Lead Opinion
Petitioners
The petition alleges in substance the following facts. In 1970, the traditional Independence Day parade in the City of Seaside was held on Sunday, July 5. It was organized by the Seaside Chamber of Commerce (Chamber), a body designated by the City as its official agency for the collection and distribution of information regarding businesses, public facilities, and civic and recreational activities and opportunities. The Chamber receives from the City approximately $10,500 per year and
Pursuant to section 9-108 of the Seaside Municipal Code (see fn. 2, ante), the City issued to the Chamber a parade permit for July 5, 1970, and delegated to that body the task of issuing permits to groups participating in the parade. Approximately 180 organizations of various types, including other cities, ethnic groups, high schools, military organizations, the American Legion, the Veterans of Foreign Wars, and horsemen’s associations were given permission by the Chamber to march in the parade.
Five groups, “dedicated to the active pursuit of peace through political process”
Despite the Chamber’s refusal, it is alleged, petitioners, who are members of the five “peace groups,” and between thirty and eighty other persons marched for two or three blocks along the parade route following the last official unit of the parade. The march was peaceful except for a brief scuffle which occurred when a few members of the last official unit of the parade attempted to wrest a banner from petitioners.
The police took no action during the parade except to take motion pictures of the unauthorized portion of the parade. On July 16, 1970, petitioners attended the Seaside City Council meeting to protest the treatment which had been given their applications to join the parade. At that time they were cited for violation of section 9-108 of the Seaside Municipal Code. No other unauthorized “marchers” were arrested or cited.
On July 27, 1970, a complaint was filed in respondent court charging petitioners with violating section 9-108 by obstructing the free use of one of the streets on the parade route. On July 29, 1970, petitioners filed a demurrer to the complaint asserting that section 9-108 is an unlawful prior restraint on the exercise of First and Fourteenth Amendment rights, that it is unconstitutionally vague and overbroad, and that it violates equal protec
The City’s return to the alternative writ admits that the parade was held, that the Chamber had applied for and obtained a parade permit, that section 9-108 governs the legality of holding parades in the streets of Seaside, that petitioners had expressed to the Seaside City Council certain grievances concerning the treatment of peace groups during the parade, and that petitioners were cited for and charged with a violation of section 9-108. The City generally denies either positively or for lack of sufficient information or belief the remaining allegations of the petition. Specifically, the City denies that there was an agency relationship between it and the Chamber and denies that it delegated to the Chamber organizational and promotional responsibility for the parade. The City also alleges that petitioners never applied to it for a parade permit as required by section 9-108.
From these pleadings, the following undisputed facts emerge. The City of Seaside has adopted section 9-108 of its Municipal Code to govern parades on its streets. On July 5, 1970, the Chamber held the traditional Independence Day parade pursuant to a permit issued to it by the City under the provisions of section 9-108. Petitioners were cited for having violated section 9-108 on the day of the parade and a complaint was filed in respondent court charging that petitioners had violated section 9-108 by obstructing the free use of a specified street on the parade route.
The remaining facts stated in the petition have been placed in issue by the return but the resolution of these factual disputes is not essential to a disposition of the matter before us.
We do not consider issues which might have been raised had the Chamber’s alleged role as the City’s agent been an undisputed fact. Nor are we concerned with the asserted right of a group holding a permit to manage its own parade or the alleged right of the licensing authority to deny a permit to avoid conflicts between parades. The sole issue before us is whether section 9-108 is unconstitutional on its face.
Petitioners contend that the City’s ordinance (see fn. 2, ante) is an unconstitutional prior restraint on First Amendment rights because it is a licensing scheme totally devoid of narrow, definite and objective standards.
In Shuttlesworth v. Birmingham, supra,
The high court, observing that the ordinance as written conferred on the commission “virtually unbridled and absolute power to prohibit” a parade or public demonstration, concluded that established constitutional principles forbade its enforcement. “This ordinance as it was written, therefore, fell squarely within the ambit of the many decisions of this Court over the last 30 years, holding that a law subjecting the exercise of First Amendment freedoms to the prior restraint of a license without narrow, objective, and definite standards to guide the licensing authority, is unconstitutional.” (Fn. omitted.) (Shuttlesworth v. Birmingham, supra, 394 U.S. at pp. 150-151 [
It will be helpful to our resolution of the question now before us to consider a few pertinent cases in the long and firmly established line of decisions to which the court had reference. In Hague v. C.I.O. (1939)
Two years after Hague, however, the high court upheld the validity of a New Hampshire parade licensing statute after the Supreme Court of
Although Cox indicated that licensing statutes confined to time, place and manner regulations and giving the licensing authority narrowly limited discretion might be upheld, the Supreme Court continued to strike down as unconstitutional statutes which did not so narrowly limit the discretion of licensing officials. Thus, in Saia v. New York (1948)
A similar result was reached in two 1951 decisions. In Niemotko v. Maryland (1951)
Finally, in Cox v. Louisiana (1965)
We believe that the foregoing cases, taken together, manifest the following constitutional principles: In determining whether a statute regulating speech violates the First Amendment, we must weigh the state’s interest in maintaining peace and order in the streets and other public places against the individual’s right to freedom of speech and assembly. When this balance is struck, statutes requiring licenses for parades and demonstrations will not offend the Constitution if they regulate only the time, place, manner and duration of the marches and if they are fairly administered by officials within the range of narrowly limited discretion. On the other hand, any procedure which allows licensing officials wide or unbounded discretion in granting or denying permits is constitutionally infirm because it permits
We proceed to examine section 9-108 of the Seaside Municipal Code (see fn. 2, ante) in the light of the foregoing principles. Although subdivision (a) of section 9-108 simply declares it unlawful “to obstruct the free use of any street or sidewalk,” subdivision (b) clearly establishes a licensing scheme for the holding of “parades and/or civic demonstrations.” As we read the latter section, we construe it to mean that it is unlawful to hold or participate in any parade or civic demonstration on the public streets or sidewalks of Seaside without first obtaining a permit from the City, The section does not specify the city department or body charged with the duty of receiving the required application and issuing the indispensable permit; this shortcoming, not in itself a fatal defect, nevertheless exacerbates the other imperfections of the ordinance. Apparently the application is to be filed with some city department and thereafter submitted (the ordinance does not indicate whether by the applicant or the city department) “to the Police Department and the Fire Department for their approval.”
