In this case we review a constitutional challenge to several portions of a massage parlor ordinance adopted by the San Antonio City Council in 1976. Although our task is complicated by several important procedural hurdles — most arising out of a similar challenge contemporaneously filed in state court — we hold that the district court properly exercised its jurisdiction over this case and correctly adjudicated the constitutionality of those portions of the ordinance that it considered. We remand so that the court below may rule upon the remaining challenged sections.
I. THE FACTS
Finding, in part, that “sexual conduct or the intimation of sexual conduct, rather than the massage of the body, has become the business in fact of many massage busi *1005 nesses”, the city council of San Antonio, Texas, on February 26,1976, passed an ordinance strictly regulating massage parlors. 1
In April, 1976, several San Antonio massage parlor owners and masseuses, none of whom are parties in the instant case, filed a complaint in state court alleging that the ordinance violated the Texas and federal constitutions and seeking injunctive and declaratory relief. On June 1, 1976, the state trial court ruled that the ordinance was constitutional with the exception of nine provisions, which it declared unconstitutional and enjoined the city from enforcing.
2
Both parties appealed to an intermediate level state appellate court which, on February 16, 1977, reversed the trial court on procedural grounds and held that the ordinance in its entirety was constitutional.
Holt v. City of San Antonio,
On June 14, 1976, two weeks after the state trial court’s judgment was entered but prior to its reversal on appeal, the instant plaintiffs — two massage parlor owners, two licensed masseuses, and two massage parlor “patrons” — filed suit in federal court pursuant to 42 U.S.C. § 1983, seeking injunctive and declaratory relief on grounds that the ordinance violated the First, Fourth, Fifth, Ninth and Fourteenth Amendments to the United States Constitution. After a non-jury trial, the district court on August 25, 1976, entered its findings of fact and conclusions of law. The court held that (1) although the plaintiff owners and masseuses had standing to sue, the plaintiff patrons did not; (2) those portions of the ordinance declared unconstitutional by the state trial court in Holt were “not properly before this Court” and presented no case or controversy, (3) with one exception, all sections of the ordinance properly before the court “are constitutional on their face [and as applied] as a valid exercise of police power”, and (4) Section 10 of the ordinance, insofar as it requires recording of the type of massage provided to a patron, is unconstitutional on its face. Judgment enjoining enforcement of the “service provided” portion of Section 10 and denying all other relief sought by the plaintiffs was entered on the same day. The plaintiffs timely filed their notice of appeal to this Court.
II. THE PROCEDURAL ISSUES
A. Plaintiff Patrons’ Standing to Sue:
In addition to massage parlor owners and masseuses, the complaint in this case named as plaintiffs Edward Camara, Jr., “a prospective and intended patron of massage parlors in San Antonio”, and Keith Gates, “a patron of massage parlors in San Antonio”. Camara and Gates sought a declaratory judgment that the customer registration and “peephole” provisions of the ordinance are unconstitutional, and each claimed to be “under a genuine threat of enforcement under the ordinance, with a likelihood of arrest and prosecution should he fail to comply with its provisions”. The district court found that Camara and Gates “have not made the requisite showing to establish their standing to bring or join in the instant suit”. We agree.
“In its constitutional dimension, standing imports justiciability: whether the plaintiff
*1006
has made out a ‘case or controversy’ between himself and the defendant within the meaning of Article III”.
Warth v. Seldin,
If this were an appeal from a judgment granting the defendants’ motion to dismiss for lack of standing, we would be required to accept as true all of the material allegations of the complaint.
Warth v. Seldin, supra,
We do not hold that patrons or “intended patrons” of massage parlors
per se
lack standing to challenge ordinances regulating such establishments. We hold only that the plaintiff patrons in this case have failed to show “that there is a substantial controversy, between parties having adverse legal interests, of sufficient immediacy and reality to warrant the issuance of a declaratory judgment” under 28 U.S.C. § 2201.
