Entrance sign for Cambridge Christian School, featuring a blue plaque set between two brick pillars and surrounded by landscaping and large oak trees.
Cambridge Christian School in Tampa, Florida. Credit: CambridgeChristian / Facebook

TALLAHASSEE โ€” After a nine-year legal battle, the U.S. Supreme Court on Monday declined to take up an appeal by a Tampa Christian school that contended its speech rights were violated when it was prevented from offering a prayer over a stadium loudspeaker before a 2015 state championship football game.

The Supreme Court, as is common, did not explain its reasons. But the decision effectively was a victory for the Florida High School Athletic Association and let stand a ruling last year by a panel of the 11th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals.

Attorneys for Cambridge Christian School in June filed a petition asking the Supreme Court to take up the case, which stemmed from a championship game between Cambridge Christian and Jacksonvilleโ€™s University Christian School at Orlandoโ€™s Camping World Stadium.

The athletic association, a non-profit governing body for high-school sports, denied the use of the loudspeaker for a prayer. The teams prayed on the field before and after the game. Those prayers could not be heard by people in the stands.

Cambridge Christian filed the lawsuit in 2016, and the dispute went to the Atlanta-based appeals court twice. In last yearโ€™s decision, a three-judge panel of the court concluded that announcements over the loudspeaker at the game were โ€œgovernment speech,โ€ as they were scripted and controlled by the association. It said the associationโ€™s decision to block a prayer over the public-address system did not violate free-speech rights.

But the schoolโ€™s petition filed at the Supreme Court described the appeals-court ruling as โ€œegregiously wrongโ€ and alleged potentially far-reaching effects if it was not overturned.

โ€œIf the Eleventh Circuitโ€™s boundless version of government speech stands, state actors will be able to claim that virtually all private speech and religious exercise in a government setting lacks First Amendment protection,โ€ the schoolโ€™s attorneys wrote.

The associationโ€™s attorneys, however, argued in a brief last month that the appeals court correctly followed a 2022 U.S. Supreme Court decision involving the โ€œframework for identifying government speech.โ€ They also disputed the schoolโ€™s contentions about far-reaching effects of the appeals courtโ€™s ruling.

In addition, the association pointed to a 2023 state law that required allowing high schools to offer โ€œbrief opening remarksโ€ โ€” which could include prayers โ€” before championship events.

The association said the โ€œproblem CCS (Cambridge Christian School) brought this case to address has thus been solved in the constitutionally preferred way โ€” not through a uniform national policy handed down by a politically insulated court, but through a local policy crafted by a responsive legislature and an energetic executive.โ€

The appeals-court panel said the 2023 state law made moot parts of the lawsuit but that it needed to rule on the First Amendment issues because Cambridge Christian sought โ€œnominal damages.โ€

U.S. District Judge Charlene Edwards Honeywell initially dismissed the case in 2017, but the appeals court in 2019 overturned the dismissal and sent the case back to Honeywell for further consideration. That led to Honeywell in 2022 ruling again in favor of the association, which prompted another appeal by Cambridge Christian.


Pitch in to help make the Tampa Bay Journalism Project a success.

Subscribe to Creative Loafing newsletters.

Follow us:ย Google Newsย |ย NewsBreakย |ย Redditย |ย Instagramย |ย Facebookย |ย BlueSky