The State of California requests that, as Circuit Justice, I stay the enforcement of the judgment of the Supreme Court of California pursuant to 28 U. S. C. § 2101(f) pending the disposition of a petition for certiorari (No. 88-1054) to review that judgment. Because I think it unlikely that four Justices would vote to grant certiorari, see
Hicks
v.
Feiock,
In its petition for certiorari, California seeks review of the State Supreme Court’s judgment reversing the conviction of respondent Freeman for pandering under Cal. Penal Code Ann. §266i (West 1988).
On discretionary review, the California Supreme Court first considered the relevant statutory language of the State Penal Code. In relevant part, § 266i of the Penal Code provides that a person is guilty of felonious pandering if that person “procure[s] another person for the purpose of prostitution . . . .” Prostitution, in turn, is defined in § 647(b) of the Penal Code as “any lewd act between persons for money or other consideration.” Finally, “‘for a “lewd” or “dissolute” act to constitute “prostitution,” the genitals, buttocks, or female breast, of either the prostitute or the customer must come in contact with some part of the body of the other for the purpose of
sexual arousal or gratification of the customer or of the prostitute.
’”
Interpreting these definitions of terms relevant to the state pandering statute, the State Supreme Court held that “in order to constitute prostitution, the money or other consideration must be paid
for the purpose of sexual arousal or
gratification.”
California, in its petition for certiorari, would have us review this First Amendment holding of the State Supreme Court. I recognize that the State has a strong interest in controlling prostitution within its jurisdiction and, at some point, it must certainly be true that otherwise illegal conduct is not made legal by being filmed. I do not, however, think it likely that four Justices would vote to grant the petition because in my view this Court lacks jurisdiction to hear the petition. It appears “clear from the face of the [California Supreme Court’s] opinion,”
Michigan
v.
Long,
As I read the State Supreme Court’s opinion, it is independent of federal law as well. This Court has held that where a state court has “felt compelled by what it understood to be federal constitutional considerations to construe and apply its own law in the manner it did ... we have jurisdiction and should decide the federal issue; for if the state court erred in its understanding of our cases and of the First and Fourteenth Amendments, we should so declare, leaving the state court free to decide . . . ‘suits according to its own local law.’”
Zacchini
v.
Scripps-Howard Broadcasting Co.,
The discussion section of the California Supreme Court opinion is divided into two subsections, the first titled “The Statutory Language,” the second titled “First Amendment Considerations.” The state court’s discussion of the language of the Penal Code, which concludes with the clear holding quoted above, is not “interwoven with the federal law.”
Michigan
v.
Long, supra,
at 1040. Discussion of federal law — specifically the First Amendment — is strictly confined to the second subsection and constitutes an independent, alternative holding. Were we to review the state court’s decision and hold that it had misinterpreted the strictures of the First Amendment, on remand the court would still reverse Freeman’s conviction on state statutory grounds. This is precisely the result the doctrine of adequate and independent state grounds seeks to avoid.
Herb
v.
Pitcairn,
There is language early in the California Supreme Court’s discussion section observing that “the prosecution of [Freeman] under the pandering statute must be viewed as a somewhat transparent attempt at an ’end run’ around the First Amendment and the state obscenity laws. Landmark decisions of this court and the United States Supreme Court compel us to reject such an effort.”
So ordered.
