Cheyenne Desertrain v. City of Los Angeles , 754 F.3d 1147 ( 2014 )


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  •                 FOR PUBLICATION
    UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
    FOR THE NINTH CIRCUIT
    CHEYENNE DESERTRAIN; STEVE               No. 11-56957
    JACOBS-ELSTEIN; BRADFORD
    ECKHART; PATRICIA WARIVONCHIK;             D.C. No.
    LEROY BUTLER; WILLIAM CAGLE;            2:10-cv-09053-
    CHRIS TAYLOR,                             RGK-PJW
    Plaintiffs-Appellants,
    v.                        OPINION
    CITY OF LOS ANGELES, a municipal
    entity; JON PETERS; RANDY
    YOSHIOKA; JASON PRINCE; BRIANNA
    GONZALES,
    Defendants-Appellees.
    Appeal from the United States District Court
    for the Central District of California
    R. Gary Klausner, District Judge, Presiding
    Argued and Submitted
    December 5, 2013—Pasadena, California
    Filed June 19, 2014
    Before: Harry Pregerson, Marsha S. Berzon,
    and Morgan Christen, Circuit Judges.
    Opinion by Judge Pregerson
    2           DESERTRAIN V. CITY OF LOS ANGELES
    SUMMARY*
    Civil Rights
    The panel reversed the district court’s summary judgment
    in an action brought pursuant to 42 U.S.C. § 1983 challenging
    the constitutionality of Los Angeles Municipal Code
    Section 85.02, which prohibits the use of a vehicle “as living
    quarters either overnight, day-by-day, or otherwise.”
    The panel held that Section 85.02 provides inadequate
    notice of the unlawful conduct it proscribes, and opens the
    door to discriminatory enforcement against the homeless and
    the poor. Accordingly, the panel held that Section 85.02
    violates the Due Process Clause of the Fourteenth
    Amendment as an unconstitutionally vague statute.
    COUNSEL
    Carol A. Sobel (argued), Law Office of Carol A. Sobel, Santa
    Monica, California, for Plaintiffs-Appellants.
    Blithe S. Bock (argued), Carmen A. Trutanich, Amy Jo Field,
    Lisa S. Berger, City Attorney’s Office, Los Angeles,
    California, for Defendants-Appellees.
    *
    This summary constitutes no part of the opinion of the court. It has
    been prepared by court staff for the convenience of the reader.
    DESERTRAIN V. CITY OF LOS ANGELES                  3
    OPINION
    PREGERSON, Circuit Judge:
    This 42 U.S.C. § 1983 case concerns the constitutionality
    of Los Angeles Municipal Code Section 85.02, which
    prohibits use of a vehicle “as living quarters either overnight,
    day-by-day, or otherwise.” Plaintiffs include four homeless
    individuals who parked their vehicles in the Venice area of
    Los Angeles and were cited and arrested for violating Section
    85.02. Defendants are the City of Los Angeles and individual
    LAPD officers. Plaintiffs argue that Section 85.02 is
    unconstitutionally vague on its face because it provides
    insufficient notice of the conduct it penalizes and promotes
    arbitrary and discriminatory enforcement. We agree.
    FACTUAL BACKGROUND
    I. Section 85.02 and the Venice Homelessness Task Force
    In 1983, the City of Los Angeles enacted Municipal Code
    Section 85.02:
    USE OF STREETS AND PUBLIC
    PARKING LOTS FOR HABITATION.
    No person shall use a vehicle parked or
    standing upon any City street, or upon any
    parking lot owned by the City of Los Angeles
    and under the control of the City of Los
    Angeles or under control of the Los Angeles
    County Department of Beaches and Harbors,
    as living quarters either overnight,
    day-by-day, or otherwise.
    4          DESERTRAIN V. CITY OF LOS ANGELES
    On September 23, 2010, Los Angeles officials held a
    “Town Hall on Homelessness” to address complaints of
    homeless individuals with vehicles living on local streets in
    Venice. Present at the meeting were a member of the City
    Council, the Chief of the LAPD, the Chief Deputy to the City
    Attorney, and the Assistant Director of the Los Angeles
    Bureau of Sanitation. City officials repeated throughout the
    meeting that their concern was not homelessness generally,
    but the illegal dumping of trash and human waste on city
    streets that was endangering public health. To address this
    concern, officials announced a renewed commitment to
    enforcing Section 85.02.
