Iranian Muslim Organization v. City of San Antonio

BARROW, Justice,

dissenting.

I respectfully dissent.

I agree with the fundamental proposition that prior restraints on free speech are presumptively unconstitutional and thus there is a heavy burden upon a governmental body to show justification for imposition of a prior restraint. However, in considering that proposition here, the majority opinion misconstrues the factual background and the posture of this appeal. This has resulted in an advisory opinion which misinterprets the holdings of the courts below and does a great disservice to the conscientious efforts of the acting Police Chief, the City Manager and the City Council of San Antonio to balance the freedom of the Iranian students to demonstrate with the duty of the City to maintain public order. Overshadowing the whole controversy was the well-being of over 50 Americans then being held *210hostage by Iranian students in the American Embassy in Iran.

The majority opinion is advisory because the appeal from the denial of petitioners’ application for temporary mandatory injunction to require the City Council to issue them a parade permit is now moot and, therefore, this appeal should be dismissed.1 Art. V, Sec. 8, Tex.Const.; Firemen’s Ins. Co. of Newark, New Jersey v. Burch, 442 S.W.2d 331 (Tex.1968). Furthermore, since only an interlocutory order is before us, we do not adjudicate any issue but simply remand for trial on the merits. This has been the status of the case from the onset.

The basis for the denial of the parade permits to the Iranian Muslim Organization 2 (IMO) was concern over possible repercussions to the American hostages. While this case was on appeal, all hostages were released. It is clear from the record that if the IMO or anyone else wishes now to have a parade pro or con on the Iranian question, they need but to apply for a permit. All city officials so testified. Conclusive support for their good faith is shown by the undisputed evidence that the IMO was granted a permit to parade before the American hostages were captured. The IMO has not requested a permit after the hostages were released; nor has the City denied such a permit to anyone else after the hostages were released.

It must be recognized that this is an appeal from an interlocutory order and the evidence has not been fully developed. Under settled rules of this Court, the merits of the cause are not presented for appellate review in an appeal from the denial of a temporary injunction. The majority recognizes this rule and grants no relief. Appellate review is strictly limited to a determination of the question of whether there has been a clear abuse of discretion by the trial court in denying the interlocutory order. Davis v. Huey, 571 S.W.2d 859 (Tex.1978). This was the only question before the court of civil appeals. Accordingly, the majority in that court did not pass on the merits of the case, nor does the majority here.

It is necessary to review the factual background of this case in order to understand the action of the city officials and the holdings of the lower courts. In early 1979, the government of the Shah of Iran was overthrown and the Shah fled to Mexico. In October 1979, he was permitted to enter the United States for treatment at a New York hospital. It is undoubtedly a historical understatement to say the Shah’s entry into the United States set off a torrent of anti-American activity by Iranian college students in the United States and also in Iran. In fact, the IMO was granted a permit by the city officials and held a parade or demonstration in San Antonio shortly after the Shah went to New York, but before the hostages were captured. On November 4, 1979, a mob of Iranian students overran the American Embassy in Iran and captured a number of American servicemen and employees stationed in the embassy. Understandably, most American citizens were outraged at the actions of the Iranian students both here and abroad.

On December 2, 1979, the Shah was released from the New York hospital and flown to Lackland Air Force Base, located near San Antonio, for further treatment. On December 3, 1979 the IMO applied to the San Antonio Chief of Police for permits to hold two parades on December 7, 1979. One parade was to be held just outside the main gate of Lackland Air Force Base and was to consist of 400 persons. The other parade was to proceed through the heart of downtown San Antonio between 2:00 and 4:30 p. m. and was to consist of from 100 to 1,000 persons. Shortly after the IMO applications, a purported representative of the Ku Klux Klan sought permits for the same times and places to demonstrate against the Iranian students. A group identified as *211“Americans for Freedom” also sought a permit.

