72nd Street Pizza, Inc. v. Nebraska Liquor Control Commission

261 N.W.2d 614, 199 Neb. 729, 1978 Neb. LEXIS 631
CourtNebraska Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 11, 1978
Docket41220
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 261 N.W.2d 614 (72nd Street Pizza, Inc. v. Nebraska Liquor Control Commission) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Nebraska Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
72nd Street Pizza, Inc. v. Nebraska Liquor Control Commission, 261 N.W.2d 614, 199 Neb. 729, 1978 Neb. LEXIS 631 (Neb. 1978).

Opinions

Clinton, J.

This action originated in an appeal to the District Court for Douglas County, Nebraska, from an order [731]*731of the Nebraska Liquor Control Commission denying the application of the applicant, 72nd Street Pizza, Inc., for an “on-sale” beer license. The city council of the City of Omaha had recommended to the commission that the application for the license be denied. Upon review in the District Court the denial was found to be arbitrary and unreasonable and that court directed the commission to grant the license. The City of Omaha and certain objectors appealed from the judgment of the District Court. We reverse that judgment and reinstate the order of the commission.

The pertinent facts about which there is no substantial dispute are as follows. The 72nd Street Pizza, Inc., which we will hereafter refer to as the applicant, is one of a chain of five pizza restaurants having a place of business in Omaha. Four previously established restaurants have liquor licenses. The applicant applied to the commission for an on-sale beer license for its recently established restaurant on 72nd Street. As required by statute, a copy of the application was sent to the city council which, pursuant to provisions of the statute, held a hearing and enacted a resolution which “recommended to said Liquor Control Commission to deny said license.” The license applied for covered the period ending April 30, 1977. The city council transmitted its resolution to the commission.

Pursuant to the provisions of the applicable statutes, the commission notified the applicant of the time and place of hearing on its application, specifying in the notice that the hearing was being held for the “following reason(s):

“1. Due to the action of the local governing body recommending denial of your application.
“2. Due to protests having been filed against your application.”

The protesters were individuals who were liquor license holders in the City of Omaha and who were also officers of a retail liquor dealers association. [732]*732The principal bases of their protest were (1) the city council recommendation for denial and (2) the license of one George Kahre which was sought to be “transferred” to the applicant was not a current existing license — no license having been issued to Kahre for the years 1975 or 1976.

The City of Omaha appeared at the hearing before the commission in resistance of the application. It presented to the commission a letter which stated in part: “The City Clerk was instructed to inform the Nebraska Liquor Control Commission that the only reason for the denial was due to the fact that, in essence, to vote to recommend the issuance of a license to sell beer on the premises from an Off Sale License would in effect be recommending a new license. This was the only reason the City Council voted to deny the application for the On Sale Beer License.”

The city resisted issuance of the license by the commission because of a policy established by ordinance (which will be discussed in more detail later), limiting the number of liquor licenses in the City of Omaha. It was stipulated to the commission by the applicant and the city that: “. . . it was only the technical requirements of the ordinance which required them to recommend a denial, and if it had not been for that, that the favor of the City Council would have been in sympathy with and in favor of the issuance of that license at this location . . . .”

The ordinance in question was not received into evidence at the commission hearing, but was offered and received in the District Court as were the records of the proceedings and the exhibits received in the hearing before the commission.

On appeal to the District Court additional evidence was received. This consisted principally of the ordinance of the city establishing its policy with reference to recommendations to the commission for the issuance of licenses and its policy limiting the num[733]*733ber of licenses. Briefly summarized, this ordinance provided that the total number of liquor licenses within the corporate limits should be limited to: “. . . one (1) ‘Class C Liquor License’ [liquor by the drink] for each One Thousand (1,000) inhabitants,” and (2) one license ‘‘of all other classifications of retail alcoholic liquor licenses combined for each Fifteen Hundred (1,500) inhabitants . . . .” § 18.24.010, Ordinance 19531, City of Omaha. The ordinance contained a provision for an annual estimation of population upon which the foregoing limitations were to be based. The ordinance recognized the fact that at the time of the enactment of the ordinances the number of licenses then extant exceeded the number set by the ordinance. It further provided for reducing the number of licenses to meet the policy limitations by what we will call a policy of ‘‘attrition” founded on the premise that in the course of time some licenses would be ‘‘revoked, surrendered or not renewed.” § 18.24.020, Ordinance 19531, City of Omaha.

The ordinance also contained a provision which is described by the parties as providing for holding unrenewed and unused licenses in ‘‘abeyance” for a period of time, to wit, the next possible license period. The apparent purpose of this latter provision was to assist a licensee or recent licensee in selling the assets of his liquor business, a market for which would not exist except for the prospect that a purchaser would be able to procure a license of his own if he did purchase the business. This provision seems to provide a form of legal approval to the ‘‘transfer” of liquor licenses, extending it to include the so-called license held in abeyance, and recognizes the notorious fact that contracts for the sale of a liquor business almost always contain provisions making the sale contingent upon the issuance of a license by the commission to the purchaser. The ordinance provides that if ‘‘renewal” (an apparent [734]*734euphemism for the term transfer) is not requested within the prescribed period, then the issuance of the license will not be recommended to the commission by the city council.

Another provision of the ordinance provides: “Nothing contained in this Chapter, however, shall be construed to prevent the City Council from recommending a retail alcoholic liquor license to a bona fide purchaser of a business belonging to a person now or hereafter holding a license . . . .” § 18.24-030, Ordinance 23875, § 1, City of Omaha.

The record before us shows that previous to and at the time the applicant applied for its license, the number of existing licenses within the corporate limits of the City of Omaha exceeded the number of licenses provided for in the portion of the ordinance limiting the number of licenses. The record would support the conclusion that the cause of that situation is that the attrition policy had not worked and, also, that because of annexations to the City of Omaha, licenses held outside the city limits came to be included in those in the city. As to the latter, of course, when those licenses were originally issued the city had no recommending power.

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72nd Street Pizza, Inc. v. Nebraska Liquor Control Commission
261 N.W.2d 614 (Nebraska Supreme Court, 1978)

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Bluebook (online)
261 N.W.2d 614, 199 Neb. 729, 1978 Neb. LEXIS 631, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/72nd-street-pizza-inc-v-nebraska-liquor-control-commission-neb-1978.