Osage Creek Cultivation, LLC Delta Medical Cannabis Company, LLC Bold Team, LLC Natural State Medicinals Cultivation, LLC And Good Day Farm Arkansas, LLC v. Arkansas Department of Finance and Administration Arkansas Alcoholic Beverage Control Division Arkansas Medical Marijuana Commission Carpenter Farms Medical Group, LLC River Valley Relief Cultivation, LLC River Valley Production, LLC, D/B/A River Valley Relief Cultivation River Valley Production, LLC And New Day Cultivation, LLC

2023 Ark. 47
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedMarch 16, 2023
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 2023 Ark. 47 (Osage Creek Cultivation, LLC Delta Medical Cannabis Company, LLC Bold Team, LLC Natural State Medicinals Cultivation, LLC And Good Day Farm Arkansas, LLC v. Arkansas Department of Finance and Administration Arkansas Alcoholic Beverage Control Division Arkansas Medical Marijuana Commission Carpenter Farms Medical Group, LLC River Valley Relief Cultivation, LLC River Valley Production, LLC, D/B/A River Valley Relief Cultivation River Valley Production, LLC And New Day Cultivation, LLC) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Arkansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Osage Creek Cultivation, LLC Delta Medical Cannabis Company, LLC Bold Team, LLC Natural State Medicinals Cultivation, LLC And Good Day Farm Arkansas, LLC v. Arkansas Department of Finance and Administration Arkansas Alcoholic Beverage Control Division Arkansas Medical Marijuana Commission Carpenter Farms Medical Group, LLC River Valley Relief Cultivation, LLC River Valley Production, LLC, D/B/A River Valley Relief Cultivation River Valley Production, LLC And New Day Cultivation, LLC, 2023 Ark. 47 (Ark. 2023).

Opinion

Cite as 2023 Ark. 47 SUPREME COURT OF ARKANSAS No. CV-22-347

Opinion Delivered: March 16, 2023 OSAGE CREEK CULTIVATION, LLC; DELTA MEDICAL CANNABIS COMPANY, LLC; BOLD TEAM, LLC; APPEAL FROM THE PULASKI NATURAL STATE MEDICINALS COUNTY CIRCUIT COURT CULTIVATION, LLC; AND GOOD DAY [NO. 60CV-21-5305] FARM ARKANSAS, LLC APPELLANTS HONORABLE MORGAN E. WELCH, JUDGE V. AFFIRMED. ARKANSAS DEPARTMENT OF FINANCE AND ADMINISTRATION; ARKANSAS ALCOHOLIC BEVERAGE CONTROL DIVISION; ARKANSAS MEDICAL MARIJUANA COMMISSION; CARPENTER FARMS MEDICAL GROUP, LLC; RIVER VALLEY RELIEF CULTIVATION, LLC; RIVER VALLEY PRODUCTION, LLC, D/B/A RIVER VALLEY RELIEF CULTIVATION; RIVER VALLEY PRODUCTION, LLC; AND NEW DAY CULTIVATION, LLC APPELLEES

RHONDA K. WOOD, Associate Justice

Appellants allege the Arkansas Medical Marijuana Commission granted a marijuana-

cultivation license to a corporate entity that had been dissolved. As existing cultivation

license holders, they challenged this decision and then sued when the Commission refused

to revoke the new license. The circuit court, however, dismissed their complaint. The court

held that the complaint surmounted the State’s sovereign immunity but held that subject- matter jurisdiction was lacking and that the challengers lacked standing. We affirm this order

on appeal but for different reasons: the circuit court had subject-matter jurisdiction but still

properly dismissed the complaint because it failed to state facts to surmount the State’s

sovereign-immunity defense.1

I. Factual Background

In 2016, Arkansas voters approved the sale of medical marijuana by passing

Amendment 98. This amendment established the Medical Marijuana Commission and

authorized the Commission to grant between four and eight marijuana-cultivation licenses.

Ark. Const. amend. 98, § 8(j). The Commission decided to grant and award five initial

licenses in 2018. Appellants are the five entities with the initial licensed cultivation facilities.

They filed the lawsuit underlying this appeal.2 All relevant facts have been taken from their

second amended complaint, and we treat the allegations as true for this appeal. E.g., Monsanto

Co. v. Ark. St. Plant Bd., 2019 Ark 194, at 8, 576 S.W.3d 8, 13.

