Lead Opinion
Affirmed in part and vacated in part by published opinion. Judge MOTZ wrote
OPINION
In this case, the North Carolina Alcoholic Beverage Control Commission (the Commission) appeals from the district court’s order preliminarily enjoining it from enforcing certain state restrictions on nudity and other conduct, pending the outcome of a trial. For the reasons stated herein, we affirm in part and vacate in part.
I.
Giovani Carandola, Ltd. operates Christie’s Cabaret, a nude dancing establishment in Greensboro, North Carolina, which holds permits issued by the Commission to sell malt beverages, fortified wines, unfortified wine, and mixed beverages. In November 2000, an agent of the Commission visited Christie’s and observed three Car-andola employees engaging in various kinds of exotic dancing. The agent concluded that the dancers’ conduct violated N.C. Gen.Stat. § 18B~1005(a) (1995) and an administrative rule promulgated pursuant to that statute.
In pertinent part, § 18B-1005 provides:
(a)Certain Conduct. — It shall be unlawful for a permittee or his agent or employee to knowingly allow any of the following kinds of conduct to occur on his licensed premises:
(1) Any violation of this Chapter;
(2) Any fighting or other disorderly conduct that can be prevented without undue danger to the permittee, his employees or patrons;
(3) Any violation of the controlled substances, gambling, or prostitution statutes, or any other unlawful acts;
(4) Any conduct or entertainment by any person whose private parts are exposed or who is wearing transparent clothing that reveals the private parts;
(5) Any entertainment that includes or simulates sexual intercourse or any other sexual act; or
(6) Any other lewd or obscene entertainment or conduct, as defined by the rules of the Commission.
Pursuant to subsection (a)(6) of the statute, the Commission has adopted N.C. Admin. Code tit. 4, r. 2S.0216 (Apr.2002) (the Rule), which provides:
(a) No permittee or his employee shall allow any person to perform acts of or acts that simulate:
(1) sexual intercourse, masturbation, sodomy, bestiality, oral copulation, flagellation, or any sexual acts that are prohibited by law;
(2) the touching, caressing or fondling of the breasts, buttocks, anus, vulva or genitals;
(3) the display of the pubic hair, anus, vulva or genitals.
(b) No permittee or his employee shall allow any person to use artificial devices or inanimate objects to depict any of the prohibited activities described in Paragraph (a) of this rule.
(c) No permittee or his employee shall allow any person who exposes to public view any portion of his pubic hair, vulva, genitals, or anus to remain in or upon the licensed premises.
On December 6, 2000, the Commission sent Carandola a letter, stating, in part, that its employees had been observed (1) “simulating] sexual intercourse” and “simulating] masturbation” on the licensed premises in violation of § 18B-1005(a)(5) and Rule 2S.0216(a)(l); and (2) “engaging in acts of touching, caressing or fondling of
Instead, Carandola, joined by Janel D. Ralph, a dancer at the club (hereinafter collectively, Carandola), filed suit in federal court. Carandola asked the district court to declare § 18B-1005 and Rule 2S.0216 unconstitutional, both facially and as applied, and, in the interim, to issue a preliminary injunction forbidding enforcement of these provisions against them. After an evidentiary hearing, the district court issued a preliminary injunction. Giovani Carandola, Ltd. v. Bason,
We review a district court’s grant or denial of a preliminary injunction for abuse of discretion. Doran v. Salem Inn, Inc.,
In deciding whether to issue a preliminary injunction, a court must consider “(1) the likelihood of irreparable harm to the plaintiff if the preliminary injunction is denied, (2) the likelihood of harm to the defendant if the requested relief is granted, (3) the likelihood that the plaintiff will succeed on the merits, and (4) the public interest.” Direx Israel, Ltd. v. Breakthrough Med. Corp.,
II.
The First Amendment bars the government from “abridging the freedom of speech” — that is, generally, “from dictating what we see or read or speak or hear.” U.S. Const, amend. I; Ashcroft v. Free Speech Coalition,
A.
