City of Albuquerque v. Pangaea Cinema, LLC , 2012 NMCA 75 ( 2012 )


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    New Mexico Compilation
    Commission, Santa Fe, NM
    '00'04- 15:45:12 2012.08.08
    Certiorari Granted, July 20, 2012, No. 33,693
    IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF NEW MEXICO
    Opinion Number: 2012-NMCA-075
    Filing Date: May 29, 2012
    Docket No. 30,380
    CITY OF ALBUQUERQUE,
    Plaintiff-Appellee,
    v.
    PANGAEA CINEMA LLC d/b/a
    GUILD CINEMA LLC, and
    KEIF HENLEY, Registered Agent,
    Defendants-Appellants.
    APPEAL FROM THE DISTRICT COURT OF BERNALILLO COUNTY
    Carl J. Butkus, District Judge
    City of Albuquerque
    Robert D. Kidd, Jr., Interim City Attorney
    John E. DuBois, Assistant City Attorney
    Albuquerque, NM
    for Appellee
    ACLU of New Mexico
    Laura Schauer Ives
    Albuquerque, NM
    Bach & Garcia LLC
    George Bach
    Albuquerque, NM
    Kari Morrissey
    Albuquerque, NM
    for Appellants
    1
    OPINION
    CASTILLO, Chief Judge.
    {1}     The Guild Cinema (the Guild), a locally owned art-house movie theater in the Nob
    Hill neighborhood of the City of Albuquerque (the City), was prosecuted under the City’s
    zoning regulations covering adult amusement establishments for showing one pornographic
    film during a weekend festival of X-rated fare. The Guild argues that the City’s crackdown
    on the showing of just one adult film outside of a zone designated for adult entertainment
    violates a mainstream theater’s free-speech rights by misusing an ordinance that is
    unconstitutionally vague and unfairly applied in this instance. We conclude that the
    ordinance is not vague and was not unconstitutionally applied, and we affirm.
    I.     BACKGROUND
    {2}     The parties stipulated to the facts before the district court. Pangaea Cinema, LLC
    does business as a single-screen movie theater known as the Guild Cinema in the Nob Hill
    neighborhood of the City along East Central Avenue. Although its most common fare
    consists of independent feature films and documentaries, in November 2008 the Guild
    played host to its second annual “Pornotopia” festival, a weekend slate of erotic films.
    During the festival’s second day, two code enforcement officers for the City attended two
    film screenings. The officers, one male and one female, both concluded that one of the
    films, “Couch Surfers: Trans Men in Action,” met the definition of an adult film under the
    City’s Zoning Code (the Code). Albuquerque, N.M., Zoning Code ch. 14, art. XVI (2008,
    as amended through 2011). A specific ordinance within the Code, Albuquerque, N.M., Rev.
    Ordinances ch. 14, art. XVI, § 14-16-1-5(B) (the Ordinance) allows adult films to be shown
    only in specified zones of the City and prohibits the public screening of such films in all
    other areas, including the business district of Nob Hill where the Guild is situated. A
    criminal complaint was filed charging the Guild with operating as an adult amusement
    establishment outside of an area zoned for such activity. The Guild concedes that the film
    it showed featured “specified anatomical areas” and “specified sexual activities” as defined
    by the Ordinance. The City acknowledges that the exhibition of one adult film did not cause
    negative secondary effects, such as criminal activity. Affidavits filed by some of the Guild’s
    commercial neighbors reported positive effects from the event, in particular, increased
    business at their establishments during that weekend.
    {3}     The Guild was convicted in metropolitan court, and it appealed to district court. The
    parties stipulated to facts and exhibits, and they agreed to forgo a trial and agreed instead to
    have the matter decided on the Guild’s motion to dismiss the charge. The district court
    affirmed the findings of the metropolitan court, upheld the conviction in a thirty-one-page
    opinion, and fined the cinema $500 for the infraction. The Guild filed a motion for
    reconsideration that was denied by the district court. This appeal followed.
    II.    DISCUSSION
    2
    {4}     The Guild argues that it should not be categorized as an adult amusement
    establishment under what it considers to be the City’s unconstitutionally vague Ordinance
    and that, because no secondary effects resulted from the showing of the film, the City
    exceeded its zoning authority by impermissibly targeting the content of the Guild’s speech
    in violation of the theater’s free-speech rights. We take those three arguments in turn, and
    we review them de novo. See Gomez v. Chavarria, 2009-NMCA-035, ¶ 6, 
    146 N.M. 46
    , 
    206 P.3d 157
    (stating that constitutional questions and issues of statutory construction are
    reviewed de novo).
    A.     The Ordinance Need Not Be More Narrowly Construed
    {5}    The Guild first asks us to avoid the constitutional issues and find that a close reading
    of the City’s Ordinance leads to the conclusion that the Ordinance does not apply to the
    Guild’s screening of a single adult film. The Ordinance reads, in pertinent part:
    ADULT AMUSEMENT ESTABLISHMENT. An establishment
    such as an auditorium, bar, cabaret, concert hall, nightclub, restaurant,
    theater, or other commercial establishment that provides amusement or
    entertainment featuring one or more of the following:
    (1)    A live performance, act or escort service distinguished or
    characterized by an emphasis on the depiction, description, exposure, or
    representation of specified anatomical areas or the conduct or simulation of
    specified sexual activities; or
    (2)     Audio or video displays, computer displays, films, motion
    pictures, slides or other visual representations or recordings characterized or
    distinguished by an emphasis on the depiction, description, exposure or
    representation of specified anatomical areas or the conduct or simulation of
    specified sexual activities.
    Albuquerque, N.M., Rev. Ordinances § 14-16-1-5(B) (emphasis added). Another applicable
    ordinance states: “Any use not designated a permissive or conditional use in a zone is
    specifically prohibited from that zone, except as otherwise provided herein.” Albuquerque,
    N.M., Rev. Ordinances ch. 14, art. XVI, § 14-16-1-3(B) (1980).
    {6}     When interpreting an ordinance, we look to its language: “If the language makes the
    [ordinance] understandable and sensible, that is all that is necessary to uphold it as valid.”
    State ex rel. Children, Youth & Families Dep’t v. Shawna C., 2005-NMCA-066, ¶ 34, 
    137 N.M. 687
    , 
    114 P.3d 367
    (internal quotation marks and citation omitted). “Legislative intent
    is determined primarily from the language of the statute and from the legislative purpose to
    be achieved.” State v. Andrews, 1997-NMCA-017, ¶ 5, 
    123 N.M. 95
    , 
    934 P.2d 289
    (citation
    omitted). “In order to construe faithfully what the Legislature meant[,] . . . we consider the
    plain meaning of the words used in the context of the statutory text as a whole.” Quynh
    3
    Truong v. Allstate Ins. Co., 2010-NMSC-009, ¶ 37, 
    147 N.M. 583
    , 
    227 P.3d 73
    (citation
    omitted). “A statute is read literally if its words are plain and unambiguous, provided such
    a construction would not lead to an injustice, absurdity, or contradiction.” Andrews,
    1997-NMCA-017, ¶ 5.
    {7}     In the case before us, the portion of the Ordinance italicized above defines an adult
    amusement establishment, in one instance, as a “theater . . . that provides . . . entertainment
    featuring . . . motion pictures . . . distinguished by an emphasis on . . . specified anatomical
    areas or the conduct or simulation of specified sexual activities.” The Guild first zeroes in
    on the word “featuring” and argues that it does not encompass the showing of just one adult
    film; rather it should be interpreted to mean “regularly featur[ing]” such films. The dissent
    agrees with the Guild and concludes that characterizing the Guild as an “adult amusement
    establishment” for its single showing of an adult film defies common understanding.
    Dissenting Opinion, ¶ 50. We disagree and explain. As we have stated, we look to the plain
    language of the Ordinance. To include the concept that the showing must be regular, we
    would have to add a word that is not there and rely on other jurisdictions that interpret
    differently worded statutes. “Feature,” in its verb form, is defined as “to make a feature of;
    give special prominence to,” with the following example given: “the theater was featuring
    a murder-mystery film.” Webster’s Third New Int’l Dictionary 832 (1976). As the district
    court noted, movie theaters and television stations often advertise the presentation of a
    feature film. To bolster its argument, the Guild ventures to other jurisdictions for
    interpretive support. It unconvincingly relies on one case that is based on an ordinance that
    does not use the word “feature”; one case in which the ordinance explicitly uses the phrase
    “regularly features”; and two cases, including an unpublished opinion out of Alaska, that
    deal with live “adult cabaret.” See Schultz v. City of Cumberland, 
    228 F.3d 831
    (7th Cir.
    2000); Schmitty’s City Nightmare, LLC v. City of Fond Du Lac, 
    391 F. Supp. 2d 745
    (E.D.
    Wis. 2005); Stevens v. Matanuska-Susitna Borough, Nos. A-9674, A-9683, 
    2007 WL 2143008
    (Alaska Ct. App. July 25, 2007); People v. Super. Ct. (Lucero), 
    774 P.2d 769
    (Cal.
    1989). None is persuasive or materially on point with the statutory analysis in this case.
    {8}     Finally, the Guild points out a difference between the Ordinance’s reference to live
    exhibition and its reference to the exhibition of films. The Ordinance uses singular language
    to refer to any live exhibition and plural language for the exhibition of film. According to
    the Guild, this language difference suggests that just one live performance could be expected
    to produce negative secondary effects but that it would take multiple exhibitions of films to
    create those effects and thus trigger enforcement. We disagree. The Ordinance explicitly
    provides that any plural language used includes the singular and vice versa, Albuquerque,
    N.M., Rev. Ordinances § 14-16-1-5(A)(2), and we see no reason to find an exception to that
    common statutory language. Cf. State ex rel. Richardson v. 5th Jud. Nominating Comm’n,
    2007-NMSC-023, ¶ 17, 
    141 N.M. 657
    , 
    160 P.3d 566
    . Nothing in the Ordinance suggests
    that the City Council made a distinction between live acts and feature films.
    {9}   We are not persuaded by the Guild’s arguments that the Ordinance may and should
    be more narrowly construed to avoid constitutional analysis. We agree with the district
    4
    court’s interpretation. When the Ordinance is read literally, nothing in its plain meaning
    compels us to transform the word “featuring” into “regularly featuring.” Thus, we conclude
    that any theater which features an adult film—i.e., hosts a screening of a movie that depicts
    the anatomical areas and sexual acts listed in the Ordinance—is an adult amusement
    establishment as defined by the Ordinance, even if only one movie is shown, and, as such,
    it is subject to the terms of the Ordinance.
    B.     The Ordinance Is Not Unconstitutionally Vague
    {10} The Guild next contends that the Ordinance—specifically its definition of an “adult
    amusement establishment”—fails to give adequate notice that the screening of just one adult
    film outside a permissible zone transforms a mainstream theater into an adult amusement
    establishment. Thus, the Guild asks us to declare the Ordinance void for vagueness as
    applied to the Guild.
    {11} “A strong presumption of constitutionality underlies each statute, and the defendant
    has the burden to prove unconstitutionality beyond all reasonable doubt.” Shawna C., 2005-
    NMCA-066, ¶ 32. The United States Constitution “does not require impossible standards
    of clarity in statutes, only that the language convey[] sufficiently definite warning as to the
    proscribed conduct when measured by common understanding and practices.” 
    Id. ¶ 34 (alteration
    in original) (internal quotation marks and citation omitted). Neither does the
    Constitution require “mathematical certainty from our language[,]” but rather “flexibility and
    reasonable breadth[.]” Grayned v. City of Rockford, 
    408 U.S. 104
    , 110 (1972) (internal
    quotation marks and citation omitted). Our task is not to appraise the wisdom of the City’s
    decision, because a city “‘must be allowed a reasonable opportunity to experiment with
    solutions to admittedly serious problems.’” City of Renton v. Playtime Theatres, Inc.
    (Renton), 
    475 U.S. 41
    , 52 (1986) (quoting Young v. Am. Mini Theatres, Inc., 
    427 U.S. 50
    ,
    71 (1976)). Thus, we will “strive to avoid” a remedy that requires us to “tamper with the
    text” of an ordinance. United States v. Nat’l Treasury Emps. Union, 
    513 U.S. 454
    , 478
    (1995). As the New Mexico Supreme Court has stated,
    In the enactment of statutes[,] reasonable precision is required.
    Legislative enactments may be declared void for uncertainty if their meaning
    is so uncertain that the court is unable, by the application of known and
    accepted rules of construction, to determine what the [L]egislature intended
    with any reasonable degree of certainty. But absolute or mathematical
    certainty is not required in the framing of a statute.
    State ex rel. Bliss v. Dority, 
    55 N.M. 12
    , 29, 
    225 P.2d 1007
    , 1017 (1950).
    {12} A statute or ordinance will be deemed to be unconstitutionally vague if it has one of
    two fatal characteristics: it fails to give people of ordinary intelligence a reasonable
    opportunity to know what activity is prohibited so as to allow them to conform their actions
    to the law, or it fails to provide explicit standards and thus invites police officers,
    5
    prosecutors, judges, or juries to engage in arbitrary and discriminatory enforcement. State
    v. Laguna, 1999-NMCA-152, ¶¶ 25-26, 
    128 N.M. 345
    , 
    992 P.2d 896
    . Finally, we have
    observed that a defendant “will not succeed if the statute clearly applied to the defendant’s
    conduct.” Shawna C., 2005-NMCA-066, ¶ 32. The standard two-step analysis follows.
    1.     Notice to Individuals of Ordinary Intelligence
    {13} The Guild points to a dearth of previous similar convictions by the City and to
    narrow interpretations of such laws in other jurisdictions in an effort to argue that a
    proprietor in its position would logically conclude that the Ordinance does not apply to an
    independent cinema showing only one adult film. As we discussed above, the decisions of
    other jurisdictions are not on point or persuasive. We instead focus on how the Ordinance
    applies to the facts before us, based on an interpretation by a reasonable person. See
    Dickerson v. Napolitano, 
    604 F.3d 732
    , 745-46 (2d Cir. 2010) (“The standard is an objective
    one. Courts ask whether the law presents an ordinary person with sufficient notice of . . .
    what conduct is prohibited or proscribed[.]” (internal quotation marks and citations
    omitted)).
    {14} Two recent federal cases offer guidance in judging whether a statute or ordinance
    gives adequate notice to people that their behavior is subject to a legislation’s proscriptions.
    In Holder v. Humanitarian Law Project, __ U.S. __, __, 
    130 S. Ct. 2705
    , 2712-14 (2010),
    United States citizens and groups sought an injunction to prohibit enforcement of a criminal
    ban on providing “material support” or “expert advice or assistance” to designated foreign
    terrorist organizations, alleging unconstitutional vagueness of the language of the statute.
    
