American Target filed this suit against Francine A. Giani in her official capacity as Director of the Utah Division of Consumer Protection. American Target sought declaratory, injunctive, and other relief, asking the district court to hold the Utah Charitable Solicitations Act unconstitutional. On cross motions for summary judgment, the district court granted summary judgment in favor of defendant. American Target filed a timely appeal, and we exercise jurisdiction pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 1291. We affirm in part and reverse in part.
I. Background
American Target is a Virginia corporation that provides fundraising services to nonprofit organizations. The corporation is under contract to provide such services to Judicial Watch, Inc., a nonprofit organization located in Washington, D.C. Under this contract, American Target helps manage Judicial Watch’s national direct mail campaign.
By virtue of its contract with Judicial Watch, American Target is classified as a professional fundraising consultant under the Utah Charitable Solicitations Act. Utah Code Ann. § 13-22-2(11) (Supp. 1999). The Act requires all professional fundraising consultants to register with the state and obtain a permit. Id. §§ 13-22-5, -9. To obtain the required permit, American Target must complete a written application, pay an annual fee of $250 and post a bond or letter of credit in the amount of $25,000. Id. § 13-22-9.
American Target has not complied with the registration requirements and is therefore barred from assisting Judicial Watch with its mailing in Utah. American Target claims that the Act violates several provisions of the U.S. Constitution, including the First Amendment, the Commerce Clause and the Due Process Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment. We address each constitutional challenge.
II. First Amendment
The First Amendment provides that government “shall make no law ... abridging the freedom of speech.” U.S. Const, amend. I. In a facial challenge, American Target argues that the Utah Act operates both as an impermissible abridgement of protected speech and as an unconstitutional prior restraint. Because nothing in the record indicates that the Act will have any different impact upon interests not before this court, we analyze both prongs of the First Amendment challenge as they are presented under the facts of this case.
City Council of L.A. v. Taxpayers for Vincent,
A. Protected Speech
We review de novo challenges to the constitutionality of a statute.
United States v. Hampshire,
Charitable solicitations qualify as protected speech for First Amendment purposes.
Village of Schaumburg v. Citizens for a Better Env’t,
The Utah Act targets the secondary effects of professional solicitations, i.e., increased fraud and misrepresentation. The Act does not authorize a content-based review of the charitable mailings. It simply facilitates oversight of the mailers’ backgrounds and methods. Therefore, the Act is content neutral, and we accordingly subject it to intermediate scrutiny. The state must demonstrate that the Act (1) serves a substantial governmental interest and (2) is “narrowly drawn” to serve that interest “without unnecessarily interfering with First Amendment freedoms.”
Village of Schaumburg,
“The interest in protecting charities (and the public) from fraud is, of course, a sufficiently substantial interest to justify a narrowly tailored regulation.”
Riley v. National Fed’n of the Blind,
All of the Act’s provisions must be narrowly drawn to serve this recognized gov *1248 ernmental purpose. We review those statutory provisions construed by the district court to determine whether the state has narrowly tailored them to prevent fraud.
1. Registration and Disclosure Requirements
The Act requires professional fundraising consultants like American Target to meet certain registration and disclosure requirements. Consultants must identify those involved in the solicitation process, disclose the purpose and method of solicitation, declare the existence of any injunctions, judgments, administrative orders, or criminal convictions involving moral turpitude, and provide copies of all agreements concerning fundraising. Id. § 13-22-9.
The Supreme Court has indicated that registration and disclosure provisions do not raise First Amendment problems. In
Secretary of State v. Munson,
Mandatory registration and disclosure enable Utah citizens to make informed decisions concerning their charitable donations. These requirements directly promote Utah’s legitimate interest in combating fraud while not unnecessarily interfering with solicitors’ protected speech. We find that the registration and disclosure provisions of the Utah Act are narrowly tailored to serve the state’s substantial interest in fighting fraud.
2. Registration Fee
The Utah Act also requires fund-raising consultants to pay an annual registration fee. The fee imposed must be “reasonable, fair and reflect the cost of services provided.” Utah Code Ann. § 63-38-3.2(2)(a) (Supp.1999); Utah Code Ann. § 13-22-9(l)(a) (Supp.1999). Prior to fiscal year 1997, the state assessed a fee of $150. The Utah Division of Consumer Protection raised the fee to $250 for fiscal year 1997 and thereafter. In an affidavit filed with the district court, Director Giani stated that the Division raised the fee to defray increased regulatory costs caused by a significant jump in applications.
