joseph and Rose Satawa.” The crèche sits immediately north of
    a stand of pine trees, which is twenty-nine feet, four inches wide and fifteen feet tall.
    Behind the pine trees are two park benches, and at least one commemorative plaque,
    discernable only from the median. Also on the same section of median as the crèche are
    2
    From this point forward, all references to “Satawa” are to John Satawa.
    3
    The only year since 1945 that the crèche has not appeared in the median is 1996, when
    significant road construction made it impossible to erect the display.
    4
    The speed limit on Mound Road is 50 MPH, and more than 82,600 cars use the road each day.
    5
    The Board comprises three members: a Chairperson, a Vice-Chairperson, and a Commissioner.
    It has “responsibility for overseeing the Road Commission’s budget and establishing and carrying out
    policies with regard to all matters pertaining to the County roads.”
    6
    As the district court explained, the crèche is only eight feet tall, but it sits on an eighteen-inch-
    high platform.
    No. 11-1612         Satawa v. Macomb County Rd. Comm’n, et al.                       Page 4
    several pieces of old farm equipment and wagons, installed by the “Friends of the
    Village,” a citizens’ group dedicated to maintaining Warren’s “village” character.
    Across Chicago Road to the north of the crèche is a gazebo and small courtyard, built
    by the Village of Warren Historical Commission, and a historical marker, again with text
    readable only from the median, put in place by the State of Michigan.
    On December 10, 2008, the Board received, by fax, a letter from the Freedom
    From Religion Foundation. The letter, supposedly written on behalf of “a concerned
    Macomb County resident,” argued that the crèche violated the Establishment Clause
    because “[d]isplaying an inherently Christian message at a busy intersection on County-
    owned property unmistakably sends the message that Macomb County endorses the
    religious beliefs embodied in the display.” Accordingly, the Freedom From Religion
    Foundation “ask[ed] that [the Board] immediately . . . remove the display to private
    property.”
    In response, Macomb County Highway Engineer Robert Hoepfner dispatched
    Road Commission Permit Inspector Joe Dana. Dana reported back and told Hoepfner
    that, indeed, the crèche was where the Freedom From Religion Foundation said it was,
    and that Satawa’s phone number was on a plaque attached to the display. Hoepfner
    called Satawa and explained that, because Satawa did not have a permit, Satawa would
    have to disassemble the crèche. A formal, written demand to remove the crèche within
    thirty days followed on December 11, 2008. Satawa complied after the end of the
    holiday season.
    One month later, Satawa went to the Road Commission’s office to apply for a
    permit to display the crèche the following year. Road Commission staff helped him fill
    out an application. On February 7, 2009, however, the Road Commission returned the
    application to Satawa, explaining that it was incomplete, and enclosing a new
    application. With help from the Thomas More Law Center, Satawa filled out the
    application, explaining in detail—and illustrating with photographs—the crèche’s
    location. In his application, Satawa offered to pay all electrical costs associated with the
    display, to buy insurance, and “to post a sign at the display which states clearly that it
    No. 11-1612           Satawa v. Macomb County Rd. Comm’n, et al.                                Page 5
    is his private display and not the display of Macomb County, the City of Warren, or any
    other government entity.”
    Hoepfner personally reviewed Satawa’s application. He sought legal advice from
    an attorney for the county and brought the issue of Satawa’s permit application to the
    Board’s attention during the “new business” portion of a regularly scheduled meeting
    on March 9, 2009. There, he explained:
    MALE SPEAKER: This is an interesting one, last year a gentleman for
    the last 60 years has been installing a nativity scene at Mound Road and
    Chicago Road in the median of Mound Road, I received a letter from
    some anti-nativity scene law firm asking me to get rid of it.
    MALE SPEAKER: (Inaudible) Wisconsin?
    MALE SPEAKER: Yeah.
    MALE SPEAKER: Yeah.
    MALE SPEAKER: So I wrote the man a letter and ordered him to
    remove the nativity scene from the right-of-way. He has come in now
    and applied for a permit to install the nativity scene next year. His cover
    letter is from a law firm, the Thomas More Law Center. I’ve contacted
    Ben Aloia and asked him to research it. Ben has informed me that we
    should not allow this nativity scene to be installed, and he has given me
    some language that I should [sic] respond to this permit. I intend to do
    that. This probably won’t go away and I suspect they’ll sue us.
    FEMALE SPEAKER: All we can do is obey the law.7
    This was the only time that the Board formally discussed Satawa’s permit application.
    Although Hoepfner mentioned only the crèche’s religious aspects when he
    brought Satawa’s application to the Board’s attention, he claimed in his deposition,
    thirteen months later, that the primary reason for denying Satawa a permit was that the
    crèche raised a safety concern. In particular, he claimed to be worried that a vehicle
    might strike the crèche. Hoepfner made clear: “I didn’t deny [the permit] for sight
    problems. It was an encroachment within the right of way . . . that’s the reason I denied
    it.”
    7
    The district court noted that this transcript was likely inadmissible at the time of summary-
    judgment briefing because it had not been properly authenticated. It reasoned, however, that it could
    consider the transcript, on the assumption that the parties would reduce it to admissible form at trial.
    No. 11-1612           Satawa v. Macomb County Rd. Comm’n, et al.                      Page 6
    Hoepfner also insisted in his deposition that he had separate discussions with
    each of the Road Commissioners about Satawa’s application, outside of the Board’s
    regularly scheduled meetings. (“Q: Did you ever have any discussions with any Board
    member outside of the Board meetings regarding the nativity scene permit? A: All of
    the Board Members.”). These discussions, he claimed, lasted “many, many hours,” and
    focused on his belief that the crèche posed a traffic hazard. The district court apparently
    took this testimony at face value.
    It is true that Board Chairwoman Fran Gillett testified that she understood that
    Hoepfner was concerned about safety. However, she also indicated that she “first
    became aware of [the crèche] . . . when [the Board] had a complaint the Christmas before
    last [December 2008], and then at that point [she] didn’t hear anything more until 2009
    at [the March 6 Board] meeting.” (emphasis added). And yet, she claimed that she
    learned of Hoepfner’s safety concerns through casual, passing discussions in the
    hallway. It is not likely that these discussions took place after the meeting, since
    Hoepfner responded to Satawa’s permit application in writing the next business day after
    the Board meeting, March 9, 2009.8 At best, then, Hoepfner and Gillet’s testimony is
    confusing. At worst, one or the other is completely mistaken.
    In any event, safety concerns are wholly absent from the letter that Hoepfner sent
    Satawa on March 9, 2009. There, addressing Satawa’s lawyer, Hoepfner wrote:
    Dear Mr. Muise:
    Please allow this letter to serve as the Board of County Road
    Commissioners for the County of Macomb’s formal denial of the January
    7, 2009 Application for Permit submitted by John Satawa to erect a
    nativity scene in the Mound Road right of way. Given the religious
    nature of your nativity scene, the Road Commission of Macomb County
    as a governmental agency must weigh whether or not the approval of
    such a permit would be deemed a violation of the First Amendment of
    the United States Constitution.
    A statute or practice that touches on religion, if it [is] to be permissible
    under the establishment of religion clause of the Constitution’s First
    8
    March 6, 2009 was a Friday.
    No. 11-1612         Satawa v. Macomb County Rd. Comm’n, et al.                     Page 7
    Amendment, (1) must have a secular purpose, (2) must neither advance
    nor inhibit religion in its principal or primary effect, and (3) must not
    foster an excessive entanglement of government with religion. In
    Allegheny v. ACLU of Pittsburg[h], 
    492 U.S. 573
     (1989), the U.S.
    Supreme Court held that “there is no doubt, of course, that the crèche
    (nativity scene) itself is capable of communicating a religious message.”
    Since the nativity scene Mr. Satawa desires to place in the right of way
    clearly displays a religious message, this would be a violation of the
    Establishment Clause of the First Amendment: “Establishment Clause,
    at the very least, prohibits government from appearing to take a position
    on questions of religious belief or from ‘making any adherence to a
    religion relevant in any way to a person’s standing in the political
    community.’” Allegheny, at 594.
    The Road Commission of Macomb County cannot permit you to display
    this nativity scene in the Road Commission’s right of way. This
