Salt Lake City v. Kidd ( 2019 )


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  •                  This opinion is subject to revision before final
    publication in the Pacific Reporter
    
    2019 UT 4
    IN THE
    SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF UTAH
    SALT LAKE CITY,
    Appellee,
    v.
    KARLIE KIDD,
    Appellant.
    No. 20150280
    Filed January 23, 2019
    On Certification from the Court of Appeals
    Third District, Salt Lake
    The Honorable Judge Mark Kouris
    No. 131401513
    Attorneys:
    Heather Lindsay, Salt Lake City, for appellee
    W. Andrew McCullough, Midvale, for appellant
    JUSTICE PEARCE authored the opinion of the Court in which
    CHIEF JUSTICE DURRANT, ASSOCIATE CHIEF JUSTICE LEE,
    JUSTICE HIMONAS, and JUSTICE PETERSEN joined.
    JUSTICE PEARCE, opinion of the Court:
    INTRODUCTION
    ¶1 Salt Lake City requires that any individual employed by an
    escort service agency, or any other sexually oriented business, obtain
    a license from the City before providing services. When Karlie Kidd
    met an undercover Salt Lake City police officer at the Grand America
    Hotel and asked him for a “show-up” fee, she did not possess such a
    license. She did, however, have an escort services license from
    Midvale City. Salt Lake City nevertheless cited Kidd for offering
    escort services without a valid license.
    SLC v. KIDD
    Opinion of the Court
    ¶2 State law authorizes Salt Lake City and Midvale, as well as
    any other municipality, to impose licensing requirements on
    employees of sexually oriented businesses. This results in a
    regulatory scheme where escorts must obtain licenses in each
    jurisdiction in which they want to operate, if the jurisdiction requires
    a license.
    ¶3 To Kidd, the statute promotes regulatory overkill and
    burdens her constitutional rights because the license Midvale issued
    to her satisfies Salt Lake City’s requirements and any legitimate
    interest the City might have in regulating her profession. Kidd
    claims that the imposition of multiple licensing requirements
    violates her First Amendment and Equal Protection rights.
    ¶4 Because Kidd’s First Amendment argument is inadequately
    briefed and because her Equal Protection claim was not properly
    raised in the district court, we affirm her conviction.
    BACKGROUND
    ¶5 Kidd and the escort service agency that employed her were
    licensed to provide sexually oriented business services in Midvale.
    Kidd was not, however, licensed by Salt Lake City to provide
    sexually oriented business services in that municipality. To obtain
    that license, Kidd would have been required to pay a fee and
    provide her social security number, fingerprints, and criminal
    history, as well as other personal information. See SALT LAKE CITY,
    UTAH, CODE § 5.61.110. 1
    ¶6 An undercover Salt Lake City police officer answered Kidd’s
    online advertisement and arranged to meet her at the Grand
    America Hotel. Upon arrival, Kidd requested a “show-up” fee or
    “donation.” The officer provided the payment; additional officers
    then entered the room. They informed Kidd that they were police,
    ran a records check, and ascertained that Kidd did not have a Salt
    Lake City-issued sexually oriented business license. They cited Kidd
    for violating Salt Lake City Code section 5.61.100.
    ¶7 Section 5.61.100 provides that “[i]t is unlawful for any
    sexually oriented business to employ, or for any individual to be
    employed by a sexually oriented business in the capacity of a
    _____________________________________________________________
    1 Kidd argues that much to her consternation, she already
    provided the same information to Midvale, along with a fee, to
    obtain its license. See MIDVALE CITY, UTAH, CODE § 5.12.310.
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    Opinion of the Court
    sexually oriented business employee, unless that employee first
    obtains a sexually oriented business employee license.” The Salt
    Lake City Code, like the Utah Code, deems escorts to be employees
    of sexually oriented businesses.
