Hudson Bergen County Retail Liquor Stores Ass'n v. Board of Commissioners

52 A.2d 668, 135 N.J.L. 502, 1947 N.J. LEXIS 236
CourtSupreme Court of New Jersey
DecidedApril 24, 1947
StatusPublished
Cited by43 cases

This text of 52 A.2d 668 (Hudson Bergen County Retail Liquor Stores Ass'n v. Board of Commissioners) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of New Jersey primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hudson Bergen County Retail Liquor Stores Ass'n v. Board of Commissioners, 52 A.2d 668, 135 N.J.L. 502, 1947 N.J. LEXIS 236 (N.J. 1947).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Case, Chief Justice.

This opinion is in the case of John Novak.

The Hudson Bergen County Retail Liquor Stores Association filed its petition of appeal with the State Commissioner of Alcoholic Beverage Control naming as respondents John Novak and the Board of Commissioners of the City of Hoboken. -The petition alleged that on October 2d, 1945, the board had granted Novak’s application for a plenary retail distribution license and had erred therein because the act was an abuse of discretion in that there were already “ample liquor outlets” to serve the needs of the neighborhood and of the city and that the granting of the licenses was socially undesirable. The board and Novak answered separately, admitting the granting of the license, otherwise denying the allegations *505 of the petition and setting up that the Board of Commissioners was vested with authority to issue the license and that the appellant hied the petition for the selfish purpose of unlawfully establishing a monopoly in itself and its members; and Novak added the allegation that the municipality had the authority to determine the number of licenses.

At the hearing de novo before the Commissioner the appellant put in proof tending to show that the City of Hoboken was “a mile square city,” that in 1940 its population, according to census, was 50,000; that the number of licenses was 238 on August 1st, 1945, and that the granting of twelve additional licenses since that date brought the number to 250; that 250 licenses meant one license to every 200 of the population, including men, women and children, or, allowing a recognized deduction of forty per cent, of the total population for persons under twenty-one years of age and therefore not lawful patrons, a licensed place for every 120 adults; that although there had been an influx of workers due to war conditions these persons were mainly daily transients and not residents; that within approximately a two block radius of Novak’s establishment there were twelve other licensed places; that all of the city licensees were members of the appellant organization and that the objection to the new licenses was that the city liad reached the saturation point; that every municipality in Hudson County except Hoboken and all of the cities in the state comparable in size to Hoboken had limitation ordinances; that the number of licenses in Hoboken was at the lowest per capita, of population in the state and that the resulting condition was “terrible.” The respondents took no testimony.

The Commissioner correctly set up as his standard for decision that the issuance of retail liquor licenses in the first instance rested within the reasonable discretion of the local issuing authority, that in the absence of an abuse of such discretion the action of the authority in issuing licenses should not be disturbed and that, therefore, the question for determination by him was whether the respondent board had abused its discretion in granting the additional distribution licenses. He held that the issuing of liquor licenses without regard for *506 the paramount issue of public necessity and convenience constitutes an abuse of discretion, that the license in dispute had been so issued, that any presumption of validity of the act of the board in granting the application had been negatived by the ratio of licenses to population, that public necessity did not require the additional license, that the Board of Commissioners' had “run riot” in the granting of licenses and that therefore the license involved herein, with other licenses, should be canceled. The matter went on writ of certiorari to the Supreme Court which held that Hudson Bergen County Eetail Liquor Stores Association was not a taxpayer or an aggrieved person and was not found by the Commissioner to be such and therefore, inasmuch as the statutory appeal was given to “any taxpayer or other aggrieved person opposing the issuance of such license” (2?. S. 33 :l-22), was not in position to take the appeal to the Commissioner, and, further, that the act of the board in granting the license was not such an abuse of discretion as warranted the revocation of the license. The original appellant now appeals from that judgment of the Supreme Court.

The sale of intoxicating liquor has from the earliest history of our state been dealt with by legislation in an exceptional way. In its legal significance it is sui generis. “It is a subject by itself, to the treatment of which all the analogies of the law, appropriate to other topics, cannot be applied.” Paul v. Gloucester County, 50 N. J. L. 585, 595. “The sale of intoxicating liquor is in a class by itself.” Bumball v. Burnett, 115 Id. 254. “The right to regulate the sale of intoxicating liquors by the legislature, or by municipal or other authority under legislative power given, is within the police power of the state, and is practically limitless. It may extend to the prohibition of the sale altogether. A license is not a contract. It is a mere privilege.” Meehan v. Excise Commissioners, 73 Id. 382; affirmed, 75 Id. 557. “There is no inherent power in a citizen to sell intoxicating liquors by retail. It is not a privilege of a citizen of the state or of a citizen of the United States. As it is a business attended with danger to the community it may be entirely prohibited or be permitted under such conditions as will limit to the *507 utmost its evils.” Crowley v. Christensen, 137 U. S. 86; 34 L. Ed. 620. “The liquor business is peculiarly subject to strict governmental control.” Franklin Stores Co. v. Burnett, 120 N. J. L. 596.

The licensing tribunal is as the legislature may determine. Under YII Anne (Kinsey ch. XY) licenses were granted by “the Justices of the Peace in their Sessions or under the Hands and 'Seals of two Justices of the Peace out of the Sessions, the one of them being of the Quorum,.” By XII George II (Nevill ch. LX) the authority was limited to the justices in open session only. Under the act of February 24th, 1797, it was in the Court of General Quarter Sessions. Pal. p. 235. By the Inns and Taverns Act of 1846 {Rev., p. 577; 3 Comp. Stat., p. 2890) it was in the Court of Common Pleas. Subject to the diversion of the power from time to time to one and another class of municipalities, the Court of Common Pleas remained the basic licensing body until the repealer of 1934 (chapter 32, Pamph. L. 1934) which dovetailed with the present Alcoholic Beverage Control Act, chapter 436, Pamph. L. 1933. Both statutes became operative upon the repeal of national prohibition. By R. S. 33 :1-21, the Court of Common Pleas was the issuing authority in sixth class counties until the repealer of 1942 (chapter 159, Pamph. L. 1942). There is no merit in the contention that the authority to issue or control licenses must, constitutionally, be placed within the municipality.

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Bluebook (online)
52 A.2d 668, 135 N.J.L. 502, 1947 N.J. LEXIS 236, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hudson-bergen-county-retail-liquor-stores-assn-v-board-of-commissioners-nj-1947.