Lead Opinion
GIBBONS, J., delivered the opinion of the court, in which BOGGS, C.J., MARTIN, DAUGHTREY, MOORE, COLE, CLAY, and GILMAN, JJ„ joined. ROGERS, J. (pp. 779-89), delivered a separate dissenting opinion, in which SILER, BATCHELDER, SUTTON, COOK, McKEAGUE, and GRIFFIN, JJ., joined.
Plaintiff-appellant Christopher J. Pagan filed the instant suit against the Village of Glendale, Ohio (“Glendale” or “the Village”) and Glendale Police Chief Matt Fruchey, alleging that section 76.06 of the Glendale Traffic Code constitutes an unconstitutional restriction on commercial speech in violation of the First Amendment. Following the parties’ cross-motions for summary judgment, the district court determined that Glendale’s ordinance complied with the requirements of Central Hudson Gas & Electric Corp. v. Public Service Commission of New York,
I.
Pagan is a resident of Glendale and formerly the owner of a 1970 Mercury Cougar that he wanted to sell. After a classified advertisement elicited an inadequate response, Pagan posted a “For Sale” sign on the vehicle and left it parked on the public street in front of his residence. Pagan elected to place the car on the street instead of his driveway because his driveway abuts an unimproved alley and not a public roadway.
An officer with the Glendale Police Department noticed the sign, notified Pagan that the sign was a violation of Glendale Traffic Code § 76.06, and asked him to remove it or face being cited for a municipal violation; Section 76.06 reads as follows:
It shall be unlawful for any person to stand or park any vehicle, motorized or towed, upon any public or private street, road, or highway within the village or upon any unimproved privately owned area within the village for the purpose of:
(A) Displaying it for sale, except that a homeowner may display a motor vehicle, motorized or towed, for sale only when owned and titled to said homeowner and/or a member of said household, and only when parked upon an improved driveway or apron upon the owner’s private property;
(B) Washing, maintaining or repairing such vehicle except repairs necessitated by an emergency.
(C) Any advertising.
Pagan corresponded with various Glendale officials, including Fruchey, but was ultimately unsuccessful in obtaining a satisfactory resolution of his dispute with the Village. In order to avoid a citation, Pagan removed the sign from his vehicle.
Pagan subsequently filed this lawsuit against Fruchey and Glendale, alleging a violation of his constitutional rights and challenging subsections (A) and (C) of the ordinance. Pagan’s original complaint contained requests both for injunctive relief and damages, but Pagan voluntarily
II.
This court reviews the grant of summary judgment de novo. DiCarlo v. Potter,
While other forms of expression are entitled to more protection under the First Amendment than is commercial speech, see, e.g., Republican Party of Minn. v. White,
The parties agree that the speech at issue in this case, the posting of “For Sale” signs on cars, is protected commercial speech. Furthermore, Pagan takes no issue with the substantiality of Glendale’s asserted regulatory interests: traffic/pedestrian safety and aesthetic concerns. Thus, the questions before us are whether Glendale has established (1) that the restriction directly and materially advances its regulatory interests and (2) that it has drawn the restriction narrowly.
A.
With respect to the third Central Hudson prong, whether the speech regulation advances the government’s asserted interests in a direct and material way, the Supreme Court has further explained:
Under Central Hudson ..., the State must demonstrate that the challenged regulation advances the Government’s interest in a direct and material way. That burden, we have explained, is not satisfied by mere speculation or conjecture; rather, a governmental body seeking to sustain a restriction on commercial speech must demonstrate that the harms it recites are real and that its restriction will in fact alleviate them to a material degree.
Fla. Bar,
B.
Under the fourth Central Hudson prong, the relevant question is whether the speech restriction is narrowly tailored; that is, we must determine whether the speech restriction at issue is “more extensive than is necessary to serve [the asserted] interests.” Thompson,
At the outset, we note appellees’ suggestion that subsection (A) of the ordinance does not implicate the First Amendment because it prohibits the act of parking a vehicle on Glendale’s roadways for the purpose of displaying it for sale. As a result, appellees contend, the ordinance regulates commercial activity and not speech. Under appellees’ construction, a seller’s chosen means of advertising a desire to sell {e.g., posting a “For Sale” sign, placing a classified ad, advertising online, etc.) is irrelevant. The act of placing a car on the street for the purpose of displaying it for sale purportedly violates subsection (A). Appellees’ argument on this point is not well taken. During argument, they conceded that Glendale has no interest in enforcing subsection (A), except in those instances where the potential seller has displayed a “For Sale” sign. Thus, even if we construed the literal language of subsection (A) as not implicating the First Amendment, Glendale concedes that it enforces the ordinance in a manner that does. In this case, subsections (A) and (C) reach the same conduct,
A.
