*1
IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF NEW MEXICO
Opinion Number:
Filing Date: February 15, 2012
Docket No. 30,591
VILLAGE OF RUIDOSO,
Plaintiff-Appellee, v.
DAVID WARNER,
Defendant-Appellant. APPEAL FROM THE DISTRICT COURT OF LINCOLN COUNTY Jerry Ritter Jr., District Judge
Bryant, Schneider-Cook Law Firm, P.A.
Daniel A. Bryant
Angie K. Schneider-Cook
Ruidoso, NM
for Appellee
David Warner, Pro Se
Ruidoso, NM
Pro Se Appellant
OPINION
SUTIN, Judge. On behalf of a non-profit foundation that he created after the death of his son,
Defendant David Warner stationed himself and his pickup truck in a public street intersection in the Village of Ruidoso, New Mexico. He handed out flyers that solicited funds to support his foundation. Posters in the bed of the truck identified the foundation and asked for donations. Defendant was arrested and convicted in municipal court of soliciting without a permit contrary to Ruidoso, N.M., Code of Ordinances ch. 58, art. III, § 58-84(b) *2 (1998). He appeals from a repeated conviction in a de novo appeal in the district court. He presents constitutional challenges to Section 58-84(b). We reverse Defendant’s conviction.
BACKGROUND
The Ordinance at Issue
{2} Section 58-84(b) reads:
Solicitation on public property . The practice by itinerant vendors or solicitors of going onto public property for the purpose of soliciting money or for the sale of goods, wares[,] and merchandise or for the purpose of disposing of goods, wares[,] and merchandise shall be considered a nuisance and punishable under this Code, except as otherwise provided by law or authorized by the council.
Section 58-84 (use of streets, sidewalks, parks, and village-owned public property) is found under Article III (offenses against property) of Chapter 58 (offenses and miscellaneous provisions) of the Village’s Code of Ordinances. The parties consider three other Village ordinances to be related in the constitutional
analyses. These ordinances are found in Division 2 (special licenses) under Article II (business registration and licenses) of Chapter 26 (businesses) of the Village’s Code of Ordinances. Ruidoso, N.M., Code of Ordinances ch. 26, art. II, div. 2, § 26-62 (1998) (definitions) defines “solicitation” to include requesting contribution of funds for charitable or other noncommercial purposes. It defines “solicitor” as any person who engages in solicitation along “any streets[.]” Ruidoso, N.M., Code of Ordinances ch. 26, art. II, div. 2, § 26-75 (1998) (amended Jan. 26, 2010) (solicitation) makes it unlawful for any solicitor to engage in solicitation without first obtaining a license from the Village, but it exempts “[p]ersons, organizations[,] and other entities who are not otherwise required by the provisions of this article to obtain business registrations and/or licenses[.]” Section 26- 75(b)(2) (1998) (prior to 2010 amendment). And Ruidoso, N.M., Code of Ordinances ch. 26, art. II, div. 2 § 26-77 (1998) (fundraising events by non-profit organizations) sets out criteria under which outdoor fundraising activity by a non-profit organization can be conducted. Criteria applicable to Defendant’s activity include “submit[ting] an application supplied by the village clerk[,]” providing documentation of not-for-profit status, and obtaining permission from “the administering agency” (e.g., school, village, county, federal, or state agency) if the activity is held on public property. Section 26-77(2), (4), (5). None of these ordinances refers to Section 58-84(b). We see nothing in the record that indicates that either the municipal court or the district court considered these other ordinances when convicting Defendant for violating Section 58-84(b). Defendant requests this Court to rule that Section 58-84(b) alone or in combination
with Sections 26-62, 26-75, and 26-77 suffers from facial and as-applied constitutional *3 deficiencies, naming the facial culprits overbreadth, prior restraint, and vagueness. It appears from the briefs on appeal that, in pursuit of the issue of the constitutional validity of Defendant’s conviction under Section 58-84(b), the parties believe that all of these sections are to be read together as one regulatory scheme.
Applicable General Principles Our analysis of the facial invalidity of statutes and ordinances [1] prohibiting content- neutral speech in public places essentially considers how substantial, broad, and chilling the prohibition is, sometimes involving concerns about unbridled government official discretion and prior restraint. In a facial challenge to an ordinance, we consider only the text of the ordinance itself, not its application; whereas, in an as-applied challenge, we consider the facts of the case to determine whether application of the ordinance even if facially valid deprived the challenger of a protected right. Field Day, LLC v. Cnty. of Suffolk , 463 F.3d 167, 174-75 (2d Cir. 2006).
