*599 Opinion
Petitioners, who sought a writ of prohibition to prohibit their prosecution for violation of a municipal ordinance which outlawed soliciting without a license, have appealed from the judgment (order signed and filed August 2, 1976) denying their petition. 1 (See fn. 2.) Their standing to challenge the constitutionality of the local ordinance is not challenged. 2 Since the attack on the ordinance followed the overruling of the petitioners’ demurrers to complaints filed against them, there is no factual setting concerning the applicаtion of the ordinance. Review is necessarily limited solely to the constitutionality of the provisions of the ordinance as they were adopted and in effect, not as they might actually be applied.
Petitioners contend that enforcement of the ordinance constitutes a denial of due process of law in that administrative discretion to grant or deny a permit is couched in unconstitutionally vague terms. They also attack the ordinance because its exemptions deny them equal protection of the laws, and because it unconstitutionally requires, as a condition of the investigation for a permit, that the applicant waived his Fourth Amendment rights. (See
Parrish
v.
Civil Service Commission
(1967)
The ordinance challenged here required that anyone soliciting anything of valuе on the representation that it is for a charitable purpose must first obtain a permit: “§ 4320. Permit Required. No person by house to house canvass, or in residences, apartment houses or hotels, or business buildings, or in any public building or place, or on the public streets in the City, either personally or by telephone, or in any other manner, shall solicit memberships, advertising, money, property, or anything of value or financial assistance of any kind, or sell any article, or service, or tickets of admission to any performance, athletiс event, card party, benefit, lecture, picnic, dance, ball, or other place of amusement or entertainment whatsoever, on representation, that such solicitation is for a charitable, patriotic or philanthropic purpose, or for the benefit of any person, unless such person shall first have obtained a permit therefor from the San Jose Public Solicitation Commission.” (San Jose Mun. Code, § 4320.) Sections 4321 to 4327 listed the information required in the application for such a permit, and section 4328 made the application public record. Section 4329 allowed waiver of the requirements in certain cases: “§ 4329. Waiver of Requirements. The San Jose Public Solicitation Commission may, in its discretion, waive any or all of the requirements of Sections 4321 to 4327 hereof, where the applicant is known to be a bona fide charitable organization of recognized integrity and long standing reputation as such.” Finally, section 4330 provided for investigation of the applicant: “§ 4330. Investigation. Issuance of Permit. Upon receipt of the application as provided for in Sections 4321 to 4327, the San Jose Public Solicitation Commission shall make such investigation as may be necessary in regard thereto, and if satisfied that such purpose or object of such solicitation is worthy and not incompatible with public interest, and that the applicant and other persons to be engaged in such solicitation are of good character, and that the total costs and expenses of such solicitation are not disproportionate to the sum proposed to be collected thereby, and that a permit should be issued therefor, the Commission shall issue such permit for such period not to exceed one year as in the opinion of the Commission is proper; provided, that said permit may include the applicant, together with its agents and representatives named in said application. The San Jose Public Solicitation *601 Commission shall issue or refuse in writing to issue said permit within ten days following the meeting of said Commission at which such application is considered.”
I
Preliminarily we examine'the petitioners’ contention that the ordinance encroaches on First Amendment rights and must be evaluated from the viewpoint of preventing any impingement on the rights of freedom of association, speech and religion. As pointed out in
Ashton
v.
Kentucky
(1966)
Insofar as those soliciting for charitable, patriotic or philanthropic purposes or for personal benefit.are entitled to the protection of the First Amendment, the following rules apply, “In determining whether a statute regulating speech violates the First Amendment, we must weigh the state’s interest in maintaining peace and order in the streets and other public places against the individual’s right to freedom of speech and assembly. When this balance is struck, statutes requiring licenses for parades and demonstrations will not offend the Constitution if they regulate only the time, place, manner and duration of the marches and if they are fairly administered by officials within the range of narrowly limited discretion. On the other hand, any procedure which allows licensing officials wide or unbounded discretion in granting or denying permits is constitutionally infirm because it permits them to base their determination on the content of the ideas sought to be expressed.”
(Dillon
v.
