MEMORANDUM OPINION AND ORDER REGARDING DEFENDANT’S MOTION TO PRESERVE RIGHT TO TRIAL BY JURY
TABLE OF CONTENTS
I. INTRODUCTION.927
A. Factual Background.927
B. Prior Proceedings.928
C. Arguments Of The Parties .929
II. LEGAL ANALYSIS.930
A. The City’s Assertion Of A Right To Jury Trial.930
B. Timeliness Of The Motion To Preserve Right To Jury Trial.931
C. The Scope Of The Seventh Amendment Right To Jury Trial.932
1. The Supreme Court’s decision in City of Monterey.932
2. Analysis under City of Monterey.935
a. First prong of the Seventh Amendment inquiry.935
b. Second prong of the Seventh Amendment inquiry.936
III. CONCLUSION.939
I. INTRODUCTION
A. Factual Background
The court has recounted the factual background to these proceedings in considerable detail in prior rulings. 1 For present purposes, suffice it to say that, at some time in the fall of 2003, Doctor John’s leased property in a relatively new and still developing commercial area near the southern edge of Sioux City, Iowa (the City). The location of the store was zoned as General Business-Commercial Planned Development (“BG-C”) under the Sioux City Municipal Code. That is, it is in a General Business (“BG”) zone, with a Commercial Planned Development Overlay (“-C”). Doctor John’s intended to sell a variety of merchandise, including primarily lingerie, swim wear, women’s shoes, lotions, and oils, as well as videos (both “adult” and otherwise), games, novelty items, and “marital aids” or “adult toys,” including, for example, vibrators, “dildos,” “masturbation toys,” and blow up dolls (some described as “anatomically correct”).
Shortly after Doctor John’s representatives contacted the City Attorney concerning zoning requirements for the intended location of that store, and before Doctor John’s could complete preparations to open its store in Sioux City, the City Council passed a series of significant amendments to Sioux City’s zoning requirements for “adult entertainment businesses,” including what has been called in this litigation the October 2003 “Moratorium” Amendment and the January 2004 Amendments. Those amendments prevented Doctor
In December 2004, some time after the court had enjoined enforcement of the January 2004 Amendments, the City passed additional amendments to the pertinent ordinances regulating “adult entertainment businesses,” which are identified in this litigation as the December 2004 Amendments. The December 2004 Amendments expressly superseded the January 2004 Amendments. Doctor John’s amended its Complaint to challenge the constitutionality of the December 2004 Amendments, as well as the October 2003 “Moratorium” Amendment and the January 2004 Amendments.
B. Prior Proceedings
Some ten months after the court’s preliminary injunction ruling, on December 20, 2004, Doctor John’s filed a Motion For Partial Summary Judgment on the constitutional invalidity of the January 2004 Amendments. On February 22, 2005, the City filed its own Motion For Summary Judgment asserting that challenges to the January 2004 Amendments were “mooted” by enactment of the December 2004 Amendments. In the alternative, the City argued that Doctor John’s would have been a “sex shop” under the “sex toys” definitions in the January 2004 Amendments, which did not implicate First Amendment protections, and that the “combination” provision of the January 2004 Amendments involving “adult media” was constitutional under the applicable level of scrutiny for regulation of expression, which the City contended was “intermediate scrutiny.” Thus, the City asserted that Doctor John’s could have been lawfully excluded from its chosen location under those provisions.
In a lengthy ruling on those motions, which the court filed on September 28, 2005,
Doctor John’s, Inc. v. City of Sioux City, Iowa,
A second round of summary judgment motions commenced with a Second Motion For Summary Judgment filed by Doctor John’s on August 22, 2005, but that motion was held in abeyance pending discovery. Upon completion of discovery, Doctor John’s filed its January 12, 2006, Motion To Bifurcate Damages, and on April 12,
In the portion of that ruling that is, perhaps, of greatest immediate interest here, the court set a bench trial on the remaining “constitutionality” issues for September 11, 2006, and a jury trial on “damages” issues for January 22, 2007. By orders dated August 17, 2006 (docket nos. 142 & 143), the bench trial on “constitutionality” issues was rescheduled to begin on January 22, 2007, and the jury trial on “damages” issues was rescheduled to begin on March 5, 2007.
