6 Fair Empl.Prac.Cas. 257,
Gloria JOSEPH et al., Appellees,
v.
Louis H. BLAIR, Mayor, City of Falls Church, Va., et al.,
Appellants.
Patricia HOGGE, Appellant,
v.
MEMBERS OF the CITY COUNCIL, CITY OF HAMPTON, VIRGINIA, et
al., Appellees.
Edwin EMERSON, t/a Peninsula Massage Parlor, t/a Continental
Massage Parlor, Appellant,
v.
MEMBERS OF the CITY COUNCIL, CITY OF NEWPORT NEWS, VIRGINIA,
et al., Appellees.
Nos. 73-1131, 72-2441, 72-2442.
United States Court of Appeals,
Fourth Circuit.
Argued April 3, 1973.
Decided July 26, 1973.
Rehearing Denied Sept. 27, 1973.
W. Anthony Fitch, Williamsburg, Va. (Kenneth C. Hogge, and Carmel, Gray & Hogge, Hampton, Va., on brief), for appellants in Nos. 72-2441 and 72-2442.
Thomas E. Glascock, City Atty., Hampton, Va., for appellee in No. 72-2441.
P. A. Yeapanis, City Atty., Newport News, Va. (Robert M. Roylance, Asst. City Atty., Newport News, Va., on brief), for appellees in No. 72-2442.
George S. Leonard, Washington, D. C. (LaRue Van Meter, City Atty., Falls Church, Va., and Philip N. Brophy on brief), for appellants in No. 73-1131.
Philip J. Mirschkop, Alexandria, Va. (Joseph S. Bambacus, Richmond, Va., on brief), for appellants in No. 73-1131.
Before BOREMAN, Senior Circuit Judge, WINTER, Circuit Judge, and BLAIR, District Judge.
WINTER, Circuit Judge:
The scope and application of Younger v. Harris,
I.
While the ordinances vary in form in certain regards which are not material here, they have as their objective the licensing and regulation of "massage parlors" and purport to prohibit the massage of any person by another of the opposite sex, except in the case of doctors, nurses, licensed physiotherapists, members of the subject's family, and the like. The validity of the Falls Church ordinance was initially attacked by one Robert Kisley, who sued in the Circuit Court of Fairfax County, alleging that the ordinances were invalid under state and federal law because of an arbitrary classification by sex and the denial of due process and equal protection of the laws.1 The Circuit Court ruled against these contentions, holding the ordinances valid; and on appeal, the Supreme Court of Virginia affirmed. Kisley v. City of Falls Church,
When the various suits were filed in the Eastern District of Virginia, no criminal prosecutions against any plaintiff had begun.2 Presumably, by reason of a temporary restraining order and the subsequent injunction pendente lite, there have been no prosecutions in Norfolk or in Falls Church. In Hampton, no prosecutions have begun, but plaintiffs alleged, and the allegation is not denied, that the City Attorney had advised "that he will prosecute violations as and when they occur." In Newport News, prosecutions for violation of the ordinance had been instituted at the time of suit, but the prosecutions were against persons other than the plaintiffs.
II.
Judge Merhige, in granting an injunction pendente lite in No. 73-1131, concluded that Younger did not adversely affect his jurisdiction to act, since no plaintiff before him was the subject of a criminal prosecution at the time that suit was filed in his court. Judge Kellam, in declining to exercise jurisdiction in No. 72-2441 and No. 72-2442, concluded to the contrary. He recognized that there had been no prosecutions instituted against any plaintiff at the time that suit was filed, but he held nevertheless that application of Younger did not depend upon the existence of a pending state prosecution, and that the principle of comity stressed by Younger required that the "initial challenge to the constitutionality of a state law . . . [be made] in a state court." Additionally, Judge Kellam thought that Younger and Boyle v. Landry,
In Lynch v. Snepp,
Nor do we agree that there was no case or controversy between plaintiffs and defendants in Nos. 72-2441 and 72-2442. In Boyle v. Landry, plaintiffs were black citizens of Chicago who sought and obtained a declaration of the invalidity of an Illinois intimidation statute for overbreadth, and an injunction against its enforcement. The Supreme Court reversed on the ground that plaintiffs had neither alleged nor shown that they were threatened with arrest or prosecution under the statute at any time, or that they were in any jeopardy of suffering irreparable injury if Illinois was left free to prosecute in the normal manner.
