Donia v. Alcoholic Beverage Control Appeals Board

167 Cal. App. 3d 588, 213 Cal. Rptr. 447, 1985 Cal. App. LEXIS 1965
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedApril 30, 1985
DocketB007124
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 167 Cal. App. 3d 588 (Donia v. Alcoholic Beverage Control Appeals Board) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Donia v. Alcoholic Beverage Control Appeals Board, 167 Cal. App. 3d 588, 213 Cal. Rptr. 447, 1985 Cal. App. LEXIS 1965 (Cal. Ct. App. 1985).

Opinion

Opinion

SPENCER, P. J.

Introduction

Philip A. Donia, principal of the Vermont Avenue Elementary School, and other concerned citizens seek review of an order of respondent Alcoholic Beverage Control Appeals Board (board) reversing a decision of the Department of Alcoholic Beverage Control (department) which denied an *591 application by real parties in interest Simon C. Huen and Samuel A. and Paulina Quan for issuance of an off-sale beer and wine license. (Bus. & Prof. Code, § 23090.)

In February 1981, real parties applied for an off-sale beer and wine license for a convenience store, the La Colonia Market, located at 2715 South Vermont Avenue in Los Angeles. Protests were filed and an administrative hearing was held on February 17 and 28, 1983. The proposed decision of the administrative law judge recommended that the license application be granted. The department reviewed the entire record in the matter and denied the application on the ground that issuance of the 'license would tend to create or to aggravate an existing law enforcement problem and hence would be contrary to public welfare and morals. (Cal. Const., art. XX, § 22.) The board reversed the department’s decision on the ground it was unsupported by the findings and the findings were unsupported by substantial evidence. {Ibid.)

The department petitioned this court for a writ of review, which Division Four thereof denied without opinion. Philip A. Donia and others separately petitioned for a writ of review, which this division granted.

Statement of Facts

The La Colonia Market is located in a small shopping center on the northwest corner of 27th Street and Vermont Avenue. It shares a common parking lot with other businesses, including a doughnut shop which has four video arcade games, a record store which broadcasts music into the parking lot, a Pioneer Chicken takeout restaurant and a check cashing store. These businesses are a maximum of 75 feet from the market. The Vermont Avenue Elementary School is 180 feet, airline distance, north of the market. The market and shopping center lot are visible from the school playground and some classrooms. Children regularly remain in the area until 3 p.m., and the playground remains open until 4 p.m. Many children remain until that hour.

Approximately 1,700 children in grades K-6 attend the school. Seventy to 80 percent of these children walk to and from school; typically, at least 160 and possibly as many as 250 children walk directly in front of the small shopping center in which the market is located. Normally, 17 to 20 of these children enter the market and an additional 15 to 25 enter the doughnut shop.

Apart from the Vermont Avenue commercial strip, the surrounding area within a 1,000-foot radius is primarily a low income residential neighbor *592 hood. The area has a crime rate more than 120 percent of the city average. There are 20 licensed off-sale liquor outlets within a general radius of one-half mile from the school. Seven of these are within one-quarter mile to the north or south of the school. Four are within one thousand feet and two of these are on the east side of Vermont Avenue within one block of the market.

In recent years, principal Philip A. Donia has received a number of complaints from employees of persons loitering around the school, some of whom appeared to be under the influence of alcohol. Within one year, Mr. Donia personally observed four incidents he considered serious in which intoxicated individuals came onto the school premises or loitered in close proximity to the school grounds, harassing students. One individual, a vagrant, had to be escorted from the school grounds frequently. The school grounds regularly are littered with alcoholic beverage containers, requiring the custodian to clean the perimeter each morning. On Monday mornings, the lunch area is littered with soft drink and alcoholic beverage containers. On several occasions, school employees had been subject to criminal attack on or near the school premises. Mr. Donia has no personal knowledge of whether any of these attacks were alcohol-related. As a result of this criminal activity and the presence of unauthorized persons on the school grounds, the school now has a locked campus. This, however, does not prevent the entry of unauthorized persons and the littering of the property with alcoholic beverage containers. The school grounds are used by the community evenings and weekends and young adults regularly climb the fence to play basketball.

Mr. Donia is concerned that the availability of liquor at the La Colonia Market will expose children congregating in the shopping center to the public consumption of alcohol. Although he is not presently aware of a specific problem with the public consumption of alcohol in the shopping center, he has observed evidence of alcohol use in the shopping center parking lot. On one occasion, when he returned to his automobile which was parked next to the doughnut shop, there was an empty beer can stuck on his radio antenna. Mr. Donia therefore feared adults would purchase liquor at the market and food from Pioneer Chicken, then consume these items in the parking lot.

The La Colonia Market offers for sale many items which would appeal to children, including a rack containing small games which is visible from outside the store. A large glass window at the entrance to the market permits easy visibility of the interior. The alcoholic beverage items would be offered for sale near the cash register and exit from the market, thereby placing them in close proximity to items enticing to children.

*593 For the past 10 years, Los Angeles Police Sergeant David E. Brockhurst has worked exclusively in the central and southwest central portions of Los Angeles; the La Colonia Market is in the area of his primary responsibility. Over the years, Sergeant Brockhurst has observed the surrounding neighborhood directly as well as through reports from officers on the beat. As a result of his experience in responding to thousands of complaints regarding problems at liquor stores, he knows that the majority of public drunks obtain alcoholic beverages from off-sale sites and do their drinking in public areas adjacent to such sale sites. This is a violation of law. In addition, the close proximity of a fast food restaurant to an off-sale site increases the tendency of individuals to consume alcohol in public; i.e., to engage in criminal conduct. The particular layout of the shopping center in which the La Colonia Market is located would exacerbate this tendency, in that it provides a degree of privacy from scrutiny by patrolling officers.

Sergeant Brockhurst further noted that video arcades cause public safety problems and check cashing locations tend to be inordinantly attractive to robbers; the shopping center contains both. On the basis of his experience, Sergeant Brockhurst expressed the opinion that the addition of an off-sale outlet to the existing confluence of facilities in the shopping center would increase the likelihood of public consumption of alcoholic beverages and consequent crime-related problems. Sergeant Brockhurst had not personally investigated complaints of alcohol-related activity at Vermont Avenue Elementary School or at any other nearby school.

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Bluebook (online)
167 Cal. App. 3d 588, 213 Cal. Rptr. 447, 1985 Cal. App. LEXIS 1965, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/donia-v-alcoholic-beverage-control-appeals-board-calctapp-1985.