Maverick Media Group, Inc., (“Maverick”), sued Hillsborough County, Florida, (the “County”), claiming that the County unconstitutionally denied it permits for outdoor signs. The district court entered summary judgment for the County and Maverick appealed. A review of the record reveals that Maverick does not have standing to bring this claim. Therefore, we shall vacate the district court’s judgment and remand for dismissal of the case.
I.
A. In order to have Article III standing to challenge the County’s sign ordinance, Maverick must have a constitutional injury that is redressable by the court.
In order to have Article III standing in federal court, a plaintiff must suffer an injury in fact that is both causally connected to the conduct complained of and redressable by a favorable decision of the court.
Lujan v. Defenders of Wildlife,
The County in its Answer to the Complaint denied that Maverick had standing to bring its claims. The Magistrate Judge concluded that Maverick had standing. 1 Although the County did not cross-appeal this part of the district court’s judgment, we must satisfy ourselves that Maverick has standing before proceeding to consider the merits of this appeal. Id. Unless Maverick has Article III standing to bring its claims, the district court had no consti *820 tutional authority to enter a judgment in the case. Id.
B. Maverick’s injury is not redressable by the court.
We have recently held that a plaintiff whose sign permit applications were denied on the basis of one provision in a county’s sign ordinance, but which could have been denied on the basis of some alternate, but unchallenged regulation, does not have a redressable injury.
KH Outdoor, L.L.C. v. Clay County,
This approach has been endorsed by several of our sister circuits. In
Midwest Media Prop., LLC v. Symmes Tp.,
Similarly, in
Advantage Media, L.L.C. v. City of Eden Prairie,
The Fourth Circuit reached the same result in
Covenant Media of South Carolina, LLC v. City of North Charleston,
The Seventh Circuit has also endorsed this redressability analysis as applied to sign company plaintiffs whose applications could have been denied under alternate, unchallenged provisions of a sign ordinance, holding that plaintiffs have no standing where “[plaintiff] suffers an injury [it cannot erect the proposed billboard], but winning the case will not alter that situation”.
Harp Adver. Ill., Inc., v. Village of Chicago Ridge, Ill,
Thus, the KH Outdoor redressability analysis is applicable to the case where a county could deny a plaintiffs sign permit applications under an alternative provision of its ordinance that the plaintiffs complaint does not challenge. This is such a case. Just as in KH Outdoor, Hillsborough County’s ordinance contains height and size limitations for permitted signs. These limitations would have prohibited the erection of Maverick’s billboards independently of the ordinance’s categorical billboard prohibitions, and the Magistrate specifically so found. [R & R at n. 23.] In his Report and Recommendation, the Magistrate found that the evidence submitted by Maverick revealed that it sought permits only for signs measuring 14’ x 48’, “the size of which clearly exceeds the size limitations contained in the excepted off-site directional signs provisions.” [R & R at n.23, citing §§ 7.04.02(B)(6), (C)(6), (D)(2), (E)(2), and (F)(2)]. 5 Therefore, the County could have denied Maverick’s applications under an alternative, unchallenged provision of its sign ordinance.
Maverick did not specifically challenge the height and size restrictions in the County’s ordinance because it did not apply for the type of sign permitted by the County’s ordinance. Therefore, its applications were not denied under these provisions. Since its applications were for off-site billboards, they were denied under ordinance provisions prohibiting billboards and offsite signs. 6
Nor may Maverick invoke the overbreadth doctrine in an attempt to get at these limitations.
See CAMP,
The overbreadth doctrine does not, however, grant a plaintiff carte blanche to challenge an entire ordinance merely because some part of the ordinance — to which the plaintiff is not subject — might be unconstitutional.
Id.
at 1271. It does not, because it may not, waive the Article III requirement that the plaintiff have suffered a real
injury in fact
as to a challenged provision of an ordinance.
Id.; see also Granite State Outdoor Advertising, Inc., v. City of Clearwater, Fla.,
Therefore, Maverick may challenge only those provisions of the ordinance under which it suffered an injury in fact. The Magistrate determined that Maverick did not suffer injury under the permitted sign provisions of the ordinance because Maverick did not apply for such signs. All of Maverick’s sign applications were for prohibited billboards — signs that greatly exceed the height and size limitations for permitted signs. The Magistrate specifically found, without objection by Maverick, that it was “not subject to the exceptions to the prohibitions on off-site signs found in [the old ordinance] because the evidence submitted by Maverick reveals that it sought permits for signs measuring 14’ by 48’, the size of which clearly exceeds the size limitations contained in the excepted off-site directional signs provisions.”
If there were any evidence in this record that Maverick sought to display signs that otherwise complied with the permitted sign provision, it might have an injury in fact as to the height and size restrictions in this provision. Since there is no such evidence, Maverick suffered no injury
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in fact under the permitted sign provision of the prior ordinance and it has no standing to challenge it under the overbreadth doctrine or any other doctrine.
See Prime Media, Inc. v. City of Brentwood,
II.
In sum, Maverick does not have standing to bring this action challenging the billboard and offsite sign prohibitions in the County’s prior sign ordinance because its injury in fact under these provisions is unredressable by the court. It may not challenge the entire ordinance on its face because it has suffered no injury in fact as to any other provisions. Therefore, the judgment of the district court is due to be vacated, and the case will be remanded to the district court with instructions to dismiss the case.
VACATED and REMANDED.
Notes
. The district court referred the case to the Magistrate Judge for a Report and Recommendation on the cross-motions for summary judgment.
. In
KH Outdoor,
the "other” regulations were found in state law that imposed certain application requirements that had not been met by the plaintiff.
. The Magistrate in this case concluded that Maverick had standing because "[Maverick's] injury likely would be redressed by a favorable decision
{e.g.,
actual or nominal damages)." The district court summarily adopted the Report and Recommendation. This was error. In
KH Outdoor,
the plaintiffs requested damages. In concluding that the plaintiff did not have standing, we necessarily concluded that damages — just as sign permits— are unavailable to the plaintiff whose sign applications may be denied under an alternative, unchallenged provision of an ordinance.
See also Get Outdoors II,
.Offsite signs are those that are not located at the site of the business advertised.
. The ordinance defined billboards as any advertising sign measuring 72 square feet in aggregate sign area or more. [R & R, n. 22]. Both the Amended Complaint and Maverick’s property leases for its signs confirm that all of Maverick’s applications were for signs measuring 14 by 48 feet in size, and the Magistrate specifically so found in his R & R.
. The Magistrate Judge found that the County denied Maverick’s applications on the ground that they were for prohibited off-site signs or billboard signs.
. Nor does Maverick's claim that the offsite sign prohibition is not content-neutral change this analysis in any way. Maverick’s offsite sign applications, denied under the ordinance's prohibition on offsite signs, similarly could have been denied under the size and height limitations, because all the applications were for signs that exceeded those limitations.
