Pacific Coast Horseshoeing School, Inc. v. Kirchmeyer, No. 18-15840 (9th Cir. 2020)
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Plaintiff raised a First Amendment challenge to part of California's Private Postsecondary Education Act of 2009, which prohibit plaintiff, Esteban Narez, from enrolling in plaintiff Bob Smith's horseshoeing class unless he first passes an examination prescribed by the U.S. Department of Education. However, if Smith were running a flight school or teaching golf, dancing, or contract bridge, Narez could enroll without restriction. The district court held that the Act does not burden plaintiffs' free speech and dismissed the complaint based on failure to state a claim.
The Ninth Circuit reversed, holding that plaintiffs have stated a claim that the Act burdens their rights under the First Amendment. The panel held that the statutory scheme here not only implicates speech, but also engages in content discrimination; because content discrimination is apparent, the district court should have applied some form of heightened scrutiny; and thus the panel remanded for the district court to determine whether this case involves commercial or non-commercial speech, whether California must satisfy strict or intermediate scrutiny, and whether it could carry its burden under either standard.
Court Description: Civil Rights. The panel reversed the district court’s dismissal for failure to state a claim of an action challenging, on First Amendment grounds, aspects of California’s Private Postsecondary Education Act of 2009, which prohibit plaintiff, Esteban Narez, from enrolling in plaintiff Bob Smith’s horseshoeing class unless he first passes an examination prescribed by the U.S. Department of Education. The Act requires that any student without a high school certificate or its equivalent who wishes enroll in a private postsecondary school must execute an enrollment agreement with an authorized employee of the school which confirms that the prospective student has the ability to benefit from the proposed course of instruction. In order to execute the ability-to-benefit agreement, the school shall have the student take an independently administrated examination prescribed by the United States Department of Education. The Act * The Honorable Michael J. Melloy, United States Circuit Judge for the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit, sitting by designation. PACIFIC COAST HORSESHOEING SCHOOL V. KIRCHMEYER 3 exempts certain courses and a number of private institutions from these requirements. The district court determined that the Act regulates only conduct—the forming of an enrollment agreement—and any burdens on speech were incidental, resulting from the government’s regulation of commercial transactions. The district court thus concluded that plaintiffs failed to allege a First Amendment claim. The panel held that the Act regulates speech and therefore rejected the assertion that only conduct was at issue. The panel determined that, when viewed in its entirety, the Act controls more than contractual relations. It also regulates what kind of educational programs different institutions can offer to different students. The panel held that the Act implicates the First Amendment by restricting the rights of both speakers (Smith) and would-be listeners (Narez). The panel determined that the Act implicated heightened First Amendment scrutiny by differentiating between speech or speakers. The panel noted that the Act is riddled with exceptions to the examination requirement and the exceptions turned on one of two things: (1) the content of what is being taught, or (2) the identity of the speaker. Together these exceptions demonstrated that the Act did more than merely impose an incidental burden on speech: it targeted speech based on its communicative content. The panel held that the statutory scheme here not only implicated speech, but also engaged in content discrimination. Moreover, the panel held that because content discrimination was apparent, the district court should have applied some form of heightened scrutiny. The panel left it to the district court on remand to determine whether this case involves commercial or non-commercial speech, 4 PACIFIC COAST HORSESHOEING SCHOOL V. KIRCHMEYER whether California must satisfy strict or intermediate scrutiny, and whether it could carry its burden under either standard.
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