State v. Cantrell
This text of 496 P.2d 276 (State v. Cantrell) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Idaho Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
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James and Jane Cantrell were arrested on January 5, 1970, pursuant to warrants issued upon criminal complaints. Both were charged with the felony of selling intoxicating liquors without a license1 at the Lumberjack Cafe near Cataldo, Idaho, on the evening of November 18, 1969. After a preliminary hearing they were bound over to the district court where they appeared for arraignment. Upon the reading of the informations, both defendants filed their respective demurrers and motions to quash the informations. The district court continued the arraignment pending disposition of the motions and demurrers.
Defendant Charles Miller was arrested on April 4, 1970, at his place of business known as “Charlie’s Acres,” near Rathdrum, Idaho, for selling intoxicating liquor that night without a license. After a preliminary hearing the defendant was bound over to the district court. At his arraignment, Charles Miller also filed a motion to quash the information and a demurrer on grounds somewhat similar to those asserted by the Cantrells. The trial court granted Miller a hearing and ordered that it be consolidated with hearings on the motions and demurrers filed by the Cantrells. (The cases themselves were not combined).
The briefs in support of the motions and demurrers argued that the facts alleged in the respective informations could not constitute a public offense because the liquor licensing scheme embodied in Idaho Code, Title 23, creates a classification which violates the Equal Protection Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment to the United States Constitution, and Art. I, § 2 of the Idaho Constitution.2 I.C. §§ 23-903 and 23-948 require a business engaged in the retail sale of liquor by the drink to be located within an incorporated city, excepting 1) upon a “golf course” as defined; 2) an “airport” as defined; or 3) at a “lake resort” as defined. The defendants possessed licenses for the retail sale of beer for consumption at their places of business. They admitted that they did not possess liquor licenses, and explained that they had not applied for licenses because the locations of their businesses placed them outside a municipal^ and not within any of [655]*655the enumerated exceptions to the municipality requirement.
The district court denied the defendants’ demurrers, but granted the motions to quash, finding that the legislative requirements for a business to engage in the retail sale of liquor by the drink, denied defendants equal protection of the laws. The language of the court’s memorandum opinion appears to hold the classification unconstitutional on its face rather than simply as applied to these defendants. The State of Idaho has appealed the holding.
We must preface discussion of the constitutional issue by disposing of the State’s contention, that defendants’ failure to apply for retail liquor licenses destroyed their standing to challenge the constitutionality of the statutes under which they were prosecuted. The only authority cited to support this assertion is a Washington decision denying relief to civil plaintiffs, who brought an action to enjoin enforcement of liquor licensing regulations on grounds that the authorizing statute was unconstitutional for failure to prescribe adequate .standards. Relief was denied because the plaintiffs did not claim that they had been denied licenses.3 That holding merely restates the familiar rule that one who seeks Injunctive relief from enforcement of a statute must show that he is adversely or injuriously affected by the statute.4 When applied to defendants who raise constitutional defenses to criminal prosecutions, the rule requires simply that the constitutional issues relate directly to the particular statutory provisions upon which the prosecutions are based.5 That requirement is satisfied in each of the present cases.
The Twenty-First Amendment to the United States Constitution confers upon the states broad regulatory powers over liquor traffic within their respective territories. Article III of the Idaho Constitution, expressly grants to, the legislature plenary power to control the sale of intoxicating liquors, “for the promotion of temperance and morality.” The introductory section to the relevant part of Title 23, I.C. § 23-901, declares that:
“The restrictions, regulations, and provisions contained in this act are enacted by the legislature for the protection, health, welfare and safety of the people of the state of Idaho and for the"'purpose of promoting and encouraging temperance in the use of alcoholic beverages within said state of Idaho.”
Such declaration reflects an exercise of the state’s sovereign police power. This Court has acknowledged that the police power is “the least limitable of the powers of government.”6 Some discrimination is inherent in any legislative attempt to limit the number 'of retail outlets for liquor by the drink, and because any legislation is presumed to be constitutional,7 a mere showing of discrimination has been held insufficient to defeat the regulatory scheme.8 Nevertheless, to comply with the equal protection requirements of the federal and state constitutions, the discriminatory classification must reflect a reasonably conceivable, legitimate public purpose,9 and it [656]*656must relate reasonably to that ascribed purpose.10 Because a legitimate public purpose appears, prima facie, from the language of I.C. § 23-901, the issue is narrowed to whether the four-part classification is reasonably related to that purpose.
When exercising its police power over economic activity, the legislature is accorded wide latitude in selecting a classification to accomplish the given purpose.11 In this appeal the State maintains that the classification as to incorporated cities is designed to insure adequate police supervision and protection of established retail outlets and to make certain that a local governing body in addition to the State is situated to review the qualifications of prospective new licensees. As to the other classification categories, the State argues, in effect, that the legislative intent was to extend the scope of authorized retail liquor sales by the drink to substantial, permanent enterprises which appeared to pose relatively few police supervision and protection problems despite their rural location. Such expansion of liquor licensing outlets falls well within the plenary power of the legislature.
It is argued that enterprises other than those specifically identified in Title 23 might qualify for liquor licenses under the state’s rationale. In that respect, the classification may be “under-inclusive” because it benefits some persons in a manner which furthers a legitimate public purpose but does not confer the same benefit on others alleged to be similarly situated.12 However, in appropriate cases the courts prudently have modified the strict theory that the classification must include all those similarly situated with respect to the purpose, holding that equal protection has not been denied.
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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack
496 P.2d 276, 94 Idaho 653, 1972 Ida. LEXIS 311, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-cantrell-idaho-1972.