Richland Bookmart, Inc. v. Knox County, Tennessee ( 2009 )


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  •                        RECOMMENDED FOR FULL-TEXT PUBLICATION
    Pursuant to Sixth Circuit Rule 206
    File Name: 09a0052p.06
    UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
    FOR THE SIXTH CIRCUIT
    _________________
    RICHLAND BOOKMART, INC. d/b/a TOWN AND X
    -
    VIDEO SUPERSTORE, INC.; and GREG TURNER, --
    COUNTRY BOOKSTORE; KNOXVILLE ADULT
    -
    Nos. 07-6469; 08-5036
    d/b/a RAYMOND’S PLACE,
    Plaintiffs-Appellants/ ,>
    Cross-Appellees, -
    -
    -
    -
    v.
    -
    -
    Defendant-Appellee/ -
    KNOX COUNTY, TENNESSEE,
    Cross-Appellant. -
    -
    N
    Appeal from the United States District Court
    for the Eastern District of Tennessee at Knoxville.
    No. 05-00229—Thomas W. Phillips, District Judge.
    Argued: December 11, 2008
    Decided and Filed: February 12, 2009
    Before: BOGGS, Chief Judge; KETHLEDGE, Circuit Judge; and THAPAR, District
    *
    Judge.
    _________________
    COUNSEL
    ARGUED: Frierson M. Graves, BAKER, DONELSON, BEARMAN, CALDWELL
    & BERKOWITZ, Memphis, Tennessee, for Appellants. Scott D. Bergthold, LAW
    OFFICE OF SCOTT D. BERGTHOLD, Chattanooga, Tennessee, for Appellee.
    ON BRIEF: Frierson M. Graves, BAKER, DONELSON, BEARMAN, CALDWELL
    & BERKOWITZ, Memphis, Tennessee, Michael F. Pleasants, Sr., PLEASANTS LAW
    FIRM, Memphis, Tennessee, Joseph J. Levitt, Jr., Knoxville, Tennessee, for Appellants.
    Scott D. Bergthold, Bryan Allen Dykes, LAW OFFICE OF SCOTT D. BERGTHOLD,
    Chattanooga, Tennessee, for Appellee.
    *
    The Honorable Amul R. Thapar, United States District Judge for the Eastern District of
    Kentucky, sitting by designation.
    1
    Nos. 07-6469; 08-5036       Richland Bookmart, et al. v. Knox                       Page 2
    County, Tennessee
    _________________
    OPINION
    _________________
    BOGGS, Chief Judge. Three sexually oriented businesses, Richland Bookmart,
    Inc., Adult Video Superstore, Inc., and Raymond’s Place filed suit to challenge the
    constitutionality of a Knox County Ordinance that establishes licensing requirements and
    regulations for sexually-oriented businesses. Plaintiffs attacked several provisions of the
    Ordinance, on the theory that the Ordinance is unconstitutional as applied to them and
    on its face. Upon motions by both parties, the district court granted summary judgment
    in favor of Knox County and denied Plaintiffs' motion for partial summary judgment,
    with one small exception: the court ordered the severance of two crimes, “racketeering”
    and “dealing in controlled substances,” from the list of crimes that triggered the
    Ordinance’s civil disability provision. Plaintiffs’ appeal raises four main issues. First,
    Plaintiffs claim that the Ordinance is an unconstitutional infringement on First
    Amendment freedoms that is not justified by adequate evidence that local sexually
    oriented businesses produce adverse “secondary effects” or that the Ordinance is
    designed to remedy such effects. Second, Plaintiffs claim that the definitions of
    “nudity,” “semi-nudity,” and “adult motel,” as well as the prohibition on the sale and
    consumption of alcohol are not narrowly tailored and are unconstitutionally overbroad.
    Third, they claim that the Ordinance enacts an unconstitutional prior restraint. Fourth,
    they claim that the Ordinance’s regulation of business hours is preempted by Tennessee
    law. Knox County cross-appeals, arguing that the district court erroneously ordered the
    severance of “racketeering” and “dealing in controlled substances” from the Ordinance’s
    civil disability provision. With regard to the issues presented by Plaintiffs’ appeal, we
    affirm the district court’s decision; with regard to the cross-appeal, we reverse the order
    to sever.
    Nos. 07-6469; 08-5036       Richland Bookmart, et al. v. Knox                      Page 3
    County, Tennessee
    I
    Richland Bookmart, Inc. (“Richland”) and Adult Video Superstore, Inc. (“Adult
    Video”) are adult stores that sell and rent books, magazines and videos to adults. Both
    Richland and Adult Video are “off-site consumption” or “retail only” businesses – they
    do not operate on-site facilities for viewing of films or for other adult entertainment.
    Richland has operated for over twenty years; Adult Video opened in 2004. Greg Turner
    operates Raymond’s Place (“Raymond’s”), an adult cabaret that provides “adult
    entertainment to consenting adults,” including female dancers performing in the nude
    or clad in pasties and g-strings.
    In the fall of 2004, the Knox County Commission (“County”) began to update
    its regulation of sexually oriented businesses, culminating in Ordinance O-05-2-102
    (“Ordinance”). The Ordinance enacted licensing requirements and other regulations
    applicable to “sexually oriented businesses,” which include adult arcades, adult
    bookstores or adult video stores, adult cabarets, adult motels, adult motion picture
    theaters, semi-nude model studios, sexual device shops, and sexual encounter centers.
    An “adult bookstore or adult video store” is defined as “a commercial
    establishment which, as one of its principal business purposes, offers for sale or rental
    for any form of consideration any one or more of the following: books or [visual
    representations] which are characterized by their emphasis upon the display of ‘specified
    sexual activities’ or ‘specified anatomical areas’.” In reaction to a June 29, 2005
    decision by the Tennessee Supreme Court, which invalidated a zoning ordinance on the
    basis of its vague definition of “adult bookstore,” see City of Knoxville v. Entertainment
    Resources, LLC, 
    166 S.W.3d 650
     (Tenn. 2005), the County amended its definition of
    adult bookstore or video store. The amended Ordinance specifies that a “principal
    business purpose” is defined to mean 35% or more of any one of the following:
    (a) displayed merchandise, (b) wholesale or (c) retail value of the displayed
    merchandise, (d) revenues derived from sale or rental, or (e) interior business space (we
    shall refer to this provision as the “35% threshold”). In addition, (f) a business that
    Nos. 07-6469; 08-5036           Richland Bookmart, et al. v. Knox                             Page 4
    County, Tennessee
    “regularly features” the “specified sexual activities” or “anatomical areas” and “prohibits
    access by minors, because of age, to the premises, and advertises itself as offering ‘adult’
    or ‘xxx’ or ‘x-rated’ or ‘erotic’ or ‘sexual’ or ‘pornographic’ material on signage visible
    from a public right of way,” is also defined to have the principal business purpose
    sufficient to bring it within the scope of the Ordinance.
    An adult cabaret is defined as “a nightclub, bar, juice bar, restaurant, bottle club,
    or similar commercial establishment, whether or not alcoholic beverages are served,
    which regularly features persons who appear semi-nude.” “Semi-nude or state of
    semi-nudity” is further defined to mean “the showing of the female breast below a
    horizontal line across the top of the areola and extending across the width of the breast
    at that point, or the showing of the male or female buttocks. This definition shall include
    the lower portion of the human female breast, but shall not include any portion of the
    cleavage of the human female breasts exhibited by a bikini, dress, blouse, shirt, leotard,
    or similar wearing apparel provided the areola is not exposed in whole or in part.”1
    The Ordinance regulates sexually oriented businesses in three general ways: it
    requires that such businesses and all employees thereof be licensed on an annual basis,
    Secs. 4-12; it regulates business hours, the manner in which sexually explicit films or
    videos may be exhibited, and interior configuration requirements, Secs. 13-15; and it
    prohibits certain activities, Sec. 18. With regard to licensing, the Ordinance provides
    that a license “shall” be issued to both businesses and employees unless one of the
    specified conditions is met. One such condition is the applicant’s conviction, a plea of
    guilty or of nolo contendere to a “specified criminal activity,” namely “rape, aggravated
    rape, aggravated sexual assault, public indecency, statutory rape, rape of a child, sexual
    exploitation of a minor, indecent exposure,” “dealing in controlled substances,” or
    “racketeering.” Sec. 5(a)(6), (b)(5). A business can also lose its license if it knowingly
    hires someone who committed one of these specified crimes within the previous five
    years. Sec. 10.
