OPINION
Primе Media filed this lawsuit to challenge a sign ordinance of the City of Brentwood, Tennessee. In a prior appeal, this Court reversed the district court’s en *334 try of summary judgment on behalf of Prime Media, ordering the dismissal of Prime Media’s constitutional challenge as applied. On remand, the district court dismissed Prime Media’s remaining challenges to the sign ordinance on the basis of standing. Prime Media appeals that decision by the district court. For the following reasons, we affirm the district court’s decision.
I.
The relеvant facts of this case have not changed from the first time this case was before us.
See Prime Media, Inc. v. City of Brentwood,
In 1999, the City of Brentwood promulgated an ordinance limiting the use of billboards within the city. The purpose of the ordinance was “to maintain and enhance the environment; ’to promote the effective use of signs as a means of communication and economic growth; and to advance the safety and welfare of the community as it relates to the use of exterior signs in the City.” Among other restrictions, the оrdinance limited the size of billboards to a face area of 120 square feet and a height of six feet, the latter of which includes the length of any pole supporting the sign. As originally enacted, the ordinance also prohibited off-premises signs-namely, signs “that direct [ ] attention to a business, commodity, or service offered at a location other than the premises on which the sign is erected.”
In October 2002, Prime Media, Inc., an outdoor advertising company, applied for a permit from Brentwood- to build and place billboards near Interstate 65. Relying on the ordinance, Brentwood denied the permit request on three grounds: it violated the face-size restriction because the proposed billboards would be 672 square feet in size; it violated the height restriction because the proposed billboards would rest on 50- to 73-foot poles; and it violated the off-premises restriction because the billboards would not be located on the premises that they were promoting.
After receiving this response, Prime Media filed a lawsuit challenging the constitutionality of the sign ordinance on two grounds-that it violated the free-speeeh guarantees of the First (and Fourteenth) Amendment and the equal-protection guarantees of the Fourteenth Amendment. While the case was pending in the district court, Brentwood amended the ordinance to remove the off-premises restriction. The amended ordinance also added a purpose and findings section. The “[pjurposе” of the new ordinance is to “[ijmprove the visual appearance of the city while providing for effective means of communication, consistent with constitutional guarantees.” The “[findings” of the new ordinance say that:
The city’s zoning regulations have always included the regulation of signs in an effort to provide adequate means of expression and to promote the economic viability of the business community, while protecting the city and its citizens from a proliferation of signs of а type, size, location and character that would adversely impact upon the aesthetics of the community and threaten the health, safety and welfare of the community. The regulation of the physical characteristics of signs within the city has had a positive impact on traffic safety and the appearance of the community.
The amendment did not alter the size and height restrictions. In response to this development, Prime Media amended its complaint to challenge the constitu *335 tionality of the modified ordinance and sought damages arising from injuries caused by the original ordinance.
Id. at 816-17 (citations omitted).
II.
In its initial decision, the district court granted Prime Media’s motion for summary judgment, finding that the size and height restrictions were content-neutral, but were not “narrowly tailored” to promote Brentwood’s interests. The district court based its decision on Brentwood’s failure to provide a factual record demonstrating how the six foot height and 120 square foot size limits, in particular, advanced the city’s interеst in aesthetics and traffic safety. Additionally, Brentwood failed to provide studies or analyses of alternative methods to achieve the city’s interests.
Brentwood appealed the district court’s decision to this Court, and a three judge panel reversed the decision.
Id.
The prior panel held that the size and height requirements imposed by Brentwood were sufficiently tailored for a content-neutral regulation.
Id.
at 821. Relying on
Members of City Council of Los Angeles v. Taxpayers for Vincent,
After upholding Brentwood’s height and size requirements for billboards, we addressed the two alternative grounds for affirmance raised by Prime Media: its “First Amendment facial challenge to the entire ordinance, including its challenge to numerous provisions of the ordinance that do not affect Prime Media,” and its equal protection challenge to the ordinance. Id.
Because the district court did not address either of thеse claims, we leave it to the district court in the first instance to consider them — as well as Prime Media’s standing to raise them — keeping in mind that “a law’s application to protected speech [must] be substantial, not only in an absolute sense, but also relative to the scope of the law’s plainly legitimate applications, before applying the strong medicine of overbreadth invalidation.”