    Id. (internal quotation marks
    and citation omitted). Noting that “perfect clarity and precise
    guidance have never been required” in the drafting of a statute—even one limiting
    expressive activity—the United States Supreme Court concluded: “[The p]laintiffs’
    activities . . . fall comfortably within the scope of ‘expert advice or assistance’: A
    reasonable person would recognize that teaching [an organization] how to petition for
    humanitarian relief before the United Nations involves advice derived from, as the statute
    puts it, ‘specialized knowledge.’” 
    Id. at 2719-20 (internal
    quotation marks and citations
    omitted). The Court focused on the meaning as applied to the parties before it: “Of course,
    the scope of the material-support statute may not be clear in every application. But the
    dispositive point here is that the statutory terms are clear in their application to plaintiffs’
    proposed conduct, which means that plaintiffs’ vagueness challenge must fail.” 
    Id. at 2720. {15}
    Similarly, in Dickerson, a New York statute prohibited people from entering federal
    buildings while carrying unauthorized police shields or other insignia “in any way
    resembling” that worn by police officers. 
    See 604 F.3d at 736-37
    (emphasis and citation
    omitted). The plaintiffs, carrying authentic-looking but unauthorized police badges into a
    federal building, sued over unconstitutional enforcement of the statute and appealed when
    the case was dismissed. See 
    id. The court stated
    that a literal reading of the statute could
    lead to such absurd results as criminalizing a children’s game of cops and robbers, and might
    be susceptible to a facial challenge; however, the court held that an analysis of the statute,
    6
    as applied to the plaintiffs, gave them notice that their actions would violate the law. See
    