The acting Police Chief sensed the outrage of the public over the holding of the American hostages by the Iranian students and was concerned about the possibility that the parades sought by the IMO would result in violence.3 The City Manager was advised by a representative of large Mexican-American organizations in San Antonio, who himself was very active in civil rights movements, that granting a parade permit to the Iranian students would present a serious threat to the safety of the students. He said that “Chícanos were included among the hostages” and that the people in the “barrio” were upset over this fact and would probably respond to demonstrations by the Iranian students with violence. The Chairman of the San Antonio Coalition Against Racism, which consisted of some 34 civil rights organizations, expressed the same opinion and concern.

The acting Police Chief determined that a minimum of 400 officers would be needed to provide safety to the parades. He checked with other law enforcement agencies in the area and with the Department of Public Safety in Austin to determine if the City could borrow other peace officers. The acting Police Chief concluded after investigation that the police department could not provide the necessary security for the requested parades at these times and places without disrupting all other normal police duties. He reported this information and his conclusions to the City Manager.

The City Manager consulted with officials of the Department of Justice, the National Security Council and the State Department. All of these officials expressed concern that any harm to the parading Iranian students might result in repercussions to the hostages being held by the students in Iran. After consideration of several alternatives, the City Manager on December 4, 1979 denied the parade permits to both the IMO and the Ku Klux Klan. He gave the following reasons:

a. In the judgment of the city manager a demonstration would divert a large number of police officers from their normal duties, interfering with normal protection.
b. In the judgment of the city manager the demonstration applied for by Plaintiffs would cause injury to persons or property and create a disturbance.
c. The permit was not requested 15 days in advance of the anticipated date of the demonstration.
d. The demonstration would disturb the flow of traffic.
e. That the demonstration would not be free from unreasonable delays.
f. If the IMO were allowed to demonstrate and the Ku Klux Klan’s permit was denied, the latter would stage an illegal demonstration.

On December 6 the IMO filed this suit and sought a temporary restraining order; the IMO prayed that: (1) upon hearing, an injunction be granted enjoining the City from enforcing Ordinance No. 36221,4 and *212(2) that the City be ordered to issue a parade permit for IMO for December 7, 1979. It was alleged that the Shah’s proximity was crucial to the IMO’s planned demonstrations and that his visit to San Antonio was temporary. A hearing on the application for a temporary restraining order was held on December 6, 1979. Plaintiff, Ali Seyed Panai Khayat, testified that he had made the parade applications on behalf of the IMO. He testified that the permits were sought with such expedience because the demonstration would lose its effectiveness if the Shah left San Antonio before the parades took place. He was the only Iranian student or member of the IMO that testified.

Testimony in support of the denial of the parade permits was given by the acting Police Chief and the City Manager. To say that City’s action was based on “simplistic reflex” is to ignore the uncontradicted evidence in this case. The City Manager testified that five alternatives were weighed before he concluded to deny the parade permits.5 Specifically, the possibility of trying to keep the IMO and KKK parades separated was considered and rejected because the Iranian students would attract *213the citizens who were outraged over the capture of the hostages. The probability of violence in the event of a parade by the Iranian students was corroborated by the testimony of the two concerned civil rights leaders in the community. At the conclusion of the hearing, the application for a mandatory temporary retraining order was denied by the trial court.

On December 7, 1979, the IMO appealed the denial of the parade permit applications to the City Council, allegedly pursuant to Section 38-100.17.6 A hearing before the City Council was held the night of December 11,1971, and, after a full discussion, the City Council unanimously voted to uphold the City Manager’s decision in denying the parade permits.

It is erroneously assumed in the majority opinion that the City Council resolution thereby banned a11 future demonstrations pertaining to the crisis in Iran. This misconstrues the action of the City Council. The only issue before the council at this meeting was the IMO appeal from the denials by the City Manager of its two applications for parade permits. Nevertheless, it was discussed at this council meeting that the Ku Klux Klan and another organization had also applied for and been denied parade permits by the City Manager. The only vote taken by the Council was on the question of whether the City Manager’s action in denying the parade permits should be upheld. It was voted to uphold same.

On December 14, 1979, the IMO filed an amended petition. It was again alleged that the purpose of its demonstrations was to protest the temporary presence of the Shah in this country and specifically in San Antonio. It was urged that the IMO would suffer an irreparable injury if they could not demonstrate before the Shah left San Antonio. No other irreparable injury was alleged.

