Plаintiffs are owners of stand-alone bars in Austin, Texas. They filed this action against the City of Austin seeking a declaratory judgment and injunctive relief relating to the enforcement of Austin’s ordinance prohibiting smoking in enclosed public places, including bars, restaurants, and workplaces. ,. The district court declared the “necessary steps” provision of the ordinance unconstitutionally vague on its face and permanently enjoined the City of Austin from enforcing it. The City of Austin appeals the district court’s judgment and injunction, arguing that: (1) the case is nonjusticiable because plaintiffs lack standing and their claims are not ripe; (2) the “necessary steps” provision is not unconstitutionally vague; and (3) the district court abused its discretion in permanently enjoining the enforcement of the “necessary steps” provision. Some plaintiffs have also appealed the district court’s denial of their motion for attorneys’ fees. Plaintiffs’ appeal has been consolidated with the City of Austin’s appeal.
We REVERSE that portion of the district court’s judgment declaring the “necessary steps” provision of the ordinance unconstitutionally vague, VACATE the provision of the permanent injunction enjoining enforcement of said provision, and otherwise AFFIRM the judgment. We alsо AFFIRM the district court’s denial of attorneys’ fees.
I. FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND
On May 7, 2005, the citizens of Austin, Texas adopted the “Smoking in Public Places” ordinance (the “ordinance”) by way of a ballot initiative. 1 The purpose of the ordinance is to protect persons in public places and employees in their occupational environments from second-hand smoke. The ordinance took effect on September 1, 2005, and its principal goal is to prohibit smoking in all “public place[s]” within the City of Austin (the “City”). Austin, Tex., Code ch. 10-6.
The ordinance defines “public place” broadly to include any “enclosed area to which the public is invited or in which the public is permitted.” 2 Id. § 10-6-1(6). This definition includes bars and restaurants and is subject to few exceptions. See § 10-6-3. The ordinance expands the *539 City’s prior smoking ordinance, which gave those bars and restaurants with substantial revenue from the sale of alcoholic beverages the option of obtaining a permit to allow smoking. The new ordinance abolishes this permit option.
A violation of the ordinance is a Class C misdemeanor punishable by a fíne, not to exceed $2,000, or by revocation or suspension of the license or permit of a violating establishment by the city manager. 3 § 10 — 6—11(A)—(B). An individual violates the ordinance by smoking in a public place, § 10-6-2(A), smoking in a building ownеd or operated by the City, § 10 — 6—2(B), or smoking within fifteen feet of an entrance or openable window of a building in which smoking is prohibited, § 10-6-2(D). In addition to the restrictions placed on individuals, the ordinance provides that an owner or operator of a public place violates the ordinance if he or she “fails to take necessary steps to prevent or stop another person from smoking in an enclosed area in a public place.” § 10-6-2(E) (emphasis added). Certain steps — including posting “no smoking” signs and removing ashtrays — are explicitly set out in the ordinance. § 10-6-8.
Shortly after the ordinance took effect, the following plaintiffs (collectively, “Plaintiffs”) filed suit in state court challenging the constitutionality of the ordinance and seeking a temporary restraining order and a declaratory judgment: (1) three owners of stand-alone bars in the City — Bill Har-dee; Joseph Chip Tait; and Gail E. Johnson; (2) Hardee’s stand-alone bar — Roark and Hardee L.P., doing business as Warehouse Saloon and Billiards; (3) Tait’s stand-alone bar — Pub Draught Inc., doing business as Lovejoys Tap Room and Brewery; (4) Johnson’s stand-alone bars — GMC Investment Inc., doing business as Ego’s; Canary Roost Inc.; and Canary Hut Inc.; (5) an organization of bars fighting the citizen initiative, KEEP AUSTIN FREE PAC; and (6) a couple of concerned citizens, Tony Sirgo and Edward Check. 4 Plaintiffs alleged that the ordinance violated the First, Fourth, and Fourteenth Amendments, the Supremacy Clause, a number of federal statutes, as well as the Texas State Constitution, Texas statutes, and the Austin City Charter. The City subsequently removed the case to federal district court.
On October 11, 2005, the district court held an evidentiary hearing on Plaintiffs’ motion for a preliminary injunction. Plaintiffs’ primary attack challenged the ordinance as “unconstitutionally vague on its face because it is so indefinite that it does not give fair notice as to what conduct is prohibited and lacks explicit standards for enforcement.”
