Court Opinion

ID: 9369568
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2023-02-09 14:01:30.753886+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T17:16:16.080923
License: Public Domain

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                                                 PUBLISHED

                                   UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
                                       FOR THE FOURTH CIRCUIT

                                                  No. 22-1844

        JULIETTE GRIMMETT; RALSTON LAPP GUINN MEDIA GROUP; JOSH
        STEIN FOR ATTORNEY GENERAL CAMPAIGN; JOSH STEIN; SETH
        DEARMIN; ERIC STERN,

                                Plaintiffs - Appellants,

                v.

        N. LORRIN FREEMAN, in her official capacity as District Attorney for the 10th
        Prosecutorial District of the State of North Carolina,

                                Defendant - Appellee,

                and

        DAMON CIRCOSTA, in his official capacity as Chair of the North Carolina State
        Board of Elections; STELLA ANDERSON, in her official capacity as Secretary of
        the North Carolina State Board of Elections; JEFF CARMON, III, in his official
        capacity as Member of the North Carolina State Board of Elections; STACY
        EGGERS, IV, in his official capacity as Member of the North Carolina State Board
        of Elections; TOMMY TUCKER, in his official capacity as Member of the North
        Carolina State Board of Elections,

                                Defendants.

        ------------------------------

        DUKE FIRST AMENDMENT CLINIC,

                                Amicus Supporting Appellant.
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        Appeal from the United States District Court for the Middle District of North Carolina, at
        Greensboro. Catherine C. Eagles, District Judge. (1:22-cv-00568-CCE-JLW)

        Argued: December 6, 2022                                      Decided: February 8, 2023

        Before DIAZ, RUSHING, and HEYTENS, Circuit Judges.

        Vacated and remanded by published opinion. Judge Heytens wrote the opinion, in which
        Judge Diaz and Judge Rushing joined. Judge Rushing wrote a concurring opinion.

        ARGUED: Michael R. Dreeben, O’MELVENY & MYERS LLP, Washington, D.C., for
        Appellants. Joseph Edward Zeszotarski, Jr., GAMMON HOWARD & ZESZOTARSKI,
        PLLC, Raleigh, North Carolina, for Appellee. ON BRIEF: Pressly M. Millen, Raymond
        M. Bennett, Samuel B. Hartzell, WOMBLE BOND DICKINSON (US) LLP, Raleigh,
        North Carolina; Meaghan VerGow, Jenya Godina, O’MELVENY & MYERS LLP,
        Washington, D.C., for Appellants. Sarah Ludington, C. Amanda Martin, DUKE FIRST
        AMENDMENT CLINIC, Durham, North Carolina; Christopher A. Brook, PATTERSON
        HARKAVY LLP, Chapel Hill, North Carolina, for Amicus Curiae.

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        TOBY HEYTENS, Circuit Judge:

               A 90-year-old North Carolina law makes it a crime to publish a “derogatory

        report[ ]” about candidates for public office where the speaker “know[s] such report to be

        false or” acts “in reckless disregard of its truth or falsity.” N.C. Gen. Stat. § 163-274(a)(9).

        Plaintiffs assert this statute violates the First Amendment. The district court denied a

        preliminary injunction because it determined plaintiffs were unlikely to succeed on the

        merits. We disagree. Not only have plaintiffs shown a likelihood of success, “it is difficult

        to imagine them losing.” Alabama Ass’n of Realtors v. Department of Health & Hum.

        Servs., 141 S. Ct. 2485, 2488 (2021). Accordingly, we vacate the district court’s order and

        remand for further proceedings.

                                                       I.

               In 2020, Josh Stein and Jim O’Neill were vying to serve as North Carolina’s attorney

        general. As part of that contest, plaintiff Josh Stein for Attorney General Campaign hired

        plaintiff Ralston Lapp Guinn Media Group to produce an ad criticizing O’Neill’s handling

        of untested rape kits. In that ad, plaintiff Juliette Grimmett says:

               As a survivor of sexual assault that means a lot to me and when I learned that
               Jim O’Neill left 1,500 rape kits on a shelf leaving rapists on the streets, I had
               to speak out.

        JA 19. The ad was broadcast throughout North Carolina.

               In September 2020, while the campaign was still underway, a committee supporting

        O’Neill filed a complaint with the North Carolina State Board of Elections asserting the ad

        violated Section 163-274(a)(9) of the North Carolina General Statutes. That provision

        makes it a Class 2 misdemeanor—in other words, a crime:

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                   For any person to publish or cause to be circulated derogatory reports
                   with reference to any candidate in any primary or election, knowing such
                   report to be false or in reckless disregard of its truth or falsity, when such
                   report is calculated or intended to affect the chances of such candidate for
                   nomination or election.

