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Disney First Amendment Lawsuit Against DeSantis Thrown Out By Federal Judge

Disney First Amendment Lawsuit Against DeSantis Thrown Out By Federal Judge

Disney challenged legislation taking over Reedy Creek District, claiming retaliation for Disney exercising First Amendment rights. Judge quoting binding precedent: “when a statute is facially constitutional, a plaintiff cannot bring a free-speech challenge by claiming that the lawmakers who passed it acted with a constitutionally impermissible purpose.”

https://twitter.com/GovRonDeSantis/status/1552436171346771969

We have followed the fight between Disney and Governor Ron DeSantis since the start. The core of the fight was the State of Florida’s attempt to wrestle back control of the Reedy Creek District specially created for Disney, giving it government-within-a-government special status.

Disney claimed DeSantis was violating Disney’s rights as retaliation for Disney opposing DeSantis’ legislation restricting sexualized teaching in K-3 (falsely called the “Don’t Say Gay” law by propagandists). Disney sued claiming a violation of its First Amendment Rights. We covered the lawsuit in Disney sues DeSantis and Florida over Reedy Creek District Control:

The State of Florida passed legislation taking back control of the Reedy Creek District where Disney operates, effectively ending Disney’s unusual state-within-a-state autonomy. On the eve of the legislation taking effect, the District (controlled by Disney) passed restrictive covenants preserving their autonomy and nullifying the impact of the legislation.

Disney and anti-DeSantis Republicans crowed about how Disney had outsmarted DeSantis. But it’s not clear that Disney complied with all the legal requirements, including mailed notice to neighbors, to pass the restrictive covenants; DeSantis vowed to challenge Disney’s moves including through a new District resolution voiding the restrictive covenants and possible new legislation.

So now Disney has filed suit in federal court for the Northern District of Florida. The case is assigned to Chief Judge Mark Walker, who has ruled against other legislation promoted by DeSantis, such as the “Stop Woke Act,” using bombastic language including an analogy to George Orwell.

Here are the pleadings:

Complaint
Exhibit A – Development Agreement
Exhibit B – Restrictive Covenants

The Complaint focuses heavily on Disney’s free speech rights, framing everything that has happened as retaliation for its opposition to the various legislative initiatives from DeSantis taking on “wokeness.”

Subsequently a First Amended Complaint was filed adding more DeSantis statements to the allegations.

Perhaps pivotal, DeSantis made a motion for Judge Walker to remove himself from the case

DeSantis has just filed a Motion to Disqualify Judge Walker claiming that statements by the judge outside of Disney case about the Disney case indicate the outcome has been prejudged, creating an appearance of bias.

Surprisingly, Judge Walker did recuse himself, but on different grounds:

On June 1, 2023, Judge Walker denied the motion to disqualify but recused himself anyway because a relative owned 30 shares of Disney stock. In the Order, the Judge lambasted the motion as blatant judge shopping …

The recusal of Judge Walker may have been the single most important development in the case.

People like Vivek Ramaswamy wanted Disney to “have the last laugh” to make DeSantis look bad:

Judge Allen Winsor, a Trump appointee (not that it matters) whose nomination was opposed by a left-wing coalition, just issued an Order dismissing the case:

In 1967, Florida’s Legislature created the Reedy Creek Improvement District (RCID), a special improvement district in Central Florida. See Ch. 67-764, Laws of Fla. The district is perhaps best known as the home of Walt Disney World, which has operated there for decades. And as the district’s largest landowner, Disney1 has effectively controlled the district’s board, whose members were elected based on land ownership. That changed last year, after the Florida Legislature substantially amended the district’s governing structure. Now, Florida’s Governor selects the board members, subject to Senate confirmation. See Ch. 23-5, § 2(4)(1), Laws of Fla. As a result, Disney no longer controls the special improvement district in which it operates. (That district is now called the Central Florida Tourism Oversight District, or CFTOD. See id. § 2(1).)

This change—which works to Disney’s significant detriment—came after Disney publicly criticized another Florida law, the Parental Rights in Education Act. In Disney’s view, this timing was no coincidence. Disney alleges that the Florida Legislature changed the district’s governing structure to punish it for its speech. The issue in this case is whether the Legislature’s action constituted unlawful retaliation against Disney’s speech in violation of the First Amendment.2

Defendants are the Governor, the Secretary of Florida’s Department of Commerce,3 and all members of CFTOD’s board. All Defendants moved to dismiss. The Governor and the Secretary argue lack of standing and Eleventh Amendment immunity. The CFTOD Defendants argue Disney’s claim fails on the merits. After a hearing, and having carefully considered the parties’ arguments, I now grant both motions.

In short, Disney lacks standing to sue the Governor or the Secretary, and its claims against the CFTOD Defendants fail on the merits because “when a statute is facially constitutional, a plaintiff cannot bring a free-speech challenge by claiming that the lawmakers who passed it acted with a constitutionally impermissible purpose.” In re Hubbard, 803 F.3d 1298, 1312 (11th Cir. 2015).

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Comments

Belligerent wokeness has consequences.

Admire DeSantis!

Just occasionally even our corrupt system manages a good decision.

Their lawsuit never came close to making sense

    henrybowman in reply to geronl. | January 31, 2024 at 10:51 pm

    Because a resolution that nobody can countermand until the death of the last descendant of the British royal family, well… that’s just standard corporate boilerplate, isn’t it?

      Milhouse in reply to henrybowman. | February 1, 2024 at 12:05 am

      It actually is standard boilerplate. And it doesn’t last until the whole house dies out; only until the last member who is currently alive dies. It’s a standard way of getting around the rule against perpetuities.

