PUBLISHED
UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
FOR THE FOURTH CIRCUIT
No. 19-1044
KIMBERLY BILLUPS; MICHAEL NOLAN; MICHAEL WARFIELD,
Plaintiffs – Appellees,
v.
CITY OF CHARLESTON, South Carolina,
Defendant – Appellant.
------------------------------
CATO INSTITUTE; MORRIS M. KLEINER; EDWARD J. TIMMONS,
Amici Supporting Appellee.
Appeal from the United States District Court for the District of South Carolina, at
Charleston. David C. Norton, District Judge. (2:16-cv-00264-DCN)
Argued: May 8, 2020 Decided: June 11, 2020
Before WILKINSON, NIEMEYER, and KING, Circuit Judges.
Affirmed by published opinion. Judge King wrote the opinion, in which Judge Wilkinson
and Judge Niemeyer joined.
ARGUED: Russell Grainger Hines, YOUNG CLEMENT RIVERS, LLP, Charleston,
South Carolina, for Appellant. Arif Panju, INSTITUTE FOR JUSTICE, Austin, Texas, for
Appellees. Eugene Volokh, UCLA SCHOOL OF LAW, Los Angeles, California, for
Amicus Cato Institute. ON BRIEF: Stephen L. Brown, Brian L. Quisenberry, YOUNG
CLEMENT RIVERS, LLP, Charleston, South Carolina, for Appellant. Robert McNamara,
INSTITUTE FOR JUSTICE, Arlington, Virginia, for Appellees. Ilya Shapiro, CATO
INSTITUTE, Washington, D.C., for Amicus Cato Institute. Louis Chaiten, Matthew M.
Hilderbrand, JONES DAY, Cleveland, Ohio, for Amici Professors Morris M. Kleiner and
Edward J. Timmons.
2
KING, Circuit Judge:
Kimberly Billups, Michael Nolan, and Michael Warfield (collectively, “the
Plaintiffs”) are current or aspiring tour guides in Charleston, South Carolina, who have
faced a common obstacle — Charleston’s Tour Guide Licensing Ordinance (the
“Ordinance”). Pursuant thereto, before leading a paid tour through Charleston’s historic
districts, a prospective guide must obtain a license. And to obtain that license, a prospective
guide must pass a 200-question written examination that focuses on Charleston’s history,
architecture, and historic preservation efforts. If a prospective guide defies the Ordinance
by leading a paid tour of Charleston without a license, that person is subject to
imprisonment and a fine.
To challenge the Ordinance and its mandatory licensing scheme, the Plaintiffs filed
suit in the District of South Carolina against the City of Charleston (the “City”). The
Plaintiffs attacked the Ordinance as an unconstitutional restriction of their First
Amendment right to free speech. The district court agreed with the Plaintiffs and declared
the Ordinance unconstitutional. In reaching its decision, the court assumed that the
Ordinance imposes a content-neutral restriction on speech and thus applied intermediate
scrutiny. The court concluded that the City has a significant interest in protecting its
tourism industry, but that the Ordinance nevertheless fails intermediate scrutiny because it
is not narrowly tailored to serve the City’s interest. As explained below, we agree and
therefore affirm.
3
I.
A.
We begin by reciting the Ordinance’s history and its relevant provisions.
Unquestionably, tourism drives Charleston’s economy. In fact, the tourism industry
generates nearly $7.37 billion in annual economic impact for the Charleston area because
visitors flock to Charleston to explore its historic sites, sample its southern cuisine, and
revel in its ghost stories. To help protect Charleston’s tourism-based economy, the City
decided to regulate the industries that serve visitors. Accordingly, the City enacted the
Ordinance as part of its first Tourism Management Plan in 1983. The Ordinance prohibits
unlicensed tour guides from giving paid tours on public streets throughout the historic
districts of Charleston. More specifically, the Ordinance provides that no “person shall act
or offer to act as a tour guide in [Charleston] for hire unless he or she has first passed a
written examination and is licensed by the [C]ity’s office of tourism management as a
registered tour guide.” See Code of the City of Charleston § 29-58 (2016). 1 If an individual
1
The Ordinance defines several key terms relevant to its mandatory licensing
scheme, including the following:
• “Tour Guide” is defined as “any person who acts or offers to act as a
guide for hire through any part of the districts, including but not
limited to pedestrians and persons within automobiles, motor vehicles
or horse-drawn vehicles when the primary purpose of riding in such
vehicles is not transportation, but touring the historic areas of the
city”;
(Continued)
4
contravenes the Ordinance by giving a tour without a license, that person faces a fine of up
to $500 and a term of imprisonment not exceeding thirty days. See id. § 1-16(a).
Importantly, however, the Ordinance does not prescribe topics that guides must discuss
during tours and does not empower the City to monitor the speech of guides. In other
words, once licensed, a guide may speak freely while giving tours.
The Ordinance also sets forth the process a prospective tour guide must follow to
obtain a license. Under the Ordinance, to be eligible to receive a tour guide license, a
prospective guide must pass a written examination, acquire a valid business license that
must be renewed annually, and pay the attendant fees. The written exam contains 200
questions and is meant to “test the applicant’s knowledge of [Charleston] and its history.”
See Code of the City of Charleston § 29-59(b). The Historic Charleston Foundation — a
nonprofit organization that is “vitally interested in tour guides knowing [Charleston’s]
history” — prepares the questions for the exam, and the City adopts them without
amendment. See J.A. 532. 2 The exam questions are drawn exclusively from a 483-page
tour guide manual, which is also prepared by the Foundation and largely focuses on topics
• “Tour” and “Touring” are defined as “the conducting of or the
participation in sightseeing in the districts for hire or in combination
with a request for donations”; and
• “Districts” are defined as “the old and historic district and the old city
district.”
