Sarcoxie Nursery Cultivation Center, LLC v. Randall Williams

CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedMay 3, 2022
DocketWD84492
StatusPublished

This text of Sarcoxie Nursery Cultivation Center, LLC v. Randall Williams (Sarcoxie Nursery Cultivation Center, LLC v. Randall Williams) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Sarcoxie Nursery Cultivation Center, LLC v. Randall Williams, (Mo. Ct. App. 2022).

Opinion

IN THE MISSOURI COURT OF APPEALS WESTERN DISTRICT SARCOXIE NURSERY ) CULTIVATION CENTER, LLC, et ) al., ) Appellants,) ) v. ) WD84492 ) RANDALL WILLIAMS, et al., ) FILED: May 3, 2022 Respondents. )

Appeal from the Circuit Court of Cole County The Honorable Patricia S. Joyce, Judge Before Division Two: Alok Ahuja, P.J., and Edward R. Ardini, Jr. and Thomas N. Chapman, JJ. The Appellants in this case are Sarcoxie Nursery Cultivation Center, LLC,

Sarcoxie Nursery Infusion, LLC, Missouri Medical Manufacturing, LLC, Missouri

Medical Products, LLC, and GVMS, Inc. The Appellants unsuccessfully applied for

licenses from the Department of Health and Senior Services to cultivate, manufacture, and/or dispense marijuana and marijuana-infused products for

medicinal purposes. After their license applications were denied, Appellants filed a

petition for declaratory judgment in the Circuit Court of Cole County. In their

lawsuit, Appellants challenged the regulations which limit the total number of

medical marijuana facility licenses the Department will issue. The circuit court

rejected Appellants’ challenges, and upheld the Department’s numerical limits on

licenses. The Appellants appeal. We affirm. Factual Background On November 6, 2018, Missouri voters approved an amendment to the

Missouri Constitution which legalized the cultivation, manufacture, and

distribution of marijuana and marijuana-infused products for medicinal purposes.

The amendment is codified as Article XIV of the Missouri Constitution.

Article XIV vests the Department of Health and Senior Services with the

authority to

[p]romulgate rules and emergency rules necessary for the proper regulation and control of the cultivation, manufacture, dispensing, and sale of marijuana for medical use . . . so long as patient access is not restricted unreasonably and such rules are reasonably necessary for patient safety or to restrict access to only licensees and qualifying patients. Art. XIV, § 1.3(1)(b).

Article XIV gives the Department authority to administer a licensing

program for medical marijuana-related facilities. The Department is authorized to

“[g]rant and refuse state licenses and certifications for the cultivation, manufacture,

[and] dispensing” of medical marijuana, and to “suspend, fine, restrict, or revoke

such licenses and certifications” for violations of Article XIV or the Department’s

implementing regulations. Art. XIV, § 1.3(1)(a).

Article XIV also gives the Department the authority to “restrict the aggregate

number of licenses granted” for medical marijuana cultivation, manufacturing, and

dispensary facilities. Art. XIV, §§ 1.3(15)-(17). Article XIV limits the Department’s

authority in this regard, however: it specifies that cultivation licenses cannot be

limited to fewer than one license per one hundred thousand Missouri residents; that

licenses for marijuana-infused products manufacturing facilities cannot be

restricted to fewer than one per seventy thousand Missouri residents; and that the

number of dispensary licenses cannot be limited to fewer than twenty-four in each of the eight United States congressional districts existing in the State as of

2 December 6, 2018. Id. The 2010 United States Census reported that the population

of Missouri was 5,998,927. Given the 2010 Census data, the parties agree that

Article XIV prohibited the Department from authorizing fewer than: sixty licenses

for cultivation facilities; eight-six licenses for marijuana-infused product

manufacturing facilities; and 192 licenses for dispensaries.

After Article XIV was passed by voters, the Department sought public input

and guidance from a wide variety of individuals and groups before beginning the

formal regulatory process. Department officials testified at trial that they had an

“open-door policy” which permitted “anybody . . . to submit their thoughts and

ideas,” without regard to whether a lobbyist or attorney was involved. The

Department posted various drafts and revisions of its contemplated rules on its

website, and issued press releases alerting the public when a new version of the

rules was published. The rules were also sent to other agencies and to stakeholder

groups for comment.

In May 2019, the Department proposed three regulations which limited the

total number of licenses for cultivation facilities to sixty, the total number of

licenses for marijuana-infused products manufacturing facilities to eighty-six, and

the total number of dispensary facilities to 192 – the minimum number of licenses required to be issued by Article XIV, §§ 1.3(15)-(17). See 44 MO. REG. 1911, 1914,

1922 (July 1, 2019) (proposing rules to be codified at 19 C.S.R. 30-95.050(1)(A), 30-

95.060(1)(A), all 30-95.080(1)(A)-(B)). The regulations provided that the limits could

be increased in the future “in order to meet the demand for medical marijuana by

qualifying patients.” Id. The three regulations were promulgated as emergency

rules effective on June 3, 2019. See 44 MO. REG. 1818-19, 1822 (July 1, 2019). The

final regulations became effective on January 30, 2020. See 44 MO. REG. 3142-43

(Dec. 2, 2019) (Orders of Rulemaking).

3 Department officials testified at trial that they were required to build a new

regulatory agency and regulatory framework “from scratch,” and on the expedited

timetable dictated by Article XIV. The Department investigated the experience of

other States which had legalized marijuana for medical or recreational purposes.

The Department recognized that it could not simply take data from other States

and directly apply it to Missouri, but found the out-of-state information to be

“helpful” nonetheless. Department officials testified that they looked to other

States, such as Colorado and Oklahoma, which had opened their marijuana

marketplaces with minimal regulations. Missouri officials considered Oklahoma’s

experience, in particular, to have been “a disaster.” They testified that Oklahoma is

“going through it right now, trying to put the genie back in the bottle [because it did

not] start from a well-regulated, controlled system.” The Department thus adopted

the mindset that “[it] can make the incision bigger, but [it] can’t make it smaller.”

Department officials testified that their “North Star” in developing

regulations was patients, and ensuring that they had sufficient access to safe

medical marijuana. The Department considered the competitiveness of

dispensaries, geographic factors, and economic considerations in determining

whether the regulations would afford sufficient patient access to medical marijuana. Given Article XIV’s emphasis on patient access, Department officials questioned

whether it was appropriate to put any numerical limits on licenses. However,

Department officials testified that an additional “major concern” was preventing the

diversion of excess medical marijuana into the already-existing black market, which

the Department has a “regulatory duty to . . . prevent.” See Art. XIV, § 1.3(1)(b).

To assist it in formulating its rules, the Department commissioned a study

from economists at the University of Missouri to estimate supply and demand. The

market study, known as “the Haslag study,” looked to other States to provide estimates on both supply and demand within the Missouri market.

4 The Haslag study estimated with 66% percent confidence that the number of

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