Visual Educators, Inc. v. Koeppel

268 So. 2d 22, 289 Ala. 410, 1972 Ala. LEXIS 1080
CourtSupreme Court of Alabama
DecidedSeptember 28, 1972
Docket6 Div. 883
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 268 So. 2d 22 (Visual Educators, Inc. v. Koeppel) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Alabama primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Visual Educators, Inc. v. Koeppel, 268 So. 2d 22, 289 Ala. 410, 1972 Ala. LEXIS 1080 (Ala. 1972).

Opinion

HEFLIN, Chief Justice.

This case was assigned to another Justice on original submission. It has been reassigned to the writer for preparation of an opinion for the court.

[413]*413This is an appeal from an order of the Circuit Court of Tuscaloosa County, Alabama, denying the appellant-petitioner Visual Educators, Inc.’s verified petition for a writ of mandamus requiring the appelleesrespondents, William Koeppel, License Commissioner of the City of Tuscaloosa, Alabama, and C. Snow Hinton, James L. Chancy and Hilliard Fletcher, Commissioners of the City of Tuscaloosa, Alabama, to issue a license for the operation of a motion picture house within the corporate limits of the City of Tuscaloosa. The petition alleged that the petitioner (appellant) had applied for a license to the License Commissioner who denied the application and that the following day the petition was presented to the Board of Commissioners of the City of Tuscaloosa, who also denied the application. The petition also contained the appellant-petitioner’s statement that it intended to show “adult only” motion pictures; that it had complied with all material parts of the licensing ordinance; and that the respondent’s failure to issue said license amounted to a gross and palpable abuse of discretion.

Demurrers were filed by the appelleesrespondents and were overruled by the court. On the same day an answer was filed on behalf of all appellee-respondents.

The answer, in essence, stated that the respondents had ascertained that the building wherein the appellant-petitioner proposed to conduct his business had a seating capacity of only 88 persons; that the city had several licensed theaters, none of which had a seating capacity of less than 326 people; that no legitimate theater of that size could exist except through the exhibiting of obscene movies; and that such obscene movies would appeal to prurient interest, would be utterly without redeeming social value or importance, would be patently offensive to prevailing or contemporary standards in the city and county of Tuscaloosa, and would go substantially beyond customary limits of candor in describing or representing such matters. The answer further recited that the Commission Board had determined that the proposed business of exhibiting sub-standard and pornographic material was not a useful and harmless business and that such business would be susceptible to debilitating influences and dissipating tendencies hurtful to public morals and, therefore, productive of disorder and injurious to the public. The answer further recited that the respondents had never licensed any theater to engage in the business of showing “adult only” or “X-rated” movies and adopted as a part of the answer a resolution which had been adopted on May 25, 1971. The answer further recited that the respondent-Commissioners of the City of Tuscaloosa had the responsibility of setting a policy and determining a course of action to promote public safety, peace, good, order and decency within the community, pursuant to the provisions of Section 751 of Title 37 of the Code of Alabama, 1940^ and in exercise of that authority determined that the films which the petitioner intended to show were contrary to public safety, peace, good, order and decency and, therefore, refused the issuance of a license.

The said resolution of the City stated that the express purpose of the theater was to show motion pictures which depicted nudity, sexual conduct, or sadomasochistic abuse, as well as other matters, and that in the opinion of the Commission Board the public good or safety demanded that it refuse to license such theater.

At trial the testimony of William É. Koeppel, the License Commissioner, disclosed that he had no facts concerning the operation of the appellant-petitioner’s motion picture theater except that it was to be a small, adults only theater. Mayor C. Snow Hinton testified that he and the other board members felt that showing “X-rated” movies and the by-products of such a theater as was proposed to be opened in Tuscaloosa was “contrary to the families-[414]*414of [Tuscaloosa] . . He also stated that to show “lewd, immoral X-rated, adult movies” would be contrary to the standards of the community, and that he had determined that it would be “contrary to the safety, peace and good order and decency of [Tuscaloosa] to issue a license”.

The city ordinance on which the License ■Commissioner and Board of Commissioners ■were acting is found in Title 37, § 751, and reads as follows:

“Any city or town shall have the power to license, tax, regulate, restrain, or prohibit theatrical and other amusements . . . theatres, parks and other places of amusement, when in the opinion of the council the public good or safety demands it, to refuse to license any or all such business . . . .”

Appellant-petitioner, without challenging the ordinance as unconstitutional on its face, contends that the arbitrary and unfounded denial of a license to operate a ■moving picture theater on the conjecture, without proof, that it might exhibit obscene pictures, imposes a prior restraint on the freedom of expression in contravention of Article I, § 4 of the Alabama Constitution, as well as the First Amendment to the United States Constitution.

This court is, of course, bound by the federal constitution, including the commands of the First Amendment, which have been made obligatory as to the states through the Fourteenth Amendment. Be•cause the federal constitution is controlling in the event of conflict with any state or city statute or ordinance, or any state constitutional provision, this court must consider the federal constitutional implications of this case.

This approach begins with the premise that “[A]ny system of prior restraints of expression . . . bears[s] a heavy presumption against its constitutional validity”. Bantam Books, Inc. v. Sullivan, 372 U.S. 58, 70, 83 S.Ct. 631, 639, 9 L.Ed.2d 584, 593. It is, of course, incunri bent upon the censor to prove that the film in question is obscene. Freedman v. Maryland, 380 U.S. 51, 85 S.Ct. 734, 13 L.Ed.2d 649.

The above mentioned presumption and burden of proof directives are indicative of the cautious eye with which the Supreme Court of the United States views any system of prior restraint. This attitude is fundamental because censorship in advance is frought with danger, for in attempting to prevent, in advance, the commission of acts unprotected by the Constitution, it will also prevent the lawful exercise of free speech on an erroneous finding in advance that the applicant intends to carry on unlawful speech. American Civil Liberties Union v. Board of Education, 55 Cal.2d 167, 10 Cal.Rptr. 647, 359 P.2d 45, It should also be noted that the protection afforded by the First Amendment does not turn upon the truth, popularity .or social value of the ideas and beliefs which are offered. New York Times Co. v. Sullivan, 376 U.S. 254, 84 S.Ct. 710, 11 L.Ed.2d 686.

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Bluebook (online)
268 So. 2d 22, 289 Ala. 410, 1972 Ala. LEXIS 1080, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/visual-educators-inc-v-koeppel-ala-1972.