769 N.E.2d 896 | Ohio Ct. App. | 2002
Lead Opinion
The plaintiff-appellant, the city of Cincinnati, brought complaints against the defendant-appellees, Jonathan Webb, Christine Norris, and Toni Barnett ("the Webb appellees") for practicing massage without a license in violation of Cincinnati Municipal Code 897-5(a) and 897-21. Following an evidentiary hearing on the Webb appellees' motion to dismiss, the trial court held that the ordinance was both unconstitutionally overbroad and selectively enforced in violation of the Equal Protection Clause. While we reserve judgment on whether the ordinance is overly broad, we affirm the trial court's dismissal based upon the city's selective enforcement of the ordinance.
Officers of the Cincinnati Police Division Vice Section testified that the ordinance was enforced in two ways: upon a complaint by the public, or by its own self-initiated investigations. They testified that the arrest of the Webb appellees was the result of the vice squad's self-initiated sting operation for prostitution. As was their customary procedure, the officers, using the independent weekly newspaper CityBeat, called several listed telephone numbers appearing in "adult-type entertainment ads" that offered massage services, including nude massage. ("Nude" in the sense that the masseur is naked.1) They received *227 a "call back" from the Webb appellees, who agreed to provide "outcall" services at the address given by the officers. When the Webb appellees arrived at the designated address, they were admitted to an apartment by Officers Howard Fox and Chauncey Prude of the vice squad. After the officers paid a fee for services, Webb left. Norris and Barnett remained and removed their clothing. Naked, they performed massage on the officers, but apparently did not engage in any illegal sexual contact. Subsequently, the Webb appellees were arrested and charged with a violation of Section 897-5(a) — providing massage for hire without the required city license.
The police have not instituted a general crackdown. The commander of the vice squad testified that, rather than simply consult the Yellow Pages, in which any number of unlicensed massage establishments and providers readily identify themselves as offenders, the vice squad only targeted for enforcement of the licensing ordinance those advertising under the "adult" section in CityBeat, or in adult-entertainment publications found in bars. The commander testified that self-initiated investigations did not include unlicensed massage establishments or providers who advertised massage services in the Yellow Pages, because "[w]e interpret therapeutic a license-type, legitimate, medical-type license massage." In other words, the city does not apply the local licensing requirement to those who it presumes are already licensed by the state and providing what the vice squad considers medicinal or therapeutic massages.
Nowhere in the local licensing ordinance, however, is there any exemption for state-licensed massage providers. Nor does the ordinance make a distinction between therapeutic and non-therapeutic massages (accepting for the sake of argument that a nude massage is not therapeutic). The ordinance does have a list of exemptions: medical professionals (doctors and nurses), athletic trainers for professional or semi-professional sports teams, and even barbers and cosmetologists "provided their activity is limited to the head, face, or neck." The ordinance also specifically exempts persons "wholly employed in the sale of clothing, cosmetics, jewelry or sporting equipment insofar as these individuals *228 must incidentally touch a customer to properly fit or sell the product, at its standard market price." Cincinnati Municipal Code 827-29 (emphasis supplied).2
In sum, the vice squad's distinctions between state-licensed and non-state-licensed providers, and therapeutic and non-therapeutic massages, find no support in the ordinance. Nor does the city code countenance slack enforcement of the licensing requirement. Under Section 801-1, entitled "License Requirements to be Complied With," the code makes clear that any person operating a business without the required municipal license does so unlawfully. In short, when it comes to licensing in Cincinnati, there is no spirit of the law, only the letter.
In Yick Wo v. Hopkins (1886),
*229Though the law itself be fair on its face, and impartial in appearance, yet, if it is applied and administered by public authority with an * * * unequal hand, so as practically to make unjust and illegal discriminations between persons in similar circumstances, material to their rights, the denial of equal justice is still within the prohibition of the constitution.
As noted by one writer, although "[t]raditional suspect class discrimination cases capture most of the headlines," individuals who are not within any suspect class are often victimized by discriminatory governmental misconduct. McGuinness, Equal Protection and Non-Suspect Class Victims of Governmental Misconduct: Theory and Proof of Disparate Treatment and Arbitrariness Claims (1996), 18 Campbell L.Rev. 333, 335-336. This is particularly true, the writer observes, at the local level:
Americans from all walks of life need constitutional protection from increasingly arbitrary and oppressive government power, more often at the local level. It appears that the greatest threat to civil liberties arises not from more remote sources of government power in Washington * * *. Rather, individuals are pervasively regulated and often harassed by smaller local governments which appear more likely to act arbitrarily or discriminatorily because the government authority tends to be concentrated among fewer power brokers with few if any checks on their authority. Sheriffs, police chiefs, town managers, building inspectors and other local officials are more subject to direct political pressures and therefore appear more prone to eviscerate the Constitution than typically more rational forces within the state and federal governments.
Id. at 336-337 (emphasis supplied).A broad range of cases including government contracts, land use disputes, building permit squabbles, business regulation, education, licensing and permit schemes, law enforcement matters, occupational licensing and regulation, public employment and other disputes necessitate application of equal protection principles. These areas of traditional local government regulation are where meaningful equal protection is sorely needed.
