OPINION
In late July and early August of 1987, members of appellant Mecham Recall Committee went to several large shopping malls in the Phoenix area in an attempt to obtain signatures on petitions to recall former Governor Evan Mecham. The owners of five of the malls filed suit on August 14 to enjoin the committee from soliciting signatures on their property. A temporary restraining order was issued on August 14 which prohibited appellant from entering the malls “to solicit signatures, present petitions or conduct expressive political activities or related activities, or otherwise trespass thereon.” On August 27, the trial court issued a preliminary injunction, and this appeal followed. We affirm.
The five malls involved in this case are Fiesta Mall in Mesa, Los Arcos Mall in Scottsdale, and Metrocenter, Paradise Valley Mall and Park Central in Phoenix. Fiesta Mall has 144 tenants, Los Arcos Mall has 65 tenants, Metrocenter has 210 tenants, Paradise Valley Mall has 120 tenants and Park Central has 75 tenants. The memorandum of points and authorities filed in support of appellees’ motion for preliminary injunction asserted that each of the malls has a policy of prohibiting activities other than shopping or those which promote shopping. In addition to seeking an injunction, the complaint also sought damages for trespass, nuisance and interference with prospective economic relations. The case was decided, however, strictly as a matter of appellant’s constitutional right to solicit signatures in a privately owned shopping center.
MOOTNESS
Initially, we must address the question of mootness. The purpose of appellant’s mall activities was to obtain sufficient signatures for the Secretary of State to order a recall election to be held. Although that order was issued on February 1, 1988, Evan Mecham was removed from the office of governor on April 4, 1988, after he was convicted by the Arizona Senate in an impeachment trial, and the recall election was then cancelled. See
Green v. Osborne,
Generally, courts refrain from determining issues which are moot.
Mesa Mail Publishing Co. v. Board of Supervisors,
FREE SPEECH RIGHTS
Appellant concedes that the issue of its right under the First Amendment to solicit signatures in a privately owned shopping center has been settled adversely to its position. In
Hudgens v. N.L.R.B.,
Therefore, if appellant has any constitutional right to conduct political activities in appellees’ malls, that right must be found in the Arizona Constitution. Article II, § 6 of the Constitution provides, “Every person *373 may freely speak, write, and publish on all subjects, being responsible for the abuse of that right.” Article II, § 5 provides, “The right of petition, and of the people peaceably to assemble for the common good, shall never be abridged.”
Appellant contends that the words of those sections “differ dramatically” from the words of the First Amendment with the result that appellant may assert its free speech rights on private property. Appellant also contends that we should follow the rationale of the California Supreme Court in
Robins v. Pruneyard Shopping Center,
In that case, the California court held that signature soliciting for a petition to the government at a privately owned shopping mall is an activity protected by the California Constitution. The court’s analysis focused on the question of whether the United States Supreme Court in
Lloyd Corp. v. Tanner,
supra, recognized the existence of federally protected property rights so as to preclude a ruling that the California Constitution created broader speech rights as to private property than the United States Constitution. In its 4-3 decision, the court in
Robins
concluded that
Lloyd
had not created any property rights which were immune from regulation under the California Constitution and that Californians could solicit signatures and distribute handbills in shopping centers pursuant to reasonable regulation by the shopping centers as to time, place and manner. The court quoted from the dissent in an earlier decision, which it then overruled. “ ‘It bears repeated emphasis that we do not have under consideration the property or privacy rights of an individual homeowner or the proprietor of a modest retail establishment.’ ”
The California Supreme Court did not address the issue of state action under the California Constitution in Robins but instead focused on the regulation of property rights. Appellant contends that because article II, §§ 5 and 6 of our constitution do not specifically require state action and because California’s constitutional language is nearly identical to that of article II, § 6 with the additional provision that, “A law may not restrain or abridge liberty of speech or press,” Cal. Const, art. I, § 2, no state action is required for Arizona’s free speech provisions to apply. Appellant thus concludes that the Declaration of Rights in Arizona’s Constitution contains broader rights of free speech, of assembly and to petition the government than the rights enumerated in the First Amendment.
In support of its argument, appellant observes that the Arizona Supreme Court has held that the due process clause of the Arizona Constitution, art. II, § 8, provides greater rights to our citizens than its equivalent in the United States Constitution, the Fourth Amendment. In
State v. Ault,
*374 Other states have also addressed this issue. Although their resolutions of the issue are, of course, not decisive on the interpretation of our own constitution, their analysis and conclusions are enlightening. Of the ten states which have determined the issue, two have held that shopping center owners may be required to permit political activity on their premises, seven have held that they may not, and one has held that a private university may be required to permit it.