        N.C. Gen. Stat. § 163-274(a)(9). We will call this statute “the Act.”

               As required by North Carolina law, the Board of Elections investigated the claim.

        Roughly eight months later, the Board issued a final report recommending no charges be

        filed. Besides expressing doubt about whether an adequate factual predicate existed, the

        Board was “concerned that if a violation is found, this might be an unconstitutional

        application of the statute.” JA 447.

               Dissatisfied with the Board’s recommendation, a local district attorney tasked the

        State Bureau of Investigation to continue looking into the matter. The district attorney

        requested the investigation about a month after the Board’s final report, and it remained

        unresolved for more than a year.

               Almost a year and ten months after the initial complaint, a prosecutor told the Josh

        Stein for Attorney General Campaign the district attorney planned to present charges to a

        state grand jury. The next day, plaintiffs filed suit in federal district court, seeking a

        declaratory judgment that the Act is unconstitutional and to enjoin its enforcement against

        them. Plaintiffs also requested a temporary restraining order and a preliminary injunction. 1

               1
                The original plaintiffs have already been mentioned. After the district court denied
        a preliminary injunction, plaintiffs filed an amended complaint adding three new plaintiffs.

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               The district court granted a temporary restraining order, concluding “plaintiffs have

        shown a likelihood of prevailing on the merits of their claim that N.C. Gen. Stat. § 163-

        274(a)(9) is unconstitutional under the First Amendment.” D. Ct. ECF No. 16, at 1. After

        further briefing and argument, however, the district court vacated the temporary restraining

        order and denied plaintiffs’ motion for a preliminary injunction. Although the court recited

        the familiar four-factor balancing test from Winter v. National Resources Defense Council,

        Inc., 555 U.S. 7 (2008), its only stated ground for denying a preliminary injunction was

        that “plaintiffs are unlikely to succeed on the merits of their constitutional claim.” JA 423. 2

               We have jurisdiction to hear plaintiffs’ appeal from the district court’s order denying

        their motion for a preliminary injunction under 28 U.S.C. § 1292(a)(1). We review the

        “denial of a preliminary injunction for abuse of discretion,” while reviewing “legal

        conclusions de novo.” Leaders of a Beautiful Struggle v. Baltimore Police Dep’t, 2 F.4th

        330, 339 (4th Cir. 2021) (en banc). Here, the district court’s order turned on its assessment

        of what the Act means and whether it is constitutional. Both present legal questions

        reviewed de novo. See Salve Regina Coll. v. Russell, 499 U.S. 225, 231 (1991) (courts of

        appeals “should review de novo a district court’s determination of state law”). We thus

        analyze the parties’ positions with fresh eyes.

               2
                  In a later order denying plaintiffs’ motion for an injunction pending appeal, the
        district court briefly analyzed the non-merits factors applicable to such motions. That order
        is not before us. See Fed. R. App. P. 8(a) (providing for a separate motion for an injunction
        pending appeal rather than an appeal from a district court’s denial of such a motion).

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                                                     II.

               We conclude the Act is likely unconstitutional for two reasons. First, the Act

        appears to criminalize at least some truthful statements—a result the First Amendment

        forbids. Second, even if the Act reaches only false statements, it makes impermissible

        content-based distinctions in selecting which speech to forbid.

                                                     A.

               The district attorney’s defense of the Act’s constitutionality rests mainly on

        Garrison v. Louisiana, 379 U.S. 64 (1964). It goes like this: Under Garrison, criminal libel

        statutes are constitutional so long as they apply only to false speech and require proof of

        actual malice. This Act applies only to false speech made with actual malice. So, the Act

        is constitutional.

               Although plaintiffs challenge both steps of this argument, we need only reach the

        second one. Whether or not plaintiffs are correct about all of Garrison’s implications, we

        conclude the Act likely criminalizes at least some truthful speech—a step the Constitution

        forbids. See Garrison, 379 U.S. at 74 (“Truth may not be the subject of either civil or

        criminal sanctions where discussion of public affairs is concerned.”).

               The statutory text frames the prohibited conduct disjunctively: “[D]erogatory

        reports” are prohibited when the speaker makes them “knowing such report to be false or

        in reckless disregard of its truth or falsity.” N.C. Gen. Stat. § 163-274(a)(9) (emphasis

        added). We may assume a speaker cannot “know[]” a statement “to be false” unless the

        statement is false. But by its plain terms this statute also criminalizes truthful derogatory

        statements so long as the speaker acts “in reckless disregard of [a statement’s] truth or

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        falsity.” Id. That is precisely what Garrison holds is unconstitutional. See 379 U.S. at 78

        (challenged statute unconstitutional because it “direct[ed] punishment for true statements

        made with actual malice” (quotation marks omitted)).

