OPINION
Plaintiffs in this case are two candidates running on the Democratic Party ticket for local office in the Borough of Folcroft, Pennsylvania, in an election to be held on November 4,1969, and Mrs. Phillips, a resident of Folcroft. They seek a preliminary injunction against the further enforcement of Ordinance No. 136 of the Borough of Folcroft directed to the individual defendants who are responsible for such enforcement. Plaintiffs also seek a declaratory judgment, 28 U.S.C.A. §§ 2201, 2202 (Supp. 1969), that the ordinance in question is violative of the due process clause of the Fourteenth Amendhient. 1 Plaintiffs filed their complaint on October 21, 1969, and we held a hearing on October 23 and 24 in an effort to expedite a controversy which threatened to become moot after November 4, 1969. 2
There is no dispute by the defendants that plaintiffs state a claim under the Civil Rights Act, 42 U.S.C.A. § 1983 (Supp.1969). The only attack on our jurisdiction to hear this claim is that plaintiff, Mrs. Phillips, presently appealing in the courts of the Commonwealth her conviction under the ordinance, failed to exhaust state remedies before instituting this action. Such exhaustion is not required. Monroe v. Pape,
The basic facts of this case are relatively simple. At about 6:00 p. m. on October 2, 1969, Mrs. Phillips began using a homemade sound broadcast system, attached to her car, in the Delcroft Shopping Center, Folcroft, Pennsylvania, described as “the business center” of Fol-croft, and used by Darby residents as well. The subject of the broadcast message, actually a tape recording, was an attack upon the unsanitary condition of the municipal dump used by residents of both Darby and Folcroft; the broadcast urged the closing of the dump and asked listeners to sign a petition directed to Dr. George, a State health official. The condition of the dump is an issue in the local elections, one which has been addressed by the candidates. Mrs. Phillips is not a candidate in those elections.
At about 6:08 p. m., Officer Lorup arrived at the shopping center in response to a radio message concerning a sound truck at the shopping center. Officer Lorup requested Mrs. Phillips to turn down the volume of the broadcasts but she refused. The officer left the scene. At about 6:23 and 6:29, Cf. ficer Lorup received two radio calls about the same sound truck. At about 6:30 p. m., he arrived at the shopping center once again, and made another request of Mrs. Phillips to reduce the volume of the broadcasts. When she again refused, he told her of the disorderly conduct ordinance (No. 136) and warned her again to reduce the volume, and, when she refused, arrested her for violating the ordinance.
On October 7, 1969, Mrs. Phillips was convicted of disorderly conduct by Magistrate Truscello and fined $25 plus costs. He warned her that if she appeared before him again on the same charge, he might impose a heavier fine. She raised as a defense in those proceedings the same arguments concerning the ordinance’s unconstitutionality as she presents here. Her conviction is presently being appealed to the Court of Common Pleas of Delaware County, Pennsylvania. Plaintiffs specifically exclude any request that we interfere with the pending state proceedings.
Plaintiffs attack the Folcroft Ordinance No. 136 as violative of due process under the Fourteenth Amendment because of vagueness and overbreadth. That Ordinance provides in relevant part as follows:
“Section 1: Disorderly conduct within the limits of the Borough of Fol-croft, shall be and is hereby defined as any act, word or conduct causing or tending to cause a disturbance of the peace and good order of the Borough, or causing or tending to cause any danger, discomfort or annoyance to the inhabitants of the Borough or users of the Borough thoroughfares, and shall include * * •* the making of loud and/or unnecessary noises * * * ." 4
Plaintiffs challenge this municipal ordinance as unconstitutional “on its face”,
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by which we understand them to mean that its application to sound trucks “ * * * would be unconstitutional in some possible applications as construed, even though, were [the ordinance] limited in applicability to the circumstances of this case, it would be constitutional. * * * ” Amsterdam,
The Void-For-Vagueness Doctrine in the Supreme Court,
109 U.Pa.L.Rev. 67, 109 n. 224 (1960) (hereinafter cited as
“Amsterdam”).
See Thornhill v. Alabama,
*769
We need not consider plaintiffs' contention that she has been denied the equal protection of the laws by discriminatory application of the ordinance. Her specific abjuration of injunctive relief against her conviction under the ordinance obviates the need for evaluation of her argument that the ordinance has been applied in a bad faith manner. See Zwickler v. Koota,
Further, there was testimony that social clubs and carnival sponsors had been permitted to use sound trucks within the last year for the advertisement of their respective functions. Mr. Young, a Fol-croft resident, testified, without contradiction, that two blocks from his home there existed a community swimming pool which employed a public address system clearly audible at his home, some one hundred yards away, a substantially greater distance than the one hundred and fifty to two hundred feet that Mrs. Phillips’ system carried at the Delcroft Shopping Center.