    id. at 746. The
    court, conceding the statute suffered from “ambiguity as to the margins,”
    concluded: “[N]either the widespread availability of hats and T-shirts bearing the NYPD
    logo, nor the prevalence of toy badges, would be likely to confuse a reasonable person as to
    the illegality of an adult carrying a facsimile of a police shield in his belongings while
    entering a government building.” 
    Id. at 747. {16}
    Like the parties in Holder and Dickerson, the Guild challenges an ordinance that
    might be hampered by ambiguity in some settings. But when the Guild exhibited what both
    parties agree was an adult film, a reasonable theater owner would have been on notice that
    the Ordinance governing adult amusement establishments would come into play. The Guild,
    seeking to exploit any weakness it might find in the Ordinance, offers a hypothetical: If the
    theater had exhibited a five-minute movie featuring topless women discussing Descartes,
    would it be fairly punished under the Ordinance? That is a provocative question but a red
    herring; such a hypothetical might help sustain a facial challenge, but here, with an as-
    applied challenge, we deal with the concrete facts at hand. And the Guild does not dispute
    that it showed an adult film outside of a circumscribed zone as defined in the Ordinance.
    Had it merely shown an art film featuring some nudity—as many mainstream and
    independent cinemas do on a regular basis—and been cited for violating the Ordinance, then
    the Guild could make that argument. In this case, such a hypothetical has no bearing on our
    analysis. Relying on our statutory interpretation above, we determine that the Guild knew
    it was showing a film as defined by the Ordinance and, like the parties in Holder and
    Dickerson, had adequate notice that its conduct was prohibited by the Ordinance as applied
    in this situation.
    2.     Standards or Guidelines for Enforcement
    {17} Alternatively, the Guild argues that the Ordinance invites arbitrary and
    discriminatory enforcement. A legislative body may not “impermissibly delegat[e] basic
    policy matters to policemen, judges, and juries for resolution on an ad hoc and subjective
    basis, with the attendant dangers of arbitrary and discriminatory application[.]” State v.
    Myers, 2011-NMSC-028, ¶ 39, 
    150 N.M. 1
    , 
    256 P.3d 13
    (emphasis, internal quotation
    marks, and citation omitted). We have acknowledged, though, that the duties of law
    enforcement will always require the exercise of a certain degree of police judgment. Shawna
    C., 2005-NMCA-066, ¶ 39.
    {18} In the case before us, we are provided with no evidence that the City selectively
    enforced the Ordinance or singled out the Guild. We also find no evidence that the City
    improperly trained its officers in identifying adult films and citing violators of the
    Ordinance. In its argument, the Guild deals mainly in conjecture and speculation, and it
    relies on the suggestion that because the Guild knows of no other mainstream theater that
    has been prosecuted for the single showing of an adult film that the City has arbitrarily
    enforced the Ordinance. It cites a federal case from Colorado—featuring a bakery owner
    selling a number of adult-oriented cakes—to support its argument. See Pensack v. City &
    7
    Cnty. of Denver, 
    630 F. Supp. 177
    (D. Colo. 1986). But in Pensack, where the court found
    inadequate notice to the bakery and insufficient standards for law enforcement, the ordinance
    at issue defined adult establishments as those having “substantial” or “significant” portions
    of its stock emphasizing sexual activities. 
    Id. at 178. Here,
    the Ordinance has no threshold
    standard for movie theaters exhibiting adult fare. Pensack’s reasoning does not apply here.
    In the absence of any other evidence, we cannot conclude that the Ordinance is susceptible
    to arbitrary or discriminatory enforcement, particularly when applied to the Guild’s
    screening of what it admits to be an adult film. Because the Guild fails both prongs of the
    analysis, we conclude that the Ordinance is not unconstitutionally vague as applied in this
    instance.
    C.     The Ordinance Is a Proper Time-Place-Manner Restriction and Does Not
    Abridge Freedom of Speech As Applied to the Guild
    1.     N.M. Constitution Article II, Section 17 vs. First Amendment
    {19} The parties begin with a debate over whether Article II, Section 17 of the New
    Mexico Constitution affords free-speech rights that are greater than those declared in the
    First Amendment of the United States Constitution. The Guild asks that we “bear this
    heightened protection in mind” when conducting our analysis and to err on the side of
    favoring free-speech rights when faced with a split in the law of other jurisdictions. For that
    argument, the Guild relies on City of Farmington v. Fawcett, 
    114 N.M. 537
    , 
    843 P.2d 839
    (Ct. App. 1992), an obscenity case that has no bearing on the facts of the case before us.
    Although the Guild pushes for an analysis under the New Mexico Constitution, it offers the
    alternative argument that the Ordinance also fails under the United States Constitution.
    {20} New Mexico has adopted the interstitial approach to interpreting our state
    constitution. See State v. Perry, 2009-NMCA-052, ¶ 24, 
    146 N.M. 208
    , 
    207 P.3d 1185
    . “A
    state court adopting this approach may diverge from federal precedent for three reasons: a
    flawed federal analysis, structural differences between state and federal government, or
    distinctive state characteristics.” State v. Gomez, 1997-NMSC-006, ¶ 19, 
    122 N.M. 777
    , 
    932 P.2d 1
    . “[S]tate courts should be sensitive to developments in federal law. Federal
    precedent in areas addressed by similar provisions in our state constitutions can be
    meaningful and instructive.” 
    Id. ¶ 21 (internal
    quotation marks and citation omitted). We
    find none of those three situations to apply in the case before us. Further, we have
    previously held that “the protection of the federal and state constitutions are the same, at
    least with respect to content-neutral restrictions.” State v. Ongley, 
    118 N.M. 431
    , 432, 
    882 P.2d 22
    , 23 (Ct. App. 1994), modified on other grounds by Gomez, 1997-NMSC-006; see
    State v. Rendleman, 2003-NMCA-150, ¶ 58, 
    134 N.M. 744
    , 
    82 P.3d 554
    , overruled on other
    grounds by State v. Myers, 2009-NMSC-016, 
    146 N.M. 128
    , 
    207 P.3d 1105
    . Thus, we see
    no reason to depart from traditional federal jurisprudence in this area, and we proceed with
    a standard First Amendment analysis.
    2.     Facial vs. As-Applied Challenges
    8
    {21} As a threshold matter, we note that the parties spar over the distinction between facial
    and as-applied challenges and its application to the case before us. While we disagree with
    the Guild’s assertion that the district court refused to conduct an as-applied analysis, we do
    note that the district court at times may have overemphasized the significance of the Guild’s
    choice to not press a facial challenge in this case when analyzing the distinction between
    facial and as-applied challenges. The Guild has stipulated that it did not bring a facial
    challenge; it did not stipulate to the facial validity of the Ordinance in all its applications.
    {22} While the Guild’s choice to forgo a facial challenge to the Ordinance weakens the
    Guild’s arguments overall, that choice does not render its action null and void, nor does it
    obviate the need for a full analysis of the time-place-manner zoning, which we flesh out in
    the section that follows. The United States Supreme Court has stated that the distinction
    between facial and as-applied challenges “goes to the breadth of the remedy employed by
    the Court, not what must be pleaded in a complaint.” Citizens United v. Fed. Election
    Comm’n, __ U.S. __, __, 
    130 S. Ct. 876
    , 893 (2010).
    {23} Finally, we resist any temptation to take it upon ourselves to expand the scope of our
    review to analyze the constitutionality of the Ordinance in its entirety under the theory of
    overbreadth. The overbreadth doctrine is “strong medicine” to be applied “sparingly and
    only as a last resort.” Broadrick v. Oklahoma, 
    413 U.S. 601
    , 613 (1973), superseded by
    statute on other grounds as stated in Bauers v. Cornett, 
    865 F.2d 1517
    (8th Cir. 1989). The
    United States Supreme Court has further reasoned: “It is not the usual judicial practice,
    however, nor do we consider it generally desirable, to proceed to an overbreadth issue
    unnecessarily—that is, before it is determined that the statute would be valid as applied.”
    Bd. of Tr. of State Univ. of N.Y. v. Fox, 
    492 U.S. 469
    , 484-85 (1989). “Such a course would
    convert use of the overbreadth doctrine from a necessary means of vindicating the plaintiff’s
    own right not to be bound by a statute that is unconstitutional into a means of mounting
    gratuitous wholesale attacks upon state and federal laws.” 
    Id. at 485. We
    thus proceed to
    conduct a time-place-manner analysis of the constitutionality of the Ordinance as applied to
    the Guild.
    3.     Time-Place-Manner Zoning
    {24} Our First Amendment analysis recognizes the bedrock principle of the right to free
    speech articulated by the framers of both the state and federal constitutions. “‘At the heart
    of the First Amendment is the recognition of the fundamental importance of the free flow
    of ideas and opinions on matters of public interest and concern.’” United States v. Strandlof,
    
    667 F.3d 1146
    , 1156-57 (10th Cir. 2012) (quoting Hustler Magazine, Inc. v. Falwell, 
    485 U.S. 46
    , 50 (1988)). “[T]he First Amendment means that government has no power to
    restrict expression because of its message, its ideas, its subject matter, or its content.”
    Ashcroft v. A.C.L.U., 
    535 U.S. 564
    , 573 (2002) (alteration, internal quotation marks, and
    citation omitted). “However, this principle, like other First Amendment principles, is not
    absolute.” 
    Ashcroft, 535 U.S. at 573
    . We have long held that First Amendment rights “are
    not immune from governmental regulation” and a city “may impose reasonable restrictions
    9
    on the time, place, and manner in which such rights are exercised.” City of Las Cruces v.
    Huerta, 
    102 N.M. 182
    , 186, 
    692 P.2d 1331
    , 1335 (Ct. App. 1984) (internal quotation marks
    and citation omitted). The zoning power of local governments, which allows limited
    restrictions on First Amendment freedoms, “is undoubtedly broad and its proper exercise is
    an essential aspect of achieving a satisfactory quality of life in both urban and rural
    communities.” Schad v. Borough of Mount Ephraim, 
    452 U.S. 61
    , 68 (1981). The United
    States Supreme Court, however, has cautioned, such zoning power “is not infinite and
    unchallengeable[.]” 
    Id. {25} The rationale
    for allowing zoning regulations in this context is that a “city’s interest
    in attempting to preserve the quality of urban life is one that must be accorded high respect.”
    