    undoubtedly would be interpreted as our endorsement of religion, in
    violation of the Establishment Clause of the U.S. Constitution.
    Thank you for your attention to this matter. Please do not hesitate to
    contact me with any questions or concerns.
    Sincerely,
    /s/
    Robert P. Hoepfner, P.E.
    County Highway Engineer
    Satawa filed this lawsuit in the Eastern District of Michigan on October 23, 2009.
    He claimed that the Board violated his free-speech rights, the Establishment Clause, and
    the Equal Protection Clause by denying his permit. He sought declaratory and injunctive
    relief and nominal damages.        A Motion for Temporary Restraining Order and
    Preliminary Injunction soon followed. The district judge, after hearing oral argument
    and conducting a “lengthy site visit,” denied the motion. He first reasoned that, even if
    the median were a public forum, the state’s interest in traffic safety was compelling, and
    denial of the permit was narrowly tailored to suit that interest because there were other
    places that Satawa could display the crèche. Thus, the court held, Satawa could not
    show that he was likely to succeed on the merits, and was not entitled to a temporary
    restraining order or a preliminary injunction on his free-speech claim. Notably, the
    district court found that Hoepfner’s stated concern about a vehicle striking the crèche
    No. 11-1612             Satawa v. Macomb County Rd. Comm’n, et al.                                   Page 8
    was “purely speculative,” and thus not a compelling state interest. Instead, it focused
    on the possibility, apparently first raised during briefing or argument on the Motion for
    Temporary Restraining Order and Preliminary Injunction,9 that the crèche could impede
    sight lines and, thus, increase the risk of two or more vehicles colliding.
    The district court similarly held that Satawa’s Establishment Clause claim was
    not likely to succeed because Satawa could not satisfy the three-part Lemon test—the
    Board’s denial had a secular purpose, traffic safety; the policy of forbidding all
    temporary structures did not endorse, or convey disapproval of, religion; and there was
    no entanglement. See Lemon v. Kurtzman, 
    403 U.S. 602
     (1971).
    When it denied Satawa’s motion, the district court also ordered the parties to
    show cause why it should not convert its preliminary order to a final judgment on the
    merits, pursuant to FED. R. CIV. P. 65(a)(2). Satawa requested the opportunity to develop
    the factual record further, so that he could challenge the veracity of the Board’s asserted
    safety justification, and press his Establishment Clause and equal-protection claims,
    which he did not brief in his temporary-restraining-order motion. The court granted the
    request, discovery opened and closed, and the parties cross-moved for summary
    judgment.
    9
    It is not clear when this “additional justification” first appeared. The district court, when
    discussing the increased risk of vehicles colliding, cited a paragraph from Hoepfner’s affidavit, attached
    to the Board’s response to Satawa’s Motion for Temporary Restraining Order or Preliminary Injunction,
    dated October 30, 2009. That paragraph, however, is a general statement, explaining why the Board
    generally does not allow structures in its rights of way. Board Resp. to Request for Temporary Restraining
    Order at 33 (“Roadside control is necessary to improve highway safety, to maintain or improve site line
    distances, expedite the free flow of traffic, safeguard present and future highway investment, conserve
    abutting property values, and to preserve the attractiveness of the landscape in the right of way.”). Neither
    Hoepfner’s affidavit nor the Board’s briefing in the district court dealt specifically with an increased risk
    of vehicles colliding. Rather, both focused on the possibility that a vehicle could strike the crèche itself.
    Id. at 12 (“Certainly the Plaintiff’s structure itself, regardless of content, could be struck by a vehicle
    travelling down Mound Road or in the intersection and cause serious damage not only to a travelling
    vehicle, but also any passengers in a vehicle.”). The closest that the Board came to arguing its sight-
    obstruction rationale was a citation to the Michigan Road Design Manual in its October 30, 2009 response,
    suggesting “that a flat, smooth unobstructed area . . . is highly desirable and significantly improves
    highway safety.” But the record contains no explicit mention of the vehicle-on-vehicle-collision
    justification that the Board now presses until the district court, based on its own observations, found that
    the display could obstruct a driver’s line of sight. It made this finding in its order denying Satawa’s motion
    for a preliminary injunction, dated December 28, 2009. Only after that order did the parties commission
    expert reports discussing the possibility that the crèche could obstruct a driver’s view. These reports first
    appear in the parties’ summary-judgment submissions, dated July 29, 2010, July 30, 2010, and August 19,
    2010.
    No. 11-1612            Satawa v. Macomb County Rd. Comm’n, et al.                  Page 9
    The district court granted summary judgment for the Board on April 19, 2011.
    It held, first, that the median was not a public forum, since it was not “a place intended
    for bringing citizens together to exchange ideas.” Thus, the court reasoned, the Board
    could restrict speech, subject to reasonable and viewpoint-neutral time, place, and
    manner restrictions. The Board’s stated traffic-safety concern satisfied this standard.
    The court also believed that, even if the median were considered a traditional
    public forum, the Board had a compelling interest in promoting traffic safety, and
    denying the permit was a narrowly tailored means of achieving that goal. This time, the
    judge had dueling expert reports to consider in reaching his conclusion. The experts first
    agreed that the crèche posed no enhanced risk to drivers who obeyed the traffic signals.
    They also agreed, however, that if a driver traveling northbound on Mound Road ran a
    red light, and another driver traveling eastbound on Chicago Road at six to ten miles-
    per-hour below the posted speed limit looked for traffic before coming to the crèche,
    then passed the crèche and continued through the intersection without again checking
    for traffic, the Chicago Road driver would not be able to see the Mound Road driver’s
    car running the red light, and therefore might not be able to prevent a collision as
    effectively as he could without the crèche. The district court acknowledged that this
    possibility was remote, but reasoned that “the potential for even one tragic accident at
    a busy intersection clearly constitutes a compelling interest which the State must
    address.” The district court also expressed concern that, if the Board had to permit
    Satawa to install his crèche, it would be required to allow “all kinds of private
    installations of all shapes and sizes in medians all over Macomb County.” The Board’s
    denying Satawa’s permit, the district court reasoned, was narrowly tailored because “the
    Defendants’ action in denying Plaintiff a permit to erect his Nativity display in the
    Mound Road median does not leave Plaintiff without any comparable viable site for his
    expression.”10
    The district court also granted summary judgment for the Board on Satawa’s
    Establishment Clause and equal-protection claims. The former, it reasoned, failed
    10
    A number of local businesses offered to display the crèche.
    No. 11-1612            Satawa v. Macomb County Rd. Comm’n, et al.                                 Page 10
    because the government had a valid stated purpose of traffic safety; the primary effect
    of denying the permit did not convey the message that the government endorsed, or
    disapproved of, religion; and there was no entanglement. Satawa’s equal-protection
    claim failed because the Board’s decision to deny the permit was rationally related to the
    legitimate government interest of traffic safety. Satawa appeals.
    II
    Summary judgment is appropriate when “the movant shows that there is no
    genuine dispute as to any material fact and the movant is entitled to judgment as a matter
    of law.” FED. R. CIV. P. 56(a). We review a district court’s grant of summary judgment
    de novo, construing the facts, and drawing all reasonable inferences, in the non-moving
    party’s favor. ACLU of Ky. v. Mercer Cnty., Ky., 
    432 F.3d 624
    , 628 (6th Cir. 2005).
    III
    Neither the federal government nor the states may “abridg[e] the freedom of
    speech.” U.S. CONST. amend. I; Stromberg v. California, 
    283 U.S. 359
    , 368 (1931)
    (formally incorporating Free Speech Clause).11 This does not mean, however, that
    anyone may express himself however he wants, wherever he wants, whenever he wants.
    The government may regulate even constitutionally protected speech, as long as that
    regulation hinges on a weighty enough government interest, tailored carefully enough
    to account for the competing values at stake. What “enough” is depends on what the
    individual wants to express and where he wants to express it, for “the character of every
    act depends upon the circumstances in which it is done.” Schenck v. United States,
    
