Gene Lovelace Enterprises, LLC v. City of Knoxville ( 2021 )


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  •                                                                                         06/11/2021
    IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF TENNESSEE
    AT KNOXVILLE
    April 21, 2021 Session
    GENE LOVELACE ENTERPRISES, LLC, ET AL. V.
    CITY OF KNOXVILLE, ET AL.
    Appeal from the Circuit Court for Knox County
    Nos. 2-391-05, 2-494-05 William T. Ailor, Judge
    ___________________________________
    No. E2019-01574-COA-R3-CV
    ___________________________________
    This is the second appeal of this action concerning the enforceability of a licensing
    ordinance applicable to sexually oriented businesses in the City of Knoxville. The trial
    court found the ordinance lawful upon remand from this court and granted summary
    judgment in favor of the City. We affirm.
    Tenn. R. App. P. 3 Appeal as of Right; Judgment of the Circuit Court
    Affirmed; Case Remanded
    JOHN W. MCCLARTY, J., delivered the opinion of the court, in which D. MICHAEL SWINEY,
    C.J. and CARMA DENNIS MCGEE, J., joined.
    Matthew A. Grossman, Knoxville, Tennessee, for the appellant, Gene Lovelace
    Enterprises, LLC and Bambi’s, LLC.
    Scott D. Bergthold, Bryan A. Dykes, and Robert T. Noland, Chattanooga, Tennessee, for
    the appellee, the City of Knoxville.
    OPINION
    I. BACKGROUND
    The City of Knoxville (“the City”) drafted the licensing ordinance at issue to
    regulate the conduct permitted on the premises of sexually oriented businesses by, inter
    alia, (1) prohibiting total nudity and touching of patrons; (2) prohibiting alcohol on the
    premises; (3) limiting hours of operation; and (4) requiring sexually oriented businesses
    and their employees to obtain licenses. The ordinance was presented to the Metropolitan
    Planning Committee (“MPC”). Following a hearing over the course of two days on March
    10 and April 14, 2005, the MPC denied recommendation of the licensing ordinance.
    The ordinance was then presented to the Knoxville City Council (“the City
    Council”), at which the City’s outside counsel, Scott Bergthold, presented evidence,
    claiming that regulation was necessary because the subject businesses caused adverse
    secondary effects upon the community, namely diminished property values; increased
    personal, property, and drug crimes; spread of disease; and neighborhood blight.1
    Attorneys for the businesses at issue were present and objected to the passing of the
    ordinance with the support of their own documentary evidence. Members of the public
    were also present and offered their personal opinions on the matter. The ordinance was
    approved following a full hearing over the course of two days in May 2005.
    Gene Lovelace Enterprises, LLC a/k/a Last Chance Theatre & Musical Club 2000
    at Alcoa Highway and Bambi’s, LLC (collectively “Plaintiffs”), and other adult businesses
    then filed the instant action to challenge the validity of the ordinance, claiming that (1) the
    ordinance is invalid because the City did not timely appeal the MPC’s denial of the
    ordinance and that (2) the ordinance violates the constitutional right of free speech because
    it was enacted based on “shoddy” or misleading information and contains
    unconstitutionally vague and overbroad terms. The City moved for summary judgment,
    providing specific evidence of crimes occurring in and around Knoxville near the subject
    businesses. The City also provided studies performed in other cities showing similar
    effects of such businesses in other municipalities.
    At the discovery stage, Plaintiffs requested permission to depose Attorney
    Bergthold to gain information concerning the basis for his selection of the materials
    presented to the City Council. The City moved for a protective order precluding his
    deposition based upon claims of legislative immunity, the attorney-client privilege, and the
    work product doctrine. The trial court entered a protective order, citing the immunities and
    privileges claimed without further explanation.
    Plaintiffs responded to the motion for summary judgment with, inter alia, their own
    affidavit, in which Larry Miller, Ph.D. alleged that the studies provided by the City
    contained flawed methodology or were otherwise unreliable. Dr. Miller attested that he
    found no evidence of adverse secondary effects resulting from the operation of the subject
    businesses. Plaintiffs also provided a report from a cultural anthropologist, who concluded
    that displays of nudity such as those at issue here have artistic merit and communicative
    expression, and an article in which the writer concluded that crime was more common
    around fast food restaurants than around adult businesses.