In arguing that appellees have not met their burden under the third Central Hudson prong, Pagan relies heavily on the Supreme Court’s decision in Edenfield v. Fane, 507 U.S. 761,
In Edenfield, Scott Fane, a CPA, challenged a Florida rule that prevented public accountants from engaging in direct, uninvited solicitation of potential clients.
As to the third Central Hudson inquiry, the Court held that the state failed to carry its burden. According to the Court, while fraud prevention and professional ethics constitute substantial governmental interests, the absence of any evidence—statistical, anecdotal, or otherwise—to suggest that the speech at issue posed any threat of concrete harm to those interests caused the regulation to fail. Id. at 771-72,
The only suggestion that a ban on solicitation might help prevent fraud and overreaching or preserve CPA independence is the affidavit of Louis Dooner, which contains nothing more than a series of conclusory statements that add little if anything to the Board’s original statement of its justifications.
Id. at 772,
Upon review of the record, it is clear that the evidence adduced by the appellees is insufficient to satisfy their burden under Central Hudson. The rele
The primary purpose of the Ordinance is to promote the goal of traffic safety within the Village of Glendale. The objective of the Ordinance is to prohibit attractions or activities which will induce people to come into the roadway who are not a part of normal vehicular or pedestrian traffic, such as individuals washing or repairing their cars which are parked on the street, or individuals who are looking over a motor vehicle which is displaying a for sale sign parked on the street. In addition ..., the Ordinance also addresses aesthetic objectives of the Village of Glendale.
The Fruchey affidavit amounts to nothing more that a conclusory articulation of governmental interests. While it suffices for the second part of the Central Hudson test by identifying two substantial government interests, it fails to address the third prong at all: that is, how the particular restriction chosen by Glendale directly and materially advances those interests. Its reference to people in the roadway looking at cars displaying “For Sale” signs is most accurately characterized as simple conjecture by the police chief about something that might occur. Certainly, it is not evidence that “For Sale” signs on cars in streets pose any concrete harm to traffic or aesthetics or that the ordinance has any connection to the interests Glendale asserts. In fact, the Fruchey affidavit is of exactly the type deemed insufficient by the Supreme Court in Edenfield.
In addressing this issue, the district court incorrectly applied a deferential standard and ultimately held that Pagan had not pointed to anything in the record that would suggest that Glendale’s belief that section 76.06 was needed to further its asserted interests was “unreasonable” or “palpably false.” The court, relying upon Railway Express Agency, Inc. v. New York,
The issue before us is narrow in scope. This is not a question of the quality of the evidence supporting a speech regulation. It is the absence of any evidence of the need for regulation that is fatal to section 76.06. Appellees suggest that it would be difficult, expensive, and time-consuming to conduct studies and provide empirical evidence in support of section 76.06. However, the Supreme Court has made quite clear that the evidentiary requirement the state must meet under intermediate scrutiny does not prescribe the manner by which evidence must be gathered or the precise form that it must take.
The thrust of appellees’ arguments is not that the Fruchey affidavit is the type of evidence required by Edenfield but rather that other Supreme Court authority relieves them from the obligation of meeting the Edenfield requirements as to how a governmental entity must meet its burden under Central Hudson. They present three versions of this general argument.