    249 U.S. 47
    , 52 (1919) (Holmes, J.).
    We have reduced these general principles to the three-part test that we apply
    here. First, we decide whether the First Amendment protects the speech or expression
    11
    Although “[t]he First Amendment literally forbids the abridgment only of ‘speech,’ . . . we have
    long recognized that its protection does not end at the spoken or written word. . . . [C]onduct may be
    sufficiently imbued with elements of communication to fall within the scope of the First
    . . . Amendment[].” Texas v. Johnson, 
    491 U.S. 397
    , 404 (1989). “There is no doubt, of course, that the
    crèche itself is capable of communicating a [constitutionally protected] religious message.” Cnty. of
    Allegheny v. ACLU of Pittsburgh, 
    492 U.S. 573
    , 598 (1989).
    No. 11-1612        Satawa v. Macomb County Rd. Comm’n, et al.                     Page 11
    at issue. Then, we fix the appropriate level of scrutiny by specifying what kind of forum
    the speaker wants to use. Finally, we determine whether the government’s challenged
    action was constitutional, in light of the standards that apply to the relevant forum. See
    Miller v. City of Cincinnati, 
    622 F.3d 524
    , 533 (6th Cir. 2010).
    A
    The Board concedes that the crèche is protected religious expression. Appellees’
    Br. at 27; see also Allegheny, 
    492 U.S. at 598
    . Our analysis, therefore, begins with the
    question of how to define the median. The Supreme Court has divided government
    property into three categories, for forum-analysis purposes. First, property like the
    “streets and parks which have immemorially been held in trust for the use of the public,
    and, time out of mind, have been used for purposes of assembly, communicating
    thoughts between citizens, and discussing public questions” is considered a traditional
    public forum. Perry Educ. Ass’n v. Perry Local Educators’ Ass’n, 
    460 U.S. 37
    , 45
    (1983) (internal quotation marks omitted). In such a forum, the government may prevent
    expression because of its content only if the government “show[s] that its regulation is
    necessary to serve a compelling state interest and that it is narrowly drawn to achieve
    that end.” 
    Ibid.
     The government may, however, “enforce regulations of the time, place,
    and manner of expression which are content-neutral, are narrowly tailored to serve a
    significant government interest, and leave open ample alternative channels of
    communication.” 
    Ibid.
    Second, “public property which the state has opened for use by the public as a
    place for expressive activity,” is called a designated public forum. 
    Ibid.
     Although the
    government did not have to create the designated public forum in the first place, and
    “need not indefinitely retain the open character of the facility,” once it opens its doors
    to some expression, it must treat the designated public forum like a traditional public
    forum until it closes its doors again. 
    Id.
     at 45–46. Thus, during the time that a
    designated public forum is open to the public, “[r]easonable time, place and manner
    regulations are permissible, and a content-based prohibition must be narrowly drawn to
    effectuate a compelling state interest.” 
    Id. at 46
    .
    No. 11-1612            Satawa v. Macomb County Rd. Comm’n, et al.                                Page 12
    Finally, if a piece of government property “is not by tradition or designation a
    forum for public communication . . . the state may reserve the forum for its intended
    purpose.” 
    Ibid.
     In such a nonpublic forum, “it is . . . black-letter law that . . . [the
    government] can exclude speakers on the basis of their subject matter, so long as the
    distinctions drawn are viewpoint neutral and reasonable in light of the purpose served
    by the forum.” Davenport v. Wash. Educ. Ass’n, 
    551 U.S. 177
    , 189 (2007).
    Determining what kind of forum a particular piece of property is may seem like
    an exercise in line-drawing, and in a sense it is: we must decide which of the three
    categories above best describes the Mound Road median so that we can apply the
    appropriate level of scrutiny to the Board’s denial of Satawa’s permit. Still, for purposes
    of the decision-making process, it is perhaps easier to think of a continuum. “At one
    end of the spectrum” is the prototypical traditional public forum, a public space
    “immemorially . . . held in trust for the use of the public, and, time out of mind, . . . used
    for purposes of assembly, communicating thoughts between citizens, and discussing
    public questions.” Perry, 
    460 U.S. at 45
    . Public parks, for instance, fall into this
    category. At the other end is property that the government owns, has always owned, and
    does not ordinarily open to the public. In such a forum, “[a]ccess . . . can be restricted
    as long as the restrictions are reasonable and are not an effort to suppress expression
    merely because public officials oppose the speaker’s view.” Cornelius v. NAACP Legal
    Def. & Educ. Fund, 
    473 U.S. 788
    , 800 (1985). The inside of a government building,
    used as office space, would fall in this category. Many, if not most, fora fall somewhere
    between these extremes. We need not determine precisely where on the spectrum the
    Mound Road median lies, only which broad category describes it best.
    Beyond the general principles of forum analysis discussed above, little
    persuasive, and no binding, authority guides our analysis.12 Perhaps the case most
    12
    Nor can we dispose of the forum-analysis issue with Satawa’s suggestion that, because
    Michigan law defines the median as part of “the street,” the Mound Road median is automatically a public
    forum. Our task is to examine the characteristics of the median, not blindly to follow Michigan’s
    description of a given piece of property. See Boardly v. U.S. Dep’t of Interior, 
    615 F.3d 508
    , 514–15 (D.C.
    Cir. 2010) (rejecting proposition that, because national parks are called parks, they all automatically
    qualify as traditional public fora).
    No. 11-1612        Satawa v. Macomb County Rd. Comm’n, et al.                     Page 13
    similar to ours is Snowden v. Town of Bay Harbor Islands, Fla., 
    358 F. Supp. 2d 1178
    (S.D. Fla. 2004). There, a woman applied for permission to display a crèche near a
    menorah on a “grassy area approximately 760 feet long by 140 feet wide, dividing State
    Road 922.” 
    Id. at 1184
    . The grassy area had “no public parking spaces, no sidewalks,
    no benches, no bathrooms, and no recreational facilities,” just grass. 
    Ibid.
     The town
    refused to consider her application and she sued. The district court granted her motion
    for a preliminary injunction, but did not decide what kind of forum the grassy area was,
    holding instead that, whether the area was a non-public forum, or a designated public
    forum later closed to private religious speech (the two options that it thought tenable),
    the standard of review would be the same in the circumstances presented. 
    Id. at 1194
    .
    The Snowden court ultimately found that Snowden was likely to succeed on her claim
    that the Town’s denying her application was impermissible viewpoint discrimination and
    thus violated the First Amendment. 
    Id.
     at 1195–96.
    But even if Snowden had decided what kind of forum the grassy area was, its
    reasoning would be only marginally helpful, since there are critical factual differences
    between the grassy area and the Mound Road median. Unlike the Mound Road median,
    the grassy area in Snowden had “no sidewalks, no benches . . . and no recreational
    facilities.” 
    Id. at 1184
    . It made no “apparent invitation to the public[,] [and did] not
    present the physical characteristics of a park beyond the presence of grass.” 
    Id. at 1193
    .
    Here, by contrast, the Mound Road median contained two park benches and farm
    equipment. It was landscaped and housed at least one plaque, which could only be read
    by someone standing on the median. The Mound Road median, in other words, has
    features that invite the public to spend time there. It is more like a public park and
    therefore more likely than the median in Snowden to qualify as a traditional public
    forum.
    Also relatively unhelpful is Warren v. Fairfax County, 
    196 F.3d 186
    (4th Cir. 1999) (en banc). There, Fairfax County denied Warren’s request to build a
    “holiday display,” 
    id. at 189
    , on “a large grassy mall, approximately thirty yards wide
    and spanning about 200 yards. Sidewalks circumnavigate[d] the mall and amble[d]
    No. 11-1612         Satawa v. Macomb County Rd. Comm’n, et al.                      Page 14
    along a central landscaped strip.” 
    Id. at 188
    . The mall abutted Fairfax County’s
    government center. 
    Ibid.
     The Fourth Circuit, sitting en banc, held that the mall was a
    traditional public forum, and that the County’s denying Warren’s permit was not a
    narrowly tailored means of achieving a compelling state interest. 
    Id.
     at 194–96, 197–98.
    In dicta, the court argued that median strips, because they are part of the street, qualify
    automatically as traditional public fora. 
    Id.
     at 196–97.
    Warren, like Snowden, is critically different from this case. There, the mall was
    quite close to the seat of government, and apparently covered by sidewalks. The Mound
    Road median, unlike the mall in Fairfax, is not “a part of the grounds of a seat of
    legislative and executive power,” 
    id. at 196
    , and contains only one small strip of
    sidewalk. It is, in this sense, less likely to qualify as a traditional public forum than the
    Fairfax County mall.
    Nor is ACORN v. City of Phoenix, 
    798 F.2d 1260
     (9th Cir. 1986), overruled by
    Comite de Jornaleros de Redondo Beach v. City of Redondo Beach, 
    657 F.3d 936
    (9th Cir. 2011) (en banc), particularly persuasive. In ACORN, the City of Phoenix
    passed an ordinance prohibiting a person from “stand[ing] on a street or highway and
    solicit[ing], or attempt[ing] to solicit, employment, business or contributions from the
    occupants of any vehicle.” ACORN, 
    798 F.2d at 1262
    . Although the Ninth Circuit
    upheld the ordinance, it did not decide whether streets qualified as traditional public
    fora, even when being used by cars. Rather, it explained: “under the circumstances of
    this case, we need not decide whether public streets are perpetual public fora. . . .
    We conclude that the Phoenix ordinance can be justified even under the more rigorous
    standards applied to the regulation of expression in traditional public fora.” 
    Id. at 1267
    .
    But, like Snowden, the ACORN court’s reasoning would not have been
    particularly helpful to us, even if the court had decided what kind of forum was at issue.
    ACORN involved people who actually went into the streets to solicit contributions from
    drivers stopped in traffic. 
    Id. at 1262
    . This is not remotely similar to our case, where
    the property at issue is not the street itself, but a landscaped median, with adequate space
    for pedestrians and sojourners, benches, and historical displays.
    No. 11-1612        Satawa v. Macomb County Rd. Comm’n, et al.                    Page 15
    To decide what kind of forum the Mound Road median is, then, we return to
    more general forum-analysis principles. Perry, which laid the foundation for today’s
    forum analysis, cited Hague v. Comm. for Indus. Org., 
    307 U.S. 496
    , 515 (1939), when
    explaining what kind of property qualifies as a traditional public forum. Perry, 
    460 U.S. at 45
    . In Hague, the Court reasoned:
    Wherever the title of streets and parks may rest, they have immemorially
    been held in trust for the use of the public and, time out of mind, have
    been used for purposes of assembly, communicating thoughts between
    citizens, and discussing public questions. Such use of the streets and
    public places has, from ancient times, been a part of the privileges,
    immunities, rights, and liberties of citizens.
    Hague, 
    307 U.S. at 515
    . To determine whether the median is such a place, we examine
    “the objective characteristics of the property, such as whether, by long tradition or by
    government fiat, the property has been devoted to assembly and debate.” Ark. Educ.
    Television Com’n v. Forbes, 
    523 U.S. 666
    , 677 (1998) (internal quotation marks
    omitted).
    The Mound Road median is difficult to define because it has objective
    characteristics typical of both public and non-public fora. Like a public park, one of the
    “quintessential public forums,” Perry, 
    460 U.S. at 45
    , the median is landscaped and has
    benches for people to use. It also contains “memorial trees and brass memorial plaques
    affixed to rocks.” Appellant’s Br. at 12. These plaques are discernable only from the
    median—they are too small to be read by a passing motorist. Across Chicago Road, in
    a similar median, is the gazebo, erected by the City of Warren Historical Society, which
    contains more space for people to assemble.
    On the other hand, the median is in the middle of a busy eight-lane road, with a
    fifty-mile-per-hour speed limit. There does not appear to be any special parking area for
    the median, nor are there dedicated public restrooms. See Snowden, 
    358 F. Supp. 2d at 1193
     (noting lack of “appropriate accommodations facilitating such use, such as public
    restrooms and public parking”). However, there is pedestrian access from a sidewalk
    that crosses the median and connects the two sides of Mound Road.
    No. 11-1612        Satawa v. Macomb County Rd. Comm’n, et al.                     Page 16
    On balance, we hold that the Mound Road median is a traditional public forum.
    Residents of Warren apparently use the median for a variety of expressive purposes,
    such as the display of farm equipment (meant to show the historical nature of the village)
    and memorial plaques. The median, moreover, invites visitors. It contains park benches
    and is accessible by sidewalk. True, the Mound Road median is not next to a seat of
    government, nor is there any evidence that it is a place where people discuss politics, in
    particular. But a public space does not implicate the First Amendment only when it is
    a forum for political discussion. Rather, “streets and parks . . . have immemorially been
    held in trust for the use of the public and, time out of mind, have been used for purposes
    of assembly, communicating thoughts between citizens, and discussing public questions.”
    Hague, 
    307 U.S. at 515
     (emphasis added). Nor does the median’s location necessarily
    preclude its being identified as a public forum. A public sidewalk allows access to the
    median, and public benches populate it.
    The district court argued, and the Board argues, for a contrary conclusion. Their
    claims are not persuasive. The district court “distilled” three factors from the Snowden
    and Fairfax decisions:
    (1) the median’s physical characteristics and the context of the property’s
    use, including its location and purpose; (2) the County’s intent in
    constructing the median and its need for controlling expressive activities
    on the property, as evidenced by its policies or regulations; and
    (3) whether the property in question is part of a class of property which
    by history or tradition has been open and used for expressive activity.
    Applying these three factors, the district court held that, “[v]iewed in its totality, the
    subject median cannot be a place intended for bringing citizens together to exchange
    ideas.” The median, it reasoned, was not a place “used for public discourse and debate,”
    nor was it “property that . . . Macomb County has dedicated to commemorating the
    people, ideals, and events that compose the city’s or county’s identity.” Thus, the court
    held that the median was not a public forum.
    This reasoning is problematic. First, the district court’s interpretation was too
    narrow. Without question, property “intended for bringing citizens together to exchange
    No. 11-1612              Satawa v. Macomb County Rd. Comm’n, et al.                                  Page 17
    ideas,” “used for public discourse and debate,” or “dedicated to commemorating the
    people, ideals, and events that compose the city’s or county’s identity” can qualify as a
    traditional public forum. But to hold that every traditional public forum must display
    one or more of these particular qualities, as the district court appears to have done, is to
    misread relevant Supreme Court precedent. A forum is public because it is a place long
    dedicated, whether by law or tradition, to “assembly, communicating thoughts between
    citizens, and discussing public questions.” Hague, 
    307 U.S. at 515
    ; see also Pleasant
    Grove City, Utah v. Summum, 
    555 U.S. 460
    , 469 (2009) (“This Court long ago
    recognized that members of the public retain strong free speech rights when they venture
    into public streets and parks . . . .”); Capitol Square Review and Advisory Bd. v. Pinette,
    
