Document ID: s3://data.kl3m.ai/documents/govinfo/USCOURTS/USCOURTS-ca6-14-03172/USCOURTS-ca6-14-03172-0/pdf.json

Parties Involved:
Child Evangelism Fellowship Of Ohio, Inc.
Appellant
Cleveland Metropolitan School District
Appellee
Roy James
Appellee

Document Text:

NOT RECOMMENDED FOR FULL-TEXT PUBLICATION

File Name: 15a0220n.06

Case No. 14-3172

UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS

FOR THE SIXTH CIRCUIT

CHILD EVANGELISM FELLOWSHIP OF 

OHIO, INC.,

Plaintiff-Appellant,

v.

CLEVELAND METROPOLITAN SCHOOL 

DISTRICT; ROY JAMES, In his official 

capacity as Principal of Miles Cranwood 

Elementary School,

Defendants-Appellees.

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ON APPEAL FROM THE UNITED 

STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR 

THE NORTHERN DISTRICT OF 

OHIO

BEFORE: COOK and WHITE, Circuit Judges; MICHELSON, District Judge.*

COOK, Circuit Judge. In this First Amendment case, plaintiff Child Evangelism 

Fellowship of Ohio, Inc. (“CEF”) appeals the denial of its motion for a preliminary injunction 

against defendants Cleveland Metropolitan School District and Roy James, principal of Miles 

Cranwood Elementary School (collectively, “the District”). CEF sought to enjoin the District 

from imposing a facilities fee on CEF that it allegedly waived for the Boy Scouts, an act that—

according to CEF—amounts to impermissible viewpoint discrimination. The District, in 

response, argued that it never waived the Scouts’ fees—or any group’s fees—but instead 

 

*The Honorable Laurie J. Michelson, United States District Judge for the Eastern District 

of Michigan, sitting by designation.

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maintained a policy of accepting in-kind payment. The district court denied the preliminaryinjunction motion, concluding that CEF could not show a likelihood of success on the merits 

because the limited evidence before the court suggested that the District does not maintain a feewaiver policy. We AFFIRM.

I.

A. The District’s Community Use Policy and CEF’s Fee-Waiver Demands

This controversy arises out of the District’s refusal to waive fees it assessed to CEF for 

use of the Miles Cranwood Elementary School’s facilities during the 2012–13 academic year. 

The District makes its facilities available to outside groups through its Community Use Policy. 

The policy requires a permit for any non-district activities and contemplates that the District will 

impose a “reasonable fee” for use of the facilities. During the time period giving rise to this suit, 

the District charged a fee of $69.50 per hour for use of its facilities. 

CEF runs an after-school enrichment program, The Good News Club, that encourages 

learning, spiritual growth, and character development from a Christian viewpoint. According to 

the complaint, CEF used the School’s facilities for its program during the 2011–12 school year 

without paying a fee.1 Miles Cranwood’s then-principal informed CEF’s area coordinator before 

the 2012–13 school year that CEF would need a permit moving forward. CEF obtained the 

permit and sent a letter to the District’s Board of Education requesting a fee waiver. The letter 

detailed the Good News Club’s offerings and highlighted the fact that participation is free for all 

students. The District’s board denied the request and sent CEF an invoice for the proposed use 

of its facilities.

 

1

The District disputes CEF’s claim that it was not assessed a fee for the 2011–12 year, 

stating that “[i]f this actually occurred, it was without the School District’s knowledge and 

authorization”

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After learning that the Boy Scouts used the District’s facilities without paying a monetary 

fee, CEF renewed its request for a fee waiver, both in person and in writing. CEF ultimately 

engaged legal counsel, who sent a final letter alerting the District of its alleged discriminatory 

policies and practices and once again demanding an immediate waiver of all fees. The letter 

asserted that certain individuals with the Boy Scouts had “confirmed that facilities use fees 

[we]re waived by the District for after-school facilities used by the Scouts[.]” The District 

acknowledged receiving these requests but did not respond to them.

CEF sued and moved for a preliminary injunction against the District. CEF alleged that 

the District has an unwritten policy allowing school principals to waive facilities fees at their 

discretion, and that the District’s preferential fee waiver for the Boy Scouts amounted to a

violation of the First and Fourteenth Amendments.