On December 17, 1979, a hearing was held on the IMO application for a mandatory temporary injunction. It was agreed by the parties that the evidence heard on the application for a temporary restraining order should be considered as if presented as original evidence in the hearing. None of the Iranian students gave any additional testimony. The only additional evidence came from the acting Police Chief who testified relative to incidents that had happened after the December 6, 1979 hearing. At that time, five Iranian students had been permitted to demonstrate against the Shah on the City Hall steps for three days and, in fact, were furnished police protection for this purpose.

It was pointed out at the hearing on December 17 that the Shah had now left San Antonio and was in Panama. Nevertheless, the IMO still insisted on a permit. However, since no additional testimony was offered in behalf of this request, they stood on the testimony of December 6, 1979 that irreparable injury would occur to them unless permitted to parade while the Shah was in San Antonio. At the conclusion of this brief hearing, the application for a mandatory temporary injunction was denied. While there are no findings of fact, it is clear from the record that the sole reason for denying the temporary injunction was fear that violence inflicted on members of the IMO would result in harm to the hostages. The trial judge said:

All you have to do is extend your logic a little to know that if you had a demonstration by the Iranians, there would be a demonstration by those opposed to the Iranians, and there would be some head knocking, maybe some blood spilled on the streets, and then Khomeini would have a good excuse to do away with the hostages.

The trial judge also pointed out that Ali Khayet had given the Shah’s presence in San Antonio as the sole reason for wanting the parade permit and that the Shah had already left the United States. Therefore, no irreparable injury was shown to justify an interlocutory order.

*214The court of civil appeals, with one justice dissenting, affirmed the denial of the application for the mandatory temporary injunction. In doing so, the court did not consider the question to be properly determined upon trial of the merits of this cause as to the constitutionality of Ordinance No. 36221 or No. 38-100.17. The court of civil appeals held only that the trial court did not abuse its discretion in determining that the IMO was not entitled to a temporary mandatory injunction pending the final hearing. Obviously, the trial court could not grant a parade permit at that time before the Shah left the country. The court of civil appeals thus left open, for trial on the merits, the question of validity of the parade ordinance. This is the same result reached by the Court’s judgment in this cause.

Before the application for writ of error reached this Court, our hostages were returned. Thus, the basis for the denial of the parade permits no longer exists. It is clear from this record that if the IMO applies for a parade permit, one will be granted by the city officials. Accordingly, this appeal which involves only the question of whether the trial court abused its discretion in not issuing a mandatory temporary injunction to order the City Council to issue the IMO a parade permit has become moot. The interlocutory judgment cannot have any practical effect upon an existing controversy.

There is nothing in the record to justify application here of the rule of “capable of repetition, yet evading review.” There was no denial by the City of a parade permit sought by the Iranian students or anyone else until the hostages were captured and the situation became explosive. Hopefully, America will not be confronted with such a situation again. If we are, however, the considered action of the San Antonio city officials here sets a good pattern to follow. They successfully avoided bloodshed in an explosive situation and yet permitted the Iranian students to publicly air their position.

The question of whether the parade ordinance is constitutional is properly reserved for trial on the merits. This issue has been ripe for determination from the outset, but no setting has been requested by the IMO.

I would dismiss this appeal as moot.

GREENHILL, C. J., and McGEE and DENTON, JJ., join in this dissent.

. It is fundamental that the Court’s power to render advisory opinions cannot be conferred by agreement of the parties. Firemen’s Ins. Co. of Newark, New Jersey v. Burch, 442 S.W.2d 331, 335 (Tex.1968).

. Petitioner, Ali Seyed Fanai Khayat, alleged that the Iranian Muslim Organization is an unincorporated association of Iranian students.