    ¶8 The City defines “sexually oriented business” as “[n]ude
    entertainment businesses, sexually oriented outcall services, adult
    businesses, ‘seminude dancing bars’ and seminude dancing
    agencies.” SALT LAKE CITY, UTAH, CODE § 5.61.040. While this
    definition does not expressly mention escorts, the City’s definition of
    “sexually oriented business employees” does, specifying that “[a]ll
    persons making outcall meetings under this chapter, including
    escorts, . . . shall be considered sexually oriented business
    employees.” Id. The Utah Code is also explicit that escort service
    agencies are “sexually oriented businesses.” UTAH CODE § 10-8-
    41.5(1)(f)(i) (defining “[s]exually oriented business” as “a business at
    which any nude or partially denuded individual . . . performs any
    service for compensation”); id. § 10-8-41.5(1)(f)(ii) (noting that the
    term “‘[s]exually oriented business’ includes . . . an escort service”). 2
    ¶9 Section 10-8-41.5 of the Utah Code expressly prohibits escorts
    from providing sexually oriented business services in a city, if the
    city requires that the employee be individually licensed and the
    employee has not obtained such a license. UTAH CODE § 10-8-41.5(2)
    (“A person employed in a sexually oriented business may not work
    in a municipality: (a) if the municipality requires that a person
    employed in a sexually oriented business be licensed individually;
    and (b) if the person is not licensed by the municipality.”). Section
    10-8-41.5 therefore mandates that escorts obtain a license in each city
    in which they want to provide services, if that city requires a license.
    _____________________________________________________________
    2  The Salt Lake City Code defines “escort” as follows: “Any
    person who, for pecuniary compensation, dates, socializes, visits,
    consorts with or accompanies . . . another or others,” or offers to do
    so, “to or about social affairs, entertainment or places of amusement,
    or within any place of public or private resort or any business or
    commercial establishment or any private quarters.” SALT LAKE CITY,
    UTAH, CODE § 5.61.040 (but excluding, for example, “persons who
    provide business or personal services such as licensed private
    nurses” or “services such as singing telegrams, birthday greetings or
    similar activities”); see also UTAH CODE § 10-8-41.5(1)(c)(i) (defining
    “escort” similarly).
    3
    SLC v. KIDD
    Opinion of the Court
    ¶10 Kidd challenged this regulatory framework before the
    justice court. Kidd asserted that section 10-8-41.5 unconstitutionally
    prohibited individuals from providing sexually oriented services if
    they did not satisfy the license requirement of each city in which
    they wanted to work. Kidd first raised these challenges in justice
    court, without success. In a trial de novo before the district court,
    Kidd reiterated her constitutional arguments. See generally UTAH
    CODE § 78A-7-118(1) (providing that, upon timely appeal following
    sentencing, criminal defendants are generally entitled to trial de
    novo in district court).
    ¶11 More precisely, Kidd moved to dismiss the charges against
    her, asserting that section 10-8-41.5 infringed her freedom of
    expression by authorizing a city to impose “repetitive licensing
    requirements” upon an escort already licensed in a “neighboring
    city.” Kidd acknowledged she “did not have a Salt Lake City [e]scort
    license at the time of this incident,” but asserted she “did have a
    license in the neighboring cit[y] of Midvale.” She claimed her
    Midvale license was “sufficient to meet the requirements of” the Salt
    Lake City ordinance, and there was “no valid reason” for imposition
    of “duplicative and expensive licensing procedures.”
    ¶12 In support of her argument, Kidd referenced several First
    Amendment cases, but she did not connect them to the facts of her
    case. Other than asserting that “[e]scorts are protected in their
    profession by the First Amendment,” Kidd did not address what
    speech was allegedly infringed. And with even less specificity, Kidd
    asserted that section 10-8-41.5 violated her “rights to Equal
    Protection of the Law.” She did not cite or apply equal protection
    authorities to the facts of her case.
    ¶13 The district court denied the motion and Kidd entered a
    conditional plea of no contest preserving her right to appeal the
    constitutional questions. And the court of appeals certified the case
    to this court.
    STANDARD OF REVIEW
    ¶14 “The grant or denial of a motion to dismiss is a question of
    law [that] we review for correctness, giving no deference to the
    decision of the trial court.” State v. Hamilton, 
    2003 UT 22
    , ¶ 17, 
    70 P.3d 111
     (citation omitted) (cleaned up).
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    Opinion of the Court
    ANALYSIS
    I. Jurisdiction
    ¶15 Before we turn to the merits of the case, we need to address
    a jurisdictional question. Utah Code section 78A-7-118 provides that
    when justice court proceedings are followed by a trial de novo in
    district court, as was the case here, “[t]he decision of the district
    court is final and may not be appealed unless the district court rules
    on the constitutionality of a statute or ordinance.” UTAH CODE § 78A-
    7-118(8).
