Casa Dimario v. Rhode Island Dept. of Business Regulation, Pc/02-1642 (2004)

CourtSuperior Court of Rhode Island
DecidedJune 16, 2004
DocketC.A. No. PC/02-1642
StatusUnpublished

This text of Casa Dimario v. Rhode Island Dept. of Business Regulation, Pc/02-1642 (2004) (Casa Dimario v. Rhode Island Dept. of Business Regulation, Pc/02-1642 (2004)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Superior Court of Rhode Island primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Casa Dimario v. Rhode Island Dept. of Business Regulation, Pc/02-1642 (2004), (R.I. Ct. App. 2004).

Opinion

[EDITOR'S NOTE: This case is unpublished as indicated by the issuing court.]

DECISION
Appellants Casa DiMario, Inc. and Andiross, Inc. ("the appellants") appeal the decision of the Director of the Rhode Island Department of Business Regulation ("DBR") that upheld the Town of Johnston's ("Town") decision to: (1) revoke the liquor license held by Casa DiMario, Inc.; and (2) deny any transfer of that license to Andiross, Inc.

For reasons set forth in this decision, this Court affirms the decision below.

FACTS TRAVEL
Mario's Showplace is a restaurant with adult entertainment that is located in Johnston, Rhode Island and operates under a Class BV Full Liquor License.1 Appellant Casa DiMario, Inc. owned and operated Mario's Showplace until July of 2001, at which time the assets of Casa DiMario, Inc. were purchased by appellant Andiross, Inc.

Prior to the actions underlying the instant appeal, and while Casa DiMario, Inc. was the owner and operator of Mario's Showplace, Casa DiMario, Inc. appeared before the DBR on a similar matter. In January of 1996, Mario's Showplace offered totally nude adult entertainment. At that time, the Town did not have any ordinance to regulate such entertainment. In February of 1996, however, the Town passed Ordinance 965, entitled "Nudity on premises where alcoholic beverages are offered for sale." Ordinance 965 prohibits owners and operators of establishments where alcoholic beverages are sold to permit a female to expose her breast at or below the areola. The Ordinance also prohibits such persons from permitting any persons to expose their genitals, pubic area, anus, anal cleavage, or anal cleft.2

In response to the enactment of Ordinance 965, Casa DiMario, Inc. filed suit in Superior Court by which it sought to enjoin the Town from enforcing Ordinance 965 against it. In March of 1996, the Superior Court issued a restraining order enjoining the Town from enforcing Ordinance 965. This restraining order remained in effect until October of 1997, at which time the Town Solicitor settled the case with Casa DiMario, Inc. The settlement provided that the Town would not enforce Ordinance 965 or any future adult entertainment ordinances against Casa DiMario, Inc.

In January of 1998, a new Town Solicitor filed a motion to vacate the settlement. A Superior Court restraining order prohibiting the Town from enforcing Ordinance 965 against Casa DiMario, Inc. remained in effect pending a trial on the merits. In November of 1998, the Superior Court granted a permanent injunction prohibiting the Town, on procedural grounds, from enforcing Ordinance 965. See Casa DiMario, Inc. v.Richardson, C.A. No. 96-1067, 1998 R.I. Super. LEXIS 19 (R.I. Super. Ct. 1998). That decision held that towns, pursuant to an amendment to R.I. Gen. Laws § 3-7-7.3,3 had the authority to regulate entertainment at facilities holding Class B liquor licenses. Since Ordinance 965 was enacted in February of 1996, however, prior to the amendment to R.I. Gen. Laws § 3-7-7.3, the Court held that it was invalid and unenforceable.

In response to the Superior Court's decision, the Town, in December of 1998, enacted Ordinance 1057, which is almost identical to Ordinance 965.4 Casa DiMario, Inc. refused to comply with Ordinance 1057 and continued to include full nudity in its adult entertainment. As a result of Casa DiMario, Inc.'s violations of Ordinance 1057, the Town, at a hearing in February of 1999, revoked Casa DiMario, Inc.'s liquor and adult entertainment licenses, but granted it the right to reapply for such licenses after a year.

Casa DiMario, Inc. appealed the revocation of its liquor license to the DBR. The DBR issued a stay of the license revocation pending a hearing, conditioned upon Casa DiMario, Inc.'s compliance with all laws including Ordinance 1057.

Casa DiMario, Inc. also filed suit in Superior Court to challenge the legality of Ordinance 1057. On February 5, 1999, the Superior Court granted a temporary restraining order to prohibit the Town from enforcing Ordinance 1057 against Casa DiMario, Inc. After a trial in March of 1999, however, the Superior Court denied Casa DiMario, Inc.'s request for a permanent injunction and instead upheld Ordinance 1057 as legal. Casa DiMario, Inc. appealed that ruling to the Rhode Island Supreme Court. The DBR stayed its hearing as to the revocation of Casa DiMario, Inc.'s license revocation pending appeal.

In December of 2000, the Supreme Court affirmed the legality of both Ordinance 965 and Ordinance 1057. It determined that Casa DiMario, Inc. had no grandfather rights that would allow it to avoid application to it of either R.I. Gen. Laws §3-7-7.35 or R.I. Gen. Laws § 5-72-2.6 It further found that the Town was not estopped from applying Ordinances 965 or 1057 to Casa DiMario, Inc. See Casa DiMario, Inc. v.Richardson, 763 A.2d 607 (R.I. 2000).

In January of 2001, after the Supreme Court issued its decision upholding Ordinances 965 and 1057, the DBR lifted its earlier stay and heard the appeal of Casa DiMario, Inc. from the Town's decision to revoke its liquor license. In May of 2001, the DBR issued a decision that reduced the one-year license revocation to a fifty-three day suspension — the same amount of time that Casa DiMario, Inc. operated Mario's Showplace in violation of Ordinance 1057. See Casa DiMario, Inc. v. Town of Johnston, LCA-JO-00-04 (May 2, 2001).

After serving its suspension, Casa DiMario, Inc. did not reopen Mario's Showplace. Rather, in July of 2001, Andiross, Inc. purchased the assets of Casa DiMario, Inc. Casa DiMario, Inc. and Andiross, Inc. are independent corporations and do not share any stockholders, officers, or employees.

In September of 2001, Andiross, Inc. filed with the Town an application seeking approval of the transfer to it of Casa DiMario, Inc.'s liquor license. Andiross, Inc. attempted to retrieve from the Town the physical liquor license that the Town had issued previously to Casa DiMario, Inc. After the Town informed Andiross, Inc. that a representative from Casa DiMario, Inc. (rather than Andiross, Inc.) had to pick up the license because the transfer application of Casa DiMario, Inc. was still pending, a representative of Casa DiMario, Inc. picked up the license. The Town represented to Andiross, Inc. that it could operate Mario's Showplace under Casa DiMario, Inc.'s license with Casa DiMario Inc.'s permission, as long as it operated the establishment in accordance with state and local law. Thus, on October 4, 2001, Andiross, Inc. reopened Mario's Showplace under Casa DiMario, Inc.'s liquor license and offered adult entertainment.

From that date forward, the Town's police frequented Mario's Showplace on a nightly basis in their official capacity. On October 18 and 21, 2001, only two weeks after Andiross, Inc. reopened Mario's Showplace, the police reported a myriad of violations of Ordinance 1057 as a result of their usual surveillance. Officers reported, for example, that they observed dancers wearing thongs and dancers accepting tips by pulling their thongs away from their anal cleavage and thus exposing the anal cleft.

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