This is а challenge, based on the constitutional right of privacy, to an ordinance prohibiting the operation of “live sex act” businesses in Phoenix, Arizona (“Phoenix” or “the city”). Appellant Fleck and Associates, Inc. (“Fleck”) runs such an establishment and appeals the district court’s order dismissing its complaint with prejudice. 1 The district court correctly determined Fleck lacked standing to assert any cognizable privacy rights under the allegations in its complaint. However, the court improperly proceeded to reach the merits of the undеrlying suit, determining that Fleck’s customers could not state a claim for relief under any conceivable set of facts. Because Fleck lacked standing to assert either its own putative privacy rights or the interests of its customers, the district court lacked subject matter jurisdiction and should have dismissed the complaint on that ground alone. We therefore disapprove of the district court’s undertaking on the merits and hereby vacate the district court’s order and remand with instructions to dismiss the complaint without prejudice.
FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND 2
Fleck is a for-profit corporation that operates Flex, a gay men’s social club in Phoenix, Arizona. The club limits access to adults who have purchased “memberships” on a yearly, semi-yearly, or daily basis. Many people enter the club by purchasing daily passes. Customers can rent private dressing rooms for an additional fee. Sexual activities take place in the dressing rooms and in other areas of the club.
In 1998, the city banned “live sex act business[es]” defined as those “in which
On June 2, 2004, Fleck filed suit in the District of Arizona seeking injunctive and declaratоry relief on the ground the above-described governmental conduct “violated the privacy rights of Plaintiff as well as the members and users of their [sic] facility in violation of the Due Process Clause as codified in the Fifth and Fourteenth Amendments.” The complaint did not allege Fleсk suffered any injury other than the invasion of its supposed privacy interests. Fleck and Associates, Inc. was the only named plaintiff.
The city filed a motion to dismiss pursuant to Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 12(b)(1) and (6). On February 15, 2005, the district court granted the motion, ordered the complaint dismissеd with prejudice, and entered judgment for the city. The court treated the complaint as raising two distinct claims, one predicated on an invasion of the rights of Fleck’s customers (“the customers’ claim”) and another based on the invasion of Fleck’s rights as a corporation (“the corporate claim”).
The court correctly found Fleck lacked standing to assert the rights of its customers. However, the court also opted, “in the interest of judicial economy,”
Fleck & Assocs. Inc.,
As to the second claim, the court held Fleck enjoyed standing to assert its own rights as a corporation. Id. at 1038. The court did not, however, identify what those corpоrate rights might have been. Instead, it immediately proceeded to hold that Fleck lacked any cognizable privacy rights and dismissed for failure to state a claim. Id. at 1039, 1041. Because Fleck failed to allege the invasion of any cognizable corporate right, it similarly lacked standing to raise the corporate claim. Therefore, this claim should also have been dismissed for lack of subject matter jurisdiction.
DISCUSSION
I. Standard of Review
Whether a party lacks standing is a legal issue subject to
de novo
review.
Hong Kong Supermarket v. Kizer,
II. Standing
A. “Traditional” (Non-Associational) Standing
Standing doctrine involves “ ‘both constitutional limitations on federal-court jurisdiction and prudential limitations on its exercise.’ ”
Kowalski v. Tesmer,
The constitutional limitations require a litigant to allege “(1) a threatened or actual distinct and pаlpable injury to [himself]; (2) a fairly traceable causal connection between the alleged injury and the ... challenged conduct; and (3) a substantial likelihood that the requested relief will redress or prevent the injury.”
Hong Kong Supermarket,
The first of these elements, sometimes described as “injury in fact,” necessitates a showing of “an invasion of a legally protected interest” that “affect[s] the plaintiff in a personal and individual way.”
Lujan v. Defenders of Wildlife,
Fleck has failed to plead an injury in fact. According to the complaint, the only harm that has allegedly befallen Fleck & Associates Inc. is that its “privacy rights” were violated when the city “criminalized private, consensual homosexual sexual acts” by enacting and enforcing § 23-54. However, as the district court correctly held, corporations have no such privacy rights. Since Fleck has not alleged the invasion of any cognizable right, it has failed to establish the “irreducible constitutional minimum of standing.”
Lujan,
“[Corporations can claim no equality with individuals in the enjoyment of a right to privacy.”
United States v. Morton Salt Co.,
Fleck squarely identifies the source of its supposed right as the liberty guarantee described in
Lawrence v. Texas,
It is hard to imagine a constitutional guarantee that could be more inherently personal and therefore unavailable to a corporate entity, “an artificial being, invisible, intangible, and existing only in contemplation of law.”
Dartmouth College v. Woodward,
Nevеrtheless, Fleck claims that the “inherently personal right of homosexual sexual activity is central to the function and operation of [its] facility,” and that this somehow means Fleck has a liberty interest protected by the due process clause to run a “facility devoted to providing a safe location for homosexuals to express their sexuality.” Essentially, Fleck argues that it has a right to facilitate the exercise of the admittedly personal “right of homosexual sexual activity.”
This argument is really just a claim that Fleck should be allowed to champiоn the liberty interests of its customers. Under traditional standing doctrine, a party meeting the constitutional requirements of injury, causation, and re-dressibility, may, on rare occasions, “act[ ] as [an] advocate[for] the rights of third parties,”
Craig v. Boren,
B. Associational Standing
Under the doctrine of “associational” or “representational” standing an organization may bring suit on behalf of its members whether or not the organization itself has suffered an injury from the challenged aсtion.
Hunt v. Wash. State Apple Adver. Comm’n, 432
U.S. 333,
342-44,
To obtain associational standing, the entity must show that (1) at least one of its members would have standing to sue in his own right, (2) the interests the suit
Fleck’s complaint fails to demonstrate associational standing. First, Fleck does not have any “members” in the sense required by the doctrine. Associational standing is reserved for organizations that “express the[ ] collective views and protect the[] collective interests” of their members.
Hunt,
This is clearly not germane to the purpose of the organization.
Cf. Id.
at 286,
III. Conclusion
As presently cоnstituted, the complaint fails to demonstrate that Fleck suffered a distinct and palpable injury to any cognizable corporate right. In addition, Fleck does not have associational standing to assert the rights of its customers. Therefore, under the allegations in the cоmplaint, the district court lacked subject matter jurisdiction over the entirety of Fleck’s complaint and erred by reaching the merits.
4
We therefore vacate the district court’s order and remand with instructions to dismiss without prejudice.
See Steel Co.
VACATED AND REMANDED with instructions.
Notes
.
Fleck & Assocs., Inc. v. City of Phoenix,
. For the purpose of reviewing the motion to dismiss for want of standing, all factual representations are drawn from Fleck’s complaint and assumed to be true.
See Warth v. Seldin,
. Even if Fleck had alleged an "injury in fact” and the other constitutionally required elements of standing, it could not rely on the interests of its customers under the allegations in the complaint. Exceptions to the prudential rule are disfavored and a party seeking to champion the rights of third persons must demonstrate that, "[Qirst, [it] has a ‘close’ relationship with the person who possesses the right ... [and s]econd ... there is a ‘hindrance’ to the possessor’s ability to protect his own interests.”
Kowalski,
. Fleck contends alternatively that even if it lacks "formal” standing to sue, this court should reach the merits on the theory that the constitutional issue presented is gravely important. Aside from the fact that Fleck cites no authority for this position, it neglects that standing is an aspect of subject matter jurisdiction and that, no matter how important the issue, a court lacking jurisdiction is powerless to reach the merits under Artiсle III of the Constitution.
See Adarand Constructors, Inc.
v.
Mineta,