Some months after apparently acquiescing to this bifurcation of proceedings, the City filed on October 10, 2006, a Motion To Preserve Right Of Trial By Jury (docket no. 143). In its motion, the City seeks an order preserving the City’s right to a jury trial on all issues that bear on the City’s potential liability in this action, including “constitutionality” of the parts of the January 2004 Amendments to the City’s ordinances defining and regulating “adult entertainment businesses,” which is an issue currently set for bench trial on January 22, 2007. Plaintiff Doctor John’s resisted the motion on October 23, 2006 (docket no. 145), and the City filed a reply in further support of its motion on October 30, 2006 (docket no. 146). The City’s motion is now fully submitted.
C. Arguments Of The Parties
In support of its motion to preserve its jury trial rights, the City argues that it timely demanded a jury trial pursuant to Rules 38 and 39 of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure on any issues that are by rights triable by a jury. Thus, the City contends that it is entitled to a jury trial on any issues amenable to determination by a jury, even though this action also involves some issues that may not be triable by a jury. The City argues, further, that the Seventh Amendment guarantees its right to a jury trial on the § 1983 claims asserted by Doctor John’s. The City argues that, in
City of Monterey v. Del Monte Dunes at Monterey, Ltd.,
526
In its response, Doctor John’s argues that the City’s motion is an untimely motion to reconsider the order bifurcating proceedings into a bench trial on “constitutionality” issues and a jury trial on “damages” issues. Doctor John’s also argues that the issues reserved by the court for a bench trial are, in any event, constitutional and equitable issues, including prayers for declaratory and injunctive relief, that are not properly triable to a jury. Doctor John’s contends that the City is attempting to blur the clear lines between issues triable to a jury and issues triable to the court in an attempt to obtain a factfinder who will agree with the City’s contention that all “adult” businesses are bad for the community. Doctor John’s contends, however, that this is primarily a “judicial review” action concerning the constitutionality of the ordinances in question, which has little in common with a claim for damages that is triable to a jury. Doctor John’s also argues that the court must determine the ultimate standards with which Doctor John’s must comply to qualify for a business license to operate in the City, and that those standards are also a question for the court. Thus, Doctor John’s contends that the court has done no more than reserve for bench trial issues that are properly the province of the court to decide.
In reply, the City contends that the untimeliness argument asserted by Doctor John’s relies on Rule 59, which is not applicable to an order that is not a final judgment. The City also argues that Doctor John’s has side-stepped or ignored its argument and analysis based on City of Monterey. In the City’s view, the “liability” issues in this case are the “constitutional” issues, because the City will only be liable in this case if its ordinances are unconstitutional. The City reiterates that this court has recognized that there are genuine issues of material fact concerning the applicable level of scrutiny. Thus, the City reiterates its assertion that, under City of Monterey, those issues of fact are triable to a jury.
II. LEGAL ANALYSIS
A. The City’s Assertion Of A Right To Jury Trial
There is no dispute here that the City timely demanded a jury trial pursuant to Rules 38 and 39 of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure.
See
Fed.R.CivP. 38 (echoing the Seventh Amendment requirement to “preserve” the right to trial by jury and providing that “[a]ny party may demand a trial by jury of any issue triable of right by a jury”); Fed.R.Civ.P. 39 (where a jury has been demanded pursuant to Rule 38, “[t]he trial of all issues so demanded shall be by jury,” unless the parties stipulate to a trial to the court or the court finds that “a right of trial by jury of some or all of those issues does not exist under the Constitution or statutes of the United States”). Thus, the City has properly invoked its right to a jury trial. The questions are whether the City timely reiterated its demand for a jury trial after the
B. Timeliness Of The Motion To Preserve Right To Jury Trial
Doctor John’s asserts that the City’s motion to preserve its right to a jury trial is untimely, because the City waited several months after the court ordered a bench trial to file its motion. Doctor John’s argues that the City’s motion is really a motion to reconsider under Rule 54 of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure, but such a motion to reconsider, Doctor John’s argues, is at least “guided by” Rule 59(e), which imposes a ten-day time limit on motions to alter or amend judgment. Doctor John’s contends that filing a motion to reconsider months after the ruling in question is not “timely” within the requirements of Rule 59(e), and should not be timely under Rule 54. The City, however, contends that the ten-day time limit in Rule 59(e) clearly is not applicable here, because the challenged ruling to bifurcate proceedings for a bench trial of “constitutionality” issues and a jury trial of “damages” issues is not a final judgment.