See Code of the City of Charleston § 29-2.
2
Citations herein to “J.A. __” refer to the contents of the Joint Appendix filed by
the parties in this appeal.
5
relating to Charleston’s historic buildings. In the manual, the issues most likely to appear
on the exam are marked with a palmetto tree. To take the exam, a prospective tour guide
must pay $50; to pass the exam, that individual must answer 70% of the questions correctly.
An earlier version of the Ordinance had required answering 80% of the questions correctly
to pass, but the City lowered the passing score to 70% in April 2016.
After a three-year period, the tour guide license expires. If during the license term
a guide completes four continuing education courses — which must be provided or
approved by the City — and annually renews his business license, he is eligible to renew
his tour guide license for another three-year term. If, however, a guide declines to take the
continuing education courses or to annually renew his business license, he must submit a
new application for a tour guide license. Such an application is treated like an initial
application, which means that the applicant must, inter alia, retake the written exam. See
Code of the City of Charleston § 29-63. 3
B.
Having described the history and relevant provisions of the Ordinance, we now
discuss the Plaintiffs. Kimberly Billups planned to establish a tour company named
3
The Ordinance’s examination requirement is unusual in that most other cities with
tourism-based economies do not require that tour guides pass an exam to obtain a tour
guide license. For example, Paula Reynolds, a tour guide organizer who has worked in
over fifty jurisdictions around the United States, testified in the district court that only two
other jurisdictions — New Orleans, Louisiana, and Williamsburg, Virginia — require that
tour guides pass exams to obtain licenses. And after Reynolds offered that evidence,
Williamsburg amended its tour guide licensing ordinance to remove the mandatory exam
provision. See Code of the City of Williamsburg §§ 9-332, 333, 335 (2019).
6
Charleston Belle Tours. Billups intended to don an antebellum dress to portray a character
— Nancy Bostick de Saussure, a longtime resident of Charleston. Once in character,
Billups intended to lead visitors around town while describing Nancy and Charleston,
discussing the Civil War, and telling jokes. In preparation for starting Charleston Belle
Tours, Billups purchased a telephone business number, an antebellum-period costume, a
credit card reader, and a website domain name.
Additionally, to comply with the Ordinance, Billups purchased the tour guide
manual, paid the $50 fee to take the written examination, and studied five to six hours each
day from September 2015 to November 2015. Despite her efforts, Billups answered only
70% of the exam questions correctly, which was a failing score at that time. Consequently,
Billups did not receive her tour guide license until May 2016, one month after the City
amended the Ordinance to reduce the passing score to 70%. According to Billups, the
Ordinance’s mandatory licensing scheme “greatly” affects her business, as she is “unable
to hire on very knowledgeable people that have shown interest in working for [Charleston
Belle Tours].” See J.A. 159.
Michael Nolan also wanted to lead tours in Charleston. Nolan hoped to work part-
time as a tour guide and proposed a tour based on the “Irish-American experience in
Charleston.” See J.A. 297. Nolan intended to take visitors to the old Irish neighborhoods
of Charleston and other historic Irish attractions. To prepare, Nolan purchased the tour
guide manual and studied it for hours every day in the eight weeks preceding the written
examination. Nolan mostly studied the topics marked with the “little palmetto trees.” Id.
at 299. Despite his efforts, Nolan answered only 64% of the exam questions correctly.
7
Because Nolan has not yet passed the exam, he does not currently have a tour guide license
and cannot offer his Irish-American history tours.
Finally, Michael Warfield, an insurance broker by trade, decided that he wanted to
lead pub tours in Charleston. Accordingly, in pursuit of a tour guide license, Warfield
twice took the written examination. On his first try, Warfield answered 74% of the
questions correctly; on his second try, he answered 68% of the questions correctly.
Although both of Warfield’s scores were considered failing scores when he received them,
he eventually passed the exam when the City lowered the passing score to 70%.
C.
1.
As a result of their encounters with the Ordinance, the Plaintiffs filed their
Complaint in the District of South Carolina on January 28, 2016. In the Complaint, the
Plaintiffs sought, inter alia, a declaratory judgment stating that certain provisions of the
Ordinance run afoul of the First Amendment. The Plaintiffs also requested that the court
permanently enjoin the City from enforcing the Ordinance.
On February 2, 2016, the Plaintiffs asked the district court to preliminarily enjoin
enforcement of the Ordinance. In support of that request, the Plaintiffs contended that they
were likely to succeed on the merits of their claim that the Ordinance burdens protected
speech and contravenes the First Amendment. The City opposed the Plaintiffs’ preliminary
injunction request and moved to dismiss the Complaint. In that regard, the City asserted
that the Ordinance does not burden protected speech and does not contravene the First
Amendment.
8
By its Order of July 1, 2016, the district court denied both the Plaintiffs’ request for
a preliminary injunction and the City’s motion to dismiss. See Billups v. City of
Charleston, S.C., No. 2:16-cv-00264 (D.S.C. July 1, 2016), ECF No. 27 (the “Initial
Order”). 4 Although the Initial Order covered many topics, it is only relevant to this appeal
insofar as it memorializes the court’s conclusions that (1) the Ordinance burdens protected
speech and is thus subject to First Amendment scrutiny, and (2) the City has a significant
interest in protecting Charleston’s tourism industry and visitors. As it relates to the
applicability of the First Amendment, the court determined that the Ordinance burdens
protected speech because “tour guide services frequently involve telling stories or
providing other information about the various sites on the tour,” and “there is no question
that such services often act as vessels for the distribution of speech.” Id. at 10. Put another
way, the court concluded that because a tour guide’s speech is his product, the Ordinance’s
mandate that a guide obtain a license before selling that product burdens speech and thus
implicates the First Amendment.
