Defendant City of Minneapolis (City) appeals an order by the District Court declaring the Minneapolis Code of Ordinances § 540.410, as amended November 7, 1986, unconstitutional on its face and as applied to plaintiffs. Alexander v. City of Minneapolis,
I.
For more than a decade, the City of Minneapolis has attempted to regulate adults-only businesses operating within the city limits. As amended November 7,1986, Minneapolis Code of Ordinances § 540.410 is the third version of the zoning ordinance enacted by the City to “insure that the[] adverse effects [of certain uses] will not contribute to the blighting or downgrading of the surrounding neighborhood.” § 540.410(a). The ordinance requires adults-only bookstores,
At the time this action for declaratory and injunctive relief was filed against the City, plaintiff Ferris Alexander owned five adult bookstores and two theaters. Plaintiff U.S. Video operates a video tape rental facility in Minneapolis. The plaintiffs argued that the amended ordinance violated the First and Fourteenth Amendments. Following a four-day trial, the District Court found the “substantial and significant” language of the ordinance defining adults-only bookstores was unconstitutionally vague.
On appeal, the City argues that neither plaintiff has standing to challenge section 540.410 for vagueness, that the ordinance is not unconstitutionally vague, and that the District Court erred as a matter of law because it applied the wrong legal standard when it determined that the ordinance did not allow for reasonable alternatives for communication of protected speech. On May 23, 1990, a week after the oral argu
II.
In its decision that section 540.410 is void for vagueness, the District Court did not specifically address the issue of whether either plaintiff had standing to challenge the ordinance for this alleged constitutional defect. Instead, the court proceeded directly to the merits of plaintiffs’ due process attack and “agree[d] with plaintiffs in that the ‘substantial and significant’ language in the ordinance is unconstitutionally vague.”
Plaintiffs argue that section 540.-410 is unconstitutionally vague because its language does not enable them to determine whether their businesses are covered by the ordinance or, if so, what they are required to do to comply with it. We note that this challenge is limited only to the portion of the ordinance which defines adult bookstores. The “substantial and significant” language which the District Court found to be unconstitutionally vague is not contained in the sections of the ordinance defining adult theaters or other establishments that the City attempts to regulate. The record offers not the slightest hint of a vagueness attack on the “regularly or routinely” language of the ordinance defining adults-only motion picture theaters. Thus, with respect to plaintiff Alexander, it is unnecessary for us to determine whether he has standing to challenge for vagueness a section of this ordinance which applies only to the bookstores that he no longer owns. This issue is moot. It is also unnecessary for us to determine whether Alexander has standing to challenge the ordinance for vagueness as it applies to his theaters because he has not made any such challenge in either the court below or this Court.
A different analysis is required to determine whether plaintiff U.S. Video, which arguably might be a “bookstore” within the meaning of the ordinance, has standing to attack section 540.410(b)(1) for vagueness or any other alleged constitutional defects. To meet the standing requirement, a plaintiff must show that, as a result of the putatively illegal conduct of the defendant, he has suffered an “ ‘actual or threatened injury’ ” redressable by the court. Valley Forge Christian College v. Americans United for Separation of Church & State, Inc.,
At trial, Scott Sarkis, the general manager for U.S. Video, testified that U.S. Video operated a video-tape rental store in Minneapolis located outside the Central Business District. He explained that the video-tapes classified as “adults only” — approximately 30 percent of the store’s inventory — are segregated from the general tapes on display for rental. A customer must be at least 18 years of age to enter
At first glance, a literal reading of section 540.410(b)(1) suggests that the videotape rental store operated by U.S. Video might fall within the definition of an adults-only bookstore.
Thus, U.S. Video has not even been subjected to preliminary enforcement; that is, notification from the City that the facility would have to comply with section 540.410. The record reveals absolutely no attempt, threat, or plan by the City to enforce the adult ordinance against U.S. Video. Furthermore, such action is not contemplated, as indicated by the opinion from the City Attorney’s Office to which Mr. Nordrum testified. Clearly, U.S. Video has not suffered “any actual or threatened injury” as a result of the City’s enactment of section 540.410. While the seeds of controversy may indeed be planted in the plain language of the ordinance, they have yet to sprout from the dirt let alone ripen into an issue appropriate for this court to consider. We therefore hold that U.S. Video lacks standing to challenge the constitutionality of section 540.410.
In light of our decision on the threshold issue of standing, we need not reach the merits of plaintiffs’ claim that section 540.-410 is void for vagueness. In turn, the decision of the District Court declaring the ordinance unconstitutionally vague is vacated.
III.
