This case involves a constitutional challenge on vagueness grounds to the phrase “substantial business purpose” in the definition of “sexually-oriented adult use” contained in Section 3.01.02 of the Crisp County Unified Land Development Code. That section defines a “sexually-oriented adult use” as “[a]ny establishment that, as a regular and substantial business purpose, offers services, ... or materials in print or in any photographic or recorded media that [involve or depict certain defined sexually-explicit activities or anatomical areas], with the intent of providing sexual stimulation or gratification to the customer.” Under the County’s development code, establishments that meet the definition of a sexually-oriented adult use may only operate in certain designated zoning districts upon approval of a special use permit.
Appellant 105 Floyd Road, Inc. is a corporation that sells sexually-explicit materials and novelty items as well as other adult-themed but non-sexually-explicit materials. In Crisp County it transacts business under the trade name “Love Stuff.” It purchased the leasehold and assets of a prior business, Love Stuff, L.L.C., after that business was denied a special use permit to operate a sexually-oriented adult use. Although this predecessor company dealt primarily in sexually-explicit materials and catered to a mostly male clientele, after appellant purchased the business it changed the inventory by dramatically reducing the amount of sexually-explicit material and proffering adult-themed but non-sexually-explicit material that catered to women and couples.
After appellant began operating its business without a special use permit, the County sought injunctive relief, asserting that appellant was required to have such a permit because it qualified as a sexually-oriented adult use due to its “substantial business purpose” of offering to sell sexually-explicit materials. At a hearing the trial court heard testimony from a County sheriffs department investigator who visited the store in the course of investigating possible charges against appellant for distributing obscene materials. See OCGA § 16-12-80 et seq. The investigator gave rough estimates regarding the amount of sexually-explicit inventory she observed and *346 the store space used to display that inventory; on cross-examination the investigator acknowledged that she made no measurements of the store’s square footage, undertook no inventory of appellant’s stock in trade and focused only on the sexually-explicit material because the obscenity charge, not appellant’s “substantial business purpose,” was the sole subject of her investigation. 1 The County’s planning director, who enforces and administers the development code, testified that it was her job to determine whether an establishment is a sexually-oriented adult use and that she had no difficulty distinguishing appellant’s business from “convenience stores in Crisp County [that] sell some Playboys and things like that” because “that’s not a part of their regular business . . . that is not their [sic] substantial part of their business.” The trial court also heard from Ross Winner, a principal in Love Stuff, L.L.C. now employed by the company that manages appellant’s business, who testified that appellant had substantially reduced the sexually-explicit inventory of its predecessor business so it could operate without a special use permit; that the sexually-explicit inventory constituted 12 to 13 percent of appellant’s stock-in-trade; that 700 feet of the 4,000 square foot building is devoted to sexually-explicit material; and that removal of the sexually-explicit material would irreparably harm appellant because it would mean that appellant “would not be able to offer a complete atmosphere for couples.”
The trial court found that a “substantial business purpose” of appellant was to offer for sale sexually-explicit materials intended to provide sexual stimulation or gratification to the customer. After rejecting appellant’s constitutional challenges to the development code, including the assertion that the language was unconstitutionally vague, both facially and as applied to appellant, the trial court permanently enjoined appellant from operating its business. This appeal ensued. For the reasons that follow, we reverse.
We recognize that a local government, such as the County here, may constitutionally regulate commercial establishments within its boundaries that offer sexually-explicit material by enacting content-neutral time, place and manner restrictions designed to advance a substantial government interest, where reasonable alternative avenues of communication remain available. See
City of Los Angeles v. Alameda Books, Inc.,
As the U. S. Supreme Court has stated,
[i]t is a basic principle of due process that an enactment is void for vagueness if its prohibitions are not clearly defined. Vague laws offend several important values. First, because we assume that man is free to steer between lawful and unlawful conduct, we insist that laws give the person of ordinary intelligence a reasonable opportunity to know what is prohibited, so that he may act accordingly. Vague laws may trap the innocent by not providing fair warning. Second, if arbitrary and discriminatory enforcement is to be prevented, laws must provide explicit standards for those who apply them. A vague law impermissibly delegates basic policy matters to policemen, judges, and juries for resolution on an ad hoc and subjective basis, with the attendant dangers of arbitrary and discriminatory application. Third, but related, where a vague statute abuts upon sensitive areas of basic First Amendment freedoms, it operates to inhibit the exercise of those freedoms. Uncertain meanings inevitably lead citizens to steer far wider of the unlawful zone than if the boundaries of the forbidden areas were clearly marked.
