Di Lorenzo v. City of Pacific Grove

260 Cal. App. 2d 68, 67 Cal. Rptr. 3, 1968 Cal. App. LEXIS 1823
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedMarch 14, 1968
DocketCiv. 24122
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 260 Cal. App. 2d 68 (Di Lorenzo v. City of Pacific Grove) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Di Lorenzo v. City of Pacific Grove, 260 Cal. App. 2d 68, 67 Cal. Rptr. 3, 1968 Cal. App. LEXIS 1823 (Cal. Ct. App. 1968).

Opinion

ELKINGTON, J.

—Plaintiff Adeline Di Lorenzo commenced an action seeking to enjoin the enforcement of an ordinance of defendant City of Pacific Grove. From a judgment for defendant city, entered after an order sustaining a demurrer without leave to amend, plaintiff appeals.

The question before us is whether the publisher of a newspaper has a constitutional right, by virtue of the First and Fourteenth Amendments, to place a newspaper on the premises of a private residence without the consent of the resident, where a city council has determined by ordinance that such activity constitutes a threat to public safety.

The ordinance in question is numbered 534 N.S. In its pertinent parts it states the following:

“1. The Council of the City of Pacific Grove does hereby find and determine that the practice of throwing newspapers and other advertising media on private residential property creates a serious police problem and a threat to the public safety in that residents are unaware that such material is going to be thrown on their premises and are unable to make proper provisions for the stopping of such throwing of material on their property so that their absence may be inadvertently advertised to persons of dissolute or criminal propensities as a result of the accumulation of advertising matter, handbills, and old newspapers on their property, therefore:
*70 “2. The following section of the Pacific Grove Municipal Code is amended to read as follows:
“7.20.010. Regulation of the Distribution of Newspapers and other Advertising Media to Residential Property. It shall be unlawful for any person, firm, or corporation, or any agent or employee of any person, firm or corporation to throw into, leave upon, or scatter onto any residential property in the City of Pacific Grove without the consent of the owner thereof or his agent, or the occupant of said private property any newspaper, handbill, pamphlet, circular, dodger, or any advertising sheet or matter devised or intended to promote any commercial or money-malting activity. ’ ’

Among other things, plaintiff alleges in her complaint that she was and is the owner and publisher of " The Pacific G-rove Times,” a newspaper published and distributed in Monterey County; that defendant city has prevented her, by arrest and threat of further arrests, from delivering or distributing her newspaper in private places in the City of Pacific Grove without the prior consent of the owners of such private places.

It will be noted that Ordinance 534 N.S. makes it unlawful “to throw into, leave upon, or scatter onto any residential property” without consent of the owner or occupant thereof, any newspaper. It does not prevent one from going upon residential property for the purpose of leaving a newspaper with an occupant who accepts it. Nor does it prohibit going upon such property to solicit consent to place newspapers on the premises in the future. However, the ordinance is calculated to eliminate the threat to the security of one’s home caused by an uninvited accumulation of paper at the front door— thus notifying potential intruders of the householder's absence. It appears to be “narrowly drawn” reaching only the special evil which the ordinance announces it seeks to eliminate.

Plaintiff relies principally upon Wollam v. City of Palm Springs, 59 Cal.2d 276 [29 Cal.Rptr. 1, 379 P.2d 481], She quotes the following language (p. 284) : “The right of free speech necessarily embodies the means used for its dissemination because the right is worthless in the absence of a meaningful method of its expression. To take the position that the right of free speech consists merely of the right to be free from censorship of the content rather than any protection of the means used, would, if carried to its logical conclusion, eliminate the right entirely. The right to speak freely must encompass inherently the right to communicate. The right to *71 speak one’s views aloud, restricted by the ban that prevented anyone from listening, would frame a hollow right. Rather, freedom of speech entails communication; it contemplates effective communication.” However, the court in Wollam, continued, stating (pp. 284-285) : “On the other hand the selection of the means of communication and the use of such means is not limitless. The municipality may issue reasonable and necessary regulations as to such matters. But the right to regulate does not necessarily sanction the outright prohibition. . . . The municipality in the proper exercise of its police power may prescribe volume limitations. Thus the proper test of regulation by a municipality in this area turns upon whether the regulation is a reasonable and necessary one. ...”

In Wollam, supra, the court declared unconstitutional an ordinance relating to the use of sound trucks. Before such a truck could be used, a permit of the chief of police was required. Other burdensome requirements were established by the ordinance. Among other things it required that the truck could be used only 4 hours a day and that it must proceed at a speed of at least 10 miles per hour. It limited the equipment to a maximum output of 15 watts and provided that the sound must be inaudible at a range of 200 feet. Holding the ordinance to be violative of the First Amendment the court stated (p. 288) : “In summary, the vice of the present ordinance lies in its practical prohibition of the conveyance of a message to the public. The ordinance prevents any continuous statement, argument, or sustained presentation of a point of view that cannot be transmitted during the truck’s fleeting, momentary passage. Yet the purposes of the ordinance could have been achieved without such an incursion into the field of free speech. An ordinance narrowly drawn may properly reach to the evils which it seeks to avoid. Instead, here, the ordinance sweeps within its broad ambit the constitutional right to tell a whole story by means of this method of communication. ’ ’

There appears to be a dearth of authority directly relating to the problem before us. But one such case, Buxbom v. City of Riverside (S.D. Cal. 1939) 29 F.Supp. 3, has come to our attention. There, among other things, an ordinance made it unlawful to throw a newspaper upon private property without consent of the occupant. The court, in upholding the ordinance stated (pp. 6-7) : “I cannot see how this ordinance, and especially the provisions in sections 4, 5 [referring among other things to newspapers], and 6, requiring permission of *72 the owner of property before putting handbills or advertising ón it, can be said to violate the right of a free press. Freedom of the press is a part of that freedom of expression which includes free speech. The right to speak freely does not imply the right to force one’s speech on another’s private premises. . . . [N]o constitutional principle gives one the right to stand on my front lawn and deliver a speech to whomever may listen. ... In like manner, the right to distribute literature and pamphlets does not imply the right to ‘force’ acceptance by placing them on another person’s premises without his permission.

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Bluebook (online)
260 Cal. App. 2d 68, 67 Cal. Rptr. 3, 1968 Cal. App. LEXIS 1823, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/di-lorenzo-v-city-of-pacific-grove-calctapp-1968.