Attorney General Opinion No.

CourtKansas Attorney General Reports
DecidedJanuary 4, 2006
StatusPublished

This text of Attorney General Opinion No. (Attorney General Opinion No.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Kansas Attorney General Reports primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Attorney General Opinion No., (kanag 2006).

Opinion

Robert H. Gale, Jr. Syracuse City Attorney Law Office of Gale Gale Attorneys 211 N. Main Street, P.O. Box 906 Syracuse, Kansas 67878

Dear Mr. Gale:

You inquire as to the fate of the City of Syracuse's current charter ordinance allowing the retail sale of packaged alcoholic liquor on Memorial Day, Independence Day, and Labor Day [hereinafter referred to as summer holidays], in light of recent amendments to the Liquor Control Act.1 If the ordinance is invalid, you inquire regarding the City's options in considering the retail sale of packaged alcoholic liquor and packaged cereal malt beverage on those summer holidays.

K.S.A. 41-712, as amended by L. 2005, Ch. 201, § 8, provides, in part:

"From and after November 15, 2005 . . . within any city where the days of sale at retail of alcoholic liquor in the original package have not been expanded as provided by section 9 . . . no person shall sell at retail any alcoholic liquor in the original package: (1) on Sunday; (2) on Memorial Day, Independence Day, [or] Labor Day. . . or (3) before 9 a.m. or after 11 p.m. on any day when the sale is permitted. The governing body of any city by ordinance may require the closing of premises prior to 11 p.m. but such ordinance shall not require closing prior to 8 p.m."2

Section 9(b) provides, in part:

"(b) (1) The governing body of any city may, by ordinance:

"(A) Expand the days of sale at retail of cereal malt beverage in the original package to allow such sale within the city on any Sunday, except Easter, between the hours of 12 noon and 8 p.m. and expand the days of sale at retail of alcoholic liquor in the original package, if licensing of such sale of alcoholic liquor is authorized within the city, to allow such sale within the city on any Sunday, except Easter, between the hours of 12 noon and 8 p.m. and on Memorial Day, Independence Day and Labor Day; or

"(B) restrict the days of sale at retail of cereal malt beverage in the original package to prohibit such sale within the city on Sunday and restrict the days of sale at retail of alcoholic liquor in the original package, if licensing of such sale of alcoholic liquor is authorized within the city, to prohibit such sale within the city on Sunday, Memorial Day, Independence Day and Labor Day.

"[I]f, within 60 days following publication of the ordinance, a petition requesting that a proposition be submitted for approval by the voters is filed in accordance with subsection (b)(2), such ordinance shall not become effective until a proposition is submitted to and approved at an election as provided by this subsection (b).

"(2) A petition to submit a proposition to the qualified voters of a city pursuant to this subsection (b) shall be filed with the county election officer. [T]he appropriate version of the following shall appear on the petition:

. . . .

"(B) If licensing of sale at retail of alcoholic liquor is authorized within the city, the petition shall read: `We request an election to determine whether sale at retail of cereal malt beverage in the original package shall be (allowed on any Sunday, except Easter, between the hours of 12 noon and 8 p.m.) (prohibited on Sunday) within the city of __________ and whether sale at retail of alcoholic liquor in the original package shall be (allowed on any Sunday, except Easter, between the hours of 12 noon and 8 p.m. and on Memorial Day, Independence Day and Labor Day) (prohibited on Sunday, Memorial Day, Independence Day and Labor Day) within the city of __________.'

"(3) Upon submission of a valid petition calling for an election pursuant to this subsection (b), the city governing body shall call a special election . . . [T]hereupon, the county election officer shall cause the appropriate version of the following proposition to be placed on the ballot in the city at such election:

"(B) [I]f licensing of sale at retail of alcoholic liquor is authorized within the city, the following proposition shall be placed on the ballot: `Within the city of _________ shall sale at retail of cereal malt beverage in the original package be (allowed on any Sunday, except Easter, between the hours of 12 noon and 8 p.m.) (prohibited on Sunday) and shall the sale at retail of alcoholic liquor in the original package be (allowed on any Sunday, except Easter, between the hours of 12 noon and 8 p.m. and on Memorial Day, Independence Day and Labor Day) (prohibited on Sunday, Memorial Day, Independence Day and Labor Day)?'"3

Our understanding is that the City has not enacted an ordinary ordinance pursuant to Section 9. Therefore, in accordance with the above-quoted provisions, as of November 15, 2005, the City's charter ordinance allowing the sale of packaged alcoholic liquor on summer holidays is invalid.4

You inquire whether the City may enact an ordinary ordinance allowing the retail sale of packaged alcoholic liquor on summer holidays without also allowing packaged alcoholic liquor sales and packaged cereal malt beverage (CMB) sales on Sundays.

Section 8 prohibits summer holiday sales of packaged alcoholic liquor unless the days of sale are expanded pursuant to Section 9. Section 9(b)(1)(A) authorizes cities, subject to protest and referendum, to expand the days of sale to any Sunday5 for packaged CMB and packaged alcoholic liquor and on summer holidays for packaged alcoholic liquor.6 Conversely, Section 9(b)(1)(B) authorizes cities to prohibit retail sales of packaged CMB and packaged alcoholic liquor on Sundays and prohibit summer holiday sales of packaged alcoholic liquor.

This interpretation is supported by the legislative history of 2005 Senate Bill No. 298 (S.B. 298), the bill resulting in Chapter 201 of the 2005 Session Laws. When S.B. 298 was introduced, at least 14 cities allowed both Sunday and summer holiday sales of packaged alcoholic liquor by virtue of having chartered out of the Liquor Control Act's prohibition of such sales.7 S.B. 298 initially prohibited the sale of packaged alcoholic liquor on both Sunday and summer holidays but gave cities the option of adopting an ordinance allowing only Sunday sales of packaged alcoholic liquor, CMB, or both.8 Summer holiday sales of packaged alcoholic liquor would have been prohibited.

When the bill reached the Senate, the Act was amended to allow both Sunday and summer holiday sales unless a city adopted an ordinance prohibiting "such sales on Sunday, Memorial Day, Independence Day and Labor Day." In short, Sunday and summer holiday sales appeared to be a packaged deal. This way, under this version of the bill, the 14 cities that had already acted to allow both Sunday and summer holiday sales of alcoholic liquor could continue to do so unless they took action to prohibit both.9

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89 P.3d 893 (Supreme Court of Kansas, 2004)

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