    ¶16 The only written ruling in the record with respect to Kidd’s
    motion to dismiss, and the constitutional arguments contained
    therein, is the district court’s notation that Kidd’s motion was
    “[d]enied.” While this matter was pending in front of the court of
    appeals, but prior to transfer to our court, the court of appeals
    questioned whether the district court’s denial constituted a “rul[ing]
    on the constitutionality of a statute or ordinance” as section 78A-7-
    118 requires.
    ¶17 Kidd then supplemented the record with a transcript. The
    court of appeals subsequently certified the case, but did not address
    the jurisdictional question it had raised.
    ¶18 In her briefing to this court, Kidd responds to the court of
    appeals’ concern and argues that we have appellate jurisdiction
    because the district court ruled on the statute’s constitutionality. The
    City does not appear to disagree. Although this might seem to
    resolve the question, “acquiescence of the parties is insufficient to
    confer jurisdiction.” First Nat’l Bank of Layton v. Palmer, 
    2018 UT 43
    ,
    ¶ 6, 
    427 P.3d 1169
     (citation omitted). We must be “satisfied that we
    have jurisdiction before reaching the merits.” 
    Id.
    ¶19 With the transcript in the record, we are assured that we
    have jurisdiction because the district court “rule[d] on the
    constitutionality of a statute or ordinance” as required for purposes
    of section 78A-7-118. 3 We are therefore satisfied that appellate
    jurisdiction exists.
    _____________________________________________________________
    3  We agree with Kidd that we have jurisdiction to hear this case.
    But we disagree with Kidd’s reasoning. Kidd asserts that by
    certifying this case, the court of appeals “settled” the question of
    whether jurisdiction exists. Kidd misunderstands the import of
    certification.
    (continued . . .)
    5
    SLC v. KIDD
    Opinion of the Court
    II. First Amendment
    ¶20 Kidd first asserts that Utah Code section 10-8-41.5 “violates
    [her] first amendment right to free speech, and particularly violates”
    her right to “commercial speech.” We cannot reach the merits of this
    claim, however, because Kidd does not identify the speech at issue in
    this case, much less demonstrate that any such speech is protected
    by the First Amendment. Kidd’s argument is inadequately briefed
    and, as a result, she has failed to carry her burden of persuasion on
    appeal.
    ¶21 As an initial matter, “it is the obligation of the person
    desiring to engage in assertedly expressive conduct to demonstrate
    that the First Amendment even applies.” Clark v. Cmty. for Creative
    Non-Violence, 
    468 U.S. 288
    , 293 n.5 (1984). Here, Kidd needed to start
    by pointing this court to the speech she claims the statute burdens.
    Yet Kidd does nothing more than recite that, while employed as an
    escort, she arrived at a hotel room and demanded a “show-up” fee.
    Her argument assumes that the licensing requirement has infringed
    Utah Code section 78A-4-103 empowers the court of appeals to
    assign cases within its original jurisdiction to this court. UTAH CODE
    § 78A-4-103(3). By rule, the court of appeals may certify cases that
    “will govern a number of other cases involving the same legal issue
    or issues,” that present questions of “first impression under state or
    federal law which will have wide applicability,” or that otherwise
    “should be decided by” this court and on which this court would
    “probably grant a petition for writ of certiorari.” UTAH R. APP.
    P. 43(c). Certification is thus a procedural mechanism aimed toward
    efficient resolution of matters of significant jurisprudential
    importance. See id. It accomplishes only the transfer of a case from
    one appellate court to another; it does not constitute a ruling on any
    other issue.
    Likewise, when a case otherwise appears to fit rule 43’s criteria,
    our inability to reach the merits is not a conclusion that the case was
    improperly certified. Certification usually occurs early in the
    appellate process, and the existence or outcome of jurisdictional or
    procedural issues on which resolution ultimately turns may not have
    been sufficiently apparent in the briefing before the court of appeals.
    Thus, although we hope certified cases have been vetted for
    jurisdictional and preservation issues, certification should not be
    viewed as a court of appeals plebiscite on those questions.