This evidence, tending to show uneven application of the ordinance, illustrates the potential for the arbitrary exercise of the police power which is latent in the ordinance. It is therefore of some assistance in deciding the issue of vagueness.
See
Hague v. CIO,
Plaintiffs Kelly and Egan testified that they desired to utilize, sound trucks in their efforts to gain election to the position of member of the School Board and Borough Auditor respectively, since sound trucks are the “quickest, cheapest, most effective way” available to them. We think that these facts sufficiently state irreparable harm justifying equitable relief should the plaintiffs succeed on the merits.
Turning to the ordinance itself, the proscribed “disorderly” conduct is “ * * * the making of loud and/or unnecessary noises * * In their testimony before us, the Borough’s law enforcement officials indicated that this was the phrase under which they had proceeded against Mrs. Phillips, and Magistrate Truscello testified that he referred to that language in deciding to convict her of disorderly conduct. In deciding the issues before us, we begin with the proposition that
“[t]he objectionable quality of vagueness and overbreadth does not depend upon absence of fair notice to a criminally accused or upon unchanneled *770 delegation of legislative powers, but upon the danger of tolerating, in the area of First Amendment freedoms, the existence of a penal statute susceptible of sweeping and improper application. * * * ” N. A. A. C. P. v. Button,371 U.S. 415 , 433-434,83 S.Ct. 328 , 338,9 L.Ed.2d 405 (1963).
And in the area of First Amendment rights, we are concerned with freedoms that are “delicate and vulnerable, as well as supremely precious in our society.” N. A. A. C. P. v. Button,
supra,
The “chilling effect” which a vague and overbroad ordinance can have on the exercise of free speech in the crucial area of an election can not be minimized by resort to the maxim that, in order to be vague, “men of common intelligence must necessarily guess as to [the ordinance’s] meaning.” Lanzetta v. New Jersey,
At the outset we observe that the defining adjectives contained in Folcroft Ordinance No. 136 are used in the disjunctive. Thus, a person can be convicted of disorderly conduct for making only “loud noises” It is worth noticing that the Supreme Court has accorded First Amendment protection to a public demonstration characterized by “boisterous”, “loud,” and “flamboyant” conduct. Edwards v. South Carolina,
We do not think it requires much discussion to establish the vice, in the area of First Amendment freedoms, of defining disorderly conduct to mean “the making of unnecessary noises.” The definition of proscribed conduct in this manner permits
“so much free play that in the practical course of [the ordinance’s] operation it is likely to function erratically —responsive to whim or discrimination unrelated to any specific determination of need by the responsible policy-making organs of society — and to result in a significant number of impermissible public-versus-private-interest resolutions which are beyond the effective discovery or appraisal of the Court.” Amsterdam, at 90.
First, it is clear that the phrase “unnecessary noises” denotes a source of sound which the hearer considers either unimportant or nonessential to some operation,
e. g.,
use of an automobile. This interpretation is perilously close to Ordi
*771
nance No. 304 of the Township of Darby which we today have held violative of due process for overbreadth. Phillips v. Township of Darby,
However, as we have indicated, the real vice of this language is that it permits police and other officials to wield apparently unlimited discretionary powers in choosing those persons in violation of the ordinance.
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See
Landry v. Daley,
In an effort to save the ordinance, the defendants refer v. to Chester Branch N. A. A. C. P. v. City of Chester,
RELIEF
There can be no dispute that since we have concluded that Ordinance No. 136 of the Borough of Folcroft is void on its face the plaintiffs are entitled to a preliminary injunction restraining the defendants from enforcing it. Hague v. CIO,
The foregoing shall be deemed our Findings of Fact and Conclusions of Law. We have already entered on October 30, 1969 an Order in accordance with this Opinion.
Notes
. We will not treat at this time plaintiffs’ request for a declaratory judgment. We defer that decision until a final hearing on the merits.
. There is no question whether to convene a three-judge court where a municipal ordinance, not a “State statute”, is al. tacked as unconstitutional. 28 U.S.C.A. § 2281 (Supp.1969). See Uihlein v. City of St. Paul, 32
F.2d 748
(C.A. 8, 1929), cert. denied,
. Nor is the abstention doctrine appropriate. Dombrowski v. Pfister, 3S0 U.S. 479, 489-490,
. This ordinance was promulgated under the authority of 53 Pa.Stat.Ann. § 46202 (20) (Supp.1969).
. It is clear that the plaintiffs possess standing to raise the constitutional issues here presented. N.A.A.C.P. v. Button,
. The fact that the arresting officer gave Mrs. Phillips one warning to reduce the volume of the sound truck, returned several minutes later and warned her again before arresting her pursuant to Ordinance No. 136, adds nothing of constitutional dimension to the issue before ns. Such “notice” of violation of the ordinance does not cure unconstitutional vagueness. Wright v. Georgia,