(Punctuation and footnotes omitted.)
Grayned v. City of Rockford,
The criteria to evaluate statutory language challenged on vagueness grounds is that of “ ‘flexibility and reasonable breadth’ ” rather than “ ‘meticulous specificity’ ” or “mathematical certainty.”
Grayned,
supra,
The County’s development code defines sexually-oriented adult use based on an establishment’s “substantial business purpose.” That phrase is not further defined in the development code and the mere fact that regular English definitions exist for each word in the phrase does not immunize the ordinance from a vagueness challenge. See generally
Botts,
supra,
Although by its express language the definition of “sexually-oriented adult use” in the development code focuses only on an establishment’s business purpose in offering sexually-explicit material, as the case here demonstrates the County in reality focuses instead on the nature of the other, non-sexually-explicit materials offered by the establishment to determine whether it qualifies as a sexually-oriented adult use. The planning director’s testimony before the trial court and the statements made by the County’s attorney during oral argument before this Court reflect the actual content analysis performed by the County: according to the planning director, convenience stores that sell sexually-explicit material do not come within the definition because such material is not part of a convenience store’s “regular” business; likewise, the County’s attorney explained that the definition would not include a gas station merely because it offered a rack of sexually-explicit material because “a gas station is a gas station.” In appellant’s case, even though the other items available at the business did not fall within the category of sexually-explicit materials regulated by the County, the County nevertheless used the adult theme of this other material, particularly the fact that these items cater to the sexual interests or activities of adults, as the means to establish appellant’s “substantial business purpose” in offering the regulated material. Conceivably, under the County’s application of its development code, a gas station of comparable size offering the same amount of sexually-explicit materials as appellant would not come within the development code’s definition because it is a gas station, first and foremost; whereas appellant, because it is an “adult” shop, could come within the definition even if it altered its inventory to include only one sexually-explicit item. The impermissible vagueness of the standard contained in Section 3.01.02 of the County’s development code is responsible for the County’s application of this content-based analysis of the other material *350 offered at an establishment as a means to determine its “substantial business purpose” for selling sexually-explicit material. 4
This flawed analysis likewise undermines the County’s argument that appellant lacks standing to challenge the ordinance. Although the County, citing to
Young,
supra,
Accordingly, we conclude that the challenged definition “contains insufficient objective standards and guidelines to meet the requirements of due process. [Cits.]”
Jekyll Island-State Park Auth. v. Jekyll Island Citizens Assn.,
We are not criticizing the County’s goal of regulating within its boundaries those establishments that seek to offer sexually-explicit *351 materials and services with the intent of providing sexual stimulation or gratification to customers. We are simply persuaded that a more clearly worded and narrowly drawn ordinance can achieve the County’s legitimate objectives of maintaining and preserving the safety and quality of life of its residents while providing an ascertainable definition of “sexually-oriented adult use” for due process requirements.
Judgment reversed.
Notes
Likewise, inventory lists prepared by the investigator and other law enforcement officers focused on the sexually-explicit materials.
Although research has uncovered
Pleasureland Museum v. Beutter,
We are not persuaded by the contrary result reached by the Commonwealth Court of Pennsylvania, which concluded that the phrase “principal purpose” “is readily discernible by a reasonable person using common sense,”
Piatek v. Pulaski Township,
The County’s application of the definition to include consideration of materials that are not sexually explicit also raises the possibility that the definition is unconstitutionally overbroad. “An ordinance may be overbroad... because it lends itself to improper application by enforcement officials.” (Footnote omitted.) Rathkopf, The Law of Zoning and Planning § 24:20, pp. 24-86, 24-89. See generally
Johnson v. State,
We cannot agree with the County that the vagueness of the phrase “substantial business purpose” is subject to narrowing by this Court. While this Court has the authority to impose a narrow construction on legislation to avoid constitutional infirmities, see
Howard v. State,