By contrast, in the instant cases, plaintiffs are the owners of "massage parlors," and masseuses employed in such establishments in Hampton and Newport News, where, it is alleged, massage is administered to persons of the opposite sex. Enforcement of the ordinance was threatened in Hampton and had begun in Newport News. The threat to plaintiffs' continued livelihood and freedom from prosecution was real. Their request for declaratory and injunctive relief against imminent infringement of their alleged federal rights constituted "more than speculation about the future." Boyle v. Landry,
III.
In No. 73-1131, several contentions are advanced why the injunction pendente lite granted by Judge Merhige should be vacated. Only one, we think, requires extended discussion. Before proceeding to it, we state our conclusion that Judge Merhige did not abuse his discretion in granting temporary injunctive relief. West Virginia Highlands Conserv. v. Island Creek Coal Co.,
The contention which requires some discussion is that the dismissal by the Supreme Court of the United States for want of a substantial federal question in the initial litigation instituted by Kisley is res judicata of the validity of the ordinances.4 The meaning of a dismissal for want of a substantial federal question has been debated, with conflicting conclusions, within the circuits. Compare Dillenburg v. Kramer,
For these reasons, we affirm in No. 73-1131, and direct that the district court proceed with a trial on the merits as soon as practicable. In Nos. 72-2441 and 72-2442, we reverse the orders of dismissal and direct that the district court conduct further proceedings in accordance with the views expressed herein.6
No. 73-1131 affirmed.
Nos. 72-2441 and 72-2442 reversed and remanded.
ADDENDUM
In accordance with the court's usual practice, the foregoing opinion, before it was filed, was circulated to all members of the court for the concurrences of the panel members and the comments or suggestions of the non panel members.
Pursuant to Rule 35, F.R.A.P., a member of the court moved for rehearing in banc and requested a poll on his motion. The motion failed to gain the support of a majority of the judges entitled to vote thereon.
Notes
Kisley initially joined as a plaintiff with others in No. 73-1131, but Judge Merhige denied relief as to him on the ground of res judicata or collateral estoppel, and Kisley did not appeal. Since the state litigation was not a class action and the plaintiffs in No. 73-1131 were neither parties to the suit nor in privity with Kisley, Judge Merhige held that the other plaintiffs were not barred by these defenses from proceeding
Prior to instituting suit in the district court, Bo-Jac, Ltd., a plaintiff in No. 72-2441 and No. 73-1131, had filed a petition in the Hampton Circuit Court seeking a temporary injunction against enforcement of the Hampton ordinance. This suit was pending when the complaint was filed in the district court. The district court stayed its proceedings pending final disposition of the litigation in the Hampton Circuit Court. When Bo-Jac, Ltd., was denied a preliminary injunction in the state court, Bo-Jac dismissed the proceedings before determination on the merits. It was thereafter that the district court declined to exercise federal jurisdiction
These are not cases where the general abstention doctrine would justify dismissal. The alleged constitutional infirmities in the ordinances and their alleged transgression of the federal constitution and statutes do not depend upon any state construction of state legislative enactment. No ambiguous state law issue remains to be resolved. Wohl v. Keene,
Defendants in No. 73-1131 also argue that the decision of the Virginia Supreme Court in Kisley v. City of Falls Church,
Dillenburg and Doc were cases which were concerned with summary affirmance rather than summary dismissal by the Supreme Court. If Dillenburg is correct in treating summary affirmance without opinion as having very little precedential significance, manifestly, summary dismissal has less. Doe treats summary dismissal and summary affirmance of equal binding precedential value
With regard to these cases, we express no view on whether injunctive relief, if it is otherwise indicated, should be denied in No. 72-2441 because only the members of the City Council of the City of Hampton, Virginia have been joined as defendants. This is a matter for determination by the district court if plaintiffs press their claim for temporary or permanent injunctive relief. It has been represented to us in argument that the City Council of Hampton, Virginia performs some limited executive function, as well as a legislative function, but even if this is not established, we note that the complaint in this case seeks declaratory as well as injunctive relief. It may be that the request for declaratory relief may be granted, even though it is determined that injunctive relief should be denied for failure to join necessary defendants. In any event, there would appear to be no reason why plaintiffs, upon proper application, should not be granted leave to amend to join other defendants who perform executive functions in Hampton, Virginia
