The Cary News
Saturday, May 18, 2013
Serving Cary and Morrisville
Register / Log In
Site Search

Front Home / Front  




Published: Jan 23, 2013 01:57 PM
Modified: Jan 23, 2013 01:58 PM

Cary wins appeal in sign case against homeowner
First Amendment not violated in sign dispute
David Bowden had a sign painted on his house blasting Cary for damage he blamed on roadwork.

 
Story Tools
  Printer Friendly   Email to a Friend
  Enlarge Font   Decrease Font
  del.icio.us   Digg it

tool name

close
tool goes here
More Front
Schools say summer reading is crucial
New greenway links Cary to Raleigh
Cary stretch of road project slated for 2014
Cary budget proposal calls for tax, fees hike
Morrisville voters say no more districts

Most Popular

CARY - A federal appeals court has ruled in favor of the town in the “Screwed By The Town of Cary” lawsuit, signaling that the long saga may be nearing its end.

The 4th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals found that the town government did not violate the First Amendment by threatening to fine the late David Bowden for the message he had painted on his house in 2009. Three judges unanimously overturned a lower-court decision in the Bowden estate’s favor.

“We acknowledge that the Town’s Sign Ordinance, and in particular its application to Bowden, has aggravated some Cary residents who believe it excessively restrictive,” wrote Judge Albert Diaz. “But their recourse here lies with the ballot, not the Constitution.”

The court released the opinion Tuesday, following a September hearing. Cary’s Town Council and staff members praised the decision, while the American Civil Liberties Union of N.C., which helped argue the case, warned of a dangerous precedent.

“This ruling affords the government great deference to regulate private political messages they disagree with,” said Chris Brook, legal director of the state ACLU.

Cary denies that it censored or intended to censor Bowden.

Bowden, who died at age 69 in 2011, painted his protest sign in 2009 because he believed a town construction project caused water damage to his former house on S.W. Maynard Road, a claim the town denies.

The town warned Bowden that the huge painted message violated size rules for signs, then began issuing steep fines. The widower and the American Civil Liberties Union soon filed suit, beginning a lengthy legal battle that reached one of the highest courts in the land, despite an attempt at mediation.

The plaintiff and his attorneys claimed the town had violated his First Amendment rights; the town argued that Bowden had every right to make his protest “on two five-square-foot signs” or in another medium, and that unrestricted signage would lead to visual pandemonium.

The town lost the first legal round in 2010, when U.S. District Judge Louise Flanagan ruled the town’s sign rules for personal property amounted to a “content-based restriction on speech.”

Art, holiday exceptions

At issue throughout the case have been the exceptions in town rules for “public art” and “holiday displays,” which don’t face the same size restrictions in Cary as Bowden’s political message. Bowden’s lawyers claimed that the town was making an illegal judgment of content in separating those categories.

That argument might have held water in other federal appeals courts, Diaz wrote. But he and his fellow judges believed Cary gave a good rationale for its relaxed rules for Nativity scenes and artistic endeavors.

As Diaz wrote, “We think it reasonable to presume that public art and holiday decorations enhance rather than harm aesthetic appeal, and ... seasonal holiday displays have a temporary, and therefore less significant, impact on traffic safety.”

And it “defies common sense,” the judge wrote, to argue that Bowden’s fluorescent-orange sign was “intended to beautify” or was a holiday “observance.”

The judges also reversed a ruling that Cary pay about $36,000 for the Bowden estate’s legal bills. However, the family won’t be responsible for the fees, according to Brook.

Cost of doing business

Cary, though, will pay about $300,000 or more in legal costs.

“Unfortunately … it appears to be the cost of doing business, because of course the town must defend its ordinances,” said Councilwoman Gale Adcock.

Bowden’s estate, including his daughter, and the plaintiff’s legal team are now considering their next step. They may request an en banc rehearing of the case by all the 4th Circuit judges – which occurs extremely rarely, according to an attorney for the town.

Alternatively, the ACLU and Bowden’s estate could appeal to the U.S. Supreme Court, which accepts only a fraction of the cases thrown its way.

Kenney: 919-460-2608 or twitter.com/KenneyOnCary
  Triangle Member Newspapers:    The News & Observer   |   The Chapel Hill News   |   The Cary News   |   The Durham News   |  Eastern Wake News   |  The Herald   |  North Raleigh News
  © Copyright 2013, The News & Observer Publishing Company, a subsidiary of The McClatchy Company

  Terms of Service | Privacy Policy | About our ads | Copyright | Help | Contact Us | N&O Store | Advertising
Hosting Partners of
newsobserver.com