The glaring and fatal defect in the section, however, is that it contains no standards whatsoever—let alone standards designed to be “narrow, objective and definite”—to guide and govern the city officials in their decisions to grant or deny permits. As the Supreme Court said in Niemotko v. Maryland, supra,
The Seaside ordinance is not only devoid of all standards but, to make matters worse, contains no guarantee that a permit will issue even if the application meets all of the five conditions of the section. (See fn. 2, ante.) Assuming the conditions are met, the section states only that parades and demonstrations “may be permitted.” (Italics added.)
In short, the section is a barefaced example of uncontrolled discretion. In the words of the Shuttlesworth decision, there can be no doubt that, as written, it confers on the city department involved “virtually unbridled and absolute power to prohibit any ‘parade,’ ‘procession’ or ‘demonstration’ on the city’s streets or public ways.” (Fn. omitted.) (
In an obvious attempt to avoid the invalidity inherent in the lack of adequate standards, the City contends that the section is constitutional because it does not confer any discretion, but merely provides for the per
In the strikingly similar case of People v. Duffy (1947)
The same considerations apply here. We have no right to add to this ordinance provisions which it obviously lacks; we cannot find that the ordinance provides only for the exercise of a ministerial duty.
We are met with the objection, however, that subdivision (a) of section 9-108, under which petitioners were prosecuted, is constitutional and is
Subdivision (a) provides: “It shall be unlawful for any person to obstruct the free use of any street or sidewalk.” Subdivision (b) establishes “Exceptions,” where a parade permit is sought and granted, and subdivision (c) provides a procedure for appeal to the city council in case the permit is denied. To sever subdivision (a) from the invalid remainder of the ordinance would effectively ban all parades in Seaside. Such a result clearly contravenes the intention of the City of Seaside, which passed this section to provide a method of licensing, not prohibiting demonstrations. “The test of severability is whether the invalid parts of the statute can be severed from the otherwise valid parts without destroying the statutory scheme, or the utility of the remaining provisions. [Citations.]” (Blumenthal v. Board of Medical Examiners (1962)
We therefore conclude that since the ordinance under which this prosecution was brought is unconstitutional on its face, the respondent court lacks jurisdiction of the criminal proceedings against petitioners. In view of our foregoing conclusions, we deem it unnecessary to consider petitioners’ other contentions.
Let a peremptory writ of prohibition issue as prayed for.
Wright, C. J., Peters, J., Tobriner, J., Mosk, J., and Burke, J., concurred.
Notes
Petitioners are: Paul Dillon, Kathy Harlow, Louise James, Steven Murtagh, Lawrence Hornbeck, Larry Waterhouse, Karel Sherwood Pearson, Steven Coyle, Raymond Shonholtz, John Hughes, Toni Minerva, Jack Dockstader, Robert Adams, Steve Slatkow, Kenneth Dursa, Bruce Neuberger, Carlo Eisenberg, Arlene Rosenberg, Robert Mandel.
Section 9-108 provides:
“(a) It shall be unlawful for any person to obstruct the free use of any street or sidewalk.
“(b) Exceptions—Parades and/or civic demonstrations which obstruct the free use of the public streets and/or sidewalks may be permitted provided the following conditions are met:
(1) The applicant shall submit an application stating the name of the applicant, the date and time on which the public street or highway will be used and the nature of the activity proposed.
(2) Such application shall be accompanied by a fee of $5.00 which shall not be returnable.
(3) The application shall be filed with the City not less than 14 days prior to the activity.
(4) In the event of a parade or moving demonstration, the application shall include a detailed statement of the routes to be traveled including all streets.
(5) The application shall be submitted to the Police Department and the Fire Department for their approval. In the event that the anticipated crowds at such activities will reasonably require the use of extra police officers and/or firemen, the cost of hiring such persons shall be at the expense of the person or group applying for the permit. Payment shall be at the established rate of pay and a deposit covering such expenses shall be made to the City not less than seven days prior to the activity.
“(c) Appeals.
In the event that the application detailed in Section 9-108(b) is acted upon unfavorably, the applicant shall have the right to appeal to the City Council.”
The five groups named in the petition were the Women’s International League for Peace and Freedom, Veterans for Peace, a group of members of the Peace and Freedom Party, a group from Monterey Peninsula College known as the MPC Committee for Peace, and the Movement for a Democratic Military.
The petition alleges that the applications were made to the Seaside Chamber of Commerce, not to the City itself.
Petitioners argue that we should accept the facts alleged in the verified petition as true on the theory that the City’s denial upon information and belief, or for lack of information or belief, is ineffective and is an admission of any fact presumably within the knowledge of the City. (Dietlin v. General American Life Ins. Co. (1935)
Although the City has not raised these issues, we note (1) that a petition for a writ of prohibition is a proper procedural means by which to challenge as unconstitutional on its face a statute or ordinance under which criminal charges are being prosecuted. (Whitney v. Municipal Court (1962)
We also note that the City itself obviously did not consider the ordinance limited to time, place and manner regulations, since it first raised the contention at oral argument before this court.
Dissenting Opinion
I dissent. I would deny the writ.
