Book Mart, Inc. v. Mayor of Boston

4 Mass. Supp. 92
CourtMassachusetts Superior Court
DecidedDecember 20, 1982
DocketNo. 57895
StatusPublished

This text of 4 Mass. Supp. 92 (Book Mart, Inc. v. Mayor of Boston) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Massachusetts Superior Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Book Mart, Inc. v. Mayor of Boston, 4 Mass. Supp. 92 (Mass. Ct. App. 1982).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM OF DECISION

This action for declaratory and injunctive relief comes before the court upon a stipulation of material facts which amounts to a case stated. Frati v. Jannini, 226 Mass. 430, 431 (1917) (Rugg, C.J.). In many cases, the litigants proceed in ignorance of the law; in some there is an-absence of controlling legal precedent. In the present instance, in contrast, there is a surfeit of legal decisions and the parties appear to have parsed them exceedingly fine. To understand the case, therefore, it is necessary to understand a bit of recent legal history.

Since at least 1805, this Commonwealth has statutorily regulated public amusements. St. 1805, c. 98, secs. 1, 3. As amended through St. 1971, c. 9%, G.L. c. 140, sec. 181, empowered a municipality to license theatrical exhibitions, public shows, and public amusements and exhibitions of every description “upon such terms and conditions as (the mayor or selectmen may) deem reasonable.” A Boston ordinance enacted pursuant to-that statute which empowered the mayor to deny a license if “the granting of said license would lead to violations of the public safety, health, or order”, was declared unconstitutionally vague in Galarelli v. White, Civ. No. 73-2587-G (D. Mass., Sept. 21, 1973) (unpublished). Identical language appearing in a Fitchburg ordinance was struck down as [94]*94unconstitutionally vague in City of Fitchburg v. 707 Main Corp., 369 Mass. 748 (1976) (Braucher, J.).1 Apparently acting in light of these decisions, in August, 1978, the Boston City Council passed and the Mayor approved a city ordinance which more specifically spelled out the grounds upon which a theatrical license might be denied as follows:

“(The license may be denied if) the granting of the license at , the premises would lead to or cause an offense under any applicable law, code, or ordinance; or would lead to the creation of a nuisance or otherwise endanger the public health, safety, or order by (a) unreasonably' increasing pedestrian or vehicular traffic in the area in which the premises are located; or (b) increasing the incidence of illegal or disruptive conduct in the area in which the premises are located; or (c) unreasonably increasing the level of noise in the area in which the premises are located; or
(d) otherwise significantly harming the legitimate protectable interests of the affected citizens of city.
No application shall be denied if the anticipated harm is not significant or if the likelihood of its occurrence is remote.” 14 City of Boston Code, sec. 428.

In 1979, the Legislature got around to amending G.L. c. 140, sec. 181. The statutory amendment largely tracks sec. 428 of the City of Boston Ordinances, as amended, quoting the first three subsections set out above substantially verbatim but deleting the words “illegal or” in Subsection (b) and not adopting Subsection (d) ,or the general condition that ‘ ‘no application shall be denied if the anticipated harm is not significant or if the likelihood of its occurrence is remote.” G.L. c. 140, sec. 181, as amended by St. 1979, c. 358, sec. 3.2

Since the United States District Court had declared the earlier Boston licensing regulations unconstitutional in Galarelli v. White, supra, the owners of adult book stores offering coin-operated motion pictures for pay in the City of Boston (peep shows), of course, continued doing business albeit without licenses. The August, 1978, amendments to secs. 427 and 428 of the City of Boston code, Ordinance 14, changed this situation by imposing a presumably constitutional licensing requirement upon these peep show operators. The mayor having delegated his licensing authority to the Executive Director of the Mayor’s Office of Consumer Affairs and Licensing (Executive Director), the peep show operators commenced applying for licenses to the Executive Director. Apparently from the inception of the ordinance as amended, it has been the policy of the Executive Director to require applicants for an entertainment license to provide the name and home address of each officer, each director, and each stockholder (stockholders being required to supply the amount of stock in the corporation owned by each). Until recently, however, it has been the practice of the Executive Director not to refuse to issue a license where an applicant has not made disclosure of the names and home addresses of the stockholders.

On November 17, 1980, the Executive Director denied entertainment licenses to three peep show operators, who [95]*95immediately brought suit, challenging the constitutionality of sec. 423 of the City of Boston Code, Ordinance 14, upon the grounds that it was a prior restraint not justified as a time, place and manner restriction or by a compelling state interest; that it faded to provide necessary procedural safeguards for the denial of the license; and that the substantive standards established by the ordinance were both vague and over broad, lacking narrow or definite standards and investing the licensor with impermissible discretion. This litigation found its way to the Court of Appeals for the First Circuit, which, during the summer of 1981, issued its decision in Fantasy Book Shop, Inc. v. City of Boston, 652 F.2nd 1115 (1st Cir. 1981). That decision held that sec. 428 was not per se impermissible as a prior restraint upon First Amendment expression, id at 1121, but that Subsection (d) was unconstitutionally vague and “the facially valid statutory criterion relied upon approaches the outer limits of permissible vagueness”. Id at 1125. In light of these rulings, the Court of Appeals remanded the case to the District Court for a factual determination concerning whether the licenses in question had been denied on permissible or impermissible grounds.

Against this background, the City has apparently decided to force the issue of its right to demand the names of shareholders in corporations operating peep shows as part of the licensing process. On September 24, 1982, the Executive Director requested by letter that the peep show operators provide the names and addresses of their shareholders, asserting that the information was “required in order to determine whether the licenses exercised at the (plaintiffs’) locations . . . will increase illegal or disruptive conduct in the area.” On the last day allowed by the Executive Director to respond to this letter, the peep show operators who are the plaintiffs in this case declined to provide the information sought. The Executive Director promptly caused a public hearing to be held “to determine whether the entertainment license of (each of the plaintiff) corporations should be revoked or suspended’ ’. The hearing was duly held. Other than verbal jousting between the members of the Licensing Division and their counsel and counsel for the plaintiff peep show operators, there was but one fact witness. He testified that the sole officer and director of the plaintiff 200Book Club Inc., was also the sole officer and director of Joe P. Enterprises, Inc., four other shops in the Combat Zone, so-called, and the sole proprietor of Adult House. This witness also said that persons by the name of Palladino originally formed the officers and directors of Joe P. Enterprises, Inc., and claimed that “I do have a confidential source.

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