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    Opinion of the Court
    her ability to engage in constitutionally protected speech, whatever
    that speech might have been. In other words, Kidd leaves it to this
    court to fill in the blanks about what speech or expressive conduct
    might have occurred but for her failure to obtain a license. We are
    not in a position to do that for Kidd. We could speculate on what
    Kidd would do but for the statute, but judicial speculation cannot
    overcome the presumption of constitutionality that we afford
    legislation. “[A]ll statutes are presumed to be constitutional and the
    party challenging a statute bears the burden of proving its
    invalidity.” State v. Angilau, 
    2011 UT 3
    , ¶ 7, 
    245 P.3d 745
     (citation
    omitted). This Kidd did not do.
    ¶22 As noted above, Kidd characterizes her claim as resting
    primarily—or perhaps entirely—on the infringement of her
    commercial speech. But again, Kidd does not identify the
    commercial speech at issue. She does make a passing assertion that
    First Amendment protection has been afforded to escort service
    agencies on what appears to be artistic (as opposed to commercial)
    speech grounds. We express no opinion as to whether, or to what
    degree, the First Amendment may protect escort services generally
    or escort service providers individually. 4 We simply note that to
    _____________________________________________________________
    4 Compare FW/PBS, Inc. v. City of Dallas, 
    493 U.S. 215
    , 224 (1990)
    (plurality opinion) (noting that the ordinance at issue “applie[d] to
    some businesses that apparently are not protected by the First
    Amendment, e.g., escort agencies” (emphasis omitted)); Ctr. for Fair
    Pub. Policy v. Maricopa Cty., 
    336 F.3d 1153
    , 1165 (9th Cir. 2003) (noting
    that the statutory provision at issue “regulates both establishments
    protected by the First Amendment—adult bookstores, video stores,
    cabarets, motion picture theaters and theaters—and businesses that
    have no such protection—escort agencies” (emphasis added)); 
    id.
     at
    1172 n.1 (Canby, J., dissenting) (agreeing with the majority that “the
    statutory term ‘sexually-oriented businesses’ includes escort services
    that presumably are not engaged in First Amendment-protected
    activity”); IDK, Inc. v. Clark Cty., 
    836 F.2d 1185
    , 1195–97 (9th Cir.
    1988) (concluding that “escort services’ activities are not protected by
    the [F]irst [A]mendment”); with 
    id. at 1200
     (Reinhardt, J., dissenting)
    (concluding that “[t]o the extent that association is constitutionally
    protected, the first amendment applies to IDK (as well as to the
    escorts and their patrons), despite the fact that IDK operates for
    commercial ends”). See also Bushco v. Utah State Tax Comm’n, 
    2009 UT 73
    , ¶¶ 2, 6, 48, 54, 58, 
    225 P.3d 153
     (rejecting First Amendment
    (continued . . .)
    7
    SLC v. KIDD
    Opinion of the Court
    assert a First Amendment claim, Kidd needs to start by identifying
    and characterizing the speech at issue. And Kidd has failed to do so. 5
    ¶23 Kidd would then have needed to demonstrate what level of
    protection the speech at issue receives and how the statute burdens
    it. Kidd compounds this problem by citing cases applying various
    First Amendment frameworks without explaining how those
    distinctive legal principles might apply, either alternatively or in
    combination. Kidd’s main contention appears to be that section 10-8-
    41.5 fails as a regulation of commercial speech, and in support she
    relies on Pacific Frontier v. Pleasant Grove City, which addresses a First
    Amendment challenge involving commercial speech. 
    414 F.3d 1221
    ,
    1231–35 (10th Cir. 2005). But Kidd also relies on United States v.
    O’Brien, which addresses regulation of conduct that implicates
    protected expression. 
    391 U.S. 367
    , 376–77 (1968). She also cites
    FW/PBS, Inc. v. City of Dallas, which addresses whether a regulation
    constitutes an unconstitutional prior restraint due to inadequate
    procedural safeguards. 
    493 U.S. 215
    , 223 (1990) (plurality opinion).
    And while Kidd references other cases, she does little with them. For
    example, she cites, without meaningful analysis, Tollis Inc. v. San
    Bernardino County, which analyzes whether an ordinance may be
    upheld as a content-neutral time, place, and manner regulation and
    justified on the basis of secondary effects. 