    515 U.S. 753
    , 761 (1995) (“The right to use government property for one’s private
    expression depends upon whether the property has by law or tradition been given the
    status of a public forum, or rather has been reserved for specific official uses.”). The
    Mound Road median has been a place where people could gather since at least 1991,
    when the Village of Warren Historical Commission built the gazebo.13 It is accessible
    by public sidewalk and features benches and memorial plaques. Perhaps the Mound
    Road median is not a place where people would ordinarily conduct political discourse.
    But there is no reason that they could not do so: the median is a public space, which is,
    and apparently long has been, available to all comers. This is enough. The district
    court’s too-restrictive reading was incorrect.14
    Neither is the Board’s claim that the median is a nonpublic forum persuasive.
    The Board emphasizes that Mound Road carries “over 82,000 cars a day . . . in 8 lanes
    of traffic at speeds near or in excess of 50 mph.” Appellees’ Br. at 33. It claims that it
    “does not want people sitting in the . . . median,” and that “[t]he Mound Road median
    is certainly not a place where the [Board] would encourage people to congregate or sit.”
    13
    Indeed, to read the Michigan Historic Marker near the gazebo, one would have to be on the
    median.
    14
    Notably, the district court is not entirely right on the facts either. At the gazebo is a historical
    marker, discussing the Village’s history. And sprinkled around the median are plaques, honoring
    prominent citizens. These facts point to at least some “commemorati[on] of the people, ideals, and events
    that compose the city’s or county’s identity.”
    No. 11-1612          Satawa v. Macomb County Rd. Comm’n, et al.                            Page 18
    
