OPINION
¶ 1 Dеfendant Verne L. Watson appeals the Maricopa County Superior Court’s affir-mance of his Phoenix Municipal Court conviction for a violation of the City of Phoenix’s “Neighborhood Preservation Ordinance” arising out of the condition of defendant’s premises. Defendant appeals pursuant to Arizona Revised Statutes Annotated (“A.R.S.”) section 22-375 (1990), alleging the unconstitutionality of the ordinance. Because we find that the ordinance is constitutional on its face, we affirm.
BACKGROUND
¶ 2 In October 1998, defendant was tried in Phoenix Municipal Court for a violation of chapter 39, article 2, section 39-7(A) (Supp. Apr. 30, 1998), of the Phoenix City Code. Seсtion 39-7(A) prohibits visual blight and also prohibits the accumulation of garbage, debris, and the like on one’s premises if the result is a health or safety hazard. Section 39-16(C) punishes a violation of section 39-7(A) as a class one misdemeanor.
¶ 3 The evidence showed that defendant’s backyard was filled with dry vegetation, tires, scrаp metal, an old barbecue grill, buckets, inoperable motor vehicles, auto body parts, wood stacked along the fence, barrels, and bicycle parts. Although defendant’s backyard is fenced, the fence is less than six feet high and does not completely shield the yard and its contents from view. A city inspector testified that the accumulated material in defendant’s yard constituted a fire and safety hazard.
¶ 4 The municipal court found defendant guilty and imposed a $2,500 fine with $2,300 to be suspended upon defendant’s full compliance with the ordinance within four months. Defendant appealed the conviction to the superiоr court alleging that the ordinance was arbitrary and unreasonable and that it permitted authorities to take his property without just compensation. The superi- or court affirmed the judgment of the municipal court, and defendant appealed to this
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court. Defendant argues here that the ordinance violates substantive due process under both the United States and Arizona Constitutions and is overbroad. In his reply brief, defendant resurrects the argument he made to the superior court that the ordinance effects a taking of his property without just compensation. We do not address this latter argument because defendant did not raise the issue in his opening brief.
See State Farm Mutual Automobile Insurance Co. v. Novak,
ANALYSIS
¶ 5 Our jurisdiction over a case that originates in municipal court, is appealed to superior court, and then appealed to this court is limited by A.R.S. section 22-375 to whether the ordinance is constitutionally valid on its face.
State v. Martin,
Substantive Due Process
¶6 Defendant first challenges the ordinance on substantive due process grounds. Such a challenge asks a court to engage in a “substantive review” of the compatibility of the questioned law with the Constitution. John E. Nowak & Ronald D. Rotunda, Constitutional Law § 10.6, at 346 (5th ed.1995). In undertaking this tаsk, an initial question for the court is the intensity of the review to which it should subject the legislation, a question that in turn depends on the nature of the individual right affected by the legislation.
¶ 7 In the substantive due process context, independent review with no deference to legislative judgment, or “strict scrutiny,” is employed for legislation thаt significantly impinges on fundamental individual rights, and such legislation will be upheld only if the state proves that it is justified by a compelling state interest.
See, e.g., Roe v. Wade,
¶ 8 What is a fundamental right? A fundamental right has been defined as one that is “ ‘deeply rooted in this Nation’s history and tradition,’ ” or is so weighty as to be “ ‘implicit in the concept of ordered liberty,’ such that ‘neither liberty nor justice would exist if [it] werе sacrificed.’ ”
Bowers v. Hardwick,
¶ 9 Turning now to the instant case, defendant invokes this fundamental right to privacy, identifying “the sanctity and privacy of the home” as the interest at stake.
2
Although we agree that one’s right to privacy in the home is, in appropriate circumstances, a fundamental right worthy of the highest degree of protection, we disagree with defendant that this is the right implicated in this case. Viewed in its proper context, defendant’s request actually seeks recognition and protection of a right to keep an accumulation of debris in his yard. In effect, this amounts to a right to be completely free from governmental regulation of the use and occupancy of one’s real property, a right that not only is not fundamental but does not exist.
Cf. City of Phoenix v. Fehlner,
¶ 10 We liken defendant’s attempt to create a fundamental right to that made by the defendant in
Fuenning v. Superior Court,
¶ 11 Here too defendant has mischaraeterized the right for which he seeks fundamental status. Defendant’s asserted right, a right to accumulate debris in his yard, is not “deeply rooted in this Nation’s history and tradition” or “implicit in the concept of ordered liberty.” In short, it is not a fundamental right, and the ordinance therefore is subject to rational basis review.
¶ 12 Rational basis analysis looks at the ends sought to be achieved by the questioned legislation and the means employed to achieve those ends. Legislation is valid if the subject matter is within the state’s power to regulate and if the means employed are reasonable.
