Malt Beverages Distributors Ass'n v. Pennsylvania Liquor Control Board

881 A.2d 37, 2005 Pa. Commw. LEXIS 463
CourtCommonwealth Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedAugust 18, 2005
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 881 A.2d 37 (Malt Beverages Distributors Ass'n v. Pennsylvania Liquor Control Board) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Commonwealth Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Malt Beverages Distributors Ass'n v. Pennsylvania Liquor Control Board, 881 A.2d 37, 2005 Pa. Commw. LEXIS 463 (Pa. Ct. App. 2005).

Opinion

OPINION BY

Judge SMITH-RIBNER.

The Malt Beverages Distributors Association (MBDA) petitions for review of a letter decision of the Pennsylvania Liquor Control Board (Board) that granted an application for a double transfer of an eating place malt beverage license from a bar and grill in Altoona to premises on which a Sheetz restaurant, convenience store and gas station operates and also denied the petition of MBDA to intervene. MBDA raises the following questions: whether the Board improperly denied MBDA’s intervention as a representative of its members, when it showed sufficient harm from the license application and its members are within the group regulated or protected by the applicable statutory scheme, and whether the Board improperly failed to consider the issue raised by MBDA as to whether the proposed licensee meets the definition of “retail dispenser” in Section 102 of the Liquor Code, Act of April 12, 1951, P.L. 90, as amended, 47 P.S. § 1-102, when it will sell malt beverages for takeout and not for consumption on the premises.

I

Ohio Springs, Inc. (Applicant) is an entity related to Sheetz, Inc. (Sheetz). In January 2004 Applicant filed the application for a double transfer of Eating Place Malt License No. E-2397 from J.D. Beer Store, Inc. on Broad Avenue to Applicant’s premises on Valley View Boulevard in Al-toona. The Bureau of Licensing opposed the transfer, and a hearing was scheduled before a hearing examiner for June 30, 2004 to address nine issues, including whether those who filed petitions to intervene would be directly aggrieved by the granting of the license and whether an approval would adversely affect the health, welfare, peace and morals of the neighborhood within 500 feet of the proposed licensed premises.

The Board found that a new Sheetz convenience restaurant opened at the premises two weeks before the hearing. The facility is 10,000 square feet, about three times the size of the average Sheetz store. It has three kitchens, a serving area capable of seating sixty-two persons and an outdoor seating area for about forty-six persons. The restaurant has pizza, gelato, coffee, salads, carved sandwiches, desserts, other menu items and a bakery. The store is unlike other Sheetz stores in Pennsylvania. Applicant planned to operate a Sheetz convenience store in the same building, with no separation between it and the proposed licensed area. About seventy-five feet from the licensed premises are gasoline pumps for the Sheetz store. There is no physical separation, other than the parking lot, between the pumps and the building even though they occupy separate parcels. Applicant’s establishment is open twenty-four hours a day, seven days a week.

Applicant proposes to sell beer for takeout only, with postings indicating that no beer is to be consumed on the premises. It plans to sell about fifty types of beer and a few malt-based coolers in six-packs, twelve-packs and forty-ounce bottles but not in single cans, and it will sell the beer Monday through Saturday 7:00 a.m. to 2:00 a.m. and Sunday 11:00 a.m. until 2:00 a.m. There are no other licensed establishments within 200 feet, and there are no restrictive institutions (church, hospital, charitable institution, school or public playground) within 300 feet. See Section 432 *39 of the Liquor Code, 47 P.S. § 4-432, relating to malt and brewed beverages retail liquor licenses. The neighborhood in a radius of 500 feet is 95 percent commercial and 5 percent residential.

At the June 30, 2004 hearing before a Board hearing examiner, Mary Lou Hogan, counsel and executive secretary of MBDA, testified that MBDA is a trade association for Pennsylvania beer distributors. It has approximately 400 members throughout the state, including some in Blair County. MBDA promotes, protects and facilitates the interests of its members, and it filed its petition because it believes that the rules of selling beer in Pennsylvania will be drastically changed if the application is granted. Hogan stated that MBDA believes that if a convenience store such as Applicant is permitted to sell beer, it can compete with beer distributors because under Board rules such a seller may effectively sell a case at one time. She foresaw a devastating effect on members of the organization because they may sell only beer, soda and a limited number of other items, whereas a convenience store may sell many more items. Further, eating place malt beverage licensees are permitted to sell beer on Sunday with a Sunday permit, and beer distributors are not. Applicant would become, in effect, a distributor without any of the restrictions facing real distributors. A license granted to this Applicant would open the door to convenience store sales of beer elsewhere.

David Shipula, President of MBDA and the owner of a beer distributorship in Wilkes-Barre, testified that in his experience most “D Distributors,” such as members of MBDA, sell almost exclusively to members of the general public. ID Importing Distributors, who import beer from breweries out of state, sell to taverns. Beer distributors are not permitted to hold more than one license. Shipula believed that convenience stores that sell beer would have an unfair advantage and that he would lose sales to impulse buyers at Sheetz.

The Board approved the application subject to certain conditions; it concluded that the premises qualified as an “eating place,” which is defined in Section 102 of the Liquor Code as a “premise where food is regularly and customarily prepared and sold, having a total area of not less than three hundred square feet available to the public in one or more rooms ... and equipped with tables and chairs, including bar seats, accommodating thirty persons at one time.” Under 40 Pa.Code § 3.52(b) a licensed premises may not have an inside passage or communication to or with any other business, and under 40 Pa.Code § 3.52(c) a licensee may not conduct another business on the premises without approval.

The Board imposed the condition that the business of convenience store be separated from the restaurant by a permanent partition at least four feet high or that the other business cease. Section 432(d) of the Liquor Code, 47 P.S. § 4-432(d), requires refusal of a license to a location where sale of liquid fuel or oil is conducted. Although Applicant contended that the sale of gasoline on a separate parcel was distinct, the Board found that the company that owns the pumps is connected to Sheetz and does not have separate employees on site, that video-monitoring of the gas pumps and transactions occurs inside the restaurant and that the entire property is a de facto single location for purposes of Section 432(d). The Board required Applicant to physically separate the gas pump area from the building in some manner before operating authority would be given.

Regarding the multiple petitions to intervene, the Board noted that under 40 *40 Pa.Code § 17.11(a) a protest may be filed by another licensee within 200 feet, by a church, hospital, charitable institution, school or public playground within 800 feet, or by a resident of the neighborhood within 500 feet.

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Bluebook (online)
881 A.2d 37, 2005 Pa. Commw. LEXIS 463, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/malt-beverages-distributors-assn-v-pennsylvania-liquor-control-board-pacommwct-2005.