    Young, 427 U.S. at 71
    . In Young, the Supreme Court upheld a Detroit zoning ordinance that
    prohibited adult amusement establishments, including movie theaters, from locating within
    1,000 feet of one another. See 
    id. at 52, 72-73.
    The plurality opinion and concurrence
    agreed that such a regulation of adult theaters was not an impermissible restriction of First
    Amendment rights, because it was targeted not at the content of the speech involved but at
    the negative secondary effects caused by adult entertainment. See 
    id. at 71 n.34,
    78-79
    (Powell, J., concurring). The Court found no restriction on the amount of speech allowed;
    merely that the speech was limited to certain areas. See 
    id. at 51. Ten
    years later, the Court
    upheld an ordinance prohibiting adult amusement establishments from locating within 1,000
    feet of residential areas, churches, parks, and schools. See 
    Renton, 475 U.S. at 43
    , 52. The
    Court found that the ordinance left five percent of the city’s land available for use by adult
    establishments, an amount deemed adequate to show that the city was not targeting the
    content of the speech. See 
    id. at 53-54. {26}
    Young and Renton thus permit municipalities to use zoning powers to reduce or
    eliminate the negative secondary effects of adult entertainment by either scattering such
    establishments or concentrating them in circumscribed zones with similar activities. See City
    of Los Angeles v. Alameda Books, Inc., 
    535 U.S. 425
    , 434 (2002); 
    Renton, 475 U.S. at 52
    ;
    
    Young, 427 U.S. at 72-73
    . Such zoning ordinances are subject to intermediate scrutiny. See
    Alameda Books, 
    Inc., 535 U.S. at 434
    .
    {27} While the Supreme Court has never veered from that line of case law, it has struggled
    with the “fiction” of using the term “content neutral” to cover zoning laws that clearly apply
    only to adult material. Alameda Books, 
    Inc., 535 U.S. at 448
    (Kennedy, J., concurring).
    However, the Court has endorsed the zoning power over adult amusement establishments
    under the idea that cities are not regulating the content of the entertainment provided by
    these businesses but rather the negative secondary effects that such adult material produces
    in the surrounding community, such as crime and sex offenses. See 
    id. at 434; Renton,
    475
    U.S. at 48; 
    Young, 427 U.S. at 54-55
    . Such regulations are contrasted with those that
    impermissibly target the direct effects of the speech on the listener or viewer. “Regulations
    that focus on the direct impact of speech on its audience present a different situation.
    Listeners’ reactions to speech are not the type of ‘secondary effects’ we referred to in
    Renton.” Boos v. Barry, 
    485 U.S. 312
    , 321 (1988). For instance, if the City had enacted the
    10
    Ordinance based on fears of the psychological impact that adult films have on viewers, then
    the regulation would not be content-neutral, and thus would be subject to the highest level
    of scrutiny under First Amendment analysis. See 
    Boos, 485 U.S. at 321
    . We must be careful
    to focus our “principal inquiry” on determining “whether the government has adopted a
    regulation of speech because of disagreement with the message it conveys.” Ward v. Rock
    Against Racism, 
    491 U.S. 781
    , 791 (1989). “Thus, the Court has recognized that this kind
    of regulation, though called content neutral, occupies a kind of limbo between full-blown,
    content-based restrictions and regulations that apply without any reference to the substance
    of what is said.” Alameda Books, 
    Inc., 535 U.S. at 457
    (Souter, J., dissenting).
    a.     Strict Scrutiny vs. Intermediate Scrutiny
    {28} As a preliminary matter, the Guild seeks to exploit that subtle fissure between
    content-based and content-neutral regulations in the realm of adult entertainment. It argues
    that the City must be targeting the content of the film, because the City could not possibly
    find it necessary to police the negligible or nonexistent secondary effects from the showing
    of only one film. The Guild spends a good part of its brief in chief urging application of the
    highest standard of review in this case: strict scrutiny. We reject that argument.
    {29} “Strict scrutiny applies when the violated interest is a fundamental personal right or
    civil liberty guaranteed by the constitution.” ACLU of N.M. v. City of Albuquerque,
    2006-NMCA-078, ¶ 19, 
    139 N.M. 761
    , 
    137 P.3d 1215
    (internal quotation marks and citation
    omitted). Under that heightened review of a legislative action, the burden of proof is on the
    government to show that it has a compelling interest in the challenged scheme and that it has
    accomplished its goals by employing the least restrictive means. See 
    id. If the City
    were
    targeting content of adult films with the Ordinance, strict scrutiny would apply; if it were
    merely seeking to combat negative secondary effects of such films, then we would apply a
    more relaxed level of scrutiny (discussed in the next section below). See Alameda Books,
    
    Inc., 535 U.S. at 448
    (Kennedy, J., concurring). The Guild argues that the City improperly
    targeted the content of its expression rather than the negative secondary effects, but the
    Guild misapplies case law in order to make its point. The Guild claims that the task of this
    Court is to examine whether either negative secondary effects or the content of the movie
    were the predominant concern behind application of the Ordinance. On the contrary, the
    cases cited by the Guild state that a court must examine whether secondary effects or content
    were the predominant concern behind the enactment of an ordinance—not its subsequent
    application. See R.V.S., L.L.C. v. City of Rockford, 
    361 F.3d 402
    , 409 (7th Cir. 2004)
    (stating that “we must examine whether the [o]rdinance was designed to suppress the content
    of erotic expression or to address the negative secondary effects caused by such expression”
    (emphasis added)); Joelner v. Vill. of Washington Park, Ill., 
    378 F.3d 613
    , 623 (7th Cir.
    2004) (“The ‘content-neutrality’ inquiry is therefore subsumed by the inquiry into a
    municipality’s purpose in enacting the regulation.”). The rest of the Guild’s strict-scrutiny
    argument proceeds from that faulty premise.
    {30}   Here, without a full trial below on the issues, there is no evidence that the City was
    11
    targeting the content of adult films in enacting the Ordinance; in fact, the City asserts that
    its predominant concern in enacting the Ordinance was combating the secondary effects of
    such films. The Guild does not rebut that contention. Absent evidence that the City was
    going after content when enacting the Ordinance, we refrain from analyzing its actions under
    the strict scrutiny that would favor the Guild. See BBI Enters., Inc. v. City of Chicago, 
    874 F. Supp. 890
    , 895 (N.D. Ill. 1995) (“There is no need to elaborate further on the deficiencies
    in either party’s proof, for where as here neither side has supplied entirely reliable
    information, the party having the burden of persuasion . . . must suffer the consequences of
    such uncertainty.”). We thus proceed with the intermediate level of time-place-manner
    scrutiny.
    b.     Time-Place-Manner Analysis
    {31} The United States Supreme Court starts the analysis of time-place-manner
    regulations by asking two threshold questions: (1) Does the ordinance ban adult
    establishments altogether, and (2) does the regulation target the content of the expression?
    See Alameda Books, 
    Inc., 535 U.S. at 434
    . If the answer to each question is “no,” then the
    ordinance can be analyzed under time-place-manner regulation. See 
    id. The New Mexico
    Supreme Court has outlined three requirements for valid time-place-manner zoning: (1) the
    restriction on speech must be content neutral, that is, “justified without reference to the
    content of the regulated speech”; (2) the restriction must serve a “significant governmental
    interest”; and (3) the restriction must “leave open ample alternative channels for
    communication of the information.” Stuckey’s Stores, Inc. v. O’Cheskey, 
    93 N.M. 312
    , 319,
    
