海角大神

Supreme Court refuses challenge to school dress code

The Supreme Court Monday declined to take up a student's challenge to a Texas school dress code. An appeals court ruling said the policy, which bars non-school-related messages on clothing, did not violate student free-speech rights.

The US Supreme Court has declined to take up the case of a Texas high school student who was barred from wearing a T-shirt to school with 鈥淔reedom of Speech鈥 printed on the front and the text of the First Amendment on the back.

At issue was whether a public school dress code that bans all printed messages except those approved by school officials violated high school students鈥 free speech rights.

The high court dismissed the case without comment. That leaves in place an appeals court ruling that upheld the school鈥檚 policy, expanding the power of school administrators to ban student speech in instances where the restrictions are deemed content-neutral.

The dispute began in 2007 when Paul Palmer, then a sophomore at Waxahachie High School, showed up in class wearing a T-shirt with 鈥San Diego鈥 written on it. An assistant principal informed him that school policy prohibited shirts with written messages.

Mr. Palmer called his parents. They brought him a new shirt. This one proclaimed: 鈥John Edwards for President 鈥08.鈥

When school officials rejected that shirt too, Palmer sued, asking a federal judge to enforce his free speech rights under the First Amendment.

The judge dismissed the suit when the school district adopted a new dress code. The new policy permitted written messages promoting school organizations, events, and teams, but it continued to ban non-school-related messages.

That鈥檚 when Palmer sought permission to wear his 鈥淔reedom of Speech鈥 shirt and the John Edwards shirt.

He sued again, and lost. On appeal, the New Orleans-based Fifth US Circuit Court of Appeals upheld the Waxahachie dress code, saying it did not violate student free speech because it was a content-neutral regulation.

The appeals court said if Palmer wished to express his political views at school he could sport political buttons, which the district did not ban. It added that he was free to express his views after school or through writings.

It is that decision the Supreme Court is being asked to examine in a case called Paul Palmer v. Waxahachie Independent School District.

Paul鈥檚 lawyers wanted the justices to decide whether the appeals court ruling was in conflict with a 1969 landmark Supreme Court precedent, Tinker v. Des Moines Independent Community School District. In that case the justices ruled that a public school district could not bar students from wearing black armbands to school to protest the Vietnam War. Public school students do not 鈥渟hed their constitutional rights to freedom of speech at the schoolhouse gate,鈥 the court said.

Since the Tinker decision, the court has narrowed that holding by allowing school officials to prohibit student speech that is sexually explicit, lewd, or indecent, to regulate school-sponsored speech, and to ban student speech advocating illegal drug use.

But the core holding in the Tinker case remains unchanged: Schools may restrict student speech only if it interferes with or substantially disrupts school operations.

Lawyers for the school district had urged the high court to allow the appeals court decision to stand. They said it did not conflict with any other appeals court in cases involving content-neutral policies and was not counter to the high court鈥檚 holding in the Tinker case.

鈥淭inker does not change those fundamental principles of First Amendment law in their application to a school context,鈥 wrote Sara Leon in her brief on behalf of the school district. 鈥淓xpression by students in school may be limited by reasonable and equally applied time, place, and manner restrictions.鈥

She added, 鈥淭inker remains the rule for testing the validity of a viewpoint-based regulation of student speech in public schools. But it says nothing about the validity of a content- and viewpoint-neutral policy that restricts students鈥 clothing only during school hours reserved for the schools鈥 core mission of education.鈥

In a brief to the court on behalf of Palmer, Houston lawyer Allyson Ho wrote: 鈥淥ur public schools have a responsibility to teach students about constitutional principles not only as part of the curriculum, but also by faithfully applying them. In the context of a presidential election, that responsibility would seem, if anything, to lead our schools to encourage non-disruptive means of expressing political views 鈥 not to stifle them.鈥

---

Follow us on .

You've read  of  free articles. Subscribe to continue.
QR Code to Supreme Court refuses challenge to school dress code
Read this article in
/USA/Justice/2010/0111/Supreme-Court-refuses-challenge-to-school-dress-code
QR Code to Subscription page
Start your subscription today
/subscribe