{6}
“According to our First Amendment overbreadth doctrine, a statute is facially invalid
if it prohibits a substantial amount of protected speech.”
United States v. Williams
, 553 U.S.
285, 292 (2008);
State v. Ebert
,
{8}
In addition, the concept of prior restraint has also been applied in a First Amendment
context.
See Young
,
speech.
Turner Broad. Sys., Inc. v. Fed. Commc’ns Comm’n
,
Preliminary Preservation Question
In the district court, Defendant broadly asserted that his First Amendment rights were
violated and that Section 58-84(b) was void for vagueness. The district court expressed
disagreement with Defendant’s void-for-vagueness assertion but noted that Defendant raised
the issue. The record proper in this Court shows that in the municipal court proceedings
Defendant argued that charitable solicitations qualified as protected speech under the First
Amendment, that the Village’s content-neutral Section 58-84(b) regulation of the
solicitations was subject to intermediate scrutiny, and that although government can impose
reasonable restrictions of time, place, and manner of protected speech, narrowly tailored to
serve a significant governmental interest, the Village “lacked specific instructions or
procedures set in place by which a non-profit organization would apply for and obtain a
license or permit to request donations.” In the municipal court proceedings, Defendant cited
several cases that set out the constitutional guidelines related to Defendant’s arguments, two
of which were
Vill. of Schaumburg
,
Because Defendant failed to argue First Amendment issues with any specificity, we cannot
fault the district court if it did not specifically address them. Nevertheless, for the following
reasons, we will address the First Amendment issues that Defendant has raised on appeal:
(1) Defendant raised the issues in municipal court and the issues were part of the district
court record; (2) the Village has not argued any lack of preservation and has addressed the
constitutional issues in its answer brief on appeal; and (3) colorable First Amendment
challenges to content-neutral ordinances that do not contain standards of time, place, and
manner of communication restrictions on protected speech should be heard on appeal even
though the challenges were not clearly preserved in the district court.
See State v. Laguna
,
DISCUSSION
{13}
We review the constitutional issues raised by Defendant de novo.
See Christus St.
Vincent Reg’l Med. Ctr. v. Duarte-Afara
,
Observations Regarding the Ordinances Section 58-84 is titled “Use of streets, sidewalks, parks[,] and village-owned public
property[,]” and Subpart (b) specifically relates to solicitation on public property. Unless
otherwise provided by law or authorized by the Village council, Section 58-84(b) by itself
unqualifiedly criminalizes as a nuisance a practice by an itinerant solicitor “of going onto
public property” to solicit money. As it plainly reads, Section 58-84(b) criminally prohibits
a non-profit organization’s charitable solicitation of funds orally or by use of leaflets and
posters at any time, in any public place, and in any manner. Thus, unless other law or
Village council authorization saves this clear First Amendment infringement, Section 58-
84(b) cannot pass constitutional scrutiny.
See City of Ladue v. Gilleo
,
{16} Section 26-75(a) appears intended, at first glance, to place a restriction on “solicitation” and “solicitor” in Sections 58-84(b) and 26-62 by making unlawful any solicitation by a solicitor without first obtaining a license from the Village. Section 26- 75(b)(2) (1998) (prior to 2010 amendment) exempts solicitors from the license requirement as long as the solicitors are not required under another section to obtain a business registration or license. Because those who engage in requesting contributions for charitable purposes are not required to obtain a business registration or license, Defendant was presumably exempt from the license requirement. Like Section 26-62, Section 26-75 does not relieve Section 58-84(b) of its constitutional defect. Section 26-77 appears intended to allow a non-profit organization to engage in
outdoor fundraising activity on public property under the specific requirements, called criteria, set out in the section. This section does not mention “solicitation” or “solicitor.” Among the criteria for engagement in outdoor fundraising activity are that the organization must “submit an application supplied by the [V]illage clerk[,]” must provide documentation of its non-profit status, and “[i]f the activity is to be held on public property, permission must be granted from the administering agency, such as but not limited to school, village, county, federal[,] or state agencies.” Section 26-77(2), (4), (5). Further, under Section 26-77(6), “[d]uration of the fundraiser is limited to five consecutive days.” Thus, in the present case, assuming that Section 26-77 is to be considered a law narrowing the proscriptive scope of Section 58-84(b), Section 58-84(b)’s proscription will not be enforced against someone in Defendant’s circumstance as long as that person files an application provided by the Village, files documentation showing its non-profit status, and is given permission by the Village to engage in the fundraising activity, which can be no longer than five consecutive days in duration. The arresting officer testified that