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Charles v. City of Los Angeles

Summarized by:

  • Court: 9th Circuit Court of Appeals Archives
  • Area(s) of Law: First Amendment
  • Date Filed: 10-15-2012
  • Case #: 10-57028
  • Judge(s)/Court Below: Circuit Judge Wardlaw for the Court; Circuit Judges Paez and Rawlinson

A billboard advertising a particular product and proposing a commercial transaction is commercial speech, and the fact that the billboard advertises protected expressive speech does not change its commercial-speech status.

Wayne Charles and Fort Self Storage (鈥淎ppellants鈥) sought to install a temporary offsite billboard advertisement for 鈥淓! News.鈥 The City of Los Angeles鈥檚 Building and Safety Department determined that the sign was 鈥渟trictly commercial in nature鈥 and therefore violates its sign ordinance. The district court followed the City鈥檚 determination, and granted judgment in favor of the City. On appeal, Appellants argued that the district court erred in concluding that the billboard constitutes commercial speech, because the advertisements were for expressive works and therefore contained protected speech. The Court looked to the Supreme Court鈥檚 prior determination that speech is likely commercial if it is an advertisement relating to one product, and is driven by commercial motivation. Although Appellants agreed that the billboard is an advertisement, they claimed that it should be granted the same protection as works being advertised. The Court disagreed and concluded that the billboard is commercial speech, reasoning that the sign does not include 鈥渋nextricably intertwined鈥 noncommercial and commercial elements. Appellants further cited California cases for the proposition that 鈥渢ruthful advertisements for expressive works are inherently noncommercial speech, because they are accorded the same First Amendment status as the underlying advertised work.鈥 However, the Court rejected that argument because those cases concern only liability under state tort law. The Court also expressed concern that allowing 鈥渟uch a broad exception鈥 to commercial speech would 鈥渞adically enlarge the recognized exceptions to the First Amendment鈥檚 limited protections for advertising.鈥 Although the Court affirmed the district court鈥檚 judgment, the Court stated that the district court鈥檚 review of the City鈥檚 determination was too deferential. Given the importance of the constitutional rights at issue, the district court should have reviewed the City鈥檚 determination de novo. AFFIRMED.

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