The case subsequently proceeded through discovery and the parties thereafter filed
cross-motions for summary judgment. In their motion, the Plaintiffs advanced alternative
arguments regarding the unconstitutionality of the Ordinance. First, the Plaintiffs
contended that the Ordinance constitutes a content-based restriction on speech subject to
strict scrutiny, which it cannot survive. In the alternative, the Plaintiffs asserted that even
4
The district court’s Initial Order of July 1, 2016, is published at 194 F. Supp. 3d
452.
9
if the Ordinance is content-neutral, it still fails under the intermediate scrutiny standard
applied to such laws because it is not narrowly tailored to serve the City’s interests. In its
summary judgment motion, the City maintained that the Ordinance is subject to and
survives intermediate scrutiny.
The district court later conducted oral argument on the summary judgment motions,
after which it denied both motions by its Order of September 25, 2017. See Billups v. City
of Charleston, S.C., No. 2:16-cv-00264 (D.S.C. Sept. 25, 2017), ECF No. 79 (the
“Summary Judgment Order”). Consistent with the Initial Order, the court recognized the
significant interest of the City in protecting Charleston’s tourism industry. More
specifically, the Summary Judgment Order explained that “unknowledgeable or fraudulent
tour guides” pose a threat to Charleston’s tourism industry, and thus the City has a
significant interest in ensuring that such tour guides do not hawk subpar tour experiences.
See Summary Judgment Order 22. Notably, the court declined to determine in the
Summary Judgment Order whether to subject the Ordinance to strict or intermediate
scrutiny.
2.
Following entry of the Summary Judgment Order, the district court conducted a
bench trial in Charleston that began on April 9, 2018, and concluded on April 12, 2018.
Because the parties largely agreed on the underlying facts, the trial evidence — comprised
of witness testimony and documentary evidence — focused on the constitutionality of the
Ordinance. Approximately four months after the trial, by its Order of August 3, 2018, the
court memorialized its findings of fact and conclusions of law. See Billups v. City of
10
Charleston, S.C., No. 2:16-cv-00264 (D.S.C. Aug. 3, 2018), ECF No. 115 (the “Trial
Order”). 5
In the Trial Order, the district court reiterated its prior ruling — made in the Initial
Order — that the Ordinance burdens protected speech and is thus subject to First
Amendment scrutiny. The court then considered whether it should apply strict or
intermediate scrutiny. And the answer to that question, explained the court, depends on
whether the Ordinance imposes a content-neutral or content-based restriction on speech.
If it is the former, the more lenient intermediate scrutiny would apply; if it is the latter, the
more demanding strict scrutiny would apply. The court resolved to assume that the
Ordinance imposes a content-neutral restriction on speech and thus to apply intermediate
scrutiny. Because the court concluded that the Ordinance cannot survive intermediate
scrutiny, it was unnecessary to consider whether the Ordinance imposes a content-based
restriction on speech that would trigger strict scrutiny.
In applying intermediate scrutiny, the district court explained that the City was
obliged to demonstrate that protecting Charleston’s tourism industry is a significant
interest, that the Ordinance is narrowly tailored to serve that interest, and that the Ordinance
leaves open ample alternative channels of communication. As previously mentioned, the
court had already determined in its Initial Order and its Summary Judgment Order that
protecting Charleston’s tourism industry constitutes a significant interest. The court thus
5
The district court’s Trial Order of August 3, 2018, is published at 331 F. Supp. 3d
500.
11
assessed whether the Ordinance is narrowly tailored to serve that interest. After reviewing
the trial evidence, the court determined that the Ordinance is not narrowly tailored. More
specifically, the court ruled that the City failed to establish narrow tailoring because it did
not provide evidence that it actually tried or considered less-speech-restrictive alternatives
before enacting the Ordinance, as required by our Court’s decision in Reynolds v.
Middleton, 779 F.3d 222 (4th Cir. 2015).
In so ruling, the district court discussed three less-speech-restrictive alternatives that
the Plaintiffs identified. The Plaintiffs contended that, before enacting the Ordinance, the
City should have tried to regulate tour guides using two existing ordinances, that is, the
City’s ordinance banning deceptive solicitations and its business licensing ordinance.
Additionally, the Plaintiffs asserted that the City should have seriously considered whether
it could regulate guides using a voluntary tour guide certification program similar to those
used by other local governments throughout the country.
The City disagreed and maintained that the three less-speech-restrictive alternatives
the Plaintiffs identified would not adequately protect its interests. To support that
contention, the City offered the testimony of two officials — Daniel Riccio, the City’s
Director of Livability, and former Mayor Joseph Riley, Charleston’s longtime leader. With
respect to the deceptive solicitation ordinance — which prohibits businesses from making
a “deceptive or misleading oral or written statement or representation in the course of
soliciting or attempting to solicit persons” and from “misrepresent[ing] the nature of the
products they are promoting,” see Code of the City of Charleston § 21-232(a), (b) — Riccio
explained that it would be “impractical from an enforcement standpoint” to regulate tour
12
guides using that ordinance because it was passed to regulate aggressive timeshare
salespeople. See J.A. 380. Riley opined that the deceptive solicitation ordinance would be
difficult to enforce because disappointed tourists would not “follow up” by submitting
complaints about dishonest tour guides to the City. Id. at 253. Instead, said Riley, tourists
would simply “go home and tell people that you get ripped off in Charleston.” Id.
Turning to the business licensing ordinance, Riccio testified that the City cannot
regulate tour guides by revoking their business licenses because a guide could avoid that
sanction by starting a new company with a different name and obtaining a new business
license. Additionally, Riccio and Riley testified that the City did not seriously consider a
voluntary tour guide certification program before enacting the Ordinance because such a
program would not be as effective as the Ordinance at protecting the City’s interests.
