This case involves a constitutional attack on a statute defining the offense of disturbing schools. The family court upheld the statute’s constitutionality and subsequently adjudicated Appellant delinquent for violating the statute. We affirm in part and vacate in part.
The State filed a juvenile petition in family court in October 2004 alleging that Amir X.S. (“Appellant”) violated S.C.Code Ann. § 16-17-420 (2003) by willfully, unlawfully, and unnecessarily interfering with and disturbing the students and teachers at Southside Learning Center in Greenwood County, South Carolina.
Before trial, Appellant moved to quash the juvenile petition claiming that § 16-17-420 was unconstitutionally vague and overbroad in violation of the First Amendment of the United States Constitution. Section 16-17-420 provides in pertinent part:
“It shall be unlawful: (1) For any person wilfully or unnecessarily (a) to interfere with or to disturb in any way or in any place the students or teachers of any school or college in this State, (b) to loiter about such school or college premises or (c) to act in an obnoxious manner thereon .... ”
S.C.Code Ann. § 16-17-420(1).
At the hearing on Appellant’s motion to quash, the State argued Appellant lacked standing to challenge the statute’s constitutionality because Appellant’s conduct plainly fell under its terms. The family court upheld the constitutionality of the statute and denied Appellant’s motion. After hearing testimony from each party, the family court found there was sufficient evidence to adjudicate Appellant delinquent for the violation of § 16-17-420. The family court committed Appellant to ninety days in the custody, of the Department of Juvenile Justice and imposed one year of probation.
Appellant filed this appeal pursuant to Rule 203, SCACR 1 and raises the following issues for review:
I. Is § 16-17-420 unconstitutional because it is overly broad and punishes a substantial amount of protected free speech in relation to the statute’s plainly legitimate sweep?
II. Does Appellant have standing to challenge § 16-17-420 on grounds of vagueness; and if so, is the statute unconstitutional because it is written in terms so vague that a person of common intelligence must necessarily guess at its meaning?
Law/Analysis
I. Overbreadth
Appellant argues that S.C.Code Ann. § 16-17-420 is unconstitutional because it is overly broad and punishes a substantial amount of protected free speech in relation to the statute’s plainly legitimate sweep. We disagree.
The First Amendment overbreadth doctrine is an exception to the usual rules regarding the standards for facial challenges. First, because the very existence of overly broad statutes may have such a deterrent effect on constitutionally protected expression, the traditional rule of standing
2
is relaxed for facial
3
overbreadth claims involving First Amendment rights.
Broadrick v.
Oklahoma,
In light of these exceptions to the traditional rules of practice, courts have been “sensitive to the risk that the doctrine itself might sweep so broadly that the exception to ordinary standing requirements would swallow the general rule.”
Members of the City Council of the City of Los Angeles v. Taxpayers for Vincent,
... its function, a limited one at the outset, attenuates as the otherwise unprotected behavior that it forbids the State to sanction moves from “pure speech” toward conduct[,] and that conduct — even if expressive — falls within the scope of otherwise valid criminal laws that reflect legitimate state interests in maintaining comprehensive controls over harmful, constitutionally unprotected conduct.
Broadrick,
In an effort to balance these varying interests, courts require that the alleged First Amendment overbreadth must not only be real, but also “substantial” in order to apply the overbreadth exception in a particular case.
Taxpayers for Vincent,
Turning to the instant case, we first note that although conduct generally is not protected by the First Amendment,
expressive
conduct may be.
U.S. v. O'Brien,
An analysis of § 16-17-420 is more appropriately derived from cases analyzing statutes targeting conduct termed “disruptive” to schools, with no specific prohibition otherwise on First Amendment expressive conduct.
Grayned v. City of Rockford,
More analogous to the case before this Court is
McAlpine v. Reese,
No person shall wilfully or maliciously make or assist in making any noise, disturbance, or improper diversion by which the peace, quietude or good order of any public, private, or parochial school is disturbed.