    1
    The word “bikini” was added into the definition at the same time as the definition of “adult
    bookstore or adult video store” was amended.
    Nos. 07-6469; 08-5036       Richland Bookmart, et al. v. Knox                      Page 5
    County, Tennessee
    The Ordinance prohibits nudity and the “sale, use or consumption” of alcoholic
    beverage on the premises of a sexually oriented business. “Nudity or a state of nudity”
    is defined to mean “the showing of the human male or female genitals, pubic area, vulva,
    anus, anal cleft or cleavage with less than a fully opaque covering, or the showing of the
    female breast with less than a fully opaque covering of any part of the nipple and
    areola.”
    In May 2005, Richland and Adult Video filed suit seeking a preliminary
    injunction, a permanent injunction, and declaratory judgment against the Ordinance.
    After the Ordinance was amended as noted above and Raymond’s motion to intervene
    was granted, the court denied the County’s motion to dismiss. Plaintiffs moved for
    partial summary judgment, arguing that four provisions of the Ordinance are overbroad
    and not narrowly tailored, and the County moved for summary judgment in November
    2007. On December 17, 2007, the district court denied Plaintiffs’ motion and granted
    the County’s motion for summary judgment with one exception: the court ordered that
    “racketeering” and “dealing in controlled substances” be severed from the Ordinance’s
    definition of “specified criminal activity.”
    II
    We review a district court’s grant of summary judgment de novo. Trustees of the
    Mich. Laborers’ Health Care Fund v. Gibbons, 
    209 F.3d 587
    , 590 (6th Cir. 2000). The
    decision below may be affirmed only if the pleadings, affidavits, and other submissions
    show “that there is no genuine issue as to any material fact and that the moving party is
    entitled to a judgment as a matter of law.” Fed. R. Civ. P. 56(c). In determining whether
    a genuine issue of material fact exists, we draw all reasonable inferences in the light
    most favorable to the non-moving party. See Matsushita Elec. Indus. Co., Ltd. v. Zenith
    Radio Corp., 
    475 U.S. 574
    , 587-88 (1986).
    Nos. 07-6469; 08-5036        Richland Bookmart, et al. v. Knox                        Page 6
    County, Tennessee
    III
    Plaintiffs’ first argument attacks the relevance and sufficiency of the evidence
    relied on by the County to justify the regulation of adult stores selling for off-site
    consumption only and of stores barely meeting the 35% threshold. Furthermore,
    Plaintiffs claim to have produced their own evidence that puts the County’s factual
    findings and rationale in sufficient doubt to render summary judgment for the County
    inappropriate. In order to evaluate the merits of Plaintiffs’ first claim, we must first
    determine how much and what kind of evidence is required to justify a regulation such
    as the present Ordinance, and how much and what kind of evidence is required to mount
    a successful challenge thereto.
    A
    A regulation of sexually oriented businesses, such as the Knox County
    Ordinance, implicates at least two protected categories of speech: first, sexually explicit
    but non-obscene speech, such as adult publications and adult videos, and second,
    “symbolic speech” or “expressive conduct,” such as nude dancing. The Supreme Court
    has held that a restriction on protected speech is “sufficiently justified if it is within the
    constitutional power of the Government; if it furthers an important or substantial
    governmental interest; if the governmental interest is unrelated to the suppression of free
    expression; and if the incidental restriction on alleged First Amendment freedoms is no
    greater than is essential to the furtherance of that interest.” United States v. O’Brien, 
    391 U.S. 367
    , 377 (1968). Similarly, “time, place, and manner” regulations of protected
    speech will survive constitutional scrutiny “so long as they are [content neutral,]
    designed to serve a substantial governmental interest and do not unreasonably limit
    alternative avenues of communication.” City of Renton v. Playtime Theatres, 
    475 U.S. 41
    , 47 (1986).
    The Supreme Court has indicated that “the [O’Brien] standard for judging the
    validity of restrictions on expressive conduct . . . in the last analysis is little, if any,
    different from the standard applied to time, place, or manner restrictions.” Ward v. Rock
    Nos. 07-6469; 08-5036             Richland Bookmart, et al. v. Knox                                 Page 7
    County, Tennessee
    Against Racism, 
    491 U.S. 781
    , 797-98 (1989) (internal quotation marks and citation
    omitted); see also Barnes v. Glen Theatre, Inc., 
    501 U.S. 560
    , 566 (1991) (“In Clark [v.
    Cmty. for Creative Non-Violence, 
    468 U.S. 288
     (1984),] we observed that this [time,
    place, or manner] test has been interpreted to embody much the same standards as those
    set forth in United States v. O’Brien . . . .”). Accordingly, we have previously treated
    the two standards as sufficiently similar to be applied interchangeably. See, e.g.,
    Sensations, Inc. v. City of Grand Rapids, 
    526 F.3d 291
    , 299 n.6 (6th Cir. 2008); DLS,
    Inc. v. City of Chattanooga, 
    107 F.3d 403
    , 410 n.6 (6th Cir. 1997). Yet, the two
    formulations were penned in different contexts and employ different language; neither
    the Supreme Court nor this court has made explicit whether and when the differences
    have any legal significance. We continue to adhere to the position that the O’Brien and
    Renton inquiries “embody much the same standards,” Barnes, 
    501 U.S. at 566
    . DLS,
    Inc., 
    107 F.3d at
    410 n.6. At the same time, a clear resolution of Plaintiffs’ first claim
    is aided by an understanding of the difference between O’Brien and its progeny and
    Renton and its progeny.
    Unlike content-based regulations that are subject to the “most exacting scrutiny,”
    regulations “unrelated to the content of speech are subject to an intermediate level of
    scrutiny.” Turner Broad. Sys. v. FCC, 
    512 U.S. 622
    , 642 (1994). In O’Brien, the
    Supreme Court set out the intermediate scrutiny standard for the constitutionality of
    content-neutral regulations of expression and applied it to a regulation of general
    conduct (a prohibition on the destruction of Selective Service draft cards) that
    incidentally burdened “symbolic speech” or “expressive conduct” (the burning of a draft
    card to protest the war). 
    391 U.S. at 376-77
    . In Renton, the Supreme Court confronted
    another kind of content-neutral law: a time, place, or manner regulation aimed at
    negative “secondary effects” of protected speech.2
    2
    We have acknowledged that, to some extent, the classification of restrictions on sexually explicit
    establishments as content-neutral is a legal fiction – but one that has been generally followed. Richland
    Bookmart v. Nichols, 
    137 F.3d 435
    , 440 (6th Cir. 1998). As we have noted, “[a]lthough five members of
    the Court abandoned the premise that such restrictions are content-neutral sixteen years later in City of Los
    Angeles v. Alameda Books, [
    535 U.S. 425
     (2002)] the Court continued to apply intermediate scrutiny to
    laws targeting ‘secondary effects.’” 729, Inc. v. Kenton County Fiscal Court, 
    515 F.3d 485
    , 490-91 (6th
    Cir. 2008).
