Judges: JAMES D. "BUDDY" CALDWELL, Attorney General
Filed Date: 2/5/2009
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 7/5/2016
Dear Ms. Burkett:
On behalf of the government of the City of Denham Springs, you have requested a legal opinion concerning the constitutional validity of the provisions of the city's ordinance generally prohibiting the distribution of handbills upon unoccupied motor vehicles and vacant residences and, in the case of occupied motor vehicles and inhabited residences, allowing the handbill to be given directly to a person occupying the vehicle, if that person is willing to accept it, or inhabiting the residence. The ordinance further allows, unless an inhabitant of the residence requests otherwise, the handbill to be left at an inhabited residence in a secure place where it cannot be blown or drifted about (but cannot be left in a mailbox in violation of federal regulations). The ordinance further requires that the names and addresses of the originator of the handbill and its distributor be printed on the handbill. And the ordinance forbids the attachment of such printed material to poles and other objects on any public street, alley, sidewalk, or public way. You ask for a detailed analysis of each major provision of the ordinance. In this opinion, we will attempt to address all the major issues we see with the provisions of the ordinance and will begin with the most obviously invalid provision.
It appears that you or the City of Denham Springs has caused to be faxed to us a wealth of legal materials relevant to your request. Such materials include another copy of the ordinance, a copy of R.S.
*Page 2While being used for or distributed in accordance with their intended uses, litter shall not include political pamphlets, handbills, religious tracts and newspapers, and other similar printed materials, the unsolicited distribution of which is protected by the Constitution of the United States or the Constitution of Louisiana.
In the case, City of Bogalusa v. May, supra, the Supreme Court of Louisiana, following the U.S. Supreme Court case of Talley v. State ofCalifornia,
It would seem from all of these legal materials and from other U.S. Supreme Court cases that grave doubt would be cast upon the asserted validity of the Denham Springs' ordinance dealing with handbills. And certainly, Section 6-30, requiring the name and address of the originator and distributor of the handbill or printed material, would be in grave danger of being held unconstitutional by the Supreme Court of Louisiana, under the rationale of the cases cited above. As recently as June of 2002, the U.S. Supreme Court, in Watchtower Bible and Tract Society ofNew York, Inc. v. Village of Stratton,
In addition, the definition of the word litter in a state statute might not itself alone mean that a municipality cannot, for its own purposes and with enforcement funded solely by the municipality itself and not funded in any part by a grant given pursuant to the state litter program, have a different definition. This situation does not necessarily create an irreconcilable conflict between municipal ordinance and state law, because such a municipal ordinance would not permit what the state statute outlaws nor prohibit what the state statute expressly permits.See, for example, State ex rel. Sutton v. Caldwell,
*Page 3 State ex rel Sutton, supra,"[I]f the state should pass a law fixing the height beyond which it would be unlawful to erect a chimney, no one would doubt that any city in the state and within an earthquake zone might further restrict the height of chimneys within the city."
Moreover, the general jurisprudential rule is that the governmental interest and purpose of preventing litter is insufficient justification to place restrictions on the free speech activity of individuals' distributing handbills and other printed material. See Schneider v.State of New Jersey, Town of Irvington,
Some of the provisions of the Denham Springs ordinance are a bit different from the other legislative provisions featured in the above-described legal materials. Some do seem to be aimed at the act of littering, instead of mere distributing, and seem to prohibit distributors of handbills from creating litter by simply throwing the printed material on the ground, instead of handing it to a person. Some of the provisions of the ordinance expressly allow the distribution of handbills but only seek to provide some regulation in the manner of their distribution. Such provisions would include Sections 6-28 and 6-29. In Section 6-28, distribution of handbills is expressly allowed through the manner of handing or transmitting the printed material directly to an occupant (or other person then present upon the premises) of an inhabited private residence or, unless requested by anyone upon such premises not to do so, of placing or depositing it so as to secure or prevent it from being blown or drifted about. In Section 6-29, a handbill may be handed, transmitted, or distributed to the owner or other occupant of any automobile or other vehicle, who is willing to accept same. Otherwise, a handbill may not be simply thrown or deposited into the yard or upon property of a private residence in an unsecured manner nor deposited in or upon a parked or vacant motor vehicle. And, under Section 6-27, it cannot be deposited upon an uninhabited or vacant residence at all.
We think that the city can try to make an argument that some of these particular restrictions contained in Sections 6-28 and 6-29 do not actually curtail free speech but are merely time, place, and manner restrictions that are content-neutral, perhaps serve a legitimate government purpose, are perhaps narrowly drawn to effect that governmental purpose, and specifically allow the speech to be conveyed by certain ways in the alternative to the prohibitions. In Heffron v.International Society for Krishna Consciousness, Inc.,
Nevertheless, if the City of Denham Springs decides to try to justify its handbill ordinance on that basis, it must be remembered that, even as to time, place, and manner regulations, the courts will require the governmental entity to make a showing on the record that its purpose is a legitimate governmental purpose and that the regulation is narrowly drawn to achieve that purpose and is content-neutral. In the case of the Denham Springs ordinance, it would be helpful if the city had actual records showing that distributors of handbills are consistently caught in the act of littering itself and that excessive funds are being spent to clean up the trash and litter from these handbills. A mere theoretical argument might not suffice.
Despite all these arguments, however, the cases seem to suggest thatany municipal restriction on handbill distribution is not favored in law, and a court might construe the whole Denham Springs ordinance as one whole unit and strike it down as an overbroad interference with free speech rights. In such a case, the court would not pick small discrete parts of the ordinance and strain to construe them as mere time, place, and manner regulations that were content-neutral and narrowly tailored to serve a legitimate governmental purpose and then strike down other discrete parts of the ordinance. A legal argument can be made that the provisions of the ordinance are not severable for
Section 6-31, prohibiting the attachment of handbills and printed material to poles, posts, or other objects on any public street, sidewalk, or public way, might pass constitutional muster, if narrowly construed so that the pole, post, or object must be public property and if the city has never permitted anyone to attach handbills, posters, advertisements, or the like to them so as to create a public forum for speech. See, for example, 16A Am.Jur.2d "Constitutional Law" § 519 and the authorities and cases cited therein. R.S.
There is one suggestion for an alternative that might be constitutionally valid: It appears that a yet-to-be-tried method of handbill distribution control would be to create something like the "do-not-call" list.
We trust that this opinion has adequately answered your request, but if you have any further questions, please do not hesitate to ask them of us. With warmest regards, we remain
Yours very truly,
JAMES D. "BUDDY" CALDWELL
ATTORNEY GENERAL
BY: __________________________
THOMAS S.HALLIGAN
Assistant Attorney General
JDC/TSH/sfj
Schneider v. State (Town of Irvington) , 60 S. Ct. 146 ( 1939 )
Watchtower Bible & Tract Society of New York, Inc. v. ... , 122 S. Ct. 2080 ( 2002 )
State Ex Rel. Sutton v. Caldwell , 195 La. 507 ( 1940 )
City of Bogalusa v. May , 252 La. 629 ( 1968 )
State v. Fulton , 337 So. 2d 866 ( 1976 )
Talley v. California , 80 S. Ct. 536 ( 1960 )
Heffron v. International Society for Krishna Consciousness, ... , 101 S. Ct. 2559 ( 1981 )