Before us in this appeal is the constitutionality of a Milwaukee ordinance which prohibits female employees of “Class B” taverns from sitting with male patrons or from sitting or standing at or behind the bar. The District Court held the ordinance unconstitutional. We affirm the judgment.
*731 In her complaint plaintiff alleges that she is by occupation an entertainer and that she was “charged with the offense of sitting with a male patron in violation of section 90-25 of the Milwaukee Code of Ordinances.” Naming as defendants the Milwaukee City Attorney, the state judge before whom her prosecution was pending, and the Milwaukee Police Department, she prayed for injunctive relief against the pending prosecution and for declaratory relief adjudicating the ordinance invalid.
The District Court denied temporary injunctive relief,
1
following which the state prosecution came on for trial and the charge against plaintiff was dismissed. Defendants’ subsequent motion to dismiss this proceeding based on mootness was denied since the claim for declaratory relief remained.
White v. Fleming,
Subsequently the court ruled on defendants’ motion to dismiss addressed to the merits, granting the motion as to the Milwaukee Police Department on the authority of
City of Kenosha v. Bruno,
The ordinance, which the District Court held invalid in its entirety, applies to female entertainers, waitresses, and other female employees. Although plaintiff is solely an entertainer and is therefore affected only by the provisions of the ordinance applicable to entertainers, the provisions covering other employees are substantially the same and are “so interwoven with the system held invalid that [they] cannot stand alone.”
Dorchy v. Kansas,
The ordinance prohibits female employees from standing or sitting “at or behind the bar, except for the specific purpose of receiving food or drink orders for delivery to patrons who are not at the bar” and from sitting with male patrons anywhere on the premises. Exempted are licensed female bartenders, female employees who are members of the immediate family and household of the licensee, and “female entertainers while actually performing in an area behind the bar which is ordinarily used for back-bar entertainment.”
Until recent years the separate treatment of women in the regulation of liquor dispensing establishments was uniformly held to be a valid classification under the equal protection clause of the fourteenth amendment. Justice Frankfurter, speaking for the Supreme Court in 1948 in
Goesaert v. Cleary,
“The Fourteenth Amendment did not tear history up by the roots, and the regulation of the liquor traffic is one of the oldest and most untrammeled of legislative powers. Michigan could, beyond question, forbid all women *732 from working behind a bar. This is so despite the vast changes in the social and legal position of women. The fact that women may now have achieved the virtues that men have long claimed as their prerogatives and now indulge in vices that men have long practiced, does not preclude the States from drawing a sharp line between the sexes, certainly, in such matters as the regulation of the liquor traffic. See the Twenty-First Amendment and Carter v. Virginia,321 U.S. 131 [64 S.Ct. 464 ,88 L.Ed. 605 ], The Constitution does not require legislatures to reflect sociological insight, or shifting social standards, any more than it requires them to keep abreast of the latest scientific standards.” Id.335 U.S. at 465-466 ,69 S.Ct. at 199 .
The Court held also that the subclassification of women whose husbands or fathers owned a bar, as against other women, was similarly valid:
“Michigan evidently believes that the oversight assured through ownership of a bar by a barmaid’s husband or father minimizes hazards that may confront a barmaid without such protecting oversight. This Court is certainly not in a position to gainsay such belief by the Michigan legislature. If it is entertainable, as we think it is, Michigan has not violated its duty to afford equal protection of its laws.” Id. at 466,69 S.Ct. at 200 .
Mr. Justice Rutledge, joined by Justices Douglas and Murphy, dissented on the ground that the statute arbitrarily discriminated between male and female owners of liquor establishments, allowing the male owner to employ his wife or daughter as a barmaid, even though he himself was always absent, but preventing the female owner from employing her daughter or working herself as a barmaid, even if a male employee was always present on the premises to keep order. This analysis, thought the dissenters, showed that the statute was not “motivated by a legislative solicitude for the moral and physical well-being of women who, but for the law, would be employed as barmaids.”
Id.
at 468,
The dissenting opinion in
Goesaert
was perhaps one of the earliest judicial refusals to accept uncritically the stereotyping of women which had so long prevailed in the application of the equal protection clause. It was to be many years, however, before the dissenters’ approach found much favor in the courts. State courts and lower federal courts before and after
Goesaert v. Cleary
sustained, without much critical examination and usually based upon the traditional sex-role of women (see
Women’s Liberation Union of Rhode Island v. Israel,
In recent years, the changing attitudes concerning women’s roles in society have been reflected not only in action by Congress (see, for example, the Equal Pay Act of 1963, 29 U.S.C. § 206(d) and Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964, 42 U.S.C. § 2000e
et seq.