    1
    Plaintiffs refer to Attorney Bergthold’s evidence as “the legislative predicate.”
    -2-
    Following a hearing, the trial court granted summary judgment in the City’s favor.
    Plaintiffs appealed to this court. We reversed the grant of summary judgment and
    remanded for further proceedings, holding that the trial court failed to fully analyze the
    requested enactment of the ordinance using the four-factor test developed in United States
    v. O’Brien, 
    391 U.S. 367
     (1968). Lovelace v. City of Knoxville, No. E2013-01584-COA-
    R3-CV, 
    2014 WL 7069956
    , at *8 (Tenn. Ct. App. Dec. 15, 2014) (“Lovelace I”). The test
    at issue is as follows:
    1.     whether the ordinance is within the city’s constitutional power to
    enact;
    2.     whether the ordinance furthers an important government interest:
    3.    whether the government interest is related to suppression of free
    expression; and
    4.     whether the restriction is no greater than is essential to furtherance of
    the government interest.
    O’Brien, 
    391 U.S. at 377
     (citations omitted). We directed the trial court as follows:
    Specifically, as regarding the second factor of the O’Brien test, the trial court
    must consider whether Plaintiffs’ evidence, consisting of expert affidavits as
    well as a study and report based on empirical data specific to the City of
    Knoxville, was successful in casting doubt upon the City’s factual findings
    regarding adverse secondary effects on the community. The trial court must
    apply the proper burden-shifting framework . . . to determine whether the
    subject ordinance serves a substantial government interest.
    Lovelace I, 
    2014 WL 7069956
    , at *8. We likewise held that the trial court’s ruling
    concerning the protective order did not allow for meaningful appellate review because it
    failed to delineate the specific privilege or immunity forming the basis for the order.
    Upon remand, Plaintiffs provided an updated report from Dr. Miller in which he
    again found no adverse secondary effects upon the community from the subject businesses.
    The trial court renewed the protective order barring the deposition of Attorney Bergthold
    with the following additional reasoning:
    [Plaintiffs] want to depose [Attorney Bergthold] to show the Court that the
    data relied upon by the [City] is “shoddy” by using the impressions of
    [Attorney Bergthold] and his opinions and why he chose the information he
    chose to present to the City which supported his conclusions. The Court is
    of the opinion that those things are clearly covered by the attorney-client
    -3-
    privilege as [Attorney Bergthold] was hired by the City to help them develop
    the ordinance which is a legal function and something that the City Attorney
    does on a regular basis. To rule otherwise would open up the City Attorney
    to being deposed every time someone decided to question the efficacy of an
    ordinance prepared by that office. Questioning [Attorney Bergthold] as to
    why he chose the information he chose will not test whether the data relied
    on was based on shoddy work by those who developed it. That would have
    nothing to do with the data but [Attorney Bergthold’s] opinions as to why he
    chose the data he chose. Any documents that were filed with the ordinance
    or in support thereof are now public record and have clearly lost any
    protection of attorney-client privilege and are discoverable. [Plaintiffs have]
    the right to hire their own expert who can examine those documents and
    make whatever determination and reach whatever conclusions about or
    opinions she or he may make. Any statements made by [Attorney Bergthold]
    in a public forum have also lost any attorney-client privilege but have already
    been disclosed. However, [Attorney Bergthold’s] thoughts, impressions,
    [and] reasoning as to why he decided to use certain information in making
    his recommendation is covered by the attorney-client privilege and work
    product and therefore not discoverable.
    In determining whether legislative immunity applies to [Attorney
    Bergthold], the Court . . . is of the opinion that legislative immunity should
    be applied to [Attorney Bergthold] as he was hired by [the City] to draft an
    ordinance which is a legislative function of [the City]. After that
    determination, the Court must determine the nature of the act he was hired to
    perform not his motivation. If it was legislative in nature, then legislative
    immunity should apply and he would be protected. In this case, as stated
    previously, he was hired to draft a city ordinance. It does not matter that the
    ordinance was affecting adult entertainment businesses only that he was
    hired to draft an ordinance which is legislative in nature. As a result, the
    Court, is of the opinion that he is protected by legislative immunity.
