Fink v. Bureau of Licenses

158 A.2d 820, 90 R.I. 408, 1960 R.I. LEXIS 34
CourtSupreme Court of Rhode Island
DecidedMarch 16, 1960
DocketM. P. Nos. 1314, 1315
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 158 A.2d 820 (Fink v. Bureau of Licenses) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme 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
Fink v. Bureau of Licenses, 158 A.2d 820, 90 R.I. 408, 1960 R.I. LEXIS 34 (R.I. 1960).

Opinion

*410 Roberts, J.

These are two' petitions for certiorari to review certain actions of the respondent bureau of licenses. In one case the petitioner seeks a review of the bureau’s denial of his application for a license to conduct a junk shop at 601 Huntington avenue in the city of Providence. In the other case he seeks a review of the action of the bureau in limiting to lot No. 197 on plat No. 43 the license granted him to conduct a secondhand store on the premises located at 601 Huntington avenue. Pursuant to the writs the respondent bureau has certified to- this court the pertinent records in each case.

It appears therefrom that on April 14, 1959 petitioner filed with the bureau the two applications referred to above. In each application petitioner set out as his business address “601 Huntington Ave., Plat #43, Lot #197.” Acting under authority conferred upon it by the city charter, chapter XXXII, secs. 166 and 167, as amended by public laws 1951, chap. 2721, the bureau thereupon caused an investigation to be made of these applications by a member of the police department of the city. This officer submitted a report to the bureau on April 22, 1959 wherein he stated that he did not recommend the issuance of the requested licenses.

In his report the investigating officer stated that the applicant was conducting the businesses in question not only on lot 197 of plat 43 but on ten other lots on that plat and that he had never applied for a license covering *411 these ten lots nor for a transfer of his license to- cover any of them. The officer further stated: “He has erected a wire fence opposite the middle of Halton St. at the railroad tracks that runs to- Huntington Ave. and then east along Huntington Ave. to a point at his office building at #611 Huntington Ave. This wire fence crosses Chambers St. which is a dead end street completely closing the street. On Seabury St. which is a dead end street he uses as his main entrance and approximately 30 feet in front Huntington Ave. is a pile of old motors and junk about 20 feet high which extends across the street and up the yard. Due to the fact that this man is using land and streets not specified on his license to carry on his Junk Shop and Second Hand Store business I am returning these applications for renewal 'Not recommended.’ ”

On May 6, 1959 the bureau held a hearing on these applications. It appears from the record that at this hearing the bureau considered, among other things, that petitioner had been conducting a junk shop and a secondhand store on Huntington avenue for about twenty-one years and that in the conduct of these businesses he used parcels of land which in his past applications for licenses were never specifically designated either by street address or by plat and lot numbers. It further appears that at the close of the hearing there was an “understanding” between the bureau and petitioner that his attorney “would submit an affidavit-showing the history of this Junk business on Huntington Avenue.” Nowhere in the record does it appear that such an affidavit was ever submitted to the bureau.

These applications were again considered by the bureau on August 7, 1959. At that time the bureau noted in the record that counsel for petitioner had withdrawn his appearance and, to quote from the record, said, “Not having-heard from Mr. Fink, the Bureau voted that the application for renewal of the Junk Shop license be denied.”

Thereafter petitioner, who had retained another attorney, *412 requested of the bureau a further hearing- with respect to the applications which he had made for these licenses. On August 12, 1959 the bureau informed petitioner that it would grant him a further hearing with respect to his application for a secondhand store license still pending before it but that it would not reconsider its action in denying his application for a junk shop license-. Such hearing was held on August 28, 1959 and in the course thereof PhilipPokras, a prior owner of the business now conducted by petitioner, was permitted to testify as to the original application which he had filed for a license- in 1925 and as to the-parcels of land on which he had then conducted the business.

It appears from the testimony that in 1925 Pokras filed the original application for a license for this business stating therein that the business address was 601 Huntington avenue; that 601 Huntington avenue is the street address assigned to lot 197 on plat 43; and that Pokras used several other parcels of land in addition to lot 197 in the conduct of the business. It further appears that the original application was advertised and was subsequently granted, but there is nothing in the record which shows that in any subsequent application for a license for this business the additional parcels in use were designated either by a street number or by a plat and lot number. Thereafter, on September 4, 1959, the bureau voted to grant petitioner’s application for a secondhand store license at “601 Huntington Ave., Plat #43, Lot #197.”

The authority of a local legislature to- provide for the licensing of junk shops and secondhand stores is contained in general laws 1956, chap. 5-21. In §5-21-2 it is provided that no license for such purposes shall be granted “in any location not occupied for such purpose at the time of the application for such license, where the- owners or occupants of the greater part of the land within two hundred (200) feet of such building or place shall file * * * their objection *413 to the granting of such license.” This section has 'been construed as requiring that “owners or occupants” be given notice of the pendency of applications for licenses for premises not then occupied for the use contemplated so' that they, as potential remonstrants, might have a reasonable time in which to file their objections. Slefkin v. Board of Aldermen, 39 R. I. 525.

We have further considered this requirement of §5-21-2 concerning the giving of notice to potential remonstrants in the case of Acme Development Co. v. Bureau of Licenses, 87 R. I. 11, 137 A.2d 422. In that case an applicant had for several years been issued a license for the conduct of a junk shop at a location which in his applications for such licenses had been designated by an erroneous street address. The location at which the business was in fact being conducted had never been advertised so as to give the notice required by said §5-21-2. We held therein that the giving of such notice was a condition precedent tO' the vesting of jurisdiction in the local board to- grant the license applied for; that the licenses that had been granted were invalid; and that the use of the premises for the business had been illegal. The licensee gained nothing by the issuance of such invalid licenses, nor was the bureau of licenses thereby relieved of the requirement of giving the required notice to potential remonstrants in order to acquire jurisdiction to issue the license.

In thelight of these decisions we cannot agree with petitioner that his application was for a renewal of the license to conduct the business.

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Bluebook (online)
158 A.2d 820, 90 R.I. 408, 1960 R.I. LEXIS 34, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fink-v-bureau-of-licenses-ri-1960.