Specifically, Riccio testified that a voluntary certification program “would be impractical,”
see J.A. 378, and Riley testified that such a program would not have “the accuracy or the
excellence or the quality” of the Ordinance’s mandatory certification program, id. at 249.
The district court concluded that Riccio’s and Riley’s testimony was insufficient to
prove narrow tailoring. Although the court acknowledged that the trial evidence showed
that the City’s officials thought less-speech-restrictive alternatives would not be as
effective as the Ordinance, the court determined that such “post-hoc justification” for the
Ordinance failed to satisfy the “actually tried” evidentiary standard imposed by Reynolds.
See Trial Order 31 (internal quotation marks omitted). Accordingly, the court concluded
that the Ordinance contravenes the First Amendment because the City failed to establish
that the Ordinance is narrowly tailored to serve the City’s interest in protecting
13
Charleston’s tourism industry. Thereafter, on August 6, 2018, the court entered judgment
for the Plaintiffs and declared the Ordinance unconstitutional.
3.
On September 4, 2018, the City filed a motion requesting that the district court
amend its findings pursuant to Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 52(b) and alter or amend
its judgment pursuant to Federal Rules of Civil Procedure 59(e) and 60(b). The court
denied that motion on December 10, 2018. On January 9, 2019, the City timely noted this
appeal. We possess jurisdiction pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 1291.
II.
We generally review a judgment entered following a bench trial using a mixed
standard of review. The district court’s factual findings are reviewed for clear error and its
legal conclusions are reviewed de novo. See Roanoke Cement Co. v. Falk Corp., 413 F.3d
431, 433 (4th Cir. 2005). Nevertheless, in a free speech case, where “the reaches of the
First Amendment are ultimately defined by the facts it is held to embrace,” we are obliged
to “make a fresh examination of crucial facts” and an “independent examination of the
whole record” to ensure that there is no “forbidden intrusion on the field of free expression.”
See Hurley v. Irish-American Gay, Lesbian & Bisexual Grp. of Boston, 515 U.S. 557, 567-
68 (1995) (internal quotation marks omitted).
14
III.
On appeal, the City contends that the district court committed two errors in declaring
the Ordinance unconstitutional. First, the City maintains that the court wrongly concluded
that the Ordinance burdens protected speech and is thus subject to First Amendment
scrutiny. Second, the City asserts that even if the Ordinance is subject to First Amendment
scrutiny, the court erred in determining that it does not survive intermediate scrutiny. As
explained below, we reject both of the City’s contentions.
A.
We begin by considering whether the Ordinance burdens protected speech and thus
is subject to First Amendment scrutiny. The First Amendment guarantees that “Congress
shall make no law . . . abridging the freedom of speech.” See U.S. Const. amend. I. That
bedrock constitutional protection is made applicable to the states by the Fourteenth
Amendment. See Fusaro v. Cogan, 930 F.3d 241, 248 (4th Cir. 2019). The threshold
question before us is “whether any protected First Amendment right is involved.” See
Willis v. Town of Marshall, N.C., 426 F.3d 251, 257 (4th Cir. 2005). If no such right is
involved, our First Amendment inquiry ends. Id. If a protected First Amendment right is
involved, however, we are obliged to then assess whether the governmental action in
question infringes that right. See Am. Legion Post 7 of Durham, N.C. v. City of Durham,
239 F.3d 601, 606-07 (4th Cir. 2001). It is the obligation of the Plaintiffs to prove that the
Ordinance burdens protected speech. See Reynolds v. Middleton, 779 F.3d 222, 226 (4th
Cir. 2015).
15
In the City’s view, the Ordinance is not subject to First Amendment scrutiny
because it is a business regulation governing conduct that merely imposes an incidental
burden on speech. For their part, the Plaintiffs maintain that the Ordinance directly burdens
protected speech because it requires a tour guide to obtain a license before leading visitors
on a paid tour through Charleston’s historic districts — an activity which necessarily
involves speech or expressive conduct.
We agree with the Plaintiffs. The Ordinance undoubtedly burdens protected speech,
as it prohibits unlicensed tour guides from leading paid tours — in other words, speaking
to visitors — on certain public sidewalks and streets. See Sorrell v. IMS Health Inc., 564
U.S. 552, 568 (2011) (“An individual’s right to speak is implicated when information he
or she possesses is subjected to restraints on the way in which the information might be
used or disseminated.” (internal quotation marks omitted)); see also Frisby v. Schultz, 487
U.S. 474, 480-81 (1988) (explaining that public streets and sidewalks are traditional public
fora, “immemorially . . . held in trust for the use of the public,” where First Amendment
rights are at their apex (internal quotation marks omitted)).
The City, however, resists this rather straightforward conclusion for three reasons.
First, the City asserts that the Ordinance cannot constitute a burden on protected speech
because tour guides who do not charge for their services can give tours without a license.
But the City’s profit-based distinction is quite beside the point, as speech is “protected even
[when] it is carried in a form that is ‘sold’ for profit.” See Va. State Bd. of Pharmacy v.
Va. Citizens Consumer Council, Inc., 425 U.S. 748, 761 (1976); see also Sorrell, 564 U.S.
at 567 (“While the burdened speech results from an economic motive, so too does a great
16
deal of vital expression.”); Adventure Commc’ns, Inc. v. Ky. Registry of Election Fin., 191
F.3d 429, 441 (4th Cir. 1999) (explaining that “profit motive on the speaker’s part does not
transform” protected noncommercial speech into less-protected commercial speech).