    Nos. 07-6469; 08-5036       Richland Bookmart, et al. v. Knox                       Page 8
    County, Tennessee
    In Renton, the Supreme Court reformulated the requirements of the O’Brien test
    and made them more specific as applied to the subset of content-neutral regulations then
    before the Court. Renton’s standard applies to time, place, and manner regulations rather
    than to prohibitions of speech, thereby limiting its application to laws that satisfy
    O’Brien’s first requirement that regulations be within the government’s constitutional
    power. Renton closely mirrors O’Brien’s second requirement that the regulation
    “further” a substantial government interest by requiring that it be “designed to serve” the
    same. Renton requires that such regulations be content-neutral, thereby satisfying
    O’Brien’s third requirement that the interest be unrelated to the suppression of speech.
    O’Brien’s final demand that a restriction be “no greater than is essential to the
    furtherance” of the government interest is a requirement that the law be narrowly
    tailored. See Turner Broad. Sys., 
    512 U.S. at 662
     (stating that a law needs to be
    narrowly tailored to satisfy the O’Brien standard, and that narrow tailoring “in this
    context requires . . . that the means chosen do not burden substantially more speech than
    is necessary to further the government’s legitimate interests.” (internal quotation marks
    and citation omitted)). While Renton does not explicitly require narrow tailoring, we
    agree with the Seventh Circuit that a narrow-tailoring requirement is implicit in the
    Renton standard. Ben’s Bar, Inc. v. Village of Somerset, 
    316 F.3d 702
    , 714 n.16 (7th Cir.
    2003). That circuit noted that “the Supreme Court does not always spell out the
    ‘narrowly tailored’ step as part of its standard for evaluating time, place, and manner
    restrictions.” 
    Ibid.
     However, “a close examination of Renton reveals that the Court did
    consider whether the zoning ordinance at issue was narrowly tailored,” 
    ibid.
     (citing
    Renton, 
    475 U.S. at 52
    ), and that the Court has required narrow tailoring in other cases
    involving time, place, and manner regulation. See Ward, 
    491 U.S. at 791
     (holding that
    to pass constitutional scrutiny, time, place, or manner restrictions must be “‘justified
    without reference to the content of the regulated speech, . . . narrowly tailored to serve
    a significant governmental interest, and . . . leave open ample alternative channels for
    communication of the information’”) (quoting Clark, 
    468 U.S. at 293
    ). Renton’s final
    requirement that alternative avenues of communication are not to be unreasonably
    Nos. 07-6469; 08-5036        Richland Bookmart, et al. v. Knox                         Page 9
    County, Tennessee
    restricted is the only one that finds no reflection in O’Brien: it may fairly be said that this
    additional requirement exists to guard against the peculiar risks of time, place, and
    manner regulations that are not presented by general-conduct regulations.
    The choice between the O’Brien and Renton doctrines takes on some significance
    mainly when we must determine what evidence is sufficient to satisfy the substantially
    equivalent intermediate-scrutiny standards. See also Peek-a-Boo Lounge of Bradenton,
    Inc. v. Manatee County, 
    337 F.3d 1251
    , 1264-65 (11th Cir. 2003). Importantly, the kind
    of evidence required to establish that a regulation furthers a substantial government
    interest depends on character of the interest. A content-neutral regulation of conduct,
    such as the prohibition on public nudity or on the destruction of draft cards, “require[s]
    no evidentiary showing at all that the threatened harm was real.” City of Erie v. Pap’s
    A.M., 
    529 U.S. 277
    , 299 (2000) (emphasis added). It was enough, for example, that
    Congress took “official notice, as it were, that draft card destruction would jeopardize
    the [Selective Service] system,” and no further evidence or studies were required. 
    Ibid.
    (citing O’Brien, 
    391 U.S. at 378-80
    ). See also Barnes, 
    501 U.S. at 567-68
    . However,
    as the Supreme Court cautioned, “[t]he fact that this sort of leeway is appropriate in a
    case involving conduct says nothing whatsoever about its appropriateness in a case
    involving actual regulation of First Amendment expression.” 
    Ibid.
     (emphasis added);
    see also Schad v. Mount Ephraim, 
    452 U.S. 61
    , 73 (1981) (holding that plaintiffs’
    convictions for violation of a zoning ordinance prohibiting all live entertainment in the
    Borough of Mount Ephraim ran afoul of the First and Fourteenth Amendments, because
    “the Borough has presented no evidence . . . that live entertainment poses problems
    . . . more significant than those associated with various permitted uses” (emphasis
    added)).
    The burden governments must carry to establish the connection between “actual
    regulation of First Amendment expression” and its purported impact on secondary
    effects was further elaborated in Alameda Books. 
    535 U.S. 425
    . The initial evidentiary
    burden on the government is not a heavy one: the entity issuing the regulation “must
    have had a reasonable evidentiary basis for concluding that its regulation would have the
    Nos. 07-6469; 08-5036             Richland Bookmart, et al. v. Knox                                Page 10
    County, Tennessee
    desired effect. Although not extraordinarily high, this evidentiary burden requires that
    the entity show that the evidence upon which it relied was ‘reasonably believed to be
    relevant to the problem’ that the entity sought to address.” 729, Inc., 
    515 F.3d at
    491
    (citing Renton, 
    475 U.S. at 51-52
    ; Alameda Books, 
    535 U.S. at 438, 439
     (plurality); 
    Id. at 449
     (Kennedy, J., concurring in the judgment)). No comparable “evidentiary basis”
    has been demanded to establish that a general-conduct regulation further such an
    interest. See Pap’s A.M., 
    529 U.S. at 298-99
     (“The Court [in O’Brien] did not require
    evidence that the integrity of the Selective Service System would be jeopardized by the
    knowing destruction or mutilation of draft cards. . . . There was no study documenting
    instances of draft card mutilation or the actual effect of such mutilation on the
    Government’s asserted efficiency interests.”). For this reason, our first step is to
    determine whether the Knox County Ordinance purports to be a regulation of conduct
    that incidentally burdens expression (as in O’Brien), a time, place, or manner regulation
    targeting secondary effects (as in Renton), or a regulation comprising both (as in Pap’s
    A.M.).3
    The Knox County Ordinance is a content-neutral time, place, and manner
    regulation. Its stated aim is to “prevent the deleterious secondary effects of sexually
    oriented businesses within the County.” Sec. 1(a). To combat the secondary effects
    identified in the Preamble to the Ordinance, the County chose to regulate sexually
    oriented businesses by means of a licensing scheme and other regulations that are
    applicable to such establishments only, and a prohibition on only certain activities in
    such establishments. The County does not attempt to regulate a general category of
    conduct as in O’Brien or Barnes; instead, it expressly seeks to regulate protected
    3
    It is, of course, possible that the government interest comprises both a regulation of general
    conduct and control of secondary effects:
    While the doctrinal theories behind “incidental burdens” and “secondary effects” are,
    of course, not identical, there is nothing objectionable about a city passing a general
    ordinance to ban public nudity (even though such a ban may place incidental burdens
    on some protected speech) and at the same time recognizing that one specific occurrence
    of public nudity – nude erotic dancing – is particularly problematic because it produces
    harmful secondary effects.
    Pap’s A.M., 
    529 U.S. at 295
    ; see also Clark, 
    468 U.S. at 294
     (agreeing with petitioners’ justification of
    a regulation forbidding sleeping in a park “either as a time, place, or manner restriction or as a regulation
    of symbolic conduct”).
    Nos. 07-6469; 08-5036           Richland Bookmart, et al. v. Knox                            Page 11
    County, Tennessee
    expression in order to ameliorate adverse secondary effects. Cf. Pap’s A.M., 
    529 U.S. at 289-90
     (holding that Erie’s ordinance is on its face a general prohibition on public
    nudity that does not target expressive nude dancing). Thus, we find it prudent to conduct
    our analysis in terms set forth in Renton and Alameda Books – or, equivalently, to apply
    the O’Brien test, incorporating evidentiary standards articulated in Renton and its
    progeny.4
    B
    The next question is whether the Ordinance serves a substantial government
    interest. It is now recognized that governments have a substantial interest in controlling
    adverse secondary effects of sexually oriented establishments, which include violent,
    sexual, and property crimes as well as blight and negative effects on property values.