Roark & Hardee L.P. v. City of Austin,
This preliminary injunction hearing was followed by a trial on the merits almost a year later on August 17, 2006. By that time, the posture of the litigation had undergone a significant change. The City had sent notices of violation and filed charges, which were still pending in municipal court, against two Plaintiff bar owners, Bill Hardee and Gail E. Johnson, for failing to take the “necessary steps” to prevent or stop another person from smoking in their bars, Roark and Hardee L.P., doing business as Warehouse Saloon and Billiards, Canary Hut, and Canary Roost. The remaining Plaintiff owners and bars, Joseph Chip Tait; Pub Draught, Inc., doing business as Lovejoys Tap Room and Brewery; and GMC Investment Inc., doing business as Ego’s, had not been cited.
At trial, Plaintiffs focused their attack on the words “necessary steps” in § 10-6-2(E) of the ordinance. The City presented evidence that since the ordinance’s passage, the City’s Health and Human Services Department, the department charged under the statute with enforcement, see § 10-6-10(D), had enacted two sets of guidelines to provide clarification of the “necessary steps” provision. The first set of guidelines provided: “Necessary steps include no smoking signs, absence of ash trays, asking the patron to stop smoking, asking the patron to leave the establishment if they refuse to stop smoking and following your standard business practices for enforcing house rules.” After receiving requests for more clarification, the second set of guidelines was released, which added the step of refusing service to a person who is smoking. 7
The district court found that the issuance of these two additional sets of guidelines weighed in favor of finding the ordinance vague.
Roark & Hardee L.P. v. City of Austin,
No. A-05-CA-837-SS,
*541
After the trial, the district court entered a judgment granting Plaintiffs a permanent injunction in three respects: (1) enjoining the City from enforcing the “necessary steps” provision against owners and operators of public places beyond the two steps of posting no smoking signs and removing ashtrays; (2) enjoining the City from suspending or revoking any city permits or licenses without providing “expeditious judicial review”; and (3) enjoining the City from imposing fines under the ordinance that violate Texas Penal Code § 6.02(f) by exceeding $500. Id. at *10. Following entry of the judgment, Plaintiffs sought an award of attorneys’ fees pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 1988, as a “prevailing party” in the litigation. The district court denied the motion. The City filed a timely notice of appeal challenging the district court’s grant of permanent injunctive relief. Subsequently, a few Plaintiffs— Roark and Hardee L.P., doing business as Warehouse Saloon & Billiards; Pub Draught Inc., doing business as Lovejoys Tap Room and Brewery; Joseph Chip Tait; KEEP AUSTIN FREE PAC; Tony Sirgo; Edward Check; and Bill Hardee— filed a cross-appeal arguing that thе district court abused its discretion in denying the motion for attorneys’ fees.
II. DISCUSSION
A. Standing and Ripeness
The City first argues that this case is nonjusticiable because Plaintiffs lack standing and their claims are not ripe for adjudication. Thus, before considering the merits of this appeal, we must answer the threshold question whether Plaintiffs “present[ ] an ‘actual controversy,’ a requirement imposed by Art. Ill of the Constitution and the express terms of the Federal Declaratory Judgment Act, 28 U.S.C. § 2201.”
Steffel v. Thompson,
The “essence” of standing is “whether the litigant is entitled to have the court decide the merits of the dispute or of particular issues.”
Warth,
The City argues that Plaintiffs do not have standing because they have not suffered a particularized injury-in-fact. With regard to the penalty provisions of the ordinance, the City claims that Plaintiffs “cannot show ... that a fine in excess of $500 has been sought against them or that the City has threatened to suspend or revoke any license or permit.” The City further maintains that although some Plaintiffs were prosecuted under the ordinance, those prosecutions were for clear violations explicitly provided in either the ordinance itself or its concomitant guidelines, and thus Plaintiffs have not been injured by an application of the challenged “necessary steps” provision. According to the City, the issues raised by Plaintiffs would be more properly addressed in the normal course of their individual prosecutions under the ordinance.
