Opinion
Betty Barry and Larry Cohen (petitioners), doing business as Fun House Adult Book Store, appeal a judgment denying their petition for administrative mandamus following the revocation of their business license by the City of Oceanside.
Petitioners have operated an аdult bookstore in the City of Oceanside for a number of years. In the rear of the store, there are four arcade booths, licensed under the peep show ordinance, which show sexually explicit movies. Between March 1976, and January 1978, 25 persons have been arrested for allegedly masturbating and, of that number, 18 have been convicted pursuant to guilty pleas of disturbing the peace or committing a public nuisance (Pen. Code, §§ 415, 370, 372).
On December 13, 1977, the business license inspector for the City of Oceanside initiated a license revocation proceeding against Barry and Cohen relative to the arrests at their place of business. There was no clear evidence the police contacted the licensees to advisе them of the activities taking place in the arcade booths, but an employee of the petitioners was always present when an arrest was made.
The city proceeded under section 15.3(18) of the Oceanside City Code regarding the suspension or revocation of the business license “on the ground that the public health, welfare and safety is threatened and harmed due to the manner in which the business is operated.”
After a hearing held December 13, 1978, before the assistant city manager (hearing officer) whose recommendation was approved by the city manager, the license was revoked. The petitioners appealed that decision to the Oceanside City Council which held a hearing on January 24, 1979. The council, on а three-to-two vote, revoked the business license.
When petitioners first received notice of the action the city intended to take, they posted notice warning patrons not to engage in lewd activity and suggested it would lead to arrest and сonvictions. Since that *260 posting, there have been no further arrests. Stays have been in effect since the first hearing so that petitioners have continued to operate the business.
Petitioners contend Oceanside City Code section 15.3(18), which authоrizes the revocation of a business license, is unconstitutional. That section reads: “A business license shall be subject to suspension and/or revocation by the license inspector with concurrence of the City Manager... whenever the public health, welfare, or safety is harmed or threatened due to...the manner in which the business is operated.” They contend
Perrine
v.
Municipal Court
(1971)
The city’s contention, in effect, is this is far different from merely operating a business which because of the offensive conduct occurring on the premises has become a public nuisance. It contends it was acting within lawful police power to close down this store.
*261
The city relies on
Sunset Amusement Co.
v.
Board of Police Commissioners
(1972)
As the court in
Sunset Amusement Co.
observed, a municipality has broad powers to enact “‘all local police, sanitary, and other ordinances and regulations not in conflict with general laws.’ (Cal. Const., art. XI, § 7.)” Such an ordinance is ordinarily upheld “if ‘it is reasonably related to promoting the public health, safety, comfort, and welfare, and if the means adopted to accomplish that promotion are reasonably appropriate to the purpose. [Citations.]’
(Higgins
v.
City of Santa Monica,
Nevertheless, First Amendment activities necessarily subject licensing ordinances to strict scrutiny
(Perrine
v.
Municipal Court, supra,
The constitutionality of an ordinance prescribing standards under which the licensing agency must act in determining whether to issue a permit tо a business within the. ambit of the First Amendment was examined in
Burton
v.
Municipal Court
(1968)
In Burton, the court had before it an ordinance very similar to the one here in issue, empowering the licensing agency to refuse a permit if it finds “the said operation will not comport with the peacе, health, safety, convenience, good morals and general welfare of the public.” In this regard, the court concluded at page 692 the ordinance in question contained “overly broad standards [which] are fraught with the hazard that an appliсant will be denied his rights to free speech and press through exercise of the power of the board, in its discretion, to refuse a permit because of the content of the films which the applicant exhibits in his theater.”
“Section 103.31(b), under which the board mаy deny a permit ‘for a business which has been or is a public nuisance’ is likewise defective. The Civil Code defines a nuisance as ‘Anything which is injurious to health, or is indecent or offensive to the senses, or an obstruction to the free use of property, so as to interfere with the comfortable enjoyment of life or property, or unlawfully obstructs the free passage or use, in the customary manner, of any... public park, square, street, or highway. ...’ (Civ. Code, § 3479.) Section 3480 defines a public nuisance as ‘one whiсh affects at the same time an entire community or neigh *263 borhood, or any considerable number of persons. ... ’ (See also Pen. Code, §§ 370, 371.)
“The provisions of section 103.31(b) are no less vague than those of sections 103.29(b) and 103.31(c)!. To permit a board to refuse to grant a license for the operation of a motion picture theater because in its subjective opinion the operation may be ‘indecent or offensive to the senses.. .so as to interfere with the comfortable enjoyment of life or property’ of ‘any considerable number of persons’ obviously vests in the board an exorbitant quantum of discretion and fails to meet the constitutional requirement of narrowly circumscribed standards.”
(Burton
v.
Municipal Court, supra,
The ordinance in question does not exрressly proscribe a public nuisance, but assuming it does, as did the trial court, even this classification bears the same vagueness in the context of activities protected by the First Amendment, as discussed in Burton at 68 Cal.2d, pages 692 to 693.
While the court in
Burton
asserts the communicated information was protеcted and could not be made the subject of a “public nuisance proceeding,” here, sexual amusement was intended, not a crime in itself, and that could not be found to be a “public nuisance” under circumstances where there is nothing to suggest thе petitioners sought the response their patrons exhibited (see
Tarbox
v.
Board of Supervisors, supra,
Burton
applies “only to those situations in which the operation of a licensing ordinance impinges upon the exercise of First Amendment activities” (see
Sunset Amusement Co.
v.
Board of Police Commissioners, supra,
*264 This is not to say that illegal sexual acts, indecent exposure, or other criminal acts by the customers must be condoned; we only assert that in these cases thе governing board must spell out with reasonableness and definiteness what constitutes a “public nuisance” justifying the denial of a license. The Oceanside City Council has not done this.
Under the doctrine of stare decisis, we are bound by the
Burton
and
Perrine
decisions
(Auto Equity Sales, Inc.
v.
Superior Court
(1962)
In the light of our holding the ordinance violative of petitioners’ constitutional rights, it is unnecessary to consider whether proceeding under the peep show ordinance, rather than the business license ordinancе, is required; whether the findings are supported by the evidence; and whether the remedy is too severe.
Judgment reversed with directions to issue a peremptory writ of mandate as prayed.
Brown (Gerald), P. J., and Hamrick, J., * concurred.
Notes
ActualIy, the theater operators were charged with the misdеmeanor offense of engaging in that business without having the annual permit. The court in Burton, however, considered the same ordinance and standard for denying a license as was involved in the Sunset Amusement Co. case, supra, 7 Cal.3d 64, 73.
Although the parties do not cite the case to us, we feel compelled to note
People
ex rel.
Busch
v.
Projection Room Theater
(1976)
Assigned by the Chairperson of the Judicial Council.