      It was still invalid, but not for that reason.

        ahad haamoratsim in reply to Milhouse. | February 1, 2024 at 3:56 am

        Ah, the unborn widow, the fertile octogenarian & the other entertaining corollaries.

        Nick M, a friend and classmate, discovered an opinion that observed IIRC “Something about the rule there is that seems to perpetuate error.”

        Alas during the intervening 46 years, I have lost both the citation and any contact with Nick.

        mailman in reply to Milhouse. | February 1, 2024 at 4:21 am

        Yeah nah, its not. How many cases can you think of that relied on this as a defence Justice Milhouse?

          Milhouse in reply to mailman. | February 1, 2024 at 6:14 am

          As a defense?! What the hell are you talking about? What has defense got to do with it? Why would it be used as a defense? Defense against what?

          It’s a standard boilerplate way of getting around the rule against perpetuities. Whether you’ve ever heard of it makes no difference. It is. But how in your imagination the concept of defense comes into it is beyond me.

          healthguyfsu in reply to mailman. | February 1, 2024 at 8:24 pm

          I know I always trust the internet lawyer that makes the argument “Yeah nah, it’s not”

destroycommunism | January 31, 2024 at 10:17 pm

the scotus let pro americans down when it wouldnt even take a look at the PA allowing the extended voting that was granted not by their Legislature but by a selected committee in 2020

now they cant even tell you what a women is>>>kentaji

so it is gratifying to see a Fed court do the right thing

    henrybowman in reply to destroycommunism. | January 31, 2024 at 10:53 pm

    Federal courts and federal Republicans have a lot in common: there are a select few of them who do all the heavy lifting for liberty, and the rest just smoke and skate.

Will the execrable Nikki Haley criticize the judge who issued the decision? Haley indefensibly sided with Disney, instead of DeSantis.

Since I listen to Legal Mindset, I expected this.

    angrywebmaster in reply to georgfelis. | February 1, 2024 at 5:04 am

    Andrew Esquire has been on this like a tick on a dog. Next up, criminal charges. I think Disney’s next problem will be trying not to be declared a criminal enterprise.

      JohnSmith100 in reply to angrywebmaster. | February 1, 2024 at 12:05 pm

      That would be fun to watch.

      Andrew loves putting the lawyers who have zero knowledge or expertise in that section of Florida law in their place. It is a very niche specialty and he is among a small number of lawyers who know the details instead of some person with no experience, who wants to defend Disney at all costs.

DeSantis has been both a very effective Governor and in many respects the vanguard of the opposition to the cultural conflict waged by woke lefties.

The FL legislature giveth Reedy Creek, so the FL legislature can taketh away Reedy Creek. The whole government within a government carve out, while technically legal, was shady from the get go.

“Congress shall make no law…” (Repealing laws is not ‘making’ them.)

Amending laws with provisions that violate speech, assembly, etc., is another story — but that is not what the FL legislature did. Disney was looking for hook for a sympathetic judge can hang a hat on.

E Howard Hunt | February 1, 2024 at 9:17 am

If Florida is entitled to give a corporation special, favorable treatment because it finds the corporation’s goodwill to be especially pleasing, then by the same token is it not entitled to withdraw those privileges when their reason for having been granted no longer exists?

It’s refreshing to see Republicans like DeSantis and Abbot exercising power. They stand in stark contrast to clowns like Gianforte.

…when a statute is facially constitutional, a plaintiff cannot bring a free-speech challenge by claiming that the lawmakers who passed it acted with a constitutionally impermissible purpose…

This is very curious, as I am positive there is at least one SOCTUS ruling diametrically opposed to this conclusion, saying that a legislative act must be constitutional both in its letter and in its effects. That is to say, no legislation that reaches unconstitutional ends, or allows unconstitutional acts, can be constitutional, the language of the legislation notwithstanding.

    artichoke in reply to DaveGinOly. | February 1, 2024 at 1:10 pm

    but that doesn’t touch “purpose”. The precedent says that there can’t be a fishing expedition into the state of mind of the party, and that’s a good thing.

    The opposite is the sort of thinking that brought us “hate crimes”, a terrible idea from the left that, since it’s the law, should be used to full effect and with full energy against them at every opportunity.

So the first judge, Mark Walker, didn’t bother thinking about recusing when he heard other cases involving Disney. Fortunately something brought him to his senses this time..

Does DeSantis get do-overs on the other cases?

We in Florida like in many states are experiencing doubling to tripling of insurance rates since Ron and Casey became governor, energy and food prices have skyrocketed along with out of control medical costs, the last thing needed was corporate welfare for Disney at our expense.

    CommoChief in reply to natdj. | February 2, 2024 at 12:43 pm

    Choosing to live in a coastal/near coastal area prone to both flooding and Hurricanes has risks. Not mention the occasional tornado. I live about an hour north of Ft Walton beach FL, less than 30 miles from the Bama/FL line and my insurance went up as well. I owned coastal properties in FL for over a decade (sold them in 2019) and was frankly surprised how cheap the insurance was considering the risk levels. The insurance companies ain’t a charity. When home values increase, as they are in FL some places dramatically, the insurance premiums will also rise.

    henrybowman in reply to natdj. | February 2, 2024 at 8:10 pm

    “experiencing doubling to tripling of insurance rates since Ron and Casey became governor’

    I assume you are merely stating chronology, and I expect your downvoters assume you were stating causality.