    Within the week, the LAPD created the Venice
    Homelessness Task Force (the “Task Force”). The Task
    Force’s twenty-one officers were to use Section 85.02 to cite
    and arrest homeless people using their automobiles as “living
    quarters,” and were also to distribute to such people
    information concerning providers of shelter and other social
    services.
    Defendant Captain Jon Peters ran the Task Force, which
    included Defendant Officers Randy Yoshioka, Jason Prince,
    and Brianna Gonzales. Task Force officers received
    informal, verbal training, as well as internal policy
    memoranda, on how to enforce Section 85.02. Supervisors
    instructed officers to look for vehicles containing possessions
    normally found in a home, such as food, bedding, clothing,
    medicine, and basic necessities. According to those
    instructions, an individual need not be sleeping or have slept
    in the vehicle to violate Section 85.02. Supervisors directed
    officers to issue a warning and to provide information
    concerning local shelters on the first instance of a violation,
    DESERTRAIN V. CITY OF LOS ANGELES                            5
    to issue a citation on the second instance, and to make an
    arrest on the third.
    II. Enforcement of Section 85.02
    Beginning in late 2010, the Task Force began enforcing
    Section 85.02 against homeless individuals. Four such
    homeless individuals are Plaintiffs in this case:1
    Plaintiff Steve Jacobs-Elstein ran his own legal temp
    company for almost ten years before losing his business and
    his home in the economic downturn of 2007. He
    subsequently suffered severe anxiety and depression. He was
    able to keep his car, a small SUV, and pay for insurance,
    maintenance, and gas with the $200 he collects each month
    from General Relief. He kept his few possessions — mainly
    two computers and some clothes — in his car because he
    could not afford storage fees.
    When Jacobs-Elstein first became homeless, he slept in
    his car. In mid-2009, an LAPD officer approached Jacobs-
    Elstein while parked on a city street, warning him that if he
    1
    Plaintiffs also include four homeless disabled individuals (“Disabled
    Plaintiffs”) who the police cited for violating local parking ordinances
    from which they are exempt under California law because their vehicles
    display handicapped license plates and placards. At oral argument, both
    parties acknowledged that Task Force officers had issued these tickets by
    mistake, and that these officers were no longer issuing parking tickets to
    Disabled Plaintiffs. Disabled Plaintiffs seek only injunctive and
    declaratory relief. Because Disabled Plaintiffs disclaim any argument that
    the challenged conduct is reasonably likely to recur, their challenge to the
    parking tickets is moot. See Bell v. City of Boise, 
    709 F.3d 890
    , 898 (9th
    Cir. 2013) (the voluntary cessation of challenged conduct moots a case
    where it is “absolutely clear that the allegedly wrongful behavior could not
    reasonably be expected to recur” (internal quotation marks omitted)).
    6          DESERTRAIN V. CITY OF LOS ANGELES
    slept in his vehicle at night on public streets he would be
    arrested. At the time, Jacobs-Elstein was unaware that such
    conduct was unlawful. He then looked up Section 85.02 on
    the Internet and, based on what he read and what the officer
    told him, understood Section 85.02 to mean that he could not
    sleep in his car on a public street in Los Angeles. He began
    sleeping at motels and on other private property, and soon
    obtained permission from a Methodist Church in Venice to
    sleep in his car while it was parked in the church parking lot,
    provided he leave the lot by 8:00 a.m. each day. He also
    registered with the People Assisting The Homeless’s “Venice
    Vehicles to Homes” program, secured a spot on the housing
    wait lists maintained by the Department of Mental Health and
    the Los Angeles Housing Authority, and was approved for a
    Section 8 housing voucher through the Department of
    Housing and Urban Development.
    On the morning of September 13, 2010, Jacobs-Elstein
    was waiting in his car on a public street for the First Baptist
    Church of Venice to open so that he could volunteer to serve
    at the food distribution program, and also receive a meal.
    That morning, Defendant Officer Gonzales and her partner
    ordered Jacobs-Elstein out of his car, searched his car, and
    cited him for violating Section 85.02. The officers provided
    him no shelter or social services information.
    A few weeks later, Jacobs-Elstein was again waiting in
    his car on a public street for First Baptist to open when
    Officer Gonzales banged on the driver’s side window and
    told Jacobs-Elstein it was illegal to live in his vehicle. Two
    weeks later, Gonzales and her partner again spotted Jacobs-
    Elstein, this time when he was parked legally in the First
    Baptist parking lot, and yelled at him from across the street
    that the next time they saw him they would take him to jail.