Second, the City maintains that the Ordinance is exempt from First Amendment
scrutiny because it merely regulates the commercial transaction of selling tour guide
services — not the speech of the tour guides. But it is well-established that a law aimed at
regulating businesses can be subject to First Amendment scrutiny even though it does not
directly regulate speech. See Holder v. Humanitarian Law Project, 561 U.S. 1, 28 (2010)
(“The law here may be described as directed at conduct . . . but as applied to plaintiffs the
conduct triggering coverage under the statute consists of communicating a message.”); see
also Am. Entertainers, L.L.C. v. City of Rocky Mount, N.C., 888 F.3d 707, 715 (4th Cir.
2018) (explaining that the First Amendment applies even if the challenged regulation “was
adopted for a purpose unrelated to the suppression of expression — e.g., to regulate
conduct, or the time, place, and manner in which expression may take place”).
To be sure, restrictions on “protected expression are distinct from restrictions on
economic activity or, more generally, on nonexpressive conduct.” See Sorrell, 564 U.S. at
567. And “the First Amendment does not prevent restrictions directed at commerce or
conduct from imposing incidental burdens on speech.” Id. The Ordinance, however,
cannot be classified as a restriction on economic activity that incidentally burdens speech.
Rather, it completely prohibits unlicensed tour guides from leading visitors on paid tours
— an activity which, by its very nature, depends upon speech or expressive conduct.
Although we acknowledge that the City enacted the Ordinance to protect Charleston’s
17
economic well-being and safeguard its tourism industry, that alone does not shield the
Ordinance from First Amendment scrutiny. See Reed v. Town of Gilbert, Ariz., 135 S. Ct.
2218, 2229 (2015) (“[T]he First Amendment expressly targets the operation of the laws —
i.e., the ‘abridg[ement] of speech’ — rather than merely the motives of those who enacted
them.” (quoting U.S. Const. amend. I)).
Finally, the City relies on a rhetorical question in a decision from the Fifth Circuit
to argue that the Ordinance does not burden protected speech. In that decision, which
evaluated the constitutionality of New Orleans’s mandatory licensing scheme for tour
guides, the Fifth Circuit remarked: “When a city exercising its police power has a law only
to serve an important governmental purpose without affecting what people say as they act
consistently with that purpose, how is there any claim to be made about speech being
offended?” See Kagan v. City of New Orleans, La., 753 F.3d 560, 561-62 (5th Cir. 2014),
cert. denied, 135 S. Ct. 1403 (2015). Immediately following that musing, however, the
court proceeded to subject the New Orleans ordinance to First Amendment scrutiny. The
Kagan decision thus does not support the City on the protected speech issue.
In short, the business of leading tours depends on the expression of ideas. And the
Ordinance forbids unlicensed tour guides for hire from expressing those ideas on public
thoroughfares. Such a restriction burdens protected speech and thus implicates the First
Amendment. Cf. Watchtower Bible & Tract Soc’y of N.Y., Inc. v. Village of Stratton, 536
U.S. 150, 167 (2002) (explaining that “requiring a permit as a prior condition on the
exercise of the right to speak imposes an objective burden on some speech” and effectively
18
bans a “significant amount of spontaneous speech”). Accordingly, we are satisfied that the
Ordinance is subject to First Amendment scrutiny.
B.
Having determined that the Ordinance burdens protected speech, we now assess
whether it can survive First Amendment scrutiny. To answer that question, we would
usually begin by determining the applicable level of scrutiny — that is, intermediate or
strict. That determination would require discerning whether the Ordinance imposes a
content-neutral or content-based restriction on speech. The district court determined,
however, that because the Ordinance does not survive under the more relaxed intermediate
scrutiny applicable to content-neutral laws, it was unnecessary to consider whether the
Ordinance might be content-based and thus subject to strict scrutiny. We are persuaded to
follow the district court’s approach.
Simply put, there is nothing extraordinary about declining to decide the level of
scrutiny to be applied to a given law, as demonstrated by Supreme Court precedent. See
McCutcheon v. FEC, 572 U.S. 185, 199 (2014) (declining to decide which constitutional
test applied because law failed under more lenient test); District of Columbia v. Heller, 554
U.S. 570, 628-29 (2008) (striking down a D.C. ban on firearms after concluding that the
law would fail to pass muster under “any of the standards of scrutiny that [the Court has]
applied to enumerated constitutional rights”). Notably, in its decision in McCullen v.
Coakley, the Court did decide to answer the content-neutrality question even though doing
so was unnecessary. See 573 U.S. 464, 478 (2014). But that choice was not
uncontroversial, as Justice Scalia criticized the Court for producing “seven pages of the
19
purest dicta.” Id. at 498 (Scalia, J., concurring in the judgment). In any event, we do not
read McCullen as establishing a hard-and-fast rule requiring that courts confront the
content-neutrality question in every case. See Edwards v. District of Columbia, 755 F.3d
996, 1001 (D.C. Cir. 2014) (assuming, in a post-McCullen decision, the “validity of
[D.C.’s] argument that [its tour guide] regulations [were] content-neutral”).
Here, as discussed more thoroughly below, the Ordinance cannot survive even
intermediate scrutiny. Because we therefore can resolve this appeal without deciding the
content-neutrality question, we decline to rule thereon. See Jewell Smokeless Coal Corp.
v. Looney, 892 F.2d 366, 368 (4th Cir. 1989) (declining to decide an issue because there
was “another, narrower ground upon which th[e] case turn[ed]”).
C.
In applying intermediate scrutiny to the Ordinance, we follow the roadmap provided
by the Supreme Court in its seminal decision in Ward v. Rock Against Racism, 491 U.S.
