Kantrowitz v. Liquor Control Commission

13 Conn. Super. Ct. 248
CourtConnecticut Superior Court
DecidedMarch 22, 1945
DocketFile No. 45597
StatusPublished

This text of 13 Conn. Super. Ct. 248 (Kantrowitz v. Liquor Control Commission) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Connecticut Superior Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Kantrowitz v. Liquor Control Commission, 13 Conn. Super. Ct. 248 (Colo. Ct. App. 1945).

Opinion

The proceedings challenge the action of the Liquor Control Commission in denying a wholesaler's permit to the appellant, a member of the Connecticut bar, for proposed premises at 553 Campbell Avenue, West Haven.

The appellant, thirty-seven years of age, is the eldest son of Samuel and Esther Kantrowitz; both parents being alive and residing at 891 Hancock Avenue, Bridgeport. In addition to the parents and the appellant, the family group includes three additional sons: Harry, who resides with his parents at the Bridgeport address; Jacob, an overseas member of the United States Army; Abraham, likewise in foreign service with the *Page 249 United States Army; and a sister, whose status and residence are immaterial to this appeal. The appellant is married, residing with his wife in the Town of Fairfield.

As reasons for the denial of Ralph Kantrowitz's application for a wholesale permit, the appellee has assigned the following:

"Unsuitability of Person. "Ralph S. Kantrowitz, applicant for a wholesale liquor permit, at present resides at 891 Hancock Avenue, Bridgeport, Connecticut, with his father, Samuel Kantrowitz, a permittee holding a package store permit at Bridgeport Avenue, Devon, and also a partner with Jacob Kantrowitz, another son, in a package store at 545 Campbell Avenue, West Haven. Harry Kantrowitz, permittee for Jacob Kantrowitz, now in the U.S. Army in Italy, and Samuel Kantrowitz, also lives at 891 Hancock Avenue with father, Samuel, and the applicant.

"The funds to be used in the wholesale business, as testified to by Ralph Kantrowitz under oath at hearing duly called before the Liquor Control Commission, held in its meeting place August 7, 1944, are to be taken from a family fund contributed to by Ralph Kantrowitz, Harry Kantrowitz, and Jacob Kantrowitz, and apparently are under the control, as testified to, of Samuel Kantrowitz, father of the applicant, and, as stated before, owner in one and partner-owner in another package store permit premises.

"It was additionally testified to by Ralph Kantrowitz that a loan of $10,000 was made to him by Jacob Kantrowitz, half-owner of the package store at 545 Campbell Avenue, West Haven, and now in the armed services.

"From the above facts, the Commission concludes that the issuance of a wholesale permit to Ralph S. Kantrowitz would be contrary to the letter and spirit of the statutes in that the owners, partners, backers, or permittees of package store permits would have an interest in a wholesale permit."

The issue presented by this appeal is: Was there legal and reasonable ground for the action of the Commission? In other words, did the Commission act arbitrarily, illegally, or in an abuse of its discretion? Cripps vs. Liquor Control Commission,130 Conn. 693. *Page 250

The "trial de novo", provided by section 463f of the 1941 Supplement to the General Statutes, reveals the appellant as a young man of unquestioned character, who, despite trying personal and economic and family circumstances, persevered to acquire a broad academic training, supplemented by graduate study of law at Harvard University, and immediate admission to the bar of Connecticut. Thereafter, with a brief interlude in general practice, Mr. Kantrowitz associated himself with the Alcohol Tax Unit of the Bureau of Internal Revenue, wherein, for a seven-year period, he rendered satisfactory and honorable government service as an investigator and law enforcement official. This experience was followed by military detail, for a term approximating one and one-half years, with the United States Army as a member of its Intelligence Unit, leading ultimately to the appellant's honorable discharge in December, 1943. Upon his return to civilian status, the appellant not only engaged in the practice of law but assisted his brother, Harry, on a part-time basis, in the operation of the West Haven package store. This activity continued until June, 1944, when Mr. Kantrowitz, fortified by his vast experience with Alcohol Tax Unit, as well as his extensive knowledge of the liquor industry, decided to establish a wholesale liquor business. The appellee's denial of his right to engage in this enterprise has precipitated the present litigation.

Since 1940, members of the Kantrowitz family have been associated with the sale and distribution of liquor through two package store outlets: one, a Devon package store; the other, a West Haven package store. Listed below is a chronological record, from their inception to the present, of the ownership and operation of these outlets; indicating, as it does, the dates on which and the individuals to whom the Liquor Control Commission issued package store permits.

Devon Package Store, 225 Bridgeport Avenue, Devon (Milford):

6-21-40. Permit P-2988 issued to Samuel Kantrowitz, permittee and sole owner. Renewed up to and including 1944. Most recent permit, P-847r, was cancelled 9-18-44.

9-12-44. P-642 issued to Esther Kantrowitz, permittee, Harry Kantrowitz, backer. Still active.

West Haven Package Store, 545 Campbell Avenue, West Haven: *Page 251

9-10-41. Permit P-3280 issued to Jacob Kantrowitz, permittee, Jacob Kantrowitz and Samuel Kantrowitz, backers.

4-24-42. Ralph S. Kantrowitz became permanent substitute.

6-26-42. Above substitution was cancelled and Harry Kantrowitz became substitute.

Renewals were issued to Harry Kantrowitz in 1942 and 1943.

9-10-44. P-645 issued to Harry Kantrowitz, permittee, Harry Kantrowitz and Jacob Kantrowitz, backers. Still active.

An analysis of the foregoing summary discloses that the appellant has had but the slightest official association with the stores; namely, from April 24, 1942, to June 26, 1942, when he acted as substitute permittee at West Haven. Incidentally, this two-month period represented the time which intervened between his resignation from the Alcohol Tax Unit and his entry upon military service.

Having conducted an extended independent inquiry into the Kantrowitz family; its membership; its relationship, one to the other; its finances; its business history; and its operation of the package store outlets, I am able to reach the following conclusions, which, in my judgment, are supported not only by the better evidence but also by every fair and reasonable inference which can be drawn from the exhibits:

1. The appellant maintains and operates his own home, entirely independent of parental or family assistance or influence. This situation existed on August 7, 1944, the date on which his application was heard by the Liquor Control Commission. Thus there was no basis for the appellee's finding that the appellant then resided with his parents, nor was there basis for the appellee's distinct inference, that by reason of this residence, he was subject to family domination, control, or influence.

2. The funds to be used by the appellant in the establishment and operation of his wholesale business are not and were not, on August 7, 1944, family funds. Rather, they are and were the appellant's sole, exclusive, and independent resources reflected by the following accounts, owned wholly by him on August 7, 1944: *Page 252

U.S. Postal Savings . . . . . . . . . . . . . $2,500.00

City Savings Bank (Bridgeport) . . . . . . . . 933.09

Bridgeport-Peoples' Savings Bank (Bridgeport) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4,000.00

3. Neither Harry Kantrowitz nor Jacob Kantrowitz nor Samuel Kantrowitz nor Esther Kantrowitz has any interest in or claim to the aforesaid deposits, nor did they on August 7, 1944.

4.

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Related

State v. Zazzaro
20 A.2d 737 (Supreme Court of Connecticut, 1941)
Cripps v. Liquor Control Commission
37 A.2d 227 (Supreme Court of Connecticut, 1944)

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Bluebook (online)
13 Conn. Super. Ct. 248, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kantrowitz-v-liquor-control-commission-connsuperct-1945.