B. The District’s In-Kind Arrangement Policy

Responding to CEF’s motion, the District denied the existence of a fee-waiver policy or 

practice. It explained that “in limited circumstances [the District] has agreed to accept goods or 

services as in-kind payment of the Permit Fee, when requested by the group.” The District 

claims to evaluate in-kind proposals according to three criteria:

(1) the goods or services must be of equal or greater value than the Permit Fees;

(2) the goods or services must be of tangible benefit to the facilities, staff, 

students, or academic programs; and

(3) the District must not be in a position to readily provide or obtain those goods 

or services for itself.

The District said it had agreed to such an arrangement with the Boy Scouts. It produced a letter 

to the Scouts dated October 31, 2010, memorializing a “satisfactory accord based upon an 

exchange of in-kind services.” The letter also states that “[t]here will be no charge for the use of 

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our schools this year given the costs that you bear in providing approximately $195 worth of 

supplies, uniforms, camping costs and books to each of the approximately 1,420 students who 

participate in the program.” This $276,900 value exceeds the Boy Scouts’ yearly fee assessment 

of approximately $91,000. 

The District further asserted that it does not consider the applicant organization’s 

viewpoint when evaluating a proposal for an in-kind arrangement. It offered its arrangement 

with The Word Church (“the Church”), an evangelical Christian group, as an example. Under 

that agreement, the Church provided capital improvements to a Cleveland high school in 

exchange for its use of the facilities to hold religious services. The District valued the Church’s

improvements at $168,500, an amount that covered the Church’s $149,078 fee. Like the letter to 

the Scouts, the agreement between the parties expressly contemplates an in-kind exchange. 

Finally, the District averred that CEF, unlike the Boy Scouts and the Church, never 

proposed an in-kind arrangement in lieu of a monetary fee. Instead, it simply asked the District 

to waive the fee altogether. The District thus maintained that it refused CEF’s waiver request 

because of its policy against outright fee waivers, not because of CEF’s religious viewpoint.

C. The District Court Denies CEF’s Motion for a Preliminary Injunction

In a brief order, the district court denied CEF’s motion for a preliminary injunction. The 

court found that CEF could not demonstrate a likelihood of success on the merits because the 

record lacked sufficient evidence to show that “a fee-waiver policy exists, let alone that [the 

District] operates it in a discriminatory matter.” Reasoning that CEF could not “demonstrate that 

[the District] has a fee-waiver policy” and that the District could not discriminatorily apply a feewaiver policy that never existed, the court found CEF’s likelihood of success to be “virtually 

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zero without additional evidence to corroborate the allegation.” (Id.) CEF now appeals from the 

denial.

II.

“We ‘review the District Court’s legal rulings de novo’ (including its First Amendment 

conclusion), ‘and its ultimate conclusion [as to whether to grant the preliminary injunction] for 

abuse of discretion.’” Platt v. Bd. of Comm’rs on Grievances & Discipline of Ohio Supreme 

Court, 769 F.3d 447, 454 (6th Cir. 2014) (quoting McCreary Cnty. v. ACLU of Ky., 545 U.S. 

844, 867 (2005)) (alteration in original). A court weighs four factors when considering a motion 

for a preliminary injunction: 

(1) whether the movant has a strong likelihood of success on the merits; 

(2) whether the movant would suffer irreparable injury without the injunction; 

(3) whether issuance of the injunction would cause substantial harm to others; and 

(4) whether the public interest would be served by the issuance of the injunction.

Certified Restoration Dry Cleaning Network, L.L.C. v. Tenke Corp., 511 F.3d 535, 542 (6th Cir. 

2007). As “a preliminary injunction is an ‘extraordinary’ form of relief . . . the moving party in 

the district court has the ‘burden of proving that the circumstances clearly demand it.’” Serv. 

Emps. Int’l Union Local 1 v. Husted, 698 F.3d 341, 344 (6th Cir. 2012) (per curiam) (quoting 

Overstreet v. Lexington-Fayette Urban Cnty. Gov’t, 305 F.3d 566, 573 (6th Cir. 2002)).

