In June 2002, the San Diego County Board of Supervisors adopted a comprehensive zoning ordinance to govern the operation of adult entertainment businesses within its jurisdiction, which covers the unincorporated portions of the county. The ordinance restricts the hours in which such businesses can operate, requires the removal of doors on peep show booths, and mandates that the businesses disperse to industrial areas of the county. The County’s purported rationale for the ordinance was to combat negative secondary effects — crime, disorderly conduct, blight, noise, traffic, property value depreciation, and unsanitary behavior — that concentrate in and around adult businesses.
We hold that the district court’s manner of severance was in error and reverse on that ground. We affirm in all other respects. 1
I.Background
In June 2002, citing to concerns about the surrounding neighborhood, the San Diego County Board of Supervisors adopted a comprehensive set of regulations and licensing procedures governing adult entertainment establishments within its jurisdiction. The ordinances took effect the following month.
1560 N. Magnolia Ave., LLC, using property leased from Tollis, Inc., operates an adult bookstore in the Bostonia neighborhood of the county under the name “Déjá Vu.” These businesses (hereinafter, “Déjá Vu”) initiated federal and state constitutional challenges against the new ordinances, seeking declaratory and injunctive relief.
The district court granted summary judgment to the County, upholding the ordinance’s requirement that adult establishments locate only in industrial zones.
2
See Fantasyland Video, Inc. v. County of San Diego,
This timely appeal followed.
II. Jurisdiction
The district court had subject matter jurisdiction over Déjá Vu’s constitutional claims under 28 U.S.C. §§ 1331, 1343(a), and over its state claim under 28 U.S.C. § 1367(a). We have jurisdiction under 28 U.S.C. § 1291.
III. Standard of Review
We review de novo the district court’s grant of summary judgment and, viewing the evidence in a light most favorable to the non-moving party, determine whether there are any genuine issues of material fact for trial.
See Gammoh v. City of La Habra,
A. Industrial Zone Restriction
The constitutionality of the challenged provision is governed by the framework announced in
City of Renton v. Playtime Theatres, Inc.,
Déjá Vu raises two arguments on appeal both relating to the third step. It first contends that a concurrence by Justice Kennedy in
City of Los Angeles v. Alameda Books, Inc.,
1. Justice Kennedy’s Alameda Books Concurrence
To justify a content-based zoning ordinance that restricts sexual and pornographic speech, Justice Kennedy wrote that “a city must advance some basis to show that its regulation has the purpose and effect of suppressing secondary effects, while leaving the quantity and accessibility of speech substantially intact.”
In
Alameda Books,
the disputed ordinance prohibited multiple adult businesses from operating under the same roof. Under Justice Kennedy’s construct, the City of Los Angeles must have had some basis to assume three propositions: “[1] that this ordinance will cause two businesses to split rather than one to close, [2] that the quantity of speech will be substantially undiminished, and [3] that total secondary effects will be significantly reduced.”
The first proposition mirrors the “alternative avenues of communication” requirement under intermediate scrutiny, which requires that the displaced business be given “a reasonable opportunity to open and operate.”
See Renton,
Justice Kennedy then noted that the evidentiary burden to establish these propositions was minimal.
See id.
at 451-52,
We reach the same conclusion here. The County’s legislative record cites to a number of sources — studies and reports from other jurisdictions, relevant judicial decisions, and public testimony — to assert a connection between the adult establishments and negative secondary effects. A municipality may rely on these types of sources.
See Ctr. for Fair Pub. Policy,
We reject Déjá Vu’s contention that
Alameda Books
imposed a heightened evi-dentiary burden on the County to show “how speech would fare” under the ordinance. So long as there are a sufficient number of suitable relocation sites, the County could reasonably assume that, given the draw of pornographic and sexually explicit speech, willing patrons would not be measurably discouraged by the inconvenience of having to travel to an industrial zone.
See Alameda Books,
2. Alternative channels of communication under Renton
To satisfy its burden under
Renton,
the County must propose a sufficient number of potential relocation sites to allow Déjá Yu “a reasonable opportunity” to operate its business.
If the County’s list is reasonable, the burden shifts to Déjá Vu to demonstrate that the proposed sites are inadequate or unlikely to ever become available.
Lim,
a. Availability of relocation sites
The County proposed 76 potentially available parcels for Déjá Vu’s relocation. Déjá Vu submitted the declaration of a land use expert contesting the availability and suitability of each site. After an exhaustive survey, the district court excluded eight sites for summary judgment purposes.
Fantasyland,
Déjá Vu’s argument on appeal draws on the County’s restriction of adult establishments to industrial zoning districts. All adult establishments must relocate to four industrial districts: M50, M52, M54, and M58. Although presumably available for adult establishments, none of these zones allows for general commercial use. “Non-manufacturing uses are restricted to those providing essential support services to manufacturing plants and their personnel.” San Diego County Zoning Ordinance § 2500;
see also
§§ 2520, 2540, 2580. According to Déjá Vu, this total exclusion from commercial zones suggests that it has not “been afforded a reasonable opportunity to relocate.”
