Lou-Val Co. v. Doran

29 F.2d 408, 1928 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1598
CourtDistrict Court, E.D. Pennsylvania
DecidedDecember 8, 1928
DocketNo. 4733
StatusPublished

This text of 29 F.2d 408 (Lou-Val Co. v. Doran) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, E.D. Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lou-Val Co. v. Doran, 29 F.2d 408, 1928 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1598 (E.D. Pa. 1928).

Opinion

DICKINSON, District Judge.

An outline of the fact situation is that the plaintiff has an existing permit; that it desires to have it extended or amended, or a new permit to issue (whatever the appropriate phrase is); that it has complied with all the formalities required by the law and the regulations; and that the Commissioner has refused the application. The ground of the refusal is the finding of the Commissioner that the permittee “is not a fit person” to hold a permit.

The plaintiff takes its stand successively upon three propositions of law:

(1) The indorsement upon an existing permit of its extension to a new product of manufacture (the formula for which has the required official approval) is a purely ministerial act.

(2) Although the extension may not be a purely ministerial act, the Commissioner may not refuse the extension without basing his refusal upon fact findings supported by evidence.

(3) There are no evidentiary facts in evidence to warrant a finding that the permit should not be extended to inelude the manufacture of the new product, the formula of which has been approved. -

The first and second propositions raise questions of law. The third raises a question of law only in the sense of the distinction [409]*409between the sufficiency of evidence and its absence.

1. We defer the discussion of the legal merits of this proposition until after we have disposed of the others, except in so far as this has a bearing upon the third propositioif, which will be discussed in its order.

2. The second proposition, as a general proposition, we think to be sound. The inclusion of another product in the permit to manufacture should not be refused, unless there is something in the fact situation to call for such refusal.

3. This' brings us to the final proposition, which, as there is at least some evidence, becomes a proposition of fact, in so far as it becomes whether the applicant .has been guilty of such conduct or acts as call for a finding that he should not be intrusted with any permit. On the face of the refusal it presents this absurdity. The applicant has been found to be fit to hold a permit to make one thing, but unfit to hold a permit to make another, when the things to be made have the like official approval. This, however, is only a surface view.

The Commissioner has found that the applicant has conducted its business in such manner and made sales to such persons that it cannot safely be intrusted with a permit and is unfit to hold one. No court would impose an unfit permittee upon an official responsible for the proper use of permits. If, however, this permittee is unfit to hold the second permit, it is just as unfit to hold the first. There is, in consequence, an apparent glaring inconsistency in granting the first and refusing the second. The fact situation, however, is, as we have indicated, not as simple as thus stated. The first permit was issued, but of course on the assumption that it would not be abused. Subsequently a citation issued, charging amillegal diversion, and fpllowing the hearing upon this charge-the permit was revoked. The revocation was reversed by the court on a bill of review and the permit reinstated. This reversal was a long time after the order of revocation. The order of revocation was reversed, because the record showed no findings and no evidence in support of the citation. The record as submitted to the court was found to be barren of the required findings and proofs. These very important features of the real record had been omitted from the record submitted. No reargument was, however, asked for, and the controversy was permitted to drop until revived by the present application.

The position of the Commissioner is in effect that a mistake was made in issuing the first permit to an unfit person, and that he should not be compelled against his well-supported judgment to make a second like mistake in granting another permit. The position of the plaintiff is that the fact merits of the first permit are res adjudieata and that the unproven charges, which could not found a revocation of the first permit, will not support a refusal of the second. Had the court passed upon the fact merits -of the revocation of the first permit, the force of this argument would be felt. A perusal of the opinion accompanying the ruling, however, shows that the court did not reverse the order of revocation because of the insufficiency of the evidence to support the fact findings made, but because neither findings nor evidence were present. There was in consequence no determination of the facts.

We see no need at this time to go into the question of who was responsible for “the diminution in the record” which was submitted to the court. This takes us back to the first proposition. Broadly stated, we would not be inclined to affirm it. Approval of the formulae according to which products are to be made goes only to the products; a withdrawal permit is directed to the per-mittee. The product may in consequence be approved, but a permit to withdraw alcohol be denied, because, although the product may be unobjectionable, the permittee may be otherwise.

The Plaintiff’s Theory.

The argument addressed to us is admittedly ingenious. The question is of its soundness. It is that there are three requisites to the lawful conduct of a business which calls for the úse of alcohol in the manufacture of a nonbeverage product. What may be termed the chronological order is, first, the approval of the formula according to which the product may be manufactured. Official approval of this is provided for. The second is what is called a basic permit, which confers the lawful right to obtain the needed supplies of alcohol in the form or condition called “denatured.” The third is, or at least may be, termed a withdrawal permit, which confers the right to use the alcohol in manufacture and to lawfully dispose of the product. Over the issue of these basic permits the Commissioner has control; but, when the manufacturer has an approved formula and a basic permit, his right to a withdrawal permit follows as a matter of course, and cannot be denied him. The eon-[410]*410trolling and pivotal right is in consequence the right to this basie permit. He must, of' course, have his formula approved, or he has no right to make use of his basie permit or to withdrawals; but, if he has both an approved formula and this basic permit, he has also the withdrawal right.

It follows that, when the Commissioner revokes a permit, what he revokes is the basie permit, and without this the approved formula and the withdrawal right come to nothing. So long, however, as the basic permit stands unrevoked, the withdrawal right remains. Were it otherwise, the refusal of the permit to withdraw would be a denial of the supply, and thus an unrevoked basie permit would be nullified, which would be tantamount to an indirect revocation. Such a revocation is unwarranted in the present ease for two reasons: In the first place, an existing permit cannot be revoked without a citation; and, in the second plaee, the decree reversing the revocation before made, whether res adjudicata in the sense of an adjudication on the fact merits of the cause or not, was none the less a decree reinstating the permit, which, even if erroneous, could be corrected only upon a rehearing or appeal, and, as neither was had, the permit stands, and includes the right to a supply of alcohol (not exceeding in all the named limit) for use in the manufacture of a new product, the formula of which has been approved.

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Bluebook (online)
29 F.2d 408, 1928 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1598, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lou-val-co-v-doran-paed-1928.