Deja Vu Showgirls v. State, Dep't of Tax. , 2014 NV 73 ( 2014 )


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  •                                                   130 Nev., Advance Opinion   73
    IN THE SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF NEVADA
    DEJA VU SHOWGIRLS OF LAS                            No. 60037
    VEGAS, LLC, A NEVADA LIMITED
    LIABILITY COMPANY, D/B/A DEJA VU
    SHOWGIRLS; LITTLE DARLINGS OF
    LAS VEGAS, D/B/A LITTLE
    MED
    DARLINGS; K-KEL, INC., D/l3/A                          SEP 1 8 2014
    SPEARMINT RHINO GENTLEMEN'S
    CLUB; OLYMPUS GARDEN, INC.,
    D/B/A OLYMPUS GARDEN; SHAC,                           thaer GE
    LLC, D/WA SAPPHIRE; THE POWER
    COMPANY, INC., D/B/A CRAZY HORSE
    TOO GENTLEMEN'S CLUB; AND D.
    WESTWOOD, INC., DTB/A
    TREASURES,
    Appellants,
    vs.
    NEVADA DEPARTMENT OF
    TAXATION; NEVADA TAX
    COMMISSION; AND THE STATE OF
    NEVADA BOARD OF EXAMINERS,
    Respondents.
    Appeal from a district court summary judgment rejecting a
    facial challenge to the constitutionality of Nevada's Live Entertainment
    Tax and denying injunctive relief as to the enforcement of that tax.
    Eighth Judicial District Court, Clark County; Elizabeth Goff Gonzalez,
    Judge.
    Affirmed.
    Lambrose Brown and William H. Brown, Las Vegas; Shafer and
    Associates and Bradley J. Shafer, Lansing, Michigan,
    for Appellants Deja Vu Showgirls of Las Vegas, LLC; Little Darlings of
    Las Vegas; K-Kel, Inc.; Olympus Garden, Inc.; The Power Company, Inc.;
    and D. Westwood, Inc.
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    Greenberg Traurig, LLP, and Mark E. Ferrario and Brandon E. Roos, Las
    Vegas,
    for Appellant SHAC, LLC.
    Catherine Cortez Masto, Attorney General, Blake A. Doerr and David J.
    Pope, Senior Deputy Attorneys General, and Vivienne Rakowsky, Deputy
    Attorney General, Carson City,
    for Respondents.
    BEFORE THE COURT EN BANC.
    OPINION
    By the Court, DOUGLAS, J.:
    In this opinion, we consider whether, on its face, Nevada's
    Live Entertainment Tax violates free speech rights under Article 1,
    Section 9 of the Nevada Constitution or the First Amendment to the
    United States Constitution. We also address whether the district court
    was required to entertain appellants' as-applied challenge to the Tax when
    they failed to exhaust their administrative remedies on that issue.
    Regarding appellants' facial challenge, we conclude that the Tax does not
    violate the First Amendment as related to speech (i.e., dance), and we
    therefore affirm the district court's summary judgment as to this issue. As
    for appellants' as-applied challenge, we hold that appellants were required
    to exhaust their administrative remedies on this issue before seeking
    relief in the district court, and thus, we affirm the district court's
    dismissal of the as-applied challenge for lack of subject matter jurisdiction.
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    BACKGROUND
    In 2003, the Nevada Legislature enacted the Live
    Entertainment Tax, which imposes an excise tax on certain business
    transactions completed at facilities providing "live entertainment."      See
    NRS 368A.200(1). 'Live entertainment' means any activity provided for
    pleasure, enjoyment, recreation, relaxation, diversion or other similar
    purpose by a person or persons who are physically present when providing
    that activity to a patron or group of patrons who are physically present."
    NRS 368A.090(1). Nevada's Live Entertainment Tax (NLET) imposes a
    ten-percent tax on any amounts paid for admission and for food,
    refreshments, and merchandise provided within a live-entertainment
    facility having a maximum occupancy of less than 7,500 persons. NRS
    368A.200(1). When a live-entertainment facility has a maximum
    occupancy of at least 7,500 persons, however, NLET only imposes a five-
    percent tax on admission charges. 