    DESERTRAIN V. CITY OF LOS ANGELES                 7
    On the morning of October 31, 2010, Jacobs-Elstein was
    exiting his car when Officer Gonzales and her partner
    detained, handcuffed, and arrested Jacobs-Elstein for
    violating Section 85.02. The car contained personal
    belongings, such as boxes and computer equipment, as well
    as plastic bottles of urine. Jacobs-Elstein was in custody for
    about seven hours before being released, after which he
    borrowed money to get his car out of impoundment. He had
    no criminal record before this arrest.
    On January 30, 2011, Defendant Officer Yoshioka and his
    partner cited Jacobs-Elstein again for violating Section 85.02,
    this time while Jacobs-Elstein was sitting in his car, talking
    on his cell phone. Jacobs-Elstein had dog food in the car. He
    told Officer Yoshioka the dog food was from a friend whose
    dog he would later take to the park. The car also contained
    salad boxes, water bottles, a portable radio, and bags of
    clothes. Jacobs-Elstein showed Officer Yoshioka proof that
    he resided on private property, and thus was not sleeping in
    his vehicle. Officer Yoshioka informed him that he need not
    sleep in his car to violate Section 85.02.
    During this last incident, Officer Yoshioka’s partner gave
    Jacobs-Elstein a “Local Resources Information” pamphlet.
    This was the first time he was offered any such information.
    The flyer claimed to provide guidance on how to comply with
    Section 85.02. Yet Jacobs-Elstein soon discovered that this
    information was not helpful to him. It provided information
    only on RV parks, where Jacobs-Elstein could not park his
    car, and shelters, where he could not keep his belongings
    during the day.
    Plaintiff Chris Taylor sells his artwork at a booth on
    Venice Beach, where he works every day. In October 2010,
    8          DESERTRAIN V. CITY OF LOS ANGELES
    Officer Yoshioka issued a warning to Taylor for sleeping in
    his small two-door car through the night, in violation of
    Section 85.02. He then began sleeping on the sidewalk,
    which is legal. Starting December 1, 2010, Taylor began
    sleeping at Winter Shelter in Culver City. He rented a storage
    facility to get his excess property out of the car, though he
    kept his sleeping bag with him in case he missed the bus to
    the shelter and had to sleep on the streets.
    On the morning of December 18, 2010, Officer Yoshioka
    and his partner arrested Taylor for violating Section 85.02
    and had his car impounded. At the time he was arrested,
    Taylor was sitting in his car to get out of the rain. The
    vehicle contained one tin of food, clothing, and a bottle of
    urine. Taylor informed the officers that he slept at Winter
    Shelter and not in his car, and that he had an identification
    card issued by Winter Shelter to prove it. He was arrested
    nonetheless.
    Plaintiff Patricia Warivonchik has lived in Venice for
    thirty-four years. She is epileptic, and after suffering a
    significant head injury, is unable to work full time. Because
    she could no longer afford to pay rent in Venice, but did not
    want to leave the area, she began living in her RV. Since
    becoming homeless, Warivonchik has supported herself with
    part-time jobs and by selling ceramic artwork. She is also a
    member of a church in Santa Monica where she legally parks
    her RV at night.
    On November 13, 2010, Warivonchik was driving her RV
    through Venice — taking her artwork to a local fair — when
    she was pulled over by Officer Yoshioka and his partner for
    failing to turn off her left blinker. She was not cited for the
    blinker, but was given a written warning for violating Section
    DESERTRAIN V. CITY OF LOS ANGELES                 9
    85.02 and told that she would be arrested if ever seen again
    in Venice with her RV.
    Plaintiff William Cagle has been a resident of Venice
    since 1979. He suffers from congestive heart failure, which
    causes fluid to build up in his legs, preventing him from
    walking even short distances. His sole source of income is
    Social Security, which is not enough to pay both for rent and
    for the medicine he needs that is not covered by his insurance.
    Cagle became homeless in 1993, but was able to keep his
    small van.
    In the early mornings of October 17, 2010, and November
    22, 2010, Officer Yoshioka and his partner cited and arrested
    Cagle for violating Section 85.02. Among the items found in
    Cagle’s van were clothing, bedding, boxed food, bottles of
    medicine, and a portable radio. Cagle explained to the
    officers that he was not sleeping in his vehicle. Officer
    Yoshioka’s partner responded that sleeping is not the only
    criteria for violating Section 85.02.