    827 F.2d 1329
    , 1332–33 (9th
    Cir. 1987).
    challenges raised by “[p]laintiffs, a group of escort service agencies
    and erotic dancing clubs,” without explicitly addressing whether the
    escort service agencies were entitled to First Amendment protection,
    and ultimately concluding that the “provisions of the statute
    applying the tax [at issue] to escort services [were]
    unconstitutionally vague”).
    5  The next step would have been for Kidd to clearly identify the
    alleged burden on her protected speech. Here again, Kidd’s briefing
    fell short. Kidd alludes to the burden on escorts seeking to provide
    services across Salt Lake County, but does not aver that she sought
    to work in any municipality other than Salt Lake City and Midvale.
    Thus, while she estimates the cost of obtaining a license in multiple
    municipalities, she never claims that she would engage in First
    Amendment-protected activities anywhere other than Salt Lake City
    or Midvale.
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    ¶24 Undifferentiated citation to various First Amendment
    frameworks will almost inevitably lead to inadequate briefing. See,
    e.g., Cheek v. Clay Bulloch Constr. Inc., 
    2016 UT App 227
    , ¶¶ 30–33, 
    387 P.3d 611
     (concluding that an argument was inadequately briefed,
    due in part to the undeveloped assertion of “multiple contractual
    theories, some of which are contradictory”). And requiring Kidd to
    develop a cogent First Amendment argument is more than making
    her run an appellate gauntlet before she can obtain relief. When a
    party advances proto-arguments without developing them into
    actual arguments, that party essentially asks this court to develop
    those arguments for her. And then rule on those arguments, often
    without the benefit of adversarial briefing because the opposing
    party was not given a focused target at which to aim. This is not the
    way we aspire to operate nor is it fair to the opposing party.
    ¶25 Because of the lack of clarity in Kidd’s legal argument, as
    well as the absence of factual development noted above, we are
    unable to reach the merits of her claim. In short, Kidd has failed to
    develop an argument “that we can respond to” and has not
    demonstrated that Utah Code section 10-8-41.5 is an unconstitutional
    intrusion on First Amendment rights. See Rose v. Office of Prof’l
    Conduct, 
    2017 UT 50
    , ¶ 82, 
    424 P.3d 134
    .
    ¶26 Although unnecessary to the resolution of this case, we
    note two additional shortcomings of Kidd’s argument, as these
    issues may arise in future cases. First, any First Amendment claim
    should specify the breadth of the challenge, as well as the specific
    relief sought. Yet Kidd never asserts whether she has raised a facial
    statutory challenge or a challenge that the statute is unconstitutional
    as applied to her, and her brief sometimes reads as if she is raising a
    facial challenge and sometimes uses language usually associated
    with an as-applied argument.
    ¶27 The distinction matters, both in terms of the tests applied
    and the available remedy. See, e.g., Gillmor v. Summit Cty., 
    2010 UT 69
    , ¶ 27, 
    246 P.3d 102
     (contrasting facial and as-applied
    constitutional challenges); Bushco v. Utah State Tax Comm’n, 
    2009 UT 73
    , ¶ 49, 
    225 P.3d 153
     (explaining the overbreadth doctrine as a basis
    for a facial challenge on First Amendment grounds); see also United
    States v. Stevens, 
    559 U.S. 460
    , 472 (2010) (contrasting “typical” facial
    challenge requirements with an overbreadth challenge). The
    distinction may also inform a court’s ability to reach the merits.
    “Particularized facts are what allow a court to issue a narrowly
    tailored and circumscribed remedy” in response to an as-applied
    claim. Justice v. Hosemann, 
    771 F.3d 285
    , 292 (5th Cir. 2014).
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    SLC v. KIDD
    Opinion of the Court
    ¶28 Second, the posture of Kidd’s challenge is somewhat
    unique. Kidd was cited for violation of a city ordinance but
    challenged only the state statute authorizing that ordinance.
    Whether Kidd could succeed on such a challenge without also
    challenging the city ordinance, we need not and do not address. Nor
    do we opine on whether the analytical framework might shift
    depending on whether Kidd challenges the statute, the ordinance, or
    both. 6 We simply note these issues and caution parties to keep them
    in mind in future cases.
