Opinion
We decide in this case whether an ordinance which, except in a six-block downtown shopping mall, totally bans the placement of newspaper racks in a city with a population of 85,000 1 is unconstitutional on its face.
*52 Defendant City of Burbank appeals from a summary judgment in favor of plaintiffs—newspaper associations and newspapers—declaring the ordinance to be unconstitutional under the United States and California Constitutions and permanently enjoining defendant from enforcing it.
These facts are not disputed: Newspaper racks are used as one method of distributing newspapers in the Los Angeles metropolitan area, which' includes Burbank. Section 20-24(a) of the Burbank Municipal Code, as amended in 1973, prohibits the placement “upon any public sidewalk or parkway,” of “any movable or immovable "object of any character whatsoever,” excepting boxes in the process of being unloaded, approved receptacles containing trees and shrubs, trash containers, and directional signs.
The section also exémpts: “(4) . . . [N]ewspaper racks within the area known as the Golden Mall, . .'.” 2
The Golden Mall is a six-block pedestrial mall, more or less in the center of Burbank, comprising about 1 percent of the total area of the city. 3
Plaintiff contended, and the trial court agreed, that the ordinance was unconstitutional on its face.
Discussion
Defendant recognizes the black-letter constitutional law that streets, sidewalks and parks, are historically so associated with the exercise of First Amendment rights that access to those areas for the purpose of exercising such rights cannot be absolutely denied, and that the state is limited to restricting the time, place and manner of such uses. (13 Cal.Jur.3d, Constitutional Law, § 247, p. 453, § 252, p. 464.) 4
*53 Defendant contends, however, that the First Amendment does not apply to newspapers or newsracks: “The right to utilize public streets and sidewalks for communicating thoughts and views is an in personam right—a right accorded to persons and not to inanimate devices, and must be personally exercised rather than through unattended racks or other devices placed on public sidewalks and parkways.” We cannot agree.
Plaintiffs’ First Amendment rights to distribute its newspapers and the public’s right to buy and read them cannot be conditioned on a particular method of transmitting information. (Cf.
Weaver
v. Jordan,
Defendant’s other contentions are pegged to its assertion that a summary judgment was improper because there were triable issues of fact—whether the newsrack ordinance significantly affects the distribution of newspapers, whether plaintiffs could adequately distribute newspapers using newsracks on private property, and whether the ordinance does really prohibit newsracks on public property in Burbank. 6
Defendant’s claim that there are “factual issues” misses the point. The city has indiscriminately prohibited the distribution of newspapers through the use of newsracks on public property in the City of Burbank; The blanket prohibition without more makes the ordinance overbroad and unconstitutional on its face.
(E.g., Wollam
v.
City of Palm Springs, supra,
Equally without merit are the city’s contentions that the ordinance is not unconstitutional on its face because, first, newsracks are not prohibited on private property, and, second, newsracks are permitted on the public Golden Mall. “[O]ne is not to have the exercise of his liberty of expression in appropriate places abridged on the plea that it may be exercised in some other place.”
(Schneider
v.
State
(1939)
The suggestion that access to private facilities would be constitutionally adequate was rejected in
Southeastern Promotions, Ltd.
v.
Conrad
(1975)
In
Van Nuys Pub. Co.
v.
City of Thousand Oaks, supra,
Nor is the prohibition against newsracks on public property less than total because the city affords such privileges on the Golden Mall. The fraction of Burbank open to newsracks is grossly inadequate to meet constitutional muster. (See
Wollam
v.
City of Palm Springs, supra,
The cases relied on by defendant do not help. In
46 South 52nd Street Corporation
v.
Manlin
(1960)
People
v.
Amdur,
Finally,
City Investment Co.
v.
Racik,
The judgment is affirmed.
Stephens, J„ and Hastings. J„ concurred.
Appellant’s petition for a hearing by the Supreme Court was denied October 23, 1975.
Notes
California Statistical Abstract (State of California 1974) page 9 (as of Jan. 1, 1974). (Evid. Code. $ 452.)
The exception provides in full; “(4) This section shall not apply to newspaper racks within the area known as The Golden Mall, as such area is described and delineated in Section 1 of Ordinance No. 2051, passed and adopted on April 4. 1967. provided that such racks must be of a type equivalent to Model 97. K-Jack Newspaper Rack Head maintained at all times in good order and repair and installed only in the manner and at such locations within The Golden Mall area as approved by the Parks and Recreation Director."
Dozens of streets criss-cross Burbank from city-line to city-line. Only the northeast corner of the city—part of the Verdugo Mountains—appears to be sparsely settled.
The cases stating and restating this proposition are collected, inter alia, in
In re Hoffman,
In
Wollam
v.
City of Palm Springs,
Defendant has submitted elaborate declarations supported by photographs and tables which purport to show, first, the unaesthelic qualities of newsracks on public property, and. second, the number and location of newsracks on private property and in The Golden Mall. Defendant’s declarations also purport to controvert plaintiffs’ declarations concerning the economic impact of the prohibition of newsracks. Other than defendant’s map of Burbank, none of this material is relevant.