    Id. At its
    inception, NLET provided ten exemptions dependent on,
    inter alia, the location and size of a facility providing live entertainment,
    the entity status of a provider, 1- and, in several instances, the type of
    entertainment provided. 2 NRS 368A.200(5) (2003). Among other things,
    the 2003 version of NLET included an exemption for "[Wye entertainment
    that [was] not provided at a licensed gaming establishment if the facility
    INLET exempted "Wive entertainment that is provided by or
    entirely for the benefit of a nonprofit religious, charitable, fraternal or
    other organization that qualifies as a tax-exempt organization. . . ." from
    being subject to the tax. NRS 368A.200(5)(b) (2003).
    2 NLET  also exempted "[a]ny boxing contest or exhibition governed
    by the provisions of chapter 467 of NRS" from being subject to the tax. See
    NRS 368A.200(5)(c) (2003).
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    in which the live entertainment [was] provided [had] a maximum seating
    capacity of less than 300." NRS 368A.200(5)(d) (2003). The initial
    statutory scheme also provided an exemption for gaming establishments
    "licensed for less than 51 slot machines, less than six games, or any
    combination of slot machines and games within those respective limits, if
    the facility in which the live entertainment [was] provided [had] a
    maximum seating capacity of less than 300." NRS 368A.200(5)(e) (2003).
    Since its enactment, the Legislature has amended NLET's
    provisions on multiple occasions. In 2005, the Legislature, among other
    things, created eight exceptions to NLET's definition of "live
    entertainment." 3 NRS 368A.090(2)(b) (2005). Additionally, the
    Legislature changed the maximum seating capacity language in NRS
    368A.200(5)(d)-(e) (2003) to "maximum occupancy," and reduced that
    provision's occupancy from 300 to 200. NRS 368A.200(5)(d)-(e) (2005).
    The Legislature also added six new exemptions, including exempting
    certain National Association for Stock Car Auto Racing (NASCAR) events
    from being subject to the tax. NRS 368A.200(5)(k)-(p) (2005). Two years
    later, the Legislature added another exemption from the tax for
    professional minor league baseball contests, events, and exhibitions. NRS
    368A.200(5)(p) (2007). 4
    3 For  example, the statute was amended to exclude "[t] elevision,
    radio, closed circuit or Internet broadcasts of live entertainment" and
    "[a]nimal behaviors induced by animal trainers or caretakers primarily for
    the purpose of education and scientific research" from NLET's definition of
    "live entertainment." NRS 368A.090(2)(b)(5), (7) (2005).
    4 In
    the Legislature's 2007 amendment, NRS 368A.200(5)(p) (2005)
    was moved to NRS 368A.200(5)(q), with the baseball exemption
    designated as NRS 368A.200(p). 2007 Nev. Stat., ch. 547, § 1, at 3434.
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    In April 2006, appellants, which are all exotic dancing
    establishments, filed suit against respondents in the United States
    District Court for the District of Nevada seeking a declaration that NLET
    is facially unconstitutional for violating the First Amendment to the
    United States Constitution, an injunction against its enforcement, and a
    refund of all taxes paid under the statute. The federal district court later
    dismissed this action on respondents' motion, concluding that appellants
    had failed to show that Nevada's state court and administrative systems
    deprived them of a plain, speedy, and efficient remedy. Appellants
    appealed that decision to the United States Court of Appeals for the Ninth
    Circuit, which later affirmed the lower court's determination.
    While the appeal of the dismissal of their federal action was
    still pending before the Ninth Circuit, appellants filed a de novo action in
    the Eighth Judicial District Court seeking a declaration that NLET is
    facially unconstitutional, injunctive relief, a refund of all taxes paid under
    NLET, and attorney fees and costs (Case 1). Appellants later amended
    their complaint in Case 1 to include an as-applied constitutional challenge
    to NLET. Even though Case 1 was pending in the district court,
    appellants K-Kel, Olympus Garden, SHAC, The Power Company, and D.
    Westwood filed individual tax refund requests with the Nevada
    Department of Taxation pursuant to NRS 368A.260(1) on the ground that
    NLET was facially unconstitutional under the First Amendment. The
    Department later denied these refund requests and the Nevada Tax
    Commission affirmed the Department's decision by a written order
    entered on October 12, 2007, determining that NLET was facially
    constitutional.