    600 P.2d 258
    , 265 (1979) (internal quotation marks and citation omitted). The United States
    Supreme Court expands on the second prong by requiring that the ordinance in question be
    “narrowly tailored” to serve that significant governmental interest. 
    Renton, 475 U.S. at 52
    ,
    63 (citation omitted).
    {32} The appropriate standard for “reviewing challenges to content-neutral zoning
    ordinances targeting the secondary effects of adult establishments” applies “regardless of
    whether that challenge is styled as facial or as-applied.” Independence News, Inc. v. City of
    Charlotte, 
    568 F.3d 148
    , 155 n.3 (4th Cir. 2009). Lower courts have faithfully applied the
    analysis during the past quarter century: “Renton’s constitutional framework grants the city
    broad discretion to choose the means and scope of its regulation of sexually oriented
    businesses.” Z.J. Gifts D-2, L.L.C. v. City of Aurora, 
    136 F.3d 683
    , 689 (10th Cir. 1998).
    I.     Content Neutral
    {33} We first dispose of the two threshold questions. First, the City has not entirely
    banned adult amusement establishments from operating in the City, either directly or
    indirectly. Cf. 
    Schad, 452 U.S. at 76
    (“As we have observed, Young . . . did not purport to
    approve the total exclusion from the city of theaters showing adult . . . materials.”). The
    City, in an unrebutted assertion, states that about five percent of the municipality’s acreage
    is zoned to allow the exhibition of adult films. That level of set-aside comports with the
    12
    amount of land mass deemed reasonable by the Court in Renton. 
    See 475 U.S. at 53
    .
    Second, the Guild does not challenge the City’s assertion that, in enacting the Ordinance,
    the City was not regulating content but rather the secondary effects that flow from the
    showing of adult films. The Guild also concedes that the City has that zoning authority
    under its powers to regulate the time, place, and manner of the entertainment offered by adult
    amusement establishments.
    {34} It is when we get to the time-place-manner analysis that the Guild challenges the
    City’s actions. The Guild contends that, as applied in this case, the City fails the two prongs
    of the Renton test: that the Ordinance is not narrowly tailored to serve a significant
    governmental interest and that it does not leave the Guild with adequate alternative channels
    of communication.
    ii.    Narrowly Tailored to Serve a Significant Governmental Interest
    {35} An ordinance qualifies as narrowly tailored “so long as the regulation promotes a
    substantial governmental interest that would be achieved less effectively absent the
    regulation, and the means chosen are not substantially broader than necessary to achieve that
    interest. If these standards are met, courts should defer to the government’s reasonable
    determination.” 
    Ward, 491 U.S. at 782-83
    . “The government’s purpose is the controlling
    consideration.” 
    Id. at 791. While
    the regulation must be narrowly tailored, “it need not be
    the least restrictive or least intrusive means of doing so.” 
    Id. at 798; see
    Fox, 492 U.S. at
    477 
    (“We have refrained from imposing a least-restrictive-means requirement—even where
    core political speech is at issue—in assessing the validity of so-called time, place, and
    manner restrictions.”).
    {36} The City asserted that its goal in enacting the Ordinance was to combat the negative
    secondary effects produced by adult theaters in general, and the Guild offers no rebuttal.
    The stated purpose of the City’s zoning regulations is “to create orderly, harmonious, and
    economically sound development in order to promote the health, safety, convenience, and
    general welfare of the citizens of the city.” Albuquerque, N.M., Rev. Ordinances § 14-16-1-
    3(A). The City asserts, without challenge by the Guild, that the drafters of the Ordinance
    relied on “numerous studies and other evidence” concerning the adverse secondary effects
    emanating from adult amusement establishments. Because the Guild does not rebut that
    assertion, we defer to the City’s presumptively reasonable determination in the name of
    public health, safety and welfare.
    The municipality’s evidence must fairly support the municipality’s rationale
    for its [adult amusement] 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 its burden.
    6A Eugene McQuillin, The Law of Municipal Corporations § 24:128, at 472 (3d ed. 2007)
    13
    (footnote omitted).
    {37} It is well-established New Mexico law that “[t]o be within the authorized purposes
    the zoning ordinance must bear some reasonable relationship to the general welfare.” City
    of Santa Fe v. Gamble-Skogmo, Inc., 
    73 N.M. 410
    , 413, 
    389 P.2d 13
    , 15 (1964). In the case
    before us, no evidentiary hearing was conducted to flesh out the details of the City’s reasons
    for legislating against the negative secondary effects of adult entertainment. Specifically,
    we have no way of divining whether the “numerous studies and other evidence” relied on
    by the City in any way address the negative secondary effects of the screening of adult films
    on a rare or occasional basis.
    {38} When similar regulations fail, a municipality tramples on protected speech and
    ignores ample alternative means of combating secondary effects. In a recent case, Ascherl
    v. City of Issaquah, No. C11-1298MJP, 
    2011 WL 4404145
    , at *2-3 (W.D. Wash. 2011), a
    municipality sought to limit the distribution of leaflets to a “free[-]speech zone” in order to
    “serve public safety concerns, minimize congestion, and facilitate the orderly flow of
    pedestrian traffic” during an annual festival. The court found the ordinance inadequately
    tailored and ruled in favor of a pamphleteer who ventured outside the zone, because the court
    found “no evidence that leafleting by itself causes congestion or prohibits the orderly flow
    of pedestrian traffic, let alone creates a public safety concern.” 
    Id. at *3. In
    contrast, the
    respondent was found to have properly tailored its adult entertainment ordinance by showing
    its “great interest in protecting and preserving the quality of its neighborhoods through
    effective land-use planning” and its “sincere and sustained effort to enhance and improve
    the quality of life in Seattle.” Northend Cinema, Inc. v. City of Seattle, 
    585 P.2d 1153
    , 1158-
    59 (Wash. 1978) (en banc). The Washington Supreme Court said of the ordinance that is
    similar to the one before us and the Court in Young: “It demonstrates a reasonable decision
    that the public welfare is best served by having this particular type of speech take place only
    in certain areas of the community. The ordinance thus remains neutral regarding the content
    of the films[.]” Northend Cinema, 
    Inc., 585 P.2d at 1158
    . The court concluded that the
    ordinance was not “a disguised form of censorship.” 
    Id. at 1159. {39}
    Absent evidence to the contrary, we take the City at its word that the Ordinance was
    designed to promote its significant interest of combating the negative secondary effects of
    adult entertainment. And we believe that the City, like Seattle in Northend Cinema, Inc. and
    like numerous other towns in the wake of Young, took a reasonable route in accomplishing
    its goal. To that end, we refuse to place ourselves in the position of legislators acting on
    behalf of the health, safety, and welfare of the public. See 
    Ward, 491 U.S. at 800
    (stating
    that the validity of time-place-manner regulations “does not turn on a judge’s agreement with
    the responsible decisionmaker concerning the most appropriate method for promoting
    significant government interests or the degree to which those interests should be promoted”
    (internal quotation marks and citation omitted)).
    {40} As noted above, the Guild directs our attention from the enactment of the Ordinance
    and focuses on its application. It attacks the City on the grounds that, in this instance, the
    14
    showing of one adult film produced no negative secondary effects. Although the Guild does
    not rebut the City’s assertion that the Ordinance was enacted to combat the negative
    secondary effects associated with the exhibition of adult films, it asserts that the City failed
    to produce evidence of negative secondary effects resulting from the Guild’s single showing
    of the adult film in this instance. The Guild’s argument fails, because it is well-established
    that cities, in enforcing a time-place-manner restriction, need not prove the existence of
    negative secondary effects in each instance: “[T]hat fact is beside the point, for the validity
    of the regulation depends on the relation it bears to the overall problem the government seeks
    to correct, not on the extent to which it furthers the government’s interests in an individual
    case.” 
    Id. at 801; see
    Independence News, 
    Inc., 568 F.3d at 156
    (stating that a city “does not
    have to show that a particular adult establishment generates adverse secondary effects each
    time it seeks to enforce” such a zoning ordinance); BZAPS, Inc. v. City of Mankato, 
    268 F.3d 603
    , 607 (8th Cir. 2001) (“[A] city would have the burden of showing precisely how many
    adult performances were capable of producing an unacceptable level of antisocial activity
    before the city could regulate those performances. We are satisfied that neither the [F]irst
    [A]mendment nor Supreme Court precedent requires a city to do the impossible.”); City of
    Columbia v. Pic-A-Flick Video, Inc., 
    531 S.E.2d 518
    , 521 (S.C. 2000) (“Municipalities do
    not have to show negative secondary effects in order to enforce adult zoning provisions.”);
    BBI Enters., 
    Inc., 874 F. Supp. at 891
    n.4 (stating that “once an ordinance is rendered
    facially valid by legitimate legislative findings as to the general problem to be dealt with, a
    specific operation does not necessarily escape the [o]rdinance’s provisions by showing that
    those generically[]validating characteristics do not in fact apply to that operation”).
    {41} We conclude that the Ordinance serves a significant governmental interest and is
    narrowly tailored to achieve that interest.
    iii.   Leaves Open Alternative Channels for Communication
    {42} The Guild makes a brief argument and cites to only one out-of-state federal district
    court case that is not on point for the proposition that the Ordinance does not provide it with
    “practical alternative avenues for showing an occasional adult film.” It may be true that the
    Guild’s regular customers prefer not to frequent an adult cinema, and it may be inconvenient
    for the Guild to rent out such a cinema in another part of town properly zoned for such an
    exhibition. But just recognizing such an option acknowledges that at least one alternative
    exists for the Guild to present adult films in Albuquerque, and it is not an entirely
    unreasonable one. Zoning laws inevitably create hurdles for various behavior and forms of
    expression in certain parts of town; there is no evidence to suggest that this one rises to the
    level of an unconstitutional burden on the Guild’s free-speech rights. As the Washington
    Supreme Court stated: “[A]lthough potential viewers would be able to see the films only in
    those downtown areas, there is no evidence that this places any burden on the adult movie
    market.” Northend Cinema, 
    Inc., 585 P.2d at 1158
    . In the case before us, the Guild has
    produced no evidence that it was left with no reasonable alternative channels of
    communication. We thus conclude that the Ordinance is a constitutionally valid regulation
    of the time, place, and manner of the exhibition of adult films as applied to the facts of this
    15
    case.
    III.    CONCLUSION
    {43} We are aware of the problems of line-drawing that this case represents. The
    Ordinance does not provide a threshold level of adult film screenings that would be tolerated
    outside the permissible zones. The City voices a concern about the potential cumulative
    effect of allowing even occasional showings of adult films in areas not zoned for such
    behavior. Cf. F.C.C. v. Fox Television Stations, Inc., 
    556 U.S. 502
    , 521 (2009) (supporting
    a federal agency’s enforcement action against isolated uses of profanity on television and
    stating that “[t]o predict that complete immunity for fleeting expletives . . . will lead to a
    substantial increase in fleeting expletives seems to us an exercise in logic”). We recognize
    that the Ordinance affects First Amendment rights. We also recognize that the Guild’s
    position is that the Ordinance regulating adult amusement establishments is overbroad and
    reaches some speech that does not create the type of secondary effects it seeks to protect
    against. This case, however, does not present us with that question, and the record before
    us does not provide the proper basis on which to declare that the City may not prosecute
    mainstream movie theaters that occasionally exhibit pornographic films.
    {44} As discussed above, we generally defer to the zoning power of municipalities, even
    though it is inevitable that the lines drawn pursuant to that power will result in winners and
    losers. “[E]very line drawn by a legislature leaves some out that might well have been
    included. That exercise of discretion, however, is a legislative, not a judicial, function.”
    Vill. of Belle Terre v. Boraas, 
    416 U.S. 1
    , 8 (1974) (footnote omitted). We applaud the
    wisdom of Justice Oliver Wendell Holmes:
    When a legal distinction is determined . . . a point has to be fixed or
    a line has to be drawn . . . to mark where the change takes place. Looked at
    by itself without regard to the necessity behind it the line or point seems
    arbitrary. . . . But when it is seen that a line or point there must be, and that
    there is no mathematical or logical way of fixing it precisely, the decision of
    the [l]egislature must be accepted unless we can say that it is very wide of
    any reasonable mark.
    Louisville Gas & Elec. Co. v. Coleman, 
    277 U.S. 32
    , 41 (1928) (Holmes, J., dissenting).
    {45} Based on the record before us, we cannot say here that the Ordinance missed the
    mark in confining the exhibition of adult films to specified zones within the City limits. The
    enforcement of the Ordinance—even against a mainstream theater screening one adult
    film—was not unconstitutionally applied in this case. For the foregoing reasons, we affirm
    the decision of the district court.
    {46}    IT IS SO ORDERED.
    16
    ____________________________________
    CELIA FOY CASTILLO, Chief Judge
    I CONCUR:
    _______________________________________
    MICHAEL E. VIGIL, Judge
    JONATHAN B. SUTIN, Judge, dissenting
    SUTIN, Judge (dissenting).
    {47}   I respectfully dissent.
    {48} This case appears to be one constructed by both parties as a single-film-test case of
    first impression—but ill-fitting in the universe of cases and myriad of constitutional analyses
    relating to the validity of ordinances that regulate adult amusement establishments. Here is
    how the district court insightfully and colorfully described the fretful fate it faced.
    On the surface, the scenario presented by the parties is starkly clear as are the
    parties’ opposition positions. The law applicable is, however, anything but
    clear. Indeed, the [c]ourt can analogize itself to a small fish navigating
    through a largely unfathomable murky bayou at night during a storm fully
    aware of the likelihood of hungry alligators (appellate courts, critical
    attorneys and legal commentators) lurking nearby. . . .
    Viewed against the backdrop of the veritable flood of published adult
    use litigation cases, this appears to be a relatively carefully crafted “test” case
    on both sides. It is a pity that the law in this area is not as clear as the
    crafting of the case by the parties. As the City observes: “This case presents
    the [c]ourt with some novel legal issues under New Mexico law in a larger
    context wherein even the federal courts have been far from uniform.”
    {49} This case was factually unsatisfactorily developed. It comes to us with no
    metropolitan court record and no factual record in the district court save a sparse and
    inadequate stipulation by the parties to the facts. Nevertheless, I address the critical points
    instead of simply calling for remand for further factual development. In my view, the City’s
    outlier zoning ordinance (the Ordinance) cannot be enforced against the Guild for two
    distinct reasons. First, the Guild cannot be considered an “adult amusement establishment”
    and, second, the Ordinance as applied to the Guild cannot withstand constitutional scrutiny.
    The Guild Cannot Be Considered an Adult Amusement Establishment
    {50}   The principal question here is whether the Guild should even be considered an adult
    17
    amusement establishment. The answer is that it should not; and the Ordinance should be
    construed to exclude the Guild’s single showing. The Guild is an established, mainstream,
    independent, single-screen, neighborhood, art theater. Year-round, with a single weekend
    exception, the Guild does not daily or weekly feature or concentrate on sexually oriented
    conduct in the films it shows. It in no way regularly and substantially shows adult films.
    Adult amusement establishments, on the other hand, concentrate daily or weekly on sexually
    oriented adult material. These establishments are theaters that show adult films regularly as
    a substantial part of their regular business. This description is one from common
    understanding. As articulated by the court in Schmitty’s City Nightmare, LLC, “[i]t would
    do violence to the meaning of both ‘oriented’ and ‘establishment’ to conclude that a venue
    offering only occasional adult entertainment could constitute an establishment ‘oriented’ to
    adult entertainment. . . . One would not call a bar a ‘martini bar’ if it served martinis only
    once a year, just as one would not call a club a ‘jazz club’ if 99% of its music was rock and
    
