In June 2002, the San Diego County Board of Supervisors adopted a comprehensive zoning ordinance to govern the operation of adult entertainment businesses within its jurisdiction, which covers the unincorporated portions of the county. The ordinance restricts the hours in which such businesses can operate, requires the removal of doors on peep show booths, and limits adult entertainment establishment to areas of the county zoned for industrial use. San Diego County’s stated rationale for the ordinance was to combat negative secondary effects — crime, disorderly conduct, blight, noise, traffic, property value depreciation, and unsanitary behavior— that concentrate in and around adult businesses.
The two adult entertainment establishments presently operating in the unincorporated portions of San Diego County filed suit. (The City of San Diego and the other incorporated municipalities in the County are not governed by this ordinance.) In this appeal, the operator of one of the establishments, Fantasyland Video, Inc., appeals the district court’s decision to uphold the ordinance’s hours restriction and open-booth requirement. In its briefing to us, Fantasyland also contended that the hours of operation restriction violated both the First Amendment and the California Constitution. After oral argument, we certified to the California Supreme Court the question of what the proper standard of review is under the California Constitution.
Fantasyland Video, Inc. v. County of San Diego,
We affirm the district court’s decision to uphold the ordinance’s hours-of-operation restriction as surviving intermediate scrutiny under the California Constitution.
I.Background
In June 2002, citing to concerns about the surrounding neighborhood, the County Board of Supervisors adopted a comprehensive set of regulations and licensing procedures governing adult entertainment establishments within its jurisdiction. Among these regulations, the County prohibited any “door, curtain, or obstruction of any kind [to] be installed within the entrance to a peep show booth.” San Diego County, Cal., Ordinance No. 9479, § 21.1816 (June 19, 2002). In addition, the County made it unlawful “for any owner, operator, manager or employee of an adult entertainment establishment to remain open for business between the hours of 2:00 a.m. and 6:00 a.m. of any day excepting herefrom an adult hotel/ motel.” San Diego County Ordinance No. 9479, § 21.1809. The ordinance took effect the following month.
Fantasyland operates an adult arcade, bookstore, novelty shop, and video store. It initiated federal and state constitutional challenges against the new ordinance, seeking declaratory and injunctive relief.
The district court granted summary judgment to the County, upholding the ordinance’s requirement that adult establishments close between the hours of 2:00 a.m. and 6:00 a.m. and its restriction on doors at the entranceway to private peep show booths.
1
See Fantasyland Video, Inc. v. County of San Diego,
These timely appeals followed.
II. Jurisdiction
The district court had subject matter jurisdiction over Fantasyland’s constitutional claims under 28 U.S.C. §§ 1331, 1343(a), and over its state claims under 28 U.S.C. § 1367(a). We have jurisdiction under 28 U.S.C. § 1291.
III. Standard of Review
We review de novo the district court’s grant of summary judgment and, viewing the evidence in a light most favorable to the non-moving party, determine whether there are any genuine issues of material fact for trial.
See Gammoh v. City of La Habra,
IV. Discussion
The constitutionality of the challenged provisions is governed by the framework announced in
City of Renton v. Playtime Theatres, Inc.,
With respect to this third step, the Supreme Court has adopted a specialized burden-shifting framework. When enacting a secondary effects ordinance, the municipality must rely on evidence that “demonstrate[s] a connection between the speech regulated ... and the secondary effects that motivated the adoption of the ordinance.”
Alameda Books,
To avoid summary judgment, the plaintiffs must then “cast direct doubt on [the municipality’s] rationale, either by demonstrating that the municipality’s evidence does not support its rationale or by furnishing evidence that disputes the municipality’s factual findings.”
Id.
at 438-39,
A. Hours-of-Operation Restriction
Fantasyland argues that the hours-of-operation restriction should be invalidated under the California Constitution based on
People v. Glaze,
At the legislative stage, the County relied on studies and reports, reported court decisions, and anecdotal testimony to establish a correlation between adult establishments and negative secondary effects.
2
Based on this evidence, the County could reasonably infer that restricting the hours of operations for adult businesses would have the purpose and effect of reducing crime, disorderly conduct, traffic, and noise during late-night hours. Fantasy-land’s attempt to cast doubt on the County’s conclusions fails as a matter of law because its expert, Daniel Linz, Ph.D., a professor in the Department of Communication’s Law and Society Program at the University of California Santa Barbara, did not rebut the County’s evidence with regard to noise and traffic. The evidence presented by Dr. Linz addressed only late night crime and property values. The County considered these factors, but its purported rationale for requiring adult businesses to close from 2:00am to 6:00am also included combating increased noise and traffic. Fantasyland’s failure to address these considerations is fatal under the second step of the
Renton
intermediate scrutiny analysis.
See Alameda Books, Inc.,
B. Open-Booth Requirement
Fantasyland argues that San Diego County Ordinance No. 9479 is invalid under several facets of
Renton
intermediate scrutiny and under Justice Kennedy’s concurring opinion in
Alameda Books,
We have previously upheld open-booth requirements similar to the one adopted by the County.
Spokane Arcade, Inc. v. City of Spokane,
1. Renton Analysis
a. Substantial interest unrelated to expression
Fantasyland first contends that the County has no substantial governmental interest under Renton in preventing private sexual conduct within an enclosed booth. We disagree.