    Based on the Department's and Commission's denials of their
    refund requests, appellants filed a second de novo action in the Eighth
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    Judicial District Court on January 9, 2008 (Case 2). In this complaint,
    appellants argued that NLET was facially unconstitutional and sought a
    refund, declaratory and injunctive relief, and damages. Nearly three
    years later, appellants amended their Case 2 complaint to include an as-
    applied challenge to NLET. The district court then entered an order
    coordinating Cases 1 and 2 and consolidating their declaratory relief
    claims.
    After hearing arguments on respondents' re-noticed motion for
    partial summary judgment and motion to dismiss the as-applied
    challenge, the district court entered an order limiting Case 1 to only
    appellants' facial challenge to NLET and permanent injunction request.
    In doing so, the district court dismissed the pending as-applied challenge
    in Case 1 for lack of subject matter jurisdiction based on appellants'
    failure to exhaust their administrative remedies and dismissed Case 2 in
    its entirety, also on subject matter jurisdiction grounds, because
    appellants had filed a de novo action instead of a petition for judicial
    review per NRS 233B.130. Appellants subsequently appealed the
    dismissal of Case 2 to this court, and that appeal is before us in the
    companion case addressed in Deja Vu Showgirls v. State, Department of
    Taxation (Deja Vu I), 130 Nev. , P.3d            (Adv. Op. No. 72,
    September 18, 2014).
    Appellants and respondents ultimately filed competing
    motions for summary judgment on the remaining issues in Case 1. The
    district court granted respondents' summary judgment motion, denying
    appellants' summary judgment motion in the process. The district court
    concluded that NLET did not facially violate the First Amendment
    because it is a content-neutral and generally applicable tax that does not
    target constitutionally protected activity. In making its determination,
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    the district court only considered the statute's language. Additionally, as
    a consequence of its decision, the district court necessarily rejected
    appellants' request for a permanent injunction.
    DISCUSSION
    I.
    We first address whether the district court erred by dismissing
    appellants' as-applied challenge from Case 1 for lack of subject matter
    jurisdiction.
    In Nevada, a district court lacks subject matter jurisdiction to
    consider a taxpayer's claim for judicial relief unless that taxpayer has
    exhausted its administrative remedies. State v. Scotsman Mfg. Co., Inc.,
    
    109 Nev. 252
    , 254, 
    849 P.2d 317
    , 319 (1993). 5 We have recognized limited
    exceptions to that rule, however, when a statute's interpretation or
    constitutionality is at issue, or when the initiation of administrative
    proceedings would be futile.       
    Id. at 255,
    849 P.2d at 319. With those
    exceptions in mind, appellants contend that the district court improperly
    dismissed their as-applied challenge to NLET because that challenge
    involved constitutional issues. 6 Whether the district court erred by
    5Scotsman    uses "subject matter jurisdiction" with reference to a
    party's failure to exhaust administrative remedies. We note but do not
    decide the question of whether the failure to exhaust administrative
    remedies is jurisdictional or a claim prerequisite. See II Richard J. Pierce,
    Jr., Administrative Law Treatise §§ 15.2, 15.3 (5th ed. 2010 & Supp. 2014).
    6 We reject appellants' assertion that initiating administrative
    proceedings for their as-applied constitutional challenge to NLET before
    the Department would have been futile because they offer no cogent
    argument. See Berkson v. LePome, 126 Nev. „ 
    245 P.3d 560
    , 566
    (2010) (stating that "[it is well established that this court need not
    consider issues not supported by cogent argument. . ."). Appellants' one-
    sentence argument on this issue does not support the proposition that the
    continued on next page . . .
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    dismissing appellants' as-applied challenge for lack of subject matter
    jurisdiction is a question of law that we review de novo.       See Ogawa v.
    Ogawa, 
    125 Nev. 660
    , 667, 
    221 P.3d 699
    , 704 (2009).
    It is undisputed that appellants failed to exhaust their
    administrative remedies for their as-applied constitutional challenge. And
    while appellants argue that there is a general exception for claims
    involving constitutional issues, this argument ignores the distinction
    drawn by Nevada authority between facial and as-applied challenges in
    this context. See Malecon Tobacco, L.L.C. v. State ex rel. Dep't of Taxation,
    
    118 Nev. 837
    , 841, 
    59 P.3d 474
    , 477 (2002). While facial constitutional
    challenges may bypass the administrative exhaustion requirement, we
    have held that as-applied constitutional challenges hinging on factual
    determinations cannot. 
