Case Information
*1 Before EDMONDSON and MARCUS, Circuit Judges, and STROM [*] , District Judge.
PER CURIAM:
Plаintiffs challenge a local Pinellas County ordinance regulating the solicitation of charitable contributions. The challenge is based on the Commerce Clause, the First Amendment, and the Fourteenth Amendment. The district court granted summary judgment for Defendant County concluding that the Ordinance was facially constitutional. We affirm in part; but because the district court failed to address Plaintiffs' as-applied challenge, wе remand for consideration of that claim.
BACKGROUND
Pinellas County, Florida (Defendant County) passed Ordinance No. 93-106 (the "Ordinance"), pursuant to Fla. Stat. § 496.421, which grants authority to counties to enact ordinances regulating charitable solicitation. The ordinance, codified in Pinellas County Code §§ 42-266 to -344, regulates persons who solicit charitable contributions within the County.
The Ordinance requires fund-raising consultants and paid solicitors to register with the County *2 before performing services for their clients, who are charities soliciting within the County. [2] The Ordinance also prohibits a charity from soliciting in the County if the charity contracts with a professional solicitor before that person has been issued the required permit. And it prohibits professional fund-raising consultants from soliciting in conjunction with a client-charity until that charity has registered with the County.
Plaintiffs are American Charities for Reasonable Fundraising Regulation, Inc. ("American Charities"), the Creative Advantage, Inc. ("TCA"), and Norman W. Leahy ("Leahy"). [4] Plaintiffs sought relief in district court to enjoin the enforcement of the Ordinance and to grant a declaratory judgment finding the Ordinance unconstitutional as violative of the First Amendment, the Fourteenth Amendment Due Process Clause, and the negative Commerce Clause. The district court denied relief, concluding that the Ordinance does not fundraising activity or solicit contributions, or employ, procure, or engage any compensated person to solicit contributions and who does not at any time have custody or control of contributions"), with id. (defining "professional solicitor" as any person "who for compensation, performs for a charitable organization or sponsor any service in connection with which contributions are or will be solicited by the compensated persons ... in connection with the solicitation of contributions for or on behalf of a charitable organization"). See Pinellas County Code § 42-291(a) ("[n]o charitable organization, sponsor, commercial
co-venturer, professional fundraising consultant, federated fundraising organization, professional solicitor, or other pеrson ... shall solicit contributions in the county by any means ... without first registering and having been issued a charitable solicitations permit") Pinellas County Code § 42-321 provides:
(b) It shall be a violation of this article for any professional solicitor, professional fundraising consultant, commercial co-venturer, federate fundraising agency or sponsor to solicit on behalf of or in connection with any affiliated or client charity before that charity or sponsor has registered and been issued a charitable solicitations permit as required in this article. (c) It shall be a violation of this article for any charity to contract with any professional solicitor, professional fundraising consultant, commercial co-venturer, federated fundraising agency, or sponsor for the purpose of raising or soliciting funds for the charity or spоnsor before the professional solicitor, professional fundraising consultant, commercial co-venturer, federated fundraising agency, or sponsor has been issued a charitable solicitations permit by the department as required by this article. American Charities for Reasonable Fundraising Regulation is a membership association which brings
this action on behalf of its members, who include professional fund-raising consultants. The Creative Advantage, Inc., is a full service direct mail fund-raising agency which consults with charities on fund-raising but does not directly solicit. Leahy is a copywriter, based in Virginia, who produces copy for charities.
facially violate the Constitution, and granted summary judgment for Defendant. Plaintiffs appeal.
DISCUSSION
We review the district court's grant of summary judgment de novo.
See Sammy's of Mobile, Ltd. v.
City of Mobile,
The district court properly determined that Plaintiffs' facial challenges to the Ordinance were unavailing. See American Charities for Reasonable Fundraising Regulation, Inc. v. Pinellas County, 32 F.Supp.2d 1308 (M.D.Fla.1998); see also American Target Advertising v. Giani, 199 F.3d 1241 (10th Cir.2000). The district court erred, however, in determining that Plaintiffs' due process as-applied challenge was not ripe for review. We conclude that the as-applied claim was ripe and that the County's application of the Ordinance to Plaintiffs may violate the Due Process Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment.