781 (1989). There, the Court explained that the government may impose “reasonable
restrictions on the time, place, or manner of protected speech, provided the restrictions are
justified without reference to the content of the regulated speech, that they are narrowly
tailored to serve a significant governmental interest, and that they leave open ample
alternative channels for communication of the information.” Id. at 791 (internal quotation
marks omitted). Because we assume that the Ordinance is content-neutral, we proceed to
consider the remaining requirements. The City bears the burden of proving that the
Ordinance survives intermediate scrutiny. See Reynolds, 779 F.3d at 226; see also Doe v.
Cooper, 842 F.3d 833, 846 (4th Cir. 2016). Like the district court’s, our analysis begins
20
and ends with the conclusion that — although the Ordinance serves the City’s significant
interest in protecting Charleston’s tourism industry — the Ordinance is not narrowly
tailored.
1.
In evaluating whether the Ordinance serves a significant governmental interest, we
are guided by our decision in Reynolds. See 779 F.3d 222. As explained therein, we do
not typically require governmental entities to present evidence demonstrating the existence
of a significant interest. Indeed, we have found “common sense and the holdings of prior
cases” sufficient to establish the existence of such an interest. Id. at 227. Additionally,
when it is obvious that a challenged law serves a significant governmental interest, we do
not require that the government produce evidence so demonstrating. Id. at 228 & n.4. 6
Here, the district court concluded in its Initial Order and its Summary Judgment
Order that the City has a significant interest in protecting Charleston’s tourism industry
from the harms potentially perpetrated by “unknowledgeable or fraudulent tour guides”
peddling subpar tour experiences. See Summary Judgment Order 22. And the court further
6
We acknowledge that our pre-Reynolds precedent required the government to
“produce evidence [demonstrating] that a challenged regulation materially advances an
important or substantial interest by redressing past harms or preventing future ones.” See
Giovani Carandola, Ltd. v. Bason, 303 F.3d 507, 515 (4th Cir. 2002) (internal quotation
marks omitted). In Reynolds, however, we recognized that the Supreme Court’s McCullen
decision altered that requirement, and we explained that after McCullen “objective
evidence is not always required to show that a speech restriction furthers the government’s
interests.” See Reynolds, 779 F.3d at 228. But we emphasize that Reynolds did not relieve
the government of its evidentiary burden when the relationship between a challenged
regulation and the governmental interest it allegedly furthers is not obvious. Id. at 228 n.4.
21
determined that the Ordinance obviously served that interest because its burdensome
requirements — passing the 200-question written examination, acquiring a business
license, and paying the various related fees — would discourage potential fraudsters from
invading Charleston’s tourism industry and ensure that tour guides possess adequate
knowledge about Charleston’s history.
On appeal, the parties do not seriously dispute those determinations. And like the
district court, we are satisfied that the City has a significant interest in protecting
Charleston’s tourism industry and visitors from harms perpetrated by unknowledgeable or
fraudulent tour guides. See Nat’l Fed’n of the Blind v. FTC, 420 F.3d 331, 339 (4th Cir.
2005) (observing that the government’s interest in protecting the public from fraud is “a
sufficiently substantial interest to justify a narrowly tailored regulation” (internal quotation
marks omitted)). We also readily conclude that the Ordinance serves — at least to some
extent — the City’s interest in protecting Charleston’s tourism industry. See Kagan, 753
F.3d at 561 (ruling that New Orleans’s tour guide licensing scheme furthers a significant
governmental interest because it promotes the city and “protect[s] visitors there as they see
and enjoy all of the attractions of New Orleans; its history and sights on to its food and
music”).
In short, we emphasize that Charleston is a historic city, known the world over, that
ranks among our country’s most popular tourist destinations. Of course, the City has a
significant interest in protecting Charleston’s tourism industry and its stellar reputation as
a tourist destination. And we recognize that the Ordinance and its mandatory licensing
scheme serve those interests. Our inquiry, however, does not end there, as the
22
constitutionality of a law that restricts protected speech does not turn solely on the
significance of the governmental interest involved. Rather, to zealously safeguard the right
to free speech enshrined in our Constitution’s First Amendment — undoubtedly among the
most fundamental of American rights — we must also ensure that the government’s chosen
method for protecting its significant interests is not too broad. In other words, we must
examine whether the speech-restricting law at issue — here, the Ordinance — is narrowly
tailored.
2.
In assessing whether the Ordinance is narrowly tailored to serve the City’s interest
in protecting Charleston’s tourism industry, we consider whether the Ordinance “burden[s]
substantially more speech than is necessary to further the government’s legitimate
interests.” See Ward, 491 U.S. at 799. Of course, the Ordinance need not be “the least
restrictive or least intrusive means of” serving the City’s interests, but the City may not
“regulate expression in such a manner that a substantial portion of the burden on speech
does not serve to advance its goals.” Id. at 798-99.
a.
In these proceedings, the district court deemed itself constrained to rule that the
Ordinance is not narrowly tailored because the City did not satisfy the evidentiary standards
specified in our Reynolds decision. Specifically, the court concluded that the City failed
to meet its burden to produce evidence that it actually tried or considered less-speech-
restrictive alternatives before adopting the Ordinance. Although the court recognized in
its Trial Order that several witnesses thought less-speech-restrictive alternatives to the
23
Ordinance would not adequately protect Charleston’s tourism industry, the court dismissed
that testimony as merely “post-hoc justification” for the Ordinance. See Trial Order 31.
On appeal, the City contends that the district court misapplied our Reynolds
decision. 7 To that end, the City maintains that it was not required to try or consider less-
speech-restrictive alternatives before adopting the Ordinance because (1) those alternatives
would not have been as effective as the Ordinance, and (2) the Ordinance imposes such a
slight burden on speech that any alternative could not possibly impose a less onerous
burden. 8 The Plaintiffs respond that the court properly applied Reynolds and that the City
failed to meet its evidentiary burden thereunder.