The injury-in-fact element requires that a plaintiff show that he or she “ ‘has sustained or
is immediately in danger of sustaining
some direct injury” as the result of the challenged official conduct and the injury or threat of injury must be both ‘real and immediate,’ not ‘conjectural or hypothetical.’ ”
City of Los Angeles v. Lyons,
When Plaintiffs brought suit for declaratory and injunctive relief, the ordinance had been in effect for approximately two weeks, and the City had not noticed or charged any Plaintiffs for violations. However, the City’s admitted enforcement strategy is to use a complaint-driven scheme, whereby inspectors investigate violations after reports are made to the City’s Health and Human Services Department, and the City follows-up with notices of violation and charges in municipal court. According to the City, the bars, restaurants, and other enclosed public places to which the ordinance applies have control over their respective environments, and thus noticing and prosecuting them, rather than individual smokers, for violations is the most efficient and best use of the City’s resources. Therefore, from the ordinance’s effective date, City inspectors were targeting Plaintiff bar owners. Further, the injuries resulting from a criminal prosecution for violating the “necessary steps” provision, which Plaintiffs contend is unconstitutionally vague, and from being liable for its penalties, which Plaintiffs allege violate procedural due process and state law, were real and immediate threats.
Moreover, as this case progressed, the
threat
of enforcement became real as some Plaintiffs actually were noticed for violations and charged under the ordinance. Although the City claims that these prosecutions were not for violations of the “necessary steps” provision of the ordinance, an assertion contested by Plaintiffs,
9
nowhere in the record does the City suggest that it will refrain from enforcing the “necessary steps” provision against Plaintiffs. Rather, the City continues to publish guidelines explaining the “necessary steps,” a clear indication that the City is intent on enforcing this section. Additionally, even if the City has resisted enforcing the $2,000 fine against Plaintiffs and revoking Plaintiff bar owners’ licenses or permits at this stage, the City may seek to enforce these penalties later.
10
This circuit has recognized that a party has standing when it has faced prosecution under a criminal ordinаnce in the past and faces the real possibility of prosecution in the future.
Reed v. Giarrusso,
The causation and redressability requirements for standing are satisfied as well. The significant threat of prosecution that Plaintiff bar owners face is directly traceable to the City’s intention to enforce the ordinance against them, and a judicial invalidation of the ordinance would give Plaintiffs direct relief from being prosecuted. 11
Even though Plaintiff bar owners have standing, their claims also must be ripe fоr adjudication. The Supreme Court has stated that the “ripeness doctrine is drawn both from Article III limitations on judicial power and from prudential reasons for refusing to exercise jurisdiction.”
Reno v. Catholic Social Servs., Inc.,
When this case was initiated, all Plaintiffs were seeking pre-enforcement review. By the time of trial, Plaintiffs Hardee and Johnson had received criminal citations under the ordinance for failing to take the “necessary steps to prevent or stop smoking” in their establishments. Although the municipal court had not fully adjudicated the complaints against Plaintiffs Hardee and Johnson when trial commenced in this case, a concrete dispute had formed, thus avoiding the risk of premature review. Therefore, the issue whether Plaintiffs Hardee’s and Johnson’s void-for-vagueness claims were initially ripe for review has been mooted by thе change in posture of the litigation at the time of trial and appeal.
See Reg’l Rail Reorganization Act Cases,
“A court should dismiss a case for lack of ‘ripeness’ when the case is abstract or hypothetical.”
Monk v. Huston,
The City argues the case is not ripe because Plaintiffs have not shown hardship or that the case is fit for adjudication. Specifically, the City contends pre-enforcement review is unnecessary becausе complying with the ordinance would not affect the exercise of Plaintiffs’ First Amendment or fundamental constitutional rights or cause economic injury or other significant harm. Further, the City asserts that Plaintiffs’ case for injunctive relief required additional factual development, rather than relying on the hypothetical facts upon which the district court based its decision.
Looking first at the element of hardship, we find that all Plaintiff bars and owners would suffer hardship were we to deny review. “[W]here a regulation requires an immediate and significant change in the plaintiffs’ conduct of their affairs with serious penalties attached to noncompliance, hardship has been demonstrated.” Sui
tum v. Tahoe Reg’l Planning Agency,
Turning our attention to the second ripeness element, we consider whether the facts of Plaintiffs’ claims are fit for review. Plaintiffs challenged the penalty provision, permitting a fine of up to $2,000, for being in violation of the Texas Penal Code, and the enforcement provision, giving the city manager discretion to revoke permits and licenses, for failing to provide procedural due process. To determine the merits of both those claims, no further factual development is necessary, as they are both purely legal inquiries in the сontext of this ease. Consequently, they are ripe.