    PROCEDURAL HISTORY
    I. The Complaint
    In their First Amended Complaint, Plaintiffs challenged
    Section 85.02 under the Fourth, Fifth, and Fourteenth
    Amendments, various sections of the California Constitution,
    and several state and federal statutes. Although Plaintiffs
    alleged that enforcement of Section 85.02 “violates due
    process,” they did not specifically allege that the statute is
    unconstitutionally vague.
    10         DESERTRAIN V. CITY OF LOS ANGELES
    II. Discovery
    The parties proceeded to discovery. Plaintiffs filed a
    discovery request for “[a]ny and all documents regarding the
    incident(s) described in the Complaint.” On August 22, 2011
    — eight days before the discovery cut-off date — Defendants
    filed their tenth response to Plaintiffs’ discovery request. In
    their response, Defendants for the first time produced copies
    of internal memoranda instructing officers on how to enforce
    Section 85.02.
    In one memo from 2008, officers were told that any arrest
    “report must describe in detail observations . . . that establish
    one of the following — (i) overnight occupancy for more than
    one night or (ii) day-by-day occupancy of three or more
    days.” The arrest reports for Plaintiffs Jacobs-Elstein, Taylor,
    and Cagle, however, contained no such observations. In
    another memo, from 2010, officers were told to “adhere to the
    ‘Four C’s’ philosophy: Commander’s Intent, Constitutional
    Policing, Community Perspective, and Compassion,” with no
    further details.
    On August 26, 2011, Plaintiffs’ attorney deposed the Task
    Force’s lead officer, Defendant Captain Jon Peters.
    Plaintiffs’ attorney questioned Captain Peters extensively on
    whether the Task Force had been given any limiting
    instructions on how to enforce Section 85.02. Specifically,
    Plaintiffs’ attorney asked about the 2008 memo directing
    officers to make an arrest only after observing a suspect
    occupying a vehicle for more than one night or for three
    consecutive days, an instruction Defendant Officers had
    ignored. Captain Peters then stated that he disapproved of
    this memo because he felt it did not offer Task Force officers
    enough discretion, and had instead instructed officers to
    DESERTRAIN V. CITY OF LOS ANGELES                 11
    follow the broadly-worded “Four C’s” policy. Plaintiffs’
    attorney asked Captain Peters if he believed a person who
    slept at a shelter but was found in her vehicle during the day
    would be in violation of Section 85.02. Captain Peters
    responded, “I don’t believe that they would be violating the
    law, in my opinion.”
    On August 30, 2011, Plaintiffs’ attorney deposed
    Defendant Officer Jason Prince. Again, Plaintiffs’ attorney
    repeatedly asked whether Task Force officers had been given
    any specific training or guidance on how to enforce Section
    85.02, particularly if a suspect did not sleep in the vehicle at
    night. Officer Prince responded, “The totality of the
    circumstances is what brings us to the conclusion that they’re
    in violation of [Section] 85.02, not where they’re sleeping at
    nighttime.”
    After those two depositions revealed conflicting views
    among the enforcing officers as to what Section 85.02 means,
    Plaintiffs’ attorney told Defense counsel that Plaintiffs would
    now be challenging the constitutionality of Section 85.02 on
    vagueness grounds. On September 13, 2013, Plaintiffs’
    attorney emailed Defense counsel confirming that one of
    Plaintiffs’ “primary arguments [is] vagueness,” then
    mentioned three Supreme Court cases discussing the void-
    for-vagueness doctrine: Papachristou v. City of Jacksonville,
    
    405 U.S. 156
    (1972), Kolender v. Lawson, 
    461 U.S. 352
    (1983), and City of Chicago v. Morales, 
    527 U.S. 41
    (1999).
    III.   Motions for Summary Judgment
    On September 14, 2011, the parties filed cross-motions
    for summary judgment. In their motion, Plaintiffs argued that
    Ҥ 85.02 is unconstitutionally vague and criminalizes
    12         DESERTRAIN V. CITY OF LOS ANGELES
    otherwise innocent behavior with insufficient notice as to
    what constitutes a violation of the law. . . . Section 85.02 is
    totally devoid of any standards or guidelines to limit police
    discretion in enforcing a vague law.”