Arguing that the $250 fee is excessive, American Target relies almost exclusively upon
Murdock v. Pennsylvania,
Murdock
“does not mean that an invalid fee can be saved if it is nominal, or that only nominal charges are constitutionally permissible.”
Forsyth County v. Nationalist Movement,
3. Bond or Letter of Credit
To obtain a permit under the Act, American Target must also provide proof that it is bonded or provide a letter of credit in the amount of at least $25,000. Utah Code Ann. § 13 — 22—9(4)(a). The statute requires that the bond or letter of credit “be payable to the state for the benefit of parties who may be damaged by any violation of this chapter.” Id. § 13-22-9(4)(b).
The district court relied upon
Dayton Area Visually Impaired Persons v. Fisher,
The bond requirement, on its face, supports a different state interest than the other challenged provisions of the Act. The disclosure and fee requirements enable prophylactic oversight of professional fundraisers. The bond requirement provides a victim relief fund for those injured through violations of the Act. When a professional fundraiser violates the Act, the state naturally expects the violator to satisfy a tort judgment. But this interest in redress applies across the law in other tort contexts. More importantly, this interest is adequately served by the preventive measures within the Act. Extensive disclosure and vigorous oversight diminish the likely need for a victim compensation fund. An ounce of prevention here is preferable to a pound of cure.
The actual impact of the bond requirement supports our conclusions. The president of American Target, in a sworn affidavit, stated that the company must provide 100 percent collateral for the amount of any outstanding bond. The company does not have enough un-pledged collateral on hand to secure the Utah bond and must borrow the full amount.
Id.
The requirement therefore imposes a sizeable price tag upon the enjoyment of a guaranteed freedom. Bonding may peripherally promote Utah’s interest in regulatory oversight, but this goal is “sufficiently served by measures less destructive of First Amendment interests.”
Village of Schaumburg,
Having found the bond provision unconstitutional as applied to American Target, we now must decide whether
any
attempt to enforce this provision would create “an unacceptable risk of the suppression of ideas.”
Taxpayers for Vincent,
B. Severability
, Having found one part of the Act unconstitutional, we must decide whether the objectionable provision can be severed. Severability is an issue of state law.
Leavitt v. Jane L.,
There is no saving clause in the Utah Act to aid our interpretation. Therefore, we must look to whether the statutory provisions “are so dependent upon each other that the court should conclude the intention was that the statute be effective only in its entirety.” Id. The bonding/letter of credit requirement is not interrelated in any meaningful sense with the remainder of the Act. Indeed, on its face, the bonding requirement articulates a different purpose than do the other provisions. Elimination of the bonding requirement therefore will not frustrate the Act’s stated purpose. Accordingly, we find that it is severable under Utah law.
C. Prior Restraint
American Target also claims that the Act operates as an impermissible prior restraint upon protected speech. A scheme of prior restraint gives “public officials the power to deny use of a forum in advance of actual expression.”
Southeastern Promotions Ltd. v. Conrad,
“Prior restraints are not unconstitutional per se.”
Southeastern Promotions,
1. Unbridled Discretion
a) § 13-22-9(l)(b)(xiv)
American Target contends that state officials enjoy too much discretion *1251 over the administrative process. The Director of the Division of Consumer Protection has the power to deny, suspend or revoke an application, registration, permit or information card. Utah Code Ann. § 13-22-12(1). To exercise this power, the director must find that such action serves the “public interest” and that the regulated entity has violated one or more of thirteen grounds set forth in the statute. Id. 3 These grounds include, among others, the filing of an application that is “incomplete or misleading in any material respect.” Id. § 13-22-12(l)(a). The Act also contains a list of specific information which must be included in any application. Id. § 13-22-9. 4 The director retains the *1252 authority to request “any additional information the division may require.” Id. § 13~22-9(l)(b)(xiv). -American Target contends that this catch-all provision confers unbridled discretion upon the director: she may demand any piece of information from an applicant and lawfully deny a permit if the applicant refuses such request. We agree.
The state may not condition protected speech “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.”