Now, the only remaining issue is whether Plaintiffs’ primary claim, that the ordinance is unconstitutionally vague on its face, is fit for review. Many times void-for-vagueness challenges are successfully made when laws have the capacity “to chill constitutionally protected conduct, especially conduct protected by the First Amendment.”
United States v. Gaudreau,
Here, we are wrestling with the second scenario as the ordinance does not threaten to inhibit any constitutionally protected conduct.
15
In the context of pre-enforcement review, which is still the case for the uncharged Plaintiff bar owners, examining facial vagueness is often difficult, perhaps impossible, because facts are generally scarce. However, in this case, both Plaintiffs Hardee and Johnson had been issued multiple notices of violation and charged for violating the ordinance prior to the evidentiary hearing. Due to this development, the evidence adduced at trial provided an adequate record of the ordinance’s operation and particularized harmful effect on all Plaintiff bars and owners to permit a determination of whether the “necessary steps” provision is impermissibly vague in all its applications.
Compare Socialist Labor Party v. Gilligan,
B. Facial Vagueness Challenge
Tasked with the difficult challenge of considering facial vagueness, the district court evaluated: (1) whether the ordinance’s “necessary steps” provision provided fair notice that would enable ordinary people to understand the conduct prohibited; and (2) whether it authorized and encouraged arbitrary enforcement.
See United States v. Escalante,
The City asserts that the district court erred in its overall analysis of facial vagueness. The City argues that even though the district court applied the aforementioned test, albeit erroneously, it failed to consider the complete legal test for facial vagueness. Specifically, the City notes that this court and others have previously provided, in cases involving no con
*548
stitutionally-protected conduct, that “[a] facial challenge to a legislative Act is, of course, the most difficult challenge to mount successfully,
since the challenger must establish that no set of circumstances exists under which the Act would be valid.” United States v. Robinson,
Plaintiffs argue that the “necessary steps” provision establishes no standard at all. In fact, they contend, that it is a “tautology.” According to Plaintiffs', the “ever-changing” guidelines are non-binding and thus fail to cure the vagueness of the “necessary steps” standard.
At a threshold level, Plaintiffs confront a heavy burden in advancing a facial constitutional challenge to an ordinance.
See Nat’l Endowment for the Arts v. Finley,
As previously noted, in
Village of Hoffman Estates
the Supreme Court announced the proper procedure for analyzing a facial vagueness challenge.
In Plaintiffs’ Amended Complaint, which was the live pleading at trial, they alleged, as the district court styled it, “everything-but-the-kitehen-sink.” With respect to many of the allegations, Plaintiffs failed to provide useful evidence at either the preliminary injunction or trial stages. Thus, the district court summarily dismissed most of Plaintiffs’ claims and, in the end, only granted Plaintiffs relief on their facial vagueness challenge to the “necessary steps” provision of the ordinance, as well as their two penalty provision issues. The City appealed the district court’s judgment
*549
on the vagueness claim. Plaintiffs cross-appealed, arguing only that the district court abused its discretion in denying them attorneys’ fees. Significantly, Plaintiffs did not appeal any of their constitutional claims; however, they attempt to resurrect them in their appеllee briefs in urging this court to apply a stricter void-for-vagueness test because constitutionally protected conduct is at issue. Although a timely notice of appeal is a prerequisite for the exercise of our jurisdiction,
United States v. Carr,
Plaintiffs assert that the ordinance violates their First Amendment right to be free from compelled speech. In particular, Plaintiffs allege that the guidelines compel them to speak against their will by mandating verbal confrontation with their patrons — verbally requesting them to stop smoking and to leave the premises. The district court rejected this argument in both the preliminary injunction order and its final judgment due to Plaintiffs’ failure to provide useful evidence on the issue. We agree.
Recently in
Rumsfeld v. Forum for Academic and Institutional Rights, Inc.(FAIR),
Similarly, we find that Plaintiffs’ contention here, that the ordinance unconstitutionally compels their speech, trivializes the freedom protected in
Barnette
and
Wooley.