    On September 26, 2011, Plaintiffs filed their opposition
    to Defendants’ motion for summary judgment, again raising
    the argument that Section 85.02 is impermissibly vague.
    That same day, Defendants filed their opposition to
    Plaintiffs’ motion for summary judgment. As to Plaintiffs’
    vagueness challenge, Defendants first argued that “Plaintiffs’
    allegations and theories of liability are confined to those
    found in the operative complaint,” and that Defendants were
    not on notice that vagueness would be at issue during
    summary judgment. Defendants went on, however, to defend
    Section 85.02 against Plaintiffs’ vagueness challenge, on the
    merits.
    On October 3, 2011, Plaintiffs filed their reply in support
    of their motion for summary judgment. In it, Plaintiffs
    explained to the district court that it was not until eight days
    before the end of discovery that Defendants disclosed the
    LAPD’s internal memoranda describing the discretion
    officers had in enforcing Section 85.02. This was “significant
    since, when faced with a vagueness challenge to a municipal
    ordinance, courts are required to consider any possible
    limiting instructions . . . .” Thus, “[D]efendants can hardly
    complain when they only turned over key documents a week
    before the end of discovery.” Plaintiffs also informed the
    court that Plaintiffs’ attorney had told Defense counsel on
    August 30, 2011, that Plaintiffs would now be raising a
    vagueness challenge, and sent an email confirming this on
    September 13, 2011.
    DESERTRAIN V. CITY OF LOS ANGELES                        13
    On October 28, 2011, the district court denied Plaintiffs’
    motion for summary judgment and granted Defendants’
    motion for summary judgment as to all claims. In a footnote,
    the district court held that because Plaintiffs failed to raise a
    vagueness challenge in their First Amended Complaint,
    “Defendants were not on notice that Plaintiffs would
    challenge the constitutionality of § 85.02 [on vagueness
    grounds] and such arguments are inappropriate.”
    Plaintiffs timely appeal.2 We have jurisdiction under 28
    U.S.C. § 1291.
    STANDARD OF REVIEW
    We review de novo a grant or denial of summary
    judgment “to determine whether, viewing the evidence in a
    light most favorable to the nonmoving party, there are any
    genuine issues of material fact and whether the district court
    applied the relevant substantive law.” Tzung v. State Farm
    Fire & Cas. Co., 
    873 F.2d 1338
    , 1339–40 (9th Cir. 1989)
    (internal citation omitted).
    2
    Plaintiffs also appeal their claims under the Fourteenth Amendment’s
    right to travel, the Fourth Amendment’s protection against unreasonable
    searches and seizures, and various California statutes. Because Plaintiffs
    seek only injunctive and declaratory relief, and because we find that
    Section 85.02 is unconstitutionally vague on its face — a dispositive
    holding — we need not address Plaintiffs’ other claims.
    14         DESERTRAIN V. CITY OF LOS ANGELES
    DISCUSSION
    I. The district court abused its discretion by not
    addressing Plaintiffs’ vagueness claim on the merits.
    The district court refused to consider the merits of
    Plaintiffs’ vagueness challenge because it was not expressly
    raised in their First Amended Complaint. That ruling was an
    abuse of discretion: Plaintiffs should have been granted leave
    to amend their First Amended Complaint to add their new
    claim.
    Plaintiffs made their vagueness argument both in their
    motion for summary judgment and in their opposition to
    Defendants’ motion for summary judgment. Where plaintiffs
    “fail[] to raise [a claim] properly in their pleadings, . . . [if]
    they raised it in their motion for summary judgment, they
    should [be] allowed to incorporate it by amendment under
    Fed.R.Civ.P. 15(b).” Jackson v. Hayakawa, 
    605 F.2d 1121
    ,
    1129 (9th Cir. 1979). And “when issues are raised in
    opposition to a motion to summary judgment that are outside
    the scope of the complaint, ‘[t]he district court should have
    construed [the matter raised] as a request pursuant to rule
    15(b) of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure to amend the
    pleadings out of time.’” Apache Survival Coal. v. United
    States, 
    21 F.3d 895
    , 910 (9th Cir. 1994) (quoting Johnson v.
    Mateer, 
    625 F.2d 240
    , 242 (9th Cir. 1980)).
