Harstell Operating Co. v. Liquor Control Commission

206 N.E.2d 601, 2 Ohio Misc. 23, 31 Ohio Op. 2d 118, 1964 Ohio Misc. LEXIS 209
CourtCourt of Common Pleas of Ohio, Franklin County, Civil Division
DecidedJuly 30, 1964
DocketNo. 218460
StatusPublished

This text of 206 N.E.2d 601 (Harstell Operating Co. v. Liquor Control Commission) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Common Pleas of Ohio, Franklin County, Civil Division primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Harstell Operating Co. v. Liquor Control Commission, 206 N.E.2d 601, 2 Ohio Misc. 23, 31 Ohio Op. 2d 118, 1964 Ohio Misc. LEXIS 209 (Ohio Super. Ct. 1964).

Opinion

Harter, J.

This matter is in the coart by way of an appeal ander Section 119.12, Revised Code, from an order of the Liqaor Control Commission apon a hearing on a citation asserting five violations of regalations of the commission. The commission foand, on the evidence addaced before it, that the Department of Liqaor Control had proven violations numbered 1, 3 and 5 by the reqaisite evidence bat had failed to prove violations 2 and 4. On these findings, the commission ordered a 100-day sns-pension as to each of the three violations, sach saspensions to ran concarrently.

There is a measare of confasion in the record and the briefs as to which violation bears which namber bat, ander the view which I take of this record, this confasion is not traly significant. I will attempt to describe the problems in general and withont too mach attention to nambers.

The violations which were foand by the commission to have been established by the evidence related to activities within the permit premises on Jane 20, 1963, Jaly 1, 1963 and Jaly 23, 1963.

As to the activity of Jane 20, 1963, it was claimed that one of the permit holder’s employees or agents solicited a patron “to bay her a drink” of intoxicating liqaor, in violation of the [25]*25first sentence of regulation 59. As to the July 1, 1963, episode, it was asserted that one of the permit holder’s employees or agents permitted the solicitation of a patron to “buy her a drink,” in violation of the second sentence of regulation 59. The third of these claimed violations (numbered 5 in the citation) alleged that the permit holder or its responsible agents permitted loitering within the permit premises by an intoxicated person in violation of regulation 52.

In considering the record relating to these three claimed violations, I will first treat of the last claimed violation — that of allowing an intoxicated person to loiter within the premises. The pertinent language of regulation 52 is:

“No permit holder shall knowingly or wilfully allow in, upon or about his licensed premises improper conduct of any kind * * *.”

This regulation has been in effect in this form since 1950. We have to assume that loitering by an intoxicated person is improper conduct. The regulation deliberately uses the expression “knowingly or wilfully allow.” By using such a phrase, the promulgators of the regulation must be assumed deliberately to have required scienter, or knowledge, and affirmative action, or nonaction, consciously willed, to constitute a violation of the regulation. To make out a case of allowing an intoxicated person to loiter in permit premises, the Department of Liquor Control must produce evidence to the effect that the permit holder’s responsible agent or representative had actual or constructive knowledge of the presence of an intoxicated person within the premises at a time when such responsible representative could have acted effectively to remedy the problem but did not do so. I fully explained my theories on this point in a ease decided in 1961 in this court, entitled Mendlowitz v. Board of Liquor Control, No. 209395. Rather than repeat my reasoning here, I direct the attention of the persons who may be interested in the details of my theory to that opinion.

With these background comments on the law applicable to this alleged violation, let us next consider the evidence which was adduced on this point before the commission.

Ralph E. Krieger, the investigator in charge of the Cleveland district of the Ohio Department of Liquor Control, and one police officer, were the only department witnesses who testified [26]*26regarding this 5th charge. Krieger related that he entered the premises on Jnly 23, 1963, with another investigator and three Cleveland police officers (none of these four testified) to serve a citation on the manager. Krieger further stated that he observed a man named Carl Kuni first when he was in the corridor leading to the men’s rest room at the rear of the premises — that Kuni was approaching the door of the girls’ dressing room where he was stopped by police officers. Kuni was truly intoxicated, apparently, although appellant’s manager denies it, and we will assume the fact of his intoxication, but that, alone, is not enough. We must go on to see what knowledge of his condition was brought to the attention of the permit holder’s responsible representatives at a time when they could have expelled him but failed to do so. The record expressly shows that the witnesses did not know how Kuni got into this corridor, where he had come from, whether he had obtained the liquor which made him intoxicated in these premises, or elsewhere, and no effort was made to show any knowledge of his condition on the part of any of the permit holder’s representatives prior to his spontaneous appearance, and arrest, in the back corridor. Eor example, the policeman witness gave the following testimony:

“Q. Mr. Kennelly, you don’t know where he was immediately before you saw him in the back corridor, do you? A. No, sir, I don’t.
“Q. So you don’t know whether he had been observed by anyone in connection with the 730 Lounge before that time, do you? A. No, Sir, I don’t.”

The explanation of this occurrence, if one is needed, came from the manager of this permit holder’s business. Such manager testified that his attention was first called to Mr. Kuni “when he walked in the door with the state agents, and the two city policemen. All these men, including Kuni, walked to the back of the premises and were all the way out of the bar room and in the corridor near the washrooms when the state agents and police discovered Kuni was with them. ’ ’ The manager went on to describe how the policemen then arrested Kuni and pinned him against the wall, hurting his elbow. Kuni wanted to know what he had done — he said he had just come in to use the rest room. The agents for the state and the police had Kuni in their custody, inside these premises, about 25 minutes. Under these [27]*27circumstances, it is conclusively apparent that there was no opportunity for appellant’s representatives to have done anything about evicting Kuni. Kuni was then the creature of the enforcement officers, not of the permit holder’s representatives. This requires a reversal of this phase of the commission’s order because of this significant gap in the evidence. We must hold that this part of the commission’s order was not supported by reliable, probative or substantial evidence — indeed, by any evidence, and therefore this part of the order is not in accordance with law.

It is appropriate, next, that we recite the facts developed at the commission’s hearing relating to charges 1 and 3 — that “employees” solicited drinks from patrons, and that responsible representatives of the permit holder permitted strangers to solicit patrons for drinks. It is asserted that two dancers, referred to as “Debbie” and “Cha Cha Nova,” were the ones who did the soliciting. The department’s investigator, G-eorge Baker, testified that he was on the permit premises on June 20, 1963, under instructions from Colonel Floyd Moon, Enforcement Chief, using the name “Gene Bradford,” and that he entered about 1:10 a. m. He seated himself at the bar and ordered a drink. After a few minutes, a girl came over to him and said: “My name is Cha Cha.

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Related

Morissette v. United States
342 U.S. 246 (Supreme Court, 1952)
Smith v. Board of Liquor Control
121 N.E.2d 920 (Ohio Court of Appeals, 1954)
Wittenberg v. Board of Liquor Control
80 N.E.2d 711 (Ohio Court of Appeals, 1948)
Ross v. Board of Liquor Control
135 N.E.2d 629 (Ohio Court of Appeals, 1954)

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Bluebook (online)
206 N.E.2d 601, 2 Ohio Misc. 23, 31 Ohio Op. 2d 118, 1964 Ohio Misc. LEXIS 209, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/harstell-operating-co-v-liquor-control-commission-ohctcomplfrankl-1964.