Get Outdoors II, LLC v. City of San Diego

CourtCourt of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit
DecidedNovember 1, 2007
Docket05-56366
StatusPublished

This text of Get Outdoors II, LLC v. City of San Diego (Get Outdoors II, LLC v. City of San Diego) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Get Outdoors II, LLC v. City of San Diego, (9th Cir. 2007).

Opinion

FOR PUBLICATION UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE NINTH CIRCUIT

GET OUTDOORS II, LLC, A Nevada  Limited Liability Company, dba GET OUTDOORS, LLC, in No. 05-56366 California, Plaintiff-Appellant,  D.C. No. CV-03-01436-WQH v. OPINION CITY OF SAN DIEGO, CALIFORNIA, Defendants-Appellees.  Appeal from the United States District Court for the Southern District of California William Q. Hayes, District Judge, Presiding

Argued and Submitted June 6, 2007—Pasadena, California

Filed November 1, 2007

Before: Cynthia Holcomb Hall and Consuelo M. Callahan, Circuit Judges, and Lyle E. Strom,* Senior District Judge.

Opinion by Judge Hall

*The Honorable Lyle E. Strom, Senior United States District Judge for the District of Nebraska, sitting by designation.

14473 14476 GET OUTDOORS II v. SAN DIEGO COUNSEL

E. Adam Webb, The Webb Law Group, Atlanta, Georgia, for the appellant.

Randal R. Morrison, Sabine and Morrison, San Diego, Cali- fornia, for the appellee.

OPINION

HALL, Senior Circuit Judge:

This appeal is the first of three unrelated but similar cases requiring us to decide whether and to what extent an outdoor advertising company has standing to challenge the constitu- tionality of a municipal sign ordinance. In this opinion, we will outline the general legal principles applicable to all three cases and decide the appeal in the challenge to the San Diego ordinance.1 We affirm the district court’s order granting sum- mary judgment to the City of San Diego.

I. Background

Get Outdoors II is an outdoor advertising company attempt- ing to build and operate signs in the City of San Diego (“the City”). On June 2, 2003, Get Outdoors II filed twenty-four applications for billboard permits with the City, through its Development Services Department. Get Outdoors II alleges that it had already signed leases with various real property owners to post signs on their parcels.

When the company’s representative dropped off the appli- cations, a city official informed him that the City’s sign ordi- 1 We decide the other two cases in separately published memorandum dispositions. See Get Outdoors II, LLC v. City of Lemon Grove, ____ ; Get Outdoors v. City of Chula Vista, ____. GET OUTDOORS II v. SAN DIEGO 14477 nance prohibited new billboards but agreed to review the applications. The City then performed a complete review of the applications and notified Get Outdoors II the next day that it could not grant permits for any of the signs under San Diego Municipal Code (“SDMC”) § 142.1210, which prohib- its new signs bearing “off-premises” messages.2 The City sent a formal letter, dated June 9, to the same effect.3 In a later declaration, a city development official explained that, in addition to violating the billboard ban, each of the permit applications was missing key documents and that, in any case, the proposed billboards violated size and height restrictions. Each of the proposed billboards had a display square footage of 672 and a pole height of 50 feet in areas where display was limited to 50, 150 or 350 square feet and pole height limited to 20 or 30 feet.

Get Outdoors II filed this lawsuit on July 21, 2003. Its 33- page, 105-paragraph second amended complaint raises four- teen claims for relief based on the First and Fourteenth Amendments. It argues that the City’s billboard regulations are unconstitutionally overbroad under the First and Four- teenth Amendments because they favor commercial over non- commercial speech and some types of noncommercial speech 2 The “off-premises” or “off-site” distinction is a familiar one in sign regulation. The City in this case has restricted its sign permits to “on- premises” messages, which are defined as “those identifying or advertising an establishment, person, activity, goods, products, or services located on the premises where the sign is installed.” SDMC § 142.1210(a)(1)(A). “Off-premises” or “off-site” signs, by contrast, advertise products or ser- vices that are sold or provided elsewhere. See generally Metromedia, Inc. v. City of San Diego, 453 U.S. 490 (1981). The City exempts non-conforming signs that were lawfully erected before July 19, 1983. See SDMC § 127.0303. 3 The declarations offered by the City and Get Outdoors II differ as to the dates — some say the relevant events occurred on June 2 and 3, others on June 5 and 6. Both parties agree that the City contacted Get Outdoors II the day after the permits were submitted and sent the formal letter on June 9. 14478 GET OUTDOORS II v. SAN DIEGO over others, and that its own rights were violated by the ban on off-site signs, as well as certain size and height restrictions. It also argued that the permitting process was an invalid prior restraint because it lacked a deadline provision and because it gave city officials unbridled discretion to grant or deny per- mits. Get Outdoors II requested injunctive relief, damages, and attorney fees. Notably, it requested that the court invali- date the entire sign ordinance.

The parties filed cross-motions for summary judgment, which were argued in November 2004. By that time, the City had enacted several legislative amendments, including a “message substitution” clause, a 45-day deadline for decisions on all permit applications, and a judicial review provision. See SDMC §§ 142.1210(a)(10) (D); 129.0808; 129.0809. The dis- trict court granted summary judgment to the City on July 13, 2005. See Get Outdoors II v. City of San Diego, 381 F. Supp. 2d 1250 (S.D. Cal. 2005).

The district court held that Get Outdoors II lacked standing to bring its overbreadth claim because it was challenging pro- visions of the ordinance other than the provision that applied to it, found the billboard ban constitutional, rejected the chal- lenge to the permit procedure as moot, and rejected the unbri- dled discretion claim on the merits. The court also held that the challenged provisions were severable because the content- neutral size and height restrictions may function indepen- dently from the provisions regulating sign copy and location. It granted summary judgment to the City.

Get Outdoors II filed its timely appeal on August 17, 2005. We review the district court’s dismissal for lack of standing, dismissal for mootness, and grant of summary judgment de novo. See Ruiz v. City of Santa Maria, 160 F.3d 543, 548 (9th Cir. 1998); Desert Outdoor Advertising, Inc. v. City of Moreno Valley, 103 F.3d 814, 818 (9th Cir. 1996). We may affirm on any ground supported by the record. Lambert v. Blodgett, 393 F.3d 943, 965 (9th Cir. 2004). We hold that the GET OUTDOORS II v. SAN DIEGO 14479 City’s billboard size and height restrictions do not violate the First Amendment, that Get Outdoors II’s permit applications violated these restrictions, and that it therefore lacks standing to challenge the ban on off-premises messages. Because we also hold that the challenge to the permit process fails, we affirm.

II. Standing

We turn first to the question of whether Get Outdoors II has standing to challenge the entire sign ordinance on the basis of the injuries it has alleged here. Because Get Outdoors II has made what it calls an overbreadth claim, it argues that it falls into a special exceptional category of standing doctrine. Throughout its briefs, Get Outdoors II uses “overbreadth” to describe two different arguments: (1) a severability argument that an injury caused by one provision of the sign ordinance should be considered an injury caused by the entire sign ordi- nance; and (2) a traditional overbreadth claim that certain pro- visions of the sign code are unconstitutionally overbroad because they threaten to burden the speech of non-parties to this case.

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