The conduct at issue is not private at all. It is occurring at a retail establishment. The “curtailing [of] public sexual criminal offenses” is a significant state interest.
Ellwest,
Moreover, there is no requirement under
Renton
that the asserted secondary effects be criminal.
See, e.g., Ctr. for Fair Pub. Policy,
b. Nexus between the speech and secondary effects
Fantasyland next suggests that the County failed to show a nexus between the peep show booths and its interest in curtailing sexual activity.
When enacting the open-booth requirement, the County Board of Supervisors referenced anecdotal reports of sexual activity occurring within peep show booths of other jurisdictions. The County also incorporated the findings from
Spokane Arcade,
To avoid summary judgment, Fantasy-land must produce contrary evidence that casts direct doubt on the County’s conclusions. It offered the lone declaration of John M. Goldenring, a medical doctor and public health expert. In his declaration, Dr. Goldenring stated that infection from sexually transmitted diseases could only occur through sexual contact, and not through seminal fluid left on the surfaces of the peep show booths.
c. Narrowly tailored
Finally, Fantasyland suggests that there are far less drastic means of accomplishing the County’s stated objective. They include reducing the size of the booth, requiring that there be a space between the floor and the bottom of the door to allow verification that only one person is in the booth, and monitoring the spaces around the booths.
The issue is not whether Fantasy-land can posit less restrictive alternatives. The narrow tailoring requirement “is satisfied ‘so long as the ... regulation promotes a substantial government interest that would be achieved less effectively absent the regulation’ ” and “the means chosen are not substantially broader than necessary to achieve the government’s interest.”
Ward v. Rock Against Racism,
Fantasyland has not shown that the open-booth requirement is substantially broader than necessary to curtail the targeted sexual activity. It did present a declaration that peep show patronage generally declines by 60% after removal of the doors. However, such decline in business, standing alone, is not determinative.
Fantasyland has not produced any evidence showing that the decline was unconnected to the County’s asserted secondary
effects
— i.e., that the 60% were there just to watch the movie.
See Ellwest,
Furthermore, the ordinance does not restrict protected speech occurring in the booths. The ordinance does not in any way limit the content of the videos, the number of booths available for viewing the videos, or the availability of the videos. The videos are as available as ever.
2. Justice Kennedy’s Alameda Books Concurrence
To justify a content-based zoning ordinance that restricts sexual and pornographic speech, Justice Kennedy wrote in
Alameda Books
that “a city must advance some basis to show that its regulation has the purpose and effect of suppressing secondary effects, while leaving the quantity and accessibility of speech substantially intact.”
We now hold that Justice Kennedy’s concurrence is also inapplicable to an open-booth requirement. Under the County’s rationale, the patron watching a private peep show often seeks to masturbate, solicit sexual acts, or engage in sexual acts while in the booth. Any regulation that deters these activities will necessarily make the forum for the speech less attractive, but only because the speech and sexual acts originate with the same person and occur at the same time. The overall quantity of the protected expression must be reduced, but only because the patron is chilled from also contemporaneously engaging in the unprotected behavior. Justice Kennedy’s proportionality language was not designed for situations where the protected speech and the unprotected conduct merge in the same forum.
Fantasyland is of course entitled to cast doubt on the County’s reasoning. It could attempt to prove an absence of the asserted unlawful or illicit sexual activity in the booths, thereby defeating the County’s inference of correlation between the speech at issue and the secondary effects. Alternatively, Fantasyland could produce evidence that the open-booth requirement does little to deter the sexual activity while, at the same time, substantially chills the protected speech. It has done neither here.
The County’s open-booth requirement is valid under prevailing Ninth Circuit authority and nothing in Alameda Books undermines that conclusion. As a result, the district court correctly granted summary judgment to the County on this claim.
C. Rule 60(b) Appeal
On June 16, 2006, Fantasyland filed a motion for relief from the district court’s judgment pursuant to Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 60(b). The motion referenced a declaration by Fantasyland’s vice president stating that peep show business had declined by 91% since Fantasyland began complying with the County’s open-booth restriction.
There was no abuse of discretion in the district court’s decision to deny the motion. The declaration is not “newly discovered evidence” under Rule 60(b)(2) because it discusses evidence that was not in existence at the time of the judgment.
See Corex Corp. v. United States,
Finally, Rule 60(b)(6)’s catchall provision is unavailable. This rule “has been used sparingly as an equitable remedy to prevent manifest injustice” and “is to be utilized only where extraordinary circumstances prevented a party from taking timely action to prevent or correct an erroneous judgment.”
United States v. Alpine Land & Reservoir Co.,
AFFIRMED.
Notes
. The other adult establishment in the unincorporated portion of the County, Déjá Vu, appealed the district court's judgment on other grounds not relevant to this appeal.
Tollis Inc. v. County of San Diego,
. Fantasyland conceded that this evidence satisfied the County’s initial evidentiary burden.
See Fantasyland,
. Justice Kennedy did not join the plurality opinion in
Alameda Books.
As "his concurrence is the narrowest opinion joining in the judgment of the Court,” it is the controlling opinion.
Ctr. for Fair Pub. Policy,
. Fantasyland also references the declaration of its vice president, who speculated that the open-booth requirement would facilitate contact between customers “culminating in relatively anonymous sexual encounters after they leave the business” (emphasis added). This declaration does nothing to cast doubt on the County’s rationale to curb sexual activity occurring inside the business.