he recommended to Defendant that if he got a permit, the citation would probably be dismissed. Notwithstanding this testimony, it is notable that neither the record nor the briefs reflect whether an application form existed for anyone to use to obtain a permit, what information an application required, or what standards were to be considered in granting or withholding permission for a non-profit organization to engage in fundraising. Considering Sections 58-84(b) and 26-77 together as the Village’s attempt to regulate the time, place, and manner of solicitation by a non-profit organization for charitable purposes in a public place, the following picture emerges of the coverage of the sections in relation to Defendant’s solicitation conduct on behalf of his non-profit organization and of the constitutional status of his conviction. Section 58-84(b) outright proscribes any solicitation whatsoever of funds for
charitable purposes, “except as otherwise provided by law or authorized by the council.” *8 Sections 26-62 and 26-75 add nothing to our constitutional analysis. Section 26-77 can arguably be considered a law that the Village intended as limiting the breadth to Section 58- 84(b). Read in that manner, the two sections might be interpreted as implying that the solicitation flatly proscribed in Section 58-84(b) would nevertheless be allowed if the criteria set out in Section 26-77 were met. We gather from the Village’s arguments on appeal that it intends this interpretation. Based on the interplay of Sections 58-84(b) and 26-77, it is reasonable to conclude that, under that two-ordinance regulatory scheme, Defendant was prohibited from soliciting funds on behalf of his non-profit organization unless he first completed an application supplied by the Village, submitted it to the Village, and then obtained permission from the Village to engage in the fundraising activity. Constitutional Analysis
{19} The diagnosis is not one of constitutional health but instead of constitutional infirmity. As we indicated earlier in this Opinion, without Section 26-77, Section 58-84(b) is clearly facially unconstitutional, unless a law or authority provides otherwise, because Section 58-84(b) outright prohibits all solicitation of money at any time, at any place, and in any manner. Even with Section 26-77 at its side, however, Section 58-84(b) is facially
unconstitutional. The regulatory scheme comprised of Sections 58-84(b) and 26-77 still broadly prohibits solicitation of money at any time, at any place, and in any manner unless a permit from the Village is obtained. This regulation does not save the infirmity of the ordinances. We understand the Village to argue that solicitation is not prohibited but rather that the ordinances “merely require a permit prior to solicitation and are designed to provide the Village with notice of time, place, and manner of presentation so that public health[,] safety[,] and welfare concerns can be addressed.” However, there exists nothing in the record to indicate whether any particular form of application actually exists; nothing to indicate what is required in the application, if it does exist; nothing to indicate who is responsible for granting or denying permission; and nothing to indicate by what standards permission will be granted or denied. Nothing in the ordinances or in the record reflects the existence of any limitation on discretion, or any time, place, or manner of solicitation regulation. Thus, the scheme facially and unconstitutionally prohibits activity without obtaining
a permit, the issuance of which rests in what appears from the lack of evidence to the
contrary to be unbridled discretion of public officials.
See Vill. of Schaumburg
,
[e]xpression, whether oral or written or symbolized by conduct, is subject to reasonable time, place, or manner restrictions. . . . [R]estrictions of this kind are valid provided that they are justified without reference to the content of the regulated speech, that they are narrowly tailored to serve a significant governmental interest, and that they leave open ample alternative channels for communication of the information.
Clark
, 468 U.S. at 293;
see also Turner Broad. Sys.
, 512 U.S. at 642 (stating that
“regulations that are unrelated to the content of speech are subject to an intermediate level
of scrutiny,” citing
Clark
,
of First Amendment speech, we deem it unnecessary to address Defendant’s as-applied and void-for-vagueness arguments.
CONCLUSION We reverse Defendant’s conviction. IT IS SO ORDERED.
____________________________________ JONATHAN B. SUTIN, Judge *10 WE CONCUR:
___________________________________
CELIA FOY CASTILLO, Chief Judge
___________________________________
CYNTHIA A. FRY, Judge
Topic Index for Village of Ruidoso v. Warner , 30,591 AE APPEAL AND ERROR
AE-PA Preservation of Issues for Appeal
AR-SR Standard of Review
CT CONSTITUTIONAL LAW
CT-FS Freedom of Speech
CT-PS Prior Restraint
CT-VO Vague or Overbroad
CL CRIMINAL LAW
CL-SL Solicitation
GV GOVERNMENT
GV-MU Municipalities
GV-OR Ordinances
GV-ZL Zoning Law
Notes
[1] Statutes and ordinances are treated the same in cases addressing the constitutionality of laws restricting First Amendment speech. In this Opinion, because this case involves ordinances, unless “statute” appears in quoted material, we use “ordinance” throughout even though several of the cited cases deal with statutes.