First, appellees say that even in the absence of evidence of concrete harm, we should defer to legislative judgments on matters of traffic safety and aesthetics. Appellees argue that Metromedia v. City of San Diego,
But Metromedia does not control the outcome of this case. After noting the difficulty of applying broad First Amendment principles to “unique forms of expression,” id. at 500,
The position advocated by the appellees assumes, without discussion, that billboards and “For Sale” signs posted on parked cars raise practically indistinguishable aesthetic and traffic safety issues. Appellees’ analogy hardly strikes us as obvious. In fact, it appears to sidestep the ultimate issue: namely, whether or not the speech Glendale seeks to regulate poses the harms that all agree would justify regulation. If “For Sale” signs are a threat to the physical safety of Glendale’s citizens or implicate aesthetic concerns, it seems no great burden to require Glendale to come forward with some evidence of the threat or the particular concerns. Our research has revealed only one other case, post-Edenfield, that has ruled on this precise issue, and that court arrived at a result identical to ours on the issue of the evidence required by Edenfield. See Burkow v. City of Los Angeles,
Second, appellees say that Edenfield does not apply to all commercial speech cases but only to those dealing with advertising by professionals. This argument does not explicitly appear in appellees’ brief but was mentioned at oral argument and is perhaps best viewed as a variation of their first argument that traffic safety and aesthetics are entitled to greater deference than other interests in analyzing commercial speech cases. While Edenfield involves advertising by accountants and has been applied in lawyer advertising cases, see Fla. Bar,
Third, appellees focus on the notion that less is required of a governmental entity when its interests are aesthetics. Appellees suggest that the invocation of aesthetic objectives carries with it some talismanic quality that, under case precedents, legitimizes all signage regulation and relieves them from making the showing required in Edenfield. Appellees direct our attention to Members of the City Council of Los Angeles v. Taxpayers for Vincent,
The appellees’ view of Vincent overlooks several critical points. The Court in Vincent was not considering a restriction on commercial speech only and was not applying the Central Hudson test. Rather, the restrictions on posting signs in Vincent applied to all forms of speech and were truly content-neutral, unlike the ordinance here (which, as we discuss below, is not content-neutral). In this context, the Court recognized the legitimacy of aesthetics as a governmental interest, a point with which we agree and Pagan does not contest. Looking to Metromedia, the Court then noted that signs as well as billboards could pose aesthetic harm. This is another point with which we have no disagreement. We differ from appellees, however, in believing that recognition of aesthetics as a substantial governmental interest tells us nothing about how to resolve this case. Vincent certainly does not suggest, either explicitly or'implicitly, that, in examining restrictions on commercial speech, aesthetic interests' are to be treáted differently from other governmental interests. Also, Vincent gives us no instruction about application of the Central Hudson test, and it says nothing about the rule of Edenfield, decided some nine years later. In fact, the Court in Vincent does not specifically tell us what evidence Los Angeles presented about its interests or the concerns that prompted enactment of the ordinance. Vincent, then, to the extent that it is relevant, simply tells us that the Court has recognized that proven aesthetic interests may prompt restrictions on signs, a point that leads nowhere in the resolution of this case.
Appellees’ argument about the special nature of aesthetic concerns does not address the more fundamental problem with appellees’ aesthetic justification. As we have noted, as an abstract matter, aesthetic issues are appropriate considerations in developing speech regulations. The record before us does not, however, disclose what Glendale’s aesthetic objectives are. Perhaps Glendale hopes to avoid -unsightly signage cluttering neighborhood streets; perhaps Glendale seeks to avoid having its streets filled with vehicles that may often not be the sort of automobiles people would like to have parked on their neighborhood streets; perhaps “For Sale” signs posted on cars are simply not in keeping with the character of Glendale’s neighborhoods. There are various possibilities,' but it is not the
Even if appellees’ view of Metromedia and Vincent is closer to the mark than ours and whatever the evidentiary requirement may be to show that a particular medium of communication poses aesthetic harm, a reviewing court must, as a preliminary matter, be apprised of what the government’s aesthetic motivations are. Glendale fails to supply even this rudimentary information, saying in the Fruchey affidavit only that the ordinance addresses unspecified “aesthetic objectives.” This general assertion fails to identify Glendale’s aesthetic concerns with “For Sale” signs. Certainly, it does not suffice to show concrete harms addressed by the ordinance or that the ordinance directly and materially advances the government interest, as required by the third prong of Central Hudson. While the dissent questions any requirement that would mandate a study before limiting speech in furtherance of undoubtedly subjective aesthetic aims, our decision imposes no such requirement. Assuming that the subjective nature of aesthetics requires that we give regulators a freer hand when examining restrictions on commercial speech, it seems no great burden to require, as a threshold matter, that they offer something more specific than a bald assertion that the regulation reflects aesthetic considerations.
The dissent critiques our decision as “reading] into the First Amendment a requirement that governments go through pointless formalities before they enact ... commonsense rule[s].... ” We have no interest in preventing the adoption of common sense rules or requiring legislative bodies to engage in “pointless formalities.” In contrast to those situations in which we apply rational basis review, the intermediate scrutiny we apply in the commercial speech context charges the government with the burden of justifying its chosen form of regulation. Thus, even common sense decisions require some justification. Otherwise, we have no basis for concluding that Glendale’s legislative decision is animated by reasoned judgment and not hostility toward particular speech. Moreover, if the need for the regulation is as obvious as Glendale and the dissent believe it to be, it seems that Glendale should be ideally positioned to provide some evidence of the need for its regulation—a task that Glendale has been entirely unwilling to undertake.