    roll.” 391 F. Supp. 2d at 756-57
    . To characterize the Guild as an “adult amusement
    establishment” for its single showing of an adult film defies a common understanding of that
    phrase.
    {51} In addition, characterization of the Guild as an adult amusement establishment is not
    supported by case law. It is the adult amusement establishment that gave rise to the use of
    the negative secondary effects rationale to hold restrictions content-neutral. Two United
    States Supreme Court film-based cases set the First Amendment precedent on the issue and
    for this case. The first case is Young, 
    427 U.S. 50
    . Young gave origin to First Amendment
    analyses in regard to zoning of adult theaters. See 
    id. at 56 n.12,
    70-71 (stating that “[e]ven
    though the First Amendment protects communication in [the area of adult films] from total
    suppression, . . . the State may legitimately use the content of these materials as the basis for
    placing them in a different classification from other motion pictures” and explaining that the
    question then remains whether the at-issue ordinances may be justified by the city’s stated
    “compelling” interest). In Young, the two theaters involved “propose[d] to offer adult fare
    on a regular basis.” 
    Id. at 59. The
    Court determined that municipalities may control the
    location of such theaters “either by confining them to certain specified commercial zones or
    by requiring that they be dispersed throughout the city.” 
    Id. at 62. The
    Court stated that
    “apart from the fact that the . . . classification is predicated on the content of material shown
    in the respective theaters, the regulation of the place where such films may be exhibited does
    not offend the First Amendment.” 
    Id. at 63. The
    Court held that what was “ultimately at
    stake [was] nothing more than a limitation on the place where adult films may be exhibited,
    even though the determination of whether a particular film fits that characterization turns on
    the nature of its content, . . . the city’s interest in the present and future character of its
    neighborhoods adequately supports its classification of motion pictures.” 
    Id. at 71-72 (footnote
    omitted).
    {52} In the second case, Renton, 
    475 U.S. 41
    , two theater owners intended to “exhibit
    feature-length adult films” and therefore challenged an ordinance prohibiting “any ‘adult
    motion picture theater’” from certain locations. 
    Id. at 44-45. Construing
    Young, the Renton
    Court noted that because the ordinance did not ban adult theaters altogether, the ordinance
    18
    was “therefore properly analyzed as a form of time, place, and manner regulation.” 
    Id. at 46. The
    Court noted, too, that “so-called ‘content-neutral’ time, place, and manner
    regulations are acceptable so long as they are designed to serve a substantial governmental
    interest and do not unreasonably limit alternative avenues of communication.” 
    Id. at 47. The
    Court recognized that the ordinance treated theaters that “specialize[d] in adult films
    differently from other kinds of theaters” and that the city’s “‘predominate concerns’ were
    with the secondary effects of adult theaters” on the surrounding community. 
    Id. The Court concluded,
    therefore, that the ordinance was “aimed not at the content of the films shown at
    ‘adult motion picture theaters,’ but rather at the secondary effects of such theaters on the
    surrounding community” and that this was “completely consistent” with its definition of
    content-neutral regulations. 
    Id. at 47-48. The
    Court also determined that the ordinance was
    “narrowly tailored to affect only that category of theaters shown to produce the unwanted
    secondary effects[.]” 
    Id. at 52 (emphasis
    added) (internal quotation marks and citation
    omitted).
    {53} The City enacted the Ordinance under the umbrella of the Young and Renton rulings.
    This is indicated both by the City’s contention that its goal in enacting the Ordinance was
    to combat the negative secondary effects produced by adult theaters and that it relied on
    “numerous studies and other evidence” concerning the adverse secondary effects emanating
    from adult amusement establishments. Yet, by including the Guild in its definition of “adult
    amusement establishments,” the City sweeps into its zoning regulation a business that falls
    outside of the content-neutral scope and rationale of Young and Renton. As delineated in
    Young and Renton, adult establishments (1) regularly show or “specialize” in the showing
    of adult films, and (2) they are associated with pernicious or negative secondary effects on
    the surrounding community or neighborhood. 
    Young, 427 U.S. at 55
    , 59, 72; 
    Renton, 475 U.S. at 47
    .
    {54} Here, the parties stipulated that “[n]either ‘Pornotopia’ generally nor the specific
    showing of ‘Couch Surfers, Trans Men in Action’ caused any negative secondary effects to
    businesses on the same street as the Guild or to the neighborhood[.]” Moreover, in its oral
    argument to this Court, the City conceded that there were no negative secondary effects
    anticipated from the single showing of an adult film. And, further, the parties stipulated that
    “[o]ther than one weekend a year when the erotic film festival takes place at the Guild, the
    Guild shows movies of the art-house variety, i.e, a variety of both independent fictional and
    documentary films that do not contain an emphasis on specified anatomical areas or
    specified sexual activities.”
    {55} Because the Guild operates year-round as an “art-house” theater, and because there
    were no actual or anticipated secondary effects from its single showing of an adult film, the
    Guild is not properly characterized as an adult amusement establishment as contemplated
    by the Court in Young and in Renton. In Young and Renton, the ordinances could escape
    strict scrutiny as content-based precisely and solely because the restrictions were narrowly
    tailored to cover only the type of establishment shown by studies to cause or likely to cause
    negative secondary effects. It was that type of establishment that was characterized as an
    19
    “adult establishment” subject to zoning restriction.
    {56} Under these circumstances, the reasoning in Tollis, Inc. v. San Bernardino County,
    