Carandola principally challenges the North Carolina restrictions as overbroad. According to Carandola, these restrictions, without justification, burden “vast amounts of constitutionally protected expression”— including dance, theater, political satire, comedy, and even performances with fully clothed performers in which sexual content is non-existent or quite limited. Brief of Appellee at 24. The Commission responds that Carandola “lack[s] standing” to bring this challenge because there is no evidence that it “desire[s] to present or act in any ballet, musical, or other serious theatrical production of any kind.” Reply Brief at 4, 7. The Commission’s contention rests on a fundamental misunderstanding of the over-breadth doctrine.
The overbreadth doctrine constitutes “a departure from traditional rules of standing.” Broadrick v. Oklahoma,
If an overbreadth challenge succeeds, “any enforcement” of the regulation at issue is “totally forbidden.” Broadrick,
B.
The level of First Amendment scrutiny a court applies to determine the “plainly legitimate sweep” of a regulation depends on the purpose for which the regulation was adopted. If the regulation was adopted to burden disfavored viewpoints or modes of expression, a court applies strict scrutiny. See Texas v. Johnson,
In this case, the district court concluded that both § 18B 1005(a) and the Rule are content-based “on their face,” and that “[t]he state has failed to provide suffi- ■ eient evidence that the challenged statute and regulation were not purposed upon hostility towards the content of expression.” Carandola,
The Supreme Court has instructed that measures to regulate sexually explicit entertainment outside the home receive intermediate scrutiny if they are not premised on a desire to suppress the content of such entertainment, but rather to address the harmful secondary effects of such entertainment: higher crime rates and lower property values, see Alameda Books, — U.S. at—,
Such measures, the Court has explained, regulate expression only incidentally, because the expression “happen[s] to be associated” with the adverse effects the state seeks to address. Boos,
Put another way, in this limited context, the Supreme Court does not equate reference to content with the suppression of content. Cf. Reno,
In this case, the Commission asserts that it adopted the challenged Rule and the legislature adopted § 18B-1005(a)(5) to address secondary effects — specifically, to protect “public decency” and to prevent “disorderly conduct” and “blatant bacchanalian revelries” of the sort described by the Supreme Court in LaRue, 409 U.S. at .110-11,
No record evidence supports this claim.
Even though the Commission has submitted no direct evidence of legislative motive, we believe that precedent requires us to evaluate the challenged restrictions as content-neutral provisions aimed at secondary effects. Indisputably, both § 18B-1005(a)(5) and the Rule promulgated pursuant to § 18B — 1005(a)(6) comprise part of North Carolina’s long-established alcohol control law, which the legislature enacted
For these reasons, we conclude that one purpose of § 18B-1005(a)(5) and the challenged Rule is to address the secondary effects that follow from lewd conduct on licensed premises, and that hostility to erotic expression, if a purpose of the restrictions at all, does not constitute the predominant purpose. Within the limited field of regulations on public exhibitions of adult entertainment, this suffices for us to treat the subsection and Rule as content-neutral and so subject only to intermediate scrutiny. See Pap’s,
C.
In sum, then, we subject the North Carolina restrictions only to intermediate scrutiny in determining whether they adversely affect a “substantial” amount of protected speech relative to their “plainly legitimate sweep.” Broadrick,
III.
Intermediate scrutiny is not, however, a toothless standard. It requires the government to produce evidence that a challenged regulation “materially advances an important or substantial interest by redressing past harms or preventing future ones. These harms must be ‘real, not merely conjectural,’ and the regulation must ‘alleviate these harms in a direct and material way.’ ” Satellite Broad. & Communications Ass’n v. FCC,
The “appropriate focus” of this inquiry is not “the actual intent of the enacting legislature.” Barnes,
The Commission has produced no evidence — either current or otherwise — of
The restrictions challenged here, however, sweep far beyond bars and nude dancing establishments. They reach a great deal of expression “in the heartland of [the First Amendment’s] protection.” Caran-dola,
The Commission has offered nothing— no evidence, no judicial opinion, not even any argument — to suggest that these mainstream entertainments, to which it has conceded the restrictions apply, produce the kind of adverse secondary effects that the state seeks to prevent. Indeed, it is difficult to believe that such evidence exists. One simply does not associate these performances with disorderly behavior — whether or not alcohol is served. Nor has the Commission suggested any other state interest in burdening such entertainment. Thus, the restrictions burden these performances, and the right of North Carolinians to view them, without any justification at all.