One aspect of our decision the dissent appears to find particularly troubling is its belief that it will impose a severe burden on municipalities seeking to regulate signage that they believe raises legitimate and undeniably important traffic safety and aesthetic concerns. While we disagree that the burden is severe and instead believe it fairly easily met, we note that the fact that the First Amendment imposes a requirement of evidentiary justification upon a regulatory authority is not, in and of itself, a cause for dismay.
As previously stated, our decision today does not prescribe the manner by which municipalities must justify these sorts of ordinances. Instead, we simply conclude that we cannot discharge our obligation to scrutinize commercial speech restrictions if we deem sufficient the conjectural affidavit of Glendale’s police chief that offers nothing more than a statement of what he believes to be Glendale’s regulatory objectives. It is Glendale’s obligation to provide something in support of its regulation, and we do not find ourselves free to hold that obligation has been discharged based on principles of common sense or obviousness, especially where, as here, all do not agree as to what is obvious or a matter of common sense. A judicial pronouncement that an ordinance is consistent with common sense hardly establishes that it is so.
B.
The district court did not specifically address tailoring, but Pagan argued before the trial court, as he does on appeal, that the regulatory means chosen by Glendale lack a reasonable fit to the regulatory ends. The district court did, however, note that Pagan’s claims along these lines were nothing more than conclusory assertions regarding his own notions of a more reasonable regulatory scheme and that it was not the'place of the courts to second-guess Glendale’s decision regarding appropriate traffic ordinances.
While we need not reach the issue of tailoring because our decision regarding the third Central Hudson prong is dispositive in this case, it is important to note that, contrary to the district court’s conclusion, the regulatory authority bears the burden of establishing a reasonable fit when regulating commercial speech. In the commercial speech context at least, our review will, to some extent, require examination of the means chosen by the government. The obligation rests with the government to establish that its regulation is “narrowly tailored” and that it has carefully calculated the costs and benefits of regulation. See Discovery Network,
IV.
Appellees also argue that we need not engage in an analysis under Central Hudson because the prohibition on parking a car on the streets of Glendale for the purpose of advertising is a content-neutral time, place, or manner regulation and should be analyzed under that framework. Although their brief does not specify whether this argument refers to subsection (A) or (C), or both, it is most naturally understood as relating to subsection (C), because subsection (A) contains its own implicit reference to content. If appellees were successful in characterizing the ordinance as content-neutral, our inquiry here would still be a form of intermediate scrutiny, focusing on whether the restriction is narrowly tailored to serve substantial government interests and leaves open ample alternative channels of communication.
The Glendale ordinance cannot be evaluated as a content-neutral restriction, however, because, as appellees conceded during oral argument, the restriction on advertising does depend on the content of the speech: namely, the ordinance, as construed by Glendale, draws a distinction between promotional speech and speech asserting belief or fact.
Y.
For the foregoing reasons, we reverse the district court’s grant of summary judgment and remand this cause for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
Notes
. The district court, in its order granting summary judgment in favor of the defendants, determined that Chief Fruchey was entitled to qualified immunity. Having failed to challenge this aspect of the district court’s order in his briefing, Pagan has waived any argument that the district court’s decision respecting Chief Fruchey was incorrect. See, e.g., McCalvin v. Yukins,
. The dissent determines that Pagan has waived any claim that subsection (C) of the Glendale ordinance is unconstitutional. The subsection (C) claim was referred to in the complaint as an equal protection and due process claim. In his summary judgment motion Pagan withdrew his equal protection claim and said that Glendale's enforcement of the advertising prohibition contained in subsection (C) was better addressed as a part of his First Amendment claim. Although Pagan did not make further specific mention of subsection (C) in his briefing, we conclude that this does not amount to waiver under the circumstances present here. Pagan’s overall claim is and has been that Glendale unconstitutionally limits the posting of "For Sale” signs on cars in the public streets. In any event, although the distinction between subsections (A) and (C) was the subject of considerable questioning at oral argument, the issue of whether the conduct for which Pagan seeks First Amendment protection is reached by subsection (A), subsection (C), or both, is ultimately not germane to the resolution of Pagan’s "as applied” challenge—a circumstance that likely explains Pagan's failure to distinguish between the subsections in his briefing.