    Following a hearing, the court again granted the City’s motion for summary judgment,
    finding that the City was not required to appeal the MPC’s denial because the licensing
    ordinance is not a zoning ordinance. The court found that the ordinance was not overbroad
    or vague and that it passed the four-factor O’Brien test because Plaintiffs failed to cast
    direct doubt upon the evidence relied upon by the City Council.
    -4-
    II. ISSUES
    A.     Whether the trial court erred in its qualification of the subject
    ordinance as a non-zoning matter, thereby permitting the City to present the
    matter to the City Council without filing an appeal from the MPC.
    B.     Whether the trial court abused its discretion in its issuance of a
    protective order barring the deposition of Attorney Bergthold.
    C.     Whether the trial court erred in its grant of summary judgment.
    III. STANDARD OF REVIEW
    Rule 56.04 of the Tennessee Rules of Civil Procedure states that a motion for
    summary judgment should only be granted if “the pleadings, depositions, answers to
    interrogatories, and admissions on file, together with the affidavits, if any, show that there
    is no genuine issue as to any material fact and that the moving party is entitled to a judgment
    as a matter of law.” The standard of review following a trial court’s decision on a motion
    for summary judgment is de novo with no presumption of correctness. Tatham v.
    Bridgestone Ams. Holding, Inc., 
    473 S.W.3d 734
    , 748 (Tenn. 2015) (citing Parker v.
    Holiday Hospitality Franchising, Inc., 
    446 S.W.3d 341
    , 346 (Tenn. 2014)).
    IV. ANALYSIS
    A.
    Plaintiffs assert that the licensing ordinance at issue is tantamount to a zoning
    ordinance subject to the zoning appeal process when one ground for denial of a permit is
    noncompliance with zoning requirements. Plaintiffs argue that the City’s failure to abide
    by its own appeal process renders the ordinance invalid. The City responds that the subject
    ordinance simply requires compliance with laws governing location as a prerequisite to
    obtaining a business license but does not prevent Plaintiffs from continuing to use the
    property as a sexually oriented business due to its location. Rather, it imposes ordinary
    licensing restrictions on that category of businesses and is not a zoning ordinance.
    The City Code provides an appeal process stating that any petitioner “aggrieved by
    any decision of the [MPC] may petition the City Council to consider the same.” Knoxville
    Municipal Code, Appx. B, Art. VII, Sec. 6F (emphasis added). The appeal ordinance then
    provides certain guidelines concerning the public notification requirement and the time
    limits applicable to such appeals of zoning decisions.
    -5-
    In considering this issue, we must first determine whether the ordinance at issue is
    a zoning ordinance. Tennessee courts utilize the following two-part test in determining
    whether an ordinance is a zoning ordinance:
    The first step requires courts to review the terms of the challenged ordinance
    and the municipality’s comprehensive zoning plan to determine whether the
    ordinance is so closely related to the zoning plan that it can be fairly
    characterized as tantamount to zoning. The second step requires the courts
    to determine whether the challenged ordinance substantially affects the use
    of the property that is the subject of the litigation. Both parts of the test must
    be satisfied before a challenged ordinance may be held to be tantamount to
    zoning.
    SNPCO, Inc. v. City of Jefferson City, 
    363 S.W.3d 467
    , 478 (Tenn. 2012). Here, the
    challenged ordinance regulates the time and manner in which the subject businesses
    operate and cannot be fairly characterized as tantamount to zoning when the ordinance at
    issue does not depend upon the City’s zoning plan. Consideration of the second factor is
    unnecessary when both parts of the test must be satisfied to classify the challenged
    ordinance as a zoning matter. Accordingly, we hold that the City was not beholden to the
    appeal process for zoning matters under the circumstances presented here.2
    B.