The Commission has made equally fatal concessions with respect to the scope of
Although we certainly recognize the state’s interest in preventing bar fights, prostitution, and similar problems, we see no reason for its attempt to further these interests with such broadly drawn restrictions. See United States v. Morison,
This case would present a different question if we could construe the challenged restrictions in a manner that removed or reduced the threat to constitutionally protected speech. See, e.g., Schultz v. City of Cumberland,
Given the Commission’s failure to do so and its concessions that the challenged restrictions will burden a multitude of mainstream musical, theatrical, and dance productions' — from musical comedy to ballet to political satire to flamenco dance — • we have difficulty understanding the Commission’s insistence that “[n]o other” statute or regulation “could be less invasive of free speech interests.” Reply Brief at 7.
The Commission even asserts that the challenged statute and Rule constitute the “only means to protect its interest” in preventing societal problems. Id. Yet, other jurisdictions with similar concerns have adopted narrower regulations, targeting only those venues where secondary effects are likely to arise, while leaving other speech unaffected. See, e.g., Farkas v. Miller,
In fact, in recent years, the Supreme Court has strongly reaffirmed its refusal to allow even a most compelling state interest — protecting children from pornography — to justify broadly drawn regulations that sweep beyond their legitimate reach to restrict the availability of art that adults have a constitutional right to view. For example, last Term in Ashcroft, the Court struck down the Child Pornography Prevention Act as overbroad, despite the “re-pugnan [ce]” of the crime Congress sought to prevent, because the Act would also prohibit a significant amount of art, including exhibitions of the play “Romeo and Juliet,” the movies “Traffic” and “American Beauty,” and “hundreds of other [works] of lesser note” that explored the theme of teenage sexuality. Ashcroft, — U.S. at—,
For the same sorts of reasons, in recent cases involving restrictions on nudity and adult entertainment, our sister circuits have struck down broadly drawn regulations that sought to address harmful secondary effects by restricting the availability of all entertainment with sexual themes or nudity. For example, the Eighth Circuit recently invalidated as unconstitutionally overbroad a “sexual contact” ordinance that “did not exclusively cover conduct in adult entertainment businesses, which has been recognized to cause harmful secondary effects ... but also covered conduct in any business or commercial establishment, which could include theater performances, ballet performances, and many other forms of live entertainment” because there were “no findings” that such entertainment “cause[s] harmful secondary effects.” Ways v. City of Lincoln,
Similarly, in Triplett Grille, Inc. v. City of Akron,
Nevertheless, the Commission argues that we must uphold the challenged restrictions because they resemble part of a regulation upheld by the Supreme Court in LaRue,
In sharp contrast, here the state has expressly conceded that the challenged restrictions do affect a substantial amount of expression that resembles a ballet rather than “bacchanalian revelries,” and therefore present the “concrete problems” that concerned the Supreme Court in LaRue. Id. at n. 5.
Not only do the Commission’s concessions distinguish the case at hand from the case presented to the LaRue Court, but they are doubly significant given the Supreme Court’s subsequent reinterpretation of LaRue. In 44 Liquormart, the Court clarified both the proper analysis and the appropriate scope of liquor regulations intended to protect public decency.
In his Barnes concurrence, which has been “generally adopted” as the “narrowest opinion” explaining the result reached by the divided Court,
*520 [bjecause there is no overbreadth challenge before us, we are not called upon to decide whether the application of the statute would be valid in other contexts. It is enough, then, to say that the secondary effects rationale on which I rely here would be open to question if the State were to seek to enforce the statute by barring expressive nudity in classes of productions that could not readily be analogized to the adult films at issue in Renton v. Playtime Theatres, Inc., 475 U.S. 41,106 S.Ct. 925 ,89 L.Ed.2d 29 (1986). It is difficult to see, for example, how the enforcement of Indiana’s statute against nudity in a production of “Hair” or “Equus” somewhere other than an “adult” theater would further the State’s interest in avoiding harmful secondary effects, in the absence of evidence that expressive nudity outside the context of Renton-type entertainment was correlated with such secondary effects.