. Defendants do not concede that the ordinance is properly viewed as a restriction on commercial speech and make an alternative argument that it is properly analyzed as a content-neutral time, place, and manner restriction. We disagree and explain our reasoning in Part IV of this opinion.
. To be sure, subsection (C) is broader than subsection (A) and doubtless reaches speech not prohibited by (A). As applied to Pagan's "For Sale” sign, however, both provisions prohibit its display.
. While our task is not to suggest what sort of evidence might suffice in other cases, we observe that there are many types of evidence other than expensive or burdensome studies that would likely demonstrate that a restriction responds to a real, existing problem rather than a hypothetical one. As the Supreme Court noted in Florida Bar, case law does not "require that empirical data come to us accompanied by a surfeit of background information.”
. In applying Edenfield, the Supreme Court has observed that there are situations in First Amendment contexts other than commercial speech where the articulated harm is so obvious that no evidence is required: ”[I]n other First Amendment contexts, we have permitted litigants to justify speech restrictions ... based solely on history, consensus, and simple common sense.” Fla. Bar,
However, the alleged harms recited by the appellees cannot be characterized as matters upon which there is longstanding consensus or upon which all can agree. Prospective buyers may be just as likely to exercise caution and avoid entering traffic when viewing cars parked in the street with "For Sale” signs as they are to enter the roadway, or owners may remove a car from the street for inspection, fearing inspecting buyers might wander into traffic. Also undercutting the notion that these harms derive from common sense and consensus is the likelihood that a "For Sale” sign a few feet off the street in a driveway creates a distraction as great as a "For Sale” sign in a street.
. It bears noting that the dissent has done its own evidentiary research and identified a number of ordinances in other jurisdictions similar to that at issue here. Accepting ar-guendo that the existence of similar statutes would itself be sufficient to meet Glendale’s burden, Glendale is the party responsible for accumulating this evidentiary record. A court’s role is not to search for evidence that a party could have located and submitted but did not. Nor should a court base its decision on an evidentiary record of its own creation. In contrast to the dissent’s approach, the Me-tromedia opinion bears no indication that the Court itself did research on legislative action. Rather, it appears that the judicial history of billboard regulation gave the Court information as to the legislative history.
. Finally, even assuming Metromedia is applicable to this case, Edenfield—coming more than a decade later—must be read as a refinement of the Central Hudson framework relied upon in Metromedia. Edenfield, not Metrome-dia, requires the result here.
. The dissent particularly notes Jobe v. City of Catlettsburg,
. Specifically, appellees stated at argument, in response to questioning, that the ordinance would apply to both speech promoting a commercial transaction and speech promoting a political candidate but would not apply to speech declaring one’s child to be an honor student or advocating readiness for the coming of Jesus.
Dissenting Opinion
dissenting.
The justification for forbidding the placement of for-sale automobiles on the public streets—for inspection by potential buyers—is simply obvious: people may be drawn to stand in the street for nontraffic purposes. The act of selling a car in a public street invites prospective buyers into the road to examine the car, and common sense supports a ban on such acts. To read into the First Amendment a requirement that governments go through pointless formalities before they enact such a commonsense rule is, in my view, to cheapen the grandeur of the First Amendment. To require a study, or testimony, or an affidavit, to demonstrate the obvious is to turn law into formalistic legalism. Nothing in Supreme Court precedent requires such a step.
Indeed, Metromedia strongly supports upholding the ordinance without any artificial record evidence requirement. Metromedia, Inc. v. City of San Diego,
That analysis directly supports upholding the ordinance in this case. The Me-tromedia Court majority determined that the ban on commercial speech met each element of the Central Hudson test: (1) the speech did not involve unlawful activity and was not misleading, and thus was entitled to First Amendment protection; (2) the ban sought to implement a substantial government interest; (3) it directly advanced that interest; and (4) it reached no further than necessary to accomplish the given objective.
The “more serious question” in Me-tromedia, as in this case, was the third criterion—whether the ordinance directly advanced the identified interests. The Court majority rejected an argument that the record was insufficient to establish a connection between billboards and traffic safety.
There is nothing here to suggest that these judgments are unreasonable. As we said in a different context:
We would be trespassing on one of the most intensely local and specialized of all municipal problems if we held that this regulation had no relation to the traffic problem of New York City. It is the judgment of the local authorities that it does have such a relation. And nothing has been advanced which shows that to be palpably false.