We follow a three-step analysis when evaluating free speech claims under the First 

Amendment: first, we ask whether the First Amendment protects the plaintiff’s speech; second, 

we determine the nature of the forum, “because the extent to which the Government may limit 

access depends on whether the forum is public or nonpublic”; and third, we “assess whether the 

justifications for exclusion from the relevant forum satisfy the requisite standard.” Cornelius v. 

NAACP Legal Def. & Educ. Fund, Inc., 473 U.S. 788, 797 (1985). The parties agree that CEF 

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engages in protected activity and that the District has created a limited public forum by making 

its facilities available to outside groups. In such a limited public forum, “the government may 

restrict speech . . . as long as the restrictions do ‘not discriminate against speech on the basis of 

viewpoint’ and are ‘reasonable in light of the purpose served by the forum.’” Miller v. City of 

Cincinnati, 622 F.3d 524, 535 (6th Cir. 2010) (quoting Good News Club v. Milford Cent. Sch., 

533 U.S. 98, 106–07 (2001)).

III.

On appeal, CEF renews its argument that the District maintains an unwritten, 

discretionary fee-waiver policy that District administrators have applied in a discriminatory 

manner. Specifically, CEF argues that the District’s actions constitute viewpoint discrimination, 

content discrimination, and a violation of the Equal Protection Clause. 

CEF asserts that the District’s refusal to waive CEF’s fees while not charging the Boy 

Scouts constitutes impermissible viewpoint discrimination. It cites Supreme Court precedent for 

the proposition that “the government offends the First Amendment when it imposes financial 

burdens on certain speakers based on the content of their expression,” Rosenberger v. Rector & 

Visitors of the Univ. of Va., 515 U.S. 819, 828 (1995), and points to numerous lower-court 

decisions holding that public schools may not impose facilities fees on the Good News Club that 

the Boy Scouts do not have to pay, see, e.g., Child Evangelism Fellowship of S.C. v. Anderson 

Sch. Dist. Five, 470 F.3d 1062, 1069–73 (4th Cir. 2006); Child Evangelism Fellowship of 

Greater San Diego v. Bersin, No. 05CV1166, 2008 WL 5101993, at *3 (S.D. Cal. Dec. 1, 2008); 

Child Evangelism Fellowship of Va. v. Williamsburg-James City Cnty. Sch. Bd., No. 4:08CV4, 

2008 WL 3348227, at *5 (E.D. Va. Aug. 8, 2008). CEF contends the District’s refusal to waive 

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its fees also amounts to impermissible content discrimination and a violation of the Equal 

Protection Clause.

To the extent that CEF’s appeal challenges the basis for the district court’s denial of its

motion for preliminary relief, it fails. As the district court concluded, CEF’s evidence in support 

of its request for injunctive relief did not adequately show that the District had a fee-waiver 

policy. To the contrary, at this early juncture, the record supports the District’s position that it 

merely accepted in-kind payment in lieu of monetary fees, as both the 2010 letter to the Scouts 

and the Church’s 2011 lease expressly contemplate exchanges of goods or services.

CEF urges us to disregard the District’s alleged in-kind-arrangement policy as an 

example of a “litigation-driven label” that allows schools to “evade [equal access] by 

strategically describing existing student groups.” It argues that “[w]hat matters for the 

constitutional inquiry . . . is not what Defendants call their ‘arrangement’ with the Scouts, but 

whether CEF has requested equal treatment, and whether Defendants have refused or granted 

that request.” But the cases CEF cites in support of its position featured claims under the Equal 

Access Act—not the First Amendment—and involved attempts by school districts to limit forum 

access by differentiating arbitrarily between “curriculum-related” and “non-curriculum-related” 

groups. See Mergens, 496 U.S. at 244; Straights & Gays for Equality v. Osseo Area Sch.-Dist. 

No. 279, 471 F.3d 908, 912 (8th Cir. 2006); Pope v. E. Brunswick Bd. of Educ., 12 F.3d 1244, 

1246–54 (3d Cir. 1993). 

