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AMERICAN BROADCASTING COMPANIES, INC., Robert L. Crivelli,
Apula Borger, Vernon M. Kerrick, Philip M. Godfrey, Charles N.
Mertz and Jonathan J. Olken, Plaintiffs-Appellants,
v.
Mario M. CUOMO, Edward I. Koch, and Michael J. Codd, Individually
and as Police Commissioner of the City of New York, Defendants-Respondents.
570 F.2d 1080
No. 77-7476.
United States Court of Appeals,
Second Circuit.
Sept. 21, 1977.
Appeal was taken from a judgment of United States District
Court for the Southern District of New York, Kevin Thomas Duffy,
J., dismissing complaint and refusing to sign a temporary restraining
order. The Court of Appeals, Gurfein, Circuit Judge, held that
where irreparable injury to television network and general public
would result if management television crews of network were not
permitted to broadcast live coverage of postelection activities
of remaining primary candidates at their respective headquarters,
notwithstanding objection of candidates because of strike by
broadcast technicians employed by network, constitutional free
speech was involved in that there was a dedication of premises
to public communications use once media was invited, and arrests
for criminal trespass might result from a combination of activity
on part of police commissioner and his agents and of complaining
owners of premises, district court should have issued an order
restraining threatened arrests, subject, however, to condition
that order not be operative if other television networks refused
to cross picket line set up by striking technicians. Reversed.
[1] CONSTITUTIONAL LAW k90(1) 92k90(1)
Once there is a public function, public comment, and participation
by some of the media, the First Amendment requires equal access
to all of the media or the rights of the First Amendment will
no longer be tenable. U.S.C.A.Const. Amend. 1.
[2] CONSPIRACY k7.5(3) 91k7.5(3) Formerly 91k7.7
An ordinary citizen who conspires with a state agent to violate
the civil rights of a plaintiff is equally liable and this amounts
to a conspiracy based upon state action. 42 U.S.C.A. § 1983.
[3] INJUNCTION k150212k150
Where irreparable injury to television network and general
public would result if management television crews of network
were not permitted to broadcast live coverage of postelection
activities of remaining primary candidates at their respective
headquarters, notwithstanding objection of candidates because
of strike by broadcast technicians employed by network, constitutional
free speech was involved in that there was a dedication of premises
to public communications use once media was invited, and arrests
for criminal trespass might result from a combination of activity
on part of police commissioner and his agents and of complaining
owners of premises, district court should have issued an order
restraining threatened arrests subject, however, to condition
that order not be operative if other television networks refused
to cross picket line set up by striking technicians. Penal Law
N.Y. § 140.05; 42 U.S.C.A. § 1983; U.S.C.A.Const. Amends.
1, 14. *1081 Philip Forlenza, W. Cullen MacDonald, Hawkins, Delafield
& Wood, New York City (ABC et al.), for plaintiffs-appellants.
Leonard Koerner, Corp. Counsel, New York City, for Codd. Fabian
G. Palomino, Corner, Finn, Dwyer & Charles, Brooklyn, N.Y.,
for Cuomo. Edward N. Costikyan, Paul, Weiss, Rifkind, Wharton
& Garrison, New York City, for Koch.