In 2020, the Commission, allegedly without following applicable rules, decided to

grant three more cultivation licenses. This brought the number of licenses granted to eight,

the constitutional maximum. The Commission granted one of these new licenses to Bennet

Nolan, operating through River Valley Production, LLC (“River Valley Production I”).

1 Because we dismiss on sovereign-immunity grounds, we do not address standing. 2 Osage Creek Cultivation, LLC; Delta Medical Cannabis Company, LLC; Bold Team, LLC; Natural State Medicinals Cultivation, LLC; and Natural State Wellness Enterprises, LLC. Good Day Farm Arkansas, LLC, acquired a license from Natural State Wellness and now stands in its shoes as a plaintiff/appellant in this case.

2 But there was one problem: River Valley Production I had been dissolved by articles of

dissolution filed on March 20, 2019. To rectify this problem, two new entities were formed:

• River Valley Relief Cultivation, LLC (“River Valley Relief”), an Arkansas limited liability company; and

• River Valley Production, LLC (“River Valley Production II”), another Arkansas limited liability company.

Both the Commission and the Alcoholic Beverage Control Division, an enforcement

body, received a complaint from the original five cultivators about the license granted to

Nolan because River Valley Production I had been dissolved. They requested that his

cultivation license be revoked. But rather than revoke the license, or hold a hearing on the

complaints, the ABC Division entered into a settlement agreement with Nolan and River

Valley Production II, allowing them to retain the license.3

After this settlement, the five initial cultivators sued the Commission; the ABC

Division; the Department of Finance and Administration; Nolan’s three River Valley

entities; and the two other new cultivation-license holders.4 The complaint sought a

declaratory judgment and injunctive relief. The initial cultivators argued the Commission

exceeded its constitutional authority when it issued a license to a dissolved legal entity, River

Valley Production I. They also argued that the license was void.

The defendants moved to dismiss the lawsuit. The arguments included that the

complaint was barred by sovereign immunity; that the circuit court lacked subject-matter

3 River Valley Relief had received its license on July 17, 2020, but was dissolved a short time later. Presumably, the license then transferred to River Valley Production II. 4 Carpenter Farms Medical Group, LLC, and New Day Cultivation, LLC.

3 jurisdiction; and that the cultivators lacked standing. The cultivators filed a motion for

summary judgment. The court granted the motion to dismiss and dismissed the motion for

summary judgment as moot.

First, the court concluded the complaint surmounted sovereign immunity because

the complaint included sufficient detailed facts that the state actors had acted ultra vires and

unconstitutionally. Second, the court found that it lacked subject-matter jurisdiction because

no adjudication had occurred within the meaning of the Administrative Procedure Act, a

necessary predicate for judicial review of agency decisions in circuit court, and they did not

bring an applicability challenge. Third, the court concluded the cultivators lacked standing

because their cultivation permits were not “directly affected by the actions of the

Commission.”

The five initial cultivators, appellants, filed this appeal. They limited their appeal to

a single claim from their complaint, “Count 3,” which challenged the Commission’s

decision to allegedly grant a license to a dissolved corporate entity. They argue the circuit

court erred by finding it lacked subject-matter jurisdiction because they sought declaratory

and injunctive relief only, so the adjudication requirement of the APA did not apply. They

also argue the circuit court wrongly held that they lacked standing because the issuance of

more cultivation licenses caused an injury to their market share.

II. Law and Analysis

A. Subject-Matter Jurisdiction

Applying the APA, the circuit court dismissed the complaint for lack of subject-

matter jurisdiction. Appellants correctly point out that the APA was not the jurisdictional

4 basis for this count of their claim. The complaint references both the APA and the

declaratory-judgment statute (Ark. Code Ann. §§ 16-111-101 et seq. (Repl. 2016 & Supp.

2021)) as a basis for relief. We agree this claim fell within the circuit court’s subject-matter

jurisdiction under the declaratory-judgment statute.

Subject-matter jurisdiction implicates a court’s authority to hear and decide a

particular type of case. Ark. Dep’t of Fin. & Admin. v. Naturalis Health, LLC, 2018 Ark. 224,

at 6, 549 S.W.3d 901, 906. A court receives subject-matter jurisdiction from the Arkansas

Constitution or constitutionally authorized statutes or court rules. Id. “A court lacks subject-

matter jurisdiction if it cannot hear a matter under any circumstances and is wholly

incompetent to grant the relief sought.” Ark. Dep’t of Health v. Solomon, 2022 Ark. 43, at 5.

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