Municipal Court
(1971)
*602
It is clear that the cloak of the First Amendment envelops free speech, free assembly, and freedom to petition for redress of grievances.
(Edwards
v.
South Carolina, supra,
Petitioners seek to bring themselves within the freedom of religion protection of
Cantwell
on the theory that although the ordinance is silent as to solicitation for religious purposes, the general reference to a charitable purpose embraces any religious purpose. (See
Lundberg
v.
County of Alameda
(1956)
The right to solicit funds or property was not involved in
Thomas
v.
Collins, supra,
In
Schneider
v.
State, supra,
the court had lumped charitable solicitation with solicitations in the name of religion as follows: “Conceding that fraudulent appeals may be made in the name of charity and religion, we hold a municipality cannot, for this reason, require all who wish to disseminate ideas to present them first to police authorities for their consideration and approval, with a discretion in the police to say some ideas may, while others may not, be carried to the homes of citizens; some persons may, while others may not, disseminate information from house to house. Frauds may be denounced as offenses and punished by law. Trespasses may similarly be forbidden. If it is said that these means are less efficient and convenient than bestowal of power on police authorities to decide what information may be disseminated from house to house, and who may impart the information, the answer is that considerations of this sort do not empower a municipality to abridge freedom of speech and press.” (
In this state the following rule applies: “That reasonable regulation of charitable organizations is within a government’s police power has long been established; such regulation does not intrude upon the right of free speech.
(Gospel Army
v.
City of Los Angeles,
In
Gospel Army
v.
City of Los Angeles
(1945)
*605
The distinction is well pointed out by Justice Henshaw in
Matter of Application of Dart
(1916)
In re Porterfield, supra,
“The need for such legislation is primarily to be decided by those who enact it. A very wide discretion as to what is needful or proper for the purpose is necessarily committed to the legislative body. [Citations.] But because the rights of citizens both to free speech and to engage in a business or follow a profession are constitutionally protected [citations], it is always a judicial question whether any particular regulation of such rights is a valid exercise of legislative powers.” (28 Cal.2d at pp. 101-102.)
The highest court in the land, in an opinion subscribed by five justices, recently collated its views as follows: “We are not without guideposts in considering appellants’ First Amendment challengе to Ordinance No. 598A. ‘Adjustment of the inevitable conflict between free speech and other interests is a problem as persistent as it is perplexing.’
Niemotko
v.
Maryland,
*607
1213, 1219];
Martin
v.
Struthers
(1943)
In
Cantwell
v.
Connecticut,
as in this case, the legislation under attack covered solicitation for charitable or philanthropic causes but also included religious causes. It required approval by a public body. The case was decided on the principle that the permit system constituted a censorship of religious frеedom. Nevertheless, the case is recognized as contributing to the rule enunciated in
Staub
v.
City of Baxley, supra,
as follows: “It is settled by a long line of recent decisions of this Court that an ordinance which, like this one, makes the peaceful enjoyment of freedoms which the Constitution guarantees contingent upon the uncontrolled will of an official — as by requiring a permit or license which may be granted or withheld in the discretion of such official — is an unconstitutional censorship or prior restraint upon the enjoyment of those freedoms.” (
Our inquiry is therefore directed to the terms of the ordinance itself.
II
The fountainhead for the test of vagueness is
Connally
v.
General Const. Co.
(1926)
In
Hynes
v.
Mayor of Oradell, supra,
the court (seven judges concurring) struck down the ordinance, which only required those covered by it to “notify the Police Department, in writing for identification only,” because the coverage of the ordinance was unclear and because it did not sufficiently specify what those within its reach must do in order to comply (425 U.S. at pp. 620-622 [48 L.Ed.2d at pр. 252-254]). With respect to the former, the opinion states: “[I]t does not explain, for example, whether a
‘recognized
charitable cause’ means one recognized by the Internal Revenue Service as tax exempt, one recognized by some community agency, or one approved by some municipal official.”