See Campbell v. Superior Court,
¶ 13 We turn now to the subject ordinance. Section 39-7(A) provides,
■General: All land including exterior premises and vacant land, whether improved or unimproved, shall be maintained free from any аccumulation of garbage, debris, rubble, hazardous waste, litter, rubbish, refuse, waste material, or blight, which includes, but is not limited to, graffiti on walls, fences, mail boxes, etc., bottles, papers, glass, cans, discarded broken, or inoperable appliances, discarded or broken furniture, broken glass, discarded broken or inoрerable equipment, discarded or broken bicycles, an accumulation of vehicle, bicycle or appliance parts, piles of mixed materials, dry vegetation, rags, empty barrels, boxes, crates, packing cases, mattresses, bedding, excelsior, packing straw, packing hay or other packing material, lumber not neatly piled, lumber stored in front yards, scrap iron, tin and other metal not neatly piled or anything whatsoever in which insects, rodents, snakes or other harmful pests may live, breed or multiply or which may otherwise create a fire hazard. It is an affirmative defense to a violation of this subsection bаsed on the presence of an inoperable vehicle that the vehicle was registered to a resident of the property, that the vehicle was undergoing repair, and that the total period during which the vehicle was inoperable did not exceed fifteen days. This affirmative defense may not be rаised more than three times in any combination of civil or criminal proceedings in any one calendar year.
¶ 14 We examine the ordinance initially to determine its goals. If those goals are evident from the language of the ordinance, we need look no further.
See Continental Casualty Co. v. Industrial Commission,
¶ 15 If promoting health and safety and curbing visual pollution are legitimate governmental objectives, the ordinance passes its first hurdle toward a finding of constitutionality.
Arizona Downs v. Arizona Horsemen’s Foundation,
¶ 16 Defendant does not seriously contest the legitimacy of the ordinance’s goals, but asserts that the ordinance employs means that cause it to extend beyond its permitted reach. Defendant argues that the ordinance, in regulating what one may keep on one’s premises, would prohibit such accumulations as a tidy collection of antique bottles or a yard full of pristine rose bushes. Such a prohibition is arbitrary and unreasonable, defendant reasons, because these accumulаtions pose no threat to health or safety and could not reasonably be regarded as blight.
*54 ¶ 17 Defendant’s contention is premised on a misreading of the ordinance. The reach of this ordinance is far short of defendant’s hypothetical bottle collection or rose garden. We first note that the use of the term “accumulation” inherently limits the scope of the ordinance because it implies that the ordinance is not aimed at an orderly assembly of items but is concerned with a cluttered and messy array of property. See The Random House Dictionary of the English Language 10 (unabr. ed.1967) (defining “accumulate” as “to heap up; gather, as into a mass”). A second limiting fеature of the ordinance is that accumulations offend only if they are health or safety hazards or constitute visual pollution. Thus, in a prosecution under the ordinance, the city would have to prove that the subject accumulation had the characteristics necessary to create a heаlth or fire hazard, or, if the prosecution were for blight, that under an objective standard a hypothetical reasonable person would regard the condition as unsightly.
¶ 18 We find that the language of the ordinance adequately restricts its scope so as to target only conditions that the city may legitimately regulаte. Consequently, the ordinance’s means of achieving its objectives are reasonable. Because we have also found that those objectives are proper for a municipality, we hold that the ordinance passes rational basis scrutiny and is facially constitutional.
See Campbell,
Overbreadth
¶ 19 Defendant also arguеs that the ordinance is overbroad in that it criminalizes behavior that is lawful and cannot constitutionally be made unlawful. Defendant uses the same bottle collector and rose gardener he hypothesized for his due process argument. However, he does not identify any First Amendment interest implicated by this ordinance.
¶ 20 Ordinarily, one whose conduct is clearly within the prohibitory provisions of an ordinance has no standing to argue that the ordinance also reaches lawful conduct of persons not before the court.
Seeley v. State,
CONCLUSION
¶ 21 Section 39-7(A) does not violate substantive due process, and defendant lacks standing to raise an overbreadth argument. We therefore affirm dеfendant’s conviction for violating this ordinance.
Notes
. Review methodology under substantive due process is similar to that employed under the equal protection doctrine; that is, there are differing levels of scrutiny depending upon the nature of the right involved, and the justification required for the legislation is grеater or lesser depending upon the intensity of the scrutiny applied. Nowak & Rotunda, supra, § 11.4, at 383, § 11.7, at 404. Whether a piece of legislation is reviewed under the equal protection doctrine or the substantive due process doctrine depends upon its mechanics. If the legislation affects all persons, substantive due process applies. Id. § 11.4, at 383. If the legislation creates a classification and affects only members of the class, review under equal protection is appropriate. Id.
. In addition to citing the Fourteenth Amendment to the United States Constitution, defendant relies on the right to privacy guaranteed by article 2, section 8 of the Arizona Constitution as a source of the right he asserts. However, other than to claim that the Arizona provision renders "a man’s home his castle,” defendant offers no analysis of the applicability of that clause separate from his discussion of the United States Constitution's Due Process Clausе. We therefore limit our analysis to the latter authority in addressing defendant’s challenge.
. In truth, defendant’s overbreadth argument is precisely the same as his due process argument. In his brief, defendant acknowledges this and offers nothing additional by way of analysis or authority. Even if we were to consider an over-breadth argument, we would reach the same result as that reached on the due process issue.
