delivered the opinion of the court:
Reverend Vernon Lyons of the Ashburn Baptist Church of Chicago was found guilty by a jury of violating section 17 — 11 (littering), chapter 17, of the Chicago Park District Code and fined $25. He appeals directly to this court alleging the ordinance to be violative of the first and fourteenth amendments to the United States constitution and sections 2 and 4 of article II of the constitution of Illinois.
Defendant admits that he, four of his own children, and two other members of his church, under his direction, were distributing small paper pamphlets containing the biblical book "The Acts of the Apostles” by placing them under the windshield wipers of cars, or upon the seats of cars with open windows, parked in the Chicago Park District’s Monroe Street parking lot. The defendant apparently paid the parking-lot fee and drove into the lot solely for the purpose of distributing this literature. While the evidence is not precise on this point, the capacity of the parking lot is about 3,000 cars, and the implication of the testimony is that there were large numbers of cars parked there at the time the pamphlets were distributed. A fair summary of the balance of the testimony, which was largely undisputed, is that defendant was informed by the officers and assistant manager of the parking lot that he could not distribute his pamphlets in the lot as was being done, that he was free to leave without being arrested, and that he
Reverend Lyons refused to distribute the pamphlets outside the parking lot, insisting he was constitutionally privileged to circulate them as he was doing, and indicated his intention to continue. He was thereupon arrested. There was no hint of disorderly or ungentlemanly conduct by any of the participants or officers. Several days after defendant’s arrest there were still pamphlets scattered about the parking lot. There is no direct testimony that either defendant or any of the church members actually deposited the pamphlets directly on the ground.
The challenged ordinance is as follows:
“littering
“17 — 11. No person shall throw, cast, deposit, damage, lay, place or scatter in or upon the park system or any park property or appurtenance any placard, hand-bill, pamphlet, circular, book, notice, paper of any kind, coal, ashes, dust, manure, rubbish, garbage, refuse matter or article, or thing of any kind.
“Any person violating any of the provisions of this chapter, where no other penalty is specifically provided, shall be fined not less than five dollars nor more than two hundred dollars for each offense.”
While defendant argues that section 17 — 11 is unconstitutional on its face, he cites no apposite authority supporting his position, and we think it clear that it is not. No case to which counsel refer, and none' which our research has discovered, goes so far as to eliminate the right of public corporations to adopt reasonable regulations designed to maintain publicly owned property in an orderly condition.
The ordinance on its face is obviously intended to prevent littering of park district property — a clearly legitimate
We come then to the crux of this case: Are the first-amendment freedoms of speech and press contained in the Federal constitution and by the fourteenth amendment thereof made applicable to the States, and our State constitutional guarantee in section 4 of article II that “Every person may freely speak, write and publish on all subjects” impermissibly impaired by prohibiting defendant from placing religious pamphlets in and upon unoccupied vehicles, without the consent of their owners, in municipally owned and operated fee-parking lots?
Resolution of this question is not entirely free from difficulty, for free speech and a free press are fundamental personal rights and liberties thought by those who drafted our State and Federal constitutions to lie “at the foundation of free government by free men.” “[T]he delicate and difficult task falls upon the courts to weigh the circumstances and to appraise the substantiality of the reasons advanced in support of the regulation of the free enjoyment of the rights.” (Schneider,
It is readily apparent that placement of pamphlets under the windshield wipers or in the seats of each automobile in a 3000-car parking lot may well result in additional burdens for those charged with responsibility for maintaining the lot in a clean and orderly condition, for it is likely that many, if not most, of such pamphlets will be discarded on the premises by the returning car owners. In fact, the evidence in this case indicates that there were substantial numbers of pamphlets about the parking-lot premises several days after defendant’s arrest, apparently having been discarded by car owners or blown from the car windshields. It is further undisputed that there was an undetermined amount of such literature on the parking-lot surface at the time defendant was arrested although it is not clear as to whether these pamphlets had been dropped by the distributors, blown from the cars or discarded. It is further apparent that the presence of unsought and undesired pamphlets in or upon their cars will be a source of annoyance to numerous car owners, necessitating some action on their part in order to dispose of the unwanted literature. And, if defendant’s actions are constitutionally immunized from proscription, other similar distributions will be similarly protected. The returning car owner may find himself the unhappy recipient
In our opinion adequate protection of the right of an individual to disseminate his ideas or philosophies to others does not necessitate subjecting park districts or the public to these inconveniences, annoyances and burdens. Defendant’s right to station himself and his helpers on the sidewalk at or near the parking-lot entrance, and there distribute his literature to all willing recipients as they walked from or to the lot is unquestioned, and this action would have afforded him access to all persons reachable by the methods he actually employed. The lot manager’s testimony is undisputed that he urged defendant to do so and that defendant refused, giving as his only reason his belief that he was constitutionally privileged to do as he was doing. It seems manifest to us, however, that neither our own constitution nor the first amendment guarantees of the Federal constitution give individuals the unqualified right to speak or distribute their writings in any manner and at any time or place chosen by them without regard to the consequences to others. Cameron v. Johnson, 36 L.W. 4319.
Society generally and the inhabitants of any community have, it seems to us, a right to have publicly owned premises maintained in a sanitary and orderly condition. To that end municipal authorities may properly prohibit conduct thereon which violates that right unless the value to society of the proscribed conduct is deemed such as to outweigh the detriment to others resulting from such conduct. The right of an individual to freely speak, write and distribute his writing are among the most important values in our society, and have been zealously guarded by the courts since this country’s founding, as noted earlier herein. But they áre not absolute, and when alternative methods of distributing literature are available, each of which affords the individual substantially equal opportunities for communication with
Defendant’s other claims of error are susceptible to readier resolution. While it is contended that his petition for a change of venue was wrongfully denied, it is apparent that the petition was insufficient on its face to necessitate transfer of the case from Cook County. It alleges in nonfactual general terms “that the Court, Civil Administration and Jurors will be prejudiced against him”, that “The Church Federation of Greater Chicago, the Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Chicago and Jewish Religious Organizations have formed a group or committee entitled ‘The Chicago Conference on Religion and Race’ ” which has attempted to influence the mayor and others to implement a political, economic and social revolution, and has contributed to a breakdown of law and order; that neither defendant nor his church subscribe to this philosophy and petitioner requests transfer to a “jurisdiction wherein the Chicago Conference on Religion and Race has not intimidated and/or manipulated public officials.” While verified by defendant’s affidavit, the petition alleges conclusions rather than facts, is unsupported by other affidavits (see Ill. Rev. Stat. 1967, chap. 146, par. 4), it alleges no prejudice on the part of any specific judge, and is, in our judgment, manifestly insufficient to require either a change of judges or jurisdictions. We find no abuse of discretion in its denial. 92 C.J.S., sec. 171—c; Gouker v. Board of Supervisors,
We have examined the jury instructions as to which error is alleged to have been committed and find the trial court’s rulings unexceptionable.
The judgment of the circuit court of Cook County is affirmed.
Judgment affirmed.