As the court noted in its ruling on the second round of summary judgment motions in this case, which included the City’s motion to reconsider parts of the court’s ruling on the first round of summary judgment motions, this court has previously found that Rule 54(b) provides authority for a court to reconsider any interlocutory order, including a prior ruling on a motion for summary judgment.
Wells’ Dairy, Inc. v. Travelers Indemnity Company of Illinois,
This court has also recognized that the standards for reconsideration of interlocutory orders may be less “exacting” than the standards for reconsideration of final orders under Rules 59(e) and 60(b), but this court has nevertheless held that it should look to the general principles under those rules for guidance.
Id.
(citing
Bragg v. Robertson,
Because the City has raised the question of whether certain issues should be tried to the jury or the court sufficiently in advance of the bench trial to permit reasoned and informed opposition and reasoned and informed adjudication of the matter, the court finds that the City’s motion is timely. Nor does the court find that the City’s apparent acquiescence in trial of certain matters to the bench at the conclusion of the oral arguments on the second round of summary judgment motions amounts to a waiver of the City’s right to reiterate its demand for jury trial on any or all issues. Rather, the court suggested such a procedure at the oral arguments, without prior notice to the parties that the court was considering such a procedure should the court decide that genuine issues of material fact remained on “constitutionality” issues. Moreover, the manner in which the court bifurcated the proceedings was not precisely that proposed by Doctor John’s in its motion to bifurcate, but the City had opposed any bifurcation of the proceedings.
Thus, the court finds that the City’s motion to preserve its right to trial by jury on all issues on which the Seventh Amendment guarantees such a right is properly before the court.
C. The Scope Of The Seventh Amendment Right To Jury Trial
In support of its motion for preservation of its Seventh Amendment right to jury trial, the City principally relies on
City of Monterey v. Del Monte Dunes at Monterey, Ltd.,
1. The Supreme Court’s decision in City of Monterey
In
City of Monterey,
a land developer brought an action pursuant to 42 U.S.C. § 1983 against a city asserting that the city’s series of repeated rejections of proposals to develop the property in question, each time imposing more rigorous demands on the developer, violated substantive due process and equal protection and constituted a regulatory taking without paying compensation.
City of Monterey,
The Court concluded that the question
ante
to consideration of whether or not the Seventh Amendment required trial by jury was to “ ‘ “ascertain whether a construction of the statute [on which the claim was based] is fairly possible by which the [constitutional] question may be avoided.”’”
Id.
(quoting
Feltner v. Columbia Pictures Television, Inc.,
Thus, in the absence of a statutory right to trial by jury, the Court turned to the question of whether or not the Seventh Amendment guaranteed a right of trial by jury on the § 1983 claim at issue in that case.
Id.
at 708,
In Suits at common law, where the value in controversy shall exceed twenty dollars, the right of trial by jury shall be preserved, and no fact tried by a jury, shall be otherwise reexamined in any Court of the United States, than according to the rules of the common law.
U.S. Const, amend. VII. In City of Monte-rey, the Supreme Court pursued a two-prong inquiry to determine when the Seventh Amendment requires a jury trial:
Consistent with the textual mandate that the jury right be preserved, our interpretation of the Amendment has been guided by historical analysis comprising two principal inquiries. “[W]e ask, first, whether we are dealing with a cause of action that either was tried at law at the time of the founding or is at least analogous to one that was.” Markman v. Westview Instruments, Inc.,517 U.S. 370 , 376,116 S.Ct. 1384 ,134 L.Ed.2d 577 (1996). “If the action in question belongs in the law category, we then ask whether the particular trial decision must fall to the jury in order to preserve the substance of the common-law right as it existed in 1791.” Ibid.
City of Monterey,
As to the first inquiry, the Court concluded that the Seventh Amendment applies not only to common-law causes of action, but also to statutory causes of action “ ‘ “analogous to common-law causes of action ordinarily decided in English law courts in the late 18th century, as opposed to those customarily heard by courts of equity or admiralty.” ’ ”
Id.
at 708-09,
Turning to the second inquiry to determine whether the Seventh Amendment requires trial by jury, the Court focused on whether the particular issues were proper for determination by the jury.