Before GURFEIN and VAN GRAAFEILAND, Circuit Judges, and COFFRIN,
District Judge. Statement made by the court at the disposition
of the appeal in open court. GURFEIN, Circuit Judge. In view
of the shortness of time, we will deliver an oral opinion subject
to editing and corrections that may occur to us when we read
the text. In the meantime, the opinion is being taken down on
tape and will be available to counsel. This is an appeal from
an order of Judge Kevin Duffy dismissing the complaint and refusing
to sign a temporary restraining order. The individual appellants
are employees of the corporate appellant, AMERICAN BROADCASTING
COMPANIES, INC. ("ABC"), and are part of its Eyewitness
News Department. Respondents, the Honorable Mario Cuomo and the
Honorable Edward Koch are the two remaining candidates in the
primary runoff for Mayor of New York and the respondent Codd
is the Police Commissioner of the City of New York. *1082 This
case arises out of a series of arrests and threats of arrests
against persons affiliated with the individual appellants, with
such threats actually being directed against some of the individual
appellants by Messrs. Koch and Cuomo and the City Police Department
(on September 8, the first day of the Democratic primary) who
claimed trespass in violation of the criminal trespass law of
New York, N.Y. Penal Law s 140.05 (McKinney 1975). These threatened
arrests occurred in various campaign facilities of the candidates
in the primary. The matter has been aggravated by the circumstance
that there is an ongoing collective bargaining dispute between
the network, ABC, and the National Association of Broadcast Engineers
and Technicians, known as "NABET", whose members have
been on strike for some time. On September 8, apparently some
of the NABET members picketed several of the headquarters of
the Democratic candidates and engaged in other secondary activity
for the purpose of causing the ABC management television crew,
who were then inside the several campaign facilities by invitation
of the candidates, to be ousted. ABC, we are told, has filed
a complaint with the National Labor Relations Board charging
unlawful secondary activity on the part of the union, but we
are not concerned with that subject. We do know that there have
been threats that if the management crews of ABC try to enter
or fail to leave the various premises of the candidates, they
would be arrested. Mr. Koch has indicated a belief, which Mr.
Costikyan has indicated here again today, that if ABC is permitted
to bring its management crew into the headquarters, the crews
of CBS and NBC would leave and the networks would refuse to put
in their own management crews. It is possible, of course, for
ABC to send in movie crews who are not members of the NABET union
but as they have pointed out in their affidavit, this would prevent
a simultaneous broadcast of the activities which they film, since
it would take several hours to process the movie film. The question
before us is whether Judge Duffy abused his discretion in refusing
to restrain the Police Commissioner from enforcing the criminal
trespass statute and from refusing to restrain Messrs. Koch and
Cuomo from refusing access to the ABC management crew. The first
question presented as it has been given to us is whether a federal
court should enjoin enforcement of a criminal statute which as
applied interferes with First Amendment rights.
The Supreme Court held in Steffel v. Thompson, 415 U.S. 452,
94 S.Ct. 1209, 39 L.Ed.2d 505 (1973), that a declaratory judgment
was proper when a criminal prosecution for exercising a First
Amendment right was threatened and the Court went further in
Doran v. Salem Inn., Inc., 422 U.S. 922, 95 S.Ct. 2561, 45 L.Ed.2d
648 (1975), by extending the declaratory judgment relief to injunctive
relief. There is no question that irreparable harm will result
if ABC is not permitted to broadcast live coverage of the post-election
activities at the respective headquarters. We think that this
would amount to irreparable injury, not only to ABC but to the
public which views the events on its channel. Some of these viewers
might be limited to a single channel, such as people in hospitals
or other institutions who have a single channel to watch, and
indeed the public generally would hardly know that they are being
foreclosed, if they watch ABC, from seeing something that they
could see if they switched to another station. And so we cover
the first element required for a permanent injunction, namely,
irreparable injury.
The second element would be whether there is likely chance
of success upon a trial of a permanent injunction. This, in turn,
requires the consideration of two questions. First, whether a
First Amendment right is being violated; and secondly, whether
there is sufficient state action to constitute a violation of
the Civil Rights Act of 1871 and the Fourteenth Amendment as
it applies the First Amendment to the states. *1083 With respect
to the constitutional free speech issue, the Police Commissioner
takes the position that he is simply enforcing the statute. As
far as the candidates are concerned, we have indicated the position
of Mr. Koch and apparently, judging from the statement of his
representative, Mr. Cuomo takes the same position, namely, that
there might be danger that CBS and NBC might withdraw. The second
phase of the claim dealing with the constitutional right is that
the candidates apparently contend that their activities are private
and that the premises upon which they propose to engage in these
activities are also private premises where invitation is required
in order to give anybody, including the press, a license to be
on those premises. They point out that the invitation to attend
the post-election festivities or obsequies, as the case may be,
is by invitation only. But we do not think that this is the issue.
We think that once the press is invited, including the media
operating by means of instantaneous picture broadcast, there
is a dedication of those premises to public communications use.