In Reynolds, our Court evaluated a Henrico County, Virginia ordinance that banned
panhandling and several other forms of solicitation on all county highways. In reversing
7
The City — “[o]ut of an abundance of caution” and as an alternative argument in
case we “find the district court’s view of Reynolds to be correct” — urges us to consider
overruling Reynolds. See Br. of Appellant 2 n.3. Of course, we must reject that invitation
out of hand, as we are powerless to overrule the decision of a prior panel of this Court. See
McMellon v. United States, 387 F.3d 329, 332 (4th Cir. 2004) (en banc) (explaining the
“basic principle that one panel cannot overrule a decision issued by another panel”).
8
Additionally, the City — apparently believing that it has ensnared the district court
in a series of fatal contradictions — complains that the court applied Reynolds differently
in the Trial Order than it did in the Initial Order and the Summary Judgment Order. Any
such inconsistencies would not be remarkable, however, as the court’s view of whether the
City satisfied Reynolds’s evidentiary requirements could certainly change at each
successive stage of the litigation. Cf. Graves v. Lioi, 930 F.3d 307, 318 (4th Cir. 2019),
cert. denied, 140 S. Ct. 1118 (2020) (explaining that the law-of-the-case doctrine “poses
no bar to the assessment of past holdings based on a different procedural posture when, as
is the case in the progression from review of a motion to dismiss to a motion for summary
judgment, that later review expands the court’s inquiry based on development of actual
facts underlying a plaintiff’s claims”).
24
the district court’s decision that the ordinance did not run afoul of the First Amendment,
we set forth the evidentiary standards that a governmental entity must meet to satisfy
intermediate scrutiny. As it relates to the narrow-tailoring requirement, we made clear that
“intermediate scrutiny . . . require[s] the government to present actual evidence supporting
its assertion that a speech restriction does not burden substantially more speech than
necessary; argument unsupported by the evidence will not suffice to carry the
government’s burden.” See Reynolds, 779 F.3d at 229. And we further explained that “the
burden of proving narrow tailoring requires the [government] to prove that it actually tried
other methods to address the problem.” Id. at 231.
The evidentiary standards that we identified in Reynolds were derived from the
Supreme Court’s McCullen decision. Therein, the Court concluded that the
Commonwealth of Massachusetts had not demonstrated that its speech-burdening law was
narrowly tailored because it offered only uncorroborated assertions that it had tried other
methods to protect its interests and that those methods had failed. See McCullen, 573 U.S.
at 496 (“Given the vital First Amendment interests at stake, it is not enough for [the
government] simply to say that other approaches have not worked.”). In rejecting
Massachusetts’s narrow-tailoring argument, the Court underscored that Massachusetts had
“not shown that it seriously undertook to address the problem with less intrusive tools
readily available to it. Nor ha[d] it shown that it considered different methods that other
jurisdictions have found effective.” Id. at 494. Without such a showing by Massachusetts,
said the Court, the law could not be considered narrowly tailored. Id. at 495 (“To meet the
requirement of narrow tailoring, the government must demonstrate that alternative
25
measures that burden substantially less speech would fail to achieve the government’s
interests, not simply that the chosen route is easier.” (emphasis added)).
Read together, Reynolds and McCullen establish the following rule: To prove that
a content-neutral restriction on protected speech is narrowly tailored to serve a significant
governmental interest, the government must, inter alia, present evidence showing that —
before enacting the speech-restricting law — it “seriously undertook to address the problem
with less intrusive tools readily available to it.” See McCullen, 573 U.S. at 494. In other
words, the government is obliged to demonstrate that it actually tried or considered less-
speech-restrictive alternatives and that such alternatives were inadequate to serve the
government’s interest. Id.; see also Reynolds, 779 F.3d at 231-32. The government’s
burden in this regard is satisfied only when it presents “actual evidence supporting its
assertion[s].” See Reynolds, 779 F.3d at 229. 9
b.
Here, the Plaintiffs identify two readily available, less-speech-restrictive
alternatives that they claim the City should have tried to use to regulate tour guides before
enacting the Ordinance — that is, the City’s existing deceptive solicitation and business
9
Of course, in interpreting Reynolds and McCullen, we do not intend to suggest that
actually trying or considering less-speech-restrictive alternatives is the sole requirement of
narrow tailoring. Rather, we emphasize that producing evidence demonstrating such
efforts is necessary, but not sufficient, to satisfy the narrow-tailoring standard. After all,
even if a governmental entity has tried or considered a less-speech-restrictive alternative,
it still must prove that the law in dispute does not “regulate expression in such a manner
that a substantial portion of the burden on speech does not serve to advance its goals.” See
Ward, 491 U.S. at 799.
26
licensing ordinances. Additionally, the Plaintiffs identify a third alternative that they claim
the City should have at least considered — a voluntary tour guide certification program
similar to those used by other local governments around the country. In response, the City
maintains that all three alternatives would fail to adequately protect Charleston’s tourism
industry. To corroborate that contention, however, the City merely offers testimony from
its officials regarding the predicted ineffectiveness of the suggested alternatives. Such
testimony, without more, is not sufficient to satisfy the evidentiary standards established
by Reynolds and McCullen.
As it relates to the two readily available alternatives that are already on the books
— the deceptive solicitation and business licensing ordinances — the City claims that those
ordinances would not adequately safeguard its interests. As previously mentioned, Daniel
Riccio, the City’s Director of Livability, testified that it would be “impractical from an
enforcement standpoint” to regulate tour guides using that ordinance because it was passed
to regulate aggressive timeshare salespeople. See J.A. 380. And former Mayor Joseph
Riley explained that the deceptive solicitation ordinance would be difficult to enforce
because, rather than submitting complaints about dishonest tour guides to the City,
disappointed tourists would simply “go home and tell people that you get ripped off in
Charleston.” Id. at 253. The City presents no evidence, however, demonstrating that it
considered or attempted using the deceptive solicitation ordinance to regulate tour guides
before it enacted the Ordinance.