    “[L]eave to amend ‘shall be freely given when justice so
    requires,’ Fed.R.Civ.P. 15(a), and this policy is to be applied
    with extreme liberality.” Morongo Band of Mission Indians
    v. Rose, 
    893 F.2d 1074
    , 1079 (9th Cir. 1990). “Five factors
    are taken into account to assess the propriety of a motion for
    leave to amend: bad faith, undue delay, prejudice to the
    DESERTRAIN V. CITY OF LOS ANGELES                15
    opposing party, futility of amendment, and whether the
    plaintiff has previously amended the complaint.” Johnson v.
    Buckley, 
    356 F.3d 1067
    , 1077 (9th Cir. 2004). “The denial of
    a motion to amend a complaint is reviewed for abuse of
    discretion.” 
    Id. First, there
    is no evidence of bad faith. Second, there was
    no undue delay because Plaintiffs only fully understood
    Defendants’ enforcement policies late in the discovery period.
    Defendants made Plaintiffs aware of the LAPD’s 2008 and
    2010 internal memoranda — describing the Task Force’s
    policy of enforcement — eight days before the discovery cut-
    off. As discussed in Part II.B below, the vagueness analysis
    of a statute includes a review of any limiting interpretation
    adopted by the enforcement agency. These two memoranda
    alerted Plaintiffs that Task Force officers had either received
    ambiguous instructions, or had ignored the explicit directives
    they had been given. Once Plaintiffs received these key
    documents, they advanced their vagueness argument.
    Third, there was no prejudice to Defendants. The district
    court found that Defendants were not on notice that Plaintiffs
    would raise a vagueness challenge at summary judgment.
    Yet the record shows otherwise. After finally receiving
    Defendants’ 2008 and 2010 internal memoranda, Plaintiffs’
    attorney repeatedly asked Defendants during their depositions
    whether Task Force officers had any criteria to limit their
    enforcement of Section 85.02, especially when it came to
    suspects — like Plaintiffs — who did not spend the night in
    their vehicles. This questioning put Defendants on notice that
    Plaintiffs were concerned with the vagueness of Section
    85.02 and the lack of limiting instructions provided by the
    LAPD.
    16         DESERTRAIN V. CITY OF LOS ANGELES
    Once Plaintiffs fully understood Defendants’ policy of
    enforcing Section 85.02, Plaintiffs confirmed that they sought
    to challenge Section 85.02 on vagueness grounds. Plaintiffs’
    attorney told Defense counsel weeks before the parties filed
    cross-motions for summary judgment that Plaintiffs would be
    raising a vagueness challenge, and repeated this statement by
    email the day before cross-motions for summary judgment
    were filed.
    By the summary judgment stage, Defendants had ample
    notice of Plaintiffs’ vagueness challenge, and the issue did
    not require further discovery. Both parties fully argued the
    vagueness issue in their respective summary judgment
    briefings. Thus, any claim of surprise or prejudice by
    Defendants is unpersuasive. See Howey v. United States, 
    481 F.2d 1187
    , 1191 (9th Cir. 1973) (finding no undue prejudice
    when defendant “was fully prepared to litigate” new issues
    raised in amended complaint).
    Fourth, there is no showing that amendment would be
    futile. And fifth, Plaintiffs only amended their complaint
    once, long before they received Defendants’ internal
    memoranda.
    The district court should have construed Plaintiffs’
    vagueness argument at summary judgment as a motion to
    amend their First Amended Complaint.             And given
    Defendants’ late disclosures and inability to make a credible
    claim of surprise or prejudice, the district court abused its
    discretion by not amending the First Amended Complaint to
    conform to the evidence and argument, and by not
    considering the vagueness claim on the merits.
    DESERTRAIN V. CITY OF LOS ANGELES                   17
    II. Section 85.02 is unconstitutionally vague.
    A statute fails under the Due Process Clause of the
    Fourteenth Amendment “if it is so vague and standardless
    that it leaves the public uncertain as to the conduct it prohibits
    . . . .” Giaccio v. Pennsylvania, 
    382 U.S. 399
    , 402 (1966). A
    statute is vague on its face when “no standard of conduct is
    specified at all. As a result, men of common intelligence
    must necessarily guess at its meaning.” Coates v. City of
    Cincinnati, 
    402 U.S. 611
    , 614 (1971) (internal quotation
    marks omitted).
    “Vagueness may invalidate a criminal law for either of
    two independent reasons. First, it may fail to provide the
    kind of notice that will enable ordinary people to understand
    what conduct it prohibits; second, it may authorize and even
    encourage arbitrary and discriminatory enforcement.”