And as the District notes, “the distinction between a fee-waiver and acceptance of in-kind 

payment is constitutionally significant” and not a mere difference of labels. A waiver subsidizes 

speech while accepting an in-kind payment of equal or greater value does not. Cf. Child 

Evangelism Fellowship of S.C., 470 F.3d at 1069 (concluding that a fee waiver is a form of 

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speech subsidy because it “encourages private speech by making funds available”). The record 

at this stage shows that the Scouts and the Church provided consideration in excess of their 

assessed facilities fees, strengthening the District’s argument that its in-kind arrangements do not 

subsidize speech at all, let alone selectively. 

Overall, the slim record dooms CEF’s preliminary-injunction motion. As the district 

court held below, at this stage, CEF has not shown that a fee-waiver policy even exists. Because 

CEF cannot demonstrate a likelihood of success on the merits of its claim, we need not consider 

the other preliminary injunction factors. 

IV.

CEF argues in the alternative that the District’s in-kind arrangement policy, as presented, 

constitutes an impermissible prior restraint under the First Amendment. Though CEF challenged 

the constitutionality of the in-kind arrangement policy in a reply brief below, the district court 

confined its preliminary-injunction ruling to the fee-waiver claim. We generally do not consider 

issues left unaddressed by the district court. See Snow Pallet, Inc. v. Clinton Cnty. Indus. Dev. 

Auth., 46 F. App’x 787, 791 n.1 (6th Cir. 2002) (citing N. Texas Prod. Credit Ass’n v. McCurtain 

Cnty. Nat’l Bank, 222 F.3d 800, 812 (10th Cir. 2000)); Palshook v. Jarrett, 32 F. App’x 732, 

736–37 (6th Cir. 2002); Luciani v. Schiavone, No. 98-4463, 2000 WL 331974, at *6 (6th Cir. 

2000); see also Singleton v. Wulff, 428 U.S. 106, 120 (1976).

CEF urges us to depart from this practice because the issue was “fully briefed” below. 

Cf. Babcock & Wilcox Co. v. Arkwright-Boston Mfg. Mut. Ins. Co., 53 F.3d 762, 767 (6th Cir. 

1995) (addressing an issue ignored by the district court’s summary-judgment order because “it 

was fully briefed below” and because the court may uphold the grant of summary judgment “on 

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grounds other than those used by the lower court”). But it was not fully briefed. CEF introduced 

this theory in a reply brief, and the court resolved the motion without a hearing, leaving the 

District no meaningful opportunity to respond to this claim with defenses or evidence of its own. 

We thus decline to take up the issue at this juncture.2

V.

For these reasons, we AFFIRM the judgment of the district court.

 

2We do not foreclose CEF from arguing to the district court that it provides what the 

Scouts provide and what the District deemed sufficient to cover facility costs. The dissent goes a 

step further by arguing that the Scouts in fact provided no benefit to the District (but only to the 

District’s students), and, thus, “in practice” received a fee waiver. The implication is that CEF, if 

similarly situated to the Scouts with respect to the Constitution, is also entitled to a waiver. 

Unlike the dissent, we believe that the current record supports the District’s assertion that its 

arrangement with the Scouts was “in kind.”

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HELENE N. WHITE, Circuit Judge, dissenting.

I agree that CEF failed to “show[] that a fee-waiver policy even exists.” Maj. Op. 8. 

CEF has shown, however, that a fee-waiver practice existed between the District and the Boy 

Scouts and that despite repeated requests, the District did not provide CEF with a similar 

arrangement. I would vacate the district court’s denial of CEF’s motion for preliminary 

injunction and remand for further proceedings. 

The majority and the district court needlessly focus on whether the District has a feewaiver policy. Although it appears not to, CEF argues that the District has a “no charge 

arrangement” with the Boy Scouts—i.e., a practice of waiving fees—and the little evidence in 

the record supports CEF’s contention.

The District’s Community Use Policy provides that “the use of the facilities shall be 

subject to a reasonable fee according to a fee schedule which reflects actual costs to the district 

for janitorial, light and heat expenses as well as other costs.” The District recognizes that the 

“Community Use Policy as written does not allow for a waiver or reduction of the Permit Fee.” 

