Home 用中文 Espaņol  
News & Opinion
Legal Hotline
Membership
Asked & Answered
Access To Meetings
Access To Records
News Gathering
Prop 59
CFAC Podcasts
Model Letters
Books
AG Opinions
CFAC In The News
CFAC Assembly
About Us
Contact Us


Enter your e-mail to receive our bi-weekly FLASH newsletter:




Murals on private property

Q: I would like to find court decisions where city ordinances or actions prohibiting murals on private property have been thrown out because they violate the First Amendment or California's Constitution. It is my understanding that murals are protected as speech and cities cannot regulate them by permit on private property. I believe there have been several cases regarding this, some filed by the ACLU.

A: You are probably thinking of City of Indio v. Arroyo, 143 Cal.App.3d 151 (1983), which overturned as unconstitutionally broad an ordinance that had been interpreted to bar a convenience store from keeping a mural that depicted Mexican heritage. You should be aware that the decision noted that the Court did not "place wall murals beyond all municipal regulation. If the city could demonstrate, for example, that the mural posed a traffic hazard, or that the building on which it appeared failed to comply with structural or fire safety requirements," or was obscene, or was primarily commercial speech ("COLD BEER, COME INSIDE"), then the regulation might be upheld.

 

join


Have a legal question?
Check out Asked & Answered first. Chances are, we've already answered it. If not, then proceed to CFAC's Legal Hotline for help from top lawyers—free.


CFAC Archives:


Search CFAC
Google
WWW cfac.org