Opinion
This аppeal involves the constitutionality of two provisions of Los Angeles Municipal Code section 103.101 (as amended by Ordinance No. 150,184, approved Oct. 5, 1977) governing permission to operate a picture arcade. Defendants City of Los Angeles, board of police commissioners, police chief, and city attorney appeal from the granting of a preliminary injunction to plaintiffs, a group of nine arcade proprietors, restraining the enforcement of subdivisions (c)(4) and (i) of section 103.101.
The ordinance requires that a permit be obtained for the operation of a picture arcade. 1 Subdivision (c)(4) provides that a permit shall be denied if, within the past two years, “the applicant, his or her employеe, agent, partner, director, officer, stockholder or manager has . . . knowingly allowed or permitted any act of sexual intercourse, sodomy, oral copulation, or masturbation, to be committed at or in any arcade or picture arcade, or . . . any arcade or picture arcade to be used as a place in which solicitations for [such acts] openly occur . . . .”
Subdivision (i) requires that “the entire interior of such premises wherein the pictures are viewed [be] visible upon entrance to such premises” and prohibits booths which are “partially or fully enclosed . . . or . . . concealed.” 2
*184 Plaintiffs sought declaratory and injunctive relief, claiming that the ordinance was unconstitutional as an invalid infringemеnt on freedom of • expression and as an attempt to regulate sexual conduct which was preempted by state law.
On appeal, defendants contend that: (1) no showing of irreparable injuiy justifying preliminary injunctive relief has been made by plaintiffs, and (2) enforcement of subdivisions (c)(4) and (i) of the ordinance cannot be restrained because they are not unconstitutional, either as (a) restraints upon freedom of expression, or (b) intrusions upon state preempted regulations of sexual conduct.
Discussion
Summary
The order granting the preliminary injunction must be reversed. Though subdivision (c)(4), authorizing denial of a permit on the basis of prior conduct, is an unconstitutional prior restraint in violation of the First Amendment, preliminary injunctive relief with respect thereto was improper because plaintiffs did not show that they would be irreparably injured by enforcement pending trial. Subdivision (i), prohibiting closed or concealed booths, is a valid, reasonable regulation of the manner of arcade operation and is not preempted by state law. The court, therefore, lacked jurisdiction to enjoin its enforсement.
Subdivision (c)(4) Is An Invalid Prior Restraint on First Amendment Rights
Both sides briefed the First Amendment question here presented, and plaintiffs have requested declaratory relief on this issue. Thus, though, as hereinafter demonstrated, plaintiffs have made no showing of irreparable injury pending trial, we deem it appropriate to state our opinion on the merits of plaintiffs’ claim.
(7978 Corporation
v.
Pitchess
(1974)
The operаtion of a picture arcade is an activity protected by the First Amendment.
(People
v.
Perrine
(1975)
The denial of a permit is a total prior restraint upon a person’s engaging in a First Amendment protected activity. Though a system of prior restraint is not unconstitutional per se, the United States Supreme Court has consistently held that such a system comes to a court “ ‘bearing a heavy presumption against its constitutional validity.’ ”
(Southeastern Promotions, Ltd.
v.
Conrad
(1975)
Where, as here, an ordinаnce mandates denial of a license to conduct a First Amendment related business on the basis of prior misconduct, such a disqualification provision can only be sustained if there is a clear and present danger that serious substantive evil would result from granting that license.
In
Perrine
v.
Municipal Court, supra,
“To interpret the ordinance in this case to permit denial of a license because of a past conviction of violating Penal Code section 311.2 would do more than create a hazard to protected freedoms; it would suppress them altogether. The penalty for violating section 311.2 does not include a forfeiture of First Amendment rights, and the risk that criminal sanctions will be insufficient to deter future violations of that section cannot justify the county’s attempted forfeiture of those rights on the theory that past violators are unfit to operate bookstores.” (Italics added.)
