City of Paducah v. Investment Entertainment, Inc.

791 F.2d 463, 54 U.S.L.W. 2631
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit
DecidedMay 28, 1986
DocketNos. 85-5092, 85-5093
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 791 F.2d 463 (City of Paducah v. Investment Entertainment, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
City of Paducah v. Investment Entertainment, Inc., 791 F.2d 463, 54 U.S.L.W. 2631 (6th Cir. 1986).

Opinions

MERRITT, Circuit Judge.

The City of Paducah, Kentucky, appeals the judgment of District Judge Johnstone that Paducah’s obscenity abatement ordinance, on its face, establishes a prior restraint of protected speech and thereby unconstitutionally infringes the first amendment rights of plaintiffs Investment Entertainment, Inc. and Beltline News and Arcade Club, sellers of books, magazines, and video tapes. We agree that the ordinance’s provision requiring the revocation of the occupational licenses of booksellers and movie theaters dealing in obscenity renders the ordinance invalid.

I.

On June 14, 1983, the City of Paducah enacted an ordinance to control obscene material as defined in Miller v. California, 413 U.S. 15, 93 S.Ct. 2607, 37 L.Ed.2d 419 (1973). Relying on the city’s power to declare and abate public nuisances, the ordinance defines the following as “public nuisances per se” in Paducah: (1) any place where obscene films are publicly exhibited or possessed for exhibition in the regular course of business; (2) any obscene film so exhibited or possessed; (3) any place of business, or portion thereof, where obscene publications constitute a principal part of the stock in trade of the business; and (4) any obscene publication possessed at such a place. The ordinance also defines as “a public nuisance per accidens” all money or other consideration received for the exhibition or sale of such obscene films or publications after the manager of the business receives certified notice of the initiation of proceedings under the ordinance.

The key contested provision of the ordinance states that the Paducah Board of Commissioners, upon a specific finding that a public nuisance exists, shall by resolution order a revocation of all licenses and permits that have been issued to the business maintaining the nuisance. This license revocation is subject to judicial confirmation.

The Board must then order counsel for the city to bring a civil action against the public nuisance. In addition to license revocation, the ordinance contemplates that the action will seek an order enjoining all persons maintaining the nuisance from possessing or marketing the obscene films or publications at any time in the future, an accounting of all money received in the obscenity business, forfeiture of the obscene materials and the money, and judgment for the city for all costs expended in abating the nuisance. The ordinance provides that the “cost of abatement,” which is defined to include investigative costs, court costs, reasonable attorney fees, and printing costs for any trial and appeal, is to be a special assessment against the parcel of land upon which the public nuisance is maintained, but only against the interests of the individuals responsible for maintaining the nuisance. This special assessment is to be collected and enforced by the same means as used for ordinary local property taxes.

In June and July of 1983, Paducah police officers purchased obscene magazines and video tapes from businesses operated in Paducah by Investment and Beltline. Counsel for the city wrote a letter to both informing them of the ordinance and of the material purchased by the police officers. The letter gave them notice that public hearings would be held. In August 1983, after a hearing, the Board adopted a resolution finding the material purchased from Investment to be obscene and declaring the business from which the material was pur[465]*465chased to be a public nuisance. In September 1983, the Board adopted a similar resolution concerning Beltline. Thereafter, counsel for the city initiated civil actions in Kentucky state court seeking abatement of the nuisances as provided by the ordinance.

Investment and Beltline brought separate suits in the United States District Court for the Western District of Kentucky, both under 42 U.S.C. § 1983 (1982), seeking to have the ordinance declared constitutionally invalid and to have the city enjoined from enforcing the ordinance. Alleging diversity of citizenship, Investment removed the state court enforcement action pending against it to federal district court. Beltline also attempted to remove the enforcement action directed against it to federal court, but removal was denied because there was no diversity of citizenship. The District Court then consolidated all three actions. The parties have raised no issue concerning abstention in the District Court or this Court.

Neither Investment nor Beltline challenged the ordinance’s definition of obscenity, and both admit that the material seized is obscene within the Miller v. California definition. The District Court granted their motions for summary judgment. It held that because the ordinance’s license revocation procedure could result in closing down an entire place of business even though not all the material was obscene, the abatement procedure amounted to a prior restraint of both protected speech and unprotected speech. Judge Johnstone gave this example: Under the ordinance, a movie theater could be closed for repeatedly showing an obscene film on weekends even though the theater showed “The Ten Commandments,” “Snow White,” and “Gone With the Wind” on week days. The District Court also held that the ordinance’s abatement procedure unconstitutionally encouraged businesses to engage in self-censorship because the threat of having an entire place of business “abated” would induce business operators to avoid questionable, but still protected, films and publications. The District Court ruled that this self-censorship arises from the ordinance’s use of undefined terms such as “regular course of business,” “repeatedly,” and “principal part.” The court held that in this respect the ordinance was vague and would give business operators no notice of what conduct the ordinance reached.

II.

The ordinance requires the revocation of the business licenses of distributors and exhibitors of obscene material. It therefore restrains future speech of the booksellers and theaters whose licenses are revoked — both obscene and decorous speech. The main issue presented is whether Padu-cah may use license revocation as a tool to control obscenity.

The problem of using licensing to control distribution of printed expression by booksellers and publishers has a long history. Milton’s Areopagitica remains the classic argument against the licensing of speech. Writing in 1644, just after the revolution, in response to a parliamentary law reestablishing the use of licensing to control books, Milton takes as his “task ... to show that no ... well instituted state, if they valued books at all, did ever use” “this authentic Spanish policy of licensing books.” He argues instead that “the timeliest and most effectual remedy” is subsequent evaluation and seizure if necessary. Among his many arguments, Milton advances the danger to truth and beauty because they are difficult to distinguish from falsity and ugliness (however “much we thus expel of sin, so much we expel of virtue, for the matter of them both is the same”) and the problem of the “quality which ought to be in every licenser” (“he who is made judge to sit upon the birth and death of books ... had need to be a man above the common measure, both studious, learned, and judicious”. Yet, “there cannot be a more tedious and unchosen journey-work ... than to be made the perpetual reader of unchosen books and pamphlets”).

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Bluebook (online)
791 F.2d 463, 54 U.S.L.W. 2631, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/city-of-paducah-v-investment-entertainment-inc-ca6-1986.