STANDING
The district court did not address Plaintiffs as-applied due process challenge because the court concluded that this claim was not ripe: the County had not sought to enforce the Ordinance against Plaintiffs. We conclude Plaintiffs offered sufficient evidence of a threat of enforcement to assert their as-applied challenge.
While pre-enforcement review is the exception, "[w]hen the plaintiff has alleged an intention to
engage in a course of conduct arguably affected with a constitutional interest, but proscribed by a statute, and
there exists a credible threat of prosecution thereunder, he 'should not be required to await and undergo a
criminal prosecution as the sole means of seeking relief.' "
Babbitt v. UFW,
Plaintiffs offered sufficiеnt proof of a credible threat of prosecution in this case. Plaintiffs offered the affidavit of Marilyn Price, president of Plaintiff TCA; the affidavit states that she had written the County asking whether her company had to register for a permit although TCA does not directly solicit contributions. In response, John Wood of the Regulatory Section of the Department of Consumer Protection for the County called. Wood said that, if a nonprofit mails into the County, it is mandatory for that organization and its professional fund-raising consultant (that is, TCA) both to register. Wood also explained that the penalty for noncompliance was a civil injunction and possibly a $500.00 fine or imprisonment. [5] Price stated that, as a direct result of this conversation, she has asked TCA's clients not to mail into the County, and TCA has refused to enter into consulting agreements with charities that mail into the County.
Defendants argue this affidavit is insufficient to show a threat of prosecution. Plaintiffs, however,
did receive a response from someone "with the knowledge and authority to speak for the [County]" about
registration.
Digital Properties, Inc. v. City of Plantation,
These circumstances assure us that this case "grows out of a genuine dispute and is not a contrivance
prompted solely by a desire to enforce constitutional rights."
International Society for Krishna Consciousness
of Atlanta v. Eaves,
DUE PROCESS CLAUSE
Plaintiffs say their activities, or lack thereof, in Pinellas County are insufficient for the County to apply the Ordinance to them in accordance with due process. Plaintiffs may be correct. But because we cannot determine from the record the extent of the contacts and whether they are sufficient, we remand for such a determination.
A state's legislative jurisdiction is circumscribed by the Due Process Clause: "There must bе at least
*6
some minimal contact between a State and the regulated subject before it can, consistently with the
requirements of due process, exercise legislative jurisdiction."
Hellenic Lines Ltd. v. Rhoditis,
To determine legislative jurisdiction, that is, to confirm that the application of the County's
regulations to Plaintiffs does not offend due process, we look to choice-of-law and personal jurisdiction
analyses. When choice-of-law issues arise in court, to apply a state's substantive law in accordance with due
process, "that State must have a significant contact or significant aggregation of contacts, creating state
intеrests, such that choice of its law is neither arbitrary nor fundamentally unfair."
Allstate Ins. Co. v. Hague,
Applying these standards to the question before us now, we ask whether sufficient contacts exist between the Plaintiffs and the County, "creating state interests such that it would not be fundamentally unfair to subject" the Plaintiffs to the County's registrаtion requirements. Adventure Communications, Inc. , 191 F.3d at 437. Therefore, a "minimum contacts" inquiry is necessary for determining whether the County's exercise of legislative jurisdiction, in this case, offends due process.
The regulated party must have performed some act by which it "purposefully avails itself of the
privilege of conducting activities within the [County]."
Burger King v. Rudzewicz,
But the record, in this case, seems to show only that Plaintiffs assist charities that send national mailings to the general publiс: Plaintiffs themselves do not send mailings to the public. Plaintiffs aver that they do not solicit, do not handle the funds, and are not paid on a percentage of the contributions basis. *8 Nothing apparently indicates that Plaintiffs purposefully aid the solicitation of funds from the citizens of Pinellas County, in particular as opposed to general solicitations conducted more or less nationally. An abstract, indirect, and unaimed level of involvement with the County would not be sufficient for the County to regulate Plaintiffs.
