Jimbo's Hispanic Cafe, Inc. v. Arico, 93-6779 (1994)

CourtSuperior Court of Rhode Island
DecidedMay 13, 1994
DocketC.A. No. P.C. 93-6779
StatusUnpublished

This text of Jimbo's Hispanic Cafe, Inc. v. Arico, 93-6779 (1994) (Jimbo's Hispanic Cafe, Inc. v. Arico, 93-6779 (1994)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Superior 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
Jimbo's Hispanic Cafe, Inc. v. Arico, 93-6779 (1994), (R.I. Ct. App. 1994).

Opinion

[EDITOR'S NOTE: This case is unpublished as indicated by the issuing court.]

DECISION
This civil action is an administrative appeal pursuant toG.L. 1956 (1993 Reenactment) § 42-35-15 from a decision of the defendant Liquor Control Administrator (hereinafter simply "the Administrator"), issued on November 9, 1993, which denied and dismissed the plaintiff's appeal from the denial by the Board of License Commissioners of the City of Central Falls (hereinafter "the Board") of a transfer of the plaintiff's Class BV beverage license to 55 Sheridan Street in the City of Central Falls. This Court has jurisdiction pursuant to G.L. 1956 (1987 Reenactment)§ 3-3-9. The plaintiff's complaint was filed on December 10, 1993. Initial briefing was completed on March 8, 1994 and the records of the Administrator were certified on March 31, 1994. The case was assigned to this Justice for decision on March 31, 1994. The Court requested that the Attorney General file a memorandum regarding the constitutionality of G.L. 1956 (1987Reenactment) § 3-7-19, as amended. The Attorney General intervened and filed a memorandum on April 21, 1994. The plaintiff filed a response on April 25, 1994. This matter is now in order for decision.

I
The historical facts as found by the Administrator in his decision are undisputed. For several years the premises at 55 Sheridan Street in Central Falls were occupied and used as the location of a licensed beverage establishment known as the "Sportsman." On November 28, 1990 the United States Drug Enforcement Administration raided the premises and ultimately seized the real estate and fixtures at that location, but not its Class BV license. On September 9, 1991 the beverage license then held by the owners of the "Sportsman's Lounge" at 55 Sheridan Street was revoked by the Board. Apparently, no appeal was taken from that revocation by any party in interest, including the United States. The plaintiff has entered into a purchase and sale agreement with the United States of these premises subject to approval of the transfer of its existing Class BV license from Cowden Street to 55 Sheridan Street. The Administrator and the Board found that the plaintiff is an otherwise qualified person to hold a beverage license under the law of this State.

The Administrator found that all of the owners of private real property within a two hundred (200) foot radius surrounding the proposed premises at 55 Sheridan Street have objected in writing to the granting of a Class BV beverage license at the location. On October 1, 1992 the City of Central Falls changed the zoning classification of the premises at 55 Sheridan Street from a C-2 commercial district, in which beverage establishments are permitted, to an M-2 manufacturing zone, in which they are not.

The Administrator concluded as a matter of law that §3-7-19 barred approval of the transfer because of the remonstrance of owners of the greater part of the land within the two-hundred-foot radius. He also concluded that because the zoning of the proposed premises does not permit its use for the sale of beverages, the transfer cannot be approved.

II
The question of the constitutionality of the application of§ 3-7-19 to the plaintiff's request to transfer its license depends upon the construction of the statute and the precedential value of Bourque v. Dettore, 589 A.2d 815 (R.I. 1991) to the facts of this case. It presents for decision the question left open by the Supreme Court in El Nido, Inc. v. Goldstein,626 A.2d 239, 241, fn. 1 (R.I. 1993).

The plaintiff argues that § 3-7-19 applies only to the original issue of the licenses mentioned in the section at a given location and not to the transfer of an already issued license from one location to another under § 3-5-19. It does acknowledge that there is language in Ramsay v. Sarkas,110 R.I. 590, 597, 295 A.2d 416, 420 (1972) which suggests that an applicant for the transfer of a license is subject to the same conditions of remonstration as an application for an original issuance.

The Administrator has construed the meaning of § 3-7-19 to include the transfer of existing licenses from one location to another. He derives this construction from an analysis of the point of view of the abutting landowners. As to them, the owners of a greater part of the land within the defined radius can exclude a license from their immediate neighborhood. It makes no logical difference to these landowners whether the sale of alcoholic beverages they want to exclude is pursuant to an originally granted license or one transferred from another location. So far as they are concerned someone wants to sell alcoholic beverages in a place in their neighborhood where no one presently has a license to do so. There is no reason for the General Assembly to have intended to treat transfer applications differently from original applications.

The plaintiff recognizes the persuasive power of the Administrator's construction when it argues that in this case this transfer should not be subject to § 3-7-19 because of the long-standing, pre-existing license at the location, for which the plaintiff wishes to "substitute" its existing license. It argues that the intent of the General Assembly was to permit a neighborhood veto only where an applicant seeks to use a parcel of land for the first time as a location for the sale of beverages under the licenses mentioned in § 3-7-19. According to its reasoning it is only "taking-over" the former owners' license with its own.

The plaintiff does concede that Bourque v. Dettore, supra, disposes of any contention that § 3-7-19 is an invalid delegation of legislative power. It argues that its situation is factually different from the applicant in that case, and so the holding in that case that a substantially identical remonstrance provision did not deprive an applicant of property without due process or deny it equal protection of the law does not apply to it.

The plaintiff contends that it has somehow succeeded to the property interests of the former holders of the Class BV license at 55 Sheridan Street. Its argument is that when the United States seized the premises it also seized the right to conduct a licensed retail beverage establishment. Presumably, when the United States agreed to sell the premises to the plaintiff, it agreed to transfer those premises as a location for a going restaurant business. If that business, before it was seized, had enjoyed a license to sell alcoholic beverages, that license might then have been transferred to a buyer, subject to approval of the buyer by the licensing authorities and to other conditions which apply to transfers from an existing holder to a new one. In this case, the plaintiff says, it didn't need a holder-to-holder transfer because it already held an appropriate license for another location.

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409 U.S. 109 (Supreme Court, 1973)
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Town of Coventry v. Glickman
429 A.2d 440 (Supreme Court of Rhode Island, 1981)
Bourque v. Dettore
589 A.2d 815 (Supreme Court of Rhode Island, 1991)
Ramsay v. Sarkas
295 A.2d 416 (Supreme Court of Rhode Island, 1972)
Tisdall Co. C. v. Board of Aldermen C.
188 A. 648 (Supreme Court of Rhode Island, 1936)
El Nido, Inc. v. Goldstein
626 A.2d 239 (Supreme Court of Rhode Island, 1993)

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Bluebook (online)
Jimbo's Hispanic Cafe, Inc. v. Arico, 93-6779 (1994), Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jimbos-hispanic-cafe-inc-v-arico-93-6779-1994-risuperct-1994.