Faircloth v. Mr. Boston Distiller Corp.

245 So. 2d 240
CourtSupreme Court of Florida
DecidedOctober 21, 1970
Docket39980, 40119
StatusPublished
Cited by22 cases

This text of 245 So. 2d 240 (Faircloth v. Mr. Boston Distiller Corp.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Florida primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Faircloth v. Mr. Boston Distiller Corp., 245 So. 2d 240 (Fla. 1970).

Opinion

245 So.2d 240 (1970)

Earl FAIRCLOTH, As Attorney General, Rodger P. Doyle, C.C. Harrison, Jr., Eugene Toll, Charles Rex, Jr., and Thomas B. Wood, As and Constituting the Board of Business Regulation, State of Florida Department of Business Regulation, Etc., Old Florida Rum Company, Etc. and Jacquin-Florida Distilling Company, Etc., Appellants,
v.
MR. BOSTON DISTILLER CORP. and Hartley & Parker, Inc., Appellees.
OLD FLORIDA RUM COMPANY, Appellant,
v.
MR. BOSTON DISTILLER CORP., Hartley & Parker, Inc., Rodger P. Doyle, C.C. Harrison, Jr., and Thomas B. Wood, As and Constituting the Board of Business Regulation, State of Florida Department of Business Regulation, an Agency of the State of Florida and Jacquin-Florida Distillery Company, a Corporation, Appellees.

Nos. 39980, 40119.

Supreme Court of Florida.

October 21, 1970.
Rehearing Denied December 14, 1970.

*241 Wilbur E. Brewton, Jesse Warren, Jr., Earl Faircloth, Atty. Gen., and T.T. Turnbull, Tallahassee, for Bd. of Business Regulation, State of Fla., Dept. of Business Regulation, etc.

L. Grant Peeples, L. Ralph Smith, Jr., and Edgar M. Moore, Peeples, Smith & Moore, Tallahassee, for Old Florida Rum Co.

Julius F. Parker, Jr., Parker, Foster & Madigan, Tallahassee, for Jacquin Florida Distilling Co., Inc.

Robert M. Ervin, Wilfred C. Varn and Joseph C. Jacobs, Ervin, Pennington, Varn & Jacobs, Tallahassee, for appellees.

ROBERTS, Acting Chief Justice.

These are direct appeals, pursuant to Fla. Const. art. V, § 4(2), F.S.A., from certain orders of the circuit court in and for Leon County and from a summary judgment entered by said court directly passing upon the validity of Chapter 70-225, Laws of Florida, which amended portions of Chapter 561, Florida Statutes, F.S.A. The Summary Judgment appears as follows:

"On motion for summary judgment the real issues between the parties turn upon the constitutional validity of certain portions of Chapter 70-225, Laws of Florida, as it applies to the rate of excise tax required of the plaintiffs with respect to alcoholic beverages manufactured in Florida exclusively from raw materials produced in Florida (except for flavoring extracts) and not blended with whiskey produced in and other state.
"Plaintiff, Mr. Boston Distillers Corporation, a Florida corporation, is a bottler of alcoholic beverages, as above described, but, its name to the contrary notwithstanding, it does not distill any such beverages. It bottles such beverages, but only in Florida. A majority of its capital stock is owned by another corporation Glenmore Distillers Company, which owns distilleries in another state. Glenmore also owns a controlling interest in two other corporations which bottle spirituous liquors in the States of Massachusetts and Georgia. Mr. Boston itself does no distilling and does no bottling except in Florida. Some of its products manufactured in Florida are, with the consent of Glenmore Distilleries Company, sold under a brand name identical to one used by Glenmore or Glenmore subsidiaries in marketing similar products in other states.
"The facts of the case are not in serious controversy and the Court's decision must turn on questions of law which have been argued by the original parties and the intervenors. It is
"Ordered, adjudged and declared:
"1. So much of Chapter 70-225 as provides that for alcoholic beverages to qualify for the reduced tax rate provided in Sections 561.46(5) (b), (6) (b), Section 561.461(2) and Section 561.64(2).
`* * * such beverage must be either distilled and bottled by a distiller licensed under Section 561.35(1) (d) and (f), who conducts distilling operations only in the State of Florida and in no other state, or bottled by a bottler *242 licensed under Section 561.35(1) (e) who conducts bottling operations only in the State of Florida and in no other state * * *'
is void and inoperative because in violation of the equal protection clause of Section 2, Article I of the Constitution of Florida in that it makes an unreasonable classification of persons for the purpose of taxation. Allowing the benefit of the reduced tax upon Florida products to one of two companies who bottle alcoholic beverages in Florida and denying such lower tax rate to the other merely because the first distills some such beverages in Florida (and does not distill in another state) is without any reasonable relationship to the classification of persons for the purpose of taxation. All liquors to be taxed at the lower rate must be distilled in Florida from Florida products. All must be bottled in Florida. Whether or not one bottler distills in Florida is wholly unrelated to the tax since there is no requirement that the spirits distilled in Florida be bottled in Florida or be the spirits with respect to which that manufacturer claims the lower tax rate.
"2. So much of Chapter 70-225, Laws of Florida, as provides:
`If a Florida bottler shall be a corporation, such corporation shall be deemed to be carrying on bottling operations in a state other than the state of Florida, when such corporation is affiliated with, directly or indirectly, or if such bottler produces an alcoholic beverage sold under a brand name identical or deceptively similar to the brand name of any other corporation which is engaged in bottling spirituous liquors in any state other than the state of Florida, or when such corporation is controlled by or the majority of stock therein is owned by another corporation, which latter corporation owns or controls in any way the majority of stocks or controlling interest in any other corporation which is engaged directly or indirectly in bottling spirituous liquors in any state other than the state of Florida.'
is void and inoperative, being included in the act of violation of Section 6, Article III of the Constitution of Florida in that there is nothing in the title to the act to put any reasonable person on notice that the act would attempt to change the ordinary meaning of the words `distiller' and `bottler' or that the act would attempt to make two classes of `distillers' and two classes of `bottlers' and apply the `limited rate of taxation' to one class of distillers and not the other, and to one class of bottlers and not the other. The title to the act is clearly misleading as to this portion of its contents.
"3. So much of that portion of Chapter 70-225 quoted in the preceding paragraph as purports to deny to Mr. Boston the lower tax accorded other manufacturers merely because of the ownership of stock of Mr. Boston by Glenmore or use by Mr. Boston of a brand name also used by Glenmore is void and inoperative in that it denies Mr. Boston the equal protection of the law in violation of Section 2, Article I of the Constitution of Florida.
"The statute would deny its benefits to Mr. Boston who bottles beverages in Florida and give its benefits to a competitor who also bottles beverages in Florida merely because the competitor distills in Florida and stock of Mr.

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245 So. 2d 240, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/faircloth-v-mr-boston-distiller-corp-fla-1970.