. City officials should consider such portents of violence when imposing time, place and manner restrictions on demonstrations. See Concerned Jewish Youth v. McGuire, 621 F.2d 471 (2d Cir., 1980). Only in this manner can they prevent “danger of riot, disorder, interference with traffic upon the public streets, or other immediate threat to public safety, peace, or order” (Cantwell v. Connecticut, 310 U.S. 296, 60 S.Ct. 900, 84 L.Ed. 1213 (1940)) and thus meet their “duty and responsibility to keep their streets open and available for movement.” (Cox v. Louisiana, 379 U.S. 536, 85 S.Ct. 452, 13 L.Ed.2d 471 (1965)). The fulfillment of this duty by city officials is “one of the means of safeguarding the good order upon which they [civil liberties] ultimately depend” Cox v. New Hampshire, 312 U.S. 569, 61 S.Ct. 762 85, L.Ed. 1049 (1941) and one of the elements of civilized society “without which liberty itself would be lost in the excesses of anarchy.” (Cox v. Louisiana, supra).

. This ordinance was not introduced into evidence, but is alleged to be an ordinance setting out procedures for the obtaining of a parade permit. This Court cannot, and has not, taken judicial notice of the ordinance. City of Austin v. Walton, 68 Tex. 507, 5 S.W. 70 (1887).

The Supreme Court has recognized the validity of a limited ordinance conditioning a public demonstration on the obtaining of a parade *212permit (Cox v. New Hampshire, supra). The purpose of such an ordinance is to further “the constitutional guarantee of liberty” which in and of itself depends on the “existence of an organized society maintaining public order, without which liberty itself would be lost....” (Cox v. Louisiana, supra.) It is for this reason the United States Supreme Court has upheld the convictions of persons for demonstrating without a parade permit even though the permit was wrongfully refused them. Poulos v. New Hampshire, 345 U.S. 395, 73 S.Ct. 760, 97 L.Ed. 1105, 30 A.L.R.2d 987 (1953). In Poulos the Court said:

The principles of the First Amendment are not to be treated as a promise that everyone with opinions or beliefs to express may gather around him at any public place and at any time a group for discussion or instruction ....
There is no basis for saying that freedom and order are not compatible. That would be a decision of desperation. . . .
The valid requirements of license are for the good of the applicants and the public.... Delay is unfortunate, but the expense and annoyance of litigation is a price citizens must pay for life in an orderly society where the rights of the First Amendment have a real and abiding meaning....

Since we do not have the parade ordinance before us, we cannot determine the constitutionality of that ordinance, nor can we determine whether the IMO had complied with it. Neither could the trial court have made these determinations at the interlocutory hearing without introduction of the ordinance.

. The City Manager testified as follows:

Well, the decision was made in the same fashion I make so many, and that is that I sat down with the City Attorney, and with the acting Police Chief, and, as I recall, somebody else was there — whose name doesn’t come to mind at this time — and we made a number of scenarios, all the way from granting the permit as requested, one or both of them, to denying all of them, and including interim steps such as imposing a 15-day waiting period. We weighed the pros and cons of each one, and in this case it was the unanimous feeling of all the persons in the office that the permit ought to be denied.

Basically, what I stressed to Gary Sick [Iranian Affairs at the National Security Council] was that 1 could think of about five alternative actions, all of which could end badly, simply because there might have to be police action affecting the Iranians and/or others, and that those actions might be cause for retaliating against the American hostages, and I told him that I was leaning toward denying both the permit for the Iranian Muslim Organization and, obviously, as well the Ku Klux Klan Organization. My concern was that, having denied it, I thought there was a 50-50 possibility that if the demonstration and/or parade were to occur, it would occur anyhow, and if that occurred, it would be my direction to the police department to give them, that is, those persons breaking the law, fair warning, and if they failed to heed that fair warning within a reasonable period of time, then the police department would be ordered to arrest the demonstrators, and I was afraid that the act of arresting the demonstrators would incense the Iranians holding our hostages, and Gary Sick advised me that persons in Washington, including President Carter, had gone through exactly the same set of scenarios, and that it was their conclusion that the least offensive action that might be taken would be to arrest the Iranians for violating a law, as opposed to stronger police action and a melee between demonstrators and anti-demonstrators.

I talked with the City Council about what I thought were the possible consequences of various actions, yes.

. This section was not introduced into evidence, but apparently is the City’s parade ordinance.