Opinion
Easy Street Theatre is—or was, until the present action abated it out of existence—a nightclub in San Mateo, California, which featured pornographic films, nude dancing, and hired female companionship. Liquor was also served, usually at exorbitant prices.
On September 19, 1975, the District Attorney of San Mateo County filed a complaint against Easy Street to abate it as a public nuisance under Penal Code sections 11225-11235, the “Red Light Abatement Act.”
Prior to filing the complaint, the district attorney’s office had amassed considerable evidence that the premises were being used for allegedly immoral purposes; that, for example, cocktail waitresses regularly solicited acts of prostitution; that customers were (illegally) *187 “cadged” for drinks; that lewd acts such as masturbation were performed on customers, including police investigators; and, in general, that the ownership promoted a systematic course of illegal sexual acts such as to warrant closure of the premises as a public nuisance.
On appeal from the trial court’s order of closure, the owners of Easy Street make several contentions of reversible error, which we proceed to discuss as follows.
I
Appellants’ first argue that the trial court failed to make an essential finding of fact “as [to] the lewdness of any acts taking place on the premises.”
We note, first, that in its memorandum of intended decision filed December 22, 1977, the trial court both concluded that lewd practices were condoned and encouraged, and stated with particularity the factual basis for such conclusion, while an advisory jury impanelled for the court’s assistance returned verdicts embodying the same conclusion.
Appellants argue, however, that the memorandum of decision may not be substituted for an essential, missing finding of fact. (Cf.
South Bay Irr. Dist.
v.
California American Water Co.
(1976)
We agree, in general, that failure to find on a material issue will ordinarily amount to reversible error. There is an exception to the rule, however, where “‘it is evident, in the light of the entire record, that if more complete findings had been made they would have been adverse to the contentions of the appellant.’”(South Bay Irr. Dist., supra, at p. 995.)
Invoking that exception seems appropriate here, where, if a formal finding on “lewdness” had been made, incontrovertibly it would have been adverse to appellants.
Public masturbation in a theatre by patrons of a pornographic film house has specifically been held to constitute “lewdness.”
(People
v.
Mitchell
(1976)
As stated in People v. Mitchell, supra: “The occurrence of repeated instances of public masturbation, encouraged by the management of property by the flashing of warnings when police are known to be present, supports the inference that the property is used for a lewd purpose. Thus, the record here supports the trial court’s determination that the theatre property is of a type described in Penal Code section 11225.” (Id. at p. 340.)
We accordingly find no reversible error in the court’s failure to make a specific finding of lewdness.
II
Appellants’ second contention is that the court erred prejudicially in failing to instruct the advisory jury as to “specific intent,” as well as in failing to make “an ultimate finding as to the existence of any specific intent to perform a ‘sexual act’ beyond the offer of such an act.”
Apparently appellants have misconceived both the nature of the proceedings and the function of the advisory jury. The operation of Penal Code section 11225 is not criminal, but equitable, in nature, and no specific intent need be shown, the statute only requiring that lewd acts be shown to have regularly occurred on the premises.
(People
ex rel.
Hicks
v.
Sarong Gals
(1974)
III
Appellants next argue error in denial of a jury trial to appellants, claiming that the abatement action is essentially personal and criminal.
As respondents point out, however, the purpose of the proceedings is the reformation of the property itself, rather than the abatement
*189
of the specific acts constituting lewdness. (Cf. 47 Cal.Jur.3d, Nuisances, § 75, pp. 327-328;
People
ex rel.
Hicks
v.
Sarong Gals, supra,
People
v. One
1941 Chevrolet Coupe
(1951)
We accordingly find no error in denial to appellants of a jury trial.
IV
Appellants assert that the order of abatement unconstitutionally infringes upon its First Amendment rights as a prior restraint of their protected activities of showing pornographic films and nude dancing.
We agree that, as a practical matter, closure of Easy Street as a public nuisance “impinges” on appellants’ rights of free speech and expression; and it is not argued on the facts before us that either the films or the nude dancing were obscene. (Cf.
Flack
v.
Municipal Court
(1967)
Nor, in balancing these relative interests, need we view any such limited impingement on the subject activities with the same solicitude we might show were the interference with “[T]he right to hold a town hall meeting.” (
Appellants’ final contention is that the abatement order “is over-broad under the rules of equity,” i.e., that a narrowly drawn, less punitive order could have achieved the same result as the subject order.
The record before us shows that Easy Street had a history of police problems, and that prior warnings had gone unheeded. * Given the broad discretion conferred on trial courts in fashioning appropriate remedies to abate public nuisances (People ex rel. Van De Kamp v. American Art Enterprises, Inc., supra, 75 Cal.App.3d 523), we cannot say that closure for one year was inherently unreasonable, or an abuse of discretion.
Judgment affirmed.
Racanelli, P. J., and Elkington, J., concurred.
Appellants’ petition for a hearing by the Supreme Court was denied January 24, 1980.
Notes
The trial court found, indeed, that one instance of lewd conduct occurred while a temporary injunction was in effect, during pendency of the trial itself.