    Plaintiffs next argue that the trial court abused its discretion in entering a protective
    order, prohibiting the deposition of Attorney Bergthold based upon legislative immunity,
    the attorney-client privilege, and the work product doctrine. Plaintiffs assert that Attorney
    Bergthold, who is not a party to the lawsuit, does not have standing to plead legislative
    immunity because he does not face potential civil or criminal liability. They likewise assert
    that the City may not rely upon the attorney-client privilege or work product doctrine
    because they are not seeking his communications with the City. Finally, they suggest that
    a reasonable protective order may shield the City from any disclosure of unnecessary
    material while also allowing their requested discovery. The City responds that Plaintiffs
    possess the documents filed with the ordinance or those filed in support thereof and that
    Attorney Bergthold’s thought processes are protected and not subject to review.
    2
    Plaintiffs suggest that review was somehow hampered by the failure to follow the appeal
    process, citing the fact that the appeal procedure requires notification to all interested parties and
    the general public at least 15 days prior to the hearing. Our review of the record reflects that
    Plaintiffs were afforded a full and fair hearing before both the MPC and the City Council and that
    members of the public were present at the City Council hearing and offered an opportunity to
    present their opinions.
    -6-
    Decisions pertaining to discovery and the issuance of a protective order are subject
    to an abuse of discretion standard of review. To determine whether a decision constitutes
    an abuse of discretion, we review the trial court’s decision to ascertain: “(1) whether the
    factual basis of the decision is supported by sufficient evidence; (2) whether the trial court
    has correctly identified and properly applied the applicable legal principles; and (3)
    whether the trial court’s decision is within the range of acceptable alternatives.” Gooding
    v. Gooding, 
    477 S.W.3d 774
    , 780 (Tenn. Ct. App. 2015) (quotation omitted). The
    Tennessee Rules of Civil Procedure limit the scope of discovery to “any matter, not
    privileged, which is relevant to the subject matter involved in the pending action, whether
    it relates to the claim or defense of the party seeking discovery or to the claim or defense
    of any other party[.]” Tenn. R. Civ. P. 26.02. Our Supreme Court has provided the
    following additional guidance in such matters:
    When a discovery dispute involves the application of a privilege, the court’s
    judgment should be guided by the following three principles. First,
    Tennessee’s discovery rules favor discovery of all relevant, non-privileged
    information. Second, even though privileges do not facilitate the fact-finding
    process, they are designed to protect interests and relationships that are
    regarded as sufficiently important to justify limitations on discovery. Third,
    while statutory privileges should be fairly construed according to their plain
    meaning, they need not be broadly construed.
    Powell v. Cmty. Health Sys., Inc., 
    312 S.W.3d 496
    , 504 (Tenn. 2010) (citation omitted).
    The attorney-client privilege, codified now at Tennessee Code Annotated section
    23-3-105, provides as follows:
    No attorney, solicitor or counselor shall be permitted, in giving testimony
    against a client or person who consulted the attorney, solicitor or counselor
    professionally, to disclose any communication made to the attorney, solicitor
    or counselor as such by such person during the pendency of the suit, before
    or afterward, to the person’s injury.
    Similarly, the work product doctrine, codified now at Rule 26.02(3) of the Tennessee Rules
    of Civil Procedure, provides as follows:
    [A] party may obtain discovery of documents and tangible things otherwise
    discoverable under subdivision (1) of this rule and prepared in anticipation
    of litigation or for trial by or for another party or by or for that other party’s
    representative (including an attorney, consultant, surety, indemnitor, insurer,
    or agent) only upon a showing that the party seeking discovery has
    substantial need of the materials in the preparation of the case and is unable
    without undue hardship to obtain the substantial equivalent of the materials
    -7-
    by other means. In ordering discovery of such materials when the required
    showing has been made, the court shall protect against disclosure of the
    mental impressions, conclusions, opinions, or legal theories of an attorney
    or other representative of a party concerning the litigation.
    (Emphasis added.). We agree with the trial court that Attorney Bergthold’s thoughts,
    impressions, and reasoning as to why he decided to use certain information in making his
    recommendation are covered by the attorney-client privilege and are his work product,
    thereby precluding their discoverability.