Id.
at 825 (quoting
Virginia v. Hicks,
Upon remand of the case, the district court dismissed Prime Media’s suit for lack of standing. The district court held that Prime Media no longer met the traditional standing requirement of injury in fact after this Court held that Brentwood’s size and height requirements are constitutional. Therefore, the district court reasoned that Prime Media had to rely on the “overbreadth doctrine” and third-party standing to have standing in a suit against Brentwood and its billboard ordinance. Citing a case frоm the Eleventh Circuit,
Tanner Advertising Group, LLC v. Fayette County, Georgia,
Prime Media now appeals the issue of standing to this .Court.
III.
We review a dismissal of a claim for lack of standing de novo.
Am. Canoe Ass’n, Inc. v. City of Louisa Water & Sewer Comm’n,
Prime Media argues that the district court erred by ruling that it had suffered no injury in fact and contends that it actually does have Article III standing. Prime Media’s actual injury in this case was the rejection of its six proposed billboards for failure to meet, among other requirements, the size and height requirements of Brent-wood’s sign ordinance. Based on the prior panel’s decision, however, these requirements have been found to be sufficiently tailored to pass constitutional scrutiny.
In a traditional standing case, the answer would clearly be in the negative. However, in this case, Prime Media has claimed that Brentwood’s ordinance is overly broad, which implicates the “over-breadth doctrine.” The Supreme Court has recognized that “some broadly written statutes may have such a deterrent effect on free expression that they should be subject to challenge even by a party whose own conduct may be unprotected.”
Taxpayers for Vincent,
The overbreadth doctrine compels us to take a closer look’at the threshold standing requirements, which involve two related but distinct inquiries. At the outset, no plaintiff can litigate a case in federal court without establishing
constitutional
standing, which requires a showing that the plaintiff has suffered (1) an injury that is (2) “fairly traceable to the defendant’s allegedly unlawful conduct” and that is (3) “likely to be redressed by the requested relief.”
Lujan v. Defenders of Wildlife,
The second strand of the standing inquiry involves the doctrine of
prudential
standing. Unlike constitutional standing, which involves absolute and irrevocable justiciability requirements under Article III, prudential standing is a judicially created doctrine relied on as a tool of “judicial self-governance.”
Warth v. Seldin,
This overview leads us to the question of how the doctrine of overbreadth affects the requirements of standing. The overbreadth doctrine allows plaintiffs to attack the сonstitutionality of a statute or ordinance “not because their own rights of free expression are violated, but because of a judicial prediction or assumption that the statute’s very existence may cause others before the court to refrain from constitutionally protected speech or expression.”
Virginia v. Am. Booksellers Ass’n,
Prime Media’s standing with regard to the size and height requirements does not magically carry over to allow it to litigate other independent provisions of the ordinance without a separate showing of an actual injury under those provisions. This issue — whether a party who has injury in fact standing to challenge a particular provision of a law has, by virtue of that injury alone, overbreadth standing to challenge other provisions of the same statute or ordinance — has recently received substantial attention in the Eleventh Circuit. The district court cited some of this case law in its opinion аnd the parties have vigorously argued over its significance to this appeal. Since we heard oral arguments in this case, the Eleventh Circuit appears to have definitively and, in our view, correctly answered the question.
In
CAMP Legal Defense Fund, Inc. v. City of Atlanta,
We agree with the Eleventh Circuit’s approach to this issue, as it follows directly *339 from the Supreme Court’s analysis in FWI PBS. In approaching the question of standing, the FW/PBS Court simply addressed the injury in fact question on a provision-specific basis, implicitly rejecting the idea that an injury in fact under one provision creates standing to challenge other distinct provisions of the ordinance. The opposite approach — conferring standing based on an independent provision of a statute or ordinance, merely because they are codified under the same heading— would be the epitome of advancing form over substance. The critical inquiry is whether the plaintiff can allege an injury arising from the specific rule being challenged, rather than an entirely separate rule that happens to appear in the same section of the municipal code. Thus, as this case presently stands, even though it is undisputed that Prime Media had standing to challenge the Brentwood billboard height and size requirements, it must separately establish an injury in fact under the numerous other provisions that it seeks to challenge.