It is idle to speak of privacy when the affair is publicly transmitted
by broadcast to millions of viewers. The issue is not whether
the public is or is not generally excluded, but whether the members
of the broadcast media are generally excluded. If choice were
allowed for discrimination in a public event of this magnitude
in the various media, then we reject the contention that it is
within the prerogative of a political candidate. We rather think
that the danger would be that those of the media who are in opposition
or who the candidate thinks are not treating him fairly would
be excluded. And thus we think it is the public which would lose.
[1] In short, we do not think that the particular place involved
is necessarily the outer limit of the constitutional protection
of the First Amendment. We think that once there is a public
function, public comment, and participation by some of the media,
the First Amendment requires equal access to all of the media
or the rights of the First Amendment would no longer be tenable.
We thus conclude that the First Amendment rights of ABC and of
its viewing public would be impaired by their exclusion from
the campaign activities and that this exclusion under the threat
of arrest is unconstitutional and should be the subject of a
federal injunction. [2] The next issue, as I have indicated,
that is raised is the question of state action. Mr. Cuomo raises
the point quite well that although Commissioner Codd, as a Police
Commissioner is an agent of the State, the individual candidates,
who have not yet been elected, are not. We need not determine
that fully. The Supreme Court has indicated that primary elections
are so fundamental a part of our governmental elective process
as to be on a par with general elections. That these gentlemen,
Messrs. Koch and Cuomo are public figures, we cannot doubt. We
think that in this case the statement on behalf of the Police
Commissioner is both relevant and important. The Police Commissioner,
in stating that his duty was to enforce the law, as indeed it
is, indicated that in cases of arrests for criminal trespass,
his men require two things: (1) that there be a complaint from
the owner of the premises and (2) that the owner give some assurance
that he will follow up the arrest by becoming a complainant in
a court action. This indicates to us that in practice, arrests
for criminal trespass result from a combination of activity on
the part of the Commissioner and his agents and of the complaining
owners of the premises. In this circuit, we have held in Birnbaum
v. Trussell, 371 F.2d 672 (1966), that an ordinary citizen who
conspires with a state agent to violate the civil rights of a
plaintiff is equally liable and that this amounts to a conspiracy
based upon state action, and we adhere to that precedent. We
are not unconscious of the fact, of course, that the union involved
has a great stake in the economic war which it is waging against
the network. And we recognize that its own rights of free speech
and picketing *1084 should not be curtailed, even where there
is a paramount necessity to protect First Amendment rights and
where the pressure on the part of the union is, as in this case,
only secondary. We therefore conclude with some reluctance because
of the situation I have just mentioned that the two candidates
and their officers and agents, as well as the Police Commissioner
should be restrained in order to effect the protection of the
Fourteenth Amendment rights of ABC and its viewing public. We
think that although there has already been one arrest at one
of the headquarters at the instigation of one of the employees
of one of the candidates and that this criminal case is pending,
nevertheless, despite the constraints being put on federal courts
by Younger v. Harris, 401 U.S. 37, 91 S.Ct. 746, 27 L.Ed.2d 669
(1971), and other related cases, the impact of those cases is
excepted when the remedy at law is inadequate and the harm is
"great and immediate." Since we are dealing here with
something that is going to happen on Monday, there is no conceivable
possibility that the state courts in the criminal prosecution
can determine the matter by that date. [3] Accordingly, we reverse
the order of the district court, and we order a restraining order
to be issued preventing the arrest of the ABC crew, but we are
limiting it to the condition that CBS and NBC participate simultaneously
in the broadcasts in question. In the event that CBS and NBC
refuse to either cross the picket line or have their managerial
crew operate, then the injunction will not be operative because
that would result only in ABC getting what we might call in the
vernacular a "scoop" which is not our intention. In
other words, we want the networks to be on a par and if they
are on a par, then Mr. Koch's suggestion that the public will
be defeated in its right of viewing becomes chimerical. If counsel
will proceed to the Clerk's Office, he will find that we have
scribbled out an order based on the opinion which we have just
delivered, and you might then proceed to Judge Duffy's court,
which I think is Part I this week, and make such further arrangements
as may be necessary, to process the papers. I want to thank counsel
both for the speed with which they met this problem and for the
skill with which they presented the issues. It was very helpful
to the court on both sides, and I compliment you all. (Later
in the day, the Court added to its oral opinion: "The judgment
dismissing the complaint is reversed.")
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