    Ibid.
     The Board also suggests that the gazebo does not counsel a contrary conclusion,
    since “the display of a permanent monument by a government in a public park is not the
    form of expression to which the forum analysis applies.” Id. at 35.
    These claims are unsuccessful. First, the record refutes the Board’s contention
    that, because Mound Road is a high-volume roadway, the Board does not want people
    on the median. If this were so, it would be strange to provide access to the median via
    sidewalk, and to allow various groups to erect benches, a gazebo, and plaques that could
    only be read while standing on the median. The Board replies that it did not know about
    any of these things before this litigation, and that it has now requested (though not
    compelled) removal of, at least, the farm equipment.15 Even accepting this as true,
    though, the character of the median is a matter of tradition. The board’s choosing to
    attempt to close the median to all expression now does not change its traditional status
    for the purposes of this litigation.
    Nor is the Board’s claim that the gazebo has no bearing on our forum analysis
    correct. It is, of course, true that “[t]he Free Speech Clause restricts government
    regulation of private speech; it does not regulate government speech,” Summum,
    
    555 U.S. at 467
    , but the significance of the gazebo is not its message. Rather, the
    gazebo’s presence demonstrates that the median is, like a public park, a place that
    welcomes visitors.
    In sum, the Mound Road median is best categorized as a traditional public forum.
    To be sure, it is not prototypical. Nevertheless, it is a place where people have long been
    able to gather, sit, and communicate, even though it separates traffic on a busy street.
    B
    Because the median is a traditional public forum, the government may prohibit
    protected expression based on content only if it “show[s] that its regulation is necessary
    to serve a compelling state interest and that it is narrowly drawn to achieve that end.”
    15
    At oral argument, the Board’s attorney indicated that the presence of other objects in the
    median was still “being hotly discussed and debated between the City and the Road Commission.”
    No. 11-1612           Satawa v. Macomb County Rd. Comm’n, et al.                             Page 19
    Perry, 
    460 U.S. at 45
    . It may, however, “enforce regulations of the time, place, and
    manner of expression which are content-neutral, are narrowly tailored to serve a
    significant government interest, and leave open ample alternative channels of
    communication.” 
    Ibid.
    “[U]nder strict scrutiny [the government] still must demonstrate that [its] stated
    justification is the actual purpose for the proposed amendment and not a
    ‘rationalization[ ] for actions in fact differently grounded.’” Awad v. Ziriax, 
    670 F.3d 1111
    , 1130 n.15 (10th Cir. 2012) (final alteration in original.) (quoting United States v.
    Virginia, 
    518 U.S. 515
    , 535–36 (1996));16 see also Shaw v. Hunt, 
    517 U.S. 899
    , 908 n.4
    (1996) (“To be a compelling interest, the State must show that the alleged objective was
    the legislature’s ‘actual purpose . . . .’”) (citing Miss. Univ. for Women v. Hogan, 
    458 U.S. 718
    , 730 (1982)). This is different from rational-basis review, see, e.g., Williamson
    v. Lee Optical of Okla., 
    348 U.S. 483
     (1955) (proposing hypothetical justifications for
    Oklahoma law, and affirming based on those justifications), but it is crucial because of
    what is at stake. “We cannot and will not uphold [government action] that abridges an
    enumerated constitutional right on the basis of a factitious governmental interest found
    nowhere but in the defendants’ litigating papers.” Colo. Christian Univ. v. Weaver, 
    534 F.3d 1245
    , 1268 (10th Cir. 2008) (McConnell, J.).
    The parties first dispute whether religion or traffic safety was the “real” reason
    that the Board denied Satawa’s permit application. The district court held that, as the
    defendants’ litigating papers, suggested, safety was at least part of the Board’s
    motivation for denying the permit. (“In sum, the Court does not find that Plaintiff has
    demonstrated the existence of any material issue of fact with regard to Defendants’
    safety reasons for the denial of Mr. Satawa’s permit application such that the safety
    reasons given by Mr. Hoepfner should be discredited.”). The district court erred.
    Before this lawsuit, there was no indication that safety concerns played any role
    in the Board’s decision. Quite the contrary. Even though Satawa’s permit application
    16
    Virginia, which Awad cited, involved intermediate scrutiny, the less exacting review applied
    to gender discrimination.
    No. 11-1612            Satawa v. Macomb County Rd. Comm’n, et al.                       Page 20
    specifically claimed that the crèche did not obstruct traffic or pose “any other safety
    concerns,” Hoepfner’s letter denying the permit only addressed religion. (“The Road
    Commission of Macomb County cannot permit you to display this nativity scene in the
    Road Commission’s right of way. This undoubtedly would be interpreted as our
    endorsement of religion, in violation of the Establishment Clause of the U.S.
    Constitution.”). Not once did he use the word “safety;” not once did he use the word
    “traffic.” Likewise, Hoepfner’s presentation to the Board made no mention of safety
    concerns. Rather, he explained: “I’ve contacted Ben Aloia and asked him to research
    [whether the Board should grant Satawa’s application]. Ben has informed me that we
    should not allow this nativity scene to be installed, and he has given me some language
    that I should [sic] respond to this permit. I intend to do that.” Ben Aloia is a lawyer,17
    not a traffic engineer. Never did Hoepfner take any measurements, do any calculations,
    or consult with any other engineers before denying the permit. If Hoepfner’s concern
    really were traffic safety, it is implausible that there would be no mention of traffic
    safety in either his letter to Satawa or his presentation to the Board. Hoepfner’s dealing
    only with religious concerns in documented letters and discussions before litigation
    began strongly suggests that the Establishment Clause, not safety, was the reason for his
    decision. This is especially so at the summary-judgment stage, where we must construe
    the record in Satawa’s favor.
    Contrary evidence in the record is, at best, thin. As discussed above, Hoepfner
    claimed in his deposition that he had separate discussions with each of the Road
    Commissioners about Satawa’s application, outside of the Board’s regularly scheduled
    meetings. (“Q: Did you ever have any discussions with any Board member outside of
    the Board meetings regarding the nativity scene permit?                     A: All of the Board
    Members.”). He insisted that these discussions lasted “many, many hours,” and focused
    on his belief that the crèche posed a traffic hazard. Board Chairwoman Fran Gillett
    testified that she understood that Hoepfner was concerned about safety. But she also
    indicated that she “first became aware of [the crèche] . . . when [the Board] had a
    17
    Indeed, Attorney Aloia continues to represent the Board before us.
    No. 11-1612            Satawa v. Macomb County Rd. Comm’n, et al.                               Page 21
    complaint the Christmas before last [December 2008], and then at that point [she] didn’t
    hear anything more until 2009 at [the March 6 Board] meeting.” (emphasis added). One
    business day after the board meeting, Hoepfner sent a letter denying the permit to
    Satawa’s lawyer.
    This sequence of events casts doubt on the Board’s argument that Hoepfner
    related his safety concerns to Gillett through casual, passing discussions that took
    “many, many hours.” This would be so even if we were not required to construe the
    facts and draw all reasonable inferences in Satawa’s favor. Mercer Cnty., 
    432 F.3d at 628
    . Under the summary-judgment standard, the district court should have rejected
    Hoepfner’s claim that he discussed safety concerns with Board members before the
    meeting, and drawn the reasonable inference that the Board’s self-serving (but still
    questionable) litigation documents were designed to conceal its real reason for denying
    the permit: the crèche’s religious content.18
    Because, at this stage, we must assume that the Board rejected the permit
    application based on its religious content, strict scrutiny applies.19 Pinette, 
    515 U.S. at 760
     (“Our precedent establishes that private religious speech, far from being a First
    Amendment orphan, is as fully protected under the Free Speech Clause as secular private
    expression.”). Thus, the government must show that its denying the permit application
    was “necessary to serve a compelling state interest and that it [was] narrowly drawn to
    achieve that end.” Perry, 
    460 U.S. at 45
    .
    18
    It is also worth noting that, here, the Board presses a safety concern that Hoepfner admits he
    did not have. In his deposition, Hoepfner expressly stated that he “didn’t deny [the permit] for sight
    problems.” The safety issue relating to sight (obscured vision) that the Board now claims is compelling
    appeared, at the earliest, during briefing on Satawa’s temporary-injunction motion. Supra note 9. We may
    consider this shift in determining whether the Board’s denying the permit was constitutional. McCreary
    Cnty., Ky. v. ACLU of Ky., 
    545 U.S. 844
    , 866 (2005) (holding that, when determining purpose in the
    Establishment Clause context, past behavior was relevant, since “the world is not made brand new every
    morning”).
    19
    Amicus National Legal Foundation suggests that we adopt a framework similar to the
    McDonnell Douglas burden-shifting analysis to determine whether a government’s asserted motivation
    is its actual motivation. Amicus Br. of Nat’l Legal Found. at 2–7. We need not take this step because, at
    this stage, resolution of the actual-motive question is straightforward.
    No. 11-1612        Satawa v. Macomb County Rd. Comm’n, et al.                    Page 22
    “There is no doubt that compliance with the Establishment Clause is a state
    interest sufficiently compelling to justify content-based restrictions on speech. Whether
    that interest is implicated here, however, is a different question.” Pinette, 
    515 U.S. at
    761–62 (citing Lamb’s Chapel v. Ctr. Moriches Union Free Sch. Dist., 
    508 U.S. 384
    ,
    394–95 (1993)). For the Establishment Clause to serve as a compelling state interest,
    the speech suppressed must actually violate the Constitution. If the government’s
    “posited fears of an Establishment Clause violation are unfounded,” an Establishment
    Clause defense will not do. Lamb’s Chapel, 
    508 U.S. at 395
    .
    The question we face, then, is whether Satawa’s private expression of religious
    beliefs on the Mound Road median would violate the Establishment Clause. “And we
    do not write on a blank slate in answering it.” Pinette, 
    515 U.S. at 762
    . Time and again,
    the Supreme Court and this court have considered cases where a private individual seeks
    to express religious views in a public forum. See, e.g., Pinette, 
    515 U.S. at
    761–63
    (holding that allowing KKK to erect unattended cross on Columbus’s Capitol Square
    would not violate Establishment Clause); Lamb’s Chapel, 
    508 U.S. at 395
     (holding that
    use of school facilities during off-hours for religious film would not violate
    establishment clause); Widmar v. Vincent, 
    454 U.S. 263
    , 271–76 (1981) (holding that
    University’s allowing religious student groups to use school facilities would not violate
    Establishment Clause); Chabad of S. Ohio & Congregation Lubavitch v. City of
    Cinncinati, 
    363 F.3d 427
     (6th Cir. 2004) (affirming grant of preliminary injunction
    against City of Cincinnati’s enforcing ordinance prohibiting display of menorah in
    traditional public forum during Chanukah); Ams. United for Separation of Church &
    State v. City of Grand Rapids, 
    980 F.2d 1538
     (6th Cir. 1992) (en banc) (holding that
    privately funded menorah, displayed during Chanukah in traditional public forum did
    not violate Establishment Clause); Congregation Lubavitch v. City of Cincinnati, 
