Tоday, cigar makers cannot keep up with the demand for their product. William G. Flanagan,
Cigar Madness,
Forbes, April 21, 1997, at 134. Reasons advanced for this new-found popularity range from the attraction the politically incorrect cigar holds for those who dislike to run with the herd, to the role of the cigar as a status symbol, as telling as a cellular telephone.
See JR Tobacco of America, Inc. v. Davidoff of Geneva,
Plaintiff Russel H. Beatie, Jr. comes into this conflict like a modern-day Don Quixote, tilting at the windmills of the law. Unhappy with the Act’s restrictions on his ability to enjoy a cigar with his meal whenever and wherever he pleased, plaintiff, an attorney and self-described cigar aficionado, brought this action in the United States District Court for the Southern District of New York (Cote, J.), seeking a judgment declaring the ordinance unconstitutional as applied to cigars.
The essence of Beatie’s argument is that although numerous studies show that exposure to secondary cigarette smoke can be harmful to nonsmokers, no reliable scientific study has directly shown secondary cigar smoke to have comparably adverse effects. Absent such evidence, Beatie contends, the City’s prohibitions against cigar smoking bear no rational relationship to a legitimate government interest, and they therefore violate his substantive due process rights.
BACKGROUND
Tobacco use has long been identified as a cause of death and disease in smokers, and in recent years medical researchers and public health officials have been persuaded that exposure to tobaсco smoke may also place nonsmokers at risk. Epidemiological and clinical studies suggest that exposure to Environmental Tobacco Smoke (ETS) — tobacco smoke exhaled by smokers combined with the smoke that escapes from the burning end of a tobacco product — can cause numerous ailments in nоnsmokers, including eye and upper respiratory tract irritation, heart problems, birth defects and lung cancer. See Indoor Air Quality; Proposed Rule, 59 Fed. Reg. 15,967, 15,973-15,983 (1994) (to be codified at 29 C.F.R. Pts.1910, 1915, 1926 & 1928) (proposed April 5, 1994).
Responding to this medical evidence, federal public health officials have issued several reports outlining the dangers of ETS exposure. In a 1986 report, the Surgeon General concluded that exposure to ETS can cause cancer in adults and that children whose *710 parents smoke are at increased risk for respiratory ailments. See U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, Respiratory Health Effects of Passive Smoking: Lung Cancer and Other Disorders § 1.2 (1992) [EPA Report ] (citing U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, The Health Consequences of Involuntary Smoking, A Report of the Surgeon General (1986)). Similar concerns prompted the Environmental Protection Agency in 1993 to issue a report classifying ETS as a Class A (known) Human Carcinogen and stating that exposure to ETS can worsen childhood asthma attacks and increase the risk of bronchitis and pneumonia in infants and small children. See EPA Designates Passive Smoking a “Class A” or Known Human Carcinogen, EPA Envt’l News (Jan. 7, 1993).
Against this backdrop, the New York City Council began deliberations in March 1994 on a proposal to strengthen the City’s existing anti-smoking laws. After conducting public hearings and entertaining testimony from over 200 witnesses, the City enacted the Smoke-Free Air Act.
The Act severely restricts the smoking of tobacco products, including cigars. It prohibits оr limits smoking in nearly all public places other than bars, billiard parlors, hotel lobbies, and a handful of other exempted locations. See Admin. Code § 17-505 (listing exempted locations). Under the City’s Administrative Code, § 17-503(a), smoking is prohibited during opei-ating hours in enclosed areas within public transportation and mass transportation facilities, public restrooms, retail stox-es, business establishments, libraries, museums and galleries, theaters, auditoriums, convention centers, sports arenas, health clubs, public meeting-places, health care facilities, childrens’ institutions, zoos, and elevators. Under § 17-508(c) smoking is also restricted in outdoor dining and seating areas and playgi-ounds, and under § 17-503(d) it is banned altogether in public and private day-care centers, pi-e-primary, primary and secondary educational facilities. Finally, under § 17-504 only restricted smoking is permitted in the woi’kplace.
With respect to restaurants, which are the focus of plaintiffs challenge to the law, the Act completely prohibits smoking in dining areas of restaurаnts with more than 35 seats, except in special smoking rooms or bar areas of restaurants meeting certain criteria. Admin. Code. § 17-503(a)(5). One practical effect of these restrictions has been greatly to reduce the already small number of “cigar friendly” restaurants in the City. Plaintiff and like-minded lovers of cigars who wish to smoke with their meаl now find their options extremely limited.
Hoping once again to enjoy the occasional Opus X in his favorite culinary establishments, plaintiff filed suit in May 1995 alleging that there is no reliable scientific evidence demonstrating that cigar smoke is harmful to nonsmokers and asserting that absent such evidence, the Act’s limitations on such smoking bear no rational relationship to any legitimate governmental objective and therefore violate the Due Process and Equal Protection Clauses of the Fourteenth Amendment.
After limited discovery, the defendants moved for summary judgment, arguing that the evidence proffered by plaintiff was not sufficient to demonstrate that the City lacked a rational basis for regulating cigar smoking. The district court agreed and granted the motion dismissing plaintiffs complaint. From this dismissal, plaintiff appeals only from the ruling on his due process claims. We affirm.
DISCUSSION
I Standard of Review
A motion for summary judgment may be granted only when no genuine issue of material fact is presented and the moving party is entitled to judgment as a matter of lаw. Fed.R.Civ.P. 56(c). A grant of summary judgment is reviewed
de novo
on appeal.