    Id. In making
    that determination, we reasoned
    that given an agency's expertise in the area of the dispute, it is in the best
    position to make the factual determinations necessary to resolve that
    dispute. See 
    id. at 840-41,
    59 P.3d at 476-77. Thus, because appellants
    failed to raise their as-applied challenge to NLET before the
    Department—a challenge that hinges on factual determinations not yet
    made—we conclude that they were required to exhaust their
    administrative remedies, and therefore, we affirm the district court's
    dismissal of appellants' as-applied challenge.
    . . . continued
    Department, having never had appellants' as-applied challenge before it,
    would not have fully considered that challenge if it had been properly
    raised.
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    With appellants' as-applied challenge no longer before us, we
    now consider whether NLET is facially unconstitutional for violating free
    speech rights (i.e., dance) under Article 1, Section 9 of the Nevada
    Constitution or the First Amendment to the United States Constitution. 7
    This court reviews constitutional challenges to a statute de
    novo. Busefink v. State, 128 Nev. „ 
    286 P.3d 599
    , 602 (2012). In
    the First Amendment context, there is a "strong presumption in favor of
    duly enacted taxation schemes." Leathers v. Medlock, 
    499 U.S. 439
    , 451
    (1991). As the Supreme Court has stated, "Inherent in the power to tax is
    the power to discriminate in taxation," and thus, "[1] egislatures have
    especially broad latitude in creating classifications and distinctions in tax
    statutes."    
    Id. (internal quotation
    omitted). Accordingly, in such
    circumstances, a statute's "presumption of constitutionality can be
    overcome only by the most explicit demonstration that a classification is a
    hostile and oppressive discrimination against particular persons and
    classes." 
    Id. at 451-52
    (internal quotations omitted).
    When making a facial challenge to a statute, the challenger
    generally bears the burden of demonstrating that there is no set of
    circumstances under which the statute would be valid. See Busefink, 128
    Nev. at , 286 P.3d at 602. But if a court concludes that a heightened
    'We note that Article 1, Section 9 of the Nevada Constitution
    "affords no greater protection to speech activity than does the First
    Amendment to the United States Constitution." Univ. & Cmty. Coll. Sys.
    of Nev. v. Nevadans for Sound Gov't, 
    120 Nev. 712
    , 722, 
    100 P.3d 179
    , 187
    (2004). Accordingly, our resolution of appellants' challenge to NLET based
    on the United States Constitution also resolves appellants' challenge
    under the Nevada Constitution.
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    level of scrutiny applies, the general presumption regarding a statute's
    constitutionality is reversed, and the State bears the burden of
    demonstrating the statute's constitutionality. 8 See United States v.
    Playboy Entm't Grp., Inc., 
    529 U.S. 803
    , 817 (2000). With the
    aforementioned standards in mind, our analysis will focus on determining
    what level of scrutiny applies in our review of NLET's constitutionality.
    A.
    Before reaching the heart of this appeal, we must first dispose
    of appellants' assertion that, under Murdock v. Pennsylvania, 
    319 U.S. 105
                    (1943), NLET violates the First Amendment because it directly taxes live
    entertainment, which they maintain is categorically protected under the
    First Amendment. In Murdock, multiple Jehovah's Witnesses challenged
    their convictions for violating an ordinance that prohibited all soliciting
    and canvassing without first obtaining a license by paying a flat license
    
    tax. 319 U.S. at 106-07
    . In concluding that the ordinance was
    unconstitutional as applied to the petitioners, and therefore reversing
    their convictions, the Supreme Court recognized that "a person cannot be
    compelled to purchase, through a license fee or a license tax, the privilege
    freely granted by the constitution."       
    Id. at 114
    (internal quotation
    omitted).
    8Although   not discussed by the parties, we note that appellants'
    allegation that NRS 368A.200 violates the First Amendment satisfies the
    preliminary state actor requirement. See S.O.C., Inc. v. Mirage Casino-
    Hotel, 
    117 Nev. 403
    , 409-10, 
    23 P.3d 243
    , 247 (2001) (explaining that the
    First Amendment, applied to the states through the Fourteenth
    Amendment, only provides protection from a government's abridgment of
    free speech rights).
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    Appellants' interpretation and application of the Murdock case
    to NLET is fundamentally flawed. First, the tax at issue in Murdock was
    a flat license tax, which was required to be paid before the petitioners in
    that case could exercise •their rights under the First Amendment. The
    Supreme Court specifically distinguished that kind of tax from taxes on
    income, property, and other taxes that relate to the scope of activities or
    realized revenues.    
