Bay State Distributing Corp. v. Doran

33 F.2d 782, 1929 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1347
CourtDistrict Court, D. Massachusetts
DecidedJuly 8, 1929
DocketNo. 3077
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 33 F.2d 782 (Bay State Distributing Corp. v. Doran) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Massachusetts primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bay State Distributing Corp. v. Doran, 33 F.2d 782, 1929 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1347 (D. Mass. 1929).

Opinion

MORTON, District Judge.

This is a proceeding in equity to review the revocation of the plaintiff’s permit as a manufacturer of denatured alcohol. The suit is brought under title 2, section 9, of the National Prohibition Act (27 USCA § 21), and is governed by section 5 (section 14), which provides that “the Court may affirm, modify, or reverse the finding of the Commissioner as the faets and law of the case may warrant.” The matter has been heard without objection by either party on the transcript of the evidence taken before the hearing officer.

Proceedings for the revocation of a permit may be begun before the Commissioner by a sworn complaint of a third person, or instituted by the commissioner himself if he “has reason to believe, that [the permittee] is not in good faith conforming to the provisions of the Act,” etc. Section 9. In the first case a copy of the complaint must be served on the permittee with the citation for hearing; in the second, the citation must be accompanied by “a statement of the faets constituting the violation charged.” The proceedings against this plaintiff were initiated under date of July 6, 1928, by the Prohibition Administrator; and the order revoking the permit was signed by him. A statement of the charges was duly served. They were in substance (1) that the permittee “did in bad faith * * * unlawfully and willfully and with intent to deceive fail to furnish the Commissioner a true list of the names of your stockholders, on being requested to do so by said Commissioner”; and. (2) that it “did fraudulently obtain the approval of the Prohibition Administrator” to a continuance of the original permit and to two amendments thereof, by representing “that Daniel A. Sullivan treasurer of the Bay State Distributing Corporation controlled said Bay State Distributing Corporation, although at that time and at all times thereafter, you knew that the controlling shares .of the capital stock of (said corporation) merely stood in the name of Daniel A. Sullivan, trustee,” etc. There is doubt, in view of the explicit language of the statute, whether the Prohibition Administrator had power to act in the premises; but as his findings must be set aside on other grounds, I pass this question.

The evidence did not support the first charge, it not being shown that the plaintiff was requested to furnish, or undertook to furnish, a list of its stockholders. The administrator’s action rests on the second charge only. The finding on which it was based was as follows:

“I, therefore, find there is evidence of bad faith in that the permit in question was continued in force by subterfuge or deceit or due to the fact that full particulars relative to the controlling ownership of the business were withheld from the former Administrator, and if such information had been forthcoming permit privileges would have been discontinued.
“I regard the testimony as showing sufficient evidence of bad faith to sustain the charges and to justify the recommendation that the permit be revoked and I do so recommend.”

It is doubtful whether these findings are sufficient to support the action taken; but this question also I pass without deciding it, preferring to rest my conclusion on other grounds.

The act recognizes that alcohol for industrial uses is necessary, that substantial amounts of capital would naturally be invested in manufacturing it for such purposes, and that the persons who embark in that business ought to be protected against arbitrary or unjustified revocation of the permit on which it depends. The grounds upon which a permit may be revoked are, therefore, clearly stated in the act, viz., that the permittee “is not in good faith conforming to the provisions of this Act, or has violated the laws of any state relating to intoxicating liquor.” Title 2, § 9. In this case there were no charges that the permittee violated the provisions of the act or of any state law; the evidence does not indicate any ground of suspicion, even, that such was the fact; and there is no finding that the permittee had been guilty of such violations. The charge on which the revocation is based is, if maintainable at all, extremely technical; [784]*784i. e., it does not involve any illegality on the part of the plaintiff.

There was no dispute about the basic facts. The permittee is a Massachusetts corporation. The majority of its stoek stood on its books in the names of “Daniel .A. Sullivan,” and “Daniel A. Sullivan, Trustee.” The hearing officer has found that the Prohibition Administrator asked Mr. Sullivan who controlled the corporation; that Mr. Sullivan replied that he did; and that this statement was intentionally false and deceptive. This was the ground on which the permit was revoked; the Commissioner taking the view that the corporation was controlled by the persons for whom Sullivan was acting as trustee, and that therefore Sullivan’s statement that he controlled it was willfully false.

As charged, the alleged false statement was made orally to Mr. Parker when he was Federal Prohibition Administrator during an interview with Mr. Sullivan about 3 y2 years ago. Mr. Parker’s recollection of the talk was admittedly hazy:

“There was a change of ownership or something of that kind.”
“I cannot remember the actual words.”
“Mr. Sullivan assured me that he was the owner or had the controlling interest. That is all I can remember of it.
“Q. That he held the controlling stoek in the Bay State Distributing Corporation? A. Yes. That is the way I remember the situation.”
“Q. Did that conversation with Mr. Sullivan go as far as the question of whether or not this stock Mr. Sullivan held was held by him as trustee? A. I don’t know that that actual question was asked, but my understanding was that it was not held as trustee.”
“Q. • * * Did Mr. Sullivan suggest in that conversation that he held this controlling stoek of the Bay State Distributing Coloration as trustee for unknown beneficiaries? A. No.”

Mr. Parker further testified that if he had known that Sullivan held stock in trust and did not know the owners of the stock, he would not have issued the permit nor approved the other matters mentioned in the charges. On cross-examination he said, “It was a conversation about stockholders, and it is very hazy in my mind about what was said. It is in my mind that Mr. Sullivan told me he was the principal stockholder and there were other stockholders.” “I do not remember whether I called for a list of stockholders or not, but I think I did.” Mr. Sullivan on his side testified that he had no recollection of anything being said about who owned the controlling stoek; that “Mr. Parker never asked me a question along this line,” i. e., about the persons with whom he was associated; that he felt he controlled' the corporation; that he never received any notice or request for a list of stockholders.

The stoek book of the corporation was correctly kept, and showed the stock ownership as Sullivan stated it. It was at all times open to examination by the prohibition authorities; and it was examined by them several times. No objection was made to the Way in which the stoek stood. Certain agents testified that on one occasion Sullivan said to them that he was trustee for himself, whereas he later admitted that he was trustee for other persons whom he declined to name, although he did name their counsel with whom alone he had had dealings.

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Related

Meinwald v. Doran
60 F.2d 261 (E.D. New York, 1932)

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Bluebook (online)
33 F.2d 782, 1929 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1347, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bay-state-distributing-corp-v-doran-mad-1929.