Sepe v. Daneker

68 A.2d 101, 76 R.I. 160, 1949 R.I. LEXIS 100
CourtSupreme Court of Rhode Island
DecidedAugust 19, 1949
StatusPublished
Cited by29 cases

This text of 68 A.2d 101 (Sepe v. Daneker) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Rhode Island primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Sepe v. Daneker, 68 A.2d 101, 76 R.I. 160, 1949 R.I. LEXIS 100 (R.I. 1949).

Opinion

*161 Baker, J.

This is a bill in equity brought primarily to enjoin the respondents individually and in their official *162 capacity from enforcing against the complainant certain rules and regulations of the liquor control administration. The complainant is the holder of a class C beverage license which entitles him to sell alcoholic beverages at retail. The respondents are the liquor control administrator and the director of the department of business regulation in this state. After a hearing on bill, answer and proof, the superior court entered a decree enjoining the respondents in accordance with the prayers of the bill. From the entry of that decree they have duly prosecuted their appeal to this court.

The evidence was presented in the superior court in the form of an agreed statement of facts and questions of law only were raised. Our determination of the questions presented here should not be considered as necessarily an approval of the method of procedure adopted by the complainant. The decree appealed from in substance ordered that the respondents, their successors in office and persons acting as their servants, agents, or employees be permanently enjoined from enforcing the provisions of rules 53 and 54 of the liquor control administration and prior rule 74 thereof and from promulgating rules and regulations similar thereto; and also declared that such numbered rules are null and void.

The pertinent portions of rules 53 and 54 as set out in the statement of facts are as follows: “53. No alcoholic beverages shall be sold by any manufacturer or wholesaler to any retailer, nor shall any retailer purchase any alcoholic beverages except for cash or on terms requiring payment by the purchaser within thirty days from date of delivery. * * * No manufacturer or wholesaler shall sell, except for cash, any alcoholic beverages to any retailer with knowledge that such retailer is in arrears for the payment of alcoholic beverages, as provided by this rule; nor shall any retailer purchase any alcoholic beverages except for cash while in arrears for the payment of any alcoholic beverages, as provided by this rule. * * * 54. Written notice shall be given *163 by the manufacturer or wholesaler by registered mail to each licensee in default of payment within five (5) days after the default occurs, containing the date of delivery, the amount of indebtedness in default, and the following statement: Rule No. 53 of the Liquor Control Administration prohibits you from accepting delivery of any alcoholic beverages from any manufacturer or wholesaler except for cash, until you have paid in full, the amount of the default shown in the notice. Each manufacturer and wholesaler shall notify the Liquor Control Administrator of each default within five days, and shall file with him a copy of each written notice required to be mailed to the licensee within five days after default occurs.” These rules became effective January 1, 1948. Former rule 74 which went into effect November 3, 1937 was the same as rule 53 except in a minor particular not material here.

From the agreed statement of facts it appears among other things that the complainant, who operates a retail liquor establishment in the city of Cranston, on February 2, 1948 received a notice by registered mail from the Rhode Island Liquor Dealers’ Credit Corporation stating that he was in arrears for the payment of alcoholic beverages to the Standard Wholesale Company in the amount of $18.35; that about March 1, 1948 he placed an order with a Rhode Island bottling corporation in Woonsocket for six one-fifth gallon bottles of whiskey; that about March 8, 1948 he was notified by such corporation that since his name was on the credit bureau delinquent list the corporation could not under the provisions of rule 53 sell him the whiskey on credit; that since February 2, 1948 he has been unable to purchase alcoholic beverages on credit because of the terms of rules 53 and 54 and former rule 74; that the credit bureau delinquent list is supplied to wholesalers and manufacturers by the Rhode Island Liquor Dealers’ Credit Corporation; that the liquor control administrator was duly notified in accordance with the provisions of rules 53 and 54 that the complainant was in default in the amount of $18.35 *164 to the Standard Wholesale Company, a duly licensed wholesaler; and that the complainant made no request for a hearing before the liquor control administrator as to whether or not the complainant was actually in arrears as above set out.

The trial justice in granting the complainant relief held that the rules and regulations in question were unconstitutional. The complainant contends that such holding was correct, in that rules 53 and 54 are contrary to the due process clause of section 1, article XIV, of the amendments to the constitution of the United States; that they violate secs. 2 and 10 of article I of the constitution of this state, and that the rules are invalid for other reasons. We entertain serious doubt whether the complainant, without having obtained from the liquor control administrator any ruling adversely affecting his license, can properly raise these constitutional questions. However, in the special circumstances we shall assume that the questions are properly before us but we shall consider only the points briefed and argued.

In support of his principal contentions on the issue of the constitutionality and invalidity of the rules the complainant relies on the law as set out in cases, both federal and state, of which Lawton v. Steele, 152 U. S. 133, is an example. In so doing he has overlooked or disregarded the nature of the business in which he himself is engaged. The cases above referred to, in their general references to the public interest and to arbitrary and unreasonable interference by way of unnecessary restrictions on private business, will be found on examination to apply to the ordinary private enterprises not requiring a license.

The complainant, however, is engaged in the business of selling at retail alcoholic beverages under a duly granted license. That license he holds subject to the laws of this state and to the rules and regulations of the liquor control administration. It has been decided that, generally speaking, a licensee takes his license subject to such conditions as *165 the legislature sees fit to impose. Child v. Bemus, 17 R. I. 230. Further in Tisdall Co. v. Board of Aldermen, 57 R. I.

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Bluebook (online)
68 A.2d 101, 76 R.I. 160, 1949 R.I. LEXIS 100, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sepe-v-daneker-ri-1949.