Harlan D. Douglass challenges the constitutionality of the City of Spokane's nuisance ordinance, Spokane Municipal Code (SMC) § 10.08.030. In a pretrial motion, Douglass moved to dismiss charges that he violated the ordinance on the theory that SMC § 10.08.030 is unconstitutionally vague. The Spokane County District Court agreed and dismissed the charges. On appeal, the Spokane County Superior Court affirmed. Our review has led us to conclude that the factual record in this case is inadequate to determine whether the municipal ordinance is unconstitutionally vague. Accordingly, the judgment below is reversed and the case remanded for further proceedings consistent with the principles discussed herein.
On Octobеr 27, 1987, the City of Spokane filed criminal charges against Douglass alleging eight separate violations of SMC § 10.08.030. Specifically, the City alleged that Douglass violated SMC § 10.08.030(A)(1), (B)(2), (3) and (5). SMC § 10.08.030 provides that:
A. No person may do an act, omit to act, engage in a course of activity, or create or maintain a condition which unreasonably:
1. interferes with the cоmfort, solitude, health, or safety of others; or
2. offends common decency; or
3. offends common sensibilities and senses by way of extreme noise, light, or odor; or
4. obstructs or renders hazardous for public passage any public way or place; or
5. pollutes or renders less usable any watercourse or water body.
*174 B. No person may maintain upon any land:
1. a refrigerator, freezer, or other insulated container within which a child could suffocate;
2. a pit, excavation, swimming pool, well, or other uncovered hole into which a person could fall;
3. lumber, metal, plastic, paper, cardboard, or other scrap material deposited in such place and manner as to constitute a hazardous attraction to children;
4. unused or junk vehicle or machinery or parts unless enclosed and secured as required by law for wrecking yards, or junk yards; or
5. an abandoned or vacant building, structure or part thereof not securely closed to entry.
C. No person may maintain upon any land:
1. any toxic, radioactive, caustic, explosive, malodorous, or septic substances, such as putrescent animal, fish, or fowl parts, animal or vegetable waste matter, excrement, and any material likely to attract or breed flies or rats, unless kept in proper receptacles as provided by the health and refuse laws;
2. any structure, collection of wood, cloth, paper, plastic, or glass material, vegetation, or flammable substances kept in such mannеr as to create a substantial risk of combustion or spread of fire.
SMC § 10.08.030. 1
The factual record underlying the criminal charges is limited to two separate bills of particular, which reveal the following information. The eight charged violations of SMC § 10.08.030 occurred on October 5, 15, 16, 19, and 21, 1987. All of the alleged violations occurred in the City of Spokane; five occurred at 3018 South Regal and three occurred at 2815 East 31st Street.
Spokane Police Department Officer Robert Grandinetti responded to 2815 East 31st Street on three separate dates. Each time he observed the house to be open, vacant, and unsecured. On each occasion, Grandinetti entered the house and noted that all of the doors, windows, and plumbing fixtures had been removed and that debris was strewn about the house.
Grandinetti responded to 3018 South Regal on five separate dates regarding complaints that the house was vacant, unsecured, and that large numbers of teenagers were using *175 the house for parties. Each time Grandinetti responded, he observеd that the condition of the premises had progressively deteriorated. Specifically, on October 5, 1987, he found the doors to the premises open, the water and electricity on, debris strewn in all parts of the house, and a plugged-in electric blanket in one of the bedrooms. In addition, he observed that a wooden fence in the yard was torn down in sections, exposing an open swimming pool hole.
Ten days later, Grandinetti found all the doors, moldings, and other salvageable items removed from the premises. He observed that almost all of the glass in the house was broken and that the interior of the house had been damaged by means of kicking the plasterboard and spray painting thе walls. He also discovered an individual sleeping on a makeshift cot in one of the bedrooms. Grandinetti reported large amounts of spray paint on the walls of the pool area of the backyard as well as other debris inside and outside the house.
On October 16, 1987, Grandinetti found 20 to 25 teenagers at the premises. Some of the teenagеrs were skateboarding in the empty pool; others were on the side of the pool. Grandinetti again found teenagers at the premises skateboarding in the pool on October 19 and 21, 1987.
On November 23, 1987, Douglass appeared in Spokane County District Court, Spokane Municipal Department. A jury trial was set for April 18, 1988. On March 10, 1988, Douglass moved to dismiss the сharges on the theory that SMC § 10.08.030 is unconstitutionally vague. On April 8, 1988, District Court Judge Maggs heard the motion for dismissal. At the hearing on the motion for dismissal, "both parties insisted that] the ordinance['s] validity be decided solely on its face."
On May 12, 1988, in a written decision, Judge Maggs declared SMC § 10.08.030(A) and (B) unconstitutionally vague. Accordingly, Judge Maggs dismissed the criminal charges.
*176 On May 26, 1988, pursuant to RALJ 2.4(c) and RALJ 2.6, thе City filed notice of appeal to the Spokane County Superior Court. On April 5, 1989, Judge Clarke affirmed the Spokane County District Court's dismissal and held that the ordinance was void for vagueness under both the fourteenth amendment to the United States Constitution and article 1, section 3 of the Washington State Constitution.
The City sought discretionary review of the Superior Court decision in the Court of Appeals. Pursuant to RAP 2.3(d)(2), the motion was granted on June 16, 1989. On November 16, 1989, pursuant to RCW 2.06.030, the Court of Appeals certified the case to this court. We accepted certification. We are asked to decide if SMC § 10.08.030(A) and (B) abridge the due process clause of the state and federal constitutions.
