Burdеned by the City of Pleasant Grove’s ordinance establishing a solicitors licensing procedure, plaintiffs — individuals and entities engaged in selling Kirby vacuum cleaners through door-to-door solicitations — sued under 42 U.S.C. § 1983 claiming that the licensing ordinance violated their First Amendment commercial speech rights. The case proceeded to a preliminary injunction hearing, following which the district court found that, in addition to satisfying the other factors of the preliminary injunction test, plaintiffs have a substantial likelihood of showing that two provisions of the ordinance requiring solicitors to provide their fingerprints and post a $1,000 bond violate their commercial speech rights. We review the grant of such preliminary injunctions for abuse of discretion and conclude on the record before us that the district court did not abuse its discretion. We therefore AFFIRM the grant of injunctive relief.
I
To “protect the local citizenship against crime and to preserve the private property, peace, and comfort of the occupants of the private residents [sic] in the city,” Pleasant Grove enacted Chapter 5.48 of the Pleasant Grove City Code (“Ordinance”), which requires individuals to obtain a license before engaging in door-to-door solicitation. When applying for a license, solicitors must provide Pleasant Grove with, inter alia, the following: (1) proof of age, address, and a “legally recognized form of identification;” (2) two photographs of the applicant; (3) a set of fingerprints taken by the Department of Public Safety; (4) a $20 fee to cover the cost of processing the registration; (5) a $1,000 bond to be returned ninety days after “the solicitor informs the City that the [sic] or she has terminated solicitations within the City, unless the City has good cause to believe that legal action has been or may be brought against the solicitor related to the solicitation activities of the solicitor;” (6) a $100 annual fee; and (7) “such information as the police department shall reasonably require.” In addition, Pleasant Grove requires solicitors to submit to a background check before obtaining a license.
Pacific Frontier, Inc. is a distributor of Kirby vacuum cleaners. It engages independent contractor dealers who perform door-to-door solicitations and in-home demonstrations of Kirby vacuums. Because it considered the costs of complying with the Ordinance’s licensing requirements to be “prohibitive,” Pacific Frontier declined to apply for a license in Pleasant Grove. 1 Its independent dealers nonethe *1227 less proceeded to engage in door-to-doоr solicitations in Pleasant Grove. Pleasant Grove police arrested eight such dealers for soliciting without a license.
Seven of those who were arrested (“individual plaintiffs”) joined three corporations — Pacific Frontier, J
&
L Distributing, Inc., and Redwood-Division Pro Club 100%, Inc. — in filing a complaint in federal district court asserting that the Ordinance violated their First Amendment right to free speech and burdened interstate commerce. The plaintiffs sought, inter alia, a permanent injunction against further enforcement of the Ordinance, a declaratory judgment that the Ordinance is unconstitutional, and compensatory and special damages. In response, Pleasant Grove filed- a motion to dismiss arguing that
Younger v. Harris,
After deciding that Pleasant Grove's dismissal motion was moot, the district court proceeded to hear arguments on the plaintiffs’ motion for a preliminary injunction. Plaintiffs did not challenge most-.of Pleasant Grove’s licensing procedure, electing to seek an injunction against only three provisions: the Ordinance’s annual fee, bond, and fingerprinting requirements. At the hearing, Captain Cody Cullimore of the Pleasant Grove City Police Department testified to prior crimes committed by door-to-door salespeople. Specifically, he related that 'the department had received complaints of thefts occurring when solicitors were performing demonstrations inside homes, one complaint of a soliсitor committing sexual assault, and reports of residential burglaries after solicitors had canvassed a particular neighborhood. Additionally, Cullimore testified that solicitors had defrauded citizens by taking money for products and not delivering the goods. On cross-examination, he acknowledged that police involvement with solicitors, when compared to police responses to other businesses, was “minimal.” In eleven years, the police department received 160 complaints relating to door-to-door solicitation. By contrast, in a ten month period in 1997, the department received over 2,000 complaints on “issues impacting business.” Moreover, nearly half of the 160 calls about solicitors involved complaints that solicitors were operating without a license. Cullimore also admitted that there were no instances in which thе fingerprints disclosed that a solicitor should not receive a license, and that the fingerprints had never been used to investigate or prosecute a crime.