Staub v. City of Baxley,
In a facial challenge
to
a city licensing scheme, the Supreme Court considered a catch-all provision that authorized the imposition of “other terms and conditions deemed necessary and reasonable by the Mayor.”
City of Lakewood v. Plain Dealer Publ’g Co.,
We therefore hold that § 13-22-9(l)(b)(xiv), construed in light of the director’s authority to deny an incomplete application, is unconstitutional on its face and we sever it from the Act.
5
Any attempt by the state to invoke this blanket authority “would create an unacceptable risk of the suppression of ideas.”
Taxpayers for Vincent,
b) § 13—22—12(l)(b)(vii)
Section 13-22-12(l)(b)(vii) authorizes the state to deny a permit if the applicant has “failed reasonably to supervise his agents, employees, paid solicitors or, in the case of an organization, its professional fund raisers or professional fund-raising counsels or consultants.” Instead
*1253
of providing “narrow, objective and definite standards to guide the director,”
Shuttlesworth,
Given the placement of this provision within the statutory text, we can only speculate as to a limiting construction. Perhaps the provision is designed to merely punish the applicant if an agent or employee violates the Act under his failed supervision. However, we decline to read words into the statute that the Utah Legislature did not ratify. The state must make explicit the necessary limits to the director’s discretion. As enacted, § 13-22-12(l)(b)(vii) also confers unbridled discretion on the state and therefore is unconstitutional on its face. 6
2. Time Limits
Time limits upon a prior restraint allay “the risk of indefinitely suppressing permissible speech.”
FW/PBS,
In
Freedman v. Maryland,
In addition, the state maintains the status quo during administrative review. The status quo for a new applicant like American Target is non-operation.
See East Brooks Books, Inc. v. City of Memphis,
III. Commerce Clause
American Target also claims that the Act as applied places an undue burden upon interstate commerce. We disagree. We review American Target’s Commerce Clause challenge de novo.
United States v. Hampshire,
To evaluate a dormant Commerce Clause challenge, this court must first determine whether the act in question “regulates evenhandedly” among economic interests or instead “discriminates against interstate commerce” either on its face or in practical effect.
Oregon Waste Sys.,
Because the Act regulates evenhandedly among in-state and out-of-state consultants, this court must balance various interests in the constitutional assessment. The Act must be upheld if it serves a “legitimate public interest,” its effects on interstate commerce are only “incidental,” and the burden imposed on interstate commerce is not “clearly excessive in relation to the putative local benefits.”
Pike v. Bruce Church, Inc.,
As discussed previously, the Supreme Court has recognized the public interest in curtailing fraudulent solicitations.
Riley,
American Target contends that another line of Commerce Clause authority applies to this case. Citing
National Bellas Hess, Inc., v. Department of Revenue,
IV. Due Process
Finally, American Target submits that the Utah Act as applied confers state jurisdiction in a manner inconsistent with due process. Again, we disagree.
The Due Process Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment requires that no state “deprive any person of fife, liberty, or property, without due process of law... U.S. Const, amend. XIV, § 1. Judicial jurisdiction cannot extend to an individual consistent with due process unless “he have certain minimum contacts [with the jurisdiction] ... such that the maintenance of the suit does not offend ‘traditional notions of fair play and substantial justice.’ ”
International Shoe v. Washington,
In its agreement with Judicial Watch, American Target promises to suggest lists of potential Utah donors, design targeted mailings, help select optimum dates for mailing, and act as a general consultant concerning the solicitation process. To fulfill its obligations under this agreement, American Target must purposefully direct efforts toward residents of the state. Therefore, jurisdiction can be asserted consistent with due process.
Without apparent authority, American Target claims that there must be a higher level of business activity to support the legislative or regulatory jurisdiction asserted here. Charting the due process limits on legislative jurisdiction, the Supreme Court has employed language reminiscent of that used in the personal jurisdiction caselaw. “There must be at least 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,
*1256 For the reasons discussed above, we AFFIRM in part and REVERSE in part. In addition, we deny the outstanding motion by Appellant American Target to strike the brief of amici curiae Mike Hatch, Minnesota Attorney General, et al, and grant the motion for leave to respond.
Notes
. American Target contends that we should apply intermediate scrutiny to this content neutral regulation only if we first determine that it is a time, place or manner restriction. The
Turner Broadcasting
court made no such qualification and we shall not impose one here. In fact, the Supreme Court has suggested that there is no meaningful distinction between evaluation of a content neutral regulation of expressive conduct and a content neutral time, place or manner restriction.
