Salazar v. Majestic Realty Co.

CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedDecember 4, 2025
DocketB343420
StatusPublished

This text of Salazar v. Majestic Realty Co. (Salazar v. Majestic Realty Co.) 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
Salazar v. Majestic Realty Co., (Cal. Ct. App. 2025).

Opinion

Filed 12/4/25 CERTIFIED FOR PUBLICATION

IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA

SECOND APPELLATE DISTRICT

DIVISION ONE

ALEX SALAZAR, B343420

Plaintiff and Appellant, (Los Angeles County Super. Ct. No. 24PSCV02047) v.

MAJESTIC REALTY CO. et al.,

Defendants and Respondents.

APPEAL from an order of the Superior Court of Los Angeles County, Christian R. Gullon, Judge. Reversed with directions. Law Office of D. Gill Sperlein and D. Gill Sperlein for Plaintiff and Appellant. Randazza Legal Group, Marc J. Randazza and Alex J. Shepard for Amicus Curiae First Amendment Lawyers Association on behalf of Plaintiff and Appellant. Glaser Weil Fink Howard Jordan & Shapiro, Peter C. Sheridan and Steven Basileo for Defendants and Respondents. ____________________________ Plaintiff Alex Salazar appeals from the denial of a preliminary injunction against defendants and respondents Majestic Realty Co., Redlands Joint Venture, LLC, and Mountain Grove Partners, LLC. Defendants own and operate Citrus Plaza and Mountain Grove, two adjoining shopping centers (the Centers). Plaintiff, an activist, requested permission to distribute leaflets at the Centers proclaiming his view that “[m]en are not legally and financially responsible for supporting a child” born outside of marriage, and inviting the public to attend a meeting on the subject. Pursuant to the Centers’ policy prohibiting expressive activity on their property, including leafletting, the Centers declined plaintiff’s request. Plaintiff sued, contending that under Robins v. Pruneyard Shopping Center (1979) 23 Cal.3d 899 (Pruneyard), he has the right to leaflet at private shopping centers under the California Constitution’s liberty of speech provision. He then moved for a preliminary injunction. The trial court found that under Pruneyard, “a blanket ban [on leafletting] is unconstitutional,” and the balance of harms favored plaintiff. The court nonetheless concluded plaintiff was unlikely to prevail on the merits and denied the preliminary injunction. The court relied on plaintiff’s deposition testimony, in which, when asked where in the Centers he would like to leaflet, plaintiff identified areas near the entrances of three businesses within the Centers. The trial court cited case law holding that Pruneyard does not apply to store entrances and the area surrounding them. The court further found plaintiff’s leaflets offered unlicensed legal advice, namely that men do not have to

2 comply with their child support obligations, and thus, were constitutionally unprotected. The trial court erred. Case law establishes plaintiff has standing to raise a facial challenge to the Centers’ restriction on free expression without demonstrating his own expression is protected. Alternatively, plaintiff has demonstrated his own constitutional injury. We disagree with the trial court that plaintiff’s deposition testimony limits his challenge to being allowed to leaflet at store entrances, nor do his leaflets constitute unlicensed legal advice. Accordingly, plaintiff may invoke Pruneyard, under which the Centers’ total ban is unconstitutional. Also unconstitutional is the Centers’ requirement that persons obtain permission before engaging in expressive activity, which lacks objective criteria guiding the Centers’ discretion in applying the permit requirement. Defendants dispute the trial court’s finding that the balance of harms favored plaintiff. We conclude the trial court did not abuse its discretion in so finding. Accordingly, we reverse the order denying plaintiff’s request for a preliminary injunction and direct the trial court to grant a preliminary injunction enjoining defendants from enforcing the total ban on expressive activity and the unfettered permitting requirement at the Centers. Consistent with Pruneyard, defendants may impose appropriate time, place, and manner restrictions on expressive activity, but they may not ban it entirely.

3 BACKGROUND

1. Plaintiff’s expressive activity Plaintiff identifies himself as “an activist with a strong interest in increasing dialog about men’s reproductive rights and responsibilities.” As described by the trial court, “Plaintiff seeks to explain that men have a legal right to decide whether to pay child support for a child born outside of marriage, a movement which he has coined men’s eMANcipation.” Plaintiff wishes to “bring[ ] people together to discuss the issue,” and has “created a 12-point, hour-long[ ] presentation on the topic.” To inform people of the meetings at which he intends to give his presentation, plaintiff distributes flyers at shopping centers. 1 Two such flyers are in the record. The first states, “Men are not owned by women through their bodies!” (Boldface & some capitalization omitted.) It continues, “Men are not legally and financially responsible for supporting a child that a woman chooses to have, for women’s reproductive decisions that only a woman can make with her female body, and for what women do with their bodies. And a man has the right to choose to support a child for any child born outside of marriage. [¶] Learn about men’s eMANcipation and join the fight[,] men. Contact Alex Salazar at [e-mail address omitted]. I hold meetings in Riverside. Email me for meeting details.” The bottom of the flyer states, “Learn the truth. Learn your rights. Learn that you are not owned by women through their bodies.”

1 At his deposition, plaintiff testified he had distributed his flyers on seven occasions, but had yet to give his presentation because no one had contacted him in response to his flyers.

4 The second flyer largely mirrors the first apart from many misspellings. 2 The second flyer provides additional information about the meetings plaintiff is offering, stating, “I give a [one- hour] pre[sen]ta[t]ion in Riverside to teach men that they do have the r[e]pr[o]ductive right to choo[s]e too and why they are not r[e]sponsible for supporting a woman’s r[e]pr[o]ductive d[ec]i[s]ion to have a child.”

2. Complaint Defendants own and operate the Centers, which are adjacent to one another. The Centers prohibit “ ‘soliciting, petitions, polling, . . . peddling, political causes, [and] distribution of pamphlets’ ” on their property, and have signs at each entrance so stating. The signs further state, “All offenders will be prosecuted to the fullest extent of the law,” and the prohibitions are “[e]nforced by Redlands Police Dept.” (Some capitalization omitted.) The Centers also have a code of conduct, including section 34, which states, “All non-commercial expressive activity must be in compliance with the Centers’ rules for such activities including, but not limited to, obtaining the prior written permission of the Centers’ management.” Defendants acknowledge in their briefing that, to the extent section 34 suggests the Centers might grant permission for noncommercial

2 In opposition to the preliminary injunction motion, defendants submitted a declaration from Paul Bresenden, the owner of a marketing agency, who opined plaintiff had deliberately misspelled words in the second flyer “to avoid censorship algorithms used by social media sites to filter out offensive words or ideas.”

5 expressive activity, they in fact never do, instead imposing a total ban on expressive activity. Plaintiff contacted the Centers and requested permission to distribute his flyers at the Centers. The Centers denied the request given their policy prohibiting political activity and distribution of leaflets. Plaintiff repeated his request through counsel and the Centers again denied his request. Plaintiff then sued defendants, followed shortly by a motion for a preliminary injunction. The parties agreed to take limited discovery, after which plaintiff filed his first amended complaint, the operative complaint in this appeal.

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