This summary was computer-generated without any editorial revision. It is not official, has not been checked for accuracy, and is NOT citable.
Facts
- The Defendant, David Warner, created a non-profit foundation in memory of his son and solicited funds by distributing flyers at a public street intersection in the Village of Ruidoso, New Mexico. His actions led to his arrest and conviction for soliciting without a permit as per the Village's ordinances (para 1).
Procedural History
- Municipal Court: Convicted the Defendant of soliciting without a permit contrary to Ruidoso, N.M., Code of Ordinances ch. 58, art. III, § 58-84(b) (1998).
- District Court of Lincoln County: Upheld the conviction in a de novo appeal.
Parties' Submissions
- Defendant-Appellant: Argued that Section 58-84(b) of the Ruidoso Code of Ordinances, either alone or in combination with related sections, is constitutionally deficient on the grounds of overbreadth, prior restraint, and vagueness (para 4).
- Plaintiff-Appellee: [Not applicable or not found]
Legal Issues
- Whether Section 58-84(b) of the Ruidoso Code of Ordinances, alone or in combination with related sections, is unconstitutional on the grounds of overbreadth, prior restraint, and vagueness (para 4).
Disposition
- The Court of Appeals of New Mexico reversed the Defendant's conviction (para 23).
Reasons
-
Per Jonathan B. Sutin, with concurrence from Celia Foy Castillo, Chief Judge, and Cynthia A. Fry, Judge:The court found Section 58-84(b) of the Ruidoso Code of Ordinances, which criminalizes solicitation on public property without a permit, to be a clear infringement on First Amendment rights unless other laws or Village council authorization could render it constitutionally valid (paras 14-15).The related ordinances (Sections 26-62, 26-75, and 26-77) were considered in the constitutional analysis but did not alleviate the constitutional defects of Section 58-84(b) (paras 15-17).The regulatory scheme, comprising Sections 58-84(b) and 26-77, was deemed facially unconstitutional for broadly prohibiting solicitation of money without a permit, which was subject to the unbridled discretion of public officials, failing to meet the intermediate scrutiny test for content-neutral ordinances that restrict speech (paras 18-21).The court concluded that the ordinances in question are facially invalid abridgments of First Amendment speech, rendering it unnecessary to address the Defendant’s as-applied and void-for-vagueness arguments (para 22).
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