    827 F.2d 1329
    (9th Cir. 1987), and that in Lucero, 
    774 P.2d 769
    , is applicable and
    persuasive. In Tollis, the court stated:
    the [c]ounty has presented no evidence that a single showing of an adult
    movie would have any harmful secondary effects on the community. The
    [c]ounty has thus failed to show that the ordinance, as interpreted by the
    [c]ounty to include any theater that shows an adult movie a single time, is
    sufficiently narrowly tailored to affect only that category of [theaters] shown
    to produce the unwanted secondary effects. Nor do we see how the [c]ounty
    could make such a showing, since it is difficult to imagine that only a single
    showing ever, or only one in a year, would have any meaningful secondary
    effects.
    Tollis, 
    Inc., 827 F.2d at 1333
    (internal quotation marks and citation omitted); see also
    BZAPS, 
    Inc., 268 F.3d at 609
    (Bye, J., concurring in part and dissenting in part) (“An
    ordinance that allows the city to regulate the content of a single performance, without
    presenting evidence that a single performance causes adverse secondary effects, is not
    narrowly tailored.”).
    {57} Likewise, when presented with the question of “the appropriate constitutional
    standard by which to define the ‘use’ necessary to make a movie theater an ‘adult motion
    picture theater[,]’” the California Supreme Court determined that “a ‘single use’ standard
    [was] insufficiently tailored to serve [the city’s] stated purpose of preventing the clustering
    or concentration of adult motion picture theaters in any one area.” 
    Lucero, 774 P.2d at 770
    ,
    775. The court explained that “[n]othing in the [city] ordinance’s statement of purpose
    disclose[d] the presence of significant deleterious effects on the community arising out of
    a single showing of an adult film.” 
    Id. at 775. And,
    further, relying on Tollis, Inc., the court
    stated that “a single showing of an adult movie does not necessarily create the logical
    relationship between the evil feared and the method selected to combat it.” 
    Lucero, 774 P.2d at 775-76
    (internal quotation marks and citation omitted). The Lucero court chose to
    interpret the ordinance as applying only to those adult entertainment theaters “offering adult
    fare as a substantial part of their regular business, but . . . not [to] apply to theaters showing
    only occasional or incidental adult movies.” 
    Id. at 777.1 1
              I note Justice Mosk’s separate opinion in which he agrees with the constitutional
    impropriety of the standard employed by the city but points to the danger of the majority
    setting the standard instead of “allowing cities to experiment with various solutions to the
    serious problems created by urban blight[,]” citing Renton and Young, when “[t]o do so the
    majority must reach out to decide this issue without the benefit of a developed record”
    among other considerations. 
    Lucero, 774 P.2d at 779
    (Mosk, J., concurring and dissenting).
    20
    {58} Here, as in Tollis and Lucero, there exists no persuasive support for the application
    of the Ordinance to the Guild for its “single showing” of an adult film. There were no
    secondary effects, nor is there any evidence of a likelihood of negative secondary effects if
    the Guild is permitted to show an adult film during its one-weekend-a-year festival.2
    {59} The rationales of Tollis and Lucero bring reason to bear on the application of the
    Ordinance. The Ordinance should be narrowly construed so as to exclude the Guild, based
    on a single showing of an objectionable film, from the definition of an “adult amusement
    establishment.” To narrowly construe the Ordinance in that manner, as applied to the Guild,
    would be to give the Ordinance constitutionally sound construction. Cf. Northend Cinema,
    
    Inc., 585 P.2d at 1157-58
    (rejecting a vagueness challenge that was in part based on an
    ordinance’s failure to clarify “how frequently [adult] films must be shown before a building
    is ‘used’ for the purpose” of showing adult films, because “any language in the ordinance
    which is uncertain is readily subject to a narrowing and constitutionally sound
    construction”); Entm’t Prods. Inc. v. Shelby Cnty., Tenn., 
    588 F.3d 372
    , 386, 388 n.14 (6th
    Cir. 2009) (presuming that state courts would refrain from “expansive construction” of adult
    entertainment if such construction would affect “mainstream artistic performances” or
    mainstream establishments for the “presentation of a single performance” and noting that
    “[c]ases of overzealous enforcement against mainstream artistic venues . . . would and
    should invite litigation by the affected parties on an as-applied basis”). Moreover, by
    narrowly construing the Ordinance so as to exclude the Guild “from occasionally exhibiting
    an ‘adult’ film, we . . . [are able to] constru[e] the [O]rdinance in a constitutional manner
    while allowing a reasonable and practical construction in conformity with the purpose of the
    enactment.” 
    Lucero, 774 P.2d at 776-77
    ; see also Pub. Citizen v. United States Dep’t of
    Justice, 
    491 U.S. 440
    , 455 (1989) (stating that the Supreme Court consistently interprets
    statutes “to avoid deciding difficult constitutional questions where the text fairly admits of
    a less problematic construction”); Lovelace Med. Ctr. v. Mendez, 
    111 N.M. 336
    , 340, 
    805 P.2d 603
    , 607 (1991) (“It is . . . a well-established principle of statutory construction that
    statutes should be construed, if possible, to avoid constitutional questions.”).
    Were It Necessary to Reach the Constitutional Question, As Applied to the Guild, the
    Ordinance Cannot Withstand Constitutional Scrutiny
    {60} But for Young and Renton having created the legal fiction that zoning ordinances of
    the sort at issue here are content-neutral in their regulation of adult establishments, such
    ordinances would be presumptively unconstitutional and subject to strict scrutiny because
    they are, in essence, content-based. See 
    Renton, 475 U.S. at 62
    (Brennan, J., dissenting)
    2
    I understand that the weekend festival may show more than one film that the City
    might see as objectionable. But that is not the circumstance the parties brought to this Court.
    They chose the limited, single-film circumstance. The circumstance of showing more than
    one objectionable film must, unfortunately, be litigated in another case unless, of course, the
    Majority Opinion stands.
    21
    (recognizing that the city’s ordinance was content-based); see also Alameda Books, 
    Inc., 535 U.S. at 434
    (stating that content-based regulations are presumptively invalid and are subject
    to strict scrutiny); 
    Id. at 448 (Kennedy,
    J., concurring in judgment) (recognizing the inherent
    “fiction” in classifying adult-establishment zoning ordinances as “content-neutral”). That
    is, adult-establishment zoning ordinances are considered “content-neutral” if they are
    predominately concerned with combating negative secondary effects. Owing to their
    “content-neutral” status, Young- and Renton-type ordinances covering adult establishments
    are subject to a lesser scrutiny and are constitutionally valid provided that they are narrowly
    tailored to further the substantial governmental interest of regulating the pernicious
    secondary effects associated with adult establishments. Alameda Books, 
    Inc., 535 U.S. at 456
    (Souter, J., dissenting).
    {61} Here, as I have already noted, there were no negative secondary effects, nor were any
    anticipated from the Guild’s single showing of an adult film. The City has failed to carry
    its evidentiary burden and there exists no evidence in the record of any likelihood of
    negative secondary effects in the Guild’s neighborhood or elsewhere in the City if the
    Guild’s singular activity were allowed. Additionally, the City provided no evidence
    showing why the Ordinance, as applied, furthered a substantial governmental interest. See
    