    923 F.2d 458
     (6th Cir. 1991) (holding that city could not show likelihood on success of
    merits in challenge of injunction requiring it to keep menorah displayed in public square
    lit). Where, as here, “[t]he State did not sponsor [the religious] expression, the
    expression was made on government property that had been opened to the public for
    speech, and permission was requested through the same application process and on the
    No. 11-1612         Satawa v. Macomb County Rd. Comm’n, et al.                     Page 23
    same terms required of other private groups,” the government would not violate the
    Establishment Clause by granting the permit. Pinette, 
    515 U.S. at 763
    . The Board’s
    interest in preventing an Establishment Clause violation, therefore, was not compelling.
    Its decision to deny the permit does not pass muster under strict scrutiny.
    C
    We would reach the same result even if we accepted the Board’s proffered
    traffic-safety justification. To deny the permit based on traffic safety, the Board would
    have to show that it did no more than enforce compliance with a reasonable, content-
    neutral time, place, and manner restriction, “narrowly tailored to serve a significant
    government interest, [which left] open ample alternative channels of communication.”
    Perry, 
    460 U.S. at 45
    ; Bays v. City of Fairborn, 
    668 F.3d 814
    , 822 (6th Cir. 2012) (“To
    be a constitutional time, place, and manner restriction [on protected expression in a
    traditional public forum], the . . . policy must be narrowly tailored to serve a significant
    government interest.”). Of course, traffic safety in general is a significant government
    interest. The particular concern that the board posits in this case, however, is not. The
    parties’ experts agreed that the crèche could cause an accident in only one scenario: a
    driver traveling northbound on Mound Road runs a red light, and another driver traveling
    six to ten miles-per-hour below the posted speed limit, eastbound on Chicago Road,
    looks for traffic before coming to the crèche, then passes the crèche and continues
    through the intersection without again checking for traffic. Not only is this scenario
    extremely improbable—indeed, it rests on one driver flagrantly disobeying traffic laws,
    while another is grossly inattentive—but the crèche’s absence would do little to prevent
    it. For the crèche to cause the posited collision to take place, the Chicago Road driver
    would have not to look at Mound Road traffic after he passed the area that houses the
    crèche, and not have his view obstructed by the pine trees (though the County claims that
    the trees permit a view of Mound Road). Otherwise, the driver would have ample time
    to stop, regardless of the crèche’s presence. A hypothetical traffic-safety concern resting
    on aberrant behavior, which has never happened—nor has there been any record of it
    being threatened—in sixty years does not qualify as a significant government interest.
    No. 11-1612            Satawa v. Macomb County Rd. Comm’n, et al.                               Page 24
    Nor, as the Amicus urges, was the decision to deny the permit outright a means
    narrowly enough tailored to achieve the Board’s stated traffic-safety goal. “Although
    a regulation may satisfy the [narrow-]tailoring requirement even though it is not the least
    restrictive or least intrusive means of serving the state’s goal, it must not be substantially
    broader than necessary.” Bays, 
    668 F.3d 823
     (internal quotation marks omitted). Here,
    the Board denied Satawa’s permit outright. It made no effort to take a less restrictive
    course, nor did it explain why it could not have worked with Satawa to allay its safety
    concerns. It did not tailor its denial at all, much less narrowly, to its stated interest.
    Denial of the permit, therefore, would not pass muster even if we accepted the
    general validity of the Board’s proffered traffic-safety justification.
    IV
    The First Amendment’s Establishment Clause prohibits the government from
    taking action “respecting an establishment of religion.” U.S. CONST. amend. I. This, the
    Supreme Court has explained, means that the government may neither officially promote
    religion, nor harbor “an official purpose to disapprove of a particular religion or of
    religion in general.” Church of the Lukumi Babalu Aye, Inc. v. City of Hialeah, 
    508 U.S. 520
    , 532 (1993). “The touchstone for our analysis is the principle that the First
    Amendment mandates governmental neutrality between religion and religion, and
    between religion and nonreligion.” McCreary Cnty., 
    545 U.S. at 860
     (internal quotation
    marks omitted).
    Although it has lost some of its luster, the test from Lemon, 
    403 U.S. 602
    , as
    refined by later Supreme Court opinions, guides our Establishment Clause analysis.
    ACLU of Ohio Found., Inc. v. DeWeese, 
    633 F.3d 424
    , 430–41 (6th Cir. 2011). Under
    today’s Lemon test, we ask: (1) whether the government’s predominant purpose was
    secular;20 (2) “whether the government action has the purpose or effect of endorsing
    religion,” ibid., and (3) whether the action fosters “an excessive entanglement with
    20
    Originally, the first question in the Lemon test was whether the challenged action had “a
    secular . . . purpose.” Lemon, 
    403 U.S. at 612
    . McCreary County reformulated this test, requiring that the
    government show that its predominant purpose was secular. Mercer Cnty., 
    432 F.3d at 635
    .
    No. 11-1612         Satawa v. Macomb County Rd. Comm’n, et al.                     Page 25
    religion.” Lemon, 
    403 U.S. at 613
    . If we cannot answer “yes” to the first question and
    “no” to the second two, the challenged action violates the Establishment Clause.
    DeWeese, 
    633 F.3d at 431
     (“Failure under any of Lemon’s three prongs deems
    governmental action violative of the Establishment Clause.” (internal quotation marks
    omitted)).
    In the predominant-purpose inquiry, we generally accept the government’s stated
    rationale for its action. 
    Ibid.
     “But it is nonetheless the duty of the courts to distinguish
    a sham secular purpose from a sincere one.” Santa Fe Ind. Sch. Dist. v. Doe, 
    530 U.S. 290
    , 308 (2000) (internal quotation marks and alterations omitted). Our task is to
    examine the record with “eyes that . . . belong to an objective observer, one who takes
    account of the traditional external signs that show up in the text, . . . history, and
    implementation of the statute, or comparable official act,” McCreary Cnty., 
    545 U.S. at 862
     (internal citations and quotation marks omitted), and to ensure that “the secular
    purpose required [was] genuine, not a sham, and not merely secondary to a religious
    objective.” 
    Id.
     at 864 (citing Santa Fe, 
    530 U.S. at 308
    ). Of course, “reasonable
    observers have reasonable memories, and our precedents sensibly forbid an observer to
    turn a blind eye to the context in which [the] policy arose.” Id. at 866 (alteration in
    original, internal quotation marks omitted).
    Here, as discussed above, an objective examination of the record—especially at
    the summary-judgment stage—strongly suggests that the Board denied Satawa’s permit
    because it believed that the crèche, if placed on the median, would violate the
    Establishment Clause. Its later-asserted position that it denied the permit because of
    safety concerns does not withstand even cursory scrutiny. First, Gillet’s testimony casts
    doubt on Hoepfner’s claim that he had extensive discussions with Board members about
    the safety concerns that the crèche posed. See supra note 9. Second, the Board’s
    asserted safety justification, like the County’s explanation for its display in McCreary
    County, changed over time. See McCreary Cnty., 
    545 U.S. at
    851–58. In his
    deposition, Hoepfner specified: “I didn’t deny [Satawa’s permit] for sight problems. It
    was an encroachment within the right-of-way . . . that’s the reason I denied it.” The
    No. 11-1612            Satawa v. Macomb County Rd. Comm’n, et al.                                Page 26
    Board, however, now relies on the admittedly later-conceived explanation that the crèche
    could interfere with a driver’s line of sight. This shift too casts doubt on the Board’s
    safety explanation. Third, no contemporaneous document gives any reason other than
    the crèche’s religious content for denying Satawa’s permit application. Avoiding an
    Establishment Clause violation, an objective observer would find, was the reason that
    the Board denied the permit.
    Satawa reasons that this premise leads inexorably to the conclusion that the
    Board’s predominant purpose was not secular, but religious. To deny the permit because
    of the crèche’s religious message, he claims, was to express an official policy
    disfavoring religion. This argument has some intuitive appeal. But it rests on a sleight
    of hand. The purpose of adhering to the Constitution has nothing to do with religion.
    The Board’s bad guess—or bad legal advice—about the constitutional implications of
    Satawa’s permit, without more, does not show a purpose to favor or disfavor religion.21
    See Stratechuk v. Bd. of Educ., S. Orange-Maplewood Sch. Dist., 
    587 F.3d 597
    , 604–06
    (3d Cir. 2009). Nor is there any evidence of animosity toward religion in the record.22
    To the contrary, Gillet instructed Hoepfner, who had sought legal advice from outside
    counsel, to “obey the law.” Appellant’s Br. at 14. The Board’s predominant purpose
    was the secular purpose of acting constitutionally.23
    21
    A contrary conclusion would put any government faced with a permit application in an
    impossible position. If it approved the permit, it would be liable for favoring religion; if it denied the
    permit, it would be liable for disfavoring religion.
    22
    Were there such evidence, the result might be different. If the county had a bad motive, or
    wanted to curry political favor with a particular group, the predominant purpose might not be considered
    secular.
    23
    This reasoning is completely consistent with our earlier strict-scrutiny discussion. Taken
    objectively, and construed under the summary-judgment standard, the record shows that the Board denied
    Satawa’s permit to avoid what it believed was an Establishment Clause violation. For this to qualify as
    a compelling state interest, strong enough to justify abridging Satawa’s fundamental right to express
    himself in a traditional public forum, Satawa’s display would actually have to violate the Establishment
    Clause. Lamb’s Chapel, 508 U.S. at 395. In the first step of the Lemon test, something different is at
    stake. The question is not whether the government put forward a compelling interest that justifies its
    banning expression, but whether the purpose for a given act was predominantly religious. That the goal
    of avoiding an Establishment Clause violation is a compelling governmental objective only when there
    would actually be a constitutional violation has no bearing on whether the effort, right or wrong, to avoid
    an Establishment Clause violation is a predominantly religious or secular purpose.
    No. 11-1612         Satawa v. Macomb County Rd. Comm’n, et al.                    Page 27
    Nor, by the same token, would a reasonable observer find that the Board’s action
    had the purpose or effect of endorsing or disapproving of religion, or that denying the
    permit created any kind of entanglement. Rather, on this record, a reasonable observer
    would take Hoepfner at his written, and spoken (at the board meeting), word: he was
    trying to obey the law. Fear of violating the Constitution, not Satawa’s religion,
    motivated his decision. Nothing about that fear suggests any view about, or involvement
    with, religion at all, short of a desire simply to act lawfully. The district court was
    correct to grant summary judgment for the Board on Satawa’s Establishment Clause
    claim.
    V
    The Equal Protection Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment “protects against
    invidious discrimination among similarly situated individuals or implicating fundamental
    rights.” Miller, 
    622 F.3d at 538
     (quoting Scarbrough v. Morgan Cnty. Bd. of Ed.,
    