Id.
A closely parallel analysis is dispositive here. The commonsense judgment of Glendale’s lawmakers is, if anything, far more compelling in this case. Simply put, exhibiting cars for sale on the public roadway may interfere with the dedication of such roadways to traffic and its necessary incidents. The ban on placing cars in the roadway for sale undoubtedly directly advances the Village’s interest in traffic safety-
Noteworthy in the Metromedia Court majority’s analysis is the total absence of reliance on record evidence to support its direct advancement rationale. This despite the Metromedia plaintiffs’ assertion that the record was inadequate to support the ban on off-site billboard advertising and the Court majority’s recognition that the California Supreme Court had noted the meagerness of the record. Common sense prevailed in that case, and common
The majority in Metromedia relied in part on the large number of similar local laws throughout the country that had previously been upheld when subjected to constitutional attack. Metromedia,
To be sure, the Supreme Court held in Edenfield v. Fane,
Nothing in our ironclad obligation to follow the holdings of the Supreme Court requires us to read Edenfield beyond the facts of the case to a set of facts that is meaningfully different. In Edenfield, the Court held that a single affidavit was insufficient to support a law banning in-person solicitation by CPAs.
Other cases are even less applicable.
In Florida Bar v. Went for It,
The Supreme Court in Thompson v. Western States Medical Center,
In Lorillard Tobacco Co. v. Reilly,
In all of these cases, the only holding that the third step of Central Hudson was not met, in addition to Edenfield, was one aspect of the tobacco sales practices regulated in Lorillard: certain tobacco advertising could not be placed lower than five feet from the floor of any retail establishment within 1000 feet of a school. This failed the Central Hudson third step, not for lack of empirical evidence but because the five-foot rule “does not seem to advance th[e] goal” of preventing minors from using tobacco products. Lorillard, 533 U.S. at 566,
In short, the Court’s holdings, and Edenfield in particular, do not require the conclusion that without record evidence, a regulation that so obviously advances a substantial interest is invalid. It is true that, as the Court majority stated in Me-tromedia, “[ejach method of communicating ideas is ‘a law unto itself and that law must reflect the ‘differing natures, values, abuses and dangers’ of each method.”
Of course if the two cases conflict, then Edenfield would control on the theory that the Supreme Court has to that extent overruled Metromedia. We should not rush to that conclusion, however, where
Finally, Glendale’s ordinance also clearly passes Central Hudson’s fourth prong. The ordinance is not more extensive than necessary to serve Glendale’s asserted interests in traffic safety. “The least restrictive means test has no role in the commercial speech context.” Florida Bar,
The ordinance exactly serves Glendale’s purposes. Although it is true that cars parked in a private driveway fronting a public street may also prove distracting, it is not true that such activity invites people into the roadway for purposes of inspecting the car that has been advertised for sale. Glendale has properly limited the reach of the ordinance to public property; Glendale could reasonably conclude that the dangers attendant to placing a car for sale in a public street outweigh any harm that may occur when a property owner decides to place an automobile for sale on his own property. Cf. Metromedia,
Because Glendale has crafted an ordinance that goes no further than necessary to address a substantial public concern, the judgment of the district court should be affirmed.
It is accordingly not necessary to rely in addition on Glendale’s asserted aesthetic interests, and I treat them only briefly here. Those interests appear independently sufficient to support the restriction on commercial speech in this case. A majority of seven Justices in Metromedia concluded that San Diego’s aesthetic interests were sufficient to support San Diego’s ordinance to the extent that it regulated commercial speech. Metromedia,
The problem addressed by this ordinance—the visual assault on the citizens of Los Angeles presented by an accumulation of signs posted on public property—constitutes a significant substantive evil within the City’s power to prohibit. “[The] city’s interest in attempting to preserve [or improve] the quality of urban life is one that must be accorded high respect.”
Id. at 808,
By banning these signs, the City did no more than eliminate the exact source of the evil it sought to remedy. The plurality wrote in Metromedia: “It is not speculative to recognize that billboards by their very nature, wherever located and however constructed, can be perceived as an ‘esthetic harm.’ ”453 U.S., at 510 [101 S.Ct. 2882 ]. The same is true of posted signs.