2
)
but in court decisions as well. While the Supreme Court has not yet overruled
Goesaert v. Cleary,
the judicial and social climate has changed since that case was decided. This court showed, arguably, a disposition narrowly to limit
Goesaert
to its facts in holding that a complaint challenging Chicago’s barmaid ordinance, which the district court had dismissed on the authority of
Goesaert,
presented sub
*733
stantial constitutional questions under the equal protection clause and, in view of the Civil Rights Act of 1964, 42 U.S.C. § 2000a
et seq.,
the supremacy clause.
3
McCrimmon v. Daley,
It is true that Goesaert was grounded in part upon the broad powers of the state to regulate the traffic in liquor under the twenty-first amendment, and the Court has recently reaffirmed those powers in
California v. LaRue,
The Supreme Court has rejected classifications based on sex which do not bear a rational relationship to the objective the regulation is designed to achieve.
Reed v. Reed,
The minimal requirement for the validity of state statutes and city ordinances under the equal protection clause is that the statutory classification bear some rational relationship to a legitimate state purpose.
Weber v. Aetna Casualty & Surety Co.,
In the area of sex classifications, which as we noted above, four members of the Court regard as “inherently suspect,” a number of lower courts have viewed
Reed
and
Frontiero
as indicating that a less deferential test is to be applied. The Fourth Circuit, in fact, based upon its interpretation of
Reed,
has gone so far as to recognize a standard which lies between the rational basis and compelling interest tests for use in sex classification cases, the “intermediate” test being whether there is a “fair and substantial” relation between the basis of the classification and the object of the classification.
Eslinger v. Thomas,
476
*735
F.2d 225, 230-231 (4th Cir. 1973).
6
The Ninth Circuit has interpreted
Reed
and
Frontiero
as suggesting “that a classification based upon sex will have to be justified by more than the traditional ‘rational’ connection between the classification and some valid legislative purpose.”
Berkelman v. San Francisco Unified School Dist.,
The Second Circuit, while applying a rational basis standard to hold a maternity leave regulation invalid on the ground of equal protection, found evidence in recent Supreme Court decisions “that rational basis scrutiny is not so deferential a standard of review as had been previously and generally supposed.”
Green v. Waterford Board of Education,
2 Cir.,
Two other Supreme Court cases must also be considered.
Eisenstadt v. Baird, supra,
“The question for our determination in this case is whether there is some ground of difference that rationally explains the different treatment accorded married and unmarried persons [under the challenged Massachusetts statutes].” Id. at 447,92 S.Ct. at 1035 .
In
Geduldig v. Aiello, supra,
The precise terms of the test ultimately to be evolved by the Supreme Court for judging the validity of a classification based on sex cannot now be determined. But whatever formulation the Court may ultimately adopt, it can at least be divined from the authorities discussed above that we may not accept a classification based solely on sex without further inquiry as to whether the differences between men and women rationally justify the classification.
The interest sought to be advanced by the ordinance before us, judging from its terms, from the Wisconsin Supreme Court’s decision upholding it
(City of Milwaukee
v.
Piscuine, supra,
We hold, therefore, that the provisions of the Milwaukee ordinance in issue here are in violation of the equal protection clause.
Affirmed.
Notes
. The record does not disclose why this action was not dismissed at that stage on the basis of
Younger v. Harris,
. We omit reference to the Equal Rights Amendment, H.R.J. Res. No. 208, 92d Cong. 2d Sess. (1972), since it has not been ratified as yet.
. Plaintiff in the case at bar does not assert the Civil Rights Act as a basis for holding the challenged Milwaukee ordinance invalid.
. In concurring in the judgment in
Frontiero,
Mr. Justice Powell, joined by the Chief Justice and Mr. Justice Blackmun, found it unnecessary to decide whether classifications based on sex are inherently suspect and thought it inappropriate to reach that question in light of the pendency before state legislatures of the proposed Equal Rights Amendment, “which if adopted will resolve the substance of this precise question . . . .”
. But see
Daugherty v. Daley, supra,
. The words “fair and substantial relation” in
Reed,
The court in
Eslinger
cites in support of its “intermediate” test
Wark v. Robbins,
. Judge Feinberg, writing for the court, referred to two cases which had “apparently narrowed the linguistic gap” between the strict scrutiny and rational basis standards: In the first of these,
Weber v. Aetna Casualty & Surety Co., supra,
Judge Feinberg also noted that “the Court seems far less willing to speculate as to what unexpressed legitimate state purposes may be rationally furthered by a challenged statutory classification,” comparing
McGowan v. Maryland, supra,
. Traditionally, the courts have not required that the classification be supported by legislatively articulated reasons or findings. See, e. g.,
McGowan v. Maryland, supra,
. Another inferable purpose of the ordinance at bar,
viz.,
protecting male patrons from having money extracted from them by female employees soliciting drinks, see
Daugherty v. Daley, supra,