    470 F.3d 250
    , 260 (6th Cir. 2006)). “[U]nder the Equal Protection Clause . . .
    government may not grant the use of a forum to people whose views it finds acceptable,
    but deny use to those wishing to express less favored or more controversial views.”
    Police Dep’t of Chicago v. Mosley, 
    408 U.S. 92
    , 96 (1972).
    “The threshold element of an equal protection claim is disparate treatment; once
    disparate treatment is shown, the equal protection analysis to be applied is determined
    by the classification used by the government decision-makers.” Miller, 
    622 F.3d at 538
    (quoting Scarbrough, 
    470 F.3d at 260
    ). The Board claims that it granted a permit for
    only one item on median: the gazebo across the street from the crèche. Appellees’ Br.
    at 49. It suggests, however, that its granting such a license is irrelevant because
    “[p]ermanent monuments displayed on public property typically represent government
    speech.” Summum, 
    555 U.S. at 470
    .
    The thrust of the Board’s claim appears to be that, because the decision to allow
    the Warren Historical Commission to build a permanent monument is government
    speech, it is not similar to the Board’s decision to deny Satawa’s application to erect a
    temporary display, for purposes of the Equal Protection Clause. Whether this argument
    No. 11-1612        Satawa v. Macomb County Rd. Comm’n, et al.                    Page 28
    succeeds is a close question. Without doubt, a permanent display has a different position
    under the First Amendment than a temporary display. So, in that sense, the gazebo and
    the crèche are materially different. On the other hand, it would be strange to hold that
    Satawa’s permit application can be denied because a restriction on a temporary display
    is more problematic than a restriction on a permanent one. Nevertheless, the two
    displays are not in the same class, in at least one sense.
    We need not resolve this question, however, because of the presence of other
    objects on the median. As soon as the Board received the Freedom From Religion
    Foundation’s letter, Hoepfner sent an inspector to see the crèche. He immediately called
    Satawa and told him to remove the display. The record does not show that he took
    similar steps for the other items on the median until after litigation began.
    See Appellees’ Br. at 49 (“[N]one of the other items placed on the median at issue
    . . . have been permitted by the RCMC. . . . There are discussions underway at the
    RCMC regarding the removal of these items and the Warren Historical Commission has
    been approached to remove the items.”).
    The crèche, as discussed above, is private religious expression, “fully protected
    under the Free Speech Clause.” Pinette, 
    515 U.S. at 760
    . For the County to have treated
    it differently than other items on the median, therefore, the decision to ban the crèche
    would have to advance a compelling governmental interest and be a narrowly tailored
    means to achieve that interest. Barr v. Lafon, 
    538 F.3d 554
    , 576 (6th Cir. 2008) (“[W]e
    apply strict scrutiny under the Equal Protection Clause to a statute infringing on speech
    protected by the First Amendment . . . .”). As discussed above, the Board cannot meet
    this standard. See supra part III.B. The district court erred by granting summary
    judgment to the Board on Satawa’s equal-protection claim.
    VI
    In sum, we AFFIRM the district court’s grant of summary judgment to the Board
    on Satawa’s Establishment Clause claim. However, we REVERSE the district court’s
    disposition of Satawa’s free-speech and equal-protection claims, and remand for further
    proceedings consistent with this opinion.
    