Additionally, the City maintains that its business licensing ordinance would not
adequately protect its interests. The City relies on Riccio’s testimony to contend that it
27
cannot regulate tour guides by revoking their business licenses because a guide could avoid
that sanction by starting a new company with a different name and obtaining a new business
license. But again, the City has offered no evidence showing that it considered or tried
using the business licensing ordinance to regulate tour guides before enacting the
Ordinance, nor has the City shown that a guide has ever established a new company to
circumvent the suspension of a business license.
In short, although the City provides myriad post-hoc justifications for why the
deceptive solicitation and business licensing ordinances could not be used to effectively
regulate tour guides, it failed to produce evidence demonstrating that it “seriously
undertook” to utilize those ordinances for such a purpose before enacting the Ordinance
and its mandatory licensing scheme. See McCullen, 573 U.S. at 494. Absent such a
showing, we cannot simply accept the City’s assurances that those other ordinances would
be too difficult to enforce or would not sufficiently safeguard its interest in protecting its
tourism industry. 10
10
In fact, in its McCullen decision, the Supreme Court determined that similar
uncorroborated assurances from Massachusetts were not sufficient to satisfy the narrow-
tailoring evidentiary burden. More specifically, Massachusetts contended that it had to
establish buffer zones around abortion clinics to protect the clinics’ patrons because other
methods — in particular, different laws already on the books and individual injunctions —
had failed to achieve that goal. The Court, however, flatly rejected that contention because
no evidence supported it. See McCullen, 573 U.S. at 494 (rejecting Massachusetts’s
argument because it failed to identify “a single prosecution brought under those [other]
laws within at least the last 17 years” and “the last injunctions [it] cite[s] date to the
1990s”). In an attempt to overcome that lack of evidence, Massachusetts maintained that
prosecuting individuals under other laws or using individual injunctions would be
impractical and would make the Commonwealth’s job more difficult. The Court remained
unpersuaded, however, stating “[o]f course [the buffer zone] would [be easier to enforce].
(Continued)
28
Finally, the Plaintiffs propose a third alternative — a voluntary tour guide
certification program similar to those successfully used by other great American cities,
including historic municipalities like Baltimore and Chicago. The Plaintiffs contend that
the City should have seriously considered, before enacting the Ordinance, whether a
voluntary certification program could be used in Charleston to regulate tour guides. As the
Plaintiffs emphasize on appeal, such a voluntary program provides tour guides with
opportunities to “obtain a competitive advantage (and government recommendation) by
passing a test and obtaining a credential.” See Br. of Appellees 19. And unlike the City’s
existing deceptive solicitation and business licensing ordinances, a voluntary certification
program speaks directly to the City’s interest in ensuring that tour guides have a base level
of knowledge and competency. Under the voluntary certification program supported by
the Plaintiffs, prospective tour guides who meet the certification requirements could
advertise their tours as certified — for example, by wearing special insignia — and the
City could compile a list of certified guides for distribution to visitors. In other words,
such a voluntary certification program would protect the City’s tourism industry by
encouraging visitors to patronize certified tour guides who satisfy standards established by
the City — all without infringing the Plaintiffs’ free speech rights.
The City, on the other hand, has given short shrift to the idea of a voluntary tour
guide certification program. Specifically, the City has failed to offer evidence
But that is not enough to satisfy the First Amendment.” Id. at 495. For similar reasons,
we cannot accept the City’s uncorroborated statements regarding the impracticality of
using the deceptive solicitation and business licensing ordinances to regulate tour guides.
29
demonstrating that it seriously considered a voluntary certification program before
enacting the Ordinance — such as, evidence that it conducted cost-benefit analyses,
sanctioned formal reports, held workshops with city leaders, or spoke with leaders of other
cities that have successfully implemented such a program. Rather, the City relies on the
testimony of Riccio that a voluntary certification program “would be impractical,” see J.A.
378, and the testimony of Riley that such a program would not have “the accuracy or the
excellence or the quality” of the Ordinance’s mandatory certification program, id. at 249.
That testimony, however, is simply not sufficient to satisfy the City’s burden, as it is merely
post-hoc justification for why City officials believe a voluntary tour guide certification
program would not adequately protect its interests. Without unnecessarily specifying the
precise process a governmental entity should employ in considering less-speech-restrictive
alternatives used by other jurisdictions, we confidently say that outright rejection on
impracticality grounds — absent any serious consideration whatsoever — does not suffice.
At bottom, because the City failed to provide evidence that — before enacting the
Ordinance — it attempted to use “less intrusive tools readily available to it” (the existing
deceptive solicitation and business licensing ordinances) or that it ever seriously
“considered different methods that other jurisdictions have found effective” (a voluntary
tour guide certification program), we are satisfied that the City has not established that the
Ordinance is narrowly tailored. See McCullen, 573 U.S. at 494; see also Edwards, 755
F.3d at 1009 (“In sum, [D.C.] has provided no convincing explanation as to why a more
finely tailored regulatory scheme would not work.”). We therefore conclude that the
30
district court correctly declared the Ordinance unconstitutional, as it cannot survive
intermediate scrutiny. 11
IV.
Pursuant to the foregoing, we affirm the judgment of the district court.
AFFIRMED
11
Ordinarily, in applying intermediate scrutiny, we would also have to consider
whether the Ordinance leaves open ample alternative channels of communication. Because
the City has failed to establish that the Ordinance is narrowly tailored, however, we need
not address and resolve that issue. See Reynolds, 779 F.3d at 232 n.5.
31