The ordinance’s goal is to prohibit smoking in enclosed public places in
*550
order to protect the City’s population from the harmful effects of second-hand smoke. To achieve that goal, the ordinance requires Plaintiffs to take the “necessary steps” to stop another person from smoking. Thus, as a general matter, the ordinance regulates Plaintiffs’ conduct, not speech. Plaintiff bar owners and their employees remain free to express whatever views they have on the ordinance. And, although the amended guidelines call for Plaintiffs to “verbally” request smokers to extinguish cigarettes or leave the premises, this speech is plainly incidental to the ordinance’s regulation of conduct. After all, the guidelines were amended to include these verbal requirements only after Plaintiffs “allegedly” experienced difficulty in implementing the ordinance.
17
Cf. Giboney v. Empire Storage & Ice Co.,
Plaintiffs further contend that the vagueness of the “necessary steps” provision permits unreasonable government interference in the operation of their businesses, a protected liberty interest. As support for this proposition, Plaintiffs invoke
Stidham v. Texas Commission on Private Security,
Because the ordinance does not threaten to inhibit constitutionally protected conduct, we continue under the rubric in
Village of Hoffman Estates
and consider whether the ordinance is impermissibly vague in all its applications,
see also United States v. Clinical Leasing Serv., Inc.,
In evaluating vagueness, a reviewing court should consider: (1) whether the law “give[s] the person of ordinary intelligence a reasonable opportunity to know what is prohibited, so that he may act accordingly;” and (2) whether the law provides explicit standards for those applying them to avoid arbitrary and discriminatory applications.
Grayned v. City of Rockford,
The degree of vagueness that the Constitution tolerates — as well as the relative importance of fair notice and fair enforcement — depends in part on the *552 nature of the enactment. Thus, economic regulation is subject to a less strict vagueness test because its subject matter is often more narrow, and because businesses, which face economiс demands to plan behavior carefully, can be expected to consult relevant legislation in advance of action .... The Court has also expressed greater tolerance of enactments with civil rather than criminal penalties because the consequences of imprecision are qualitatively less severe. And the Court has recognized that a scienter requirement may mitigate a law's vagueness, especially with respect to the adequacy of notice to the complainant that his conduct is proscribed.
Id.
at 498-99,
In this case, although the ordinance’s penalties are criminal in nature and they explicitly allow for conviction without a scienter requirement,
20
the ordinance does not threaten to inhibit the exercise of constitutionally protected rights and is akin to the quasi-criminal ordinаnce in
Village of Hoffman Estates
that regulated business activity. The evidence reveals that the owners and operators regulated by the ordinance may clarify the meaning of its provisions by their own inquiry. In particular, the City’s proffered guidelines were drafted after town meetings with the business owners themselves, and the updated guidelines were issued as a response to requests for clarification of the “necessary steps” provision by business operators.
See Village of Hoffman Estates,
In order to sustain a vagueness challenge, “a penal statute [must] define the criminal offense with
sufficient definiteness
that ordinary people can understand what conduct is prohibited.”
Kolender,
To begin, we note that the ordinance’s goal, as a whole, is to prevent smoking in enclosed public places, so as to minimize the health hazards associated with secondhand smoke.
See Grayned,
Next we examine the disputed words “necessary steps,” to determine whether Plаintiff bar owners had fair notice of what conduct was prohibited, or mandated, on their part, and whether inspectors were provided definite standards to avoid arbitrary enforcement.
21
In conducting this examination, we “must, of course, consider any limiting construction that a state court or enforcement agency has proffered.”
Village of Hoffman Estates,
The first set of guidelines explicitly provides that “necessary steps” include posting no smoking signs, removing ashtrays, asking the patron to stop smoking, asking the patron to leave the establishment if he continues to smoke, and following standard business practices for enforcing house rules. On March 9, 2006, an amended set of guidelines was issued, in response to requests for clarification, adding: (1) that the owners or operators refuse service to a рatron if he continues to smoke; (2) that the requests to stop smoking and to leave the establishment be verbal; and (3) that the standard business procedures be applied in the same manner as violations of house rules, local ordinances, or state laws. These guidelines not only provide standards to those inspectors enforcing the ordinance but essentially provide Plaintiff bar owners and operators a clear “how to” guide for avoiding a violation under the “necessary steps” provision. Nevertheless, evidence at trial revealed that Plaintiff bar owners often failed to implement any steps to prevent smoking in their establishments.
