Facts of the case The case concerned
The Spectrum, a
student newspaper published as part of a Journalism II class at
Hazelwood East High School in
St. Louis County, Missouri.
The Spectrum was published roughly every three weeks during the 1982–1983 school year. About 4,500 copies were distributed to students and community members. The cost of printing the paper, as well as supplies, textbooks, and a portion of the
academic advisor's salary, were furnished by the district's
board of education, supplemented by newspaper sales. For that school year, the board supplied $4,668 in printing costs, and Howard Emerson, the adviser to the journalism class, submitted page proofs of the May 13 issue of the newspaper to principal Robert Eugene Reynolds for approval, a practice that was customary at the time. Reynolds objected to two of the stories scheduled to run. One was about
teen pregnancy, containing interviews with three students who had been pregnant. The story used false names to keep the girls' identities a secret, but Reynolds was concerned that the students would still be identifiable from the text. He was also concerned that the references to sexual activity and
birth control were inappropriate for younger students at the school. The second story was about divorce and featured an interview with a student whose parents were divorced, in which she complained that her father "wasn't spending enough time with my mom, my sister, and I ... was always out of town on business or out late playing cards with the guys ... always argued about everything". Reynolds, unaware that the girl's name would also be changed, argued that her family should have been given an opportunity to respond within the story or to object to its publication. Reynolds did not believe there was time to make changes because, if there were any delays in publication, the newspaper would not be published before the end of the school year. After consulting with his supervisors, he opted to publish a four-page newspaper instead of a six-page one, omitting the pages containing the two stories in question. Cutting two pages removed a total of seven articles from the paper. Reynolds did not tell the students about the decision, and they did not find out about it until the paper was delivered to the school.
Legal precedent Until the 1960s, administrative review of student publications was considered routine at both the high school and collegiate level. However, with the rise of the
counterculture of the 1960s, student publications began to explore social issues with greater fervor, focusing on the
Vietnam War, the
civil rights movement,
sexual orientation, and other topics considered controversial at the time. In 1969, the
U.S. Supreme Court held in
Tinker v. Des Moines Independent Community School District () that students' freedom of expression is protected under the First Amendment. Following that precedent, at least 125 cases in lower courts across the country were decided in favor of student expression and against administrative censorship. Whenever an instance of censorship involved action by a government employee, such as a school principal or a college dean, the courts held that First Amendment safeguards applied. Under the
Tinker precedent, courts recognized student newspapers as public forums in which expression could be restricted only if administrators could prove that substantial disruption of school activities was imminent. Two subsequent cases—
Healy v. James, (1972), and
Papish v. University of Missouri Curators, (1973)—expanded the First Amendment rights of students on college campuses, but did not strongly define the status of student newspapers as public forums. By the 1980s, however, with the end of the student protest era, school administrators sought to reassert their authority. The first case in the new trend,
Bethel School District v. Fraser, (1986), involved a high school student who was disciplined for delivering a speech containing
sexual innuendos, even though they were not
obscene or disruptive in a legal sense. Overturning lower court rulings, the Supreme Court held that the
Tinker precedent did not apply because the penalties imposed by the school were unrelated to the student's political viewpoint.
Lower court decisions The
Kuhlmeier case was filed in the
U.S. District Court for the Eastern District of Missouri. The students sought a declaration that their First Amendment and
Fourteenth Amendment rights had been violated by undue actions of a public official, as well as
injunctive relief and monetary damages. After a
bench trial, the district court denied the injunction and monetary damages. In May 1985, it ruled that no violation of First Amendment rights had occurred, and held that school officials may restrict student speech in activities that "are an integral part of the school's educational function" as long as the restriction has "a substantial and reasonable basis". The
U.S. Court of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit reversed the district court's decision in January 1986. It held that
The Spectrum was not only part of the school program, but also a public forum. The newspaper was "intended to be and operated as a conduit for student viewpoint", the appeals court found, and as a public forum, it could not be censored unless "necessary to avoid material and substantial interference with school work or discipline ... or the rights of others ". ==Supreme Court ruling==