Opinion
We deal in these two cases with ordinances of the Cities of Paramount and Redondo Beach which restrict display of certain explicit material when such material “has as its primary purpose, design or effect sexual arousal, gratification or affront.”
The two ordinances are virtually identical, except for what may be a typographical error in the Redondo Beach ordinance. 1 For convenience sake, citations in the body of this opinion will be to the Paramount ordinance. (Ord. No. 478, Paramount Mun. Code, ch. 11 A.) It first provides (§ 11A-1) that the term “harmful matter to minors” 2 has no applicability to the ordinance. It then goes on to describe the type of materials and activities which it does cover as follows: “No person shall for commercial purposes knowingly display, cause to be displayed or permit to be displayed in any business open to minors, unless accompanied by a parent or guardian, any book, magazine, or other publication or matter which depicts any photograph or pictorial representation of any of the anatomical parts of a person’s genitals or anus, or any act of sexual intercourse, oral copulation, sodomy, masturbation or bestiality, *200 whether actual or simulated, when to the average adult person such photograph or pictorial representation has as its primary purpose, design or effect sexual arousal, gratification or affront; unless such book, magazine, or other publication or matter is sealed in a plastic wrapper, is stapled closed, or is by any other means sealed in such a manner as to reasonably restrict and deter its being opened prior to sale, whereby such photograph or pictorial representation may become exposed to the view of any minor.” (§ 11 A-2.)
Section 11A-3 of the ordinance exempts from the sealing requirement of section 11 A-2 such matter which is “displayed from an area which places such book, magazine, or other publication or matter reasonably beyond the reach of any minor . . . . ” Section 11A-3 imposes the further requirement, however, that if the matter appears on the cover of the publication it must be covered from view regardless of whether or not the publication is sealed or placed beyond the reasonable reach of minors.
Section 11A-4 of the ordinance provides that any business which for commercial purposes displays materials described by section 11 A-2 and does not seal and/or cover them as required by sections 11A-2 and 11A-3, shall post a notice warning that the business displays such defined materials and that admission to minors is prohibited by law, unless the minor is accompanied by a parent or guardian. The ordinance provides (§ 11A-7) that a parent or guardian is not prohibited from having his child or ward accompany him to a business which displays those materials in a manner other than that permitted by sections 11A-2 and 11A-3, and that a business person is not prohibited from admitting into such a business a minor accompanied by a parent or guardian (§ 11A-9).
Section 11A-2 applies only to those who act “knowingly.” While the ordinance does not expressly define the term “knowingly,” it does contain a section (11A-6) which discusses evidentiary aspects of scienter. 3
*201 Violation of the ordinance constitutes an infraction; except that if a person has twice been convicted of violating the ordinance within the previous two years, the offense becomes a misdemeanor punishable by a $500 fine or a 30-day jail sentence. (§ 11A-12.)
Petitioners sought injunctive relief on the grounds that the ordinances intruded upon an area preempted by state regulation; that they were constitutionally defective because they were vague, overbroad and denied petitioners equal protection of the law; and that their existence had a chilling effect on the exercise of constitutionally guaranteed rights of free speech. We are compelled to hold that to the extent the ordinances deal with subject matter not preempted by state legislation, the regulations which they impose are constitutionally overbroad.
We start our inquiry with the following premises in mind. Though we deal here with restrictions not limited to obscenity, we note that obscenity is not within the class of speech protected by the First Amendment.
(Ginsberg
v.
New York
(1968)
The State of California has enacted Penal Code section 313 et seq. which prohibit display or dissemination to minors of matter which appeals to prurient interest, goes substantially beyond customary candor, and taken as a whole is utterly without redeeming social importance
for minors.
Items falling within this description are defined as “harmful matter.” This court has held that section 313.1 of the Penal Code preempts the field of offering and selling harmful matter to mi
*202
nors.
(Carl
v.
City of Los Angeles
(1976)
Dissemination of sexually motivating matter which is not classifiable as obscene also may be regulated, provided that the regulation addresses only the time, place and manner of speech and is necessary to further a significant governmental interest.
(Young
v.
American Mini Theatres
(1976)
Gluck, supra,
held that the State of California has not preempted the field of regulating particular material that is not obscene as to minors or adults. The extent to which local governments may or may not regulate certain explicit nonobscene speech is illustrated by
Young, supra,
In
Young, supra,
the Supreme Court, by the narrowest of margins,
5
upheld a city zoning ordinance which restricted the geographical concentration of so-called “adult” movie houses. Four members of the court, speaking through Mr. Justice Stevens, noted that the ordinance was not challenged as imposing a limit on the total number of adult theaters which might operate in the city, that no claim was made that distributors or exhibitors of adult films were denied access to the market or that the viewing public was unable to satisfy its appetite for adult films. They found that under the ordinance the market for the commodity remained essentially unrestrained (
In a concurring opinion Mr. Justice Powell stated: “The primary concern of the free speech guarantee is that there be full opportunity for expression in all of its varied forms to convey a desired message. Vital to this concern is the corollary that there be full opportunity for everyone to receive the message. [Citations omitted.]” (
In
Gluck, supra,
It is against this background that we turn our attention to the ordinances of the real parties Cities of Paramount and Redondo Beach. As we noted earlier, real parties have provided that the term “harmful matter to minors” shall have no application to their ordinances. We presume that this is an effort to avoid the pitfalls of preemption
(Carl
v.
City of Los Angeles, supra,
Furthermore, we do not deal here with an ordinance that regulates use of public streets and sidewalks, nor with a zoning ordinance which attempts either to geographically concentrate or disperse establishments which sell restricted materials. The ordinances do not constitute a regulation on the “place” of speech. They are not restricted in application to *204 “adult bookstores” which specialize in such matters. 7 They apply with equal force to any and all retail establishments which display for sale so much as a single publication containing bare-human anatomy in graphic photographs or pictures. Nor are they merely a restriction on the “time” of speech. They apply whenever the materials are displayed. Clearly, they are aimed at the “manner” of speech.