    E.g., Pap’s A.M., 
    529 U.S. at 296
    ; Richland Bookmart, 
    137 F.3d at 440
    . Plaintiffs argue
    that the Ordinance does not advance that admittedly important interest and that summary
    judgment in favor of the County was improper because Plaintiffs adduced facts
    demonstrating that at least a subset of the businesses regulated by the Ordinance has not
    in fact generated any adverse secondary effects in Knox County. Under Renton, the
    County had to provide “a reasonable evidentiary basis for concluding that its regulation
    would have the desired effect.” 729, Inc. v. Kenton County Fiscal Court, 
    515 F.3d 485
    ,
    491 (6th Cir. 2008). Plaintiffs submit that the County failed to carry its initial
    evidentiary burden, “however slight,” because the evidence cited in the Ordinance is not
    “germane” to at least two categories of adult businesses in Knox County – namely,
    “off-site consumption” bookstores or video stores such as Richland and Adult Video,
    and “combination” adult-mainstream stores that barely meet the Ordinance’s 35%
    threshold. Appellants’ Br. at 22, 26.
    The Supreme Court and this court have repeatedly held that local governments
    need not conduct their own studies demonstrating that adverse secondary effects result
    4
    This is in accord with our prior decisions, in which we have applied the O’Brien test and
    required that regulations meet the evidentiary burden set forth in Renton. E.g., Deja Vu of Cincinnati,
    L.L.C. v. Union Twp. Bd. of Trs., 
    411 F.3d 777
    , 789, 791 (6th Cir. 2005) (en banc).
    Nos. 07-6469; 08-5036       Richland Bookmart, et al. v. Knox                      Page 12
    County, Tennessee
    from the operation of sexually oriented businesses or that the measures chosen will
    ameliorate these effects. Alameda Books, 
    535 U.S. at 438
     (plurality opinion); 
    id. at 451
    (Kennedy, J., concurring); Pap’s A.M., 
    529 U.S. at 296
    ; Renton, 
    475 U.S. at 51-52
    ; Deja
    Vu of Nashville, Inc. v. Metro. Gov’t of Nashville & Davidson County, 
    466 F.3d 391
    , 398
    (6th Cir. 2006); Deja Vu of Cincinnati, L.L.C. v. Union Twp., 
    411 F.3d 777
    , 791 (6th Cir.
    2005) (en banc). “The First Amendment does not require a city, before enacting such
    an ordinance, to conduct new studies or produce evidence independent of that already
    generated by other cities, so long as whatever evidence the city relies upon is reasonably
    believed to be relevant to the problem that the city addresses.” Renton, 475 U.S. at
    51-52 (emphasis added). Nor are local governments required to demonstrate empirically
    that its proposed regulations will or are likely to successfully ameliorate adverse
    secondary effects. Alameda Books, 
    535 U.S. at 439
    . Thus, insofar as Plaintiffs merely
    dispute the relevance of “foreign” and outdated studies, they fail to create a genuine
    issue of material fact to survive summary judgment.
    This is not to say that, provided that the now-standard list of studies and judicial
    opinions is recited, no plaintiff could ever successfully challenge the evidentiary basis
    for a secondary-effects regulation. Albeit light, the burden on the government is not
    non-existent, and a plaintiff may put forth sufficient evidence to further augment that
    burden:
    This is not to say that a municipality can get away with shoddy data or
    reasoning. The municipality’s evidence must fairly support the
    municipality’s rationale for its ordinance. If plaintiffs fail to cast direct
    doubt on this rationale, either by demonstrating that the municipality’s
    evidence does not support its rationale or by furnishing evidence that
    disputes the municipality’s factual findings, the municipality meets the
    standard set forth in Renton. If plaintiffs succeed in casting doubt on a
    municipality’s rationale in either manner, the burden shifts back to the
    municipality to supplement the record with evidence renewing support
    for a theory that justifies its ordinance.
    Alameda Books, 
    535 U.S. at 438-39
    . As we have recently noted, the Alameda Books
    plurality thus “set forth a burden-shifting framework governing the evidentiary standard
    Nos. 07-6469; 08-5036             Richland Bookmart, et al. v. Knox                                  Page 13
    County, Tennessee
    in secondary-effects cases.” Sensations, Inc. v. City of Grand Rapids, 
    526 F.3d 291
    , 297
    n.5 (6th Cir. 2008).5
    Plaintiffs contend that not only has the County failed to carry its initial burden,
    but that they have “raised the doubt required by Alameda,” Appellants’ Br. at 31,
    shifting the burden back to the County to proffer further evidence in support of its
    rationale, which makes summary judgment for the County at this stage improper. As an
    initial matter, Plaintiffs are incorrect to suggest that the County cited no findings relevant
    to the secondary effects of the contested types of businesses (off-site and combination
    stores). In fact, the Ordinance relied on a number of judicial decisions, which held that
    evidence of secondary effects produced by off-site or retail-only sexually oriented
    businesses was sufficient to justify their regulation. For example, in H & A Land Corp.
    v. City of Kennedale, the Fifth Circuit stated that the City of Kennedale “cannot
    reasonably believe its evidence [of secondary effects] is relevant unless it sufficiently
    segregates data attributable to off-site establishments from the data attributable to on-site
    establishments.” 
    480 F.3d 336
    , 339 (5th Cir. 2007). That Circuit considered the
    evidence offered by the City and found that a 1984 Indianapolis study and a 1986
    Oklahoma City study indeed isolated the effects of off-site establishments on property
    values, which sufficiently “support[ed] the belief that off-site sexually oriented
    businesses cause harmful secondary effects.” 
    Ibid.
     Similarly, in World Wide Video of
    Wash., Inc. v. City of Spokane, the Ninth Circuit upheld Spokane’s regulation of retail-
    only stores on the basis of testimonial evidence from residents complaining of a variety
    of negative effects associated with this category of businesses. 
    368 F.3d 1186
    , 1197 (9th
    Cir. 2004). The Indianapolis and Oklahoma studies relied on by Kennendale and the
    testimonial evidence relied on by Spokane were also included among the findings made
    by the County in enacting the Ordinance.
    5
    Because Justice Kennedy concurred in the judgment of the Court on the narrowest grounds, his
    concurrence represents the Court’s holding in Alameda Books. 729, Inc., 
    515 F.3d at 491
    . Justice
    Kennedy’s concurrence seems to endorse the evidentiary standard set forth by the plurality, and departs
    from the plurality on a different point. See 
    535 U.S. at 451, 453
     (Kennedy, J., concurring) (stating that
    “very little evidence” is required to justify a secondary effects regulation “at least at the outset,” but that
    the regulation may not withstand intermediate scrutiny if the evidentiary “assumptions” are later “proved
    unsound”).
    Nos. 07-6469; 08-5036       Richland Bookmart, et al. v. Knox                      Page 14
    County, Tennessee
    While some courts have presumed that the distinction between off- and on-site
    consumption may be constitutionally relevant, H & A Land Corp., 
    480 F.3d at 339
    , it is
    difficult to maintain the same about Plaintiffs’ suggested distinction between
    “combination” stores that just barely meet one of the 35% thresholds and those that meet
    it by some larger margin. Requiring local governments to produce evidence of
    secondary effects for all categories created by every articulable distinction is a
    misapprehension of the Supreme Court’s holding that governments may rely on any
    evidence “reasonably believed to be relevant.” Alameda Books, 
    535 U.S. at 438-39
    (stating that the city need not demonstrate that “adult department stores” produce the
    same secondary effects as “adult minimalls”); see also G.M. Enters. v. Town of St.