I
Whenever a party invokes the protection of the Washington Constitution, we must determine if the asserted right is more broadly protected under the state constitution than it is under federal constitutional law.
E.g., Forbes v. Seattle,
II
At issue here is whether SMC § 10.08.030 is unconstitutionally vague under the due process clause of the fourteenth amendment to the United States Constitution. Although we conclude that the trial court erred in dismissing the charges, we remand this case for further proceedings because the factual record is inadequate to determine whether SMC § 10.08.030 is unconstitutionally vague as applied to Douglass.
Our analysis proceeds in three steps. We first discuss the appropriate standard of review for adjudicating vagueness challenges. Second, we review the parameters of the void for vagueness doctrine. Finally, we address the proper analytical format to be employed in reviewing the constitutionality of SMC § 10.08.030.
Standard of Review
Municipal ordinances are to be interpreted under the same rules of statutory construction as are state statutes.
E.g., Spokane v. Fischer,
*178 Vagueness
The due process clause of the Fourteenth Amendment requires that citizens be afforded fair warning of proscribed conduct.
Rose v. Locke,
The requirement that penal statutes define a criminal offense with sufficient definiteness,
i.e.,
provide fair warning, protects individuals from being held criminally accountable fоr conduct which a person of ordinary intelligence could not reasonably understand to be prohibited.
*179
Rose v. Locke,
Similarly, the due process requirement that a penal statute define a criminal offense with sufficient definiteness does not extend to invalidating statutes which a reviewing court believes could have been drafted with greater precision.
Rose v. Locke, supra
at 49;
Eze,
is not a principle designed to convert into a constitutional dilemma the practical difficulties in drawing criminal statutes both general enough to take into account a variety of human conduct and sufficiently specific to provide fair warning that certain kinds of conduct are prohibited.
In other words, "vagueness in the constitutional sense is not mere uncertainty."
4
Smith,
*180
In determining whether a challenged ordinance is sufficiently definite so as to provide fair warning of proscribed conduct, the language of the ordinance is not examined in a vacuum. Rather, the context of the entire enactment is considered.
Seattle v. Huff,
In addition to the requirement of fair notice, the due process clаuse requires that a penal statute provide adequate standards to protect against arbitrary, erratic, and discriminatory enforcement.
6
See American Dog Owners
*181
Ass'n,
criminal statutes that contain no standards and allow police officers, judge, and jury to subjectively decide what conduct the statute proscribes or what conduct will comply with a statute in any given case.
Maciolek,
In determining if a penal statute provides adequate standards for enforcement, one must decide whether the ordinance proscribes conduct by resort to "inherently subjective terms."
Maciolek,
Analytical Format
We now consider Douglass' challenge to the constitutionality of SMC § 10.08.030. In any vagueness challenge, the first step is to determine if the statute in question is to be examined as applied to the particulаr case or to be
*182
reviewed on its face.
7
Schwartzmiller v. Gardner,
The rule regarding vagueness challenges is now well settled. Vagueness challenges to enactments which do not involve First Amendment rights are to be evaluated in light of the particular facts of each case.
Maynard v. Cartwright,
Applying these principles to the present case, Douglass must challenge SMC § 10.08.030 as being unconstitutionally vague as applied to him. The ordinance's alleged vagueness must be examined in light of Douglass' alleged conduct. The factual record in this respect, however, is inadequate for us properly to scrutinize the constitutionality of SMC § 10.08.030 as applied to Douglass. Because the charges were dismissed before trial, no findings of fact were made. With the exception of the two separate bills of particular, the record is void of any facts. In addition, neither of the parties' briefs address the facts underlying the criminal charges. We note that at oral argument, there was considerable discrepancy in the facts relevant to the issue presented. Absent adequate facts, any ruling we might make on the ordinance's alleged vagueness, as applied to Douglass, would necessarily be conjectural in nature and, therefore, inappropriate.
Ill
The constitutionality of SMC § 10.08.030 must be determined by examining the ordinance as applied to the particular facts of Douglass' case. Because the factual record is inadequate to determine whether SMC § 10.08.030 is unconstitutionally vague as applied to Douglass, we reverse the District Court's order of dismissal and remand this case for further proceedings.
Callow, C.J., and Utter, Brachtenbach, Dolliver, Dore, Andersen, and Smith, JJ., concur.
Notes
No part of subsection C was challenged.
See also Hoffman Estates v. Flipside, Hoffman Estates, Inc.,
See also American Dog Owners Ass'n v. Yakima,
It is well understood that "[i]n most English wоrds and phrases there lurk uncertainties."
Robinson v. United States,
In
Sproles v. Binford,
The United States Supreme Court has determined that this is the more important aspect of the vagueness doctrine.
Kolender v. Lawson,
*181 Where the legislature fails to provide such minimal guidelines, a criminal statute may permit "a standardless sweep [that] allows policemen, prosecutors, and juries to pursue their personal predilections."
Kolender,
at 358 (quoting
Smith v. Goguen,
A facial vagueness challenge to an ordinance is a challenge that the terms of the ordinance "are so loose and obscure that they сannot be clearly applied in any context."
Basiardanes v. Galveston,
Even if a facial vagueness challenge were appropriate, the factual record in this case would still be inadequate. Because a facial vagueness challenge may be upheld only in those cases where the challenged ordinance "is impermissibly vague in all of its applications",
Hoffman Estates v. Flipside, Hoffman Estates, Inc., supra
at 497, including the ordinance's application to the challenger, the factual record of the ordinance's application to Douglass is not unimportant.
State v. Worrell,