For example, Gail Johnson was charged for a clear pattern and practice of refusing to comply with the ordinance at both his establishments, Canary Hut and Canary Roost. Specifically, on more than one occasion, inspectors observed several patrons *554 smoking, and the operators on duty made no attempts to ask them to stop or leave the premises, or to refuse them service. At one point, an inspector even gave a bartender the opportunity to implement the steps and prevent a customer from smoking, to which the bartеnder responded with a shoulder shrug, rather than compliance. Bartenders themselves were seen smoking when inspectors entered the bar, a clear indication that Johnson’s establishments were intentionally flouting the ordinance. Additionally, although refusing service was included as a step in the amended guidelines, testimony revealed that Johnson failed to instruct his employees to refuse service to his smoking customers. 22
Similar attempts to circumvent the obligations of the ordinance were observed at the bar managed by Bill Hardee — the Warehouse, Saloon and Billiards. Although no smoking signs were posted there, the operators either failed to remove ashtrays or instead provided candle holders to be used as substitutes. In addition, the establishment had customers sign forms acknowledging that they had been instructed to go outside to smoke, but once the form was signed, the operators permitted the customers to continue to smoke inside the establishment. Inspectors observed operators who neither requested smokers to extinguish their cigarettes nor refused service to those smoking.
23
From this evidence, we find it apparent that, most of the time, the only “steps” taken were in trying to find a loop-hole to avoid enforcing the ordinаnce. Such behavior is a clear violation of the “necessary steps” provision.
See Tansley,
In addition, the danger of arbitrary and discriminatory enforcement is unfounded. The City’s officials testified that three notices of violation were issued to Plaintiffs Hardee and Johnson before charges were filed in municipal court, and that the City’s procedure in filing charges only after the third notice is issued and a management official has had a chance to review the notices is standard. In addition, the pre-printed forms provided to the inspectors to notice owners and operators for violations explicitly provide the five steps listed in the guidelines. Evidence revealed that the inspectors normally circle the steps that owners and operators failed to implement before issuing a violation. This direct reference to the guidelines’ progressive steps while actually issuing the notices to owners and operators helps to standardize enforcement. Furthermore, any concern the district court had about arbitrary enforcement was based on lengthy hypothetical questions posed to enforcement officials, whose complete testimony revealed that they look for a pattern of noncompliance, and that in certain scenarios, if it is apparent that good faith attempts are not being made to take “necessary steps” to prevent smoking, then a notice of violation would be issued.
Thus, in light of the evidence at trial, Plaintiffs fail to demonstrate that the “necessary steps” provision is so indefinite as to provide them with no standard of con *555 duct at all. 24 The ordinance and its concomitant guidelines provide adequate notice of the actions required, as well as an ascertainable standard of guilt for inspectors. Plaintiffs’ void-for-vagueness challenge to the “necessary steps” provision of the ordinance fails on the record evidence of actual charged violations; we need not address hypothetical scenarios.
C. Permanent Injunction
The City also challenges the district court’s grant of a permanent injunction with respect to the “necessary steps” provision.
25
We review the award of a permanent injunction for “abuse of discretion” which occurs if the district court: “(1) relies on clearly erroneous factual findings; (2) relies on erroneous conclusions of law; or (3) misаpplies the law to the facts.”
McClure v. Ashcroft,
Based on our conclusion that the district court erred in finding that the “necessary *556 steps” provision in the ordinance is unconstitutionally vague, it was an abuse of discretion to grant a permanent injunction enjoining the City from enforcing that section of the ordinance.
D. Attorneys’ Fees
Plaintiffs appealing the attorneys’ fees issue argue that the district court erred in failing to grant them attorneys’ fees as a “prevailing party” in the litigation. Under 42 U.S.C. § 1988(b), a district court, in its discretion, may award to the “prevailing party” in a § 1983 action reasonable attorneys’ fees. We review a district court’s denial of attorneys’ fees under § 1988 for abuse of discretion.