    Joseph, 
    350 F.3d 631
    , 639 (7th Cir. 2003) (“The plurality [in Alameda Books] did not
    require that a regulating body rely on research that targeted the exact activity it wished
    to regulate, so long as the research it relied upon reasonably linked the regulated activity
    to adverse secondary effects.”). While the 35% threshold may be arbitrarily chosen, and
    it very well may be that this threshold sweeps in some relatively benign establishments,
    it is not for us to decide that some higher, equally arbitrary percentage would lessen the
    burden on expression without compromising the efficacy of the Ordinance in controlling
    secondary effects. See DLS, Inc., 
    107 F.3d at 413
     (“The City Council determined that
    a six-foot zone struck the appropriate balance; while it is probable that each marginal
    foot of the buffer zone achieves each of these goals somewhat less efficiently, it is not
    for us to say that a seven-foot zone or a five-foot zone would strike a better balance.”).
    Thus, we find that the cumulative evidence of secondary effects documented in the
    preamble to the Ordinance “fairly supports” the County’s rationale in regulating off-site
    and combination establishments, along with other sexually oriented businesses, as
    required by Alameda Books.
    Because we find that the County met its initial evidentiary burden, only if
    Plaintiffs succeed in casting “direct doubt” on the County’s rationale or factual findings
    would the County need additional support for its decision to regulate the contested
    business categories. We conclude that Plaintiffs’ efforts to cast such doubt are
    Nos. 07-6469; 08-5036       Richland Bookmart, et al. v. Knox                     Page 15
    County, Tennessee
    unsuccessful. Assuming for the sake of argument that the evidence offered by the
    Plaintiffs is not inadmissible on summary judgment, as the County argues it is,
    Appellee’s Br. at 36-38, it is of dubious substantive import. Unlike most plaintiffs
    challenging similar regulations, e.g., J.L. Spoons, Inc. v. Dragani, 
    538 F.3d 379
    , 381-82
    (6th Cir. 2008), Plaintiffs do not introduce their own expert findings or studies, but rely
    on a private investigator and their own or their attorney’s summaries of police incident
    reports and property value assessments. Even if we were to accept this information as
    authoritative, its probative value is minimal because elementary rules of logic and
    empirical inference preclude the conclusions Plaintiffs urge.
    Plaintiffs argue that an affidavit signed by their attorney contains evidence that
    no decrease in property values was caused by some of the businesses. The affidavit
    contains property values set by the Knox County Tax Assessor for properties around
    Richland and Raymond’s, and for properties around “various establishments which
    provide and distribute adult videos as well as provide adult dancing” for years 1997,
    2001, and 2005. However, we are told nothing about how the 13% increase in property
    values over the period of eight years around Richland and Raymond’s shown in the
    affidavit compares to the changes in property values elsewhere in Knox County. An
    absolute increase in property values says nothing about Richland’s or Raymond’s impact
    on those property values, because we do not observe the counterfactual (i.e., what those
    values would be if Richland were not located there), nor do we observe the changes in
    property values in similar locations, or in any location, not near a sexually oriented
    business. Nor can we conclude anything about the trends in property values prior to
    1997 – and Plaintiff Richland has been in operation at its present site for over twenty
    years, operating as an off-site consumption establishment since about 1990. Appellants’
    Br. at 6. Likewise, we cannot know whether the proffered “various establishments
    which provide and distribute adult videos as well as provide adult dancing” are
    representative of all such establishments in Knox County, and therefore, we can
    conclude nothing about the impact on property values of the whole category of
    businesses.
    Nos. 07-6469; 08-5036       Richland Bookmart, et al. v. Knox                      Page 16
    County, Tennessee
    Further, Plaintiffs submit a summary of “[p]olice incident reports from the period
    January 1, 2000 through May 2005 of video stores with large adult sections of sexually
    explicit videos described in the Affidavit of [Plaintiffs’] investigator to demonstrate the
    lack of any negative secondary effects on [sic] video stores with as little as 35% [of
    inventory consisting of sexually-explicit materials] as defined in the Ordinance.”
    Appellants’ Br. at 11. The affidavit composed by a private investigator hired by
    Plaintiffs contains only general descriptions of the businesses, such as would be readily
    observable by a customer. There is little in the affidavit that allows us to conclude that
    all or most businesses selected meet any one of the 35% thresholds in the Ordinance or
    whether each or any of them barely clears, or vastly exceeds, the 35% threshold. Merely
    stating that a video store had an inventory of “approximately 4,000 sexually explicit
    videos,” for example, says nothing about the percentage of the total inventory these
    videos comprise.
    It is unnecessary for us to go through every piece of evidence Plaintiffs offer in
    an attempt to cast doubt on the County’s findings and rationale. While the County may
    rely on evidence from other locations and anecdotal evidence, Plaintiffs’ burden is
    heavier and cannot be met with unsound inference or similarly anecdotal information.
    Giving Plaintiffs’ evidence the most charitable treatment, it suggests merely that the
    County “could have reached a different conclusion during its legislative process” with
    regard to the need to regulate some categories of sexually oriented businesses. See
    Daytona Grand, Inc. v. City of Daytona Beach, 
    490 F.3d 860
    , 881 (11th Cir. 2007). As
    the district court and the County point out, evidence suggesting that a different
    conclusion is also reasonable does not prove that the County’s findings were
    impermissible or its rationale unsustainable. Ibid.; Turner Broad. Sys., 520 U.S. at 211
    (stating that in the context of intermediate scrutiny, conflicting evidence should not lead
    the court to “re-weigh the evidence de novo”); G.M. Enters., 
    350 F.3d at 639
     (“Although
    this evidence shows that the [town government] might have reached a different and
    equally reasonable conclusion regarding the relationship between adverse secondary
    effects and sexually oriented businesses, it is not sufficient to vitiate the result reached
    Nos. 07-6469; 08-5036        Richland Bookmart, et al. v. Knox                     Page 17
    County, Tennessee
    in the . . . legislative process.”). While Plaintiffs claim to have produced evidence
    disproving that their establishments are associated with lower property values or higher
    crime rates, the Ordinance is supported by evidence to the contrary. For example, contra
    Plaintiffs’ claim that Raymond’s cabaret is not associated with higher crime, the County
    relied on several studies and judicial decisions attesting to such an association: e.g., a
    1997 Houston study, a 1977 Los Angeles study, police investigations of crimes and
    unsanitary conditions at adult cabarets in nearby Chattanooga, and judicial findings of
    prostitution at same, DLS, Inc. v. City of Chattanooga, 
    894 F. Supp. 1140
    , 1146 (E.D.
    Tenn. 1995), aff’d 
    107 F.3d 403
    . Contra Plaintiffs’ claim that Richland and Adult Video
    produce no adverse secondary effects, the County relied on several studies and
    testimonial evidence, such as those we noted above. Plaintiffs’ unsystematic and
    eclectic collection of information is insufficient to cast direct doubt on the relevance of
    the evidence relied on by the County, or the County’s rationale in enacting the
    Ordinance. For these reasons, we conclude Plaintiffs did not meet their burden of
    casting direct doubt on the factual findings or rationale underlying the County’s
    Ordinance.
    C
    Plaintiffs’ second argument combines an as-applied and a facial challenge to the
    Ordinance’s regulatory reach. Plaintiffs challenge the definition of “semi-nudity,” which
    is part of the definition of “adult cabaret,” the definition of “nudity,” the prohibition on
    the sale or consumption of alcohol, and the definition of “adult motel” as not narrowly
    tailored and/or overbroad.
