In thе Town of Hallie, Wisconsin, DiMa Corporation operates an adult bookstore, which is currently open 24 hours per day. After Hallie adopted an ordinance limiting the hours such bookstores may be open, DiMa filed this suit under 42 U.S.C. § 1983 seeking declaratory and injunctive relief against enforcing the ordinance, claiming that the ordinance violates DiMa’s free speech rights under the First and Fourteenth Amendments. The district court granted summаry judgment for Hallie. Because we conclude that the record sufficiently supports Hallie’s claim that the ordinance is a reasonable attempt to control undesirable “secondary effects” rather than an attempt to regulate speech because of its objectionable content, we affirm the district court.
Background
Hallie is a small town in rural Wisconsin between Eau Claire and Chippewa Falls. DiMa opеrates the “Pure Pleasure” bookstore in Hallie. Pure Pleasure sells sexually explicit, nonobscene books and magazines, and it has private booths in which a patron can watch sexually explicit, non-obscene video tapes. 1 Since it opened, Pure Pleasure has operated 24 hours per day. In March 1998, Hallie adopted Ordinance No. 98-1, which regulates “adult-oriented establishments,” including “adult bookstores.” DiMа does not dispute that Pure Pleasure falls within the ordinance’s definition of these terms. The ordinance regulates adult-oriented establishments in various ways but in this suit DiMa challenges only one of them: the hours of operation limits contained in Section 1.06. Under that section, an adult-oriented establishment may not be open between 2:00 a.m. and 8:00 a.m. Monday through Friday, between 3:00 a.m. and 8:00 a.m. on Saturday, and between 3:00 a.m. and noon on Sunday. The оrdinance thus requires adult bookstores to be closed about one-quarter of the hours during a week. (These are the same hours of operation limits that Wisconsin has placed on establishments that serve alcohol. See Wisc. Stat. §§ 125.32(3) & 125.68(4).) Section 1.06 has not yet been enforced: the parties stipulated to an injunction of it while the matter was pending in the district court, and the district court continued that injunction pending the outcome of this аppeal.
Analysis
The First Amendment provides in part that “Congress shall make no law ... abridging the freedom of speech, or of the press.” Section One of the Fourteenth Amendment incorporated this provision and so it prohibits state government from abridging these freedoms as well.
See, e.g., Gitlow v. New York,
There are some categorical exceptions to this genеral analysis, however; government has more freedom to regulate certain kinds of speech, even though it does so based on the content of the speech. Within constitutional limits, government may proscribe obscenity,
see Miller v. California,
As the Sixth Circuit recently noted, the Court’s analysis has caused some con
*828
fusion among courts and litigants, and that confusion is evident in this case.
See Richland Bookmart, Inc. v. Nichols,
Time, place, and manner restrictions are “reasonable,” that is, do not violate the First Amendment, if they: (1) are justified without reference to the content of the regulated speech; (2) are narrowly tailorеd to serve a significant government interest; and (3) leave open ample alternative channels for communication of the information.
Ward,
We can reject DiMa’s first argument rather easily. DiMa claims that at least some of the Hallie Township Board members had an improper motive when they voted for the ordinance: rather than acting to combat crime, deter sexually transmitted diseases, and the other “legitimate” goals that the ordinance’s preamble asserts, at least some of the Board members voted for the ordinance because of local opposition to the “vice” of sexually explicit materials. The record shows that DiMa is correct. Some members of the Board desired to close down Pure Pleasure altogether because of numerous complaints from Hallie residents who objected to having an adult bookstore in their town. Recognizing that the Constitution did not permit proscribing sexually explicit materials, at least some of the Board members seemed willing to enact the ordinance because it was the most that they could do consistent with the Constitution. But attacking the ordinance because it was enacted by persons with “impure hearts” gets DiMa nowhere. The actual motives of those who enacted the ordinance are irrelevant to our First Amendment analysis. “It is a familiar principle of constitutional law that this Court will not strike down an otherwise constitutional statute on the basis of an alleged illicit legislative motive.”