Similarly, in
S.H.B. v. State of Florida,
Applying these principles to South Carolina’s disturbing schools statute, S.C.Code Ann. § 16-17-420(1), we find that it does not substantially prohibit First Amendment speech. By its terms, the statute does not apply to protected speech. Specifically, the disturbing schools statute does not prohibit spoken words or conduct “akin to ‘pure speech.’ ”
Tinker,
The overbreadth doctrine additionally provides that any threat or deterrence to constitutionally protected expression may be removed by a limiting construction on the challenged statute.
Broadrick,
Taken to its outermost First Amendment boundaries, § 16-17-420 is most accurately characterized as “intertwining” speech and non-speech elements.
Cox v. Louisiana,
Appellant urges this Court to consider a school debate scenario where an individual could be prosecuted under § 16-17-420 for expressing a “disturbing” view, which in turn might implicate other students who openly disagree with that view in a manner deemed “obnoxious.” S.C.Code Ann. § 16-17-420(1). The innocent scenario suggested by Appellant is clearly not within the scope of § 16-17-420, nor would this Court construe it that way.
Tinker
permits the State to enforce its significant interest in its education system by punishing behavior that “materially disrupts classwork or involves substantial disorder or invasion of the rights of others.”
Any fertile legal imagination can dream up conceivable ways in which enforcement of a statute violates First Amendment rights. •
Grayned,
II. Vagueness
Respondent contends that Appellant lacks standing to make a facial vagueness challenge to the constitutionality of § 16-17-420. We agree.
The traditional rule of standing for facial attacks on statutes,
supra
n. 3, applies to facial vagueness challenges such as the one before this Court. “The concept of vagueness or indefiniteness rests on the constitutional principle that procedural due process requires fair notice and proper standards for adjudication.”
State v. Michau,
There can be no doubt that Appellant’s conduct falls within the most narrow application of § 16-17-420. Appellant’s teacher testified to the family court that for a period of
Moreover, Appellant had prior notice that this type of conduct was prohibited. A juvenile petition from May 2004 charged Appellant for a violation of the very same statute he now alleges is unconstitutionally vague pursuant to an October 2004 juvenile petition. Accordingly, Appellant does not have standing to facially challenge § 16-17-420 on grounds of vagueness.
Because Appellant does not have standing to challenge § 16-17-420 on grounds of vagueness, we do not address the merits of his argument that the terms of § 16-17-420 are so vague that a person of common intelligence must necessarily guess at its meaning.
See Broadrick,
Conclusion
For the foregoing reasons, we affirm the family court’s decision that § 16-17-420 is not unconstitutionally overbroad. Because Appellant does not have standing to challenge § 16-17-420 for vagueness, the family court’s decision on that matter is vacated.
Notes
. An appeal involving “a challenge on state or federal grounds to the constitutionality of a state law ... where the principal issue is one of the constitutionality of the law" is heard in this Court. Rule 203(d)(l)(A)(ii), SCACR.
. The traditional rule of standing for facial attacks provides that one to whom application of a statute is constitutional may not attack the statute on grounds that it might be unconstitutional when applied to other people or situations.
United States v. Raines,
. A facial challenge in this context is a claim that the law is incapable of any valid application.
Village of Hoffman Estates v. Flipside, Hoffman Estates, Inc.
. Breach of the peace statutes are generally attacked on grounds of overbreadth and vagueness because if not drafted with proper specificity, they have a strong potential for infringement on First Amendment rights in otherwise peaceable assembly.
See Coates v. Cincinnati,
402
. The General Assembly originally enacted § 16-17-420(1) in 1919 as a statute to protect schools for "women and girls." 1919 S.C. Acts 239. The statute was amended in 1968 to apply to "any” school. 1968 S.C. Acts 2308. Today § 16-17-420 is part of Title 16, Chapter 17 of the South Carolina Code which is appropriately titled "Offenses Against Public Policy.”
