Balboa Park is once again at the center of a free speech fight, after a San Diego artist filed a federal civil rights lawsuit saying park rangers kept citing her for selling handmade work and brushing off her pieces as unprotected vending. The complaint, filed on Feb. 20, asks for money damages and court orders to halt what she describes as discriminatory enforcement of the city’s vending rules. At stake is where the city draws the line between protected art and plain old commerce in one of its most iconic public spaces.
According to Justia Dockets & Filings, San Diego artist Sara Duvall filed the case in the U.S. District Court for the Southern District of California under number 3:26‑cv‑01112. The docket lists a complaint with a jury demand and shows that a summons went out after the Feb. 20 filing. Duvall is represented by attorneys Michele Akemi McKenzie and Timothy A. Scott, the document notes.
Duvall’s legal team says she was hit with multiple fines after displaying original pottery and mixed media pieces along El Prado, and that the citations effectively drove her out of the park. As described by McKenzie Scott PC, Duvall appealed the administrative citations and now argues that the city’s practice of classifying “handcrafted” goods as outside First Amendment protection is arbitrary in the real world. The firm has posted images and video that it says document those encounters with park rangers.
How San Diego Changed The Vending Rules
The lawsuit follows a 2024 overhaul of San Diego’s sidewalk vending rules, a rewrite city officials said would clarify when sales count as “pure speech” and when they are treated as commercial activity that needs permits. The updated ordinance explicitly carves out items such as food and certain handcrafted goods from “pure speech” protections, a line critics say looks clear on paper but fuzzier on the street. 10News has reported that artists and buskers are already feeling the impact of the stepped up enforcement.
Legal Context In Balboa Park
Duvall’s complaint arrives on the heels of other courtroom battles over Balboa Park enforcement. Last year, a federal judge concluded that an older city ordinance on offensive public speech was likely unconstitutional in a case brought by busker artist William Dorsett, a ruling that pushed city leaders to rethink how they police expression in the park. Courthouse News Service detailed the Dorsett decision and its ripple effects for street performers and artists across the city.
What The Duvall Case Could Decide
If a judge finds that the city’s enforcement crossed constitutional lines in Duvall’s case, she could win an injunction that blocks further citations and potentially recover money damages. The federal docket reflects that a jury trial has been requested and again lists McKenzie and Scott as her counsel, according to Justia Dockets & Filings. Any ruling could have a lasting impact on how officials oversee Balboa Park’s expressive activity zones and on what is treated as protected art under the First Amendment…