D.G. Restaurant Corp. v. City of Myrtle Beach

953 F.2d 140, 1991 WL 276133
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit
DecidedDecember 30, 1991
DocketNo. 90-1509
StatusPublished
Cited by36 cases

This text of 953 F.2d 140 (D.G. Restaurant Corp. v. City of Myrtle Beach) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
D.G. Restaurant Corp. v. City of Myrtle Beach, 953 F.2d 140, 1991 WL 276133 (4th Cir. 1991).

Opinion

OPINION

NIEMEYER, Circuit Judge:

In response to the anticipated establishment of an adult entertainment business offering topless dancing in Myrtle Beach, South Carolina, the city council adopted an ordinance that prohibits a business from offering nudity within 500 feet of residential areas, other regulated adult businesses, churches, schools and public parks. An affected business filed suit to challenge the ordinance on the ground that it improperly regulates free speech as secured by the First and Fourteenth Amendments. [142]*142The district court agreed and enjoined Myrtle Beach from enforcing the ordinance, concluding that the ordinance is not “content neutral,” but rather was enacted “to restrict the message purveyed by topless dancing.”

We reverse because the ordinance is narrowly tailored to serve the sufficiently important governmental interest of regulating the location of businesses offering nudity and therefore justifies the incidental limitation on First Amendment freedoms.

I

Myrtle Beach is a coastal resort city located along the Atlantic Ocean in South Carolina. D.G. Restaurant Corporation operates a nightclub in Myrtle Beach at 1008 South King’s Highway. When the drinking age in South Carolina was raised from 18 to 21 and business at the nightclub declined, the principals of D.G. Restaurant decided to convert their relatively old bar known as Dixie Electric to a “Las Vegas-style” nightclub offering topless dancing, to be known as PT’s Show Club.

In May 1989, D.G. Restaurant applied to the city for a building permit to make the necessary renovations and advised city officials of its plans to provide adult entertainment on the premises. These officials brought the plans to the attention of the city manager who, four days later, announced them at a city council meeting. On receipt of the information, the city council hurriedly scheduled a special council meeting, to be held three days later on May 26, 1989, for a first reading of a proposed ordinance that would regulate the location of adult entertainment businesses. Because of the short notice of this meeting, no studies or reports were presented to the city council about the effects that adult entertainment would have on the community, and the required recommendation of the planning and zoning commission was not obtained. Nonetheless, within the next month a staff report supporting the ordinance was reviewed and recommended by the planning and zoning commission and was presented to the council for its review in connection with the second reading of the ordinance. The report explained the justifications for and the legality of the proposed ordinance. It stated that “topless or otherwise nude entertainment in several large areas of the City ... would be incompatible with residential or family-oriented tourist uses.” The report added:

Like the Renton ordinance and similar code requirements adopted in Dallas, Boston, Seattle, Indianapolis, Los Ange-les, Chicago, Kansas City, Oakland, and Detroit, among others, the Myrtle Beach proposal is intended to protect the quality of life in its neighborhoods without violating first amendment concerns; not unlike numerous other existing land use and development restrictions.

The same evening, on June 27, 1989, the city council passed the measure as Ordinance 89-20.

The preamble to Ordinance 89-20 recites the city council’s concerns with adult entertainment businesses:

[T]he Council is concerned that the location of such establishments within the City of Myrtle Beach without adequate time, place and manner regulations could have a deleterious effect on the quality of city neighborhoods; and ... the Council finds in particular that the use of property for adult entertainment establishments is not compatible with residential, religious, and educational uses of property in the City of Myrtle Beach.

The ordinance provides that any business which permits nudity shall not be established within 500 feet of residential uses, other regulated adult businesses, churches or other houses of worship, schools, and public playgrounds, swimming pools and parks. Nudity is defined to be the exposure of “human genitals, pubic regions, buttocks and female breasts below a point immediately above the top of the areola.”

D.G. Restaurant’s application for a building permit to renovate the nightclub was approved in June 1989 and construction was completed the following January. When, however, it applied for a business license as PT’s Show Club on February 8, 1990, the city denied the application be[143]*143cause the proposed use would violate Ordinance 89-20.

II

D.G. Restaurant contends that Ordinance 89-20 is directed specifically at topless dancing, which it claims is an expressive and communicative activity protected by the free speech clause of the First Amendment. In support of the argument that the public nudity statute was specifically intended to frustrate D.G. Restaurant’s plans to establish a club which featured topless dancing, D.G. Restaurant notes that Myrtle Beach never took action to regulate adult entertainment until after its plans to open a topless club were announced, and that once the city became aware of the plans, it rushed the enactment process to adopt a responsive ordinance. D.G. Restaurant does not, however, allege that the hurried enactment process rendered the ordinance illegal. Instead, it urges the simple point that topless dancing conveys a message with which the City of Myrtle Beach disagreed, and when confronted with D.G. Restaurant’s plans, the city quickly enacted a law with the narrow purpose of regulating D.G. Restaurant’s proposed establishment of a forum for that message, thereby restraining D.G. Restaurant’s right to free speech in violation of the First and Fourteenth Amendments.

The district court conducted a trial on the First Amendment issues and concluded that the timing of the enactment of Ordinance 89-20, combined with the ultimate effect of the ban on public displays of nudity, created a strong inference that Myrtle Beach’s primary concern was “to restrict the message purveyed by topless dancing.” The court found that the city went to great lengths to prevent the opening of even one club offering adult entertainment in the city, and that such conduct established that the city’s predominant concern was the “suppress[ion] of the plaintiff’s protected speech.” Finally, the court concluded:

Ordinance 89-20 was directed specifically against the plaintiff and was intended to prevent the plaintiff from opening and operating its place of business as planned because the City disagreed with the plaintiff’s message.... Because the city of Myrtle Beach was attempting to restrict the message purveyed by topless entertainment by preventing D.G.’s from opening, Ordinance 89-20 as applied to the plaintiff is a content-based rather than content-neutral regulation of speech. As such, it presumptively violates the First Amendment.

While it has long been held that the protection afforded by the free speech provision of the First Amendment extends, to some extent, beyond the written or spoken word to the communication of ideas through conduct, the courts have not applied the same First Amendment protections to physical conduct as is afforded to purer modes of communicative speech. Compare Cohen v. California, 403 U.S. 15, 26, 91 S.Ct.

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Bluebook (online)
953 F.2d 140, 1991 WL 276133, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dg-restaurant-corp-v-city-of-myrtle-beach-ca4-1991.