Id.
at 718,
In the case before it, the Court held “that the issue whether a landowner has been deprived of all economically viable use of his property is a predominantly factual question” that “is for the jury.”
Id.
720-21,
[The developer] did not bring a broad challenge to the constitutionality of the city’s general land-use ordinances or policies, and our holding does not extend to a challenge of that sort. In such a context, the determination whether the statutory purposes were legitimate, or whether the purposes, though legitimate, were furthered by the law or general policy, might well fall within the province of the judge.
City of Monterey,
[T]o the extent [the developer’s] challenge was premised on unreasonable governmental action, the theory argued and tried to the jury was that the city’s denial of the final development permit was inconsistent not only with the city’s general ordinances and policies but even with the shifting ad hoc restrictions previously imposed by the city. [The developer’s] argument, in short, was not that the city had followed its zoning ordinances and policies but rather that it had not done so. As is often true in § 1983 actions, the disputed questions were whether the government had denied a constitutional right in acting outside the bounds of its authority, and, if so, the extent of any resulting damages. These were questions for the jury.
Id.
2. Analysis under City of Monterey
Contrary to the City’s contentions, this court concludes that none of the issues that the court has reserved for bench trial are issues on which the Seventh Amendment requires a jury trial under the test set forth in City of Monterey. This court has considerable doubt that the first prong of the City of Monterey test is satisfied here, but even assuming that the first prong is satisfied, the second is not.
a. First prong of the Seventh Amendment inquiry
As
to the first prong of the Seventh Amendment inquiry, whether the cause of action is or is analogous to one that was tried to a jury as an action at law under the common law, the City is correct that the Supreme Court concluded in
City of Monterey
that claims pursuant to § 1983 “sound in tort.”
Id.
at 709,
In this case, however, Doctor John’s
also
seeks declaratory and injunctive relief, and neither the City nor this court has identified any precedents suggesting that such
Thus, the court has considerable doubt that the first prong of the City of Monte-rey inquiry dictates trial by jury in this case. Assuming, for the sake of argument, that the first prong is satisfied here, the court turns to consideration of the second prong.
b. Second prong of the Seventh Amendment inquiry
The second inquiry under
City of Mon-terey
to determine the applicability of the Seventh Amendment “ask[s] whether
the particular trial decision
must fall to the jury in order to preserve the substance of the common-law right as it existed in 1791.”
Id.
at 708,
As in
City of Monterey,
whether the “applicability” and “damages” questions that the court has already preserved for jury determination are, indeed, issues that “must fall to the jury in order to preserve the substance of’ the City’s Seventh Amendment right to jury trial is clear.
Id.
at 720-21,
The role of the jury, if any, in determining the “constitutionality” question that the court has currently reserved for bench trial is, however, a more difficult question.
Id.
at 721,
Consequently, this court concludes that, even though jury trial is required on what the court has defined as “applicability” and “damages” issues, trial decisions on “constitutionality” issues involving the substantive due process claim, are
not
“particular trial decisions] [that] must fall to the jury in order to preserve the substance of the common-law right as it existed in 1791,”
id.
at 708,
Nevertheless, the City argues that the “constitutionality” issues that the court has
The present ease is entirely different, because Doctor John’s
does
make a broad challenge to the constitutionality of the ordinances.
See id.
at 721,
Finally, the City contends that it will only be liable in this case if its ordinances are unconstitutional. The City is correct that it will be liable for damages if the ordinances in question are determined to be “unconstitutional,” but the City will
also
be liable for damages, if the ordinances are
III. CONCLUSION
The court concludes that submission of “constitutionality” issues to the court, and only “applicability” and “damages” issues to the jury, is actually consistent with, not contrary to, the parties’ Seventh Amendment rights to jury trial, as defined by the two-prong inquiry in City of Monterey.
THEREFORE, the City’s October 10, 2006, Motion To Preserve Right Of Trial By Jury (docket no. 143) is denied. The court will determine “constitutionality” issues that fall within its province, but consistent with the parties’ Seventh Amendment rights to jury trial, the court has preserved for jury determination “applicability” and “damages” issues.
IT IS SO ORDERED.
Notes
. In a prior published ruling,
Doctor John's, Inc. v. City of Sioux City, Iowa,
