Pensacola Yacht Club v. State Beverage Department

30 Fla. Supp. 178
CourtCircuit Court of the 1st Judicial Circuit of Florida, Escambia County
DecidedJuly 17, 1968
DocketNo. 68-1081
StatusPublished

This text of 30 Fla. Supp. 178 (Pensacola Yacht Club v. State Beverage Department) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Circuit Court of the 1st Judicial Circuit of Florida, Escambia County primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Pensacola Yacht Club v. State Beverage Department, 30 Fla. Supp. 178 (Fla. Super. Ct. 1968).

Opinion

ERNEST E. MASON, Circuit Judge.

Order denying motion to dismiss and final declaratory judgment: This case is before the court on final hearing and upon the motion of the defendants Meiklejohn, as director of the Florida State Beverage Department, and the Florida State Beverage Department to dismiss the complaint herein for failure to state a cause of action. The parties hereto have agreed that the ruling of the court upon the motion to dismiss shall be dispositive of this controversy.

This is a suit for declaratory judgment and for implementing injunctive relief brought by the Pensacola Yacht Club, a nonprofit corporation against the city of Pensacola, the beverage director of the state of Florida and the state beverage department.

For the purposes of the motion to dismiss it is conceded that the plaintiff is a non-profit corporation existing under the laws of Florida doing business as a private social club and located in the city of Pensacola. That said plaintiff yacht club has been in existence for a great number of years. That among the services that the plaintiff club has rendered its members and nonresident guests is the service and distribution for consumption upon the premises of the plaintiff alcoholic beverages of various kinds and alcoholic content. That said plaintiff holds licenses issued by the state of Florida and the city of Pensacola which authorize it to sell, serve and distribute to its members and nonresident guests such alcoholic beverages.

Upon application for temporary injunction herein testimony was adduced to the effect that the defendant beverage department, and the defendant Meiklejohn as director thereof, up until approximately one year ago interpreted the beverage laws and the rules and regulations of the beverage department promulgated under authority of said laws to permit the sale on Sundays by social clubs such as the plaintiff herein of alcoholic beverages. But approximately one year ago the defendant, Meiklejohn, and said beverage department issued a directive [180]*180to the effect that social clubs such as is the plaintiff would thereafter be prohibited from selling, serving and distributing alcoholic beverages under their social club licenses on Sundays.

The defendant, the city of Pensacola, enacted an ordinance in 1950, amended in 1953, prohibiting the sale of alcoholic beverages on Sundays. But in the enforcement of the ordinance the defendant city has adopted the position that the ordinance was not operative against social clubs such as the plaintiff, and prior to the directive of the state beverage department aforesaid the police department of the city of Pensacola permitted such social clubs to sell, serve and distribute to their members and nonresident guests alcoholic beverages on Sundays. The city of Pensacola, although made a party defendant, has filed an answer in which it confesses the right of the plaintiff to sell, serve and distribute alcoholic beverages on Sundays under its social club licenses and prays that it be dismissed as a party defendant because of lack of a justiciable issue between it and the plaintiff. However, at the hearing on the application for temporary injunction there was testimony from the acting chief of police to the effect that because of the beverage department’s directive the police were not permitting the plaintiff to operate under its social club licenses on Sundays. For that reason it would not be proper for this court to dismiss the city of Pensacola as a party defendant unless it should determine that the plaintiff is not entitled to the relief prayed for. It is true, however, thát the real controversy here is between the state beverage department and the plaintiff.

It is the position of the state beverage department that the plaintiff club is unauthorized to sell, serve and distribute alcoholic beverages on Sundays because of the provisions of subsection 2 of §562.14 F. S. which prohibit the sale, consumption or service of any intoxicating beverage on a Sunday in any place holding a license under the beverage department of Florida, and because of rule 65A-3.19, Florida Administrative Code, which requires social clubs to observe the same hours of selling as are permitted other licensees in the same city. In adopting this position the defendants Meiklejohn and the state beverage department contend that the act of the plaintiff in selling, serving and distributing to its members and non-resident guests on Sundays is in direct contravention of the prohibition of subsection 2 of §562.14, and of the city ordinance aforesaid.

It is not contended that the plaintiff club is not a bona fide club, or that it exists as a subterfuge to circumvent laws and [181]*181municipal ordinances regulating alcoholic beverages, or that it serves persons alcoholic beverages other than its own members and their non-resident guests.

It is the position of the plaintiff club that it is authorized under its social club licenses to sell, serve and distribute to its members and their non-resident guests alcoholic beverages on Sundays, as well as on other days of the week, and that such acts on its part do not amount to “sales” prohibited either by the state beverage laws or the city ordinance of the city of Pensacola.

The proper disposition of this cause requires the interpretation of several sections of the Florida beverage laws, the administrative rule above referred to and the ordinance of the city of Pensacola aforesaid.

The particular sections of the beverage laws incorporated in the Florida Statutes and involved in the resolution of this question before the court, and a brief summary of their provisions and the effect thereof, are —

Subsection 2 of §562.14 prohibits the sale, consumption or service of any intoxicating beverage on a Sunday in any place holding a license under the beverage department of Florida.

The heading of §562.14 relates to “regulating the time for sale of alcoholic and intoxicating beverages; municipal and county regulations, etc.” §562.14 as now found in Florida Statutes was first incorporated in its present language in chapter 23746, Laws of Florida, Acts of 1947. The title of that act, among other things, states that it is an act amending section(s) . . . 562.14, Florida Statutes, 1941, and further “regulating sales where consumption of beverages is permitted on premises” and . . . “regulating the hours of sale of alcoholic beverages”, as well as amending other beverage laws of the State, among them §561.34. Florida Statutes 1941.

The 1941 version of §562.14 was as follows — “562.14 sale on Sunday prohibited; exception, cities may regulate. The sale of intoxicating liquors between the hours of twelve p.m., Saturday and twelve p.m., Sunday, is prohibited, except incorporated cities and towns may, by ordinance or resolution, hereafter regulate or prevent such sales.”

Subsection (12) of §561.01 dealing with definitions under the beverage administration laws of Florida defines the term “sale” or “sell” as including “any transfer of an alcoholic beverage for a consideration or any gift of an alcoholic beverage in connection with, or as part of, a transfer of property other than [182]*182an alcoholic beverage for consideration, or the serving of an alcoholic beverage by a club licensed under the beverage law.”

Subsection (9) of §561.01 declares that the term “beverage law” shall refer to chapters 561, 562, 567-569.

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Bluebook (online)
30 Fla. Supp. 178, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pensacola-yacht-club-v-state-beverage-department-flacirct1esc-1968.