The circumstances in this case seem very different from those found to be sufficient for due process
purposes in the case of
American Target Advertising,
must come from contributions received from their charity clients. Without more, an assertion that
Plaintiffs were paid with general funds of their clients which funds at one time were contributions from
someplace is insufficient to establish legislative jurisdictional minimum contacts. The district court cited
Interfase Marketing, Inc. v. Pioneer Technologies Group, Inc.,
that "awareness that product will enter state is not enough to satisfy due process—not the kind of purposeful activity required"). For now at least, we can not say that Plaintiffs have sufficient contacts with the County to regulate them under this Ordinance, consistent with due process.
The district court did not reach Plaintiffs' as-applied challenge. And, the district court should tackle the question before we attempt to do so finally. Because unanswered questions remain on the extent of Plaintiffs' contacts with the County, we REMAND the case to the district court for a determination, not inconsistent with this opinion, of whether Defendant's threatened application and enforcement of the Ordinance violates due process. Otherwise, we AFFIRM the district court's judgment.
AFFIRMED IN PART, VACATED AND REMANDED IN PART.
Notes
[*] Honorable Lyle E. Strom, U.S. District Judge for the District of Nebraska, sitting by designation.
[1] Compare Pinellas County Code § 42-266 (defining "professional fundraising consultant" as "any person who is retained by a charitable organization or sponsor for a fixed fee to plan, advise, consult, or prepare material for solicitation of contributions, but who does not manage, conduct, or carry on any
[5] Plaintiffs also offered the affidavit of Raymond Grace, the president of Creative Direct Response ("CDR"), who stated that his company was contacted by the County and told that it must register and pay the fee as a professional fund-raising consultant. He was informed that, if his company failed to register, it could no longer advise on clients' direct mail appeals and that the company's clients could not conduct direct mail appeals in the County. And in responding to Leahy's inquiry, the County informed Leahy that he must register, even though he would only be providing copy to charities and would not be involved in telemarketing or other direct solicitations, if he would be providing copy to charities which mail into the County.
[6] The same John Wood, who informed TCA of its obligation to register, was cited as the source of Dеfendant's response to Plaintiffs' interrogatories. The response said that Plaintiffs would be required to register if their client charities solicited in the County and Plaintiffs perform services, or intend to perform services, for charities soliciting in Pinellas County.
[7] This case is materially different from
Digital Properties,
which involved a zoning permit and in
which the court determined that plaintiff's as-applied challenge was not ripe because it was "founded upon
[plaintiff's] anticipatеd belief that [city] would interpret [ordinance] in such a way as to violate [plaintiff]'s
First Amendment rights."
[8] Defendants say this evidence is not sufficient because the Ordinance is not criminal. The Ordinance itself, however, provides that violations shall be punishable as provided in section 1-8 of the Pinellas County Code. Section 1-8(c) states: except as otherwise provided, "a person convicted of a violation of this Code shall be punished by a fine not to exceed $500.00 or by imprisonment in the county jail for a term not exceeding 60 days, or by both."
[9] Though the inquiries are similar, some difference exists between adjudicative jurisdiction and
legislative jurisdiction.
See Adventure Communications,
[10] The district court determined that it was the overt act of solicitation and not advising which triggered the requirement that the professional fund-raising consultant obtain a permit. Plaintiffs, however, argue they do not solicit in the County nor purposefully contribute to the solicitation of funds in the County. The district court should explore on remand the extent of Plaintiffs' solicitatiоn, or lack thereof, in the County. In addition, the district court noted that the Ordinance itself requires a professional fund-raising consultant to obtain a permit when it "solicits contributions in the county by any means." But the definition of professional fund-raising consultant provided for in the Ordinance limits the consultant category to persons who do not solicit, but instead "plan, advise, consult or prepare material for solicitation." Therefore, acts much less than overt solicitation could require consultants to obtain a permit, and the Ordinance has been so interpreted by the County in this case.
[11] For example, Plaintiffs state, in their briefs, that Leahy only writes copy: "Once he sells his copy, his involvement with that particular project ends and he moves on to the next one. He does not design the
[14] And just having some contract with a registered charity without more is not sufficient, under the
Constitution, to subject these other entities to regulation and registration by the Ordinance.
See Borg-
Warner Acceptance Corp. v. Lovett & Tharpe, Inc.,