               Resisting this conclusion, the district attorney asserts the Act’s use of the term

        “derogatory” excludes truthful statements. That argument has multiple problems.

              For one thing, the district attorney does not identify—nor have we located—any

        source suggesting “derogatory” refers exclusively to factually false statements. To the

        contrary, dictionaries from around the time of the Act’s 1931 passage define “derogatory”

        as “lessening in good repute; detracting from estimation; disparaging” 3 or “disparaging;

        detracting,” 4 with modern definitions including “expressive of a low opinion,”

        “disparaging,” or “detracting from the character or standing of something.” 5 And in

        common usage, there is no reason a statement cannot be both derogatory and true.

               To be sure, state—not federal—courts have the last word about what state law

        means. See generally Erie R.R. Co. v. Tompkins, 304 U.S. 64 (1938). But the district

        attorney provides no evidence North Carolina’s highest court would construe this statute

        to mean something other than what it says. Indeed, in a particularly damning blow to the

        district attorney’s position, the Supreme Court of North Carolina has said that an

        immediately adjacent statutory provision—which, like the Act, uses the term “derogatory”

               3
                   The Practical Standard Dictionary of the English Language 319 (1936).
               4
                   Webster’s New International Dictionary 705 (2d ed. 1934).
               5
                Derogatory, Merriam-Webster Dictionary, https://www.merriam-
        webster.com/dictionary/derogatory (last visited Jan. 9, 2023) (saved as ECF opinion
        attachment).

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        and was enacted as part of the same 1931 statute—“clearly” encompasses “truthful

        statements.” State v. Petersilie, 432 S.E.2d 832, 842 (N.C. 1993) (discussing what is now

        N.C. Gen. Stat. § 163-274(8)); see 1931 N.C. Sess. Laws 442. And, like other jurisdictions,

        North Carolina follows the familiar principle that it is “[o]rdinarily . . . reasonable to

        presume that words used in one place in [a] statute have the same meaning in every other

        place in the statute.” Campbell v. First Baptist Church of Durham, 259 S.E.2d 558, 563

        (N.C. 1979).

               The district attorney gamely insists North Carolina’s highest court would deploy the

        absurd results or constitutional avoidance canons to save the Act, which—the district

        attorney emphasizes—contains other language absent from the one at issue in Petersilie.

        We have no way of definitively resolving the district attorney’s prediction because “unlike

        . . . the other States in the circuit,” North Carolina “does not provide a mechanism by which

        we could certify the question to North Carolina’s Supreme Court.” In re McCormick,

        669 F.3d 177, 182 n.* (4th Cir. 2012).

               Even so, we think it unlikely the North Carolina Supreme Court would read the Act

        as the district attorney suggests. In North Carolina, “[s]tatutory interpretation properly

        begins with an examination of the plain words of the statute,” and “[c]anons of statutory

        interpretation”—including “constitutional avoidance”—are “only employed when there

        are two or more reasonable meanings of the statutory language at issue.” JVC Enterprises

        v. City of Concord, 855 S.E.2d 158, 161–62 (N.C. 2021) (quotation marks omitted). Here,

        the “plain words of the statute” reach truthful statements. Id. at 161; see Virginia v.

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        American Booksellers Ass’n, Inc., 484 U.S. 383, 397 (1988) (stating a federal court may

        not “rewrite a state law to conform it to constitutional requirements”). 6

               Shifting gears, the district attorney asserts that even if the Act reaches some truthful

        speech, it remains constitutional because any overbreadth is not substantial in relation to

        the Act’s legitimate sweep. We disagree. The district attorney has offered no examples of

        this Act’s “legitimate applications”—much less applications unrelated to speech—nor has

        she shown any such applications should mitigate our concerns about the law’s chilling

        effects on truthful speech during political campaigns. Virginia v. Hicks, 539 U.S. 113, 124

        (2003). Under this law, prosecutors need never show—or even allege—a “derogatory”

        statement was false so long as they contend the speaker acted with reckless disregard of its

        truth or falsity. The Supreme Court has emphasized “there is no sound principle which can

        make [a person] liable” for “publish[ing] the truth,” and it has announced a constitutional

        “rule” that “absolutely prohibits punishment of truthful criticism” even when such criticism

        is made with “ill will” or “actual malice.” Garrison, 379 U.S. at 73, 78 (quotation marks

        omitted; emphasis added). Nothing more is needed to show this Act is likely

        unconstitutional.