O’Brien,
[The language of the First Amendment] does not put us into the business of *829 invalidating laws by reason of the evil motives of their authоrs. Had the Hialeah City Council set out resolutely to suppress the practices of Santería, but ineptly adopted ordinances that failed to do so, I do not see how those laws could be said to “prohibi[t] the free exercise” of religion. Nor, in my view, does it matter that a legislature consists entirely of the pure-hearted, if the law it enacts in fact singles out a religious practice for special burdens.
Church of the Lukumi Babalu Aye, Inc. v. City of Hialeah,
The justification advanced by Hallie is combating potential undesirable “secondary effects” of adult-oriеnted es-. tablishments. This is a significant government interest.
Renton,
We also agree with the district court that a municipality may make a rec
*830
ord for summary judgment or at trial with evidence that it may not have had when it enacted its ordinance. D. Ct. Op. at 11-12. The Court in
Renton
did not address this issue because in that case, the city council had created an extensive record prior to enacting its ordinance.
Under these standards, we conclude that Hallie has met its burden of making a record to justify its ordinance’s limitation on hours of operation, but we agree with the district court that it has only minimally done so.
See
D. Ct. Op. at 10. Hallie relies primarily on the experience of West Allis, Wisconsin, and Hallie’s ordinance was essentially copied from the one enacted by West Allis. (West Allis is next to Milwaukee and is thus geographically far removed from Hallie.) Hallie relies on the factual record supporting West Allis’s experience as reported in
Tee & Bee, Inc. v. City of West Allis,
We must address one more aspect of DiMa’s argument before closing. In the court below, DiMa submitted expert testimony and a study done in Phoenix to show there is no relation between an adult-oriented business’ hours of operation and crime. It also proffered various evidence showing that there was in fact no correlation between Pure Pleasure being open 24 hours а day and crime in Hallie. The district court properly rejected this evidence because it merely contradicts other evidence that the Hallie Board could have reasonably relied upon. It is therefore irrelevant to the question of whether there is some evidence that does support the Board’s conclusions. DiMa’s contradictory evidence would be highly probative if our task were to discovеr the objective truth about the effect of Pure Pleasure’s operating in Hallie. But our task under the First Amendment is far different. The Hallie Board has the job of sorting through the available evidence and making a political judgment about what regulations best serve Hallie’s interest. We are not here to judge how well the Board did its job; our task is to determine whether the law it enacted violates the Constitution. It does not.
*832 The judgment of the district court is AFFIRMED.
Notes
. There has been nо judicial finding, nor even the allegation, that these materials are obscene. Hallie decided to regulate these materials as not obscene and the parties have so treated them in this litigation. We therefore do the same.
. Although DiMa is a corporation rather than a natural person, it may assert a First Amendment challenge.
First Nat’l Bank of Boston
v.
Bellotti,
. But even within these traditional categorical exceptions, the First Amendment does not permit government to disсriminate only against speech that contains some other message of which the government disapproves.
R.A.V.,
. Justice Kennedy, who wrote the opinion for the majority, believed that the motives of the city council were relevant, and applied an analysis adopted from cases applying the Fourteenth Amendment's equal protection clause.
Hialeah,
. "When a fragmented Court decides a case and no single rationale explaining the result enjoys the assent of five Justices, the hоlding of the Court may be viewed as the position taken by those Members who concurred in the judgments on the narrowest grounds."
Marks v. United States, 430
U.S. 188, 193,
. We do not want our reasoning to be construed as a slight of the district court’s opinion in Tee & Bee. The court’s opinion was thorough and well reasoned. In referring to Tee & Bee as not compelling evidence supporting Hallie’s ordinance, we mean that as a district court opinion, to this court Tee & Bee is persuasive but not binding precedent.
