Auspro Enterprises, LP v. Texas Department of Transportation , 506 S.W.3d 688 ( 2016 )


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  •       TEXAS COURT OF APPEALS, THIRD DISTRICT, AT AUSTIN
    ON MOTION FOR REHEARING
    NO. 03-14-00375-CV
    Auspro Enterprises, LP, Appellant
    v.
    Texas Department of Transportation, Appellee
    FROM THE DISTRICT COURT OF TRAVIS COUNTY, 345TH JUDICIAL DISTRICT
    NO. D-1-GN-11-002740, HONORABLE TIM SULAK, JUDGE PRESIDING
    OPINION
    We withdraw our opinion and judgment dated August 26, 2016, substitute the
    following opinion and judgment in their place, and deny the Department’s motion for rehearing.
    This case addresses the constitutionality of the Texas Highway Beautification Act.1
    The United States Supreme Court recently struck down a similar sign regulation in Reed v. Town of
    Gilbert, where the high court observed:
    This type of ordinance may seem like a perfectly rational way to regulate signs,
    but a clear and firm rule governing content neutrality is an essential means of
    1
    Tex. Transp. Code Ch. 391.
    protecting the freedom of speech, even if laws that might seem “entirely reasonable”
    will sometimes be “struck down because of their content-based nature.”2
    In Reed, the Supreme Court refined its framework for analyzing “content based” regulations
    of speech, holding, “A law that is content based on its face is subject to strict scrutiny regardless
    of the government’s benign motive, content-neutral justification, or lack of ‘animus toward the
    ideas contained’ in the regulated speech.”3 With this holding and broad framework for determining
    whether a government regulation of speech is “content based,” Reed has arguably transformed
    First Amendment free-speech jurisprudence.
    In Reed’s wake, our principal issue here is not whether the Texas Highway
    Beautification Act’s outdoor-advertising regulations violate the First Amendment, but to what extent.
    Based on our determination that, under Reed, certain provisions in Subchapters B and C of the Act
    are facially content-based restrictions on speech that render those subchapters unconstitutional, we
    will reverse the district court’s judgment and render judgment severing those unconstitutional
    subchapters from the Texas Highway Beautification Act.
    Background
    The facts of this case are straightforward and undisputed. On July 7, 2011, Auspro
    Enterprises, LP, placed a sign supporting Ron Paul’s 2012 presidential campaign on its property on
    State Highway 71 West in Bee Cave, Texas. On July 12, the Texas Department of Transportation
    2
    
    135 S. Ct. 2218
    , 2231 (2015) (quoting City of Ladue v. Gilleo, 
    512 U.S. 43
    , 60 (1994)
    (O’Connor, J., concurring)).
    3
    
    Id. at 2222.
    2
    sent a letter to Auspro explaining that its sign was “illegal” because all outdoor signs must be
    permitted and, although there is a specific exemption under Department rules for political signs, the
    exemption only allows political signs to be displayed 90 days before and 10 days after an election.4
    The Department’s letter ordered Auspro to remove the sign.
    After Auspro failed to remove the sign, the Department brought an enforcement
    action in Travis County District Court for injunctive relief and civil penalties. In response,
    Auspro asserted that the Texas Highway Beautification Act and the Department’s implementing
    rules violate, both facially and as applied, Auspro’s right to free speech under the U.S. and
    Texas constitutions.5 The district court granted final judgment in the Department’s favor after a
    bench trial on stipulated facts, specifically concluding, among other things, that the Act and the
    Department’s rules were not unconstitutional as applied to Auspro.6
    During Auspro’s appeal from the district court’s final judgment, the United States
    Supreme Court granted certiori and heard oral argument in Reed, prompting this Court to grant
    Auspro’s motion to abate this appeal pending the resolution of Reed. Following the Reed decision
    4
    The Department’s letter set forth, in their entirety, the Department rules requiring permits
    for outdoor advertising and granting an exception for campaign signs. See 43 Tex. Admin. Code
    §§ 21.143(1) (2011) (Tex. Dep’t Transp., Permit Required), 21.146(a)(9) (Exempt Signs); see also
    Tex. Transp. Code § 391.005 (election-sign exemption).
    5
    See U.S. Const. amend. I (“Congress shall make no law . . . abridging the freedom of
    speech . . . .”); Tex. Const. art. I, § 8 (“Every person shall be at liberty to speak, write, or publish his
    opinions on any subject, being responsible for the abuse of that privilege; and no law shall ever be
    passed curtailing the liberty of speech or of the press.”).
    6
    The judgment did not include a specific finding regarding Auspro’s facial challenge.
    3
    and with the benefit of its instruction, we reinstated this appeal and allowed the parties to submit
    briefs regarding Reed’s effect on our decision here.
    Analysis
    Auspro brings three issues on appeal, but its principal contention post-Reed is
    that the Texas Highway Beautification Act violates the First Amendment because it is a “content-
    based” government regulation of speech that cannot survive strict scrutiny.7 The Department, in
    turn, maintains that Reed does not inform our decision, arguing that the Texas Act actually favors
    election signs and that, relatedly, we remain bound by the Texas Supreme Court’s 2003 decision
    in Texas Department of Transportation v. Barber, which held that the Texas Highway Beautification
    Act is constitutional.8 In the alternative, the Department maintains that our constitutional inquiry
    here is limited to the election-sign exemption and that our sole remedy, should we determine that
    provision is unconstitutional, is severing that exemption from the Act.
    Free-speech jurisprudence, Reed, and its aftermath
    The First Amendment mandates that “Congress shall make no law . . . abridging
    the freedom of speech.”9 The Supreme Court has interpreted this language to generally prohibit any
    laws that regulate or restrict expression based on content: “[A]bove all else, the First Amendment
    7
    “Where, as here, the parties have not argued that differences in state and federal
    constitutional guarantees are material to the case, and none is apparent, we limit our analysis to
    the First Amendment and simply assume that its concerns are congruent with those of article I,
    section 8.” Bentley v. Bunton, 
    94 S.W.3d 561
    , 579 (Tex. 2002).
    8
    See 
    111 S.W.3d 86
    (Tex. 2003).
    9
    U.S. Const. amend. I.
    4
    means that the government has no power to restrict expression because of its message, its ideas,
    its subject matter, or its content.”10 Such “content-based” regulations of speech “are presumptively
    unconstitutional and may be justified only if the government proves that they are narrowly tailored
    to serve compelling state interests.”11 Because this strict-scrutiny inquiry is almost impossible to
    overcome—“It is rare that a regulation restricting speech because of its content will ever be
    permissible”12—the primary, and often dispositive, question in a free-speech analysis is whether the
    law in question is content based or content neutral. Regulations deemed content neutral—i.e., that
    regulate speech without regard to its content—are subject to the less exacting intermediate scrutiny,
    which requires that the law in question not be “substantially broader than necessary to achieve the
    government’s interest.”13 Reed is the Supreme Court’s most recent articulation of its standard for
    determining whether a particular government regulation of speech is content based.
    The government regulation of speech addressed in Reed was a sign ordinance that
    banned the display of outdoor signs in any part of the Town of Gilbert, Arizona without a permit.14
    The ordinance included exemptions from the permit requirement for 23 different categories of
    10
    Police Dep’t v. Mosley, 
    408 U.S. 92
    , 95 (1972). Because Auspro’s speech here is
    unquestionably noncommercial, this case, like Reed, does not implicate commercial-speech
    considerations. Although laws that restrict only commercial speech are content based, such
    restrictions need only withstand intermediate scrutiny. See Central Hudson Gas & Elec. Corp.
    v. Public Serv. Comm’n of N.Y., 
    447 U.S. 557
    , 564 (1980).
    11
    