Lowrance v. Achtyl,
Our task is to decide whether the district court erred in determining that there was no evidence in the record sufficient to support a finding that the City of New York lacked a rational basis for regulating cigar smoking. Legislаtive acts that do not interfere with fundamental rights or single out suspect classifications carry with them a strong presumption of constitutionality and must be upheld if “rationally related to a legitimate state interest.”
See City of Cleburne v. Cleburne Living Ctr., Inc.,
Several presumptions underlie appellant’s challenge to the Act. He believes, first, that the City Council cannot simply hypothesize a scientific conclusion for the basis of the legislation because such legislation must be founded on scientific evidence. Second, Bea-tie suggests that the ban on cigars should not be sustained because it is in reality predicated on the unpopularity of secondary cigar smoke to some groups of citizens.
A. Evolution of Rational Relationship Test
It is helpful in placing this appeal in its proper context to review briefly the history of the rational relаtionship test. A good beginning point is
Lochner v. New York,
In
United States v. Carolene Prods. Co.,
As Justice Douglas, writing for the Court, said in
Williamson v. Lee Optical of Oklahoma Inc.,
Moreover, it is not the state that must carry the burden to establish the public need for the law being challengеd; it is up to those who attack the law to demonstrate that there is no rational connection-between the challenged ordinance and the promotion of public health safety or welfare.
See Kelley v. Johnson, 425 U.S. at
247,
B. Rational Relationship Test Today
Supreme Court jurisprudence now informs us that when reviewing challenged social legislation, a court must look for “plausible reasons” for legislative action, whether or not such reasons underlay the legislature’s action.
See United States R.R. Retirement Bd. v. Fritz,
Thus, it may be seen that today it is very difficult to overcome the strong presumption of rationality that attaches to a statute. We will not strike down a law as irrational simply because it may not succeed in bringing about the result it seeks to accomplish,
Seagram & Sons, Inc. v. Hostetter,
So long as they do not burdеn fundamental rights or single out suspect classifications, lawmakers are free to engage in “rational speculation unsupported by evidence.”
Beach Communications,
II Application of Test to Instant Case
In the case at hand, the City moved for summary judgment on the ground that the plaintiff had nоt established that it was irrational for the City to limit cigar smoking. In support of its motion, it submitted an affidavit from Richard M. Weinberg, Esq., General Counsel to the New York City Council. In his affidavit, Mr. Weinberg identifies various materials on the basis of which it might reasonably be thought that both cigars and cigarettes are harmful and that placing limits on cigar smoking would protect the health of nonsmokers. Among other materials, the affidavit points to (i) studies on the dangers of ETS exposure that group all to *713 bacco products together and indicate that cigars and cigarettes are equally harmful, see, e.g., EPA Report, supra; (ii) studies showing that the chemical composition of cigar smoke is similar to that of cigarette smoke and that bоth contain carcinogens, see, e.g., U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, Reducing the Health Consequences of Smoking: 25 Years of Progress (1989); and (iii) studies suggesting that cigar smoke may be more dangerous than cigarette smoke, see, e.g., C. Claiborne Ray, Q & A: Pipes and Cigars, N.Y. Times, Nov. 23, 1993, at C6 (one cigar produces more particle emissions than three cigarettes, and 30 times the carbon monoxide emissions of a single cigarette); Elizabeth T.H. Frontam et al, Environmental Tobacco Smoke and Lung Cancer in Nonsmoking Women: A Multicenter Study, 271 JAMA 1752 (1994) (among nonsmoking women those whose spouses smoked cigars rather than cigarettes had higher risk of lung cancer).
Plaintiff responds that genuine issues of material fact exist because the parties disagree on whether the studiеs cited in the counsel’s affidavit provide a rehable basis for concluding that cigar smoke is harmful to nonsmokers. For example, plaintiff has submitted affidavits from experts who opine that no rehable evidence links cigar smoking and health risks and that studies on the negative effects of cigarette smoke do not necessarily apply to cigar smoke. Plaintiff also submits scientific studies indicating, among other things, that inhalation of certain kinds of cigar smoke does less harm to rats than cigarette smoke. See T.E. Betts, J.P. O’Sullivan & L.A. Elson, Comparative Lung Pathology of Rats After Exposure to Cigarette and Cigar Smoke, 62 Br. J. Exp. Path 62 (1981). Although plaintiff does not deny that the studies cited by the defendants actually exist, he questions their persuasive weight.
The facts plaintiff points to are insufficient to bar summary judgment. At best, plaintiffs evidence suggests a lack of direct empirical support for the assumption that cigar smoke is as harmful as cigarette smoke or his evidence might demonstrate the existence of a scientific dispute over the risks in question. But no matter how plaintiffs proof is viewed it will not serve to rebut the presumption that the statute has a rational basis. In light of lawmakers’ freedom to engage in “rational speculation unsupported by evidence,”
Beach Communications,
Moreover, to succeed on a substantive due process challenge, a plaintiff must do more than show that the legislature’s
stated
assumptions are irrational — he must discredit any conceivable basis which could be advanced to suрport the challenged provision, regardless of whether that basis has a foundation in the record,
Heller,
CONCLUSION
On this record, no reasonable jury could fail to find that there was a conceivable basis upоn which the City Council might believe that second-hand cigar smoke could be harmful to nonsmokers. Consequently, placing limits on cigar smoking is rationally related to the government’s legitimate interest in protecting the health of its citizens. There being a plausible basis for the statute, the district court correctly granted summary judgment in the defendants’ favor.
Affirmed.