Nor does it provide for in-kind exchanges. Nevertheless, according to Deputy Chief Nicholas 

Jackson’s declaration filed in this action, although “principals and building supervisors have no 

authority to interpret, modify, or deviate from the Community Use Policy,” District officials 

have, “in limited instances, . . . agreed to accept in-kind goods or services as payment of the 

Permit Fee.” (Emphasis added.) According to Jackson, the District will accept goods or 

services as payment of the fee only if the goods or services received are of equal or greater value 

than the Permit Fees, are of “tangible benefit to the facilities, staff, students, or academic 

programs,” and the District is “not in a position to readily provide or obtain [the goods or 

services] on its own accord.” The District claims to have approved an “in-kind services” 

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arrangement with the Boy Scouts under these criteria because of “the costs that [the Boy Scouts] 

bear in providing approximately $195 worth of supplies, uniforms, camping costs and books to 

each of the approximately 1,420 students who participate in the program.”

Assuming the District’s in-kind practice as stated comports with the Community Use 

Policy, which “does not allow for a waiver or reduction of the Permit Fee,” the Boy Scouts’ 

arrangement does not comply with either the Community Use Policy or the terms of the in-kind 

practice. The majority uncritically accepts the District’s claim that its arrangement with the Boy 

Scouts satisfies both, finding, without discussion or analysis of the nature of the Boy Scouts’ 

asserted payment, that the Boy Scouts paid $276,900 as in-kind consideration. Maj. Op. 4, 8.

According to the District, the Boy Scouts agreed to cover participants’ “supplies, 

uniforms, camping costs, and books,” which the District acknowledges are normally borne by 

participants, not by the District. The District does not explain how payment of these program 

costs compensates the District for its maintenance and utility expenses—because it does not.

The majority reasons “the record supports the District’s position that it merely accepted 

in-kind payment in lieu of monetary fees, as . . . the 2010 letter to the Scouts . . . expressly 

contemplate[s] exchanges of goods or services.” Maj. Op. 7. But an exchange implies 

mutuality—here, the giving of goods or services to the District that compensates it for the 

expenses of holding meetings in its schools. The majority fails to recognize that goods or 

services are not exchanged between the District and the Boys Scouts, but rather the goods and 

services flow from the Boy Scouts to the participants on the one hand, and the free space flows 

from the District to the Boy Scouts on the other. Because the District does not pay for its 

students’ expenses related to the Boy Scouts, and thus any value paid by the Boy Scouts does not 

offset the District’s facility-related costs or otherwise financially benefit the District, the record 

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does not support the conclusion that the costs absorbed by the Boy Scouts are an in-kind 

payment to the District for “actual costs to the [D]istrict for janitorial, light and heat expenses as 

well as other costs.” In short, the District did not receive goods or services from the Boy Scouts 

as payment for the Permit Fee, as required by both the District’s Community Use Policy and its 

in-kind practice. This is in contrast to the Church, which made capital improvements to a 

District facility in exchange for its use of a high-school auditorium to hold religious services.

By allowing the Boy Scouts access to its facilities without payment of the Permit Fee—

whether in cash or in kind—the District effectively granted the Boy Scouts a waiver from the 

Community Use Policy’s Permit Fees requirement. CEF requested numerous times to receive a 

fee waiver and demanded “equal treatment” and “equal access” with the Boy Scouts, but was 

denied.1 The District thus bears the burden of explaining why it can constitutionally charge CEF 

the Permit Fee and not the Boy Scouts. See United States v. Playboy Entm’t Grp., Inc., 529 U.S. 

803, 816 (2000). The District has not sought to justify its fee-waiver practice; instead, it has 

maintained that it does not have a fee-waiver policy. Equal treatment is at issue here; not 

semantics. Because the district court did not consider whether the fee-waiver practice is 

viewpoint neutral, I would vacate and remand.

 

1Because CEF requested equal treatment with the Boy Scouts, it is not material whether 

CEF expressly requested an “in-kind arrangement,” as the Boy Scouts purportedly did. Even if it 

were, the District’s suggestion that CEF could have learned of the unwritten, unpublished 

practice through an open-records request, and asked for a similar arrangement based upon the 

documents it might have received through the request, is unreasonable. Access barriers to 

limited forums must be reasonable. Christian Legal Soc’y v. Martinez, 561 U.S. 661, 679 

(2010).

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