Ketchikan Retail Liquor Dealers Ass'n v. State, Alcoholic Beverage Control Board

602 P.2d 434, 1979 Alas. LEXIS 582
CourtAlaska Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 9, 1979
Docket3697
StatusPublished
Cited by23 cases

This text of 602 P.2d 434 (Ketchikan Retail Liquor Dealers Ass'n v. State, Alcoholic Beverage Control Board) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Alaska Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ketchikan Retail Liquor Dealers Ass'n v. State, Alcoholic Beverage Control Board, 602 P.2d 434, 1979 Alas. LEXIS 582 (Ala. 1979).

Opinions

OPINION

BURKE, Justice.

This is an appeal from a decision of the superior court dismissing an appeal to that court from a decision of the Alcoholic Beverage Control Board. The superior court dismissed the appeal on the ground that the action was not properly before the court under Appellate Rule 45.1 We conclude that the Board’s decision is subject to judicial review, that appellants could properly seek such review under Appellate Rule 45, and that the order of the superior court dismissing the appeal should be reversed.

In April 1977, White Enterprises, Inc., doing business as the Ingersoll Hotel and Heritage Lounge in Ketchikan, Alaska, filed an application with the Alcoholic Beverage Control Board for a beverage dispensary license. Several individuals and the Ketchikan Retail Liquor Dealers Association (hereinafter Association) sent letters to the Board opposing the application. The letters pointed out that Ketchikan had twenty-three liquor licenses in a city with an official population of 7,770, or one for every 338 people. AS 04.10.210 provides that no new license shall be approved for any location where the ratio of such licenses exceeds one for every 1,500 people.2 The letters also contended that the application [436]*436did not meet the criteria for the exception to this requirement relating to tourism.3

The Board considered the application of White Enterprises at a meeting on May 26, 1977, in Ketchikan. Appellants appeared at the meeting and voiced their objections to the issuance of the license. Appellants appeared through counsel; they presented witnesses who were questioned by counsel and by the Board; and they submitted various documents for the Board’s consideration. Representatives of the applicant, White Enterprises, also appeared. They spoke in support of the application and were questioned by counsel for appellants. After discussion, the Board voted to approve the application.

Appellants appealed the Board’s decision to the superior court and moved that the issuance of the license be stayed pending appeal. The State moved to dismiss the appeal, alleging that appellants lacked standing and arguing that an Appellate Rule 45 appeal did not lie from the decision of the Board. Following oral argument the motion to dismiss was granted on September 12, 1977.

The issue in this case is whether appellants have a right to seek judicial review of the Board’s decision in an appeal under Appellate Rule 45.4 The State contends that an Appellate Rule 45 appeal from an administrative decision is available only to parties for review of formal agency adjudications. The State characterizes the Board proceeding on May 25, 1977, as a “regular public meeting” during which only “informal decision-making” took place and at which appellants appeared informally to express opposition to the license application. The State’s position is that, since appellants did not invoke the procedures for a formal hearing under the Administrative Procedure Act (APA), AS 44.62.010 to 44.62.650,5 [437]*437the proceeding was not adjudicatory as to them and they, therefore, may not avail themselves of the judicial review provisions of the Act, AS 44.62.560.6

The State relies on Moore v. State, 553 P.2d 8 (Alaska 1976), where we indicated that judicial review of non-adjudicatory administrative action is properly obtained in an action for declaratory relief, by analogy to AS 44.62.300.7 553 P.2d at 29. Moore, ’however, involved a challenge to an administrative decision by people who, although they were “interested persons,” did not participate in any meeting or other proceeding at which the decision was made. See id. at 14-15. In the case at bar appellants did appear before the Board, and for that reason Moore is not dispositive. It is also significant that Moore involved not an adjudicatory action but administrative action in connection with the sale of oil and gas leases. Moore did not involve an administrative hearing.

AS 04.10.380 provides unequivocally that a decision by the Board to issue a license is subject to review: “An action or decision by the board relating to the issuance, reissuance, suspension or revocation of a license under [title 4] is subject to review.” AS 04.10.380 (in part; emphasis added). There are two statutory provisions which make it clear that the procedural aspects of such review are governed by the APA. First, AS 04.05.030(f) provides that the APA “governs all proceedings” under title 4. Second, AS 44.62.330(a)(17) designates the Board as one of the state agencies whose “procedure . . . shall be conducted” under the APA.8 Since AS 44.62.-330(a) does not limit the application of the APA to “named functions” of the Board, as it does with several other agencies,9 it is clear that the APA is intended to govern all functions of the Board.

The State contends that the judicial review provisions of the APA, AS 44.62.560 and AS 44.62.570, apply only to adjudicatory proceedings, since they are codified in an article of the statutes entitled “Administra[438]*438tive Adjudication.”10 - Initially, we point out that the heading of the article is not determinative, since such headings are not part of the law of Alaska. See AS 01.05.-006.11 Furthermore, we have determined that the Board’s action was an administrative adjudication.12 In any case, however, little is gained from an examination of whether the Board proceeding of May 25, 1977, was an “adjudication” in some technical sense. It was unquestionably an administrative proceeding of some sort, and the important question is what procedural requirements are applicable to that proceeding.13

Both in the superior court and on appeal to this court, the parties have expressed sharply differing views on the nature of the Board proceeding. Appellants contend it was a public hearing; the State views it as simply a public meeting.14 An examination of the record of the Board proceeding could be helpful in determining which characterization is correct. The State, however, has failed to provide to the [439]*439court the transcript of the proceeding or the documents which were presented at the proceeding.15 We therefore assume that appellant’s description of the proceeding is correct,16 and we find that the Board proceeding was a public hearing on a license application.

Such a proceeding is authorized by AS 04.05.030(c), which provides: “The board may hold public hearings on applications for licenses when any applications are protested, and require an applicant to answer any pertinent questions.” A hearing on a license application is also contemplated, though not required, by AS 04.10.280, which provides in part: “At the time set for the hearing, the board shall consider the application and any protests that may be filed against it, and shall hear the applicant or others appearing in connection with the matter, and give judgment upon the application.” As an authorized proceeding of the Board, this hearing was subject to the requirements of the APA.

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Bluebook (online)
602 P.2d 434, 1979 Alas. LEXIS 582, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ketchikan-retail-liquor-dealers-assn-v-state-alcoholic-beverage-control-alaska-1979.