Real parties in interest assure us that the ordinances are a response to the prevalence of such materials and their ready availability in supermarkets, drug stores, and convenience stores as well as in bookstores of all types. The very prevalence of such materials mandates that the delicate task of protecting those who need or want protection must be undertaken with care so that access to such materials is not denied to those who desire it and, more importantly, so that access to nonoffensively oriented materials is not denied in the process. It is in these areas that the subject ordinances are defective.
We deal first with the sealing requirement. The ordinances presume that potential purchasers “browse” and real parties confirm that absent the sealing requirement minors as well as adults would be free to do so through such matter. Under the requirement adults, minors who are accompanied by adults and minors alone, are equally precluded from browsing prior to purchase. For this reason the sealing requirement is overbroad.
The requirement that, if not sealed, the materials be placed “beyond the reach of any minor” 8 is equally overbroad. Since section 11 A-3 provides no guidelines to merchants on how to accomplish this mode of inaccessibility, it appears inescapable that by placing the publications outside the reach of minors they will also be placed outside the reach of many adults and certainly of minors accompanied by adults.
The requirement (§ 11 A-3) that when the graphic picture appears on the cover of the publication, it must be covered regardless of whether the publication is sealed or out of reach of children is also overbroad. As the court pointed out in
Gluck, supra,
The option provided by the ordinances for merchants to exclude unaccompanied minors from their premises also fails the test of constitutionality. Minors, whether accompanied by parents or not, cannot be denied access to retail establishments which sell a wide variety of literature, or the necessities of life, simply because such establishments also sell some materials sought to be restricted.
We note that the California Supreme Court has recently held
(Marina Point, Ltd.
v.
Wolfson
(1982)
In sum, the ordinances are overbroad because to the extent that they require sealing or removal from reach, they deny access to adults as well as to children and to the extent that they require exclusion of minors from retail premises they deny minors access to items which they have an unfettered constitutional right to enjoy.
10
Ironically, the ordinances are also underinclusive and not rationally tailored to accomplish
*206
their asserted purpose
(Young
v.
American Mini Theatres, supra,
It remains for us to determine whether the petitioners herein have demonstrated the type of irreparable injury which would necessitate the issuance of a preliminary injunction. Petitioner Earl Laurence Drown asserts in the pending complaint for injunctive relief that he is the managing partner of a news agency which sells newspapers, magazines and other publications to drug stores and markets in Los Angeles County, including the Cities of Paramount and Redondo Beach. The remaining petitioners assert that they are trade associations of wholesale and retail book and periodical dealers some of whose members do business in Los Angeles County, although it is not alleged that they do business in Paramount or Redondo Beach. Where, as here, a statute is overbroad on its face and invades areas of free expression protected by the First Amendment, its mere existence on the books may exert a chilling effect on protected speech.
(Dombrowski
v.
Pfister
(1965)
In denying petitioners’ request for a preliminary injunction, respondent superior court ruled that petitioners had not demonstrated irreparable harm, citing
EWAP, Inc.
v.
City of Los Angeles
(1979)
*207 Let a peremptory writ of mandate issue directing respondent court to vacate its orders of January 7, 1981, denying petitioners’ requests for preliminary injunctions in those matters entitled American Booksellers Association v. City of Paramount, Los Angeles Superior Court case No. C-345815, and American Booksellers Association v. Redondo Beach, Los Angeles Superior Court case No. C-345818, and to enter new and different orders granting preliminary injunctions against enforcement of Paramount Ordinance No. 478 and Redondo Beach Ordinance No. 2301 c.s.
Ashby, J., and Hastings, J., concurred.
Notes
Which we shall discuss at footnote 10, infra.
See Penal Code section 313.
Section 11A-6 provides: “It shall be a defense in any prosecution for any violation of this ordinance that the book, magazine, or other publication or matter by virtue of its apparent character, outward appearance or contemporary Los Angeles County-wide reputation would not cause the average adult person to reasonably know or suspect that it depicted any photograph or pictorial representation as defined by this ordinance in Section 1. It may also be evidence of a violation of this ordinance in any such prosecution, that the book, magazine, or other publication or matter by virtue of its apparent character, outward appearance, or contemporary county-wide reputation would cause the average adult person to reasonably know or suspect that it depicted any photograph or pictorial representation as defined by this ordinance in Section 11 A-2.”
Regulation of the dissemination of adult obscenity has also been preempted by the state.
(Whitney
v.
Municipal Court
(1962)
The opinion of the court was delivered by Mr. Justice Stevens, writing for himself and three other justices. A majority was formed by the concurring opinion of Mr. Justice Powell.
And ipso facto not obscene as to adults.
The ordinance in
Young
v.
American Mini Theatres
(1976)
Paramount Ordinance No. 478, section 11A-3. Italics added.
In
Music Plus Four, Inc.
v.
Barnet
(1980)
As we noted at the beginning of this opinion, the Redondo Beach ordinance differs slightly from the Paramount ordinance. Instead of defining the explicit material as consisting of any representation of the anatomical parts of the genitals or anus, as the Paramount ordinance does, the Redondo Beach ordinance defines it as any pictorial or photographic representation of “any of the anatomical parts
or
the genitals or anus .... ” (Redondo Beach Ord. No. 2301 c.s. § 4-27.02. Italics added.) Whether use of the italicized “or” was intentional or inadvertent, it renders the Redondo Beach ordinance even more overbroad than the Paramount ordinance. (See
Erznoznik
v.
City of Jacksonville
(1975)