Maryland Casualty Co. v. Pacific Coal and Oil Co.,
B. Preclusive Effect of the State Court Judgment:
The appellants contend that the district court erred in declining to rule upon the nine sections of the ordinance which had earlier been declared unconstitutional by a state trial court in
Holt v. City of San Antonio.
4
Our consideration of this issue is
*1007
foreclosed, however, by the fact that the
Holt
injunction relied on by the district court was reversed during the pendency of this appeal. See
Concerned Citizens of Vicksburg v. Sills,
Our task is complicated, however, by the appellees’ counterargument that federal review of any section of the ordinance is precluded under principles of abstention and res judicata by the ruling of the Texas Supreme Court in Holt. Essentially, the appellees contend that by unreservedly litigating their claims in state court, the plaintiffs in Holt foreclosed the federal review sought by the separate plaintiffs in this case. We disagree.
The appellees’ argument is based upon an expansive reading of
England v. Louisiana State Board of Medical Examiners,
if a party freely and without reservation submits his federal claims for decision by the state courts, litigates them there, and has them decided there, then — whether or not he seeks direct review of the state decision in this Court — he has elected to forego his right to the District Court.375 U.S. at 419 ,84 S.Ct. at 466-67 .
By its terms, England dealt only with state and federal lawsuits brought by the same parties. In Rankin, we extended England to a class action situation, where suits on behalf of the same class of persons had been brought in state and federal court by different class representatives. We described the situation in Rankin as follows:
[T]he same cause of action, involving both state and federal constitutional issues, was brought almost simultaneously in both state and federal courts by different members of the same class acting in concert. The state action was litigated first and the plaintiff argued both state and federal constitutional points without reservation. The decision of the state trial court was favorable to the plaintiff . [but] [t]he plaintiff lost in the Florida Supreme Court and now seeks a readjudication on the merits in federal district court.418 F.2d at 485 (emphasis added).
Noting that under the doctrine of res judi-cata a prior valid judgment operates as an absolute bar in another case on the same cause of action between the same parties and their privies, we held that the “plaintiff in the federal class action is therefore barred from litigating further in the federal court by the final determination of the state class action, since the parties and is *1008 sues were identical in substance, if not in form”. Id. at 486 (emphasis added).
The instant case is distinguishable from
Rankin
in that here the state and federal cases were brought by different plaintiffs, none of whom sued in a representative capacity. We thus conclude that this case is controlled not by
Rankin
but by
E. B. Elliott Adv. Co. v. Metropolitan Dade County,
What is sought here is a de novo adjudication of the constitutionality of a county ordinance which had been challenged by some, but not all, of the plaintiffs and upheld in prior state litigation. . The parties in this action who are unaffected by the prior state decisions are entitled to a determination of their constitutional rights under the ordinance, and it is their option whether to invoke the jurisdiction of the federal courts or the state courts.425 F.2d at 1149 .
In an effort to avoid the implications of
Elliott,
the appellees seek to establish privity between the instant plaintiffs and the plaintiffs in
Holt
through the doctrine of “virtual representation”. We have recognized that “[ujnder the federal law of res judicata, a person may be bound by a judgment even though not a party if one of the parties to the suit is so closely aligned with his interests as to be his virtual representative”.
Aerojet-General Corp. v. Askew,
We hold that the relationship between the instant plaintiffs and the
Holt
plaintiffs does not amount to the close alignment of interests necessary under the virtual representation doctrine. Virtual representation demands the existence of an express or implied legal relationship in which parties to the first suit are accountable to non-parties who file a subsequent suit raising identical issues. In reviewing cases decided under the doctrine, we have described the types of relationships contemplated: “estate beneficiaries bound by administrators, presidents and sole stockhold
*1009
ers by their companies, parent corporations by their subsidiaries, and a trust beneficiary by the trustee”.