    Reed, 135 S. Ct. at 2226
    (citing R.A.V. v. St. Paul, 
    505 U.S. 377
    , 395 (1992); Simon &
    Schuster, Inc. v. Members of N.Y. State Crime Victims Bd., 
    502 U.S. 105
    , 115, 118, (1991)).
    12
    United States v. Playboy Entm’t Grp., Inc., 
    529 U.S. 803
    , 818 (2000).
    13
    See Ward v. Rock Against Racism, 
    491 U.S. 781
    , 799–800 (1989).
    14
    See 
    Reed, 135 S. Ct. at 2224
    .
    5
    signs and, within those exemptions, imposed varying restrictions depending on the category.15 For
    example, “ideological signs” were freely allowed with no restrictions, while “political signs” could
    be displayed without a permit, but only within the 60 days preceding an election and the 15 days
    following an election.16
    The Reed plaintiffs—a small church and its pastor—challenged the constitutionality
    of the ordinance after the Town repeatedly cited the church for failure to comply with the sign
    ordinance’s exemption for “temporary directional signs,” generally defined as temporary signs
    intended to direct passerby to a “qualifying event” of a non-profit organization.17 The church signs,
    which were posted around town each Saturday to announce the time and location of the next day’s
    service and then removed by Sunday afternoon, violated the ordinance’s requirement that temporary
    directional signs be displayed for no more than twelve hours before the “qualifying event” and
    for no more than one hour afterward.18 The Supreme Court, explaining that a regulation of speech
    is content based if it “applies to particular speech because of the topic discussed or the idea or
    message expressed,” held that the sign code was content based on its face.19 Specifically, the Court
    noted that the ordinance defined “temporary directional signs” on the basis of the event being
    15
    
    Id. at 2224–25.
           16
    
    Id. “Ideological signs”
    are defined as “sign[s] communicating a message or ideas for
    noncommercial purposes”; and “political signs” as “temporary sign[s] designed to influence the
    outcome of an election called by a public body.” 
    Id. 17 Id.
    at 2225. “Temporary directional signs relating to a qualifying event” are defined as
    “signs directing the public to a meeting of a nonprofit group.” 
    Id. 18 Id.
           19
    
    Id. at 2227.
    6
    advertised and “political signs” on the basis of whether the sign’s message “is designed to influence
    the outcome of an election.”20 Ultimately, after deciding that the ordinance was a content-based
    regulation subject to strict scrutiny, the Supreme Court determined the Town could not meet its
    strict-scrutiny burden and struck down the sign ordinance.21
    First Amendment jurisprudence has long analyzed “content-based” regulation of
    speech under strict scrutiny. Reed’s significance in this area is its clarification of what constitutes
    a content-based restriction on speech. Before Reed, many courts—including the Ninth Circuit in the
    decision Reed reversed and the Texas Supreme Court in its 2003 Barber decision upholding the
    Texas Act—relied on various arguments to deem as content neutral, and thus subject to only
    intermediate scrutiny, statutes that, on their face, differentiated between categories of speech based
    on topic or ideas expressed—i.e., were facially content based.22 Stated generally, these arguments
    were based on considerations such as whether the regulations in question had been adopted or
    motivated by “disagreement with the message conveyed” and whether there were justifications for
    the regulation that were “unrelated to the content of the sign.”23 Reed emphatically rejected these
    20
    
    Id. 21 Id.
    at 2233; see Lamar Cent. Outdoor, LLC v. City of Los Angeles, 
    245 Cal. App. 4th 610
    , 621 (Cal. App. 2016) (“In Reed, the high court invalidated a town’s sign ordinance . . . .”);
    Urja Mittal, The “Supreme Board of Sign Review”: Reed and Its Aftermath, 125 Yale L.J. Forum
    359, 359 (2016) (“In Reed v. Town of Gilbert, the Court applied strict scrutiny and struck down an
    Arizona sign ordinance as a content-based regulation of speech.”); Free Speech Doctrine After Reed
    v. Town of Gilbert,129 Harv. L. Rev. 1981, 1984 (2016) (explaining Reed “invalidated” sign code).
    22
    See Reed v. Town of Gilbert, 
    707 F.2d 1057
    , 1071–72 (9th Cir. 2013), rev’d, 
    135 S. Ct. 2218
    ; 
    Barber, 111 S.W.3d at 94
    .
    23
    See 
    Reed, 135 S. Ct. at 2226
    –29 (discussing underlying decision and amicius briefs);
    
    Barber, 111 S.W.3d at 94
    ; see also Brian J. Connolly, Environmental Aesthetics & Free Speech:
    7
    arguments, asserting that this type of analysis “skips the crucial first step in the content-neutrality
    analysis: determining whether the law is content neutral on its face.”24 If the law is content-based
    on its face, Reed explained, that is the end of the inquiry: “A law that is content based on its face is
    subject to strict scrutiny regardless of the government’s benign motive, content-neutral justification,
    or lack of ‘animus toward the ideas contained’ in the regulated speech.”25
    In sum, as the Supreme Court explained in Reed, a law can be content based in either
    of two ways: (1) by distinguishing speech by the topic discussed; and (2) where the government’s
    purpose or justification for enacting the law depends on the underlying “idea or message
    expressed”—i.e., the law is facially content neutral, but the motives in enacting it were content
    based.26 “Both are distinctions drawn based on the message a speaker conveys, and, therefore, are
    subject to strict scrutiny.”27 As noted, this framework marks a significant departure from the content-
    neutrality analysis used by other courts, including the Texas Supreme Court, that would uphold
    facially content-based restrictions as long as those restrictions could be justified on content-neutral
    grounds and as long as the regulations were not adopted based on disagreement with the message.
    Toward A Consistent Content Neutrality Standard for Outdoor Sign Regulation, 2 Mich. J. Envtl.
    & Admin. L. 185, 197 (2012) (describing the split between federal circuit courts in determining
    content neutrality).
    24
    
    Reed, 135 S. Ct. at 2228
    .
    25
    
    Id. (citing Cincinnati
    v. Discovery Network, Inc., 
    507 U.S. 410
    , 429 (1993)).
    26
    
    Id. 27 Id.
    8
    Having determined that the Town’s sign ordinance was content based, the Reed
    opinion turned next to analyzing whether the Town could meet its strict-scrutiny burden of showing
    that the ordinance furthers a compelling interest and is narrowly tailored to achieve that interest.28
    The Town offered only two governmental interests in support of the distinctions the sign code draws:
    preserving the Town’s aesthetic appeal and traffic safety. The Supreme Court, willing to assume for
    argument’s sake that these asserted interests were compelling governmental interests, nevertheless
    concluded that both “distinctions fail as hopelessly underinclusive”29—i.e., they were too limited
    in their regulatory reach to address the interest at issue.30 As for the aesthetic interest specifically,
    the Court noted that the Town could not “claim that placing strict limits on temporary directional
    signs is necessary to beautify the Town while at the same time it allowed unlimited numbers
    of other types of signs that create the same [aesthetic] problem.”31 The Supreme Court concluded
    that the safety interest was likewise underinclusive, noting that it “offered no reason to believe that
    directional signs pose a greater threat to safety than do ideological signs or political signs.”32 In light
    28
    See 
    id. at 2231
    (noting and describing burden (citing Arizona Free Enter. Club’s Freedom
    Club PAC v. Bennett, 
    131 S. Ct. 2806
    , 2817 (2011)).
    29
    
