Hallene v. Smith

201 A.2d 921, 98 R.I. 360, 1964 R.I. LEXIS 177
CourtSupreme Court of Rhode Island
DecidedJuly 1, 1964
DocketM. P. No. 1612
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 201 A.2d 921 (Hallene v. Smith) 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
Hallene v. Smith, 201 A.2d 921, 98 R.I. 360, 1964 R.I. LEXIS 177 (R.I. 1964).

Opinion

*361 Roberts, J.

This petition for certiorari was brought to review the action of the state liquor control administrator suspending the petitioner’s license for the sale of alcoholic beverages in an establishment located in the town of North Kingstown. The writ issued, and the respondent administrator has certified the record of the proceedings in the cause to this court. The order of suspension was stayed by us until the return day of the writ, the petitioner ¡being given. *362 leave to show cause at that time why the stay should remain in effect. For cause shown, the stay was continued in effect until further order of this court.

It .appears that petitioner, doing .business as the Ace of Clubs, operates under a class B victualer’s retail beverage license issued by the board of license commissioners of that town. The record discloses that on November 27, 1963 petitioner received notice in writing that the police department had reported to the town council an “apparent violation of Section 3-8-1 of the General Laws of 1956, as amended, in delivering intoxicating beverages to a minor on the licensed premises * * * on November 9th, 1963 and November 14th, 1963 * * The board of license commissioners held a hearing on such complaint on December 2, 1963 and thereupon suspended the license for a period of ten days, from which decision petitioner appealed to the state liquor control administrator pursuant to §3-7-21.

He heard the appeal de novo, rejected petitioner’s challenge to 'the jurisdiction of the local board and, on evidence adduced before him, found that the alleged violation had been proved. He thereupon denied and dismissed petitioner’s appeal, affirmed the decision of the local board, and entered his order suspending the license for a period of ten days.

When a decision of the liquor control administrator is brought to this court for review by certiorari, it is settled that such review will be limited to errors of law. Kaskela v. Daneker, 76 R. I. 405. A consideration of the nature of the business under regulation and the scope of the review that the administrator has been empowered to make with respect to decisions of local licensing authorities requires that this court, in our opinion, proceed under the writ only to confine the actions of the administrator within the limits of the authority conferred upon him by the legislature.

The petitioner charges the administrator with error of law in exercising his jurisdiction to review a decision of a *363 local board that was void because the hearing on which it rests was illegal for want of notice to her of the provision of law the violation of which constitutes the ground for the charges. She contends, as we understand her, that the local board erred in that it heard and determined a violation, if any, of §3-8-5, which makes the sale or delivery of liquor to a minor a criminal offense, but that the notice of the hearing charged her with a violation of §3-8-1, which she contends simply defines the extent of the authority of local licensing boards to authorize dealing with alcoholic beverages under the licenses issued by them.

The thrust of this argument is persuasive of the need for this court to consider again the purpose of §3-7-21, which vests in the administrator jurisdiction to review decisions of local boards suspending or revoking licenses. Said section reads, in pertinent part: “* * * or upon the application of any licensee whose license shall be revoked or suspended by any local board or authority, the liquor control administrator shall have the right to review the decision of any local board, and after hearing, to> confirm or reverse the same in whole or in part, and to make such decision or order as to him shall seem proper * * The local board acts in these premises pursuant to §3-5-23, which hereinafter shall be discussed by this court.

The parties and the administrator appear to assume that the jurisdiction conferred by §3-7-21 upon the administrator is appellate and that, absent a showing that the local board acted within the scope of the authority conferred upon it by §3-5-23, his jurisdiction could not properly be exercised. Such a view is inconsistent with this court’s frequent declaration that §3-7-21 constitutes the administrator a statewide superlicensing authority with power to review these causes de novo' and with a broad discretion to affirm or reverse the decision of the local board in whole or in part. Di Traglia v. Daneker, 83 R. I. 227.

The authority conferred upon the administrator in §3- *364 7-21 vests him with a broad power to make findings of fact that is conferred only rarely upon an appellate tribunal. The scope of this fact-finding power, along with the concomitant authority to' draw conclusions of law as the basis upon which a decision of the prior hearing may be reversed in Whole or in part, is significant of an intention to grant original jurisdiction. In the interests of an orderly and expeditious administration of the liquor control law and the licensing function, we at this time undertake to clarify in some measure the true nature of the jurisdiction vested in the administrator by §3-7-21.

When §3-7-21 is read in its entirety, it discloses by necessary implication a legislative intent to provide licensees with a de novo hearing >of the cause rather than an appellate review of the decision. This court in Baginski v. Alcoholic Beverage Commission, 62 R. I. 176, construed the section, then P. L. 1933, chap. 2013, sec. 14, as intended to provide licensees whose licenses had ¡been revoked or suspended with a full and complete hearing on the merits before a state licensing authority. This court noted therein that if sec. 14 were intended to provide a broad and comprehensive control by the state over the liquor traffic and to vest that control in an administrative body, such body of necessity would need a power and authority adequate to enable it to discharge its duties in the exercise of such control to the full. At page 179 the court went on to say: “In that case, the use of the word 'review’ in sec. 14, if given its narrow, technical meaning in the law of appellate procedure, is inconsistent with the primary intention of the legislature and tends to restrict greatly the measure of control which the state, by its commission, can exercise over the local boards.” In short, the court expressly states its view that a mere appellate review under §3-7-21 would be insufficient for the exercise of state supervision over local licensing authorities, the purpose for its enactment.

At page 182 of that opinion the court said: * * then *365 the conclusion is irresistible that the legislature, which charged the commission with the carrying out of its legislative policy, likewise intended to vest in it the broadest, rather than the narrowest, power over local bodies in order to insure a state-wide .conformity to the law. * * * It is significant that, by this language, the legislature did not limit the power of the commission to a mere review of errors of law, as it might easily have done, but expressly gave the commission the broad power, 'to make such decision or order

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Bluebook (online)
201 A.2d 921, 98 R.I. 360, 1964 R.I. LEXIS 177, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hallene-v-smith-ri-1964.