Opinion
The City Attorney of the City of Santa Ana brought an action in the name of the People against the owners and operators of the Mitchell Brothers’ Santa Ana Theater to enjoin the exhibition of a number of allegedly obscene motion pictures as a public nuisance. On plaintiffs motion, the court granted a preliminary injunction enjoining the showing of the films pending a final determination of their obscenity vel non. Defendants appeal from the order granting the preliminary injunction.
The complaint alleged that certain named feature length films and their previews being shown at the Mitchell Brothers’ Theater in Santa Ana were obscene under the Penal Code section 311 definition of “obscenity” and that the exhibition of such films constituted a public nuisance. 1 Following the filing of the action, the People made a motion for a preliminary injunction which was heard by Judge Hamilton on October 23, 24, 25, and 26, 1978. During the course of the hearing, the judge viewed 8 of the 26 films sought to be enjoined and the parties stipulated that the rest of the films were substantially the same in nature and content as those which the judge had viewed. Among the films viewed by the judge were “Deep Throat,” “Devil in Miss Jones,” “Roller Babies,” and “Summer of Laura.” Defendants requested the *300 court to take judicial notice that “Roller Babies” and “Summer of Laura” had been determined to be nonobscene in a civil public nuisance action brought by the City Attorney of Santa Ana against certain of the same defendants and that “Deep Throat” and “Devil in Miss Jones” had been found to be nonobscene in an earlier misdemeanor prosecution in Orange County against defendants not parties to the instant action.
On November 2, 1978, Judge Hamilton filed a signed order in which he found that all of the films and previews listed in the application for preliminary injunction were obscene under the Penal Code section 311 definition of “obscenity” and granted a preliminary injunction prohibiting defendants from exhibiting or advertising any of the films or their previews during the pendency of the action or until otherwise ordered by the court. In the same order, the judge ordered defendants to appear on December 8, 1978, “for the hearing on the final injunction and at that time,... show cause, if they can, why a permanent injunction should not be issued.... ” 2
Defendants moved to reconsider the granting of the preliminary injunction and that motion was set for hearing concurrently with the order to show cause why a permanent injunction should not issue. Both matters came on for hearing on December 18, 1978, before Judge Wisot. The judge denied the motion to reconsider the issuance of the preliminary injunction and ordered the show cause hearing on the permanent injunction off calendar without prejudice to the right of either party to have the cause set for trial on the merits in the manner prescribed by the Code of Civil Procedure. The judge expressed the view that the case could not be brought to trial by an order to show cause and that furthermore defendants were entitled to a jury trial on the issue of obscenity.
*301 On December 26, 1978, defendants filed their notice of appeal from the November 2 order granting the preliminary injunction. 3
Defendants contend that the case of
In re Ward
(1978)
I
The Propriety of the Preliminary Injunction
In
People
ex rel.
Busch
v.
Projection Room Theater
(1976)
Defendants point to the quoted language, particularly the phrase “finally adjudged to be obscene following a full adversary hearing,” in support of their argument that the Supreme Court was indicating that injunctive relief pendente lite is impermissible in an action to abate the exhibition of presumptively protected materials. The identical contention, however, was squarely presented to, and rejected by, the Court of Appeal in
In re Ward, supra,
The procedural safeguards which are constitutionally required to obviate the danger that a system of prior restraints will run afoul of the
*303
First Amendment were first articulated in the seminal case of
Freedman
v.
Maryland
(1965)
In
In re Ward, supra,
We agree with the Ward court that a preliminary injunction may issue in an action to enjoin the exhibition of allegedly obscene films as a public nuisance and that when a preliminary injunction has issued, state procedures assure prompt final adjudication of the issue of obscenity. 6 While under Code of Civil Procedure section 527, subdivision (a), either party would be entitled to bring the case to an early trial, in the context .of an injunction to abate the exhibition of obscene materials, that burden is on the People and the failure to take such action would be a ground for the dissolution of the preliminary injunction. 7
In the case at bench the preliminary injunction was issued in compliance with the constitutional standards governing prior restraints of presumptively protected materials. Before issuing the order, the court held extensive hearings over a period of four trial days during which the judge viewed eight of the films and the parties stipulated that those *305 viewed were representative of all of the films sought to be enjoined. The court also permitted the parties to introduce such other evidence bearing on the issues as they desired. (See fn. 8.) Defendants were thus accorded a full and fair judicial adversary hearing before the preliminary injunction issued. 8 Although, as Judge Wisot correctly determined, the order to show cause why a permanent injunction should not issue was not the appropriate method of bringing the case to trial on the merits, 9 that portion of the order granting the preliminary injunction was surplusage because once the preliminary injunction issued, Code of Civil Procedure section 527, subdivision (a), mandated trial at the earliest possible date. Upon the People’s failure to bring the case promptly to trial, defendants would have been entitled to have the preliminary injunction dissolved. The augmented record shows, however, that defendants, instead of insisting on a prompt trial on the merits, resisted the People’s attempt to secure priority in trial setting on the ground that inasmuch as a preliminary injunction was in force the People were not entitled to priority. Defendants are thus in no position to complain that in the case at bench there has not as yet been a final determination of the merits.
*306 II
Abuse of Discretion
Defendants’ contention that the People were collaterally estopped from seeking to enjoin the exhibition of “Deep Throat” and “Devil in Miss Jones” because they were adjudged nonobscene in a prior misdemeanor prosecution brought by the People in Orange County against defendants not parties to the instant action is without merit. It is the long settled rule that because of the difference in the degree of proof required in the two proceedings, an acquittal in a prior criminal case is not res judicata of the issue in a subsequent civil case.
