Lead Opinion
Appellant Veeda Chambers is the owner of the “Neon Cowboy,” a lounge which provides adult entertainment and serves alcohol in
1. An interlocutory injunction “is a device to keep the parties in order to prevent one from hurting the other whilst their respective rights are under adjudication .... [TJhere must be some vital necessity for the injunction so that one of the parties will not be damaged and left without adequate remedy.” Price v. Empire Land Co.,
2. The new ordinance is designed to combat the undesirable secondary effects of sexually explicit businesses. In enacting the new ordinance, the county commission considered and relied upon evi
Since the new ordinance is designed to combat the undesirable secondary effects of sexually explicit businesses, it is content-neutral and is put to the three-pronged test enunciated in Paramount Pictures Corp. v. Busbee,
3. Appellant next asserts that the 1996 ordinance cannot be applied constitutionally to Neon Cowboy because the club provided adult entertainment and alcoholic beverages prior to passage of the ordinance. We recently addressed a similar assertion in Goldrush II v. City of Marietta,
4. Finally, appellant contends the new adult entertainment ordinance is unconstitutionally overbroad and gives county officials such unbridled discretion as to render the ordinance unconstitutionally vague. Appellant suggests the ordinance restricts non-obscene, nude one-on-one lingerie modeling and authorizes county officials to decide arbitrarily whether licenses should be issued and renewed. We conclude that the presence of a severability clause in the new ordinance supports the trial court’s determination that an interlocutory injunc
In light of the foregoing, the trial court did not err when it denied an interlocutory injunction to appellant.
Judgment affirmed.
Notes
While appellant followed the procedure to obtain interlocutory review by this Court of the trial court’s denial of appellant’s motion for a temporary restraining order, the trial court analyzed the motion as one for an interlocutory injunction, the denial of which is directly appealable pursuant to OCGA § 5-6-34 (a) (4).
Dissenting Opinion
dissenting.
I dissent to this Court’s rulings in Division 3 of the majority opinion and to the judgment.
See Goldrush II v. City of Marietta,