There is little dispute that the remaining portions of the ordinance have not caused and do not imminently threaten any injury to Prime Media. If it had attempted to produce a billboard which complied with the height and size requirements and applied for a permit, and yet its application still faced rejection or regulation under the other challenged ordinance provisions, there would arguably be a cognizable injury in fact. Even if it had articulated some plans that it had developed to seek such municipal authorization, but was discouraged from applying for a permit because it was destined to losе, Prime Media might have a claim of an imminent, threatened injury. However the record bears no evidence of such a development. As a result, Prime Media has nit been subject to or affected by the other ordinance provisions challenged in its remaining claims. 2
Prime Media’s claims under the provisions of the ordinance other than the size and height requirement could only involve injuries that would align more clearly with those the Supreme Court has described as “conjectural or hypotheticаl,” rather than “palpable and distinct,” rendering them insufficient to establish an injury in fact.
O’Shea v. Littleton,
In short, Prime Media has not, in connection with its remaining claims, suffered an injury that would be redressed by a favorable decision, as is required to establish constitutional standing here. Granting standing for Prime Media to challenge the separate provisions of the ordinance as overbroad would be to ignore the constitutional requirement of injury in fact and would allow the overbreadth exception to prudential standing requirеments to swallow the constitutionally mandated injury in fact requirement for standing. Even though the overbreadth doctrine allows some plaintiff to bring such a challenge, she still must have suffered an injury in fact for a case or controversy to be present under Article III.
See Adland v. Russ,
Concrete ' injury, whether actual or threatened, is that indispensable element of a dispute which serves in part to cast it in a form traditionally capable of judicial resolution. It adds the essential dimension of specificity to the disputе by requiring that the complaining party have suffered a particular injury caused by the action challenged as unlawful. This personal stake is what the Court has consistently held enables a complainant authoritatively to present to a court a complete perspective upon the adverse consequences flowing from the specific set of facts undergirding his grievance.
Schlesinge
r
v. Reservists Committee to Stop the War,
It may well be that the City of Brent-wood’s sign ordinance is partially, or largely, unconstitutional. However, Prime Media does not possess the essential elements that a plaintiff needs in order to challenge the ordinance in federal court. Standing requirements are in place for a number of reasons. We must be silent in disputes
*341
best left to the political arena.
Luther v. Borden,
For the foregoing reasons, we AFFIRM the district court.
Notes
. Insofar as we can decipher Prime Media’s 45-page, 144-paragraph Amended Complaint, its remaining claims include, among others, the following: First Amendment challenges based on the unfettered discretion given city officials in granting billboard permits, *336 the lack of procedural safeguards in the approval process, the potential for content based restriction of non-commercial speech, the favoring of commercial over non-commercial speech, the favoring of some commercial topics over others; an equal protection challenge ("The City's sign restrictiоns’ favoritism of the speech of certain groups and organizations, while prohibiting speech by other entities that would be no more detrimental to any legitimate governmental interest, has denied to Plaintiffs and others equal protection of the law."); and an unconstitutional taking and due process claim based on the requirement that existing billboards come into compliance with the ordinance if a change in the use of the business occurs.
. Further, because overbreadth is restricted to the First Amendment context, it would be of no avail to Prime Media with regard to its due process/takings claim, which lacks any First Amendment connection. Even so, because this claim stumbles over the initial injury in fact hurdle, it can similarly be dismissed for lack of standing without reaching the overbreadth exception. The equal protection claim could hypothetically present a closer question, as it is intertwined with First Amendment free-speech rights, but this is similarly a question we need not resolve due to the lack of actual injury. Not only has Prime Media failed to plead any facts that would indicate that it has been denied equal protection or due process, or been subject to a taking without compensation, it has not even articulated a factual scenario whereby the ordinance threatens its equal protection or due process rights.
. As an example of how overbreadth could have been relevant in this case, assume, hypothetically (and without delving too deeply into the merits of the prior appeal), that instead of approving altogether of the size and height requirements, the prior panel had more narrowly ruled that that they were constitutional as applied to the signs Prime Media wanted to build' — i.e. they were no broader than necessary to advance traffic safety and aesthetic interests with regard to Prime Media's proposed billboards, leaving unresolved whether they were broader than necessary with regard to smaller or more discreet billboards owned or used by hypothetical plaintiffs not before the Court. In that case, Prime Media would still have had an injury in fact based on the rejection of its billboard under the height and size requirements. Further, even though the ordinance was deemed constitutional as applied to Prime Media, the overbreadth doctrine could have allowed it to make out a facial challenge to the size and height requirements on behalf of other prospective plaintiffs, thus acting as an exception to the normal rule of prudential standing that a party can typically only challenge a violation of its own rights. The threshold requirement of an injury in fact would be unchanged, however.
