Playboy Club of New York, Inc v. O'Connell

18 A.D.2d 339, 239 N.Y.S.2d 262, 1963 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 3950
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedApril 11, 1963
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 18 A.D.2d 339 (Playboy Club of New York, Inc v. O'Connell) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Playboy Club of New York, Inc v. O'Connell, 18 A.D.2d 339, 239 N.Y.S.2d 262, 1963 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 3950 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1963).

Opinions

Botein, P. J.

The Administrative Code of the City of New York makes it unlawful to operate a cabaret except in premises licensed for the purpose (§ B32-297.0). Respondent, proposing to open a cabaret at 5 East 59th Street in the Borough of Manhattan, applied to the Commissioner of Licenses of the City of New York for a license. After taking testimony upon such application, as authorized in the Commissioner’s discretion by section 773a-7.0 of the code, the Deputy Commissioner submitted an adverse report, and the Commissioner, agreeing with it, denied the application. Special Term has granted an order under article 78 of the Civil Practice Act setting aside and annulling the Commissioner’s determination and directing the issuance of a license; and from this order the Commissioner appeals.

Respondent, a New York stock corporation, is a wholly owned subsidiary of Playboy Clubs International, Inc. (International). Hugh M. Hefner and HMH Publishing Co., Inc. (HMH) together own 50%, and Victor A. Lownes III 25%, of International’s stock. Approximately 80% of the stock of HMH, which is the publisher of the magazine Playboy, is owned by Hefner. Hefner and Lownes are respectively the president of International and the president of respondent. Both testified before the Hearing Commissioner. The remaining witness was a Mrs. Kerster, supervisor of respondent’s female personnel.

Respondent’s establishment was planned as one of a chain of cabarets, called Playboy Clubs, operated in substantially the same fashion in a number of large cities and directly or indirectly owned by International or franchised by it. The clubs, as represented by respondent, "feature the sale of alcoholic beverages and food and the furnishing of entertainment in a distinctive atmosphere." Admission to the clubs is obtained by purchase of a Playboy key for the sum of $25 or payment of an equivalent charge. One of the attractions of the clubs is that the price of a meal is the same as a drink, $1.50, although in respondent’s club a room has also been set aside for the service of a more [341]*341elaborate dinner at a fixed price of $15. Another item of appeal is that the entertainment is designed to be almost continuous, to which end, in respondent’s club, shows will be performed at staggered times in three of the rooms. A third inducement to patronage, and a critical one npon this application, is that the "clubs are staffed with girls, called ‘ Bunnies ’, who are attired in brightly colored bunny costumes, greet entrants into the clubs, check their key status, and serve the food and beverages.” These Bunnies, most of whom are waitresses, are between 18 and 25 years of age, and respondent employs about 125 of them. Their weekly wage is $50, but their gross earnings run from $200 to $350, the excess over the wage consisting of tips. The garment they wear was described by Mrs. ICerster as similar to an all-in-one, strapless bathing suit fitted up high on the thigh. While it reveals the upper part of the breasts, Lownes testified that at no time ‘ ‘ does any costume fit any girl in such a manner, whatever position she was in as to expose any portion of the nipples. ” The decor of the clubs, stated to be luxurious, includes displays of cartoons and transparencies which portray nude and semi-nude women.

The essential basis of the Commissioner’s adverse determination was apprehension that the waitresses in respondent’s club would mingle with the patrons in violation of the following regulation of the Department of Licenses: “ Rule 6(i). Mingling. Female entertainers and female employees of a cabaret shall not be permitted to mingle with patrons or guests. ’ ’ Power to adopt the regulation is not questioned (see Administrative Code, § B32-305.0), nor is its wisdom assailed. It has the force and effect of statute and we are required to take judicial notice of it (Administrative Code, § 982.8.0; Matter of Bethlehem Steel Co. v. Joseph, 284 App. Div. 5, 8).

Respondent stresses that the Commissioner’s regulations govern licensees, not applicants. As I understand respondent’s argument, the Commissioner may not invoke the regulations to anticipate infractions which may never eventuate (Matter of Beck v. Wallander, 189 Misc. 509). Logically, the reasoning runs, the restraining regulations may therefore be applied only to licensees, since valid and trustworthy findings of violations can be based only upon actual experience in the operation of a cabaret.

Under the applicable statutes the Commissioner must be satisfied, among other things, that the applicant is a “ fit and proper person ”, and that the premises are a “ safe and proper place ” to be used as a cabaret (Administrative Code, § B32-297.0, subd. d). It seems to us clear that in considering an application [342]*342the Commissioner must of necessity take into account the possibility of infractions of his regulations, How close or likely the possibility must be to armor an adverse determination against a charge of arbitrariness is another question; and the answer will depend on particular facts. When a licensing officer grants an application, he does so because in his judgment the possibility of its abuse in the future is nonexistent or sufficiently remote to negative undue risk of abuse. When he denies an initial application by reason of an applicant’s notorious criminal record, for example, or when he denies a renewal application by reason of misconduct during the expiring term, he does so because in his judgment these circumstances turn the possibility of future abuse into a reasonable probability or create an undue risk of future abuse. To weigh the possibilities may or may not be easy, but as we have said, although in a different context, an administrative official “must take cognizance of the purpose to which the license is to be put ” and he “ is not obliged to, and should not, grant a license which would result in the use of the license in violation of law ” (Matter of Barton Trucking Corp, v. O’Connell, 7 A D 2d 36, 39, revd. on other grounds 7 N Y 2d 299; cf. Matter of Rosenberg v. Moss, 296 N. Y. 595).

Nor, in the present case, do we deem of moment the Commissioner’s failure to specify whether he was applying the “ fit and proper person "standard or the “ safe and proper place ” standard or both. If an applicant intends to permit mingling, he cannot be a proper person, for he intends to encourage illegality. If his intentions are otherwise (and disregarding the point that objective facts may belie professed intentions), the Commissioner may still reasonably find that a proposed method of cabaret operation carries with it an undue risk of mingling. In such event, he indulges in no unwarranted interpretative stretch, if any, should he conclude the premises are not a safe and proper place, The purpose of the legislation is undermined if the place is to be judged without a sensible regard to its activities. In Matter of Agoglia v. Mulrooney (259 N. Y. 462), one of the circumstances influencing denial of a cabaret license was the propinquity of the premises to a school. We question that the case would have been decided differently had the school been distant but the premises already provided an amusement haven for children. Again, we do not agree that in exercising his discretion the Commissioner invoked neither of the two standards, but rather an unauthorized and nebulous one of “ public interest ”. His statement that"this innovation would not be in the public interest" plainly related to his conclusion about the prospective breach of his regulations; he was in effect making the funda

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18 A.D.2d 339, 239 N.Y.S.2d 262, 1963 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 3950, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/playboy-club-of-new-york-inc-v-oconnell-nyappdiv-1963.