Independent Beer Distributors Ass'n v. Liquor Control Hearing Board

180 A.2d 805, 94 R.I. 354, 1962 R.I. LEXIS 82
CourtSupreme Court of Rhode Island
DecidedMay 9, 1962
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 180 A.2d 805 (Independent Beer Distributors Ass'n v. Liquor Control Hearing Board) 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
Independent Beer Distributors Ass'n v. Liquor Control Hearing Board, 180 A.2d 805, 94 R.I. 354, 1962 R.I. LEXIS 82 (R.I. 1962).

Opinion

Powers, J.

This is a petition for certiorari brought to review the decision of the liquor control hearing board, hereinafter called the board, quashing an amendment to Rule 53 of the rules and regulations of the liquor control administration promulgated by the administrator. We issued the writ and pursuant thereto the respondent board duly certified the appropriate records to this court for our inspection.

It appears therefrom that on September 3, 1959, the then liquor control administrator, hereinafter called the administrator, held a public hearing to consider the advisability of amending an existing regulation designated as Rule 53. The rule as it then stood placed a limit of thirty days’ credit on the sale of alcoholic beverages, excluding malt beverages, from wholesalers to retail licensees. Its validity was considered and upheld by this court in Sepe v. Daneker, 76 R. I. 160, and no question is raised as to the legality of the amendment as proposed, namely, the extension of the rule to cover malt beverages.

The administrator was acting pursuant to G. L. 1956, §3-5-20, which authorizes the department of business regulation to malee and promulgate such rules, and §3-2-2 which specifically designates the liquor control administration as the appropriate agency within the department for such purpose. Some question has been raised as to the lack of a proper showing that the administrator had been authorized by the department director to act in the premises. No such question has been raised by the director, however, and is therefore not relevant by virtue of G. L. 1956, §42-6-8.

Although no statutory provision exists as a prerequisite to the adoption or promulgation of any rule or amendment [356]*356thereto, the administrator advertised and conducted the hearing of September 3, 1959 in compliance with an executive order issued by the then governor on July 1, 1959. It would seem that the intendment of said order was to provide for such a public hearing as a matter of executive policy, if practicable, whenever any rule affecting the public was to be promulgated, amended or repealed. The order, or directive, applied to all departments over which the governor could properly exercise control and was not limited to the department of business regulation or the liquor control administration.

It further appears from the record that in response to the public notice numerous wholesale and retail alcohol beverage licensees appeared in person or were represented by counsel at the September 3, 1959 hearing. Norman B. Gillespie, the then administrator, called it to order, caused the proposed amendment to- be read, and allotted an hour for each contending faction to register its views. Time was also allotted for the general public as distinguished from licensees.

The petitioners were among those to be heard in person, or represented by counsel, as favoring the adoption of the proposed amendment. Among those appearing in opposition were licensees who subsequently appealed from the promulgation of the amendment to the board and were permitted by this court to intervene in the instant proceedings as amici curiae.

Considerable testimony, documents and petitions were received by the administrator on both sides of the question. He adjourned the hearing assuring all parties that their respective views would be carefully weighed and considered by him in passing on the advisability of promulgating the proposed amendment. The transcript of the hearing was subsequently introduced as an exhibit at the hearing before the board and was certified to this court as a part of the record in the instant proceedings.

[357]*357The record further discloses that on October 8, 9 and 10, 1959 there appeared in the Providence Journal,- a daily newspaper published in the city of Providence, the following notice:

“State of Rhode Island
Business Regulation
Liquor Control Division
Oct. 7, 1959
Amendment of Rule promulgated pursuant to Section 3-5-20 of Title 3 of the General Laws of Rhode Island, 1956, as amended, as follows:
Rule 53, as amended. No alcoholic beverages shall be sold by any manufacturer or wholesaler to any retailer, nor shall any retailer purchase any alcoholic beverages except for cash or on terms requiring payment !by the purchaser within thirty days from date of delivery, provided, however, that current accounts payable, at the time of the effective date of this rule, for the purchase of malt beverages by retailers shall be liquidated within one year from the effective date of this rule.
Each delivery of alcoholic beverages to a licensee shall be accompanied by an invoice of sale or delivery slip which shall bear as its date, the date of delivery of such alcoholic beverages.
No manufacturer or wholesaler shall sell, except for cash, any alcoholic beverages to any retailer with knowledge that such retailer is in arrears for the payment of such alcoholic beverages, as provided by this rule, nor shall any retailer purchase any alcoholic beverages except for cash while in arrears for the payment of any alcoholic beverages, as provided by this rule, unless written permission of the Liquor Control Administrator is granted to a retailer because of death, sickness, hardship, or other good cause shown and under such terms and conditions as the Administrator deems necessary. All purchases of alcoholic beverages on credit by a retailer under such written permission of the Liquor Control Administrator shall be reported to the Administrator [358]*358by the manufacturer or wholesaler and by the retailer.
Effective date October 22, 1959.
Norman E. Gillespi
Liquor Control Administrator”
G. L. 1956, §3-5-20, provides in part:
“* * * the adoption or authorization of rules or regulations by the department and the modification or repeal of any rules and regulations previously adopted shall be by written order of said department, notice of entry of which shall be published three (3) times in a daily newspaper published in the city of Providence, the last publication to be not less than ten (10) days prior to the effective date of such rule or regulation, authorization, modification or repeal * * *.”
The foregoing section further provides:
“* * * and any person, firm or corporation directly and adversely affected thereby may appeal from the entry of such order to the liquor control hearing board within five (5) days after such last publication of notice, in accordance with such rules of procedure as shall be established by said hearing board, for a determination of the reasonableness and validity of such rule, regulation, authorization, modification or repeal * * * ))

Thereafter, within five days of the last publication, numerous wholesale and retail licensees appealed to the board as persons or firms having been directly and adversely affected. Since the effect of the rule as thus amended was to restrict the granting of credit by wholesalers and the use of credit by retailers, we entertain no doubt about their right to appeal to the board under G. L. 1956, §§3-3-5 and 3-5-20.

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Bluebook (online)
180 A.2d 805, 94 R.I. 354, 1962 R.I. LEXIS 82, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/independent-beer-distributors-assn-v-liquor-control-hearing-board-ri-1962.