               6
                  The lack of an express limitation to false statements distinguishes this Act from
        criminal defamation statutes upheld by other circuits. See Frese v. Formella, 53 F.4th 1, 4
        (1st Cir. 2022) (upholding statute prohibiting “purposely communicat[ing]” “any
        information” a speaker “knows to be false and knows will tend to expose any other living
        person to public hatred . . .” (emphasis added)); Phelps v. Hamilton, 59 F.3d 1058, 1070–
        73 (10th Cir. 1995) (upholding statute defining “[c]riminal defamation [as] maliciously
        communicating . . . false information tending to expose another living person to public
        hatred . . .” (emphasis added)).

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                                                       B.

               The Act is likely unconstitutional for a second reason as well. Even assuming the

        Act reaches only false statements and that Garrison’s seeming approval of certain criminal

        libel statutes remains good law, we would still conclude this Act fails constitutional

        scrutiny because it draws impermissible content-based distinctions in identifying which

        speech to criminalize.

               The Act does not reach all “derogatory reports” made with “reckless disregard of

        [their] truth or falsity.” N.C. Gen. Stat. § 163-274(a)(9). Instead, it limits its prohibition to

        statements about a certain subject (“any candidate in any primary or election”) of a

        particular nature or made with a particular intent (“calculated or intended to affect the

        chances of such candidate for nomination or election”). Id. In doing so, the Act runs

        headlong into R.A.V. v. City of St. Paul, 505 U.S. 377 (1992).

               In R.A.V., the Supreme Court emphasized the distinction between (permissibly)

        regulating speech “because of [its] constitutionally proscribable content” and

        (impermissibly) using a category of unprotected speech as a “vehicle[] for content

        discrimination unrelated to [its] distinctively proscribable content.” 505 U.S. at 383–84.

        The Court gave a telling example: “[T]he government may proscribe libel; but it may not

        make the further content discrimination of proscribing only libel critical of the

        government.” Id. at 384; see id. (noting a city could not enact “an ordinance prohibiting

        only those legally obscene works that contain criticism of the city government”).

               True, this Act regulates statements critical of political candidates rather than of the

        government itself. But the Act still falls within R.A.V.’s holding that a State may not

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        “prohibit[] otherwise permitted speech solely on the basis of the subjects the speech

        addresses.” 505 U.S. at 381. Under this statute, speakers may lie with impunity about

        businesspeople, celebrities, purely private citizens, or even government officials so long as

        the victim is not currently a “candidate in any primary or election.” N.C. Gen. Stat. § 163-

        274(a)(9). That is textbook content discrimination.

               The Act’s limitation to statements “calculated or intended to affect the chances of

        such candidate[s] for nomination or election,” § 163-274(a)(9), only compounds the

        problem. Taken literally, this language means spreading a viral falsehood hoping to end a

        candidate’s marriage is fine but doing the same thing becomes a crime if it is intended (in

        whole or in part) to doom the person’s political campaign.

               This is not to say, of course, that laws touching on speech may not have a scienter

        requirement. But the lines this Act draws have no obvious relation to the reputation-based

        reasons for allowing States to prohibit libel in the first place. 7 And that, in turn, is why the

        district attorney’s attempt to analogize the Act to 18 U.S.C. § 871, the presidential threat

        statute, falls flat. Oral Arg. 22:48–23:13. As R.A.V. explained, a law prohibiting threats

        only against the President is constitutional because “the reasons why threats of violence

        are outside the First Amendment (protecting individuals from the fear of violence, from

               7
                 See Rosenblatt v. Baer, 383 U.S. 75, 86 (1966) (“law of defamation” justified by
        the “pervasive and strong interest in preventing and redressing attacks upon reputation”);
        Gertz v. Robert Welch, Inc., 418 U.S. 323, 343 (1974) (describing libel laws as reflecting
        “right to compensation for wrongful hurt to one’s reputation”); see also Garrison, 379 U.S.
        at 67–70 (rejecting, at least “[w]here criticism of public officials is concerned,” the
        traditional breach-of-the-peace justifications for criminal libel laws).

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        the disruption that fear engenders, and from the possibility that the threatened violence will

        occur) have special force when applied to the person of the President.” 505 U.S. at 388.

        The same sort of reasoning explains why a State may outlaw cross burning (and only cross

        burning) done with the intent to intimidate: “because burning a cross is a particularly

        virulent form of intimidation.” Virginia v. Black, 538 U.S. 343, 363 (2003).