    Id. at 112-13.
    Appellants' attempt to expand the
    applicability of Murdock's holding to NLET, which is an excise tax on
    admission fees and the sale of certain products, disregards this distinction.
    Moreover, appellants' expansion argument was expressly rejected by the
    Court in a later decision that limited Murdock's holding "to apply only
    where a flat license tax operates as a prior restraint on the free exercise of
    religious beliefs." Jimmy Swaggart Ministries v. Bd. of Equalization of
    Cal., 
    493 U.S. 378
    , 389 (1990) (holding that California's six-percent sales
    tax on retail sales of personal property was not unconstitutional as applied
    to a religious organization's sale of religious books, tapes, records, and
    nonreligious materials).
    Second, in making their facial challenge, appellants rely on
    the• unsubstantiated assertion that NLET, in all of its applications,
    infringes on the First Amendment by regulating protected activities
    because entertainment is presumptively protected as a category. In
    rejecting appellants' argument, we note that NLET does not regulate live
    entertainment. Moreover, despite its misnomer, NLET does not actually
    tax live entertainment. Instead, it imposes an excise tax on business
    transactions which neither inhibits nor burdens the expressive conduct
    occurring at live-entertainment facilities. See NRS 368A.200. Therefore,
    because NLET does not operate as a prior restraint on constitutionally
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    protected activities, we reject appellants' arguments on this issue.     See
    Jimmy Swaggart 
    Ministries, 439 U.S. at 386
    .
    B.
    The remainder of our analysis addresses appellants'
    arguments that NLET is a differential tax of speakers protected under the
    First Amendment that triggers strict scrutiny because it discriminates on
    the basis of the content of taxpayer speech, targets a small group of
    speakers, and threatens to suppress speech. Accordingly, we will address
    those arguments in that order.
    Preliminarily, we recognize that the degree of protection
    afforded to erotic dance under the First Amendment is uncertain. See City
    of Las Vegas v. Eighth Judicial Dist. Court, 
    122 Nev. 1041
    , 1052, 
    146 P.3d 240
    , 247 (2006) ("Arguably, erotic dance is expressive conduct that
    communicates, which could be deserving of some level of First Amendment
    protection."). This uncertainty arises from the Supreme Court's plurality
    opinion in Barnes v. Glen Theatre, Inc.,         which states that "nude
    dancing. .. is expressive conduct within the outer perimeters of the First
    Amendment," and therefore is subject to only an intermediate level of
    scrutiny. 
    501 U.S. 560
    , 565-67 (1991) (emphasis added). To the extent
    that nude dancing is protected under the First Amendment, we
    acknowledge that "society's interest in protecting this type of expression is
    of a wholly different, and lesser, magnitude than the interest in
    untrammeled political debate." Young v. Am. Mini Theatres, Inc., 
    427 U.S. 50
    , 70 (1976) (plurality opinion). With that said, we note that the line of
    cases that appellants rely on and that we use in the remainder of this
    disposition deal exclusively with taxes on the press, which raise "concerns
    about censorship of critical information and opinion." Leathers, 499 U.S.
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    at 447. Accordingly, we are confident that if NLET satisfies those legal
    standards, the statute is constitutional on its face.
    We now turn to appellants' assertion that NLET discriminates
    based on the content of taxpayer speech. Appellants contend that, in
    enacting and amending NLET, the Legislature discriminated against
    taxpayers providing adult-oriented entertainment and favored taxpayers
    presenting family-oriented live entertainment. In making this argument,
    appellants focus on NRS 368A.090's exceptions to the definition of "alive
    entertainment" and NRS 368A.200(5)'s exemptions for certain live
    entertainment facilities identified by their size, location, entity status, and
    in some cases, the type of entertainment being provided. Appellants
    allege that NLET's exemptions for NASCAR, professional baseball, and
    boxing events are examples of content-based discrimination. Respondents
    disagree, arguing that NLET is a generally applicable tax and not
    discriminatory, and that no classifications are based on the content of
    taxpayers' messages.
    We begin our consideration of appellants' arguments by
    emphasizing that "a tax scheme that discriminates among speakers does
    not implicate the First Amendment unless it discriminates on the basis of
    ideas." 