    Id. at 2231.
            30
    See, e.g., Erznoznik v. City of Jacksonville, 
    422 U.S. 205
    , 214 (1975) (“This Court
    frequently has upheld underinclusive classifications on the sound theory that a legislature may deal
    with one part of a problem without addressing all of it.”).
    31
    
    Id. 32 Id.
    at 2232.
    9
    of its underinclusiveness, the Supreme Court held that the Town’s sign ordinance failed strict
    scrutiny.33
    Reed next addressed concerns that its holding would “prevent governments from
    enacting effective sign laws,” noting that “not ‘all distinctions’ are subject to strict scrutiny, only
    content-based ones are. Laws that are content neutral are instead subject to lesser scrutiny.”34 As
    examples, the Court pointed to restrictions in the Town’s sign code regarding size, building
    materials, lighting, moving parts, and portability.35 The Court further pointed to lower-court
    decisions that have “long held that similar content-based sign laws receive strict scrutiny” and noted
    “there is no evidence that the towns in their jurisdictions have suffered catastrophic effects.”36
    Three of the justices filed separate opinions in Reed, addressing implications of the
    majority opinion.37 Justice Alito proposed several regulations that he concluded would not be
    considered content based, such as distinctions between on-premises and off-premises signs and time
    33
    See id.
    34
    
    Reed, 135 S. Ct. at 2228
    (citing Clark v. Community for Creative Non-Violence, 
    468 U.S. 288
    , 295 (1984)).
    35
    
    Id. 36 Id.
    (citing Solantic, LLC v. Neptune Beach, 
    410 F.3d 1250
    , 1264–69 (11th Cir. 2005) (sign
    categories similar to the town of Gilbert’s were content based and subject to strict scrutiny);
    Matthews v. Town of Needham, 
    764 F.2d 58
    , 59–60 (1st Cir. 1985) (law banning political signs but
    not commercial signs was content based and subject to strict scrutiny)).
    37
    Justice Alito filed a concurring opinion in which Justices Kennedy and Sotomayor
    joined. Justice Breyer filed an opinion concurring in the judgment. Justice Kagan filed an opinion
    concurring in the judgment in which Justices Ginsburg and Breyer joined.
    10
    restrictions on signs for one-time events.38 He also noted that, in addition to regulating signs put up
    by private actors, “government entities may erect their own signs consistent with the principles that
    allow governmental speech.”39 Justice Kagan, taking a different view in an opinion concurring in
    the judgment only, emphasized that, “of course,” restrictions on one-time event signs would be
    facially content-based in light of the majority’s decision because they would “single out specific
    subject matter for differential treatment.”40 Any sign ordinance that restricts some categories of
    speech while exempting others, Justice Kagan cautioned, is in “jeopardy” following the Court’s
    decision and would likely be struck down.41 Indeed, a variety of sign codes previously considered
    constitutional have been held to be unconstitutional content-based restrictions on speech based
    on Reed, including Justice Alito’s example of a permissible ordinance distinguishing between on-
    premise and off-premise signs,42 as well as an ordinance setting time limits on election signs.43
    38
    
    Id. at 2233
    (Alito, J., concurring).
    39
    
    Id. (citing Pleasant
    Grove City v. Summum, 
    555 U.S. 460
    , 467–69 (2009) (holding that
    city’s placement of monument in park was form of government speech, which is not subject to
    scrutiny under Free Speech Clause)).
    40
    
    Id. at 2237
    (Kagan, J., concurring); see 
    id. at 2231
    (explaining why event-based
    restrictions are content based).
    41
    
    Id. at 2236
    (Kagan, J., concurring).
    42
    See Thomas v. Schroer, 
    127 F. Supp. 3d 864
    (W.D. Tenn. 2015) (rejecting Alito’s
    concurrence and holding that on-premise/off-premise distinction was content based and unlikely to
    survive strict scrutiny).
    43
    See Marin v. Town of Se, 
    136 F. Supp. 3d 548
    (S.D.N.Y. 2015) (striking down sign ban
    based on existence of exemptions, including election-sign exemption, that differentiated based on
    content).
    11
    Relatedly, Reed has thus far been cited in cases striking down an anti-panhandling ordinance,44 an
    anti-robocall statute,45 and a law banning “ballot selfies.”46
    Reed and the Texas Highway Beautification Act
    Born from a mid-1960s initiative to clean up the nation’s roads, the federal Highway
    Beautification Act of 1965 requires states to regulate “outdoor advertising” “in areas adjacent to
    the Interstate System” or risk losing ten percent of their federal highway funding.47 To comply, states
    must exert “effective control” over outdoor advertising located inside an imaginary corridor
    around the highway system that extends 660 feet beyond each side of the “the main traveled way.”48
    “Effective control” means that the state must limit the signs and displays within the corridor to
    “directional and official signs and notices”; “signs . . . advertising the sale or lease of property upon
    which they are located”; “signs . . . advertising activities conducted on the property on which they
    are located”; “signs lawfully in existence on October 22, 1965”; and “signs . . . advertising the
    44
    See Norton v. City of Springfield, 
    806 F.3d 411
    , 411 (7th Cir. 2015) (noting that Reed
    “abolishe[d] any distinction between content regulation and subject-matter regulation” and made it
    clear that “a speech regulation targeted at specific subject matter is content based even if it does not
    discriminate among viewpoints within that subject matter”).
    45
    See Cahaly v. Larosa, 
    796 F.3d 399
    , 406 (4th Cir. 2015).
    46
    See Rideout v. Gardner, 
    123 F. Supp. 3d 218
    , 221, 236 (D.N.H. 2015) (law making it
    “unlawful for voters to take and disclose digital or photographic copies of their completed ballots”).
    47
    See Highway Beautification Act of 1965, Pub. L. No. 89-285, 79 Stat. 1028 (codified as
    amended at 23 U.S.C. § 131).
    48
    See 23 U.S.C. § 131(b).
    12
    distribution by nonprofit organizations of free coffee.”49 The federal act generally exempts areas that
    the states have zoned as industrial and commercial.50
    The Texas Legislature passed the Texas Highway Beautification Act in 1972
    to comply with the federal act’s mandate that it do so or risk losing highway funds,51 but included
    in it other highway-beautification provisions unrelated to the federal mandate, including laws
    authorizing state-controlled right-of-way information signs, landscaping and scenic enhancement,
    and junkyard control.52 The Act’s provisions regulating outdoor advertising essentially mirror the
    federal act, banning all signs located (1) within 660 feet of a right-of-way if the advertising is visible
    from the interstate, and (2) beyond 660 feet of a right-of-way if the advertising is visible from the
    highway and erected for the purpose of having its message seen from the highway.53 The Act then
    sets forth a number of exemptions to the ban, including exemptions for signs located in commercial
    and industrial areas;54 signs advertising as for sale or for lease the property on which the sign is
    located; signs advertising natural wonders or historic attractions; signs advertising activities that will
    49
    
