Guon v. Johnson

38 N.W.2d 280, 76 N.D. 589, 1949 N.D. LEXIS 80
CourtNorth Dakota Supreme Court
DecidedJune 27, 1949
DocketFile 7136
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 38 N.W.2d 280 (Guon v. Johnson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering North Dakota Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Guon v. Johnson, 38 N.W.2d 280, 76 N.D. 589, 1949 N.D. LEXIS 80 (N.D. 1949).

Opinion

*590 Christianson, J.

This is an appeal from a judgment of the District Court of Morton County sustaining and affirming an order of the Attorney General suspending for a period of thirty days a retailer’s state beer license and a retailer’s state liquor license theretofore issued to the appellant, Leo Guon, by the Attorney General.

The appellant, Leo Guon, was a duly licensed retailer of beer and liquor in Mandan, North Dakota, by virtue of a retailer’s state beer license and a retailer’s state liquor license duly issued to him by the Attorney General pursuant to the provisions of Laws 1945, Chapter 50, as amended by SL 1947, Chapter 9; 1947 Supplement to ND Rev Code 1943, Chapter 5-05.

The law which provides for the issuance of such licenses makes it “unlawful for any person, partnership, association of individuals or corporation to engage in the sale of alcohol or alcoholic beverages at retail unless there shall have been first procured from the Attorney General of the State of North Dakota a license so to do.” Laws 1945, Chapter 50, § 1; 1947 Supplement • to ND Rev Code 1943, § 5-0501. The law also provides that any person who has information that any licensed retailer of beer or alcoholic beverages has violated any of the provisions of the act under which the license is issued “or any law respecting the sale of beer or intoxicating liquor may file with the Attorney General an affidavit setting forth such violation or violations and it is made the duty of the Attorney General upon the filing of such affidavit to set the matter down for hearing and to mail to the retailer a copy of the affidavit together with a notice of the time and place of hearing. Laws 1945, Chapter 50, § 7; 1947 Supplement to ND Rev Code 1943, § 5-0511. The law pro-' vides that if after the hearing the Attorney General finds that the violation or violations charged in the affidavit have been established he shall order the revocation or suspension of the license. Laws 1945, Chapter 50, § 9; 1947 Supplement to ND Rev Code , 1943,. § 5-0513. The law further provides that the action of the Attorney General in revoking or suspending a license may be appealed to the district court. Laws 1945, Chapter 50, § 11 as amended by SL 1947, Chapter 9; 1947 Supplement to ND Rev Code 1943, § 5-0515.

*591 An affidavit was filed with the Attorney General charging that the appellant Guon had violated certain provisions of the law under which the licenses were issued and the Attorney General caused a hearing to be had. The Attorney General held that the appellant was guilty of the violations set forth in the affidavit and ordered that the retailer’s beer license and the retailer’s liquor license theretofore issued and then held by the appellant Guon be suspended for a period of thirty days.

Guon appealed to the District Court of Morton County from the order of the Attorney General suspending such licenses. In his notice of appeal he stated that he appeals from the whole of the order and “demands a trial anew and r'eview of all of the issues of law and fact presented by said proceedings in the District Court of Morton County, North Dakota, in the manner provided by law.” The district court sustained the order of the Attorney General and rendered judgment suspending the beer and liquor licenses for a period of thirty days after the entry of judgment. Guon has appealed from the judgment of the district court and demanded a trial anew in this court.

The system of licensing retail dealers of beer'and intoxicating liquors by the attorney general originated with the enactment of Chapter 50, Laws 1945. This law, as has been noted, provides also for proceedings before the attorney general for the revocation or suspension of such licenses and provides further that the decision of the attorney general revoking or suspending a license shall be subject to appeal to the district court. Specifically the statute provides:

.“The action of the attorney general in revoking or suspending a license may be appealed to the district court of the county and district in which the premises described in the license are located by procedure applicable to appeals from justice court except that the attorney general’s order revoking or suspending the license may be stayed by the court appealed to upon filing with the clerk of said court a bond approved by and in the amount set by the judge of said district court for the faithful observance of the laws of the state relative to the operation of the business licensed during the pendency of the appeal.
*592 “Such appeal shall be heard and determined by the court without a jury, at any time fixed by the court. A certified transcript of the evidence adduced at the hearing provided for in Section 8 of Chapter 50 of the Session Laws of North Dakota for the year 19á5 (5-0512) may be introduced in evidence and shall be considered by the court.
“The revocation or suspension of a licensee’s municipal or county license shall automatically revoke or suspend such licensee’s state license.” Laws 1945, Chapter 50, Sec. 11 as amended by SL 1947, Chapter 9, Sec. 2.

The provisions which we have italicized did not appear in the law as enacted in 1945 but were added by amendment in 1947. See Laws 1947, Chapter 9, § 2. At the time the law providing for the issuance of retailers’ beer and liquor licenses by the attorney general and the revocation of such licenses was enacted in 1945 and when it was amended in 1947 there was in force and effect in this state the Administrative Agencies Uniform Practice Act, enacted by the Legislative Assembly in 1941, which related to the procedure before administrative agencies and which among other things provided for an appeal to the district court from decisions of an administrative agency. See Laws 1941, Chapter 240; ND Rev Code 1943, Chapters 28-32.

The law providing for issuance of retailers’ beer and liquor licenses by the attorney general and the revocation of such .licenses did not purport to make the provisions of the Administrative Agencies Uniform Practice Act relating to appeals from determinations of an administrative agency applicable to appeals from decisions of the attorney general revoking such licenses. On the contrary it prescribed procedure quite unlike that provided by the Administrative Agencies Uniform Practice Act. It provided that the action of the attorney general in revoking or suspending a license may be appealed to the district court of the county and district in which the premises described in the license are located “by procedure applicable to appeals from justice court.”

The Administrative Agencies Uniform Practice Act is a comprehensive measure purporting to prescribe the procedure on hearings before administrative agencies and on appeals from the *593 determinations of such, agencies. It provides that a record shall be made of all testimony adduced at any hearing before an administrative agency, (ND Rev Code 1943, § 28-3212), and requires that the agency make findings of fact and conclusions of law as a basis for its decision. (ND Rev Code 1943, § 28-3213).

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
38 N.W.2d 280, 76 N.D. 589, 1949 N.D. LEXIS 80, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/guon-v-johnson-nd-1949.