Myers v. City of W. Monroe,
In arguing that they should be considered a “prevailing party” under § 1988, those Plaintiffs rely primarily on the district court’s judgment enjoining the City from holding the owner or operator of a public place liable for failure to take “necessary steps” to prevent smoking in their establishments. As this ruling was in error, Plaintiffs’ case for attorneys’ fees is significantly diminished. The only other constitutional claim within the ambit of § 1988(b) for which the district court granted relief to Plaintiffs was the due process claim regarding the suspension and revocation of city permits and licenses without expeditious judicial review, a holding which was not appealed on its merits. Considering the numerous other claims Plaintiffs lost and the fact that the City can still enforce the license revocation provision, as long as it provides expeditious judicial review, Plaintiffs’ success is, at most,
de minimis,
and the district court did not abuse its discretion in denying their claim for attorneys’ fees under § 1988 as a “prevailing party.”
See Texas State Teachers Ass’n v. Garland Indep. Sch. Dist.,
III. CONCLUSION
We REVERSE that portion of the district court’s judgment declaring the “necessary steps” provision of the ordinance unconstitutionally vague, VACATE the provision of the permanent injunction enjoining enforcement of said provision, and otherwise AFFIRM the judgment. We also AFFIRM the district court’s denial of attorneys’ fees. Plaintiffs shall bear the costs of these appeals.
Notes
. As the district court pоinted out, the fact that the ordinance was enacted via the voter initiative process placed the City in an unusual posture. The City Charter provides that an ordinance adopted via initiative cannot be amended or repealed until it has been in effect for two years. Austin City Charter, art. IV, § 6. Therefore, the City is in the position of defending the ordinance "as is” even though the City did not draft or enact it.
. The full definition states:
PUBLIC PLACE means an enclosed area to which the public is invited or in which the public is permitted, including but not limited to, banks, bars, educational facilities, health care facilities, laundromats, public transportation facilities, reception areas, restaurants, retail food production and marketing establishments, retail service establishments, retail stores, shopping malls, sports arenas, theaters, and waiting rooms. A private residence is not a "public place” unless it is used as a child care, adult day care, or health care facility.
§ 10-6-1(6).
. The penalty provision provides:
VIOLATION AND PENALTY
(A) A person who violates the provisions of this chapter commits a Class C misdemeanor, punishable ... by a fíne not to exceed $2,000. A culpable mental state is not required for a violation of this chapter, and need not be proved.
(B) The city manager may suspend or revoke a permit or license issued to the operator of a public place or workplace where a violation of this chapter occurs.
(C)Each day an offense occurs is a separate violation.
§ 10-6-11.
. When the suit was initiated, more plaintiffs were joined, but by the time of the trial and judgment, Plaintiffs, listed above, were the only ones remaining.
. The only type of permits or licenses the City Manager has authority to suspend are those issued by the City.
Roark & Hardee L.P.,
. Section 6.02(f) was enacted at the same time as the ordinance and provides that a municipal ordinance “may not dispense with the requirement of a culpable mental state if the offense is punishable by a fine exceeding [$500].” Tex. Pen.Code § 6.02(f).
. The second set of guidelines issued to Plaintiff bar owners on March 9, 2006, state:
SMOKING IN PUBLIC PLACES ORDINANCE No. 050303-05. Frequently Asked Questions.
After receiving requests for clarification, the City issued "further guidance” to business owner/operators which provided a “progressive enforcement process” for businesses to comply with the ordinance:
1. Post no-smoking signs and remove all ashtrays.
2. Verbally ask a patron who is smoking to extinguish the cigarette, cigar, smoking apparatus, etc. (Sign interpretation or in written form for the hearing impaired)
3. Refuse service to a person who is smoking.
4. Verbally ask anyone smoking to leave the premises. (Sign interpretation or in written form for the hearing impaired)
5. Apply standard business procedures in thе same manner for violations of house rules or local ordinances or state laws.
. In addition, the district court addressed and denied Plaintiffs' other claims, which have not been raised on appeal. Specifically, the district court rejected Plaintiffs’: (1) allegations that the terms “smoking” and "smoking accessory” in the ordinance were vague, id. at *6; (2) argument that their equal protection rights had been violated because the City admittedly enforced the ordinance against businesses but not against individuals, id. at *7; and (3) First Amendment and overbreadth claims, id. at *8. Finally, the district court found “that any of Plaintiffs’ remaining claims for relief not specifically addressed herein fail as a matter of law.” Id. at *9.
. All the complaints produced at trial specifically allege that the owner or operator "knowingly fail[ed] to take necessary steps to prevent or stop another person from smoking in an enclosed area in a public place.” (Emphasis added).
