In re Alaska Labor Trades Ass'n

10 Alaska 472
CourtDistrict Court, D. Alaska
DecidedFebruary 5, 1945
DocketNo. 909
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 10 Alaska 472 (In re Alaska Labor Trades Ass'n) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Alaska primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In re Alaska Labor Trades Ass'n, 10 Alaska 472 (D. Alaska 1945).

Opinion

DIMOND, Judge.

This is a hearing on an application for a liquor license by the Alaska Labor Trades Association (Inc.) a non-profit corporation organized under the laws of Alaska, commonly known, from the initials of its name, as the Alta Club. It will be hereinafter referred to as “the club.” The premises occupied by the club are located at 435 Fifth Street in the City of Anchorage, Alaska. The owner of the premises is another but the club occupies through Z. E. Eagleston, a resident of Anchorage who holds a lease on the premises entered into on April 1, 1944 by E. R. Tarwater, the then owner, now deceased, for a term to expire on July 31, 1948, at rental of $75 per month and containing provision forbidding assignment of the lease or underletting without the written consent of the lessor or his attorney. •

Upon the filing of the application it was referred, under Territorial law, to the City Council of the City of Anchorage. On January 18 there was filed in the office of the clerk of the court the certificate of the acting city clerk to the effect that the application had been presented to and was approved by the city council at a regular meeting held on January 17, 1945. On January 20, 1945, Noel K. Wennblom, United States Attorney for the Third Division, Territory of Alaska, filed herein a protest against the issuance of a license to the applicant upon the grounds: (1) that a person other than the applicant had and has a financial interest in the business for which the license is sought; (2) that during the year 1944 while the premises were used [475]*475under the same type of license, such premises were not always made easily accessible for inspection by municipal officers and that such officers were by actual force prevented from making an inspection of said premises while the premises were under the same management as at the present time; and (3) that during the year 1944 said premises and business were frequently operated in violation of municipal ordinances of the City of Anchorage governing the hours of operation of liquor selling establishments. Mr. Wennblom is not here an interloper, for the applicable law hereinafter quoted places upon him responsibility as to its enforcement.

The applicant objected to the sufficiency of the protest but the objections were overruled by the court and the application set down for hearing. At the hearing oral testimony was taken and a number of exhibits were offered and received in evidence.

The application is made under an act of the Alaska Territorial Legislature, largely embraced in Chapter 78 of the Session Laws of Alaska 1937 as amended. The relevant provisions of the act and other laws having relation to the question involved, follow:

“Section 1. That no person, firm, corporation or company shall manufacture, sell, offer for sale or keep for sale, traffic in, barter or exchange for goods in this Territory, any intoxicating liquor except as hereinafter provided; but this shall not apply to sales made by a person under provisions of law requiring him to sell personal property. Whenever the term ‘intoxicating liquor’ is used in this Act it shall be deemed to include whiskey, brandy, rum, gin, wine, ale, porter, beer, hoochinoo and all spirituous, vinous, malt and other fermented or distilled liquors.
“Section 2. That the licenses provided for in this Act shall be issued by the Clerk of the District Court or any subdivision thereof in compliance with the order of the Court or Judge thereof duly made and entered; and the Clerk of the Court shall keep a full record of all applica[476]*476tions for licenses and of all recommendations for and remonstrances against the granting of licenses and of the action of the Court thereon.
“Section 3. That before any license is granted, as provided in this Act, it shall be shown to the satisfaction of the Court that a majority of the citizens over the age of twenty-one years, residing within two miles of the place where intoxicating liquor is to be manufactured, bartered, sold and exchanged, or bartered, sold or exchanged, have in good faith consented to the manufacture, barter, sale and exchange, or the barter, sale and exchange of the same; and the burden shall be upon the applicant or applicants to show to the satisfaction of the Court that a majority of the citizens over twenty-one years of age have consented thereto and no license shall be granted in the absence of such evidence; provided, that when it is made to appear that a majority of said citizens over the age of twenty-one years of any one place have consented to the manufacture, barter, sale and exchange or the barter, sale and exchange of intoxicating liquor, no further proof of the consent of the citizens of the place where such intoxicating liquor is to be manufactured, bartered, sold and exchanged, or bartered, sold and exchanged, will be required for twelve months thereafter.
“Provided, however, that any application for a license coming from,within an incorporated town, shall have attached thereto in lieu of a majority of the citizens of that district, a list of at least five references as to the integrity of the applicant and the desirability of the issuing of a license for the premises mentioned therein. The Clerk of the Court, upon receipt of each application from within an incorporated town, shall notify the city council of that town of the necessity for action on the application by the council, in regular or special meeting and the filing with the Clerk of the Court of a certificate showing the action taken. A failure of the municipal officers to act upon applications for licenses within the period specified in the notice furnished them shall be considered a default and shall subject [477]*477the city to the penalty of losing its right to a refund as herein provided. At the time set for the hearing, the Court shall consider the application and any protests that may he filed against the same, and shall also hear the applicant or others appearing in connection with the matter, and give its judgment, which shall be final. If the application is rejected the fee accompanying the same shall be returned. The licensee shall cause the license to be posted in a conspicuous .position in his place of business, so that anyone entering the premises may easily read it. No license issued under the provisions of this Act shall be transferred except after first securing the consent of the Court. No refund of license fees will be allowed after the issuance of license.
“Section 4. Applications. All applicants for licenses mentioned herein shall file with the Clerk of the District Court an application in writing, signed and sworn to by the applicant, giving his name and address, and, if a corporation, executed by the duly authorized officers thereof, containing the following:
“(1) Kind of license desired:
“(2) A description of the place for which the license is desired, giving address by street and number, or other information, so that the location can be definitely determined ;
“(3) A statement of the citizenship or corporate qualifications of the applicant;
“(4) The necessary license fee;
“(5) Together with the consent of a majority of citizens over the age of twenty-one years, residing within two miles of the place where the intoxicating liquor or liquors are to be manufactured, bartered, sold and exchanged, or bartered, sold and exchanged.

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10 Alaska 472, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-alaska-labor-trades-assn-akd-1945.