    As we discussed above in section III.A, time, place, and manner regulations of
    speech must be narrowly tailored to serve the government’s legitimate, content-neutral
    interests. Narrow tailoring means that the “[g]overnment may not regulate expression
    in such a manner that a substantial portion of the burden on speech does not serve to
    advance its goals,” but it does not require that the means chosen “be the least restrictive
    or least intrusive means” of serving its goals. Ward, 
    491 U.S. at 799
    . “Rather, the
    Nos. 07-6469; 08-5036       Richland Bookmart, et al. v. Knox                    Page 18
    County, Tennessee
    requirement of narrow tailoring is satisfied so long as the regulation promotes a
    substantial government interest that would be achieved less effectively absent the
    regulation.” DLS, Inc., 
    107 F.3d at 412
     (quoting Ward, 
    491 U.S. at 799
    ).
    Adult Cabaret. Plaintiffs argue that the definition of “adult cabaret,” insofar is
    it incorporates the definition of “semi-nudity,” is not narrowly tailored, and that the
    district court erred in denying their motion for partial summary judgment on this issue.
    Plaintiff Raymond’s is an adult cabaret under the Ordinance and has standing to
    challenge this provision.
    Plaintiffs claim that the definition of “semi-nudity” unreasonably subjects to the
    licensing and regulatory requirements businesses, whose performers wear more than
    pasties and g-strings. Plaintiffs explain that pasties show “the female breast below a
    horizontal line across the top of the areola” and a g-string shows buttocks, which makes
    a pasties-and-g-string ensemble insufficient to avoid the definition of semi-nudity – and
    thus, the regulatory reach of the Ordinance. Appellants’ Br. at 41. Subjecting such
    performances to regulation, Plaintiffs argue, does not serve the government’s legitimate
    interest in controlling secondary effects and needlessly abridges the erotic expression
    communicated by the performers.
    We recognize that “nude or nearly [nude]” dancing conveys “an endorsement of
    erotic experience,” and is a protected form of expression “in the absence of some
    contrary clue.” DLS, Inc., 
    107 F.3d at 409
     (quoting Barnes, 
    501 U.S. at 581
     (Souter, J.,
    concurring in the judgment)). We need not adopt the district court’s determination that
    “the Ordinance goes no further than regulating businesses in which dancers wear pasties
    and g-strings,” in order to conclude that the Ordinance is narrowly tailored.
    We have previously upheld various time, place, and manner regulations of
    businesses featuring performers clad in revealing garments that nonetheless cover more
    than the pubic area and areolae. In DLS, Inc., this court considered a Chattanooga City
    ordinance that defined “adult cabaret” in a similar, if not even more far-reaching manner:
    Nos. 07-6469; 08-5036       Richland Bookmart, et al. v. Knox                     Page 19
    County, Tennessee
    an establishment which features as a principle [sic] use of its business,
    entertainers and/or waiters and/or bartenders who expose to public view
    of the patrons within said establishment, at any time, the bare female
    breast below a point immediately above the top of the areola, human
    genitals, pubic region, or buttocks, even if partially covered by opaque
    material or completely covered by translucent material; including swim
    suits, lingerie or latex covering. Adult cabarets shall include commercial
    establishments which feature entertainment of an erotic nature including
    exotic dancers, strippers, male or female impersonators, or similar
    entertainers.
    DLS, Inc., 
    107 F.3d at 406
     (emphasis added). In Sensations, Inc., this court upheld a
    Grand Rapids regulation of sexually oriented businesses that restricted the activities of
    semi-nude performers, where semi-nudity was defined in terms identical to the ones
    under consideration. 
    526 F.3d at 294
    . True, the plaintiffs in those cases did not
    emphasize the same argument Plaintiffs here make – namely, that “adult cabarets should
    be allowed to decide whether they want to be licensed and offer dancers wearing
    g-strings and pasties,” or “be free of licensing requirements and the other regulations in
    the Ordinance . . . by wearing slightly more clothing.” Appellants’ Br. at 43. However,
    in the course of validating licensing and other regulations, we necessarily affirmed the
    constitutionality of burdening establishments that feature similarly defined “semi-nude”
    erotic dancing. DLS, Inc., 
    107 F.3d 403
     (upholding a licensing requirement and a
    requirement of a “six-foot buffer zone” between performers of adult cabarets and
    customers, employees, or other entertainers); Sensations, Inc., 
    526 F.3d at 294
    (upholding, inter alia, a “six-foot buffer zone,” a “no-touching” rule between performers
    and audience, and a limitation on business hours).
    Plaintiffs’ proposition that the County cannot constitutionally regulate expressive
    conduct involving performers who wear more cloth than pasties and g-strings is
    unsupported. Plaintiffs’ appeal to R.V.S., L.L.C. v. City of Rockford is misplaced. 
    361 F.3d 402
     (7th Cir. 2004). R.V.S. is distinguishable on a number of grounds: there, the
    court invalidated a zoning and licensing regulation of establishments featuring “clothed”
    exotic dancers. Moreover, the ordinance before that court did not rely on any evidence,
    local or not, and it did not contain any legislative findings or reasoning to support the
    Nos. 07-6469; 08-5036       Richland Bookmart, et al. v. Knox                     Page 20
    County, Tennessee
    connection between “exotic dancing nightclubs,” as distinct from sexually oriented
    businesses, and secondary effects. 
    Id. at 411
    . By contrast, the County relied on, inter
    alia, our decision in DLS, Inc. and a Fifth Circuit decision that considered a challenge
    to a zoning ordinance as applied to an adult cabaret whose dancers performed semi-nude
    – wearing more than nothing, but less than a bikini. Baby Dolls Topless Saloons, Inc.
    v. City of Dallas, 
    295 F.3d 471
     (5th Cir. 2002). That court determined that in view of
    the secondary effects studies relied on by Dallas – and now by Knox County, “it was
    reasonable for the City to conclude that establishments featuring performers in attire
    more revealing than bikini tops pose the same types of problems associated with other
    [sexually oriented businesses].”     
    Id. at 482
    .    Similarly, the County’s legislative
    determination that regular semi-nude performances (as defined by the Ordinance) are as
    liable to produce unwanted secondary effects as other sexually oriented businesses was
    reasonable, in view of the secondary effects evidence the County examined. Because
    that determination is reasonable, the regulation of cabarets featuring semi-nude
    performers does not impose a “substantial portion of the [regulatory] burden” on
    protected speech without advancing the goals of the Ordinance; on the contrary, the
    Ordinance promotes a substantial government interest that would be achieved less
    effectively absent the regulation.
    Finally, Plaintiffs’ invocation of the Supreme Court’s jurisprudence regarding
    public nudity and nude dancing is inapposite: both Barnes and Pap’s A.M. upheld bans
    on “nudity” and the concomitant requirement that erotic performers wear at least pasties
    and g-strings, reasoning that this limitation effected a minimal restriction on the erotic
    expression contained in nude dancing. Neither case may be read to suggest the
    unconstitutionality of regulating semi-nude performances as defined by the Ordinance,
    or to suggest that pasties and g-strings are the most intrusive requirement that may be
    constitutionally imposed.
    Nudity. Next, Plaintiffs claim that the definition of prohibited “nudity” is not
    narrowly tailored because, in their interpretation of the Ordinance’s terms, a person
    wearing only a g-string and pasties would violate that prohibition. Appellants’ Br. at 48-
    Nos. 07-6469; 08-5036        Richland Bookmart, et al. v. Knox                       Page 21
    County, Tennessee
    49. Plaintiff Raymond’s is an adult cabaret that has featured nude dancing in the past,
    and therefore has standing to challenge this provision.
    We have previously upheld a similar, if not identically-worded, prohibition on
    nudity in sexually oriented establishments. In Sensations, Inc., we upheld a prohibition
    on nudity defined as “the knowing or intentional live display of a human genital organ
    or anus with less than a fully opaque covering or a female’s breast with less than a fully
    opaque covering of the nipple and areola.” 
    526 F.3d at 294
    . This court explained that
    “[t]he prohibition of full nudity has been viewed as having only a de minimis effect on
    the expressive character of erotic dancing.” 