    Leathers, 499 U.S. at 450
    . Thus, a tax that discriminates between
    speakers on a basis other than ideas is not by itself constitutionally
    suspect. To determine whether a taxing statute discriminates on the basis
    of ideas, we primarily look to the statute's language and secondarily
    consider the difference in the messages of those who are and are not being
    taxed. See 
    id. at 449.
                                      For example, in Arkansas Writers' Project, Inc. v. Ragland, 
    481 U.S. 221
    (1987), the Supreme Court looked to the language of Arkansas's
    tax on receipts from sales of tangible personal property and concluded that
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    the tax violated the First Amendment because it discriminated based on
    the content of taxpayer speech. In reaching this conclusion, the Court
    focused on the tax's content-based exemption for religious, professional,
    trade, and sports publications.     See 
    id. at 224,
    229-31. The Court
    emphasized that Arkansas's tax "is particularly repugnant to First
    Amendment principles" because "a magazine's tax status depends entirely
    on its content." 
    Id. at 229
    (emphasis added).
    Unlike the tax at issue in Arkansas Writers, it cannot be said
    that whether a live-entertainment provider is subject to NLET depends
    exclusively or even primarily on the content of the entertainment being
    provided.   See generally NRS 368A.090; NRS 368A.200. While NLET
    exempts certain performances, the statute's language does not refer to the
    content of any taxpayer's message.        See 
    Leathers, 499 U.S. at 449
    .
    Additionally, the Supreme Court has expressed that discrimination among
    taxpayers, whether those taxpayers are speakers or nonspeakers, is
    inherent and permissible in creating tax classifications that allow states
    the flexibility needed to fit their tax programs to local needs.   See 
    id. at 451.
    Although, as appellants point out, several exemptions include
    speakers, i.e., NASCAR, boxing, and professional baseball events, unless
    based on those speakers' ideas, such discrimination is insufficient to make
    NLET constitutionally suspect. 
    Id. at 444,
    451.
    Having analyzed NLET's language, we now consider the
    messages of those who are and are not taxed under the statute.
    Appellants argue that NLET's exemptions and exceptions are based on
    family-oriented versus adult-oriented messages provided at live
    entertainment facilities. This assertion lacks merit. Many facilities
    providing what appellants would classify as family-oriented live
    entertainment are subject to NLET, including concert venues, circuses,
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    and fashion shows. Compare NRS 368A.090(2)(a), and 3684.200(1), with
    NRS 368A.090(2)(b), and NRS 368A.200(5). Additionally, multiple
    facilities furnishing adult-oriented live entertainment, such as boxing and
    charity events, are exempted. NRS 368A.200(5)(b)-(c). Thus, facilities
    subject to NLET provide a variety of entertainers who in turn bring
    diverse messages. Based on NLET's language and the messages of those
    who are and are not taxed under its provisions, we conclude that the
    statute does not discriminate based on the content of taxpayer speech.
    Appellants next argue that NLET, through its exceptions and
    exemptions, impermissibly targets a small group of speakers, including
    appellants, to bear the full burden of the tax. We disagree.
    In     Minneapolis Star & Tribune Co. v. Minnesota
    Commissioner of Revenue, 
    460 U.S. 575
    , 579, 592 (1983), the Supreme
    Court concluded that a use tax resembled a "penalty for a few" and was
    unconstitutional because only 13 publishers producing 16 out of 374 paid
    circulation papers were obligated to pay the tax. Later, in Arkansas
    Writers, the Court determined that the sales tax at issue was
    unconstitutional, in part, because at most only three publications were
    obligated to pay the tax.   
    See 481 U.S. at 229
    . Further, as explained by
    the Court in a different case, "Mlle danger from a tax scheme that targets
    a small number of speakers is the danger of censorship.            
    Leathers, 499 U.S. at 448
    .
    As will be explained below, closer by comparison to this case is
    Leathers v. Medlock.     In Leathers, the Supreme Court considered the
    constitutionality of Arkansas's state sales tax on tangible property and
    specified services that excluded or exempted certain segments of the
    media and not others. 
    Id. at 441-42.
    Cable service providers challenged
    the tax after they became subject to its provisions by a legislative
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    amendment.      
    Id. at 442.