    Legislative immunity, codified now at Article II, Section 13 of the Tennessee
    Constitution, provides as follows:
    Senators and representatives shall, in all cases, except treason, felony, or
    breach of the peace, be privileged from arrest during the session of the
    General Assembly, and in going to and returning from the same; and for any
    speech or debate in either House, they shall not be questioned in any other
    place.
    Legislators or attorneys hired by legislators are not specifically covered by the doctrine of
    legislative immunity as codified; however, the immunity has been applied in a broad
    manner to insulate local legislators from judicial interference with their duties. Miller v.
    Wyatt, 
    457 S.W. 3d 405
    , 411-12 (Tenn. Ct. App. 2014) (holding that a city council member
    was immune from suit for statements made during the course of a city council hearing).
    We decline to extend the scope of such immunity to the circumstances presented here when
    the attorney-client privilege and work product doctrine are more applicable to the issue
    presented, namely whether Attorney Bergthold may be deposed concerning his thought
    process and reasoning for presenting certain documentation in support of the licensing
    ordinance. We affirm the trial court’s issuance of the protective order with all of the above
    considerations in mind. This court “may affirm a judgment on different grounds than those
    relied on by the trial court when the trial court reached the correct result.” City of
    Brentwood v. Metro. Bd. of Zoning Appeals, 
    149 S.W.3d 49
    , 60 n.18 (Tenn. Ct. App. 2004).
    C.
    Plaintiffs ask this court to reverse the grant of summary judgment. Plaintiffs first
    claim that the ordinance is facially overbroad and vague, specifically in reference to its
    definitions of sexually oriented business, specified anatomical areas, and employee. The
    City asserts that the ordinance is clearly defined, narrowly tailored, and is not substantially
    broader than necessary to promote the governmental interest in combating negative
    secondary effects.
    -8-
    A panel of this court has previously stated that “[a]n ordinance is unconstitutionally
    vague when a person of common intelligence must necessarily guess at its meaning. To
    avoid unconstitutional vagueness, a statute must define the criminal offense with sufficient
    definiteness that ordinary people can understand what conduct is prohibited and in a
    manner that does not encourage arbitrary and discriminatory enforcement.” Am. Show Bar
    Series, Inc. v. Sullivan Cnty., 
    30 S.W.3d 324
    , 339 (Tenn. Ct. App. 2000) (internal citations
    and quotations omitted). “A statute is overbroad when it poses a realistic danger that the
    statute itself will significantly compromise recognized First Amendment protections of
    parties not before the Court.” 
    Id.
     (internal quotation omitted). However, the ordinance
    may be upheld if the definition at issue is “readily susceptible to a narrowing construction
    that would salvage its constitutionality.” 
    Id.
     (citations omitted).
    The definitions of the relevant terms at issue are as follows:
    1.     Sexually oriented business: “adult bookstore,” an “adult video store,”
    an “adult cabaret,” an “adult motel,” an “adult motion picture theater,” a
    “semi-nude model studio,” “sexual device shop,” or “sexual encounter
    center.”
    2.     Specified anatomical areas: (1) Less than completely and opaquely
    covered: human genitals or anus; pubic region; buttock; and female breast
    below a point immediately above the top of the areola; and (2) Human male
    genitals in a discernibly turgid state, even if completely and opaquely
    covered.
    3.     Employee: any person who performs any service on the premises of a
    sexually oriented business, on a full time, part time, or contract basis,
    whether or not the person is denominated an employee, independent
    contractor, agent, or otherwise. “Employee” does not include a person
    exclusively on the premises for repair or maintenance of the premises or for
    the delivery of goods to the premises.
    The terms “adult cabaret” and “employee” are more clearly defined by the narrowing
    construction in the Adult-Oriented Registration Act as follows:
    (2) “Adult cabaret” means an establishment that features as a principal use
    of its business, entertainers, waiters, or bartenders who expose to public view
    of the patrons within such establishment, at any time, the bare female breast
    below a point immediately above the top of the areola, human genitals, pubic
    region, or buttocks, even if partially covered by opaque material or
    completely covered by translucent material, including swim suits, lingerie,
    or latex covering. “Adult cabaret” includes a commercial establishment that
    features entertainment of an erotic nature, including exotic dancers, strippers,
    -9-
    male or female impersonators, or similar entertainers[.]