Id. at 808,
Finally, I do not address the constitutionality of subsection (C) of the Glendale ordinance. Pagan initially challenged this portion of the ordinance, which prohibits placing vehicles in the road for the purposes of any advertising, as a violation of the Equal Protection and Due Process Clauses of the United States Constitution. However, Pagan withdrew this claim for relief in his motion for summary judgment in the district court, choosing to argue instead that Glendale’s failure to regulate other kinds of signs or to fully enforce the ordinance’s ban on advertising undermined Glendale’s asserted interest in traffic safety with respect to subsection (A). Thus, Pagan expressly limited any consideration of subsection (C) to whether a failure to enforce that subsection undermined Glendale’s arguments about the constitutionality of subsection (A). Given that Pagan himself failed to argue the constitutionality of subsection (C) below, the issue was waived and I have no occasion to address whether subsection (C) violates the First Amendment, Thurman v. Yellow Freight Sys., Inc.,
I respectfully dissent.
APPENDIX
Ordinances Forbidding the Placement of Cars for Sale in the Public Streets
Kentucky
Alexandria, Code of Ordinances § 72.11 (1988)
Ashland, Code of Ordinances § 72.004 (1983)
Augusta, Code of Ordinances § 72.11
Bowling Green, Code of Ordinances § 22-4.09 (2001)
Cadiz, Code of Ordinances § 72.11
Cold Spring, Code of Ordinances § 71.04 (1997)
Covington, Code of Ordinances § 75.08 (1967)
Crescent Springs, Code of Ordinances § 72.11
Crestview Hills, Code of Ordinances § 72.11
Danville, Code of Ordinances § 17-35 (1977)
Edgewood, Code of Ordinances § 72.11
Flemingsburg, Code of Ordinances § 72.11
Fort Mitchell, Code of Ordinances § 72.11 (1988)
Fort Thomas, Code of Ordinances § 72.15 (1983)
Fort Wright, Code of Ordinances § 72.11
Hillview, Code of Ordinances § 72.11 (1984)
Louisville—Jefferson County, Code of Ordinances § 72.044 (1960)
Madisonville, Code of Ordinances § 72.11
Pikeville, Code of Ordinances § 72.010
Walton, Code of Ordinances § 72.11
Warsaw, Code of Ordinances § 72.11 Michigan
Bingham Farms, Code of Ordinances § 95.10 (2005)
Burton, Code of Ordinances § 71.02
Clinton Township, Code of Ordinances §§ 886.10; 886.11 (1986)
Eastpointe, Code of Ordinances § 480.05 (1988)
Flint, § 28-9 (1950)
Howell, § 430.05
Marshall, § 73.18 (1992)
Mason, § 8.14
Saginaw, Code of Ordinances § 72.22 (1959)
Uniform Traffic Code for Cities, Townships, and Villages, R 28.1814 Rule 814 (2003)
Ohio
Ada, § 351.06
Amherst, § 351.07 (1980)
Avon, § 452.08
Avon Lake, § 452.08
Bay Village, § 351.06
Bedford, § 351.06
Bedford Heights, § 351.06 (1970)
Bellbrook, § 452.08
Bellvue, § 351.06 (2002)
Belpre, § 351.06
Berea, § 751.05 (1988)
Blue Ash, § 351.06
Bowling Green, § 76.09(1965)
Bratenahl, § 351.06 (1960)
Broadview Heights, § 452.08 (1976)
Brook Park, § 351.06
Brunswick, § 452.06
Bryan, § 351.06
Canal Winchester, § 351.06
Carey, § 351.06
Carlisle, § 452.08
Chagrin Falls, § 351.06
Cheviot, § 76.18 (1998)
Circleville, § 351.06
Cleveland Heights, § 351.06
Clyde, § 351.06
Conneaut, § 351.06
Cuyahoga Heights, § 452.09
Defiance, § 351.06
Delaware, § 351.06 (1967)
Delphos, § 351.06
Dover, § 351.06 (1966)
Dublin, § 76.04 (1980)
East Palestine, § 452.12 (1956)
Elyria, § 351.06 (1945)
Englewood, § 452.08