    In concluding that Arkansas's tax was
    constitutional and did not impermissibly target a small group of speakers,
    the Court determined that the use tax was of general applicability and
    posed no danger of censorship given the wide variety of programming
    subject to its provisions. See 
    id. at 447,
    449.
    Although NLET is not a generally applicable sales tax like the
    tax addressed in Leathers, it reaches a much broader base than the taxes
    at issue in Arkansas Writers and Minneapolis Star.       As evidence, the
    record demonstrates that in 2004 over 90 live-entertainment facilities
    were subject to and paid taxes under NLET. These tax payments came
    from a variety of live entertainment establishments, including raceways,
    nightclubs, performing arts centers, gentlemen's clubs, and facilities
    hosting sporting and one-time events. While we acknowledge that these
    numbers were from 2004 and thus predate NLET's additional exemptions
    and exceptions, we remain convinced that, even with those amendments,
    NLET does not impermissibly target a small group of speakers and
    therefore does not pose any danger of censorship.°
    Appellants lastly claim that based on its exemptions and
    exceptions, the only possible purpose behind NLET was to suppress
    speech.m But this assertion ignores the idea that "Mnherent in the power
    °We note that the 2005 amendments to the exemptions found in
    MRS 368A.200(5)(d)-(e) reducing the qualifying maximum occupancy
    levels from 300 to 200 actually expanded NLET's tax base. 2005 Nev.
    Stat., ch. 484, § 10, at 2483; 2005 Nev. Stat., ch. 9, § 38, at 142.
    1 °Appellantsalso assert that the Legislature's inclusion of exotic
    dancing establishments was intentional and therefore unconstitutional.
    We note that delving into legislative intent in this context is neither
    required nor prudent. We agree with the Supreme Court when it stated,
    "Mnquiries into congressional motives or purposes are a hazardous
    continued on next page . . .
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    to tax is the power to discriminate in taxation," and that unless "a
    classification is a hostile and oppressive discrimination against particular
    persons and classes," it will not trigger heightened scrutiny. 
    Leathers, 499 U.S. at 451-52
    (internal quotations omitted).
    In Leathers, the Supreme Court determined that Arkansas's
    choice to exclude and exempt certain media from a generally applicable
    tax was not hostile or oppressive because it did not suggest an intention to
    suppress any ideas. 
    Id. at 452-53.
    Similarly, the Nevada Legislature has
    decided to exempt and exclude certain venues and live entertainment from
    an otherwise broadly applicable tax. A facial examination of NLET's
    provisions reveals that this taxation scheme is neither directed at nor
    presents the danger of suppressing particular ideas.     See generally NRS
    Chapter 368A. Moreover, nothing in the record gives us reason to believe
    that NLET poses any danger of suppressing ideas.
    Because NLET does not discriminate on the basis of the
    content of taxpayer speech, target a small group of speakers, or otherwise
    threaten to suppress ideas or viewpoints, we• determine that heightened
    scrutiny does not apply Instead, rational basis review applies, and the
    statute is presumed to be constitutional. We conclude that NLET is
    constitutional on its face because appellants have failed to demonstrate
    that NLET is not rationally related to a legitimate government purpose.
    . . . continued
    matter," and such speculation should not be the basis of voiding legislation
    "which Congress had the undoubted power to enact and which could be
    reenacted in its exact form if the same or another legislator made a 'wiser'
    speech about it." United States v. O'Brien, 
    391 U.S. 367
    , 383-84 (1968).
    Accordingly, we decline appellants' invitation to scrutinize NLET's
    legislative history.
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    See Hamm v. Arrowcreek Homeowners' Ass'n, 
    124 Nev. 290
    , 301, 
    183 P.3d 895
    , 903-04 (2008); see also Arata v. Faubion, 
    123 Nev. 153
    , 159-60, 
    161 P.3d 244
    , 249 (2007) (explaining that as long as a reasonable factual
    situation can be conceived to justify it, a statute will be upheld under
    rational basis review).
    Based on the foregoing analysis, we affirm the district court's
    decisions dismissing appellants' as-applied challenge to NLET and
    concluding that NLET is facially constituf        11
    J.
    Douglas
    We concur:
    C.J.
    J.
    Pickering
    &ea
    Parraguirre
    J.
    Cherr
    J.
    Saitta
    "We have considered all of appellants' other arguments, including
    those seeking additional discovery and an injunction, and conclude that
    they lack merit.
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