Massage parlors have provoked attacks by public prosecutors for many years. As early as
Dunlop v. United States,
Appellants seek declaratory and injunctive relief to prevent enforcement of a Savannah ordinance that prohibits heterosexual massages, imposes strict training and certification requirements on massagists, and puts rather onerous place and manner restrictions on the giving of massages. Appellants, who are the owners of several massage parlors, challenge the ordinance as an abuse of the police power, as an arbitrary restriction of a supposedly due process-protected right to operate a legitimate business, and as a violation of equal protection in that it (1) “irrationally” distinguishes between heterosexual massages and rubdowns where the customer and massagist are of the same sex, and (2) unnecessarily burdens their constitutionally “fundamental” right to engage in a legitimate business. In addition, the owners argue that they have standing to assert their employees’ and customers’ alleged rights of privacy impaired by the ordinance, and their employees’ potential equal protection claim that the ordinance establishes a gender-dependent classification that cannot withstand the intensive, albeit not “strict,” scrutiny to which sex-specific statutes are subjected.
In
Smith
v.
Keater,
The Supreme Court discussed the precedential effect of a dismissal for want of a substantial federal question in
Hicks v. Miranda,
“A federal constitutional issue was properly presented [in Miller II], it was within our appellate jurisdiction and we had no discretion to refuse adjudication of the case on its merits We were not obligated to grant the case plenary consideration, and we did not; but we were required to deal with its merits. We did so by concluding that the appeal should be dismissed because the constitutional challenge to the California statute was not a substantial one. The three-judge court was not free to disregard this pronouncement. . [T]he constitutional issues which were presented in Miller II and which were declared to be insubstantial by this Court could not be considered substantial and decided otherwise by the District Court . : . .”
422 U.S. at 344-45 ,95 S.Ct. at 2289 ; accord, Ohio ex rel. Eaton v. Price,360 U.S. 246 , 247,79 S.Ct. 978 , 979,3 L.Ed.2d 1200 (1959) (“[vjotes to affirm summarily, and to dismiss for want of a substantial federal question, it hardly needs comment, are votes on the merits of a case . . .’’); C. Wright, Law of Federal Courts, 495 n. 25 (2d ed. 1970).
The Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit in
Colorado Springs Amusements, Ltd. v. Rizzo,
