"Q"-Lungian Enterprises, Inc. v. Town of Windsor Locks

272 F. Supp. 3d 289
CourtDistrict Court, D. Connecticut
DecidedSeptember 18, 2017
DocketNo. 3:13-cv-01285 (JAM)
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 272 F. Supp. 3d 289 ("Q"-Lungian Enterprises, Inc. v. Town of Windsor Locks) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Connecticut primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
"Q"-Lungian Enterprises, Inc. v. Town of Windsor Locks, 272 F. Supp. 3d 289 (D. Conn. 2017).

Opinion

RULING ON CROSS-MOTIONS FOR SUMMARY JUDGMENT

Jeffrey Alker Meyer, United States District Judge

Nude dancing is expressive activity that qualifies for protection as “free speech” under the First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution. The plaintiffs in this lawsuit ran a billiards bar and restaurant known as “Pool Table Magic” in the Town of Windsor Locks, Connecticut. They wanted to expand their business to include topless female dancers. But the Town denied them a zoning permit. So plaintiffs sued on grounds that the Town’s zoning code violates the First Amendment.

I will now dismiss this action for two reasons. First, plaintiffs don’t have' standing. For a plaintiff to have standing to maintain an action in a federal court, a plaintiff must not only prové an injury caused by a defendant but also that a court ruling in the plaintiff’s favor would redress that injury. Although plaintiffs here have sued the Town to challenge its zoning code, they have not challenged a separate state regulation that prohibits them as a liquor licensee from employing or using female topless dancers, Even if I ruled for plaintiffs that the local zoning code violated their First Amendment rights, plaintiffs would still have remained subject to the state liquor regulation, and my ruling would not redress plaintiffs’.claim of injury.

■Second, the Town’s zoning code did not violate plaintiffs’ rights under the First Amendment. Because the zoning code is not a content-based regulation.of expressive activity, it is not presumptively invalid under the First Amendment. Nor is it a verboten prior restraint on speech. To the extent that the Town’s zoning code affected plaintiffs’ plans at all to .engage in expressive activities, it operated as a valid time-place-and-manner • regulation with reasonable criteria and allowance for alternative avenues for free expression. The Town did not violate the First Amendment.

Background

In 1993, the Town of Windsor Locks adopted an adult-oriented establishment ordinance. Doc. # 54-9. The preamble to this ordinance notes that “there are a number of ‘adult oriented establishments’ located in the Town of Windsor Locks which require special supervision from the Town’s public safety agencies in order to protect and preserve the health, safety and welfare of the patrons of such establishments, as well as the health, -safety and welfare of the Town’s citizens.” Id. at 3. The preamble recites public .health and safety concerns relating to such adult businesses, including that such establishments may encourage prostitution and cause health problems from the deposit of human bodily fluids in publicly accessible locations. Id. at 3-4. The ordinance goes on to note that it is not the Town’s intent to deny any person the right to free speech as protected by the federal and state constitutions. Id. at 4.

The 1993 ordinance defines an “adult-oriented establishment” to include in relevant part an adult 'entertainment venue that features live performances by topless women. Id. at 6-7. Among other regulations, the ordinance prohibits all adult entertainment establishments from being located within 500 feet of a residential zone or 1000 feet of a public park -or playground. Id. at 8. The parties do not dispute that-at the time of the events at issue in this case the Town required that any such adult-oriented establishments be located in a B-l (business) zoning district.1

Apart from this adult business ordinance, the Town was also governed at the relevant time by a general and comprehensive zoning code. As of October 2012, the operative form of the zoning code was the 2009 printing, subject to a few 2011 amendments not relevant to this case. Section 402 of this code contained tables listing in detail both the permitted and prohibited uses of land in each type of zoning district. Doc. # 52-4 at 2-10. Section 401 of the code explained the various abbreviations that appear in these tables. Uses marked “SP” were permitted uses that were subject to site plan and design review. Doc. # 52-4 at 1. Uses marked “SU” were permitted uses that were subject to a further requirement of obtaining a special use permit. Ibid. Approval for “SP” and “SU” uses required a meeting of the Planning and Zoning Commission (PZC), and this approval was subject to conditions set out in § 1102 and § 1103 of the code. See ibid,; Doc. # 52-5 at 1-2.

In contrast to uses marked as “SP” or “SU”, uses marked “P” in the zoning code were permitted without review by the PZC, and their approval required only the ministerial issuance of a building permit.2 Uses marked “X” were prohibited outright, as was any use not. enumerated in the code, unless the PZC determined that it was “sufficiently similar to a listed use.” Doc. # 52-4 at 1. In addition, section 402A also listed certain permitted “accessory” uses, including any “accessory use customary with and incidental, to a permitted use on the same lot.” Doc. # 52-7 at 12.

In short, the Town’s general zoning code specified a range of permitted and unper-mitted uses. Adult entertainment was not mentioned anywhere in the general zoning code. Only the specific 1993 ordinance regulated these establishments by name.

In 1988, Mark Kulungian first opened a billiards hall known as Pool Table Magic in Enfield, Connecticut. Doc. #52-2 at 9. Pool Table Magic moved to its current location in 2004 at 75 Ella Grasso Boulevard in Windsor Locks. Ibid.-, Doc. # 52-2 at 10-11. This location is within a B-l zoning district, and it is not within 500 feet of a residential district or 1000 feet of a recreational area. Doc. #52-1 at 14. Accordingly, there is no indication in the record before me that the Town’s adult business ordinance would prohibit Pool Table Magic from engaging in adult-business oriented activity.

The two plaintiffs in this case are two companies connected to Kulungian and the Pool Table Magic business. Plaintiff “Q”-Lungian Enterprises, Inc., operates Pool Table Magic, and it is a tenant of the property at 75 Ella Grasso Boulevard that is owned by co-plaintiff Jessie James Realty, LLC,

On October 12, 2012, Kulungian submitted an application to the PZC for a site plan modification and for zoning approval to add “live entertainment which would include, but not be limited to, exotic [i.e. topless] dancers” at Pool Table Magic. Doc. # 52-1 at 6-7, His application stated that “the proposed accessory. use of live entertainment is customary with and incidental to the permitted use as a restaurant.” Id. at 7.

On February 7, 2013, the PZC rejected this application, and a week -later sent a letter to Kulungian stating that “the proposed accessory use is not a customary use with a restaurant or a restaurant use and is not a listed use on the Permitted Use Tables of Section 402.” Doc. # 52-1 at 29. However, the letter suggested that “the newly proposed accessory use for the building might be considered similar to an amusement enterprise or an assembly hall use, and therefore an application for site plan- modification and a special use permit should be submitted.” Ibid.

Kulungian followed up by submitting a new application on March 5, 2013, seeking a site plan modification and special use permit for the same exotic dancing proposal as in his previous application. Id. at 31-32. This application was also denied by the PZC on August 12, 2013.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
272 F. Supp. 3d 289, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/q-lungian-enterprises-inc-v-town-of-windsor-locks-ctd-2017.