See Topanga Press,
We disagree. Déjá Vu’s position confuses two distinct questions. Whether or not an industrial zone
permits
generic commercial business within its borders rests on a legislative policy judgment. Asking whether an industrial zone
is suitable for
In any case, the ordinance at issue here requires that adult businesses be located within industrial zones. Any other interpretation of the zoning scheme would zone adult businesses out of the county. As Déjá Vu does not challenge any of the district court’s holdings with respect to the suitability of any one of the 68 parcels for generic commercial use, its argument fails.
b. Sufficiency of alternative sites
The district court determined that the remaining 68 sites, on which eight to 10 adult entertainment businesses could operate simultaneously, were sufficient to allow Déj á Vu — the only affected adult entertainment business in the county — an opportunity to relocate.
Fantasyland,
We agree that measuring whether the number of proposed sites is sufficient to meet existing demand for sexual or pornographic speech is one of several tools to assess whether a municipality has afforded an adult business a reasonable opportunity to conduct their trade.
See Young v. City of Simi Valley,
Déjá Vu contends that the percentage of available acreage theoretically available to adult businesses in unincorporated San Diego County is drastically less than the amount approved in
Renton. See
It also must be borne in mind that the City of San Diego and the other incorporated municipalities in the county are not governed by this ordinance. The unincorporated portions of the county take up the substantial majority of the land area but only a small fraction of the population of the county as a whole. It may fairly be presumed that most of the commercial property in the county, including property suitable for adult businesses, is located within municipal boundaries and thus outside the territory governed by the ordinance in question. At least where we are dealing with “unincorporated” areas, it is appropriate to recognize the likely availability of other locations within the same economic market in neighboring municipalities.
Déjá Vu also claims the zoning ordinance violates California Government Code § 65860, which requires that “zoning ordinances ... be consistent with the general plan of the county.” The district court granted the County’s motion for summary judgment because Déjá Vu failed to raise the claim in its complaint.
Fantasyland,
A complaint must contain “a short and plain statement of the claim showing that the pleader is entitled to relief.” Fed.R.Civ.P. 8(a). The plaintiff need not detail all the supporting facts. The statement need only “give the defendant fair notice of what the plaintiffs claim is and the grounds upon which it rests.”
Conley v. Gibson,
On appeal, Déjá Vu refers to its allegation that “the legislative record [fails to] establish that this statute significantly advances any ‘important’ governmental interest.” The state law claim is purportedly encompassed within this statement.
Déjá Vu’s argument is not persuasive. The above allegation was made in support of the following proposition:
Defendant’s Zoning Amendment violates Plaintiffs’ and the public’s right to freedom of speech, press and expression protected under the First and Fourteenth Amendments to the United States Constitution and Article I, § 2 of the California Constitution ....
There is no accompanying reference to the relevant state statute and no assertion of a conflict between the ordinance and the County’s General Plan. As a result, the County did not have fair notice that Déjá Vu was asserting a claim under California Government Code § 65860. The district court’s grant of summary judgment on this issue was therefore correct.
C. District Court Severance of Unconstitutional Time Restraints
Under San Diego County Ordinance § 6930(b), any person seeking to operate, enlarge, or transfer control of an adult establishment must first obtain a permit from the County. The district court found that the County’s permitting regime was unconstitutional because it granted the licensing body an unreasonably long period of time — 130 or 140 days depending on the calculation method — to consider a permit request.
Fantasyland,
We hold that the district court’s manner of severance was erroneous. Once the offending provision is removed, the text of the ordinance contains no time limits at ah. A licensing requirement for protected expression is patently unconstitutional if it imposes no time limits on the licensing body.
See FW/PBS, Inc. v. City of Dallas,
This conclusion does not require, as Déjá Vu contends, invalidation of the entire ordinance. The district court should have instead severed all provisions of § 6930(b) setting forth the permit requirement because they were not moored to a reasonable time limit, thereby leaving the ordinance’s other provisions intact. Owners of adult establishments would have to
AFFIRMED IN PART, REVERSED IN PART, AND REMANDED.
Notes
. All pending requests for judicial notice are unopposed, and are hereby granted. Municipal ordinances are proper subjects for judicial notice.
See Santa Monica Food Not Bombs v. City of Santa Monica,
. The other adult establishment in the unincorporated portion of San Diego County, Fan-tasyland Video, Inc., has appealed the district court's judgment on other grounds not relevant to the disposition of this appeal.
. Justice Kennedy did not join the plurality opinion in
Alameda Books.
As "his concurrence is the narrowest opinion joining the judgment of the Court,” it is the controlling opinion.
Ctr. for Fair Pub. Policy,
. We therefore express no opinion on the district court’s mode of analysis, nor on any of its conclusions.