    Id. 50 See
    id. § 131(d) 
    (sign “may be erected and maintained . . . within areas adjacent to the
    Interstate . . . which are zoned industrial or commercial under authority of State law, or in unzoned
    commercial or industrial areas as may be determined by agreement between the several States and
    the Secretary.”
    51
    See Highway Beautification Act, 62d Leg., 2d C.S., ch. 1, § 1, 1972 Tex. Gen. Laws 15
    (current version at Tex. Transp. Code §§ 391.007–.255 (Subchapters A through I)).
    52
    See 
    id. at §§
    2–12, 1972 Tex. Gen. Laws at 15–20 (current version at Tex. Transp. Code
    §§ 391.091–.213 (Subchapters D through H)).
    53
    See Tex. Transp. Code § 391.031(a)(1)–(2).
    54
    See 
    id. § 391.031(b)(4).
    13
    take place on the property where the sign is located; signs that have as their purpose the protection
    of life and property;55 and, specifically implicated here, signs on private property that “relat[e] solely
    to a public election.”56
    Section 391.032 of the Act gives the Transportation Commission the authority to
    regulate outdoor advertising in the commercial and industrial areas that are exempted from the
    Act’s ban,57 which the Commission has done in Title 43 of the Texas Administrative Code.58 Those
    rules, stated generally, require that all signs located within the same imaginary corridor as that in the
    Act have a Department-issued permit or be subject to a fine and removal, unless the sign qualifies
    under one of several exemptions.59 The rules’ exemptions include those set forth in the Act—e.g.,
    election signs and signs with the purpose of protecting life or property—as well as those for public-
    service signs, signs of nonprofits or other charitable organizations, neighborhood subdivision or
    homeowners-association signs, and signs showing the names of ranches.60 Here, because Auspro’s
    55
    
    Id. § 391.031(b)(1)–(3),
    (5).
    56
    See 
    id. § 391.005
    (requiring, among other things, that the sign relate to a public election,
    be located on private property and be erected no earlier than 90 days before an election and removed
    within 10 days after the election); see also 43 Tex. Admin. Code § 21.146(9) (2011) (Tex. Dep’t
    Transp., Exempt Signs), amended by 39 Tex. Reg. 7954 (current version at 43 Tex. Admin. Code
    § 21.146(a)(10)).
    57
    See id.§ 391.032(a).
    58
    See 43 Tex. Admin. Code §§ 21.141–.204 (Subchapter I, Div. 1, Signs).
    59
    See 
    id. §§ 21.143
    (Tex. Dep’t Transp., Permit Required), 21.198 (Order of Removal),
    21.204 (Administrative Penalties).
    60
    See 
    id. § 21.146
    (Exempt Signs).
    14
    property was located in a commercial-zoned area, its sign was required to have a permit or qualify
    for a permit exception, which it did not.
    Under Reed’s standard for content neutrality—which simply asks whether the law
    applies to particular speech because of the topic discussed or the idea or message expressed—the
    Texas Act’s outdoor-advertising regulations are clearly content based. The Texas Supreme Court
    acknowledged as much when it considered these same provisions of the Act in Barber: “The Act . . .
    does make certain distinctions based on subject matter.”61 Specifically, as described above, most of
    the Act’s exemptions depend entirely on the subject matter of the sign’s message:
    •        “erected solely for and relating to a public election”;62
    •        “advertising . . . a natural wonder or scenic or historic attraction”;63
    •        “advertising . . . the sale or lease of the property on which it is located”;64 and
    •        “advertising . . . activities conducted on the property on which it is located.”65
    And at least one exemption in the Act is based on the function or purpose of the regulated
    speech: “[O]utdoor advertising that has as its purpose the protection of life and property.”66
    
    61 111 S.W.3d at 98
    (referring to Tex. Transp. Code §§ 391.005, .031(b)).
    62
    Tex. Transp. Code § 391.005.
    63
    
    Id. § 391.031(b)(1).
           64
    
    Id. § 391.031(b)(2).
           65
    
    Id. § 391.031(b)(3).
           66
    
    Id. § 391.031(b)(5).
    15
    Because exemptions to the Department’s permitting rules—several of which are identical to Act
    exemptions—are likewise based on the speech’s subject matter, function or purpose, and the speaker,
    they too are content-based regulations of speech under Reed’s framework.
    Like the Town of Gilbert’s sign ordinance, the Texas Act and the related
    Department rules restrict speech in different ways based on the communicative content of the sign.67
    For example, a sign advertising a presidential candidate’s fundraising event at the site where the sign
    is displayed would be allowed at any time under the Texas Act,68 while a sign that merely expresses
    the view that one should vote for that same presidential candidate would be banned during all but
    the small window around an election.69 Likewise, and more to the point here, Auspro’s election sign
    for Ron Paul is treated differently under the Department rules (promulgated under the Act) than are
    signs conveying other messages and ideas, including, for example, a sign by a nonprofit organization
    advertising an event by that organization.70 Under Reed’s framework, the Texas Act’s outdoor-
    advertising regulations and associated Department rules are, on their face, content-based regulations
    of speech.71
    The Department asserts that Reed does not inform our decision here because
    the Texas Act actually protects Auspro’s speech. The election-sign exemption does not prohibit
    67
    See 
    Reed, 135 S. Ct. at 2227
    .
    68
    See Tex. Transp. Code § 391.031(b)(3) (generally exempting signs advertising “activities
    conducted on the property on which [the sign] is located”).
    69
    See 
    id. § 391.005
    (allowing election signs only 100 days around election).
    70
    See 43 Tex. Admin. Code § 21.146(6), (10).
    71
    See 
    Reed, 135 S. Ct. at 2227
    .
    16
    elections signs in violation of the First Amendment, the Department argues, but “allows
    certain election speech that would otherwise be barred by the Act’s general, content-neutral
    prohibition of signs visible from highways.” “Even if the exemption draws a content-based line,”
    the Department continues, “that line would, if anything favor the very type of election speech that
    Auspro advocates.” This argument misses the point of Reed.
    First, there is little, if any, difference between the election-sign exemption examined
    in Reed and the one at issue here.72 Both exempt election-related signs from a general ban on
    signs within a certain number of days surrounding an election.73 More importantly, both exemptions
    distinguish speech based on the subject matter of that speech. Signs relating to elections are
    restricted as to date and size in ways that other non-election signs are not. Characterizing such an
    exemption as “favorable” to protected speech does not change the fact that it is a distinction based
    on content under Reed. If anything, it exposes the exemption as “a paradigmatic example of content-
    based discrimination.”74 The Department’s insistence on looking beyond the face of the Act
    despite its awareness that the election-sign “exemption draws a content-based line” ignores Reed’s
    plainly stated holding that, “[a] law that is content based on its face is subject to strict scrutiny
    regardless of the government’s benign motive, content-neutral justification, or lack of ‘animus
    toward the ideas contained’ in the regulated speech.”75 The Texas Act, as both the Department and
    72
    See 
    id. at 2225.
           73
    See Tex. Transp. Code § 391.005; 
    Reed, 135 S. Ct. at 2225
    .
    74
    
    Reed, 135 S. Ct. at 2230
    (explaining ordinance’s more favorable treatment of some signs
    based on content).
    75
    
    Id. at 2237
    .
    17
    the Texas Supreme Court have acknowledged, on its face draws distinctions based on the message
    a speaker conveys—i.e., is content based on its face under the Reed analysis.
    In what it considers a related argument regarding Reed’s import here, or rather lack
    of import, the Department next suggests that the sign code in Reed and the Texas Act are inherently
    different because, as the Texas Supreme Court noted in Barber, the Texas Act “allows all onsite
    commercial speech and all onsite noncommercial speech” throughout the year.76 This is important,
    the Department urges, because if Auspro had simply made “its election speech pertain[] to activities
    on its premises, its sign would have complied with the Texas Act.” While this may be true,
    the Department’s argument again overlooks the effect of Reed’s holding. The point of Reed is not
    whether the regulation provides alternative avenues of speech, but whether it “applies to particular
    speech because of the topic discussed or the idea or message expressed.”77 Moreover, the
    Department’s suggestion that Auspro could have complied with the Act by simply changing its
    sign to advertise a Ron Paul-related event on its premises—an example similar to that used in
    Reed78—actually emphasizes the Act’s disparate treatment of content.
    Finally, before addressing the Department’s remaining point, we note that we always
    faithfully adhere to our obligation, as an intermediate appellate court, to defer to the Texas Supreme
    76
    
