Miller v. Oregon Liquor Control Commission

657 P.2d 1250, 61 Or. App. 505, 1983 Ore. App. LEXIS 2217
CourtCourt of Appeals of Oregon
DecidedFebruary 2, 1983
DocketCA A24060
StatusPublished

This text of 657 P.2d 1250 (Miller v. Oregon Liquor Control Commission) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Oregon primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Miller v. Oregon Liquor Control Commission, 657 P.2d 1250, 61 Or. App. 505, 1983 Ore. App. LEXIS 2217 (Or. Ct. App. 1983).

Opinion

YOUNG, J.

This is an appeal from an Oregon Liquor Control Commission’s (OLCC) revised order denying petitioners’ application for a seasonal dispenser license. ORS 472.205.1 Petitioners contend that OLCC improperly applied existing rules applicable to regular dispenser licenses,2 that it should have adopted rules particular to seasonal licenses and that the evidence was insufficient to support certain findings. We reverse and remand for reconsideration.

Petitioners operate a restaurant in Ashland in Jackson County and had been issued a restaurant dispenser license3 in 1980. The restaurant is located within three blocks of the Oregon Shakespeare Festival theatres. The festival attracts over 260,000 persons during its nine-month season from February through October. Petitioners applied for a seven-month seasonal dispenser license for April through October. OLCC found that there are 12 dispenser licenses, but no seasonal licenses, issued or committed within the city limits of Ashland and 60 dispenser licenses and six seasonal dispenser licenses issued or committed in Jackson County. Ashland’s permanent population is approximately 15,000; Jackson County’s is 132,000.

Of the rules that OLCC applied in denying the application, two are pertinent to our discussion. OAR 845-05-030(1) provides:

“The following criteria will weigh against issuing a license:
[508]*508“There are sufficient licensed premises in the locality set out in the application, or the granting of a license in the locality set out in the application is not demanded by public interest or convenience. Factors such as declining or static population, business or industrial development in the applicant’s community, or by decreasing sales or patronage at other similarly licensed outlets in that community may be considered. For purposes of this section, the applicant’s community will be a 10-mile radius for dispenser licenses and a two-mile radius for other licenses, unless the applicant establishes that a substantial portion of the patronage of the premises is or would be from a larger or smaller area.”

OAR 845-05-040 provides in part:

“(1) An application for a dispenser license may be granted or denied on the basis of a comparison with other existing dispenser licenses in the same city or county or with other pending applications for such licenses anywhere in the state, as provided in sections (2) and (3) of this rule.
“(2) Preference in licensing may be given to applicants showing any one or more of the following. The applicant shall have the burden of proving that these provisions apply:
<<* * * * *
“(c) The public is not being adequately served by dispenser outlets, if any, in the applicant’s community as defined in OAR 845-05-030(1). Evidence that there is more than one dispenser license per 2,000 people in the applicant’s city or county will be prima facie evidence that the applicant’s community is being adequately served.
“(d) Applicant’s premises are located in a rural or unincorporated area or in an incorporated area with population of less than 25,000, or applicant’s premises has seating capacity for 100 or fewer patrons.
<<* * * * j

OLCC used Ashland as the relevant community for purposes of OAR 845-05-030(1), because figures were unavailable as to dispenser licenses in a 10-mile radius of petitioners’ location. It concluded that the

“figures indicate that the City of Ashland contains significantly more dispenser outlets than the approximately 1.14 dispenser licenses per 2,000 population authorized [509]*509for issuance to the State of Oregon as a whole. This relatively large number of outlets indicates that there are sufficient dispenser outlets in the Applicant’s community, and weighs against license issuance under OAR 845-05-030(1).”

To have so concluded, OLCC had to have disregarded the seasonal population increase attributable to the Festival.4 Without that increase, the license-to-population ratio is 12 licenses to 15,000 population or 1.6 licenses per 2,000 population, which is higher than the state quota. See ORS 472.110(4). But OLCC had also found that the nine-month Shakespeare Festival attracted and would attract attendance of over 260,000.

Although OLCC found facts as to the seasonal population, it did not apply those population figures.5 Therefore, it must have determined that the relevant population did not include the seasonal population for purposes of OAR 84505-030(1). It necessarily determined, then, that petitioners had established their patronage area to be the permanent population of Ashland.

OAR 845-05-040(2) allows preference in licensing if the applicant proves one or more of several facts, including that the public is not being adequately served by existing dispenser outlets in the relevant community (as determined under OAR 845-05-030(1)), OAR 845-05-040(2)(c); or that the applicant’s premises are in an incorporated area of less than 25,000 population, OAR 845-05-040(2)(d). Because of its determination under OAR 845-05-030(1) that the relevant community is Ashland’s permanent population of 15,000, OLCC necessarily determined that petitioners had proved that their premises were in an incorporated area of less than 25,000 population. Petitioners were therefore entitled to have OLCC consider that criterion for preference under 845-05-040(2)(d). OLCC did not consider that criterion and therefore acted inconsistently with its [510]*510own rules without explanation.6 That was error.7 ORS 183.482(8)(b)(B). The order must be set- aside and remanded for reconsideration.

Because we remand, we consider petitioners’ assignments of error concerning application of the license quota to seasonal license applicants and the need for separate rules for seasonal license applications.8 OLCC determined that petitioners’ community has sufficient outlets under OAR 845-05-030(1), which lists certain factors that weigh against issuing a license. OLCC based its determination of sufficient outlets on evidence showing that Ash-land’s license-to-population ratio is higher than the state average of 1.14 per 2,000. That is not the type of factor listed in OAR 845-05-030(1) as weighing against issuing a license. It is, however, relevant to whether the community is adequately served under OAR 845-05-040(2)(c).9 In effect, OLCC determined that because the ratio evidence indicated that the community was adequately served, there were sufficient licenses already issued.10 We need not decide whether that was a proper interpretation of the rules. [511]*511Even if it were, its application runs afoul of the statutory exemption in ORS 472.115

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Sun Ray Drive-In Dairy, Inc. v. Oregon Liquor Control Commission
517 P.2d 289 (Court of Appeals of Oregon, 1973)
McCann v. Oregon Liquor Control Commission
556 P.2d 973 (Court of Appeals of Oregon, 1976)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
657 P.2d 1250, 61 Or. App. 505, 1983 Ore. App. LEXIS 2217, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/miller-v-oregon-liquor-control-commission-orctapp-1983.