National Advertising applied for permits to erect billboards in the City of Orange, California. The City denied the applications, and stipulates it did so “solely because of the provisions of the Sign Ordinance prohibiting off-site signs.”
Orange City’s Sign Ordinance bars throughout the City “general or billboard advertising signs,” defined as “sign[s] which direct[ ] attention to a business, commodity, industry or other activity which is sold, offered or conducted elsewhere than on the premises upon which such sign is located, and which may be sold, offered or conducted on such premises only incidentally, if at all.” Orange Municipal Code §§ 17.78.030F, 17.78.080A. Excepted from this general prohibition are certain governmental signs and flags, memorial tablets, recreational signs, and temporary political, real estate, construction, and advertising signs. Orange Municipal Code § 17.78.050.
National filed suit alleging the City’s ordinance was unconstitutional on its face and seeking declaratory and injunctive relief. Both parties moved for summary judgment. The district court granted National’s motion in part, holding the ordinance unconstitutional because it prefers commercial over noncommercial speech, and because, by allowing certain exceptions, it regulates noncommercial speech on the basis of content. The court issued an injunction ordering the City to process National’s applications without regard to the unconstitutional provisions. The City denied the applications. National moved for a civil contempt order, which the court granted. The City appeals both the order invalidating its ordinance and the contempt order.
I
The City contends its ordinance prohibits only off-site signs relating to commercial activity. The plain language of the ordinance precludes this construction.
Section 17.78.080, as defined by section 17.78.030, bans advertising signs related to “a business, commodity, industry
or other activity
which is sold, offered or conducted” elsewhere than on the premises, (emphasis added). The City suggests “activity” means only commercial activity. In
Metromedia, Inc. v. City of San Diego,
the Supreme Court accepted the California Supreme Court’s holding that the word “activity” in a similar ordinance encompassed noncommercial speech.
We interpret Orange’s ordinance as prohibiting all signs relating to activity not on the premises on which the sign is located (except those exempt by section 17.78.050), and permitting all signs relating to activity on the premises. Whether the message on the signs is commercial or noncommercial is irrelevant: both commercial and noncommercial signs are permitted if they relate to *248 activity on the premises and prohibited if they do not.
II
Standards for assessing the constitutionality of billboard restrictions are found in the Supreme Court’s opinions in
Metromedia
and
Members of the City Council v. Taxpayers for Vincent,
Under these standards, Orange’s Sign Ordinance is valid as applied to commercial billboards. The City may prohibit such billboards entirely in the interest of traffic safety and aesthetics,
Metromedia,
Stricter standards apply to the restriction of noncommercial speech. Under
Metromedia,
an ordinance is invalid if it imposes greater restrictions on noncommercial than on commercial billboards or regulates noncommercial billboards based on their content.
Merely treating noncommercial and commercial speech equally is not constitutionally sufficient. The first amendment affords greater protection to noncommercial than to commercial expression.
Metromedia,
Thus, “[although the city may distinguish between the relative value of different categories of commercial speech, the city does not have the same range of choice in the area of noncommercial speech to evaluate the strength of, or distinguish between, various communicative interests.”
Metromedia,
The exemptions to the Orange City ordinance’s restrictions, like those before the Metromedia Court, require examination of the content of noncommercial messages. In most instances, whether offsite noncommercial signs are exempted or prohibited turns on whether or not they convey messages approved by the ordinance. 2
*249
The Constitution forbids the selective prohibition of protected noncommercial speech based on its content. “With respect to noncommercial speech, the city may not choose the appropriate subjects for public discourse: ‘To allow a government the choice of permissible subjects for public debate would be to allow that government control over the search for political truth.’ ”
Id.
at 515,
Because the exceptions to the restriction on noncommercial speech are based on content, the restriction itself is based on content.
Metromedia,
Ill
Cities are not powerless to regulate billboards containing noncommercial messages. The City of Orange remains free to redraft its ordinance to conform to the Constitution by avoiding content-based distinctions in its treatment of noncommercial billboards. 3
Under
Metromedia,
the City’s interests in traffic safety and aesthetics are sufficient to justify continued content-neutral regulation of the noncommunicative aspects of billboards, such as size, spacing and design.
See
Accordingly, we hold only that the City cannot analyze the content of outdoor noncommercial messages to determine whether they are allowed, and if so where.
Metromedia,
It does not necessarily follow that the entire ordinance is invalid. As a general rule only the part of an enactment that is constitutionally infirm will be invalidated, leaving the rest intact.
See Alaska Airlines, Inc. v. Brock,
IV
We turn to the contempt order. The district court held the City in contempt for failing to comply with its injunction ordering Orange to process National’s applications without regard for the unconstitutional provisions of the ordinance. We review this determination for abuse of discretion.
General Signal Corp. v. Donallco, Inc.,
The contempt order was remedial and therefore civil. Substantial compliance with the court’s injunction is a defense to civil contempt.
General Signal Corp.,
AFFIRMED IN PART, REVERSED IN PART, AND REMANDED for further proceedings consistent with this opinion. Each party shall bear its own costs.
Notes
. The City also equates "activity’ with "attraction” and argues the scope of the Orange City ordinance is the same as that of ordinances sustained in
Suffolk Outdoor Advertising Co. v. Hube,
. Section 17.78.050 of the Orange Municipal Code reads:
Exemptions from Chapter Provisions. The following signs and devices shall not be subject to the provisions of this chapter:
A. Signs placed by a government body or public utility, required to be maintained by law;
B. Memorial tablets or plaques placed by recognized historical agencies;
C. Flags of the national or state government; or not more than three flags of nonprofit religious, charitable or fraternal organizations;
D. Nonelectric signs within recreational facilities, which are not visible from any public street;
E. Temporary political signs provided the signs are removed within seven days following the purpose for which they were erected;
F. Temporary nonelectric real estate or construction signs, not exceeding six square feet in developed residential areas, or thirty-two square feet in professional, commercial, industrial, and undeveloped residential areas;
G. Temporary advertising displays, approved by the Planning Department, for grand openings, special City events and similar purposes, excluding however, promotional advertising displays not associated with a grand opening, shall be authorized by the Director of Planning and Development Services for one fifteen-day period during the calendar year;
H. Small nonelectric portable and/or temporary signs within a building;
I. Small real estate pennants used for an open house activity;
J. Small nonelectric convenience signs which facilitate traffic flow and safety, such as entrance, exit, caution, parking, right or left turn only, stop, etc., provided such signs do not exceed six square feet;
K. Copy which is placed upon a sign designed as a changeable or replaceable copy reader board, including theater marquees, and other similar signs[.]
. National argues that limiting noncommercial billboards to advocacy of onsite activities is itself an unconstitutional content-based regulation. Though not squarely before the
Metrome-dia
Court, the plurality opinion may suggest an offsite/onsite distinction between noncommercial messages would be invalid.
See
. In
Metromedia,
the Supreme Court remanded to the state court for a determination of whether a severability clause saved any portion of San Diego's ordinance.
. The City correctly notes that "a civil contempt order may fall if the underlying injunction is invalidated.”
Scott & Fetter Co. v. Dile,
