Lance License

83 Pa. D. & C. 150, 1952 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 261
CourtSusquehanna County Court of Quarter Sessions
DecidedApril 14, 1952
Docketno. 2
StatusPublished

This text of 83 Pa. D. & C. 150 (Lance License) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Susquehanna County Court of Quarter Sessions primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lance License, 83 Pa. D. & C. 150, 1952 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 261 (Pa. Super. Ct. 1952).

Opinion

Little, P. J.,

This is an appeal by Stella and Richard Lance from the order of the Pennsylvania Liquor Control Board dated April 27, 1951, refusing their application for a restaurant liquor license and amusement permit for a resort area.

The board assigned two reasons: (1) That under the terms of the act of assembly the quota for Herrick Township is one license and such license has been secured and is now in effect; (2) that the establishment for which license was requested is not in a resort area and, therefore, refused the application for restaurant liquor license and amusement permit applied for by Philip Skotz, Stella and Richard A. Lance for premises located in Herrick Township, Susquehanna County. [151]*151The name Philip Skotz does not appear in the present appeal.

The Pennsylvania Liquor Control Board has the power to increase the number of licenses in any municipality which, in the opinion of the board, is located within a resort area. See Act of June 24, 1939, P. L. 806, sec. 3; Liquor Code of April 12, 1951, P. L. 90, sec. 461(6). The above acts are deemed to be the exercise of the Commonwealth’s police power for the protection of public welfare, the health, peace and morals of the people of this Commonwealth and to prohibit forever the open saloon. It was provided that all of the provisions and every section of the acts should be liberally construed for the accomplishment of these purposes. See 47 PS §1-104.

The intent of the legislature was well stated by the Superior Court in Commonwealth v. Bienkowski, 137 Pa. Superior Ct. 474, where it was held that the purpose of the Liquor Control Act is to control the sale of liquor, to regulate and restrain the sale of liquor, and not to promote the sale of it.

The control board is vested with discretion in determining whether more licenses than the number allowed by the quota under the Acts of 1939 and 1951 should be issued in a resort area.

Courts should not be astute to find an abuse of this discretion. It is our mission to determine whether there was an abuse of discretion and, if so, correct it; it is neither our privilege nor our right to supplant the board’s discretion with our own.

In Dauphin County Grand Jury Investigation Proceedings (No. 3), 332 Pa. 358, 364, “discretion” is aptly defined as follows:

“In our own state it was said as long ago as Paschall v. Passmore, 15 Pa. 295, 304: ‘The very term (discretion) itself, standing alone and unsupported by cir[152]*152cumstances, imports the exercise of judgment, wisdom, and skill, as contradistinguished from unthinking folly, heady violence, and rash injustice. When technically employed in legal instruments, its proper acceptation. is inseparable from the idea of dispassionate conclusion, having due regard to the rights and interests of others’. . . .”

It is the latitude or extent within which a court, or an officer clothed with it, may render a decision based upon circumstances established in any particular case according to his best judgment rather than one that accords with some fixed or established rule of law.

It has not been seriously contended that the quota under the Acts of 1939 and 1951 permits of more than one license for Herrick Township, in fact, it could not be, since there are less than 500 permanent residents. Appellants rest their case on the fact that Herrick Township is a resort area, that there is a necessity for the license and that the board’s refusal constituted an “arbitrary and capricious exercise of the board’s discretion.”

A “place of resort” is defined in State v. Cumberland Club, 112 Me. 196, 91 Atl. 911, wherein at page 200, it is said:

“One well-recognized definition of ‘place of resort’ —and there are others — applies particularly well in this case, namely, a place to which persons commonly and habitually resort.”

It is a place of frequent assembly, a haunt, for the entertainment of others than the inhabitants. We think a “resort area” is one where people go for entertainment, relaxation and rest, where accommodations and means of amusement are maintained.

To accord with the intent of the legislature in adopting the provisions of the related statutes with reference to “resort area” we would define a “resort area” to be an area set aside for entertainment, rest and [153]*153relaxation, and for a like definition see License of Brindle, 32 Erie 281, 282 (1950). Where there are facilities of this nature to a limited extent, the area does not thereby become a resort area.

It appears from the evidence that appellants own a neat, well-equipped restaurant amid pleasant surroundings at Lowe Lake in Herrick Township. Fiddle and Lewis Lake are not far away and all three are largely surrounded by cottages or cottage lots. There is a ski tow on Elk Mountain about three and one-half miles from plaintiff’s property. Lewis Lake is distant about two miles and Fiddle Lake about four. There is ice skating in the winter and hunting through the game seasons in this area. At times when snow conditions are favorable the ski tow on Elk Mountain is in operation.

Several of applicants’ witnesses testified that appellants’ property, in their opinion, was situated in a resort area. With this we cannot agree. The presence of cottages around several lakes and a ski tow several miles away, with a restaurant and cabins located at one of the lakes does not change a well known dairying and farming area into a resort area. The cottages are maintained for the use of the owners, the ski tow is for ski enthusiasts and their followers and is seasonal; hunting, fishing, swimming and ice skating prevail on or about all of the lakes in Susquehanna County; we can find no evidence sufficient to convince us that there is any greater indulgence in those sports in this area than in any other part of the county where lakes abound. Plaintiffs’ claim, that many people visit the cottage owners over the week-end as guests, would not constitute the territory a resort area. The Liquor Control Board’s determination that Herrick Township is not a resort area was not an abuse of discretion.

Appellants allege that the action of the Liquor Control Board in concluding from the bare fact that the [154]*154quota had been filled, that there are sufficient licenses and for that reason to hold that applicants are not entitled to a license, was an arbitrary and capricious exercise of the board’s discretion.

The board in a reasonable use of its discretion had found that there is no necessity for an additional license. Having so determined after proper investigation the board had not the power to grant the requested license. The test to be applied is not whether it would be convenient and. pleasant to have another license but whether those license holders at present in the business are adequately equipped to supply the demand of those living in, and those frequenting the area in question.

Appellants on the witness stand expressed the opinion that there was a need for another license. Of the witnesses called by appellants, Orville Romick testified that probably 400 to 700 people come week-ends during the summer to Lowe Lake where he has a cottage. As to the necessity for another license, he said: “I would say probably there is a need of a restaurant, but a liquor license, it is hard to say just what need there ever is for a liquor license ... I am at a loss what to say; however, I think I will say there is a need for a restaurant liquor license.”

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Related

Dauphin County Grand Jury Investigation Proceedings
2 A.2d 809 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1938)
Commonwealth v. Bienkowski
9 A.2d 169 (Superior Court of Pennsylvania, 1939)
State v. Cumberland Club
91 A. 911 (Supreme Judicial Court of Maine, 1914)
Paschall v. Passmore
15 Pa. 295 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1851)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
83 Pa. D. & C. 150, 1952 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 261, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lance-license-paqtrsesssusque-1952.