Euclid, § 351.08
Evendale, § 452.08 (1952)
Fairfield, § 351.06
Findlay, § 351.06
Forest Park, § 73.12 (1961)
Franklin, § 351.06
Fremont, § 351.06
Gahanna, § 351.06
Gates Mills, § 352.08
Geneva, § 452.08
Glenwillow, § 351.06
Green, § 452.08
Greenhills, § 351.06
Greenville, § 452.08 (1960)
Greenwich, § 452.08
Grove City, § 351.06
Groveport, § 351.06
Hamilton, § 351.06
Harrison, § 351.06
Hicksville, § 351.09
Highland Heights, § 351.06
Highland Hills, § 351.06
Hilliard, § 351.06
Hunting Valley, § 351.01
Independence, § 351.09 (1958)
Johnstown, § 351.06
Lakewood, § 351.16 (2001)
Lancaster, § 351.06
Lebanon, § 351.06
Lexington, § 351.06
London, § 452.09 (1998)
Lorain, § 351.06
Lordstown, § 351.06
Louisville, § 351.06
Loveland, § 351.06
Lyndhurst, § 452.08
Macedonia, § 351.06
Mansfield, § 351.06
Maple Heights, § 452.08’(1967)
Marble Cliff, § 351.06
Marietta, § 351.06
Massillon, § 351.06
Mayfield Heights, § 351.08
Mayfield Village, § 351.06
Mason, § 351.06
Maumee, § 351.06
Medina, § 351.06
Mentor-on-the-Lake, § 452.08
Middlefield, § 351.06
Milan, § 351.06
Monroeville, § 351.06 (1978)
Montpelier, § 351.06
Mount Gilead, § 351.06
Mount Vernon, § 351.06 (1988)
Munroe Falls, § 351.06
New Albany, § 351.06
New Lebanon, § 73.06 (1980)
Niles, § 351.06
North Canton, § 351.06
North Perry, § 351.06
North Ridgeville, § 452.08
North Royalton, § 452.08
Norton, § 452.09 (1968)
Oberlin, § 351.06 (1957)
Ontario, § 351.06
Orange, § 351.06
Orville, § 351.06
Ottawa, § 351.06
Painesville, § 351.06
Parma, § 351.06 (1997)
Perrysburg, § 452.08 (1964)
Powell, § 351.06
Reading, § 452.08 (1982)
Reminderville, § 351.06 (1990)
Reynoldsburg, § 351.06
Richmond Heights, § 351.06
Riverlea, § 76.07
Rossford, § 351.06 (1966)
St. Bernard, § 351.15
St. Mary’s, § 351.06
Sandusky, § 351.06
Shelby, § 452.09
Sidney, § 351.09
Silverton, § 76.16 (1954)
Solon, § 452.08
South Euclid, § 351.06
Springboro, § 452.08
Streetsboro, § 351.06
Strongsville, § 452.08 (2000)
Stow, § 351.06
Summit County, § 351.06
Tallmadge, § 351.06
Tiffin, § 351.06
Tipp City, § 76.07 (1974)
Toledo, § 351.07 (1997)
Troy, § 351.06
Twinsburg, § 351.06 (1958)
University Heights, § 452.09
Upper Sandusky, § 351.06
Valley View, § 452.09 (1965)
Vandalia, § 452.09
Van Wert, § 76.07(1981)
Vermilion, § 452.08
Walton Hills, § 452.09 (1969)
Wapakoneta, § 452.08
Warren, § 351.06
Warrensville Heights, § 351.12
Waynesville, § 76.08 (1982)
Wellington, § 351.06
Westerville, § 351.06
Westfield Center, § 452.09
Wickliffe, § 351.06
Willoughby, § 452.09 (1971)
Willowick, § 351.06
Wilmington, § 351.06
Woodmere, § 351.06
Woodville, § 351.06
Wooster, § 351.06
Worthington, § 351.06
Youngstown, § 351.06
The Ohio Basic Code, § 76.07 (2002)
Tennessee
Alcoa, § 15-220(6) (1971)
Arlington, § 15-404 (1997)
Belle Meade, § 15-601 (1987)
Bolivar, § 15-1504 (1976)
Brentwood, § 66-293
Bristol, § 70-203 (2006)
Chattanooga, § 24-293 (1986)
Cleveland, § 15-610 (1981)
Clinton, § 15—601(3)(h) (1969)
Farragut, § 15-110
Germantown, § 20-212 (1986)
Johnson City, § 15-1108 (1985)
Knox County, § 62-189 (1991)
McMinnville, § 15-505 (1982)
Memphis, § 11-40-4 (1967)
Morristown, § 15-809 (1979)
Nashville, § 12.40.150
Oak Ridge, § 15-609 (1969)
Red Bank, § 15-601 (1975)
Sevierville, § 15-603 (1987)
Shelby County, § 20-86 (1992)
Signal Mountain, § 15-706 (1985)
Sparta, § 15-605 (1997)
Winchester, § 15-820 (1983)