The Supreme Courts of Washington
(Seattle
v.
Bittner
(1973)
And in
Natco Theatres, Inc.
v.
Ratner
(S.D.N.Y. 1979)
“. . . . The City may not, as it has tried to do, utilize its licensing power to deprive a party of the right to exercise a constitutionally protected right solely because of past misconduct.
“A system of prior restraint based upon past convictions can only be sustained if it is shown that granting a license to an individual with such a record would present a clear and present danger of a serious substantive evil.
Perrine
v.
Municipal Court,
Defendants’ attempts to distinguish the prior restraint here from that proscribed in
Perrine
v.
Municipal Court, supra,
Defendants’ reliance on
People
v.
Perrine, supra,
*188
The denial of a license here, unlike in
Perrine
v.
Municipal Court, supra,
is, moreover, based on prior conduct which did not result in a conviction. If the determination, beyond a reasonable doubt, that a person violated the lаw does not warrant denial of a permit, certainly the determination by some lesser standard of proof that a person (or his associate) permitted another to violate the law, cannot.
6
(Cf.
Remers
v.
Superior Court
(1970)
Subdivision (c)(4) is, therefore, unconstitutional on its face as an impermissible prior restraint on freedom of expression.
Plaintiffs Failed to Show They Would Be Irreparably Injurеd by Enforcement of Subdivision (c)(4)
To support a preliminary injunction, the applicant must show that pending trial he will suffer irreparable injury from enforcement of an unconstitutional law.
(7978 Corporation
v.
Pitchess, supra,
The issuance of a preliminary injunction, restraining enforcement of subdivision (c)(4), was, therefore, improper.
Subdivision (i) Is a Severable Valid Regulation of Protected Speech
The Los Angeles Municipal Code expressly provides for severability (§ 11.00, subd. (1)). The invalid provision of subdivision (c)(4) is unquestionably easily severable from the provisions of subdivision (i) which deals with an entirely unconnected regulatory aspect. Consequently, the unconstitutionality of subdivision (c)(4) does not taint the
*189
remainder of the ordinance.
(City and County of San Francisco
v.
Cooper
(1975)
The fact that the operation of picture arcades constitutes protected speech does not immunize them from the kind of regulation involved in subdivision (i) of the ordinance. It is undisputed that content-neutral reasonаble regulations of the time, place and manner of protected speech are permitted by the First Amendment
7
where such regulations are necessary to further significant governmental interests. (See
Young
v.
American Mini Theatres
(1976)
Thus, “[This] regulation is sufficiently justified if it is within the constitutional power of the Government; if it furthers an important or substantial governmental interest; if the governmental interest is unrelated to the suppression of free expression; and if the incidental restriction on alleged First Amendment freedoms is no greater than is essential to the furtherance of that interest.”
(United States
v.
O’Brien,
(1968)
The prohibition of enclosed or concealed booths in picture arcades easily passes this test. The city has the constitutional power to reasonably regulate and license arcades for purposes of health, safety and public welfare.
(People
v.
Perrine, supra,
As was pointed out in
People
v.
Perrine, supra,
The city has a substantial interest in preventing the kind of dangerous or unlawful conduct, as well as the health and safety problems, which may be anticipated in a picture arcade where the booths are concealed or еnclosed. The prohibition of such booths furthers the city’s interest in deterring and detecting the use of the premises for such unlawful activity.
That governmental interest is unrelated to the suppression of free expression and the requirement that the interior of the booths be visible does not restrict First Amendment freedoms. There is no restriction on either the content of the pictures or their dissemination.
Thus, this provision (like the regulation of the construction and operation of “peep show establishments” in
Antonello
v.
City of San Diego, supra,
Subdivision (i) Does Not Intrude on State Preempted Regulation of Sexual Conduct
Nor is the open booth requirement (subd. (i)) unconstitutional as an attempt to regulate sexual cоnduct that is preempted by state law. We recognize that: “[A] local municipal ordinance is invalid if it attempts to impose additional requirements in a field that is preempted by general law.