    
    Morales, 527 U.S. at 56
    (citation omitted). Section 85.02
    fails under both standards.
    A. Section 85.02 fails to provide adequate notice of
    the conduct it criminalizes.
    “[T]he purpose of the fair notice requirement is to enable
    the ordinary citizen to conform his or her conduct to the law.”
    
    Id. at 58.
    A penal statute cannot require the public to
    speculate as to its meaning while risking life, liberty, and
    property in the process. See Lanzetta v. New Jersey, 
    306 U.S. 451
    , 453 (1939).
    Section 85.02 offers no guidance as to what conduct it
    prohibits, inducing precisely this type of impermissible
    speculation and uncertainty. It states that no person shall use
    a vehicle “as living quarters either overnight, day-by-day, or
    18         DESERTRAIN V. CITY OF LOS ANGELES
    otherwise.” Yet the statute does not define “living quarters,”
    or specify how long — or when — is “otherwise.” We know
    that under Defendants’ enforcement practices sleeping in a
    vehicle is not required to violate Section 85.02, as Jacobs-
    Elstein learned, nor is keeping a plethora of belongings
    required, as Taylor learned. But there is no way to know
    what is required to violate Section 85.02.
    Instead, Plaintiffs are left guessing as to what behavior
    would subject them to citation and arrest by an officer. Is it
    impermissible to eat food in a vehicle? Is it illegal to keep a
    sleeping bag? Canned food? Books? What about speaking
    on a cell phone? Or staying in the car to get out of the rain?
    These are all actions Plaintiffs were taking when arrested for
    violation of the ordinance, all of which are otherwise
    perfectly legal. And despite Plaintiffs’ repeated attempts to
    comply with Section 85.02, there appears to be nothing they
    can do to avoid violating the statute short of discarding all of
    their possessions or their vehicles, or leaving Los Angeles
    entirely. All in all, this broad and cryptic statute criminalizes
    innocent behavior, making it impossible for citizens to know
    how to keep their conduct within the pale.
    In this respect, Section 85.02 presents the same vagueness
    concerns as the anti-loitering ordinance held unconstitutional
    in Morales, 
    527 U.S. 41
    . There, the Supreme Court found
    that a Chicago law prohibiting “loitering,” which it defined as
    “remain[ing] in any one place with no apparent purpose,”
    lacked fair notice, as it was “difficult to imagine how any
    citizen . . . standing in a public place with a group of people
    would know if he or she had an ‘apparent purpose.’” 
    Id. at 56–57.
               DESERTRAIN V. CITY OF LOS ANGELES                19
    So too here. It is difficult to imagine how anyone loading
    up his or her car with personal belongings, perhaps to go on
    a camping trip or to donate household wares to the Salvation
    Army, and parking briefly on a Los Angeles street, would
    know if he or she was violating the statute. What’s worse,
    even avoiding parking does not seem to be sufficient;
    Plaintiff Warivonchik was not even parked — she was
    driving her RV through Venice when she was pulled over and
    issued a warning. So, under the Task Force’s expansive
    reading of this already amorphous statute, any vacationer who
    drives through Los Angeles in an RV may be violating
    Section 85.02. As “the [C]ity cannot conceivably have meant
    to criminalize each instance a citizen” uses a vehicle to store
    personal property, vagueness about what is covered and what
    is not “dooms this ordinance.” 
    Id. at 57.
    Because Section 85.02 fails to draw a clear line between
    innocent and criminal conduct, it is void for vagueness.
    B. Section 85.02 promotes arbitrary enforcement that
    targets the homeless.
    A statute is also unconstitutionally vague if it encourages
    arbitrary or discriminatory enforcement. See 
    Papachristou, 405 U.S. at 162
    . If a statute provides “no standards
    governing the exercise of . . . discretion,” it becomes “a
    convenient tool for harsh and discriminatory enforcement by
    local prosecuting officials, against particular groups deemed
    to merit their displeasure.” 
    Id. at 170
    (internal quotation
    marks omitted).
    Arbitrary and discriminatory enforcement is exactly what
    has occurred here. As noted, Section 85.02 is broad enough
    to cover any driver in Los Angeles who eats food or
    20         DESERTRAIN V. CITY OF LOS ANGELES
    transports personal belongings in his or her vehicle. Yet it
    appears to be applied only to the homeless. The vagueness
    doctrine is designed specifically to prevent this type of
    selective enforcement, in which a “‘net [can] be cast at large,
    to enable men to be caught who are vaguely undesirable in
    the eyes of the police and prosecution, although not
    chargeable in any particular offense.’” 