               Here, in contrast, the district attorney cites no authority suggesting the reasons

        undergirding libel laws have “special force” when applied to speech about political

        candidates intended to influence elections. R.A.V., 505 U.S. at 388. In fact, First

        Amendment doctrine suggests the opposite. See, e.g., Gertz v. Robert Welch, Inc., 418 U.S.

        323, 344 (1974) (“Public officials and public figures . . . have a more realistic opportunity

        to counteract false statements than private individuals normally enjoy. Private individuals

        are therefore more vulnerable to injury, and the state interest in protecting them is

        correspondingly greater.” (footnote omitted)). 8 In addition, the justification the district

        attorney offers to support the Act’s content discrimination (preventing campaign fraud and

        protecting election integrity) is of a different kind, not degree, than the reputation-based

               8
                  See also McIntyre v. Ohio Elections Comm’n, 514 U.S. 334, 346 (1995)
        (describing “[d]iscussion of public issues and debate on the qualifications of candidates”
        as lying at “the core of the protection afforded by the First Amendment” (quotation marks
        omitted)); Buckley v. American Const. Law Found., Inc., 525 U.S. 182, 186–87 (1999)
        (First Amendment concerns are at their “zenith” when a law regulates “core political
        speech” (quotation marks omitted)); Garrison, 379 U.S. at 75 (describing “speech
        concerning public affairs” as “the essence of self-government” and stating that “‘debate on
        public issues should be uninhibited, robust, and wide-open, and . . . may well include
        vehement, caustic, and sometimes unpleasantly sharp attacks on government and public
        officials’” (quoting New York Times Co. v. Sullivan, 376 U.S. 254, 270 (1964))).

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        justifications underlying libel laws. See Rosenblatt v. Baer, 383 U.S. 75, 86 (1966); Gertz,

        418 U.S. at 343. Finally, the Act’s careful limitation to only a subset of derogatory

        statements to which elected officials may be particularly hostile—those harmful to their

        own political prospects—raises the “possibility that official suppression of ideas is afoot.”

        R.A.V., 505 U.S. at 390. 9

               As in R.A.V., the Act’s limitation to speech addressing only certain topics renders it

        facially unconstitutional. “The dispositive question in this case . . . is whether content

        discrimination is reasonably necessary to achieve [North Carolina’s] compelling interest[]”

        in preventing false defamatory speech made with actual malice. R.A.V., 505 U.S. at 395–

        96. Here, “it plainly is not” because “[a]n ordinance not limited to” speech about current

        political candidates “would have precisely the same beneficial effect.” Id. at 396. “In fact

        the only interest distinctively served by the content limitation is that of displaying the

        [State’s] special hostility towards” defamatory speech against political candidates. Id.

        “That is precisely what the First Amendment forbids.” Id.

                                              *      *       *

               9
                If the Act is intended to prevent electoral fraud and preserve election integrity, it
        draws curious lines. The Act does not prohibit inflating a candidate’s credentials or
        promoting self-aggrandizing falsehoods, nor does it touch knowing falsehoods that
        undermine the perception of electoral integrity without referencing a particular candidate.
        As the Supreme Court has recognized, this sort of “underinclusiveness can raise doubts
        about whether the government is in fact pursuing the interest it invokes, rather than
        disfavoring a particular speaker or viewpoint.” Williams-Yulee v. Florida Bar, 575 U.S.
        433, 448 (2015) (quotation marks omitted).

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              The district court denied plaintiffs’ motion for a preliminary injunction based solely

        on its conclusion that plaintiffs were unlikely to succeed on the merits of their First

        Amendment claim. Although the parties disagree about whether plaintiffs can satisfy the

        remaining three Winter factors, “we are a court of review, not of first view.” Cutter v.

        Wilkinson, 544 U.S. 709, 718 n.7 (2005). We thus vacate the district court’s order and

        remand for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.

                                                                                    SO ORDERED

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        RUSHING, Circuit Judge, concurring:

               I agree that the plaintiffs are likely to succeed on the merits of their First

        Amendment claim. I therefore join the Court’s opinion, which does not address the other

        preliminary injunction factors—likely irreparable harm, the balance of the equities, and the

        public interest—instead leaving them for the district court to resolve on remand. Compare

        Grimmett v. Freeman, No. 22-1844, 2022 WL 3696689, at *2 (4th Cir. Aug. 25, 2022) (per

        curiam), with id. at *2–3 (Rushing, J., dissenting).

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