Southwest Airlines Co. v. Texas Intern. Airlines,
Although the appellees raise the specter of conflicting state and federal pronouncements of the law and the attendant friction between the two systems, we regard such consequences — by no means inevitable — as incident to federalism. As Mr. Justice Rehnquist explained in
Doran v. Salem Inn, Inc.,
We think that the interest of avoiding conflicting outcomes in the litigation of similar issues, while entitled to substantial deference in a unitary system, must of necessity be subordinated to the claims of federalism in this particular area of the law. . . . The same may be said of the interest in conservation of judicial manpower. As worthy a value as this is in a unitary system, the very existence of one system of federal courts and 50 systems of state courts, all charged with the responsibility for interpreting the United States Constitution, suggests that on occasion there will be duplicating and overlapping adjudication of cases which are sufficiently similar in content, time, and location to justify being heard before a single judge had they arisen within a unitary system.
We do not agree with the Court of Appeals, therefore, that all three plaintiffs should automatically be thrown into the same hopper for Younger purposes, and should thereby each be entitled to injunctive relief. We cannot accept that view, any more than we can accept petitioner’s equally Procrustean view that because M & L would have been barred from injunctive relief had it been the sole plaintiff, Salem and Tim-Rob should likewise be barred not only from injunctive relief but from declaratory relief as well. While there plainly may be some circumstances in which legally distinct parties are so closely related that they should all be subject to the Younger considerations which govern any one of them, this is not such a case; — while respondents are represented by common counsel, and have similar business activities and problems, they are apparently unrelated in terms of *1010 ownership, control, and management. We thus think that each of the respondents should be placed in the position required by our cases as if that respondent stood alone.
We think this language effectively refutes the argument that a proper regard for the principles of federalism requires extension of the virtual representation doctrine to bar federal jurisdiction in this case.
All else failing, the appellees argue that the district court should have abstained pending a final disposition of
Holt
by the Texas courts. However, abstention of the type ordered in
Askew v. Hargrave,
C. Prior Supreme- Court Dismissals For Want of a Substantial Federal Question:
On three occasions, the Supreme Court has dismissed appeals from state court decisions upholding the constitutionality of ordinances that prohibit massages by persons of the opposite sex in commercial establishments.
Smith v. Keator,
A dismissal of an appeal for want of a substantial federal question is a disposition on the merits of the precise issues raised on appeal.
Hicks v. Miranda,
Summary affirmances and dismissals for want of a substantial federal question without doubt reject the specific challenges presented in the statement of jurisdiction and do leave undisturbed the judgment appealed from. They do prevent lower courts from coming to opposite conclusions on the precise issues presented and necessarily decided by those actions. . . . The precedential significance of the summary action in [a case], however, is to be assessed in light of all the facts in that case .
We conclude that the dismissals in
Smith, Rubinstein,
and
Kisley
have little, if any precedential significance in the instant case. The ordinances challenged in
Smith, Rubinstein,
and
Kisley
prohibited opposite-sex massages. Accordingly, those cases have been held to foreclose consideration of similar federal constitutional challenges to “ordinances identical in all material respects”.
Colorado Springs Amusements, Ltd. v. Rizzo,
The different facts in Mandel [upon which the Court relied to distinguish an earlier dismissal] were the differences between the Pennsylvania and Maryland statutes. Here, the Supreme Court has upheld disclosure provisions in Washington, Illinois, and Maryland statutes. Each statute differs from the others; each differs from the Sunshine Amendment [challenged in Plante]. The dismissals by the Supreme Court caution us against finding the Amendment unconstitutional. They [do] not relieve us of our duty “to undertake an independent examination of the merits”, (citations omitted). 7
III. THE SUBSTANTIVE ISSUES
We now reach the merits of the appellants’ constitutional claims.
With one exception, 8 the court below found that all challenged sections of the ordinance which had not been declared unconstitutional by the trial court in Holt “are constitutional on their face as a valid exercise of police power”. The appellants contend that the district court erred in so holding. Finding no merit in the appellants’ arguments against the constitutionality of the ordinance, we affirm.