. The City’s restraint likely stemmed from the district court’s preliminary injunction, which temporarily enjoined said enforcement provisions starting before any Plaintiffs were cited, and lasting until the permanent injunction replaced it. If we look to the first set of guidelines, issued before Plaintiffs initiated this case, the City stated in response to a frequently asked question regarding thе consequences of a violation that “[cjontinued violations will be cause for enforcement action through the City of Austin Municipal Court” and that ”[t]he Violations and Penalties are set forth in the new code.” Notably, lacking any limiting instruction, the guidelines imply that the City intended from the beginning to enforce all the penalties under the ordinance.
. Inasmuch as Plaintiff bar owners have standing, the question whether the other Plaintiffs have standing is, under the circumstances here, of no consequence. See
Rumsfeld v. Forum for Academic & Institutional Rights, Inc.,
. "While standing is concerned with who is a proper party to litigate a particular matter, ripeness ... determine^] when that litigation may occur. Specifically, the ripeness doctrine seeks to separate matters that are premature for review because the injury is speculative and may never occur, from those cases that are appropriate for federal court action.” Erwin Chemerinskey, Federal Jurisdiction § 2.4.1 (5th ed.2007) (emphasis added).
. At the time of trial, Plaintiff Johnson already had five complaints filed against him in municipal court. Dеpending on the outcome and fine applied in each case, these standalone bars could face heavy financial burdens, along with multiple criminal convictions.
. Plaintiffs point to the peculiarities of state court review of convictions under the ordi
*546
nance. Prosecutions under the ordinance are brought in the City of Austin Municipal Court, a court of limited jurisdiction over criminal cases.
See
Tex. Gov’t Code Ann. §§ 29.003, 30.00005 (West 2007). Although a municipal judge could dismiss a criminal case on constitutional grounds, she could not issue declaratory or injunctive relief that would prevent the refiling of the case or of similar cases.
See State v. Morales,
. Plaintiffs have failed to provide sufficient evidence that the ordinance threatens to inhibit constitutionally protected conduct. Although ripeness is a justiciability issue, typically a pre-merits inquiry, in ascertaining whether there is an adequate factual record, we must consider, to some extent, the merits.
. Plaintiffs’ argument that the ordinance violates their Fifth Amendment interest in avoiding self-incrimination was excluded from Plaintiffs’ Amended Complaint. Thus, even the district court’s determination that all remaining claims fail as a matter of law did not dispose of this argument, and it is waived on appeal.
See Harris County, Tex. v. CarMax Auto Superstores, Inc.,
. Testimony at trial revealed that some Plaintiffs were trying to skirt the ordinance's obligation to enforce the smoking ban in their establishments by allowing smokers to continue smoking as long as they signed forms acknowledging that the bar owners asked them to quit smoking and to leave the premises, when that was not, in fact, the case.
. We note that in asserting their First Amendment argument, Plaintiffs refrain from making overbreadth claims with respect to the First Amendment rights of smokers.
. Before proceeding, we consider Plaintiffs’ contention that they do not face the burden of demonstrating the ordinance is vague in all its applications. Specifically, Plaintiffs rely on
City of Chicago v. Morales,
to argue that they are required only to prove that “vagueness permeates the ordinance.”
. However, the City points out that it only charges owners and operators for "knowing” violations.
. “The same facets of a statute usually raise concerns of both fair notice and adequate enforcement standards. Hence the analysis of these two concerns tends to overlap.”
Gaudreau,
. A Canary Roost employee, who was issued notices of violation, testified that she had never refused service to a customer who was smoking, but that she believed that refusing service would stop patrons from smoking at the Canary Roost.
. A bartender from the Warehouse Saloon and Billiards testified that he never refused service to a smoking customer.
. Although the Texas courts have not had an opportunity to interpret the meaning of “necessary steps” in the City’s ordinance, the Texas Court of Criminal Appeals has examined a statute that made it unlawful for a business to "allow patrons” to form a line, or queue, on the public right-of-way on the River Walk in San Antonio.
State v. Guevara,
The Texas court’s reliance on a business owner’s "common-sense” in
Guevara
is supported by federal constitutional law.
See Village of Hoffman Estates,
. Although the City appeals the entire judgment, it makes no arguments regarding the validity of the order permanently enjoining enforcement of the penalty provisiops.