Even so, there is still a "strong presumption of regularity" in prosecutorial discretion. Cleveland v. Trzebuckowski (1999),
To support the defense of discriminatory selective prosecution, the Ohio Supreme Court, independently interpreting Section
In this case, the city has conceded that it has singled out a particular class for enforcement of the licensing ordinance: those massage establishments and providers that advertise in the "adult" section ofCityBeat and adults-only publications. Such advertisements are generally salacious in nature, worded to emphasize the sensual rather than the medicinal rewards of a massage.3 *230
Rather than deny its prosecutorial policy, the city seeks to defend it, arguing that, while selective, the policy is not arbitrary, because it is the providers of these types of erotic massage, not their respectable counterparts, that the municipal licensing ordinance was meant to target. To support this proposition, the city cites the preamble to Ordinance No. 232-1996, which states, "[M]assage establishments frequently serve as fronts for prostitution and contribute to an environment that fosters a general degradation of civility and decline in community morals." The city also points out that the regulatory procedure in Section 897-7(A) permits the treasurer to license a massage provider only after an investigation and recommendation of the applicant by the chief of police. As part of the application process required by the ordinance, the applicant must provide information in eleven categories, including photographs, criminal record, fingerprints, and information concerning the applicant's training and experience in the practice of massage. Under Section 897-1(M)(3), the applicant must also have certification of satisfactory completion of a minimum of 160 hours of course instruction in anatomy, physiology, and massage or touching techniques from a school of massage approved by the State Medical Board of Ohio or an equivalent board from outside this state, or accredited by an accrediting agency recognized by the United States Department of Education or the Council on Post Secondary Accreditation. Absent these requirements, Section 897-11 provides that no license shall be issued.
Even were we to consider, however, that the city has an articulable reason for its policy of selective enforcement, the result of such a selective policy is to create a completely arbitrary licensing scheme — one in which, until very recently, no one is (or ever has been) in compliance, almost all the known violators operate brazenly, and yet the police only prosecute a select few who fall into a hazy classification best described as erotic massage. Even if it is assumed that the type of massage providers touting erotic rubdowns are most likely not to meet the licensing requirements and are most likely to engage in criminal sexual contact, this does not alter the fact that the licensing requirement does not admit of such distinctions. Even those providers who meet the educational requirements and do not offer erotic rubdowns must have licenses. For the city to completely ignore this aspect of the licensing scheme and focus entirely on those massage providers that operate on the fringe of respectability essentially turns a general licensing scheme into a licensing scheme only for those who arouse the suspicion of the vice squad.
Furthermore, this case apparently disproves the vice squad's hypothesis that all those who offer erotic and/or nude massage are also offering prostitution. Had Norris or Barnett actually done anything more than take off their clothes to administer massage to Officers Fox and Prude (conduct that has *231 yet to be criminalized by city council), they could have been charged with any number of criminal offenses. Indeed, even if they had not engaged in any state crimes of prostitution or sexual contact, they could still have been charged under Cincinnati Municipal Code 897-21(2)(i) had they offered their services in a manner "intended to arouse, appeal to or gratify sexual desires." Had they in "any way touch[ed] the genitals" of the officers, they could have been charged under Section 897-21. Both offenses are misdemeanors. Since they were not charged with any of these offenses, presumably no such contact occurred, and somehow their nudity was not intended to arouse, appeal or gratify the sexual desires of the officers. Their only crime, we must assume, was operating without a municipal license — as were all other massage establishments and providers in Cincinnati at the time of their arrest.
Instead of assuring that all massage practitioners and establishments have a municipal license, as is clearly contemplated by the ordinance, the vice squad has turned the licensing ordinance into an enforcement tool in its battle against vice, targeting a narrow subset of known violators. But how a massage practitioner advertises, or where it advertises, or whether the provider is fully dressed or completely nude, while perhaps useful to police for investigation of prostitution, is irrelevant to enforcement of a general licensing requirement. Although city council may have been concerned with prostitution when it passed Ordinance No. 232-1996, it did not enact a specific anti-prostitution measure, but, rather, a general occupational licensing requirement. As written, Chapter 897 is a regulatory tool meant to apply to all massage establishments and practitioners, insuring that minimum standards are met by all those who engage in the business or practice of massage, no matter what their purpose or degree of respectability. A day spa at a prestigious Hyde Park address is no more immune from the licensing ordinance than an anonymous individual offering nude "outcall" massage on the back pages of CityBeat. Nothing about the licensing requirement of Chapter 897 supports the city's contention that it was meant as an enforcement tool, selectively wielded by the vice squad against those whose idea of a legitimate massage does not match its own.
Here, the vice squad has essentially applied its own value judgments to single out certain unlicensed persons, like the Webb appellees, for arrest and prosecution under an occupational licensing scheme that was intended for general enforcement. Such a value-laden standard in a regulatory field is completely artificial and totally inconsistent with the law in this city that all those who violate the licensing laws are lawbreakers subject to prosecution. We, therefore, hold that the city's selective enforcement of Cincinnati Municipal Code 897-5(a) by prosecuting those unlicensed practitioners of massage who advertise inCityBeat or other adult publications, and not those unlicensed practitioners who *232 openly advertise in the Yellow Pages, denies the Webb appellees equal protection as guaranteed by the United States and Ohio Constitutions.
It is well settled that constitutional issues should not be decided "unless absolutely necessary." Mayer v. Bristow (2000),
The judgment of the trial court is, accordingly, affirmed.
Judgment affirmed.
PAINTER, P.J., concurs.
HILDEBRANDT, J., concurs separately.
Concurrence Opinion
I concur in the lead opinion with respect to the equal-protection argument raised in the case at bar. I write separately, though, to emphasize that the city, which is entrusted with protecting the health and safety of its citizens, *233 acted within its well-established powers in enacting the ordinance at issue here. Undoubtedly, it is within the purview of the city to ensure that those who perform massage services do so in a safe and professional manner. Nonetheless, the city's concession that the ordinance is enforced against only a narrowly circumscribed set of practitioners necessitates the result reached in the lead opinion. Only upon such evidence of selective enforcement should we hold that the city's lawful powers have been improperly exercised. I otherwise concur in full in the lead opinion's disposition of the overbreadth issue.