(Id.,
p. 621 [48 L.Ed.2d p. 253].) So here the requirement in section 4330 that the commission be satisfied “that such purpose or object of the solicitation is
worthy and not incompatible with the public
interest” is equally vague. (Italics added.) The ordinance is similar to the test “shall сonsider the character of the applicant, the nature of the business of the organization for which members are desired to be solicited, and its effects upon the general welfare of citizens of the City . . found and condemned in
Staub
v.
City of Baxley, supra,
The same considerations apply to the requirement “that the applicant and other persons engaged in such solicitation are of good character.” In Perrine v. Municipal Court, supra, the court stated, “Statutes which authorize public officials to license conduct protected by the First Amendment must set forth definite, objective guidelines for the issuance of such licenses. [Citations.] Accordingly statutes which have empowered public officials to exercise their discretionary authority with respect to First Amendment activities in light of the applicant’s ‘good character’ [citations], the anticipated effect of his conduct upon the ‘public welfare or morals’ [citations] . . . have been hеld to be unconstitutionally vague *609 and overbroad. The danger of censorship and arbitrary suppression inherent in the employment of such imprecise standards is so great that the voiding of these regulations is required evgn in the absence of proof of actual discrimination [citations].” (5 Cal.3d at pp. 661-662.)
In re Porterfield, supra,
is a case in which the court found that the arbitrary power in the city council to determine whether the applicant is of “good moral character” (cf. here “of good character”) rendered the ordinancе unconditionally indefinite and vague (28 Cal.2d at pp. 110-112). It rejected the concept, also advanced here by the city, that the court should presume that the licensing authority would perform its duty in a fair and impartial manner. (
We also note that although the government may have an interest in establishing the financial integrity of the solicitor or the cause for which he is soliciting charitable donations, there is no standard in this ordinánce by which it can be determined whether “the total costs and expenses of such solicitation are not disрroportionate to the sum proposed to be collected thereby.” In
Matter of Application of Dart, supra,
the opinion of Justice Henshaw notes that the municipality could not require the charity to expend all its funds within the city as á condition of securing a permit to solicit. He observed, “And it will be found better in the long run that the free exercise of religion be preserved in its integrity, better for the nation, better for charity itself which owes so much to religion, even if the efficiency of religious charities be not up to the standard of perfection set by the Municipal Charities Commission. If, under that standard, seventy-five cents of eveiy dollar would go to the objects of charity, while under the less efficient methods in vogue but fifty cents of each dollar actually reaches the beneficiaries, it is not to be forgotten that there will be many millions fewer of these dollars to be distributed in charity if the activities of the religious are hampered, thwarted, and stayed.” (
Finally, insofar as the ordinance in section 4329 purports to confer discretion in the сommission to waive some of the requirements of the ordinance “where the applicant is known to be
a bona fide charitable
*610
organization of recognized
integrity and long standing reputation as such,” (italics added) the ordinance again runs into the uncertainty condemned in
Hynes
v.
Mayor of Oradell, supra
(
We conclude that on its face the ordinance is too vague to constitute a constitutionally permissive control of charitable solicitation.
The judgment of the superior court is reversed and the case is remanded with directions to issue a peremptory writ of prohibition commanding the resрondent municipal court to refrain from further proceedings in the actions specified in the petition, pending against petitioners, other than to dismiss the same.
Elkington, J., and Lazarus, J., * concurred.
Notes
A person faced with an unconstitutional licensing law may ignore it and engage with impunity in the exercise of the right of free expression for which the law purports to require a license, and he is not precluded from attacking its constitutionality because he has not applied for a permit.
(Shuttlesworth
v.
Birmingham
(1969)
We take judicial notice, as requested by petitioners, that on October 12, 1976, the city council repealed the sections of the municipal code under which petitioners are being prosecuted and enacted new provisions. Since we must reverse the judgment with directions to issue a peremptory writ of prohibition, we do not consider whether the repeal of the existing ordinance and enactment of a new ordinance on the same general subject matter either required the dismissal of the pending proceedings or permitted their continuance. (See Gov. Code, § 9608. Cf.
Spears
v.
County of Modoc
(1894)
In
Rescue Army
v.
Municipal Court
(1946)
Retired judge of the superior court sitting under assignment by the Chairperson of the Judicial Council.
