Appeal of Polish Falcons

51 Pa. D. & C. 14, 1944 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 139

This text of 51 Pa. D. & C. 14 (Appeal of Polish Falcons) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Pennsylvania Court of Common Pleas, Alleghany County primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Appeal of Polish Falcons, 51 Pa. D. & C. 14, 1944 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 139 (Pa. Super. Ct. 1944).

Opinions

Lencher, J.,

To correct any mistaken impressions as to the meaning of our order granting new liquor licenses in the cases above entitled, we make plain herewith the developments which led to those orders. Since last September appeals from orders of the Liquor Control Board in Allegheny County have been filed here in our court under the provisions of the acts of assembly approved May 27, 1943, P. L. 688, 694. Most of the appeals concern suspensions of liquor licenses, and these are the first cases in which we could isolate the sole question considered from other possible reasons that could move the Liquor Control Board to refuse to grant a new club liquor license. No court in Pennsylvania questions the Liquor Control Board’s discretionary power to refuse applications for new club liquor licenses. The sole question before us concerns only the board’s claim to have no power at all to grant a new club liquor license so long as the retail liquor license quota, hotels excluded, is exceeded. The issue has appeared repeatedly in the courts of our Commonwealth. It was deemed wise for us to determine whether all of us could agree to sustain the legal inter[15]*15pretation contended for by the Liquor Control Board. The question concerns language which first clearly exempts new club liquor licenses from the quotas, and then seems to deny clubs the exemption first created. Inevitably the proposition must include this general consideration: Does a club — athletic, recreational, political, fraternal — which maintains a bar and sells liquor to its members fall within the quota fixed for retail liquor licenses for public restaurant and eating places?

Confronted With that question, all other issues being admittedly out of the case, Judge Hoban of Lackawanna County on July 17, 1940, reversed the refusal of the Pennsylvania Liquor Control Board to grant a new liquor license to a club. Interpreting the language of the Liquor License Quota Act of June 24, 1939, P. L. 806, hereinafter quoted, he held that the population restriction set up in the act as to the granting of retail liquor licenses cannot include new liquor licenses to clubs. On appeal to the Superior Court of Pennsylvania, that appellate tribunal, without a dissenting opinion in the case of the Lithuanian Beneficial Association’s Club Liquor License Case, 142 Pa. Superior Ct. 556, held that its only province under the law was to determine whether courts below had jurisdiction and whether the proceedings were regular. This was in line with previous declarations of the appellate courts that, if there was no uniformity of decisions on this important question, that was something for the legislature to care for: McGettigan’s Liquor License Case, 131 Pa. Superior Ct. 280, 286. The same question, again unattended by any other problems, came before President Judge Hughes — now Justice Hughes of our Supreme Court — and Judge Burnside of Washington County in B. P. O. E. of Monongahela’s License, 43 D. & C. 457, and the same conclusion was reached, the quota there, too, being “the only thing that prevents the issuance of this license”. Decisions to the contrary will be found. In Appeal of Legion Home As[16]*16sociation of Danville, 48 D. & C. 123, Kreisher, P. J., reviews 45 cases on the question, finding that 21 cases in Pennsylvania sustained the Liquor Control Board’s automatic refusal — without citing any other reason— to grant a new club liquor license once the quota is exceeded, while 24 opinions studied by him held to our interpretation, to wit, that the Quota Act does not apply to applications for new club liquor licenses.

The cases above entitled were specially placed upon the argument list. We heard the narrow question argued, then heard the evidence de novo, testimony being presented only by the appellant clubs. Their evidence was uncontradicted and the Liquor Control Board presented no testimony. The purposes and personnel of each club were highly recommended by citizens appearing before us. The title of the Liquor License Quota Act of 1939, reads as follows:

“An act limiting the number of licenses for the retail sale of liquor, malt or brewed beverages, or malt and brewed beverages,, to be issued by the Pennsylvania Liquor Control Board; defining hotels, and prescribing the accommodations required of hotels in certain municipalities.”
“No licenses shall hereafter be granted by the Pennsylvania Liquor Control Board for the retail sale of malt or brewed beverages ... in excess of one of such licenses, of any class, for each one thousand inhabitants or fraction thereof, in any municipality, exclusive of licenses granted to hotels, as defined in this act, and clubs. . . . Nothing contained in this section shall be construed as denying the right to the Pennsylvania Liquor Control Board to renew or to transfer existing retail licenses of any class, notwithstanding that the number of such licensed placesfin a municipality shall exceed the limitation hereinbefore prescribed; but where such number exceeds the limitation prescribed by this act, no new license, except for hotels as defined in this act, shall be granted so long as said limitation is exceeded”; sec. 2.

[17]*17Clearly clubs are specifically excluded from the quota in the first sentence of section 2. But the word “clubs” disappears in the last part of the section providing that “where such number exceeds the limitation prescribed in this act, no license except for hotels as defined in this act shall be granted therein so long as said limitation is exceeded”. It should be first observed that if club licenses are included within its provisions this act would have to be held unconstitutional as to clubs, the title being clearly defective and in contradiction of article III, sec. 3, of our Constitution. The word “club” does not appear in the title, and indeed is not defined anywhere in this act. In the Liquor Control Act of June 16, 1937, P. L. 1762, a club is defined as “any reputable group of individuals associated together not for profit for legitimate purposes of mutual benefit, entertainment, fellowship or lawful convenience, having some primary interest and activity to which the sale of liquor shall only be secondary . . .” This definition is substantially the same as in the Beverage License Law of June 16, 1937, P. L. 1827. In Appeal of Thomas P. Lambert Post No. 2540, V. F. W., 49 D. & C. 281, President Judge Shull of Monroe County finds the act to exclude clubs from the quota, and emphasizes that “the particular effect of including club licenses within the quota provision would be to prevent issuance of any such license for an indefinite number of years, in view of the fact that the statute itself had placed an artificial value on restaurant licenses which would result in the perpetual continuance of existing licenses of that class. ... If the statute should be so construed, then it would be unconstitutional insofar as club licenses were concerned because the title failed to disclose any such purpose”.

Indeed, some judges, having considered this definition of clubs above given, have gone so far as to doubt that new club liquor licenses could ever have been in-[18]*18eluded within the operation of the Quota Act of 1939, even had the word “clubs” never appeared in the first sentence of section 2. See In re License of I. B. P. O. E. of W., John F. Moorland Lodge No. 801, 42 D. & C. 222, 228. Without passing on that question, we believe the affirmative appearance of the word “clubs” clearly creates an exception, and takes them out of the quota.

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Related

Reinbold v. Commonwealth
179 A. 571 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1935)
Orlosky v. Haskell
155 A. 112 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1931)
West v. Lysle
153 A. 131 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1930)
Lithuanian Beneficial Association's Club Liquor License Case
17 A.2d 912 (Superior Court of Pennsylvania, 1940)
Loeb v. Benham
34 A.2d 835 (Superior Court of Pennsylvania, 1943)
Cammie v. I. T. E. Circuit Breaker Co.
30 A.2d 225 (Superior Court of Pennsylvania, 1942)
Cheris's Liquor License Case
193 A. 162 (Superior Court of Pennsylvania, 1937)
McGettigan's Liquor License Case
200 A. 213 (Superior Court of Pennsylvania, 1938)

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Bluebook (online)
51 Pa. D. & C. 14, 1944 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 139, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/appeal-of-polish-falcons-pactcomplallegh-1944.