City ^ Attorney Christine Peterson, author of the Ordinance, explained that the fingerprint requirement deterred solicitors from committing crime. In support of the bond requirement, she testified that “quite often door-to-door salespeople will collect money at the door for a product, and then we can’t find them-.... And in my mind that was a safeguard for the citizens to . allow them to have some sort of recourse in case they were bilked out of money.” She acknowledged that no citizen has ever made a claim on the bond. Moreover, plaintiffs presented unrefuted evidence that Pleasant Grove has no procedure in place through which an aggrieved citizen can assert a claim on the bond.
On consideration of the evidence and arguments, the district court enjoined *1228 Pleasant Grove from enforcing the bond and fingerprint requirements of the Ordinance. The court based its decision on the Ordinance’s impact on commercial speech and did not rule on plaintiffs’ Commerce Clause argument. Because Pleasant Grove acknowledged and amended its misinterpretation of the Ordinance, the district court concluded that “[t]he $100 fee licensing requirement is no longer at issue here.” Pleasant Grove appealfed, arguing that the district court abused its discretion in enjoining enforcement of the bond and fingerprint provisions. Plaintiffs cross-appealed, asserting that the district court should have enjoined the Ordinance’s annual fee requirement and should have ruled on the Commerce Clause argument.
II
Before turning to the merits of the court’s ruling, we must address Pleasant Grove’s argument that plaintiffs ' lack standing to contest the Ordinance’s constitutionality. 2 Pleasant Grove contends that because plaintiffs challenged the Ordinance without first applying for a license, they lack standing to advance their First Amendment arguments. We decline to hold that solicitors must first apply for and be denied a license before challenging a licensing ordinance’s constitutionality.
In
Association of Community Organizations for Reform Now, (“ACORN”) v. Golden,
Although failure to apply for a license does not serve as a barrier to the facial challenge of an ordinance, plaintiffs must nonetheless meet the ordinary requirements for standing. Under these requirements, plaintiffs must establish that they have suffered an “injury in fact,” that there is a causal connection between the
*1229
injury suffered and the conduct in question, and that it is likely, not speculative, that a favorable decision will redress the injury.
Lujan v. Defenders of Wildlife,
Plaintiffs in the case before us have suffered an injury in fact. Although claim of a “subjective chill,”
Laird v. Tatum,
Thus we are satisfied that Article Ill's standing requirement permit plaintiffs to bring this action, leading us to consider Pleasant Grove’s argument that prudential considerations counsel against our hearing this case. Pleasant Grove argues that because the individual plaintiffs pled no contest in city court to the charge of soliciting without a license, all plaintiffs — including the corporate entitiеs — are precluded from seeking an injunction against enforcement of the Ordinance in federal court. We may answer whether the district court abused its. discretion in granting injunctive relief so long as any one of the plaintiffs could properly have sought the injunction below. Because issue preclusion does not apply to at least one of the plaintiffs — J & L Distributing — we will consider the merits of this case without determining whether the other plaintiffs are precluded from presenting their claims for relief.
Federal courts must “give pre-clusive effect to state-court judgments whenever the courts of the State from which the judgments emerged would do so.”
Allen v. McCurry,
(i) the party against whom issue preclusion is asserted must have been a party to or in privity with a party to the prior аdjudication; (ii) the issue decided in the prior adjudication must be identical to the one presented in the instant action; (iii) the issue in the first action must have been completely, fully, and fairly litigated; and (iv) the first suit must have resulted in a final judgment on the merits.
*1230
Collins v. Sandy City Bd. of Adjustment, 52
P.3d 1267, 1270 (Utah 2002). “The legal definition of a person in privity with another, is a person so identified in interest with another that he represents the same legal right.”
Searle Bros. v. Searle,
None of the individual plaintiffs who entered pleas of no contest were in any way associated with J & L Distributing, much less “so identified in interest” with that corporation that they “represent the same legal right.”
Searle Bros.,
Ill
Although a preliminary injunction is an exceptional form of relief, we cannot
*1231
conclude that the district court abused its discretion by enjoining the Ordinance’s bond and fingerprint provisions.
See Dominion Video Satellite, Inc. v. EchoStar Satellite Corp.,
To obtain a preliminary injunction, a movant must show: (1) substantial likelihood of prevailing on the merits; (2) irreparable injury if the injunction is denied; (3) greater injury to the movant absent the injunction than that which the opposing party will suffer under the injunction; and (4) lack. of adverseness to the public interest.
Utah Licensed Bev., Ass’n v. Leavitt,
A
A municipality has the burden of justifying its regulation even on a motion to enjoin enforcement of an ordinance.
