Kentucky Licensed Beverage Ass'n v. Louisville-Jefferson County Metro Government

127 S.W.3d 647, 2004 Ky. LEXIS 39, 2004 WL 315033
CourtKentucky Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 19, 2004
Docket2002-SC-0198-DG
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 127 S.W.3d 647 (Kentucky Licensed Beverage Ass'n v. Louisville-Jefferson County Metro Government) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Kentucky Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Kentucky Licensed Beverage Ass'n v. Louisville-Jefferson County Metro Government, 127 S.W.3d 647, 2004 Ky. LEXIS 39, 2004 WL 315033 (Ky. 2004).

Opinions

Opinion of the Court by

Justice STUMBO.

This case originated when Appellants, Kentucky Licensed Beverage Association and Jill Schulte, filed a complaint for declaratory and injunctive relief in the Jefferson Circuit Court challenging the validity of Jefferson County Ordinance 27, Series 1999 (Ordinance). Appellants take issue with the Ordinance, particularly section 113.99(B), which allows the Administrator and Board of the Jefferson County Alcoholic Beverage Control (ABC) to hold any person who violates sections 113.19 through 113.30 of the Ordinance hable for civil penalties. Specifically, Appellants allege that the Louisville-Jefferson County Metro Government (previously Jefferson County Fiscal Court, and hereinafter referred to as the “Metro Government”) is without the authority to enact an ordinance that vests the local ABC Administrator with jurisdiction to impose civil fines upon employees of licensees. The trial court entered an order upholding the Ordinance and the Court of Appeals affirmed. Because the General Assembly has previously enacted a comprehensive scheme of legislation dealing with the regulation of alcoholic beverages, codified at KRS Chapter 241 through Chapter 244, which prescribes no means whereby the local ABC Administrator can levy civil fines upon a non-licensee, we find that the Metro Government has impermissibly granted authority to the local ABC Administrator, which is not provided for by any state statute. See KRS 82.082; Whitehead v. Estate of Bravard, Ky., 719 S.W.2d 720 (1986). Accordingly, we re[649]*649verse the decision of the Jefferson Circuit Court and the Court of Appeals.

Section 113.99(B) reads as follows:

Any person or entity who violates the provisions of 113.19 through 113.30 shall appear before the County Administrator or the Jefferson County Alcoholic Beverage Control Board hearing officer for a civil hearing, and is subject to a civil penalty of not less than $100 and not more than $500 for each violation if convicted. This section shall not apply to obligations imposed upon the Administrator or his or her employees under those sections.

Sections 113.19 through 113.30 seek to prohibit the sale of alcoholic beverages to minors and regulate in various ways the manner in which licensees maintain their premises.

KRS 67.083(3)(n) grants the fiscal court of any county the authority to enact ordinances involving the regulation of the sale of alcoholic beverages. The statute also provides that when regulating an area of law that the state also regulates, a county government must enact “ordinances which are consistent with state law or administrative regulation.” KRS 67.083(6). “A fiscal court does not have any power except that conferred by statute and it possesses no authority not delegated to it, expressly or impliedly, by some provision of law.” Bickett v. Palmer-Ball, Ky., 470 S.W.2d 341, 343 (1971). Likewise, KRS 82.082 reads:

(1) A city may exercise any power and perform any function ... that is in furtherance of a public purpose of the city and not in conflict with a constitutional provision or statute.
(2) A power or function is in conflict with a statute if it is expressly prohibited by a statute or there is a comprehensive scheme of legislation on the same general subject embodied in the Kentucky Revised Statutes ....

(Emphasis added).1 This Court has previously found that the General Assembly has provided a comprehensive scheme of legislation regulating the manufacturing, sale, and distribution of alcoholic beverages through its enactment of KRS Chapters 241 through 244. Whitehead, supra, at 722-723. Accordingly, the Metro Government’s ordinance is in conflict with state statutes on the subject and is not authorized pursuant to any home rule statute cited above. Therefore, in absence of a particular grant of authority to regulate non-licensees by the imposition of civil fines in KRS 241 et seq., the Metro Government is without authority to apply the penalties set forth in the Ordinance to non-licensees. See Boyle v. Campbell, Ky., 450 S.W.2d 265, 268 (1970) (invalidating a city ordinance dealing with Sunday Closing laws, and holding that “if the doctrines of ‘preemption’ and ‘conflict’ are not disposi-tive ... there is a basic concept which invalidates this ordinance .... that the City of Bowling Green simply lacks the authority by local law to amend, modify, interpret or construe at [sic] state statute”).

Appellants point out that nowhere in KRS Chapters 241 through 244, governing the sale, manufacture, and distribution of alcoholic beverages, is a legislative grant of authority that permits the local ABC Board or Administrator to impose civil fines upon non-licensees. KRS 241.060(1) [650]*650states that the state board shall have the functions, powers, and duties:

To promulgate reasonable administrative regulations governing procedures relative to the applications for and revocations of licenses, the supervision and control of the use, manufacture, sale, transportation, storage, advertising, and trafficking of alcoholic beverages, and all other matters over which the board has jurisdiction.

KRS 241.140 states:

The functions of each county administrator shall be the same, with respect to local licenses and regulations, as the functions of the board with respect to state licenses and regulations, except that no regulation adopted by a county administrator may be less stringent than statutes relative to alcoholic beverage control or than the regulations of the board.

The Metro Government refers us to no other statute that grants it the authority to impose civil fines upon non-licensees. It merely argues that since in Commonwealth v. White, Ky., 3 S.W.3d 353 (1999), this Court construed KRS 244.080 as being broad enough to include employees of licensees within its purview by holding “retail licensees” criminally responsible for selling alcohol to minors, we should now subject employees to civil fines levied by the local ABC Administrator as well. In White

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127 S.W.3d 647, 2004 Ky. LEXIS 39, 2004 WL 315033, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kentucky-licensed-beverage-assn-v-louisville-jefferson-county-metro-ky-2004.