The final issue before us is whether section 540.410 violates plaintiff Alexander’s First Amendment rights. Noting that the ordinance does not ban adults-only businesses altogether, the District Court rejected plaintiff’s arguments that section 540.410 was content-based. Instead, the court subjected the ordinance “to the analysis set out by the Supreme Court in Young v. American Mini Theatres,
In enacting section 540.410, the City recognized that “serious objectionable operational characteristics [of certain businesses concentrated within an area have] a deleterious effect upon the use and enjoyment of adjacent areas.” § 540.410(a). The stated purpose of the ordinance is “to insure that these adverse effects will not contribute to the blighting or downgrading of the surrounding neighborhood.” § 540.410(a). Conceding that this stated purpose was permissible, Alexander argued that the real
Turning to the second part of the Renton test requiring reasonable alternative avenues of communication, the District Court examined the effect of the ordinance on adults-only businesses. Because both of Alexander’s theaters are located outside the B4S and B4C segments of the Central Business District, section 540.410 requires Alexander to relocate these facilities within the permissible subdistricts. Alexander claimed that the ordinance would effectively put his theaters out of business because no reasonable opportunity existed for their relocation. Noting that the possibility that Alexander’s theaters might be forced to close did not automatically invalidate the ordinance, the District Court determined that the validity of section 540.410 depended “on whether reasonable relocation possibilities exist for the protected businesses forced to shut down.”
The court declined to decide as a matter of law whether the percentage of land theoretically open to adult businesses was sufficient to provide reasonable access to protected speech. Instead, it focused on the actual locations available for Alexander to relocate his theaters. Based on lengthy testimony concerning Alexander’s unsuccessful attempts to relocate his businesses, the court concluded that “the ordinance works to suppress and greatly restrict the access to protected speech and is unconstitutional.”
“The inquiry for First Amendment purposes is not concerned with economic impact.” American Mini Theatres,
Our examination of the record satisfies us that numerous sites were potentially available for Alexander to relocate his theaters. Under the ordinance, theaters of this sort have access to at least 6.6% of the total acreage of commercial land;
IV.
For the reasons set forth in this opinion, we vacate the decision of the District Court that section 540.410 is unconstitutionally vague. The court’s alternative holding that the ordinance works as a prior restraint in violation of the First Amendment is reversed.
Notes
. The ordinance defines an adults-only bookstore as:
[a]n establishment having as a substantial or significant portion of its stock in trade, books, magazines, films for sale or viewing on premises by use of motion picture devices or other coin-operated means, and other periodicals which are distinguished or characterized by their principal emphasis on matters depicting, describing or relating to nudity, sexual conduct, sexual excitement or sadomasochistic abuse ... or an establishment with a segment or section devoted to the sale or display of such material, for sale to patrons therein. § 540.410(b)(1).
. The ordinance defines an adults-only motion picture theater as "[a]n enclosed building used regularly and routinely for presenting programs, material distinguished or characterized by an emphasis on matter depicting, describing or relating to nudity, sexual conduct, sexual excitement or sadomasochistic abuse ... for observation by patrons therein." § 540.410(b)(2).
. “An establishment having as a substantial or significant portion of its stock in ... films for sale ... which are distinguished or characterized by their [sexually-explicit nature] ... or an establishment with a segment or section devoted to the sale or display of such material, for sale to patrons therein." § 540.410(b)(1).
. We arrive at this figure by simple calculations. According to Plaintiffs Exhibit 14, land zoned B4, B4C, and B4S constitutes at least 13.5% of the city’s commercial land; i.e., 375 acres of the 2,784 acres of land in commercial use. Allowing a 90 acre loss for the spacing restrictions caused by triggering uses, 285 acres or 10.2% of the city's commercial land remain for adults-only businesses to legally locate their facilities. Theaters are further restricted from the 3.6% of the land which constitutes the B4 Central Business District. Therefore, 6.6% of the total acreage of commercial land is available for adults-only theaters. See Joint Appendix vol. I, at p. 3.
. Our examination of the record, specifically Plaintiffs Exhibit 23, shows at least 120 block faces are potentially available for owners of adult theaters to locate their facilities. This ample opportunity for relocation distinguishes the case here from Alexander’s earlier and successful challenge of the Minneapolis Code of Ordinances section 540.410 enacted in 1977. Because the earlier version of the zoning ordinance allowed "at most [only] twelve possible legal sites for relocation,” Alexander v. City of Minneapolis,
. It is unnecessary for us to consider Alexander's claim that he is denied equal protection under section 540.410. Although raised at the District Court, this issue was not addressed. We decline to do so now except to quote a footnote from Posadas De Puerto Rico Assoc. v. Tourism Co. of Puerto Rico,