Utah Licensed Bev.,
To defend a regulation against a First Amendment challenge, a municipality must assert “a substantial interest to be achieved by restrictions on commercial speech.”
Cent. Hudson Gas & Elec. Corp. v. Public Serv. Comm’n,
Pleasant Grove’s asserted interest in passing the Ordinance is to “protect the local citizenship against crime and to preserve the private property, peace, and comfort of the occupants • of the private residents [sic] in the city.” All parties concede that Pleasant Grove has asserted substantial interests to be achieved by the Ordinance, 10 but the parties dispute whether the Ordinance’s bond and fingerprint provisions directly advance these asserted interests and whether the regulations restrict more speech than necessary. Finding that Pleasant Grove failed to show that the bond and fingerprint requirements had any effect on the problems allegedly caused by door-to-door solicitors, and that Pleasant Grove failed to show that its interests could not' bе served adequately by a’more limited restriction on speech,'the district court concluded that the bond and fingerprint provisions of the Ordinance do not meet the final two Central Hudson requirements.
First, we conclude that the district court did not abuse its discretion in finding that Pleasant Grove failed to meet its burden of showing a “reasonable fit” between its asserted- interest and the bond provision.
Mainstream Mktg. Servs. v. FTC,
In addition, other ordinances, such as the National Institute of Municipal Law Officers’ (“NIMLO”) model ordinance upon which the Pleasant Grove ordinance was based, reveal that “the governmental interest could be served as well by a more limited restriction on commercial speech.”
Cent. Hudson,
Second, we cannot conclude that the district court abused its discretion in finding that the city failed to meet its burden of defending the Ordinance’s fingerprint requirement.
11
Pleasant Grove attempts to justify the requirement by arguing that it furthers the city’s legitimate interests in assuring peaceful use of private property and in protecting its citizens against crime. However, in a case involving a municipal ordinance requiring canvassers to obtain a permit, the Supreme Court found both justifications wanting.
*1234
With respect to the privacy justification, the Court concluded that “the ordinance, which provides for the posting of ‘No Solicitation’ signs and which is not challenged in this case, coupled with the resident’s right to refuse to engage in conversation with unwelcome visitors, provides ample protection for the unwilling listener.”
Stratton,
Although
Stratton
involved religious speech, and the Court explicitly acknowledged that the villagе’s arguments might justify a regulation of commercial speech, the Court’s analysis persuades us that Pleasant Grove has not met its burden in this case.
See id.
at 165,
Pleasant Grove protests, however, that the fingerprint requirement uniquely furthers its interest in crime prevention and investigation. For support, Pleasant Grove relies on Captain Cullimore’s testimony that fingerprinting applicants allows Pleasant Grove to “potentially” identify culprits in residential burglary investigations. City Attorney Peterson testified that the fingerprint requirement effectively deters criminal activity. When asked the basis for her belief, she stated “well, the fact that if I was a salesperson and going door-to-door and I knew that somebody can identify me by my fingerprints, obviously I would be less likely to commit a crime in the neighborhood and leave my fingerprints.”
Yet, to defend successfully the fingerprint requirement, Pleasant Grove must show that its restriction has had more than “some impact” on the alleged harm.
Greater New Orleans Broadcasting Ass’n,
Municipalities have substantial interests in protecting their citizens from crime committed by door-to-door solicitors and in preserving the privacy of their residents. Conditioning a solicitation license on the posting of a bond or the submission of-fingerprints may legitimately advance thesе substantial interests and comport with the First Amendment’s strictures, so long as a city shows that it faces real harms, which are materially palliated by the requirements. In this case, the district court below concluded that Pleasant Grove failed' to meet its burden of defending the bond and fingerprint requirements at issue. After reviewing the record, we are compelled to agree. Nothing about the trial court’s ruling can be said to be “arbitrary, capricious, whimsical, or manifestly unreasonable.”
Austin,
B
Having concluded that the district court did not abuse its discretion in finding that plaintiffs have a substantial likelihood of succeeding on the merits, thus satisfying the first prong of the preliminary injunction test, we now address the second prong and evaluate plaintiffs’ argument that they will suffer irreparable harm if denied an injunction on the bond and fingerprint provisions. The district court concluded that “[b]eeause Plaintiffs have established that the Ordinance deprives them of their First Amendment rights, they are entitled to a presumption
of
irreparable injury.” “[L]oss of First Amendment freedoms, for even minimal periods of time, unquestionably constitutes irreparable injury.”