    ¶29 For the reasons set forth above, Kidd has failed to persuade
    us that the district court erred in denying her motion to dismiss with
    respect to her First Amendment claim.
    III. Equal Protection
    ¶30 Kidd also asserts that section 10-8-41.5 “denies [her] the
    Equal Protection of the Law in violation of the Fourteenth
    Amendment.” Because Kidd did not adequately preserve this
    argument before the district court, we do not address it.
    ¶31 “As a general rule, claims not raised before the trial court
    may not be raised on appeal.” State v. Holgate, 
    2000 UT 74
    , ¶ 11, 
    10 P.3d 346
    . This “preservation rule applies to every claim, including
    constitutional questions, unless a defendant can demonstrate that
    exceptional circumstances exist or plain error occurred.” 
    Id.
     (internal
    quotation marks omitted). Kidd has not advocated that either of
    those exceptions apply here.
    ¶32 Preservation requires that an issue “be presented to the trial
    court in such a way that the trial court has an opportunity to rule on
    [it].” 438 Main St. v. Easy Heat, Inc., 
    2004 UT 72
    , ¶ 51, 
    99 P.3d 801
    (citation omitted). We have stated that the preservation
    “requirement puts the trial judge on notice of the asserted error and
    allows for correction at that time in the course of the proceeding.” 
    Id.
    “For a trial court to be afforded an opportunity to correct the error
    (1) the issue must be raised in a timely fashion[,] (2) the issue must
    be specifically raised[,] and (3) the challenging party must introduce
    _____________________________________________________________
    6 We also do not address Kidd’s failure to distinguish between
    any First Amendment protection potentially afforded escort agencies
    generally, based on artistic or other services provided by the agency
    as a whole, and any First Amendment protection that might be
    afforded her as an individual escort service provider.
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    supporting evidence or relevant legal authority.” 
    Id.
     (alterations in
    original) (citation omitted) (internal quotation marks omitted).
    ¶33 These principles also govern Kidd’s assertion of a
    constitutional violation. “Preservation requires affording the district
    court a meaningful opportunity to rule on the ground that is
    advanced on appeal, and that implies, at a minimum, not just the
    invocation of a legal principle but also its application to the facts of
    the case.” Hill v. Superior Prop. Mgmt. Servs., Inc., 
    2013 UT 60
    , ¶ 46,
    
    321 P.3d 1054
    .
    ¶34 In district court, Kidd primarily asserted that her First
    Amendment rights had been infringed. But on a few occasions, she
    incanted the phrase “equal protection.” For example, Kidd asserted
    that “[i]nsofar as [section] 10-8-41.5 [a]uthorizes the City to require
    the additional license, the statute violates [her] First Amendment
    rights, and also [her] rights to Equal Protection of the Law under the
    Fourteenth Amendment.” But Kidd did not cite and apply equal
    protection principles to her case. Indeed, the sole equal protection
    authority Kidd cites on appeal, Romer v. Evans, 
    517 U.S. 620
     (1996),
    appears nowhere in her argument below.
    ¶35 Mere mention of a constitutional right, phrase, or principle
    does not raise a constitutional claim. See 438 Main St., 
    2004 UT 72
    ,
    ¶ 51 (requiring introduction of relevant legal authority); cf. Rose, 
    2017 UT 50
    , ¶ 80 (noting, “[a]t the risk of sounding pedantic, a federal
    equal protection argument should at the very least reference” the
    constitutional provision as well as “the case law interpreting that
    clause”). The concept of preservation—and the principles underlying
    its application—would be undone were we to conclude that, in this
    instance, Kidd made and preserved a claim that section 10-8-41.5
    “denies [her] the Equal Protection of the Law in violation of the
    Fourteenth Amendment.” A party may not simply point toward a
    pile of sand and expect the court to build a castle. In both district and
    appellate courts, the development of an argument is a party’s
    responsibility, not a judicial duty.
    ¶36 Accordingly, we conclude that Kidd did not preserve her
    Equal Protection claim in the district court and we do not address it.
    CONCLUSION
    ¶37 Kidd did not preserve her Equal Protection challenge in the
    district court and has not adequately briefed her First Amendment
    challenge on appeal. We affirm.
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