    Barber, 111 S.W.3d at 99
    (emphasis omitted); see Tex. Transp. Code § 391.031(b)(3)
    (exempting from ban signs advertising activities conducted on property on which it is located).
    77
    
    Reed, 135 S. Ct. at 2227
    .
    78
    See 
    id., 135 S. Ct.
    at 2227 (“If a sign informs its reader of the time and place a book club
    will discuss John Locke’s Two Treatises of Government, that sign will be treated differently from
    a sign expressing the view that one should vote for one of Locke’s followers in an upcoming
    election, and both signs will be treated differently from a sign expressing an ideological view rooted
    in Locke’s theory of government.”).
    18
    Court’s decisions, and we are mindful that its decision to uphold the Act in Barber would likely be
    dispositive of Auspro’s appeal here.79 In light of Reed’s changes to First Amendment jurisprudence,
    however, we respectfully disagree with the Department’s assertion that we remain bound by Barber’s
    holding that the Texas’s Highway Beautification Act “is content neutral and constitutes a valid
    time, place, and manner restriction.”80 As we explain above, Barber acknowledged that the
    Texas Highway Beautification Act:
    does make certain distinctions based on subject matter. For example, the Act
    exempts from regulation directional signs, signs pertaining to natural wonders or
    scenic or historic attractions, signs for the sale of property on which they are located,
    signs designed to protect life and property, and signs providing information about
    the location of utility lines. The Act also exempts temporary signs relating to public
    elections and signs relating to activities conducted on the property where the signs
    are located.81
    In light of Reed’s unequivocal holding, these distinctions render the Act’s sign ban content based
    and presumptively invalid unless the government can meet its strict-scrutiny burden.82 We would
    note further that the Barber majority, along with many other courts, construed pre-Reed precedent
    as allowing “content-based regulations [to be treated] as content neutral if the regulations are
    79
    See, e.g., Swilley v. McCain, 
    374 S.W.2d 871
    , 875 (Tex. 1964) (“After a principle, rule
    or proposition of law has been squarely decided by the Supreme Court, or the highest court of the
    State having jurisdiction of the particular case, the decision is accepted as binding precedent by the
    same court or other courts of lower rank when the very point is again presented in a subsequent suit
    between different parties.”).
    80
    
    Barber, 111 S.W.3d at 90
    .
    81
    
    Id. at 93.
           82
    See 
    Reed, 135 S. Ct. at 2226
    .
    19
    motivated by a permissible content-neutral purpose,”83 as long as “the Act does not endorse any
    particular viewpoint.”84 In doing so, Barber reasoned that “the Act does not endorse any particular
    viewpoint”; “the Texas Legislature did not adopt the Texas Highway Beautification Act because it
    disagreed with any messages that might otherwise be conveyed”; and ultimately concluded that “the
    Act is . . . content neutral because it is ‘justified without reference to the content of the regulated
    speech.’”85 With regard to the election-sign exemption, the Barber majority explained that, although
    “arguably content based,” it could be “deemed neutral” because it “serves purposes unrelated
    to the content of expression.”86 As noted, Reed has explicitly rejected these same arguments and
    analyses.87 In doing so, Reed has, at a minimum, eliminated the essential underpinnings of the
    content-neutrality analysis on which Barber’s holding relied. As such, we must adhere to our
    obligation to follow the United States Supreme Court on this First Amendment issue.88
    83
    
    Barber, 111 S.W.3d at 93
    (relying on 
    Ward, 491 U.S. at 784
    and City of Renton
    v. Playtime Theatres, Inc., 
    475 U.S. 41
    , 48 (1986)).
    84
    
    Id. at 98.
           85
    
    Id. at 100
    (quoting City of 
    Renton, 475 U.S. at 48
    ).
    86
    
    Id. 87 See
    Reed, 135 S. Ct. at 2228
    .
    88
    See Barstow v. State, 
    742 S.W.2d 495
    , 501 n.2 (Tex. App.—Austin 1987, writ denied)
    (“On questions of federal law . . . all courts in every state owe obedience to the Supreme Court of
    the United States.”); see also Penrod Drilling Corp. v. Williams, 
    868 S.W.2d 294
    , 296 (Tex. 1993)
    (Texas courts “are obligated to follow only higher Texas courts and the United States Supreme
    Court.” (citing Barstow, 742 S.W.2d. at 501 n.2)).
    20
    We hold that, under Reed’s framework, the Texas Highway Beautification Act’s
    outdoor-advertising regulations and related Department rules are content-based regulations of speech
    subject to strict scrutiny.
    Strict scrutiny
    Under a strict-scrutiny analysis, which has been described as “‘strict’ in theory but
    usually ‘fatal’ in fact,’”89 the government has the burden of proving that the restriction furthers a
    compelling interest and is narrowly tailored to achieve that interest.90 Here, the Department has to
    demonstrate that the Act’s differentiation between types of signs furthers a compelling governmental
    interest and it is narrowly tailored to that end.91 The Department acknowledges that it cannot do
    this, and we cannot disagree. For example, even assuming, as did the Supreme Court in Reed,92 that
    aesthetic appeal and traffic safety are compelling governmental interests, the Act’s provisions are
    underinclusive: election signs outside the 100-day window around an election would pose no greater
    threat to safety and would not categorically be any uglier than the signs that are treated differently
    89
    Bernal v. Fainter, 
    467 U.S. 216
    , 219 n.6 (1987) (quoting Gerald Gunther, Foreword:
    In Search of Evolving Doctrine on a Changing Court: A Model for a Newer Equal Protection,
    86 Harv. L. Rev. 1, 8 (1972)); see 
    Reed, 135 S. Ct. at 2236
    (Kagan, J., concurring) (“After all, it
    is the ‘rare case[] in which a speech restriction withstands strict scrutiny.” (quoting Williams–Yulee
    v. Florida Bar, 
    135 S. Ct. 1656
    , 1666, (2015)); 2 Chester James Antieau & William J. Rich,
    Modern Constitutional Law § 25.02, at 8 (2d ed. 1997) (noting strict scrutiny “create[s]
    virtually insurmountable hurdles for the government seeking to defend its classifications”).
    90
    