Elrod v. Burns,
Pleasant Grove argues that although courts should presume that restrictions on commercial -speech result in *1236 irreparable harm, such a presumption is rebuttable, and is rebutted in this case because plaintiffs can be adequately compensated for any harm done. Specifically, Pleasant Grove maintains that any bond can be returned with interest if its bond provision is found unconstitutional, and plaintiffs could sue to recover lost profits or secure compensation for harms caused by fingerprinting should a court strike down that provision. Thus, Pleasant Grove maintains that plaintiffs’ injuries aré'not irreparable.
We reject Pleasant Grove’s argument that depriving plaintiffs of their First Amendment rights does not amount to irreparable injury simply because .they can secure monetary compensation for both lost profits and the cost of complying with the Ordinance. Implicit in its argument is the notion that the value of commercial speech is limited to the pecuniary gain that can be secured through its exercise. This approach “attaches more importance to the distinction between commercial and noncommercial speech than our cases warrant and seriously underestimates the value of. commercial speech.”
Cincinnati v. Discovery Network,
C
Because Pleasant Grove failed to show that the bond or fingerprint requirements materially advance its interests, the district court found that the city would not be seriously injured through the issuance of an injunction. Thus, the court concluded on the third factor of the preliminary injunction test that the threatened injury to plaintiffs’ First Amendment rights outweighs any harm that Pleasant Grove would suffer through the issuance of an injunction. We agree.
Pleasant Grove argues that without the ability to collect a bond, it may have to incur substantial costs in tracking down solicitors who damage private property within the city and then flee. Although Pleasant Grove has identified a potential harm, the fact that the city has never compensated a citizen through the bond— and has no mechanism for doing so— makes it less likely that the city will in fact suffer such an injury during the pendency of this litigation. Moreover, using a background check and the other prophylactic measures contained in the Ordinance further diminishes the likelihood of harm. Even if Pleasant Grove demonstrated that it is likely to incur the cost of tracking down a tortfeasing solicitor, the district court did not abuse its discretion in finding that the constitutional harm plaintiffs will *1237 suffer outweighs the city’s claimed injury. Additionally, Pleasant Grove argues that without the fingerprinting requirement, its cost of investigating solicitors will increase. The fact that information gained from a solicitor’s fingerprints has never been used to deny a license, although licenses have been denied on the basis of the background check, belies the city’s argument. Moreover, there is no evidence in the record detailing whether or how fingerprints are used to investigate solicitors, much less how fingerprinting solicitors operates as a cost-saving mechanism.
D
Under the final prong of the preliminary injunction test, plaintiffs must show that issuing a preliminary injunction would not be adverse to the public interest. They have succeeded in doing so. Vindicating First Amendment freedoms is clearly in the public interest
See Utah Licensed Bev.,
IV
On cross-appeal, plaintiffs argue that the district court erred by concluding that the Ordinance’s annual fee provision was no longer at issue in the litigation, and urge us to instruct the district court to enjoin enforcement of the fee requirement. Furthermore, plaintiffs assert-that the district court should have enjoined enforcement of the Ordinance because it unconstitutionally burdens interstate commerce. We conclude that neither argument is properly before us in this appeal of the district court’s grant of a preliminary injunction. On remand, the court below should rule on these arguments.
With regard to the fee, the Ordinance provides that potential licensees must pay a $100 annual fee for a license. A Pleasant Grove employee produced an information sheet that erroneously instructed city employees to charge a fee of $100 per week. Plaintiffs sought an injunction against enforcement of the fee provision as applied on a weekly basis. Pleasant Grove discovered and acknowledged its mistake prior to the hearing on plaintiffs’ motion for a preliminary injunction and assured the court that they have amended their practice and now comport with the terms of the Ordinance. The court concluded that the licensing fee no longer presented an issue on the motion for a preliminary injunction, although it indicated at the hearing that the erroneously imposed fee requirement may nonetheless be considered at later stages of the litigation. Plaintiffs contend on appeal that the district court should have enjoined enforcement. of the properly applied fee provision. Because neither party had sufficient opportunity to develop evidence or argument regarding the properly imposed fee requirement, and the district court did not rule on the issue, we decline to instruct the district court to enjoin this provision of the Ordinance.