    Id.
     at 299 (citing Pap’s A.M., 
    529 U.S. at 301
    ; Barnes, 
    501 U.S. at 572
     (plurality opinion)). While erotic dancing, whether
    performed in the “nude or nearly so,” is a protected expressive activity, the state of
    nudity itself is not inherently expressive. See DLS, Inc., 
    107 F.3d at 409
    . Because nudity
    itself is not essential to the eroticism that brings dancing under the protection of the First
    Amendment, the plurality in Pap’s A.M. rejected Justice Stevens’s position that a ban
    on public nudity effects a “complete ban on expression” by incidentally banning nude
    dancing. Sensations, 
    526 F.3d at 299
     (quoting Pap’s A.M., 
    529 U.S. at 292-93
    ). Instead,
    it merely “limit[s] one particular means of expressing the kind of erotic message being
    disseminated.” 
    Ibid.
    Because the City of Erie justified its ordinance both as a regulation of general
    conduct incidentally restricting expression and as a restriction of expression aimed at its
    secondary effects, the Supreme Court scrutinized both rationales. The Court conceded
    that banning nudity and nude dancing may not be the most effective or the least
    restrictive means of combating secondary effects of adult establishments, but that the
    Constitution requires neither to survive intermediate scrutiny. Pap’s A.M., 
    529 U.S. at 301-02
     (holding that the “restriction is no greater than is essential to the furtherance of
    the government interest,” and that it “leaves ample capacity to convey the dancer’s erotic
    message,” even if it is not the least restrictive means to address the problem).
    Nos. 07-6469; 08-5036             Richland Bookmart, et al. v. Knox                                Page 22
    County, Tennessee
    Plaintiffs seem to suggest that the definition of nudity in the Ordinance is broader
    than constitutionally permissible because donning a g-string, which they claim does not
    cover the “anal cleft,” does not take a performer out of the state of nudity. The County
    on the other hand, “has consistently maintained that pasties and G-strings . . . constitute
    sufficient covering to comply” with the Ordinance. Appellee’s Br. at 51. We need not
    weigh in on the dispute between the parties as to the amount of fabric required to cover
    the “anal cleft”; however, we see no reason not to accept the County’s limiting
    construction of its own regulation and we presume that the County will continue to abide
    by its stated interpretation in its enforcement efforts.6 We are unconvinced that defining
    nudity in terms of exposing the “anus, anal cleft or cleavage,” however anatomically or
    linguistically awkward, takes us beyond the territory controlled by our holding in
    Sensations. Moreover, the Erie ordinance upheld by the Supreme Court contained an
    even broader definition of nudity. Pap’s A.M., 
    529 U.S. at 284
     (Ordinance defined
    nudity to mean, inter alia, “the showing of the human male or female genital [sic], pubic
    hair or buttocks with less than a fully opaque covering.” (emphasis added)).7 We
    conclude that the prohibition on “nudity” in sexually oriented establishments, as defined
    in the Ordinance, does not burden substantially more expression than necessary to
    advance the County’s objective, and is thus narrowly tailored.
    Moreover, the provisions involving semi-nudity and nudity survive intermediate
    scrutiny because they do not serve to restrict unreasonably the capacity to engage in the
    protected expression embodied in erotic dance. Under the Ordinance, adult cabarets
    have a choice: establishments may opt for pasties and g-strings, which the Supreme
    Court has described as having a minimal effect on the message conveyed by completely
    6
    It is worth noting that a rigidly literal interpretation may be stretched unreasonably – and surely
    beyond what the County intends. For example, it could be extended to keep out patrons who are wearing
    the currently commonplace low-rise jeans that tend to reveal the top of the “anal cleft or cleavage” in a
    seated position, not to mention an occasional plumber. We do not intend to approve such an interpretation
    of the regulation.
    7
    It is also worth noting that notwithstanding a comparatively broad definition of nudity that
    applies whenever “buttocks” are uncovered, the plurality in Pap’s A.M. interpreted the ordinance narrowly
    – as the County and the district court do in the present case – to allow performances in pasties and
    g-strings. Pap’s A.M., 
    529 U.S. at 294
     (stating that “dancers at Kandyland and other such establishments
    are free to perform wearing pasties and G-strings”).
    Nos. 07-6469; 08-5036       Richland Bookmart, et al. v. Knox                     Page 23
    County, Tennessee
    nude dancing, Pap’s A.M., 
    529 U.S. at 301
    , and comply with the reasonable restrictions
    of the Ordinance. Or, establishments may outfit their employees in sufficient cloth to
    cover “the female breast below a horizontal line across the top of the areola” and the
    buttocks – which appears to be easily accomplished by most bikinis – and escape
    regulation altogether. This choice leaves adult cabarets with ample means of conveying
    the message contained in erotic dancing, even if it is not the least restrictive means to
    target adverse secondary effects.
    Adult motel. Plaintiffs also challenge the definition of “adult motel” as not
    narrowly tailored. However, none of the Plaintiffs have standing to bring an as-applied
    challenge to this provision.
    Prohibition on the sale or consumption of alcohol. Finally, Plaintiffs argue
    that the prohibition on the sale, use or consumption of alcohol on the premises of
    sexually oriented businesses is not narrowly tailored. The County submits that Plaintiffs
    also lack standing to challenge this prohibition because the record does not establish that
    any of them have a liquor license or intend to seek a liquor license. Assuming without
    deciding that Raymond’s, being representative of most adult cabarets, has standing to
    challenge this provision, we agree with the district court’s conclusion that this
    prohibition is “a reasonable restriction narrowly tailored to limit the secondary effects
    of crime.” In finding that sexually oriented businesses as a category are associated with
    numerous adverse secondary effects, the County reasonably relied on a number of prior
    judicial decisions finding sufficient evidence to support the connection between adverse
    effects and adult entertainment when combined with alcohol consumption. E.g., Ben’s
    Bar, Inc., 
    316 F.3d at 725
     (holding that prohibition of alcohol in adult entertainment
    venues “is, as a practical matter, the least restrictive means of furthering the Village’s
    interest in combating the secondary effects resulting from the combination of adult
    entertainment and alcohol consumption”).
    Facial Challenge on Overbreadth Grounds. Plaintiffs next challenge the
    Ordinance on grounds that any one or combination of the same provisions attacked as
    Nos. 07-6469; 08-5036       Richland Bookmart, et al. v. Knox                     Page 24
    County, Tennessee
    not narrowly tailored render the Ordinance unconstitutionally overbroad. A law that is
    overly broad “proscribe[s] a ‘substantial’ amount of constitutionally protected speech
    judged in relation to the statute’s plainly legitimate sweep.” J.L. Spoons, Inc., 
    538 F.3d at 383
     (quoting Virginia v. Hicks, 
    539 U.S. 113
    , 118-19 (2003)). Overbroad laws
    warrant the dramatic remedy of invalidation to “allay the concern that the threat of
    enforcement of [such a] law may deter or chill constitutionally protected speech.” 
    Ibid.
    However, the Supreme Court has been explicit that the overbreadth doctrine is not to be
    “casually employed.” United States v. Williams, __U.S.__, 
    128 S. Ct. 1830
    , 1838
    (2008). “Substantial social costs” are incurred by preventing the “application of a law
    to constitutionally unprotected speech, or especially to constitutionally unprotected
    conduct.” Hicks, 
    539 U.S. at 119
    . Thus, the Court has “vigorously enforced the
    requirement that a statute’s overbreadth be substantial, not only in an absolute sense, but
    also relative to the statute’s plainly legitimate sweep.” Williams, 
    128 S. Ct. at 1838
    . To
    succeed in a facial-overbreadth challenge, Plaintiffs must “demonstrate from the text of
    [the statute] and from actual fact that a substantial number of instances exist in which
    the law cannot be applied constitutionally.” N.Y. State Club Ass’n v. City of New York,
    
    487 U.S. 1
    , 14 (1988). This Plaintiffs fail to do. Plaintiffs offer no arguments or
    evidence in support of their overbreadth claims beyond those proffered in support of
    their as-applied challenges. Since we find that Plaintiffs failed to show that protected
    speech is impermissibly burdened by any of the provisions challenged as applied, these
    same provisions cannot form the basis for a successful overbreadth attack.