The appellants’ principal challenge to the ordinance is grounded in the Fourteenth Amendment’s guarantees of equal protection and due process. The due process attack is clearly without merit in that it attempts to resurrect the long discredited concept of substantive due process and is based specifically upon a 1928 case which the Supreme Court has since overruled and branded “a derelict in the stream of the law”. 9 The equal protection attack is a more subtle — but equally fruitless — effort to breathe life into the substantive due process doctrine by requiring strict judicial scrutiny of legislative classifications affecting the right to engage in a lawful business, trade, or profession.
Traditional equal protection analysis grants great deference to legisla
*1012
tive classifications. If “the distinctions drawn have some basis in practical experience”,
South Carolina v. Katzenbach,
The appellants cite
Corey v. City of Dallas,
Since the [Dallas massage parlor] ordinance infringes on the basic right to earn a livelihood, then the statutory scheme can only be justified by a compelling governmental interest.
Although this analysis has been adopted by at least two other district courts,
10
we reject it as wholly at odds with controlling legal principles. First, in
Corey
and its progeny, the notion that there is a “fundamental” constitutionally guaranteed right to “pursue a legitimate business” was derived solely from substantive due process cases which have been either discredited or overruled.
11
Without intimating any view as to the nature or scope of this right, we hold that it is not “fundamental” for purposes of equal protection analysis. Second, the theory that classifications affecting the right to pursue a legitimate business demand strict scrutiny flies in the face of the well established rule that state regulations of business or industry are to be reviewed under the less exacting “rational basis” standard. See, e. g.,
Dandridge v. Williams,
Since this action neither affects fundamental rights nor involves a traditionally suspect classification, we need only determine whether the allegedly discriminatory provisions of the massage parlor ordinance under attack bear a rational relationship to the broad purposes of the ordinance. Cf.
United Health Clubs of America, Inc. v. Strom,
State legislatures are presumed to have acted within their constitutional power despite the fact that, in practice, their laws result in some inequality. A statutory discrimination will not be set aside if any state of facts reasonably may be conceived to justify it. McGowan, supra,366 U.S. at 425-26 ,81 S.Ct. at 1105 .
Against the backdrop of these principles, we review those portions of the ordinance which the district court held to be constitutional.
A. Section 21
At the heart of the appellants’ equal protection challenge lies Section 21 which, by exempting several institutions from the coverage of the ordinance, in effect singles out massage parlors for restrictive treatment. Section 21 provides:
SECTION 21. Exceptions. The provisions of this article shall not apply to hospitals, nursing homes, sanitariums, or persons holding an unrevoked certificate to practice the healing arts under the laws of the state, or persons working under the direction of any such persons or in any such establishment, nor shall this article apply to barbers, cosmetologists, physical therapists, assistant physical therapists or athletic trainers, lawfully carrying out their particular profession or business and holding a valid, unrevoked license or certificate if (sic) registration issued by the state.
Clearly, the distinction between massage parlors and the institutions exempted under Section 21 is not arbitrary or irrational. In drafting Section 21, the city council probably reasoned that nursing homes, sanitariums, cosmetologists, and others listed are already heavily regulated by state law and thus not in need of additional local regulation, and are not likely to pose the danger— which the ordinance was intended to alleviate — of serving as subterfuges for prostitution. Furthermore, while the institutions exempted from the ordinance are concerned with physical therapy and personal grooming, counsel for appellants stressed at oral argument that his clients serve only recreational and not therapeutic purposes. Section 21 does not work an invidious discrimination. Cf.
United Health Clubs of America, Inc. v. Strom, supra,
B. Section 16:
As with Section 21, the appellants argue that Section 16, regulating hours of operation, unconstitutionally discriminates against massage parlors because other establishments performing similar services are not so burdened.
12
For the reasons stated above, this argument must fail. We note that even those cases invalidating massage parlor ordinances under substantive due process principles have conceded that regulation of operating hours would be permissible. Cianc
iolo, supra,
*1014 C. Section 12:
The appellants object to Section 12, dealing with sanitation and health requirements, in that it authorizes warrantless administrative searches allegedly in violation of the Fourth Amendment:
All premises used by permittees hereunder shall be periodically inspected by the police chief or his authorized representative for safety of structure and adequacy of plumbing, ventilation, heating and illumination. . Nothing contained herein shall be construed . . not [sic] to preclude authorized inspection thereof, whenever such inspection is deemed necessary by the police or health departments.