(In re Lane,
In
Lancaster, supra,
relied upon by plaintiffs, our Supreme Court invalidated a city ordinance making it a misdemeanor for a person to massage a member of the opposite sex as a commercial business. The court held that the ordinance constituted an unconstitutional regulation of the criminal aspects of sexual conduct, a field of the law occupied by the state to the exclusion of all local regulation. On this samе ground, the court in
In re Lane
(1962)
The open booth requirement of this Los Angeles city ordinance, however, does not conflict with the state’s preemption of the criminаl aspects of sexual activities. Unlike in Lancaster and Lane, this ordinance does not create a new standard of sexual conduct. Nor does it purport to criminalize sexual activity which is not criminal under state law.
Plaintiffs contend that the testimony at the board of police commissioners’ hearing prior to the adoption of the ordinance demonstrates that the purpose of this provision is to regulate sexual activity, particularly masturbation. We disagree. The purpose of subdivision (i) is not to regulate lewd conduct (Pen. Code, § 647, subd. (a)), a matter preempted by state law. Rather, as the testimony shows, its purpose is to regulate the operation of picture arcades so that their operation does not invite or encоurage violations of state law. Thus, the provision no more constitutes a regulation of sexual activity than does an ordinance requiring full lighting of streets. It is, therefore, a valid exercise of the city’s police power which does not intrude upon a preempted field. (See Antonello v. City of San Diego, supra, 16 Cal.App.3d at pp. 166-167.)
*192 Since Subdivision (i) Is Constitutional, Injunctive Relief Is Improper
The propriety of injunctive reliеf restraining enforcement of subdivision (i) depends on the validity of that section. “[T]he rule prohibiting . . . an injunction [that prevents the execution of a public statute by officers of the law for the public benefit] does not operate when the statute which is stayed is unconstitutional or otherwise invalid.”
(Agricultural Labor Relations Bd.
v.
Superior Court
(1976)
Disposition
The order granting the preliminary injunction is reversed.
Cobey, J., and Allport, J., concurred.
A petition for a rehearing was denied October 17, 1979, and respondents’ petitions for a hearing by the Supreme Court were denied November 21, 1979.
Notes
A “picture arcade” is defined in the ordinance as “any place to which the public is admitted wherein one or more coin or slug-operated, or electrically, electronically or mechanically controlled still or motion picture machines or projectors are maintained to show still or motion pictures to five or fewer persons per machines at any one time.” (§ 103.101, subd. (a).)
Neither party has raised any issue as to the validity of the closing hour requirement in subdivision (g) of the ordinance. That question is presently pending before our Supreme Court in People v. Glaze (Crim. 21123, hg. granted Aug. 24, 1979).
This is a direct rejection of defendants’ attempt to justify the disqualification on the ground that “the purpose of the provision . . . is to prevent the issuance of movie arcade permits to persons who are likely to permit such unlawful conduct to occur therein.”
The Washington ordinance mandated denial of a license to any person who had been convicted of a crime within the past five years “ ‘involving moral turpitude or intent to defraud.’ ”
(Seattle
v.
Bittner, supra,
The New York ordinance allowed denial of a license if the applicant or one of the officers, principals, directors or 10 percent stockholders had been convictеd of any of certain offenses (both related and unrelated to operation of movie theatres). (Id, at pp. 1128-1129.)
Indeed, disqualification because of a finding by a commission, rather than a conviction, may raise an additional problem of uncertainty. (See Perrine v. Municipal Court, supra, 5 Cal.3d at p. 663.)
On appeal, plaintiffs apparently concede that subdivision (i) does not violate their First Amendment rights since they argue only that said subdivision is preempted by state law.
In Young, the majority and dissenting justices agreed that such content-neutral regulations were permissible.