    Reed, 135 S. Ct. at 2231
    (citing 
    Bennett, 131 S. Ct. at 2817
    (quoting Citizens United
    v. Federal Election Comm’n, 
    558 U.S. 310
    , 340 (2010))).
    91
    See 
    id. 92 See
    id.
    21
    under 
    the Act.93 And with the possible exception of the exemption for signs regarding the protection
    of life and property,94 the Act’s remaining content-based exemptions are similarly underinclusive.95
    For the same reasons, the related Department rules likewise cannot meet such an exacting standard.
    Accordingly, the Act’s sign regulations and related Department permitting rules fail strict scrutiny.96
    Remedy
    Having determined that the government restrictions on speech at issue here
    fail strict scrutiny, we must now determine the appropriate remedy. The Department maintains that
    rather than grant Auspro its requested relief of declaring the entire Texas Highway Beautification
    Act unconstitutional, we are limited to severing the election-sign exemption from the Act. This is
    so, the Department contends, because Auspro’s opening brief to this Court targeted only the election-
    sign exemption, which the Department asserts means that Auspro has waived any broader challenge
    to the Act and, thus, the remedy to declare the entire Act unconstitutional.97 The Department
    93
    See 
    id. 94 See
    Tex. Transp. Code § 391.031(b)(5). Nevertheless, virtually every court and legal
    commentator that has discussed this topic, including the Supreme Court, has insisted that strict-
    scrutiny review is effectively fatal. 
    See supra
    n. ___.
    95
    See Tex. Transp. Code § 391.031(b)(1)–(3); 
    Reed, 135 S. Ct. at 2231
    .
    96
    See 
    Reed, 135 S. Ct. at 2232
    (holding that Town’s sign code failed strict scrutiny because
    exceptions were underinclusive).
    97
    See Tex. R. App. P. 38.1(i), (j) (issues not raised in opening brief are waived); Salazar
    v. Phillips & Luckey Co., No. 03-11-00441-CV, 
    2013 WL 4516021
    , at *4 (Tex. App.—Austin
    Aug. 21, 2013, no pet.) (mem. op.) (“‘[A]n appellate court has no discretion to consider an issue not
    raised in an appellant’s brief.’” (quoting Canton–Carter v. Baylor Coll. of Med., 
    271 S.W.3d 928
    ,
    930 (Tex. App.—Houston [14th Dist.] 2008, no pet.))).
    22
    relatedly invokes Texas’s broad severability statute, urging that because we can remedy the Act’s
    unconstitutionality by simply severing the election-sign exemption, we must do so.98 We disagree
    that Auspro’s opening brief is so limited,99 but we do agree that Texas’s severability doctrine dictates
    that we preserve portions of the Texas Act.
    The applicable severability provision of the Code Construction Act provides:
    if any provision of the statute or its application to any person or circumstance is held
    invalid, the invalidity does not affect other provisions or applications of the statute
    that can be given effect without the invalid provision or application, and to this end
    the provisions of the statute are severable.100
    This severability provision is similar to the doctrine previously adopted by the Texas Supreme Court:
    “When . . . part of a statute is unconstitutional, that fact does not authorize the courts
    to declare the remainder void also, unless all the provisions are connected in
    subject-matter, dependent on each other, operating together for the same purpose, or
    otherwise so connected together in meaning that it cannot be presumed the legislature
    would have passed the one without the other. . . . If, when the unconstitutional
    portion is stricken out, that which remains is complete in itself, and capable of being
    98
    See Tex. Gov’t Code § 311.032.
    99
    Auspro’s initial brief to this Court asserts, “The Texas Highway Beautification Act . . .
    turn[s] the[] fundamental constitutional principles [that regulation based on the content of speech
    is subject to strict scrutiny] on their head by banning signs related to elections from appearing on
    private property along the State’s highways and interstates for three fourths of the year, while signs
    relating to other topics have no similar restriction.” Although explicitly singling out the election-
    sign exemption, the gravamen of this assertion is that the Act violates the constitutional prohibition
    against content-based regulations of speech because, on its face, it “draws distinctions based on the
    message a speaker conveys.” 
    Reed, 135 S. Ct. at 2227
    . This is a facial challenge to the Act.
    100
    Tex. Gov’t Code § 311.032(c) (applicable to statutes without a severability provision).
    23
    executed in accordance with the apparent legislative intent, wholly independent of
    that which was rejected, it must stand.101
    In short, the purpose of severability is to sever a statute’s problematic portions while leaving the
    remainder intact whenever possible—i.e., to “limit the solution to the problem”102—but whatever
    we do, our primary focus must be on the intent of the legislature.103
    Dependent as it is on Reed and Auspro’s underlying claim, our decision here is
    necessarily limited to government regulation of noncommercial speech, specifically Texas’s
    regulation of outdoor advertising in the Texas Highway Beautification Act.104 But as briefly noted
    above, the Texas Act includes several provisions that, while related to highway beautification, do
    not constitute government regulation of speech. For example, the Act includes the Legislature’s
    101
    Western Union Tele. Co. v. State, 
    62 Tex. 630
    , 634 (1884); see Rose v. Doctors Hosp.,
    
    801 S.W.2d 841
    , 844 (Tex. 1990) (citing Western 
    Union, 62 Tex. at 634
    , for severability test).
    102
    Ayotte v. Planned Parenthood of N. New England, 
    546 U.S. 320
    , 328 (2006).
    103
    
    Rose, 801 S.W.2d at 850
    (Phillips, C.J., dissenting); see Geeslin v. State Farm Lloyds,
    
    255 S.W.3d 786
    , 797 (Tex. App.—Austin 2008, no pet.) (citing Minnesota v. Mille Lacs Band of
    Chippewa Indians, 
    526 U.S. 172
    , 191 (1999) (“Unless it is evident that the legislature would not
    have enacted those provisions which are within its power, independently of that which is not, the
    invalid part may be dropped if what is left is fully operative as a law.”)); see also 
    Ayotte, 546 U.S. at 329
    (“We prefer . . . to sever its problematic portions while leaving the remainder intact.”).
    104
    See, e.g., Free Speech Coal., Inc. v. Attorney Gen. U.S., 
    825 F.3d 149
    , 176 n.7 (3rd Cir.
    2016) (noting that Reed did not abolish distinction between commercial and noncommercial speech);
    Geft Outdoor LLC v. Consolidated City of Indianapolis, 
    2016 WL 2941329
    , at *10 (S.D. Ind.
    May 10, 2016) (determining that Reed’s holding is limited to noncommercial speech (citing Contest
    Promotions, LLC v. City & Cty. of S.F., 
    2015 WL 4571564
    , at *4 (N.D. Cal. July 28, 2015) (“Reed
    does not concern commercial speech, . . . .”)).
    24
    program for state controlled right-of-way information logo signs;105 regulations controlling junkyards
    and automobile graveyards along the State’s highways;106 and the Transportation Commission’s
    legislative authority to acquire property along the State’s highways “to restore, preserve, or enhance
    scenic beauty” or to provide public rest areas.107 Because these provisions in the Texas Act are not
    government regulations of speech, neither Reed nor our decision here affect their validity.108 Also,
    the provisions in Subchapter I are not affected by our decision here because they authorize the
    State to regulate commercial speech along certain specified highways, specifically off-premise signs
    displaying messages regarding “goods, services, or merchandise.”109 Regarding our severability
    analysis, it is worth noting that these provisions of the Act, although related to highway
    105
    See Tex. Transp. Code §§ 391.091–.099 (Subchapter D, Specific Information Logo Signs)
    (creating programs for signs in State’s right-of-way that contain logos of participating businesses);
    see also Walker v. Texas Div., Sons of Confederate Veterans, Inc., 
    135 S. Ct. 2239
    , 2249–50 (2015)
    (holding Texas’s speciality license plates are government speech, thus not subject to scrutiny under
    Free Speech Clause (relying on Pleasant 
    Grove, 555 U.S. at 471
    )).
    106
    See Tex. Transp. Code §§ 391.121–.127 (Subchapter E, Regulation of Junkyards and
    Automobile Graveyards) (prohibiting junkyards/automobile graveyards within 1,000 feet of highway
    unless junkyard is properly screened from view or in industrial area).
    107
    See 
    id. §§ 391.151–.152
    (Subchapter F, Acquisition for Scenic Enhancement or Public
    Accommodation), 391.181–.184 (Subchapter G, Acquisitions by Commission).
    108
    Although Subsection H authorizes the State to regulate outdoor advertising on State
    Highway 288, it does not include any content-based provisions. See 
    id. §§ 391.211–.213.
           109
    
