New Mayor’s Rescission of Retaliatory Gag Order Moots Journalists’ Challenge
August 8, 2006
Roxan Kerr - Washington
The U.S. Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit has held that a newspaper’s
appeal from a lower court’s decision – upholding a former mayor’s citywide gag
order that prevented city employees from speaking with reporters from the
newspaper – is now moot following a new mayor’s formal rescission of the edict.
In February 2005, then-Mayor George M. McKelvey of Youngstown, Ohio –
alleging that the newspaper’s reporters were “failing to report objectively” on
his administration – issued an oral directive prohibiting city officials from
talking to reporters from the newspaper. In Youngstown Publishing Co. v.
McKelvey, The Business Journal and its journalists sued Mayor McKelvey
alleging unlawful retaliation for exercise of their First Amendment rights.
After an adverse ruling from the trial court, which said the newspaper failed to
state a cognizable claim, the plaintiffs appealed to the Sixth Circuit.
The media watched this case with great interest and with no idea that an
unexpected twist would occur. Two weeks prior to oral arguments, the new mayor
of Youngstown, Jay Williams, who took office on January 1, 2006, formally
rescinded Mayor McKelvey’s edict and sent a memorandum to city personnel
explaining that the ban no longer existed. Upon learning of this new
development, the appeals court asked the parties to submit briefs on whether the
controversy was now moot.
The Business Journal took the position that the case was not moot
because the ban was capable of repetition evading review and because the city
voluntarily rescinded the ban making it possible that without intervention from
the court, the new mayor could easily reinstate the ban. These are two factors
courts ordinarily consider in evaluating claims of mootness. In its June 27,
2006, decision, however, the Sixth Circuit rejected the arguments. The court
reasoned that the voluntary cessation argument failed because “there is simply
no indication that the new mayor of Youngstown, Mayor Williams, will return to
the ‘old ways’ of Mayor McKelvey and issue a similar edict.” In particular, the
court stated that there is no evidence that the circumstances that caused Mayor
McKelvey’s edict will occur again – namely that “The Business Journal
will publish articles criticizing Mayor Williams and Mayor Williams would then,
in retaliation, have to issue a similar edict.” The court held that for the same
reason, the newspaper failed to show that it may again face a ban from the new
mayor.
In his concurrence, Judge R. Guy Cole, Jr. emphasized that any slight
deviation from the facts of the case would require that the court reach the
merits of the case. He noted that had Mayor McKelvey (a steadfast supporter)
revoked the edict rather than Mayor Williams (whose action regarding the edict
has been one of “apparent opposition”), the appeals court’s analysis would be
different since the Supreme Court’s standard for determining if a case has been
mooted by voluntary conduct is stringent. Judge Cole also warned against putting
too much “stock” in the appeals court’s reasoning that “genuine self-correction
by a government official, without more, provides a secure foundation for a
dismissal based on mootness.” Doing so, he continued, could create an exception
within an exception shifting the burden to plaintiffs to show disingenuousness,
a shift that is unwarranted.
At bottom, a highly watched case with the sizzle of constitutional challenges
ended with the fizzle of a procedural ruling. But the Sixth Circuit left some
room for The Business Journal and other media supporters to live and
fight another day. Instead of simply dismissing the case as moot, the court
vacated the district court opinion, which was favorable to the city, and
remanded the case to the district court with instructions that the case be
dismissed as moot, removing that precedent from the books.
Holland & Knight represented a coalition of media companies and interest
groups as amici curiae in the Sixth Circuit in this case.
For more information, e-mail Roxan A. Kerr at
roxan.kerr@hklaw.com or call toll
free, 1-888-688-8500.