The Supreme Court has held that “except in certain carefully defined classes of cases, a search of private property without proper consent is ‘unreasonable’ unless it has been authorized by a valid search warrant”,
Camara v. Municipal Court,
These principles have not been eroded by the Supreme Court’s recent decision invalidating the administrative search provisions of the Occupational Safety and Health Act of 1970, 29 U.S.C. § 657(a) (1970). Marshall v. Barlow’s Inc., supra. In that case, the Court specifically rejected the argument that its holding “will mean that, as a practical matter, warrantless search provisions in other regulatory statutes are also constitutionally infirm”:
The reasonableness of a warrantless search, however, will depend upon the specific enforcement needs and privacy guarantees of each statute. Some of the statutes cited [by the Secretary of Labor] apply only to a single industry, where regulations might already be so pervasive that a Colonnade-Biswell exception to the warrant requirement could apply. - U.S. at-,98 S.Ct. at 1825 .
We hold that the administrative search provisions of Section 12 are not facially unconstitutional. The Indiana Supreme Court recently upheld a similar massage parlor search provision for reasons which we find persuasive in the instant case:
No criminal prosecutions are authorized for refusal to permit inspection, only the license is affected. Notice would seem to be unreasonable given the ease with which some violations could be concealed. It is a business which is being inspected and one which has a history of regulation, Annot.17 A.L.R.2d 1183 (1951), albeit not as extensive as the liquor or firearms industries, and as a member of a regulated business, a licensee does impliedly consent to inspections at any and all reasonable times and places by obtaining a license . . . . City of Indianapolis v. Wright,371 N.E.2d 1298 , 1302 (Ind.1978).
The only material difference between the ordinance upheld in Wright and the San Antonio ordinance challenged in this case is that the former limited inspections to “all business hours and . . . other reasonable times”. The San Antonio ordinance *1015 purports to leave the time of inspection to the discretion of the police. Although it is conceivable that searches at certain times or with great frequency could be unreasonable, the ordinance on its face does not authorize unreasonable searches. Nor can we presume that the administrative search provisions will be unreasonably applied. On its face, Section 12 authorizes the type of warrantless administrative searches approved in Biswell and Barlow’s. 13
D. Section 10:
The appellants launch a broadside constitutional attack against Section 10, dealing with registration and record keeping. That section, as amended on June 23, 1977, provides as follows:
Every person who operates a massage business or provides a massage shall at all times keep an accurate appointment book(s) in which the name, age and current address of each and every patron shall be entered, together with the date and name of the masseur providing the massage. Such registration shall be required prior to the rendering of any massage service to any patron. The appointment book shall be available during business hours for inspection, on the premises of the massage establishment, by the police chief and the director of health or their authorized representatives. The appointment book shall be kept upon the business premises throughout the permit year and for one year thereafter. A new appointment book shall be used for each permit year.
Although their precise constitutional objections to this provision are not well defined, the appellants rely upon one case which invalidated a similar provision as an irrational exercise of the police power and an infringement upon the associational and privacy rights of massage parlor patrons. Fehlhaber v. Thompson, Civil No. 1031 (E.D.N.C. September 9, 1974) (unpublished opinion). 14 We cannot agree that Section 10 of the San Antonio ordinance is constitutionally infirm for any of these reasons.
As the appellees point out, Section 10 is rationally related to the purposes of the ordinance because it will tend to prevent minors from frequenting massage parlors and to inhibit patrons from soliciting proscribed sexual acts. Under a similar rationale, the Supreme Court has recently upheld the patient identification requirements of a New York statute regulating the prescription drug field:
There surely was nothing unreasonable in the assumption that the patient-identification requirement might aid in the enforcement of laws designed to minimize the misuse of dangerous drugs. For the requirement could reasonably be expected to have a deterrent effect on potential violators as well as to aid in the detection and investigation of specific instances of apparent abuse. Whalen v. Roe,429 U.S. 589 , 597,97 S.Ct. 869 , 875-76,51 L.Ed.2d 64 (1977).
