The plaintiff, Cinecom Theaters, owns and operates two drive-in motion picture theaters located in the City of Fort Wayne, Indiana. The defendants include the City of Fort Wayne and certain of its officials who are charged *1299 with the responsibility of enforcing the City’s ordinances. On February 16, 1971, the plaintiff filed its complaint in the Indiana State Court seeking declaratory and injunctive relief against an ordinance of the City of Fort Wayne. Upon the defendant’s petition, the cause was removed to the District Court for the Northern District of Indiana. Following an extensive hearing at which both medical and lay testimony was heard, the district court granted in part and denied in part the relief sought by the plaintiff. 1 Only the plaintiff has appealed and only those portions of the ordinance which the-district court found to be constitutional are involved in this appeal.
The ordinance makes it unlawful to exhibit certain types of material in drive-in movie theaters if the material can be seen from any public street or highway. The proscribed material includes any exhibit in which “bare buttocks or the bare female breasts of the human body are shown.” Upon a conviction, the ordinance provides that there be a mandatory suspension of the theater operator’s license for a period of thirty days.
The plaintiff maintains that the ordinance is void by reason of its over-breadth; that it proscribes the visual presentation of material which is not obscene with reference either to adults or children and, therefore, falls squarely within the protection of the First Amendment. The City of Fort Wayne raises two justifications for proscribing the movie exhibition of “bare buttocks and bare female breasts.” The first, and the one on which greater emphasis is placed, is the protection of children or minors from harmful material. The second is the protection of neighbors or passers-by from having offensive scenes unwillingly thrust upon them. In upholding the constitutionality of the ordinance, the district court adopted the City’s contentions, relying principally on the authority of Chemline, Inc. v. City of Grand Prairie,
At the outset it should be observed that when subjected to the standards set forth in Roth v. United States,
A threshold problem concerning the ordinance and the purported
parens patriae
justification for it is that its application is not restricted to minors or children. The visual presentations prohibited by the ordinance necessarily remain unavailable to the adult as well as the juvenile population. In slightly differing context, the Supreme Court has twice held that a State’s acknowledged interest in preventing the dissemination of material harmful to children does not justify its total suppression. Butler v. Michigan,
We do not conclude, however, that the failure specifically to limit the effect of this ordinance to children is fa
*1300
tal. Although expression by means of motion pictures clearly falls within the ambit of the First and Fourteenth Amendments, “it does not follow that the Constitution requires absolute freedom to exhibit every motion picture of every kind at all times and all places.” Joseph Burstyn, Inc. v. Wilson,
A drive-in movie theater is indeed a unique form for communication. The visual images exhibited on the screen can be easily observed beyond the confines of the theater itself. All persons within visual range of the theater, children and adults alike, are of necessity exposed to the scenes. The size and character of the potential audience is unlimited and can not be controlled or restricted by the theater operator. Because of these unusual qualities, we conclude that the scope of a community’s permissible regulation over the operation of these facilities is broader than it would be with respect to ordinary movie houses.
Notwithstanding that a city might regulate these facilities through an ordinance narrowly drawn to achieve that objective, Ginsberg v. New York,
A state or a city because of its strong and abiding interest in its youth is not without the authority to limit the access to minors of material which would be objectionable as to them, but which would not be obscene in its appeal to adults. Interstate Circuit v. Dallas,
In deciding
Ginsberg
the Supreme Court expressly avoided considering “the impact of the guarantees of freedom of expression upon the totality of the relationship of the minor and the State.”
Cf.
In Re Gault,
“It is enough for the purposes of this case that we inquire whether it was constitutionally impermissible for New York ... to accord minors under 17 a more restricted right than that assured to adults to judge and determine for themselves what sex material they may read or see.”
Ginsberg v. New York,
The statute before us, however, is more troublesome since it does not employ the three-prong
Roth-Memoirs
test of obscenity as it relates to minors. As the district judge here recognized, this is not an obscenity case in the typical sense. The material proscribed by the ordinance would not be obscene even under an application of the concept of variable obscenity. Obscenity connotes some sort of sexual or erotic presentation. Cohen v. California,
Thus the question before us is broader than passed upon by the Supreme Court in Ginsberg. It is not simply whether the City may accord to minors a more restricted right to judge for themselves what material they may read or see. This much was acknowledged in Ginsberg. The issue here has not previously been passed upon by the Supreme Court and involves the extent to which a city may restrict the access of its children to materials deemed harmful to' them. Stated another way, the question is whether a city may go beyond the restrictions implicit in the concept of variable obscenity.
We know of only one case to have considered the question presently before us, Interstate Circuit, Inc. v. City of Dallas,
We agree with the Fifth Circuit Court that a city may not, consonant with the First Amendment, go beyond the limitations inherent in the concept of variable obscenity in regulating the dissemination to juveniles of “objectionable” material. We observe first that children do not stand outside the protections of the Constitution. Cf. In Re Gault,
Although a city possesses the authority to regulate this industry for the protection of its children from exposure to material obscene as to them, the ordinance here is much broader than that permissible objective and therefore runs afoul of the First and Fourteenth Amendments to the Constitution. In reaching this conclusion, we are not persuaded by the Fifth Circuit Court’s decision in Chemline, Inc. v. City of Grand Prairie,
We turn now to the second justification advanced here by the City in support of its ordinance. As an independent basis for sustaining the same portion of the ordinance, the district court found that the exhibition of this matter on a drive-in theater screen amounted to “an assault upon individual privacy . . . in a manner so obtrusive as to make it impossible for an unwilling individual to avoid exposure to it.” Redrup v. New York,
“The ability of government, consonant with the Constitution, to shut out discourse solely to protect others from hearing it is, in other words, dependent upon a showing that substantial privacy interests are being invaded in an essentially intolerable manner.”
The record here falls short of such a showing. Passing motorists were able to see the screen for only a short moment. The disruption of traffic or traffic accidents were simply not problems. Nor was there any evidence to Indicate that the visual presentations were so obnoxious to those walking in the area so as to preclude their avoidance simply by averting the eyes. See Cohen v. California,
Since we have concluded that the ordinance is void by reason of its over-breadth and, therefore, transgresses the limitations of the First and Fourteenth Amendments, we need not consider the other challenges to the ordinance advanced by the plaintiff. For the reasons given, the judgment of the district court is reversed.
Reversed.
Notes
. A portion of the ordinance in question prohibited the exhibition of motion pictures in which “strip-tease, burlesque or nudist-type scenes constitute the main or primary material.” This prohibition was struck down by the district court on the ground that it was impermissibly vague.
. The Roth-Memoirs test of obscenity requires that the material must be taken as a whole, and, when so viewed,-must appeal to a prurient interest in sex, patently offend community standards relating to the depiction of sexual matters, and be utterly without redeeming social value,
. See Interstate Circuit, Inc. v. City of Dallas,
. We consider it worthy of note that despite the extensive testimony from the two psychiatrists, there was no evidence that nudity per se, regardless of context, is at all harmful to children.