In this case, of course, Carandola has presented an overbreadth challenge and the Commission has conceded that the restrictions burden a substantial number of mainstream entertainments, and has not proffered any reason at all to believe that its interest in combating secondary effects will be furthered by prohibiting the sale of liquor where serious plays or dance are performed. In such circumstances, contrary to the Commission’s contention, LaRue offers the state no assistance. Indeed, the Supreme Court itself has explained that LaRue lends “no support” to an ordinance authoritatively construed by the state courts as applying to “all live entertainment” when, as in the case at hand, nothing indicates that “unusual problems are presented by live entertainment” generally. See Schad,
For these reasons, we conclude that the district court did not abuse its discretion in finding that Carandola would likely prevail on its overbreadth challenge.
IV.
The remaining factors to be considered in awarding a preliminary injunction — the alleged irreparable injury to the plaintiff without an injunction, the potential harm to the defendant from the injunction, and the public interest — all weigh in favor of Carandola.
As to Carandola’s irreparable injury, the Supreme Court has explained that “loss of First Amendment rights, for even minimal periods of time, unquestion
With respect to the harm that would befall if the injunction is left in place, we agree with the district court that a state is “in no way harmed by issuance of a preliminary injunction which prevents the state from enforcing restrictions likely to be found unconstitutional. If anything, the system is improved by such an injunction.” Carandola,
The final prerequisite to the grant of a preliminary injunction is that it serve the public interest. Again, we agree with the district court that upholding constitutional rights surely serves the public interest. See id.
Of course, as the Supreme Court noted in similarly upholding a preliminary injunction barring enforcement of another public decency statute, “the extent of our appellate inquiry” is the determination that the district court did not “abuse[ ] its discretion” in granting a preliminary injunction. Doran,
V.
For the foregoing reasons, the district court’s judgment is
AFFIRMED IN PART AND VACATED IN PART.
Notes
. We note that the district court’s order enjoins the Commission from enforcing both Rule 2S.0216 and N.C. Gen.Stat. § 18-1005 in their entirety. On appeal, Carandola does not argue that N.C. Gen.Stat. § 18B-1005(a)(1), (2), (3), or (6) (prohibiting fighting, disorderly conduct, gambling, and the like, and authorizing the Commission to write certain rules) violate the Constitution, and we see no reason to hold they do. Accordingly, we vacate the portion of the injunction prohibiting the Commission from enforcing those subsections of the statute.
. However, contrary to the Commission's apparent belief, the fact that the challenged restrictions regulate liquor licenses does not affect the level of scrutiny. To be sure, the Supreme Court originally did embrace the view that the Twenty-first Amendment creates an “added presumption in favor of the validity” of state liquor regulations. See LaRue,
. In passing, the Commission suggests that the brief, vague testimony it offered at the preliminary injunction hearing of a single former legislator demonstrated the North Carolina legislature's intent in enacting § 18B-1005 in the early 1980s. This argument is clearly meritless. See United States v. Monsanto,
. As further evidence of the poor fit between the state’s objective and the undiscriminating terms of its restrictions, we note that the restrictions would also punish the owners of the Charlotte Coliseum for allowing basketball players or coaches to give a congratulatory pat on the bottom during a game. While this conduct may not be protected by the First Amendment, and so we do not count it as an impermissible application, it does illustrate the extraordinary breadth of the restrictions at issue here.