In their motion for a preliminary injunction, plaintiffs based their claim for an injunction solely on an alleged infringement of their First Amendment freedoms. Nevertheless, in their memorandum supporting the motion for a preliminary injunction, plaintiffs argued in addition that *1238 the Ordinance • unconstitutionally burdens interstate commerce. The district court granted the. injunction based solely on plaintiffs’ First Amendment arguments, and did not address the Commerce Clause claim. We decline to instruct the.district court to enjoin the Ordinance’s fee, bond, and fingerprint requirements on .the basis of an alleged violation of the Commerce Clause.
Pursuant to 10th Circuit Rule 28.2(C)(2), parties must “cite the precise reference in the record where the issue was raised
and ruled on.”
Doing so allows us to examine the district court’s reasons for its decision. Where an issue has been raised, but not ruled on, proper judicial administration generally favors remаnd for the district court 'to examine the issue initially.
See, e.g., Singleton v. Wulff, 428
U.S. 106, 120,
Y
■ We AFFIRM the grant of a preliminary injunction enjoining enforcement of the Ordinance’s bond and fingerprint provisions and REMAND for further .proceedings consistent with this opinion.
Notes
. Although Pleasant Grove did not raise this argument below, we nonetheless consider it.
See Board of County Comm’rs v. W.H.L, Inc:,
. Pleasant Grove argues that because commercial speech is traditionally subject to government regulation, and enjoys less protection than pure speech, we should impose a heightened standing requirement when reviewing commercial speech challenges. The city misconstrues the purpose of the ACORN rule, which is to allow plaintiffs to bring facial challenges to statutes and regulations without first requiring them to submit, to potentially unconstitutional requirements.
. We have permitted plaintiffs who did not apply for a permit to sue governments imposing permit requirements where "[t]he chilling financial reality of the bond unnecessarily interferes with First Amendment freedoms.”
American Target Adver., Inc. v. Giani,
. Whether the individual plaintiffs, or Pacific Frontier and Pro Club, are precluded from seeking damages under § 1983 due to the no contest pleas remains an issue that the district court must resolve. We need not answer that question to evaluate the district court's grant of a preliminary injunction. Importantly, the Utah Court of Appeals recently held that “an unconditional guilty plea does not operate as a waiver of a facial constitutional challenge to a statute, because such a challenge is jurisdictional in nature.”
State v. Norris,
. Pleasant Grove filed a letter pursuant to Fed. R.App. P. 28(j) arguing that the principle of judicial estoppel, adopted by this court in
Johnson v. Lindon City Corporation,
. The Ordinance at issue in this case was enforced by Pleasant Grove for approximately two years prior to. the arrests giving rise to this litigation.
. The Supreme Court has recognized that personal solicitation is imbued with important First Amendment interests:
Unlike many other forms of commercial expression, solicitation allows direct and spontaneous communication between buyer and seller. A seller has a strong financial incentive to educate the market and stimulate demand for his product or service, so solicitation produces more personal interchange between buyer and seller than would occur if only buyers were permitted to initiate contact. Personal interchange enables a potential buyer to meet and evaluate the person offering the product or service and allows both parties to discuss and negotiate the desired form for the transaсtion or professional relation. Solicitation also enables the seller to direct his proposals toward those consumers who he has a reason to believe would be most interested in what he has to sell. For the buyer, it provides an opportunity to explore in detail the way in which a particular product or service compares to its alternatives in the market.
Edenfield v. Fane, 507
U.S. 761, 766,
. Of course, if a municipality required licenses of those engaging in pure political speech — such as those canvassing on behalf of a candidate for office — the regulation would be subject to much more stringent review ■ than that applied in this case.
See Edenfield,
. Their concession is appropriate given longstanding Supreme Court precedent recognizing a municipality’s right to protect its residents' peaceful enjoyment of their homes and to prevent crime.
See, e.g., Carey v. Brown,
. The Supreme Court, in dicta, has long approved regulations requiring solicitors to provide some form of identification. In
Cant-well v. Connecticut,
. Pleasant Grove attempts to fall back on language from
Mainstream Marketing
that "a commercial speech regulation may be justified by anecdotes, history, consensus, or simple common sense.”
Mainstream Marketing,
. Given that municipal criminal cases were pending against the individual plaintiffs, and that federal abstention would likely have been warranted as a result, we reject Pleasant Grove’s secondary argument that plaintiffs' delay in seeking federal injunctive relief mitigates against a finding of irreparable harm.
