TOLLIS INC.; Eyeful, Inc., Plaintiffs-Appellees,
v.
SAN BERNARDINO COUNTY; Board of Supervisors of the County
of San Bernardino; Cal McElwain; Barbara C.
Riordan; Robert Hammock; Larry
Schoelkofp; Dennis R.
Johnston,
Defendants-
Appellants,
and
Robert O. Townsend, Defendant.
No. 86-6080.
United States Court of Appeals,
Ninth Circuit.
Argued and Submitted May 7, 1987.
Decided Sept. 14, 1987.
John H. Weston, Robert Sarno, G. Randall Garrou, Brown, Weston & Sarno, Beverly Hills, Cal., for plaintiffs-appellees.
Paul Mordy, San Bernardino, Cal., for defendants-appellants.
Appeal from the United States District Court for the Central District of California.
Before WALLACE, BEEZER and HALL, Circuit Judges.
WALLACE, Circuit Judge:
The County of San Bernardino (County) appeals the district court's injunction enjoining enforcement of the County's adult business zoning ordinance. We have jurisdiction under 28 U.S.C. Sec. 1291, and we affirm.
* In June 1985, the County enacted Ordinance No. 2940, an urgency zoning ordinance applicable to "adult oriented businesses" within the County. In July, the County amended Ordinance No. 2940 through another urgency ordinance, No. 2957 (ordinance). The ordinance was subsequently extended and ultimately made a permanent portion of the San Bernardino County Code without any substantive changes relevant to the case before us.
The ordinance states that "adult-oriented businesses," including "adult theater[s]," cannot be located within 1000 feet of any residential land use; place of worship; funeral home; school, park, or playground; or "any other recreational facility or other area where large numbers of minors regularly travel or congregate." Adult theaters are defined as structures "temporarily or permanently used for" the presentation of films or other media or live entertainment emphasizing certain specified sexual activities or anatomical areas.
Tollis, Inc. and Eyeful, Inc. (Tollis) operate an adult entertainment establishment in San Bernardino County that offers both adult movies and live entertainment. The ordinance permits Tollis's existing business to continue as a preexisting non-conforming use, but its distance limitations prevented Tollis from opening a new, expanded facility which was already under construction on its site when the ordinance was adopted. In July of 1985, Tollis brought an action challenging the constitutionality of the ordinance and seeking declaratory and injunctive relief. Until such time as the ordinance might be declared unconstitutional, however, Tollis expressed a willingness to conduct its business in such a way as to remain outside of the definition of "adult-oriented business" under the ordinance. Subsequently, Tollis moved for a preliminary injunction, arguing that the ordinance was unconstitutionally vague on its face because it failed to define the extent of use for showing adult films that would be necessary to render a theater an "adult business." In opposing this motion, the County indicated that it construed the ordinance in such a way that a single showing of an "adult motion picture" would make a theater an "adult oriented business" for purposes of the ordinance. In response, Tollis contended that the ordinance as so construed was unconstitutionally overbroad on its face. The district court consolidated the trial on the merits with its ruling on Tollis's motion for a preliminary injunction and issued a permanent injunction enjoining enforcement of the ordinance as overbroad. The County timely appealed.
We review a permanent injunction for abuse of discretion or the application of erroneous legal principles. SEC v. Goldfield Deep Mines Co.,
II
The ordinance expired by its own terms on June 16, 1986. As a threshold jurisdictional matter, we must therefore determine whether this appeal is moot.
Several times before the expiration of the ordinance, its expiration date was extended. Ultimately, in April of this year, the County Board of Supervisors passed Ordinance No. 3142, which made the ordinance a permanent portion of the San Bernardino County Code. While the new permanent ordinance contains some minor substantive changes from the ordinance, none are relevant to the issue confronting us here. The relevant portions of the temporary ordinance, defining adult theaters and regulating their location, are reproduced word-for-word in Ordinance No. 3142. Since the relevant requirements of the temporary ordinance have been manifestly preserved unchanged in Ordinance No. 3142, the controversy before us is not moot. See In re Bunker Limited Partnership,
III
Our resolution of the merits of this case is guided by the Supreme Court's recent opinion in City of Renton v. Playtime Theaters, Inc.,
Like the ordinance involved in Renton, the ordinance before us is obviously a time, place, and manner regulation, as it does not ban adult theaters altogether.
The district court provided no express finding on the County's predominant purpose in passing the ordinance. In the particular case before us, however, we need not decide whether or not the ordinance is content-neutral because we conclude that, even if the County's predominant motive was the amelioration of secondary effects, the ordinance fails to meet the third prong of the Renton test.
To be acceptable as a content-neutral time, place, and manner regulation, an ordinance must be "designed to serve a substantial governmental interest and allow[ ] for reasonable alternative avenues of communication." Id. We agree that the County has a substantial interest in preventing the deleterious secondary effects often associated with adult theaters. See Walnut,
Here, the County has presented no evidence that a single showing of an adult movie would have any harmful secondary effects on the community. The County has thus failed to show that the ordinance, as interpreted by the County to include any theater that shows an adult movie a single time, is sufficiently " 'narrowly tailored' to affect only that category of theatres shown to produce the unwanted secondary effects." Renton,
AFFIRMED.