    Id. § 391.251(2)–.252;
    see Central 
    Hudson, 447 U.S. at 563
    –64 (describing commercial
    speech as “expression related solely to the economic interests of the speaker and its audience”
    and holding that content-based restrictions on commercial speech need only withstand intermediate
    scrutiny); see also Pruett v. Harris Cty. Bail Bond Bd., 
    249 S.W.3d 447
    , 456 (Tex. 2008)
    (“Commercial speech is generally afforded less constitutional protection than other forms of
    constitutionally guaranteed expression.” (citing Central 
    Hudson, 447 U.S. at 563
    )).
    25
    beautification, were not mandated by the federal Highway Beautification Act.110 Further, because
    these provisions are complete in themselves—i.e., they would not be affected by the invalidity of the
    sign-ban regulations of Subchapters B and C—and are capable of being executed as the Legislature
    intended in the absence of the Act’s outdoor-advertising regulations, Texas’s severability doctrine
    mandates that they be preserved.111
    Turning to the regulations of speech that are at issue here, those can be found
    in Subchapters B and C of the Act.112 Within those subchapters, there are several individual
    sections that, under Reed and our analysis here, are unconstitutional content-based restrictions on
    noncommercial speech.113 As such, severing only the election-sign exemption, as the Department
    asks us to limit our remedy, would not cure the constitutional infirmities caused by the remaining
    content-based exemptions. In fact, severing only the election-sign exemption would not even
    remedy Auspro’s harm because the Act would still ban Auspro’s election campaign sign—all year,
    110
    See 23 U.S.C. § 131(a)–(t).
    111
    See Western 
    Union, 62 Tex. at 634
    ; see also Tex. Gov’t Code § 311.032 (courts should
    sever unconstitutional aspects and save balance of law if “other provisions or applications of the
    statute . . . can be given effect without the invalid provision or application”).
    112
    See Tex. Transp. Code §§ 391.031–.037 (Subchapter B, “Regulation of Outdoor
    Advertising Generally”), 391.061–.070 (Subchapter C, “License and Permit for Outdoor
    Advertising”), 391.211–.213.
    113
    The Act’s definition of “outdoor advertising” is so broadly worded that it plainly
    encompasses both commercial and noncommercial content: “‘Outdoor advertising’ means an
    outdoor sign, display, light, device, figure, painting, drawing, message, plaque, poster, billboard,
    or other thing designed, intended, or used to advertise or inform if any part of the advertising
    or information content is visible from the maintraveled way of the interstate or primary system.”
    Tex. Transp. Code § 391.001(10); see Central 
    Hudson, 447 U.S. at 563
    (describing commercial
    speech as “expression related solely to the economic interests of the speak and its audience”).
    26
    every year—while allowing other categories of signs at all times, all based on their content. In other
    words, even with the election-sign exemption invalidated, the Act would still treat speech differently
    based on the content of that speech.
    To resolve the Act’s constitutional problems, all of the content-based provisions
    must be severed—including at least sections 391.031(b), 391.037,114 391.061(c), and 391.070.115
    This would leave standing, with respect to the substantive provisions of the Act’s ban on outdoor
    advertising, only section 391.031(a)’s prohibition against signs within the imaginary federal corridor
    and two exemptions: one for signs erected in industrial or commercial areas (subject to state
    permitting rules); and the other for signs erected before October 22, 1965.116
    Would this leave standing a law—i.e., the Legislature’s ban on outdoor
    advertising—that is “complete in itself”?117 Perhaps. But what is not so easily answered in the
    affirmative is the second prong of the severability question: Is the remaining law “capable of
    114
    Section 391.037 involves advertising by certain county agricultural fairs. See 
    id. § 391.037.
    Reed noted that speech restrictions based on the identity of the speaker are often content
    based and subject to strict scrutiny. See 
    Reed, 135 S. Ct. at 2230
    (citing Citizens 
    United, 558 U.S. at 340
    ; Turner Broadcasting Sys., Inc. v. Federal Commc’ns Comm’n, 
    512 U.S. 622
    , 658 (1994)).
    115
    Section 391.070 creates an exception for certain nonprofit organizations.                 See
    Tex. Transp. Code § 
    391.070; supra
    n. __.
    116
    See Tex. Transp. Code § 391.031(a).
    117
    Western 
    Union, 62 Tex. at 634
    ; see Tex. Gov’t Code § 311.032 (courts should sever
    unconstitutional aspects and save balance of law if “other provisions or applications of the statute . . .
    can be given effect without the invalid provision or application”).
    27
    being executed in accordance with the apparent legislative intent, wholly independent of that which
    was rejected”?118
    The Department suggests that because the original version of the Texas Act did not
    include the election-sign exemption, severing that exemption would do no harm to the Legislature’s
    intent in enacting the ban on outdoor advertising. But the 1972 Texas Act included the sign-ban
    exemptions now codified in section 391.031.119 And certain of these original exemptions seem
    to be directed at protecting traditional rights enjoyed by property owners—e.g., allowing an owner
    to advertise the sale or lease of the property; to promote or advertise activities taking place on
    the property; and to warn about issues affecting life and property. To that extent, these exceptions
    express the Legislature’s intent to protect those rights, and a blanket ban on all outdoor advertising
    would potentially alter that intent. These arguments also completely ignore the possibility that a
    complete ban on all signs, while likely content neutral, could raise other free-speech and property-
    rights concerns.120 At a minimum, though, we cannot know whether the Legislature would have
    enacted a complete ban on outdoor advertising. Moreover, given that the federal Highway
    Beautification Act—the primary impetus for the Texas Act and, in fact, the law on which the Texas
    Act “is conditioned”121—seems to share the same constitutional flaws as does the Texas Act under
    118
    Western 
    Union, 62 Tex. at 634
    .
    119
    See Highway Beautification Act, 62d Leg., 2d C.S., ch. 1, § 4, 1972 Tex. Gen. Laws 15,
    16 (current version codified at Tex. Transp. Code § 391.031).
    120
    See, e.g., 
    Gilleo, 512 U.S. at 55
    (noting dangers to freedom of speech posed by content-
    neutral prohibition of all signs).
    121
    See Tex. Transp. Code § 391.002(a) (“This Chapter is conditioned on th[e Highway
    Beautification Act of 1965].”).
    28
    Reed,122 we cannot say with any certainty what the Texas Legislature will want in terms of a ban on
    highway signs in the absence of a federal act requiring one. Should the federal act be declared
    unconstitutional—a possibility suggested by the United States’ amicus brief in Reed123—Congress
    and other state legislatures would be faced with deciding whether to enact sign restrictions and, if
    so, how to comply with Reed. That is the sole province of the Legislative Branch.
    Finally, we think it is worth noting that this Court—in the opinion accompanying
    the judgment that was later reversed by the Texas Supreme Court in Barber—addressed and rejected
    this same suggestion by the Department that we could remedy any constitutional flaws in the Act
    by eliminating all exemptions, leaving a total ban on outdoor advertising.124 Our response was to
    invoke the Supreme Court’s reasoning in City of Ladue v. Gilleo:
    “[T]he City might theoretically remove the defects in its ordinance by simply
    repealing all of the exemptions. If, however, the ordinance is also vulnerable
    because it prohibits too much speech, that solution would not save it. Moreover,
    if the prohibitions in Ladue’s ordinance are impermissible, resting our decision
    on its exemptions would afford scant relief for respondent Gilleo. She is primarily
    concerned not with the scope of the exemptions available in other locations, such as
    122
    See, e.g., Brief for the United States as Amicus Curiae Supporting Petitioners, Reed
    v. Town of Gilbert, 
    135 S. Ct. 2218
    (2015) (No. 13-502) (urging Supreme Court to consider
    nuanced application of strict scrutiny to facially content-based restrictions because of likely adverse
    consequences to certain statutes, including federal highway beautification act, that included content-
    based provisions).
    123
    