    Renton, 475 U.S. at 47
    . The City has not shown that the Ordinance affects “only that
    category of theaters shown to produce the unwanted secondary effects[.]” 
    Id. at 52. Thus,
    the City has not shown, and cannot show, that the Ordinance, as applied to the Guild’s single
    showing, is narrowly tailored to serve a substantial governmental interest in restricting the
    single showing to a zoning quarantined location. Therefore, the Ordinance, as applied to the
    Guild, did not, and cannot, pass Renton’s lesser scrutiny. As a result, the Ordinance must
    be considered content-based. Content-based ordinances are subject to strict scrutiny.
    Alameda Books, 
    Inc., 535 U.S. at 434
    .
    {62} Of course, if the Ordinance, as applied to the Guild’s single showing, cannot pass the
    Renton lesser scrutiny, the Ordinance clearly cannot pass constitutional muster under a strict
    scrutiny analysis. The City simply cannot show that the Ordinance, as applied to the Guild’s
    single showing, is narrowly tailored to serve a compelling governmental interest in
    restricting the single showing to a zoning quarantined location. See ACLU of N.M., 2006-
    NMCA-078, ¶ 19 (stating the government’s burden under a strict scrutiny analysis).
    {63} With regard to the lesser Renton scrutiny and to strict scrutiny, the City cannot
    reasonably contend that the Ordinance cannot be more narrowly tailored. The City knows
    how to narrowly tailor an ordinance. It has done so with respect to commercial
    establishments that provide pornographic material. After defining the whole gamut of “adult
    material” in Section 14-16-1-5(B) of the Ordinance, the Ordinance defines an “adult store”
    as “[a]n establishment having 25% or more of its shelf space or square footage devoted to
    the display, rental, sale[,] or viewing of adult material for any form of consideration.”
    Albuquerque, N.M., Rev. Ordinances § 14-16-1-5(B). The Ordinance’s silence as to stores
    having 24% or less of its shelf space or square footage devoted to adult material
    demonstrates that the Ordinance is narrowly tailored to allow stores to provide adult material
    22
    as long as certain shelf space or square footage restrictions are met. The narrow tailoring
    obviously applies, for example, to mainstream bookstores. On the other hand, the
    Ordinance’s application to the Guild, a mainstream, single-screen art theater, lacks any
    narrow tailoring whatsoever. Accordingly, while the definition of “adult store” reflects the
    City’s conclusion that an establishment that offers adult material for public consumption
    may do so without the likelihood of harmful secondary effects associated with adult
    amusement establishments so long as the adult material comprises less than one-fourth of
    the business’s offerings, the City has made no attempt to apply that reasoning to adult
    amusement establishments.
    {64} When questioned about this tailoring at oral argument, the City offered no plausible
    explanation as to why similar narrow tailoring could not be accomplished with respect to
    theaters such as the Guild. Counsel for the City posited that “there is a difference between
    buying . . . an erotic book and walking out of the store with it, and watching an erotic
    conduct with a group of people.” Counsel provided no further explanation. The explanation
    did not touch on the question of negative secondary effects and there was no evidence to
    support the City’s assertion. All that the City could muster further was that “[t]here just is”
    such a difference and that the “percentage” approach cannot be taken with respect to movies.
    Given that the City has conceded that “it’s not the art-house theater’s showing the single
    instance that the City is concerned about” and given that the City has produced no evidence
    of any likely negative secondary effects occurring in the future if the Guild is allowed its
    single showing on this occasion, I am unable to see how the City can narrowly tailor the
    Ordinance to allow certain adult stores to regularly and to some substantial degree provide
    adult material, yet find no way to do the same with regard to activity such as that of the
    Guild at issue here.
    Unproven Future Concerns
    {65} Although the Guild cannot be considered an adult amusement establishment and the
    Ordinance cannot withstand constitutional scrutiny, I recognize there is some difficultly as
    a result of the parties’ mal-construction of this case. By presenting a case of a single
    showing of one film, and nothing more, the parties have offered no particular limit on the
    showing of other adult films including the number of showings during any particular period
    of time. This opens up possibly legitimate governmental concerns about having to deal with
    expanded showings by the Guild and with the possibility of other, similar theaters popping
    up in the same or new neighborhoods showing one or more adult films. It leaves the City
    with the difficult task of writing a narrowly tailored ordinance that will survive constitutional
    scrutiny. At what point will an establishment come within the Young and Renton concept
    of an adult amusement establishment the existence of which, as the law seems now to stand,
    is presumed likely to create negative secondary effects?
    {66} The closest the City comes to meeting these concerns is the City’s statement in oral
    argument that “it’s not the art-house theater’s showing the single instance that the City is
    concerned about, it’s the dynamic and broad issue that if they can do it, others can do it.”
    23
    In oral argument, the City stated its concern to be that conduct which in its “aggregate . . .
    produce[s] negative secondary effects,” and the City also indicated a “pragmatic” concern
    as to the difficulty in convicting beyond a reasonable doubt under a “regular and substantial
    course of conduct standard.” In the district court proceedings, the court characterized the
    City as arguing that “the constitutional standards under which [the City’s zoning ordinances]
    were passed and enforced, recognize a dynamic and broad view of land use conduct.”
    Therefore, the City argued in the district court that there existed “no constitutional
    requirement that the City show a discrete secondary harmful effect from a single event.”
    Yet, the City presented no evidence relating to any of these concerns. And the City has
    supplied no authority for or content to its general and formless theory that because zoning
    ordinances are “dynamic and broad” the Ordinance is justified.
    {67} By its vague “broad and dynamic” argument, the City appears to be saying that its
    zoning needs to be broad enough to reach and cover each and every future circumstance
    involving not only a single showing but incremental increases in showings of adult-content
    films. While I can appreciate the City’s concerns, in the context of First Amendment rights
    and the lack of evidence in this case, the City’s “broad and dynamic” theory is much too
    nebulous to carry the weight it must have to give the Ordinance a narrowly tailored status.
    It is noteworthy that the district court did not rely on this theory in its extensive decision, nor
    does the Majority Opinion affirm the district court on this theory.
    {68} In the balance of things, at one end of the pornographic film business spectrum, we
    have regular and substantial activity of an acknowledged sexual-oriented adult amusement
    establishment in the Young and Renton sense. At the other end, is a single showing by an
    acknowledged mainstream, independent, single-screen, neighborhood art theater. The First
    Amendment and Article II, Section 17 of the New Mexico Constitution do not permit the
    bright-line, all-inclusive zoning test and criminal ordinance coverage held valid by the
    Majority Opinion—held valid based on the illogic of presumed negative secondary effects
    attributable to the Young and Renton version of adult amusement establishments.3 Instead,
    the City must specifically prove a reasonable and rational correlation between allowing the
    Guild’s activity and likelihood that negative secondary effects in the neighborhood or
    elsewhere in the City will result. Short of that proof, for the Ordinance to survive it must be
    narrowly tailored so that it does not subject the Guild to criminal liability. The First
    Amendment and Article II, Section 17 of the New Mexico Constitution plainly override the
    broad land-use zoning theory advanced by the City.
    3
    The district court commented that although, in an as-applied context, the court
    “does not believe that a single showing standard is per se constitutionally invalid, it is in an
    anomalous place along the continuum of single use to full blown adult establishment in the
    miasmic collection of adult use law.”
    24
    CONCLUSION
    {69} The Ordinance and the Majority’s view that it is constitutional as applied to the
    Guild, are based on a false premise that all theaters that feature a film having an emphasis
    on depiction of adult material can reasonably and unquestionably be considered adult
    amusement establishments and therefore subject to criminal prosecution. There exist two
    independent reasons for holding that the City cannot, pursuant to the Ordinance, criminally
    sanction the Guild. First, the Guild is not an adult amusement establishment in the common
    usage and understanding of the phrase and as contemplated by Young and Renton. And the
    Ordinance can and should, therefore, be narrowly construed to exclude the Guild’s showing
    of a single film from its definition of an adult entertainment establishment.
    {70} Second, if the Ordinance is nevertheless construed to apply to the Guild, it fails any
    applicable constitutional scrutiny. The Ordinance must be, but is not, narrowly tailored to
    further a compelling or substantial governmental interest, as applied to the Guild. No
    compelling or substantial governmental interest has been shown to exist for application of
    the Ordinance to the Guild. The Ordinance is, therefore, unconstitutional as applied to the
    Guild. The City is not precluded from engaging in the experimentation it is permitted under
    Young. See 
    Young, 427 U.S. at 71
    (stating that “the city must be allowed a reasonable
    opportunity to experiment with [zoning] solutions to admittedly serious problems”). Indeed,
    the City may well need to experiment further in order to find the narrow tailoring that
    constitutionally fits.
    _____________________________________
    JONATHAN B. SUTIN, Judge
    Topic Index for City of Albuquerque v. Pangaea Cinema, LLC, Docket No. 30,380
    APPEAL AND ERROR
    Standard of Review
    CONSTITUTIONAL LAW
    Interstitial Analysis
    New Mexico Constitution, General
    Freedom of Speech
    Notice
    Prior Restraint
    Vague or Overbroad
    GOVERNMENT
    Ordinances
    Zoning Law
    STATUTES
    25
    Interpretation
    Legislative Intent
    26
    

Document Info

Docket Number: 30,380

Citation Numbers: 2012 NMCA 75

Filed Date: 5/29/2012

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 3/3/2016

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