Document Info

Docket Number: 11-1612

Citation Numbers: 689 F.3d 506

Judges: Boggs, Cole, Oliver

Filed Date: 8/1/2012

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 8/5/2023

Authorities (35)

Colorado Christian University v. Weaver , 534 F.3d 1245 ( 2008 )

Stratechuk v. SOUTH ORANGE-MAPLEWOOD SCHOOL DIST. , 587 F.3d 597 ( 2009 )

paul-scarbrough-v-morgan-county-board-of-education-perry-spurling , 470 F.3d 250 ( 2006 )

American Civil Liberties Union of Ohio Foundation, Inc. v. ... , 633 F.3d 424 ( 2011 )

Chabad of Southern Ohio & Congregation Lubavitch Peter ... , 363 F.3d 427 ( 2004 )

Rita Warren v. Fairfax County , 196 F.3d 186 ( 1999 )

Congregation Lubavitch and Rabbi Sholom B. Kalmanson v. ... , 923 F.2d 458 ( 1991 )

american-civil-liberties-union-of-kentucky-bart-mcqueary-v-mercer-county , 432 F.3d 624 ( 2005 )

Miller v. City of Cincinnati , 622 F.3d 524 ( 2010 )

Acorn and Liz Wolff v. City of Phoenix and the Chief of ... , 798 F.2d 1260 ( 1986 )

Barr v. Lafon , 538 F.3d 554 ( 2008 )

americans-united-for-separation-of-church-and-state-benjamin-baum-phyllis , 980 F.2d 1538 ( 1992 )

Boardley v. United States Department of the Interior , 615 F.3d 508 ( 2010 )

Snowden v. Town of Bay Harbor Islands, Florida , 358 F. Supp. 2d 1178 ( 2004 )

Haguer v. Committee for Industrial Organization , 59 S. Ct. 954 ( 1939 )

Schenck v. United States , 39 S. Ct. 247 ( 1919 )

Stromberg v. California , 51 S. Ct. 532 ( 1931 )

Police Dept. of Chicago v. Mosley , 92 S. Ct. 2286 ( 1972 )

Williamson v. Lee Optical of Oklahoma, Inc. , 75 S. Ct. 461 ( 1955 )

Widmar v. Vincent , 102 S. Ct. 269 ( 1981 )

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