    ***
    (9)(B) “Employee” does not include a person exclusively on the premises for
    repair or maintenance of the premises or equipment on the premises, or for
    the delivery of goods to the premises, nor does it include an independent
    accountant, attorney, or other similar professional incidentally visiting the
    premises solely to perform accounting, legal or other similar professional
    services; provided, that the accountant, attorney or other similar professional
    is not a manager, owner, operator, entertainer, or escort connected with the
    adult-oriented establishment or the providing of adult entertainment[.]
    
    Tenn. Code Ann. § 7-51-1102
    (2), (9). Further, the preamble to the licensing ordinance
    itself provides as follows:
    [I]t is not the intent of this ordinance to suppress any speech activities
    protected by the United States Constitution or the Tennessee Constitution,
    but to enact a narrowly tailored ordinance to further the content-neutral
    governmental interests of the City, to wit, the controlling of secondary effects
    of sexually oriented businesses.
    Plaintiffs suggest that the definitions leave no exception for communication that
    includes genuine artistic, political, or scientific merit and that the definition of employee
    does not include any exception for those performing unrelated services on the premises.
    We disagree. We, like the trial court, do not find that the definitions pose a real and
    substantial danger to significantly compromise constitutionally protected speech and that
    the words are clearly and narrowly tailored to target the performances at sexually oriented
    business that cause negative secondary effects. The terms adult cabaret and employee are
    subject to a narrowing construction that more clearly defines those subject to the ordinance.
    We affirm the trial court’s finding on this issue.
    Plaintiffs next claim that the ordinance is subject to strict scrutiny, not the
    intermediate scrutiny utilized by the trial court in analyzing the ordinance. Here, the
    ordinance is not specifically targeted at the content of the speech, e.g. the erotic message
    conveyed by the entertainment, but is instead targeted at combating the negative secondary
    effects of the protected expression and is more closely aligned to a time, place, and manner
    restriction, thereby requiring intermediate scrutiny of the subject ordinance. Am. Show Bar
    Series, Inc., 30 S.W.3d at 333-34.
    Plaintiffs next reassert their original claim in Lovelace I that the trial court’s grant
    of summary judgment to the City was improper under the test set forth in O’Brien. As
    previously stated, the four-factor test is as follows:
    - 10 -
    1.        whether the ordinance is within the city’s constitutional power to
    enact;
    2.        whether the ordinance furthers an important government interest:
    3.    whether the government interest is related to suppression of free
    expression; and
    4.     whether the restriction is no greater than is essential to furtherance of
    the government interest.
    O’Brien, 
    391 U.S. at 377
     (citations omitted). The licensing ordinance is clearly within the
    City’s constitutional powers to protect the public health, safety, and welfare.3 The third
    and fourth factors are also easily satisfied as we have already found that the ordinance is
    content neutral, not overly broad, and narrowly tailored to combat the secondary effects of
    such businesses. However, upon remand, the trial court was specifically tasked with
    determining whether Plaintiffs’ evidence, consisting of expert affidavits as well as a study
    and report based on empirical data specific to the City of Knoxville, was successful in
    casting doubt upon the City’s factual findings regarding adverse secondary effects on the
    community in accordance with the second factor.
    The evidentiary standards applicable to analyzing this issue are as follows:
    [A] municipality may rely on any evidence that is “reasonably believed to be
    relevant” for demonstrating a connection between speech and a substantial,
    independent government interest. This is not to say that a municipality can
    get away with shoddy data or reasoning. The municipality’s evidence must
    fairly support its rationale for its ordinance. If plaintiffs fail to cast direct
    doubt on this rationale, either by demonstrating that the municipality’s
    evidence does not support its rationale or by furnishing evidence that disputes
    the municipality’s factual findings, the municipality meets the [City of
    Renton v. Playtime Theaters, Inc., 
    475 U.S. 41
     (1986)] standard. If plaintiffs
    succeed in casting doubt on a municipality’s rationale in either manner, the
    burden shifts back to the municipality to supplement the record with evidence
    renewing support for a theory that justifies its ordinance.