    D
    Third, Plaintiffs argue that the Ordinance is an unconstitutional prior restraint
    because it “denies access in the future to non-obscene material based on a past
    conviction.” Appellants’ Rep. Br. at 38. A licensing scheme such as the Ordinance is
    indeed a prior restraint on protected expression. FW/PBS, Inc. v. City of Dallas, 
    493 U.S. 215
    , 225 (1990) (plurality opinion); Southeastern Promotions, Ltd. v. Conrad, 
    420 U.S. 546
    , 554 (1975); Odle v. Decatur County, 
    421 F.3d 386
    , 389 (6th Cir. 2005); Deja
    Vu of Nashville, Inc. v. Metropolitan Gov’t of Nashville & Davidson County, 274 F.3d
    Nos. 07-6469; 08-5036        Richland Bookmart, et al. v. Knox                       Page 25
    County, Tennessee
    377, 400 (6th Cir. 2001). However, prior restraints are not unconstitutional per se.
    Odle, 
    421 F.3d at 389
    . Where, as here, license issuance, suspension, and revocation are
    based on explicit and objective criteria, see Secs. 5(a), 9, 10, and are not left to unbridled
    discretion, a licensing scheme does “not present the grave dangers of a censorship
    system.” City of Littleton v. Z.J. Gifts D-4, L.L.C, 
    541 U.S. 774
    , 783 (2004) (internal
    quotation marks and citations omitted). We recently summarized the inquiry into the
    constitutionality of such regulations:
    The Supreme Court has long required prior restraint licensing schemes
    to guarantee applicants a prompt final judicial decision on the merits of
    a license denial and preservation of the status quo while an application
    or judicial review of a license denial is pending. Freedman v. Maryland,
    
    380 U.S. 51
    , 58 (1965); FW/PBS, Inc., 
    493 U.S. at 229-30
    ; City of
    Littleton v. Z.J. Gifts D-4, LLC, 
    541 U.S. 774
    , 779-80 (2004). In the
    seminal Freedman decision, the Supreme Court suggested that a
    licensing scheme must place the burden of proof as to whether an
    applicant’s form of expression is protected on the government. 
    380 U.S. at 58
    . However, it now appears that prompt judicial review and
    preservation of the status quo are the only constitutionally indispensable
    procedural safeguards. FW/PBS, Inc., 
    493 U.S. at 228
    ; Deja Vu of
    Nashville, 274 F.3d at 400-401 . . . .
    Odle, 
    421 F.3d at 389-90
     (emphasis added) (parallel citations omitted). The Ordinance
    satisfies both requirements. The Ordinance provides for prompt judicial review of a
    revoked license. Sec. 11. The Ordinance also provides for the preservation of the status
    quo while a license application is pending and while an appeal from a revocation of the
    license is pending: Sec. 5(a) states that a Temporary License shall be issued to an
    applicant within 24 hours, valid until a decision to grant or deny a license has been
    made, which is to occur within 20 days of application; and Sec. 11(b) states that a
    Provisional License shall be issued to any business initiating court action to challenge
    a license denial, suspension or revocation. Even if we presume that Plaintiffs have
    standing to challenge the standards for license revocation or suspension, their challenge
    fails. We affirm the district court’s determination that the Ordinance is not an
    unconstitutional prior restraint.
    Nos. 07-6469; 08-5036             Richland Bookmart, et al. v. Knox                               Page 26
    County, Tennessee
    E
    Fourth, Plaintiffs argue that the limitation on hours of operation enacted by the
    Ordinance is preempted by state law. The Ordinance provides that sexually oriented
    businesses cannot do business before 8 a.m. or after midnight Monday through Saturday,
    and they cannot do business on Sundays or legal holidays.                               The Tennessee
    Adult-Oriented Establishments statute (“Tennessee Statute”) sets identical business-hour
    limitations, 
    Tenn. Code Ann. § 7-51-1402
    , but exempts “establishment[s] that offer[]
    only live, stage adult entertainment in a theatre, adult cabaret, or dinner show type
    setting,” § 7-51-1405. The Tennessee Statute also allows local ordinances to further
    limit opening hours but disallows local ordinances that “extend” business hours.
    § 7-51-1402 (b). Plaintiffs argue that because adult cabarets were exempted from the
    state limitations on business hours, the County cannot nullify that exemption by enacting
    its Ordinance. Plaintiffs’ argument is without merit. Prior to July 1, 2007, the Tennessee
    Statute, in a section entitled “Local laws not preempted,” stated:
    Nothing in this chapter shall preempt or prevent political subdivisions in
    this state from enacting and enforcing other lawful and reasonable
    restrictions, regulations, licensing, zoning and other civil or
    administrative provisions concerning the location, configuration, code
    compliance or other business operations or requirements of
    adult-oriented establishments and sexually-oriented businesses.8
    § 7-51-1406. The Tennessee statute clearly allows the County to enact and enforce
    restrictions concerning business operations of “adult-oriented establishments and
    sexually-oriented businesses.” Plaintiffs’ reading of “other lawful and reasonable
    restrictions” and “other civil or administrative provision” to mean “[other than] local
    restrictions on hours of operations for adult cabarets,” Appellants’ Br. at 50, is
    untenable, as it twists a non-preemption clause into a preemption clause. We affirm the
    conclusion of the district court that the County Ordinance is consistent with and is not
    preempted by the Tennessee Statute.
    8
    The 2007 amendments to this section do not alter the provision in a manner material to the issue.
    Nos. 07-6469; 08-5036       Richland Bookmart, et al. v. Knox                      Page 27
    County, Tennessee
    IV
    On cross-appeal, the County argues that the district court erroneously ordered the
    severance of two crimes from the civil disability provisions of the Ordinance. The court
    held that the denial of a license to persons convicted of dealing in controlled substances
    and racketeering is unjustified because these crimes “are not related to the crime-control
    intent of the Ordinance which is to reduce crimes of a sexual nature.”
    The County argues that Plaintiffs lack standing to challenge the civil disability
    provisions of the Ordinance because none of the Plaintiffs were ever convicted of any
    of the specified crimes. Plaintiffs make no allegations to the contrary; in fact, Plaintiffs
    themselves state that no one affiliated with them has been convicted of any of the
    specified crimes. Appellants’ Rep. Br. at 8. Because this claim was litigated and
    adjudicated as an as-applied challenge, we conclude that the County’s argument is
    sound. See FW/PBS, Inc., 
    493 U.S. at 235
     (concluding that “no petitioner has shown
    standing to challenge . . . the civil disability provisions” of an ordinance regulating
    sexually oriented businesses, and that therefore, “the courts below lacked jurisdiction to
    adjudicate petitioners’ claims with respect to those provisions”); Deja Vu of Cincinnati,
    L.L.C., 
    411 F.3d at 794-95
     (holding that plaintiffs cannot challenge a civil disability
    provision of an Ohio licensing scheme for sexually oriented businesses because they
    have not alleged sufficient injury in fact to establish standing). For these reasons, we
    reverse the district court’s decision as to the severance of the two crimes from the civil
    disability provision.
    V
    Therefore, we AFFIRM the district court’s grant of summary judgment in favor
    of the County, and REVERSE the grant of partial summary judgment in favor of
    Plaintiffs.
    

Document Info

Docket Number: 08-5036

Filed Date: 2/12/2009

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 9/22/2015

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