A street preacher sued a city in Mississippi, challenging the ordinance requiring him and other street preachers to limit their speech activities to a designated protest area. After the city prosecuted him for violating the ordinance, and he was found guilty, he persisted in wishing to preach it outside the designated protest area, finding it unsuitable for reaching the proper audience. Can he challenge the ordinance under the First Amendment when he was previously convicted under the same audience? The Supreme Court says he can.
The case is Olivier v City of Brandon, issued on March 20. The exciting issue is whether the First Amendment allows the city to set up a designated protest area for religious (or political) speech like this. But that's not the issue before the Supreme Court in this case. Instead, the Court considers whether this lawsuit is foreclosed under a 1994 precedent that generally says you cannot sue the police for a civil rights violation if that lawsuit would have the effect of undoing a prior criminal conviction arising from the same conduct. That case was Heck v. Humphrey, one of the most complicated cases handed down by the Supreme Court in the last 35 years, at least in my view.
I had a similar issue about 20 years ago, when I represented a man who wanted to post political signs on his property and was found guilty of violating the town's sign ordinance. We then sued to strike down that ordinance under the First Amendment because he wanted to keep posting the signs. The argument was that he could not bring the suit because he could have challenged the constitutionality of that law in appealing from his criminal conviction. I researched the Heck out of that issue, but the courts ruled in out favor without addressing that question.
This is not a Heck case, the Supreme Court writes, because plaintiff in this case is trying to enjoin future enforcement of the speech law; he is not trying to effectively undue the prior criminal conviction arising from his past violation of the speech law. He is not challenging the validity of his prior conviction. Rather, he wants the law declared unconstitutional so he can preach where he wants in the future. While success in this lawsuit would necessarily mean that plaintiff's prior conviction was unconstitutional, we can't read Heck in such a literal sense. Justice Kagan writes that judicial language in court rulings cannot bind future cases in all circumstances. The Court now thinks that certain language in Heck was too broad, at least in application to cases like this one.
A similar issue arose in Wooley v. Maynard, a 1977 Supreme Court case that said New Hampshire could not prosecute a man who put masking tape over the state slogan on the license plate, "Live Free or Die." Because who is the state to tell me what messages can attach to my vehicle? That plaintiff was also convicted of violating the state law before later suing to challenge its constitutionality. The court said Maynard could bring the case because he sought "prospective relief" and was not essentially challenging the prior conviction. Wooley is the guiding rule in the preacher case, not Heck.