Clark v. Community for Creative Non-Violence,
. Much of the prior restraint law developed in the context of ordinary licensing and zoning schemes. None of the schemes we encountered carried a restraint like the bonding requirement under the Utah Act. Having already found that requirement an unconstitutional burden upon free speech, we do nol address how such a restraint would affect our analysis here. We simply note that so substantial a bonding requirement might operate as a full restraint where applicants cannot muster the required collateral.
. Section 13-22-12(1) provides in full:
(1) The director may, in accordance with Title 63, Chapter 46b, Administrative Procedures Act, issue an order to deny, suspend, or revoke an application, registration, permit, or information card, upon a finding that the order is in the public interest and that:
(a) the application for registration or renewal is incomplete or misleading in any material respect;
(b) the applicant or registrant or any officer, director, agent, or employee of the applicant or registrant has:
(i) violated this chapter or committed any of the prohibited acts and practices described in this chapter;
(ii) been enjoined by any court, or is the subject of an administrative order issued in this or another state, if the injunction or order includes a finding or admission of fraud, breach of fiduciary duty, material misrepresentation, or if the injunction or order was based on a finding of lack of integrity, truthfulness, or mental competence of the applicant;
(iii) been convicted of a crime involving moral turpitude;
(iv) obtained or attempted to obtain a registration or a permit by misrepresentation;
(v) materially misrepresented or caused to be misrepresented the purpose and manner in which contributed funds and property will be used in connection with any solicitation;
(vi) caused or allowed any paid solicitor to violate any rule made or order issued under this chapter by the division;
(vii) failed reasonably to supervise his agents, employees, paid solicitors or, in the case of an organization, its professional fund raisers or professional fund raising counsels or consultants;
(viii) used, or attempted to use a name that either is deceptively similar to a name used by an existing registered or exempt charitable organization, or appears reasonably likely to cause confusion of names;
(ix)failed to timely file with the division any report required in this chapter or by rules made under this chapter; or
(x)failed to pay a fine imposed by the division in accordance with Section 13-22-3;
(c) a professional fund raiser or professional fund raising counselor or consultant does not have a bond or letter of credit in force as required by Subsection 13-22-9(4); or
(d) the applicant for registration or renewal has no charitable purpose.
. Section 13-22-9 provides, in relevant part:
(1) It is unlawful for any person or entity to act as a professional fund raiser or professional fund raising counsel or consultant, whether or not representing an organization exempt from registration under Section 13-22-8, without first obtaining a permit from the division by complying with all of the following application requirements:
(a) pay an application fee as determined under Section 63-38-3.2; and
(b) submit a written application, verified under oath, on a form approved by the division that includes:
(i) the applicant’s name, address, telephone number, facsimile number, if any;
(ii) the name and address of any organization or person controlled by, controlling, or affiliated with the applicant;
(iii) the applicant’s business, occupation, or employment for' the three-year period immediately preceding the date of the application;
(ix) disclosure of any injunction, judgment, or administrative order against the applicant or the applicant's conviction of any crime involving moral turpitude;
(x) a copy of any written agreements with any charitable organization;
(xi) the disclosure of any injunction, judgment, or administrative order or conviction of any crime involving moral turpitude with respect to any officer, director, manager, operator, or principal of the applicant;
(xii) a copy of all agreements to which the applicant is, or proposes to be, a party regarding the use of proceeds;
(xiii) an acknowledgment that fund raising in the state will not commence un *1252 til both the professional fund raiser or professional fund raising counsel or consultant and the charity, its parent foundation, if any, are registered and in compliance with this chapter; and
(xiv) any additional information the division may require.
. Utah law on severability,
see supra
Part II. B., requires us to sever this unconstitutional provision. We must decide "whether the remaining sections [of the statute], standing alone, will further the legislative purpose.”
Stewart,
. Based on the foregoing analysis of sever-ability, we also find this provision severable from the statute as a whole.
. The
Freedman
court also found that prompt judicial review must be available and that the licensor must bear the burden in court to suppress the protected speech.
Freedman,
The modern interpretation of these
Freedman
safeguards has provoked some confusion among the circuits.
See, e.g., Baby Tam & Co. v. City of Las Vegas,