    City of Los Angeles v. Alameda Books, Inc., 
    535 U.S. 425
    , 438-39 (2002) (citations
    omitted). The trial court offered the following reasoning in support of its finding of the
    fulfillment of the second factor:
    3
    Plaintiffs do not appear to dispute this fact.
    - 11 -
    The plaintiffs contend that the City failed to show that the ordinance furthers
    an important governmental interest in combating negative secondary effects
    because: (1) the City enacted the Ordinance based upon shoddy reasoning
    and data; and (2) [Plaintiffs] succeeded in casting direct doubt on the City’s
    findings by furnishing contrary evidence. Most notable among [Plaintiffs’]
    evidence are affidavits of two experts, Dr. Larry S. Miller and Dr. Randy D.
    Fisher. Specifically, Dr. Miller contended that he did not find any adverse
    secondary effects caused by the sexually oriented businesses in Knoxville,
    explaining that: (1) the sexually oriented business establishments in
    Knoxville are not “hot spots” of criminal activity, and there were few police
    calls for service and crimes being reported at or near these establishments;
    (2) what has the most effect on surrounding property value is zoning, signage
    and structural design and maintenance, as opposed to sexually oriented
    businesses; and (3) there is no epidemiological evidence to suggest that
    Sexually Transmitted Diseases (STDs) are traceable to sexually oriented
    businesses in Knoxville. Further, Dr. Fisher challenged the methodologies
    used in the reports and studies in other localities, which were relied upon by
    the City in enacting the Ordinance.
    The Court finds that [Plaintiffs] failed to cast direct doubt on the City’s
    findings. The City provided sufficient evidence that is “reasonably believed
    to be relevant” to demonstrate the City’s interest in combating and preventing
    the negative secondary effects of sexually oriented businesses. Specifically,
    the City relied upon extensive legislative findings, including court opinions,
    reports and studies from other cities, periodical articles, and police reports
    from other localities, which contain evidence of secondary effects caused by
    sexually oriented businesses. Although not required, the City also provided
    the Knoxville Police Department’s reports of crimes at sexually oriented
    businesses in Knoxville.
    While the City may reasonably rely on evidence from other localities and
    anecdotal evidence, plaintiffs’ burden [to cast doubt upon the City’s findings]
    is heavier and cannot be met with unsound inference or similarly anecdotal
    information. [Plaintiffs] finding is that there is insufficient evidence to prove
    that sexually oriented businesses have actually been causing high crime rates,
    reduced property values, and transmission of STDs in Knoxville.
    [Plaintiffs’] evidence suggests, at best, that: (1) it is unclear whether and, to
    what extent, sexually oriented businesses cause negative secondary effects in
    Knoxville; and that (2) the City could have reached a different conclusion.
    This does not render the City’s contrary findings and its rationale “shoddy.”
    The second prong of the O’Brien test is satisfied, as the City showed that the
    Ordinance furthers an important governmental interest, and [Plaintiffs] failed
    to cast direct doubt on the City’s rationale.
    - 12 -
    (internal citations omitted). We agree with the trial court’s reasoning on this issue. See
    Richland Bookmart, Inc. v. Knox Cnty., Tenn., 
    555 F.3d 512
    , 527 (6th Cir. 2009)
    (“[E]vidence suggesting that a different conclusion is also reasonable does not prove that
    the County’s findings were impermissible or its rationale unsustainable.”) (citation
    omitted). We likewise conclude that the City established that the ordinance furthers an
    important governmental interest and that Plaintiffs failed to cast direct doubt on the City’s
    rationale. Having found that the second factor has been fulfilled, we affirm the trial court’s
    grant of summary judgment in favor of the City.
    V. CONCLUSION
    For the reasons stated, we affirm the decision of the trial court and remand for such
    further proceedings as may be necessary. Costs on appeal are assessed equally to the
    appellants, Gene Lovelace Enterprises, LLC and Bambi’s, LLC.
    _________________________________
    JOHN W. MCCLARTY, JUDGE
    - 13 -