. J & B Entm't, Inc.,
. Even before reinterpreting LaRue, the Supreme Court, when considering a case in precisely the same procedural posture as that at hand — review of the grant of a preliminary injunction against a public decency regulation — similarly held that the plaintiffs had made a "sufficient showing of the likelihood of ultimate success on the merits." Doran,
Dissenting Opinion
dissenting:
This case represents yet another effort by state and local authorities to regulate the purveyance of sexually explicit dancing in nightclubs and bars in their communities. In this case, the purveyors of such dancing in North Carolina challenge a North Carolina law prohibiting licensees who are authorized to sell alcoholic beverages from providing entertainment during which “private parts are exposed,” entertainment that “includes or simulates sexual intercourse or any other sexual act,” or entertainment that is otherwise “lewd or obscene.” N.C. Gen.Stat. § 18B-1005.
Acting under the direction of this statute, the North Carolina Alcoholic Beverage Control Commission adopted a regulation that provides as follows:
(a) No permittee or his employee shall allow any person to perform acts of or acts that simulate:
(1) sexual intercourse, masturbation, sodomy, bestiality, oral copulation, flagellation, or any sexual acts that are prohibited by law;
(2) the touching, caressing or fondling of the breasts, buttocks, anus, vulva or genitals;
(3) the display of the pubic hair, anus, vulva or genitals.
(b) No permittee or his employee shall allow any person to use artificial devices or inanimate objects to depict any of the prohibited activities described in Paragraph (a) of this Rule.
(c) No permittee or his employee shall allow any person who exposes to public view any portion of his pubic hair, vulva, genitals or anus to remain in or upon the licensed premises.
4 N.C. Admin Code, tit. 4, r.2S.0216 (2002).
When Christie’s Cabaret, a nude dancing establishment in Greensboro, North Carolina, was charged with violation of the
The district court preliminarily enjoined enforcement of the North Carolina law. For the reasons that follow, I would reverse.
In writing to affirm, the majority seeks to protect the offensive conduct which con-cededly violates both the statute and the regulation by concluding that the statute and regulation are unconstitutionally over-broad. It relies on an array of Supreme Court decisions that fail to dispose of the issue before us. With respect to the one dispositive case, California v. LaRue,
In LaRue, the Supreme Court was faced with a statute virtually identical to the one before us and found it constitutional against a facial challenge that it violated the First and Fourteenth Amendments. The Supreme Court observed that “as the mode of expression moves from the printed page to the commission of public acts that may themselves violate valid penal statutes, the scope of permissible state regulations significantly increases.”
The substance of the regulations struck down prohibits licensed bars or nightclubs from displaying, either in the form of movies or live entertainment, “performances” that partake more of gross sexuality than of communication. While we agree that at least some of the performances to which these regulations address themselves are within the limits of the constitutional protection of freedom of expression, the critical fact is that California has not forbidden these performances across the board. It has merely proscribed such performances in establishments that it licenses to sell liquor by the drink.
Viewed in this light, we conceive the State’s authority in this area to be somewhat broader than did the District Court.
Id. at 118,
In seeking to distinguish the Supreme Court’s holding, the majority points out that the State in LaRue did not concede the argument, as did the State in this case, that the language of the statute could reach some main street establishments. Whether a legal argument is conceded or not, however, does not affect the Supreme Court’s holding, which reviewed the statute, not the legal arguments. Moreover, the Supreme Court addressed the concession made in this case, observing that the prohibition was constitutional even though “some of the performances to which these regulations address themselves are within the limits of constitutional protection.” Id. at 118,
The majority also seeks to distinguish LaRue on the ground that the Court in LaRue affirmed the statute “on the strength of a detailed record of public hearings documenting serious problems with prostitution, public sexual conduct, and sexually transmitted disease in establishments presenting nude dancing and sexually explicit movies.” Ante at 16 (citing LaRue,
Finally, the majority suggests that La-Rue is no longer good law because it was “reinterpreted” in 44 Liquormart, Inc. v. Rhode Island,
The other circuit courts that have been faced with the exact issue presented in this case have held, as I would, that the holding in LaRue remains binding precedent with respect to similarly worded statutes. See, e.g., BZAPS, Inc. v. City of Mankato,
For these reasons, I would reverse the entry of the preliminary injunction, and therefore, I respectfully dissent.