    Id. at 166
    (quoting
    Winters v. New York, 
    333 U.S. 507
    , 540 (1948) (Frankfurter,
    J., dissenting)).
    Section 85.02 raises the same concerns of discriminatory
    enforcement as the ordinance in Papachristou, 
    405 U.S. 156
    .
    There, the Supreme Court held that a city ordinance
    prohibiting “vagrancy” — which was applied to “loitering,”
    “prowling,” and “nightwalking,” among other conduct — was
    unconstitutionally vague. 
    Id. at 158,
    163. The Court viewed
    the ordinance in its historical context as the descendant of
    English feudal poor laws designed to prevent the physical
    movement and economic ascension of the lower class. 
    Id. at 161–62.
    In America, such laws had been used to “roundup
    . . . so-called undesireables,” and resulted “in a regime in
    which the poor and the unpopular [we]re permitted to stand
    on a public sidewalk . . . only at the whim of any police
    officer.” 
    Id. at 170
    , 171 (internal quotation marks omitted).
    The Court concluded that “the rule of law implies equality
    and justice in its application. Vagrancy laws . . . teach that
    the scales of justice are so tipped that even-handed
    administration of the law is not possible. The rule of law,
    evenly applied to minorities as well as majorities, to the poor
    as well as the rich, is the great mucilage that holds society
    together.” 
    Id. at 171.
    The City argues that its enforcement goals were motivated
    by legitimate health and safety concerns. It notes that some
    DESERTRAIN V. CITY OF LOS ANGELES                  21
    of the plaintiffs were arrested while in cars with garbage,
    pets, and their personal belongings, and that it was unsafe for
    plaintiffs to occupy their cars under these circumstances. We
    do not question the legitimacy of these public health and
    safety issues, but the record plainly shows that some of the
    conduct plaintiffs were engaged in when arrested — eating,
    talking on the phone, or escaping the rain in their vehicles —
    mimics the everyday conduct of many Los Angeles residents.
    The health and safety concerns cited by the City do not
    excuse the basic infirmity of the ordinance: It is so vague that
    it fails to give notice of the conduct it actually prohibits. As
    shown by the City’s own documents, the different ways the
    ordinance was interpreted by members of the police
    department make it incompatible with the concept of an even-
    handed administration of the law to the poor and to the rich
    that is fundamental to a democratic society.
    Defendants correctly note that they can bring clarity to an
    otherwise vague statute “through limiting constructions given
    . . . by the . . . enforcement agency.” Hess v. Bd. of Parole &
    Post-Prison Supervision, 
    514 F.3d 909
    , 914 (9th Cir. 2008).
    Defendants point to their 2008 internal memorandum
    instructing officers making an arrest to first “establish one of
    the following — (i) overnight occupancy for more than one
    night or (ii) day-by-day occupancy of three or more days.”
    This memo is irrelevant. First, Defendant Captain Peters,
    who heads the Task Force, admitted that he disfavored these
    instructions, and instead advised his officers to adhere to the
    “Four C’s” philosophy, which gave Task Force officers no
    more guidance than the statute itself. Second, even if Task
    Force officers had been given the 2008 memo, they did not
    follow it. Officers did not observe Plaintiffs in their vehicles
    overnight or for three consecutive days before arresting them.
    22        DESERTRAIN V. CITY OF LOS ANGELES
    In sum, Section 85.02 has paved the way for law
    enforcement to target the homeless and is therefore
    unconstitutionally vague.
    CONCLUSION
    Section 85.02 provides inadequate notice of the unlawful
    conduct it proscribes, and opens the door to discriminatory
    enforcement against the homeless and the poor. Accordingly,
    Section 85.02 violates the Due Process Clause of the
    Fourteenth Amendment as an unconstitutionally vague
    statute.
    For many homeless persons, their automobile may be
    their last major possession — the means by which they can
    look for work and seek social services. The City of Los
    Angeles has many options at its disposal to alleviate the
    plight and suffering of its homeless citizens. Selectively
    preventing the homeless and the poor from using their
    vehicles for activities many other citizens also conduct in
    their cars should not be one of those options.
    REVERSED.