In
State v. Schmid,
The Supreme Court of Washington addressed the issue in
Alderwood Associates v. Washington Environmental Council,
The Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court, in holding that a shopping center is required to permit political activity, did not base its decision on its free speech provisions but on a constitutional provision which establishes free elections and the right of the state’s inhabitants to elect officers and to be elected to public office.
Batchelder v. Allied Stores International, Inc.,
We turn now to the cases in which the courts have held that there is no right to conduct political activity in privately owned shopping centers. In
Cologne v. Westfarms Associates,
In
Woodland v. Michigan Citizens Lobby,
The only other case which analyzes the issue in detail
1
is
Western Pennsylvania Socialist Workers 1982 Campaign v. Connecticut General Life Ins. Co.,
We have reviewed the cases cited by both parties and conclude that the more persuasive are those in which the courts have determined that their states’ constitutions do not require private property owners to permit political activities on their premises. We have no quarrel with appellant’s assertion that article II, section 6 of our constitution may be more extensive than the First Amendment. Even if that is the case, however, that does not resolve the issue. Regardless of the breadth of § 6, appellant must still establish that it restrains private conduct. This it has been unable to do. The sparse case law that exists on the issue is contrary to appellant’s contentions. The supreme court observed in
Earhart v. Frohmiller,
*376 APPLICABILITY OP MARSH v. ALABAMA
Nor do we find any merit to appellant’s argument that shopping centers are the functional equivalents of public forums such that the ordinary rules regarding private property owners no longer apply to them. Appellant bases that argument upon a statement in the since-overturned
Logan Valley
case, supra, which in turn was based upon the holding in
Marsh v. Alabama,
The shopping malls in question here are not the functional equivalent of towns. They are simply areas in which a large number of retail businesses is grouped together for convenience and efficiency. Their sole purpose is for shopping, and appellant’s argument that they are opened early for joggers and walkers, that large numbers of people are present in them each day, that occasionally non-commercial activities take place in them and that people enjoy air-conditioned comfort in them during Phoenix’s scorching summers does not change that basic fact. We agree with the following conclusion of the Wisconsin Supreme Court in
Jacobs v. Major,
supra: “From the way the mall is arranged and operated, the mall is much more like the old-fashioned department store than a municipality. It concerns itself only with one facet of its patrons’ lives — how they spend their money.”
Nor is there any merit to appellant’s contention that the malls cannot prohibit its political activity simply because they are so large and because so many people shop at them. As the Supreme Court noted in
Lloyd,
“Few would argue that a free-standing store, with abutting parking space for customers, assumes significant public attributes merely because the public is invited to shop there. Nor is size alone the controlling factor. The essentially private character of a store and its privately owned abutting property does not change by virtue of being large or clustered with other stores in a modern shopping center.”
We conclude that appellees’ shopping centers are not the functional equivalents of public forums.
CONSTITUTIONAL RECALL RIGHTS
Appellant next contends that the malls cannot prohibit its solicitation of signatures because of the importance of the rights of initiative, referendum and recall in the Arizona Constitution. In support of that contention, appellant cites the Massachusetts Supreme Court decision of Batchelder v. Allied Stores International, Inc., supra. What appellant overlooks, however, is the fact that Batchelder was decided on the basis of a provision in the Massachusetts Constitution which guarantees free elections and the right to run for public office. Arizona has no comparable provision in its constitution.
We do not dispute the significance of the rights of initiative, referendum and recall in our state government, particularly that of recall. That significance is demonstrated by the fact that the Joint Resolution of Congress which admitted Arizona as a state required the voters to approve our constitutional provisions pn recall. They were approved in a general state election held in December 1911. Historical Note to Ariz. Const, art. VIII, § 1.
Nevertheless, we agree with the Michigan Supreme Court’s conclusion in Woodland v. Michigan Citizens Lobby, supra, that those rights are reserved collectively to the people. They are not expressed in terms of individual rights. Ariz. Const. *377 art. IV, pt. 1, § 1. Thus, the importance of those rights does not assist appellant’s argument.
ADEQUACY OF NOTICE
Appellant’s final complaint is that it did not receive adequate notice of the request for a temporary restraining order. Notice that the order would be sought was given to the statutory agent for appellant. Appellant contends the notice instead should have been given to the attorney who had written a letter to appellees on behalf of appellant because appellees should have known he represented appellant. Because the express purpose of a statutory agent is to receive notice or service of process on behalf of a corporation, A.R.S. § 10-014, we find no merit to the argument.
Nor do we find any merit to appellant’s contention that the temporary restraining order was a prior restraint on its freedom of speech rights.
The issuance of the preliminary injunction is affirmed.
Notes
. In
State v. Felmet,