    Id. at 11,
    26, 33; see also 
    Reed, 135 S. Ct. at 2239
    (Kagan, J., concurring) (noting
    that “thousands of towns have such [sign ordinances], many of them ‘entirely reasonable’” and
    expressing concern that Reed would require courts “to invalidate [them] one after the other”).
    124
    See Barber v. Texas Dep’t of Transp., 
    49 S.W.3d 12
    , 25 (Tex. App.—Austin 2001), 
    rev’d 111 S.W.3d at 86
    .
    29
    commercial areas and on church property; she asserts a constitutional right to display
    an antiwar sign at her own home.”125
    And as we did then, we conclude today, “The same might be said of the Texas Highway
    Beautification Act.”126
    On motion for rehearing
    The Department’s motion for rehearing asserts that our remedy is unnecessarily broad
    because it “prohibit[s] state regulations on commercial speech” that were not implicated in Reed or
    in the underlying facts of this case. The Department urges us to leave standing Subchapters B and
    C and sever only the State’s ability to apply those subchapters to noncommercial speech.
    While we have acknowledged that Reed’s holding seems to affect only restrictions
    of noncommercial speech,127 the plain language of the Texas Act defines “outdoor advertising”
    so broadly that the Act’s restrictions on speech apply to both commercial and noncommercial
    speech.128 That the Legislature intended to encompass—and thus regulate—both commercial and
    noncommercial speech under Subchapters B and C is confirmed by comparison to the language
    of Subchapter I, which clearly and unambiguously limits that subchapter to the regulation of
    125
    
    Barber, 49 S.W.3d at 25
    (quoting 
    Gilleo, 512 U.S. at 53
    ).
    126
    Id.
    127
    
    See supra
    at 5; see also, e.g., Free Speech Coal., 
    Inc., 825 F.3d at 176
    n.7 (noting that
    Reed did not abolish distinction between commercial and noncommercial speech); Geft Outdoor
    LLC, 
    2016 WL 2941329
    , at *10 (Reed limited to noncommercial speech).
    128
    See Tex. Transp. Code § 391.001(10) (defining “outdoor advertising” as, in part, “other
    thing designed, intended, or used to advertise or inform”).
    30
    commercial speech.129 Whatever the desirability of rendering a judgment that merely severs the
    Act’s application to noncommercial speech, such a remedy would essentially rewrite the Act contrary
    to its plain language with no indication that the Legislature would have intended such a resulting
    regulatory scheme.130 Moreover, such a severance would present the risk of substituting one set of
    constitutional problems for another.131
    Finally, we note that our opinion here does not hold that the State lacks the
    power to regulate billboards along Texas highways. Rather, our opinion holds that under Reed the
    Texas Highway Beautification Act’s outdoor-advertising regulations and related Department rules
    are, as written, unconstitutional “content-based” regulations (as defined by Reed) of noncommercial
    speech because they do not pass strict-scrutiny analysis. The Legislature may see fit to amend the
    Act in an attempt to conform to Reed or to amend it such that it regulates only commercial speech
    129
    See Tex. Transp. Code § 391.251(2) (defining “advertising” as “a message seeking to
    attract the public or to direct the attention of the public to any goods, services, or merchandise”);
    Central 
    Hudson, 447 U.S. at 563
    (describing commercial speech as “expression related solely to the
    economic interests of the speaker and its audience”).
    130
    See Western 
    Union, 62 Tex. at 634
    (“If, when the unconstitutional portion is stricken out,
    that which remains is complete in itself, and capable of being executed in accordance with the
    apparent legislative intent, wholly independent of that which was rejected, it must stand.”); see also
    
    Rose, 801 S.W.2d at 844
    (citing Western 
    Union, 62 Tex. at 634
    , for severability test).
    131
    See Metromedia, Inc. v. City of San Diego, 
    453 U.S. 490
    , 536–39 (1981) (Brennan, J.,
    concurring) (explaining that giving governmental unit discretion to decide whether speech is
    commercial or noncommercial threatens “noncommercial speech in the guise of regulating
    commercial speech”); Metromedia, Inc. v. City of San Diego, 
    32 Cal. 3d
    . 180, 190 (Cal. 1982)
    (declining to enjoin sign ordinance’s application to commercial speech because of the “serious
    constitutional problems” presented by such a remedy (citing Brennan’s concurrence in 
    Metromedia, 453 U.S. at 536
    –39).
    31
    within the applicable constitutional bounds. In short, it is for the Legislature, not this Court, to
    clarify its intent regarding the Texas Highway Beautification Act in the wake of Reed.
    Conclusion
    Guided by Reed, we are compelled to reverse the district court’s judgment and
    render judgment severing Subchapters B and C132 from the Texas Highway Beautification Act as
    unconstitutional content-based restrictions of speech.
    __________________________________________
    Jeff Rose, Chief Justice
    Before Chief Justice Rose, Justices Pemberton and Field
    Reversed and Rendered on Motion for Rehearing
    Filed: December 8, 2016
    132
    Tex. Transp. Code §§ 391.031–.070.
    32
    

Document Info

Docket Number: 03-14-00375-CV

Citation Numbers: 506 S.W.3d 688

Filed Date: 12/8/2016

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 1/12/2023

Authorities (31)

Daniel Matthews and Philip Lindsay v. Town of Needham , 764 F.2d 58 ( 1985 )

Solantic, LLC v. City of Neptune Beach , 410 F.3d 1250 ( 2005 )

Erznoznik v. City of Jacksonville , 95 S. Ct. 2268 ( 1975 )

Ayotte v. Planned Parenthood of Northern New Eng. , 126 S. Ct. 961 ( 2006 )

Police Dept. of Chicago v. Mosley , 92 S. Ct. 2286 ( 1972 )

Central Hudson Gas & Electric Corp. v. Public Service ... , 100 S. Ct. 2343 ( 1980 )

Metromedia, Inc. v. City of San Diego , 101 S. Ct. 2882 ( 1981 )

City of Renton v. Playtime Theatres, Inc. , 106 S. Ct. 925 ( 1986 )

Minnesota v. Mille Lacs Band of Chippewa Indians , 119 S. Ct. 1187 ( 1999 )

United States v. Playboy Entertainment Group, Inc. , 120 S. Ct. 1878 ( 2000 )

Pleasant Grove City v. Summum , 129 S. Ct. 1125 ( 2009 )

Williams-Yulee v. Florida Bar , 135 S. Ct. 1656 ( 2015 )

Walker v. Texas Div., Sons of Confederate Veterans, Inc. , 135 S. Ct. 2239 ( 2015 )

Clark v. Community for Creative Non-Violence , 104 S. Ct. 3065 ( 1984 )

Ward v. Rock Against Racism , 109 S. Ct. 2746 ( 1989 )

Simon & Schuster, Inc. v. Members of the New York State ... , 112 S. Ct. 501 ( 1991 )

R. A. v. v. City of St. Paul , 112 S. Ct. 2538 ( 1992 )

Citizens United v. Federal Election Commission , 130 S. Ct. 876 ( 2010 )

Arizona Free Enterprise Club’s Freedom Club PAC v. Bennett , 131 S. Ct. 2806 ( 2011 )

Reed v. Town of Gilbert , 135 S. Ct. 2218 ( 2015 )

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