(One Lot Stones
v.
United States
(1972)
The contention that the People were collaterally estopped from asserting the obscenity of “Roller Babies” and “Summer of Laura” because those films were determined nonobscene in a prior civil abatement action against certain of the same defendants is equally without merit. A judgment in which these films were held nonobscene is currently pending on appeal in this court. (4 Civ. 19940.) It is an elementary principle of res judicata that the doctrine applies only to judgments and orders which are final. (4 Witkin, Cal. Procedure (2d ed. 1971) Judgment, § 163, p. 3307.) A judgment is not final while an appeal therefrom is pending.
Also without merit is defendants’ related contention that the court abused its discretion in granting the preliminary injunction because it is .not reasonably probable that plaintiff will prevail in the action. It is ordinarily within the sound discretion of the trial judge to determine whether or not a preliminary injunction should issue.
(Continental Baking Co.
v.
Katz, supra,
The order is affirmed.
Gardner, P. J., and McDaniel, J., concurred.
Appellants’ petition for a hearing by the Supreme Court was denied May 8, 1980. Mosk, J., and Newman, J., were of the opinion that the petition should be granted.
Notes
Penal Code section 311, subdivision (a), provides: “(a) ‘Obscene matter’ means matter, taken as a whole, the predominant appeal of which to the average person, applying contemporary standards, is to prurient interest, i.e., a shameful or morbid interest in nudity, sex, or excretion; and is matter which taken as a whole goes substantially beyond customary limits of candor in description or representation of such matters; and is matter which taken as a whole is utterly without redeeming social importance.”
The order stated in pertinent part: “IT Is HEREBY ORDERED that during the pendency of this action, until the Court shall otherwise order, the Defendants Wayne Babiash and Gaylord Johnson and each of them, and their agents, servants, employees, and representatives, and all persons acting in concert or participating with them, shall be, and hereby are enjoined and restrained from engaging in or performing, directly or indirectly, any and all of the following acts at the Mitchell Brothers’ Santa Ana Theater: Advertising or exhibiting any of the above-described motion picture films and previews, or any part thereof. “IT IS FURTHER Ordered that the defendants appear before this Court at 9:30 A.M., on December 8, 1978, in Department 15, for the hearing on the final injunction and at that time, or as soon thereafter as the matter can be heard, show cause, if they can, why a permanent injunction should not be issued by this Court and why this Court should not grant further relief as prayed for in the plaintiff’s complaint in the civil action on file herein.”
The record has been augmented to show that at a trial setting conference held on July 27, 1979, the case was set for trial for January 22, 1980. The augmented record shows that in June 1979, defendants filed a “COUNTER AT-ISSUE MEMORANDUM AND SUPPORTING Declarations” in which they opposed an early trial setting, stating: “This case is nSt entitled to legal preference in setting. As noted in plaintiff’s At Issue Memorandum, a Preliminary Injunction has issued in this action. Since the nature of this case, as stated by plaintiff’s At Issue Memorandum is a ‘Complaint in Equity for an Injunction and to Abate a Public Nuisance’, plaintiff is presently enjoying, prior to trial, the relief he will seek at trial, and consequently there is no necessity for legal preference.”
The public nuisance statutes referred to in
People
ex rel.
Busch
v.
Projection Room Theater, supra,
A number of states have passed statutes specifically providing for injunctive relief against the exhibition or dissemination of obscene materials. (E.g., Conn. Gen. Stat. Ann., § 53a-199 (West 1972); Mass. Gen. Laws Ann., ch. 272, § 30 (West Supp. 1976); N.Y. Civ. Prac. Law, § 6330 (McKinney Supp. 1976); see case note,
Obscene Material as a Public Nuisance
(1977) 65 Cal.L.Rev. 330, fn. 2.) Other states have judicially applied their general nuisance statutes to obscenity cases. (E.g.,
Grove Press, Inc.
v.
City, of Philadelphia
(3d Cir. 1969)
Cases involving seizure of allegedly obscene materials for evidentiary purposes prior to adjudication in a criminal prosecution for obscenity provide support for the proposition that preliminary injunctions may issue in public nuisance obscenity cases. As we explained in
People
v.
Superior Court (Loar), supra,
Rules 225 and 209 (a), of the Rules for Superior Courts provide appropriate means of complying with the mandate of Code of Civil Procedure section 527, subdivision (a), for an expeditious trial on the merits. (Cf.
Swartzman
v.
Superior Court
(1964)
The People’s contention that the hearing conducted by the trial court in passing upon the motion for a preliminary injunction amounted to a “trial” at which a “final judicial determination” of the issue of obscenity was made is without merit. The hearing on the preliminary injunction did not determine the ultimate fact of obscenity. A preliminary injunction, as its name suggests, is only tentative in purpose and scope; its purpose is to preserve the status quo pending a determination on the merits.
(Continental Baking Co.
v.
Katz
(1968)
An order requiring a defendant to show cause why a permanent injunction should not issue is not a proper method of bringing a case to trial. This is especially so where the fact of obscenity vel non must be litigated on the merits because the burden is on the state and not on the defendant to establish obscenity. (See Comment (1977) 28 Hastings L.J. 1333-1334. Cf.
Monterey Club
v.
Superior Court
(1941)