Assuming, arguendo, that the instant massage parlor owners and masseuses have *1016 standing to assert the associational and privacy rights of their patrons, the objections raised on their behalf are nevertheless without merit. The Court in Whalen v. Roe, supra, effectively disposed of the argument that patient (or patron) registration infringes on the First Amendment freedom of association:
[T]he patient appellees derive a right to individual anonymity from our freedom of association cases such as Bates v. City of Little Rock,361 U.S. 516 , 522-23,80 S.Ct. 412 , 416,4 L.Ed.2d 480 , and NAACP v. Alabama,357 U.S. 449 , 462,78 S.Ct. 1163 , 1171-72,2 L.Ed.2d 1488 . But those cases protect “freedom of association for the purpose of advancing ideas and airing grievances”, Bates v. City of Little Rock,361 U.S. at 523 ,80 S.Ct. at 416 , not anonymity in the course of medical treatment.429 U.S. at 604 n. 32,97 S.Ct. at 879 n. 32.
See also
Brown v. Haner,
The Supreme Court has similarly rejected an interpretation of the right to privacy comparable to that advanced by the appellants. In
Paris Adult Theater I v. Slaton,
Even assuming that petitioners have vicarious standing to assert potential customers’ rights, it is unavailing to compare a theater, open to the public for a fee, with the private home of Stanley v. Georgia . . . and the marital bedroom of Griswold v. Connecticut, [381 U.S. 479 ,85 S.Ct. 1678 ,14 L.Ed.2d 510 (1965)]. This Court, has, on numerous occasions, refused to hold that commercial ventures such as a motion picture house are “private” for the purpose of civil rights litigation and civil rights statutes.413 U.S. at 65 ,93 S.Ct. at 2639 .
We find this reasoning persuasive in the context of public, commercial massage parlors. The constitutional right to privacy is not offended when a person voluntarily entering a massage parlor open to the public and seeking to purchase the services of a masseuse is required to identify himself. Cf.
Stratton v. Drumm,
E. Sections 6A and 6B:
Sections 6A and 6B set forth the criteria for issuance of massage business permits and masseur’s permits by the chief of police. The appellants contend that these sections deny them due process of law because they do not provide for remedies in the event that a permit is denied. 15 Assuming that massage parlor owners and masseuses would be entitled to due process in the event a permit were denied them, the ordinance’s silence as to the procedure to be followed does not amount to a denial of due process. Had the ordinance been drafted to forbid notice and a hearing, it might well have been struck down as facially unconstitutional. As enacted, the ordinance in no way prevents the city from affording whatever process is due when it denies a permit.
IV. CONCLUSION
In summary, we affirm the district court’s conclusions that the plaintiff patrons lack standing to sue and that the challenged sections of the ordinance, with the exception of nine provisions held unconstitutional by the trial court in Holt, are constitutional on their face. As to the remaining nine challenged provisions, we remand so that the district court may rule upon the merits of the plaintiffs’ constitu *1017 tional objections. 16 Neither the “snow” of res judicata, nor the “rain” of virtual representation, nor the “heat” of abstention, nor the “gloom of night” of dismissals for want of a substantial federal question will stay the district court from the swift completion of its appointed round. 17
AFFIRMED in part; REMANDED in part.
Notes
. Chapter 18, Art. IV, City Code of San Antonio.
. The sections found unconstitutional were these: 3(5)(vii) (disclosure of criminal arrests on application for massage business permit), 3(5)(vii) (furnishing of fingerprints on application for massage business permit), 3(6) (police chief may require “such other information . . as he deems necessary” on application for massage business permit), 4(2)(ii) (disclosure of criminal arrests on application for masseur’s permit), 4(3) (“such other information” on masseur’s permit), 5 (police chief may require “further information” in investigation of moral character for issuance of massage business or masseur’s permit), 12 (white clothing requirement for masseurs), 13 (imputing criminal liability to agent or employee), and 19 (educational requirements).
. Unpublished. On the meaning of the Texas Supreme Court’s refusal of the writ on these grounds, see note 7 infra.
. The appellants argue that the district court improperly abstained from exercising its jurisdiction to review these nine sections. However, we do not construe the court’s action as *1007 abstention. As its findings of fact and conclusions of law make clear, the court viewed the state court injunction in Holt as nullifying nine of the sections challenged; hence, there was “no case or controversy” with regard to those sections. The abstention doctrine never came into play.
. In
Southwest Airlines,
we distinguished
Elliott:
“In
Elliott
a private plaintiff challenged the constitutionality of a city ordinance after another private litigant had lost a similar challenge. The question was whether in the first suit the
private litigant
had represented the interests of the later challenger. Representation by a government authority never came up because both of the private parties
opposed
the city”.
.
Younger v. Harris,
. In holding as we do, we reach a result contrary to that of the Texas Court of Civil Appeals in
Holt.
Noting that the Supreme Court had dismissed “appeals from state court decisions upholding constitutionality of massage parlor ordinances”, the court in
Holt
concluded: “These decisions foreclose a favorable consideration of appellants’ constitutional challenge of the ordinance in question”.
Holt v. City of San Antonio,
. The district court found that portion of Section 10 requiring the recording of the type of massage administered to a patron “to be invalid and unconstitutional on its face”. During the pendency of this appeal, the San Antonio City Council amended the ordinance by deleting this “service provided” portion of Section 10. We do not review the district court’s holding on this point because the action of the city council has mooted this aspect of the challenge. See
Hall
v.
Beals,
.
North Dakota St. Bd. of Pharmacy v. Snyder’s Drug Stores, Inc.,
.
Cianciolo v. Members of City Council, Knoxville, Tenn.,
. Each case quoted the following language from
New State Ice Co. v. Liebmann,
Plainly, a regulation which has the effect of denying or unreasonably curtailing the common right to engage in a lawful private business . . cannot be upheld consistent with the Fourteenth Amendment. Under that amendment, nothing is more clearly settled than that it is beyond the power of a state, “under the guise of protecting the public, arbitrarily [to] interfere with private business or prohibit lawful occupations or impose unreasonable and unnecessary restrictions upon them”.
In support of this proposition the
Liebmann
Court cited
Liggett Co.
v.
Baldridge,
a 1928 case which the Court expressly overruled in 1974. See note 9
supra.
Long before it overruled
Liggett,
the Court observed that “a pronounced shift of emphasis since the
Liggett
case has deprived the words ‘unreasonable’ and ‘arbitrary’ of the content” ascribed to them in
Liggett
and its progeny.
Daniel v. Family Security Life Ins. Co.,
. “SECTION 16. No massage business shall be kept open for any purpose between the hours of 10:00 P.M. to 8:00 A.M.”
. The appellants rely on
Hogge v. Hedrick,
. The appellants also rely on Hogge v. He-drick, note 13, supra, in which a comparable record-keeping provision was struck down on equal protection grounds in that other establishments offering similar services were not subject to the same requirements. We find this conclusion unpersuasive in light of our discussion of the equal protection issue raised with regard to Section 21. Additionally, the appellants argue that the identification requirement violates a patron’s privilege against self-incrimination. We find this point too frivolous to warrant discussion.
. The appellants also attack Section 9, governing suspension and revocation of permits, as failing to provide the constitutionally required procedural safeguards. During the pendency of this appeal, however, the San Antonio City Council amended Section 9 to provide for notice and a hearing in cases of revocation and suspension. As we construe the appellants’ objections to the original Section 9, the amendment of that section has mooted the attack against it. See note 8 supra.
. The nine sections upon which the district court must rule are those listed in note 2 supra.
. With profound apologies to Herodotus, (Book VIII, 98) and the Main Post Office, New York City.
