State v. NORTH OF THE BORDER TOBACCO, LLC

32 A.3d 548, 162 N.H. 206
CourtSupreme Court of New Hampshire
DecidedJune 30, 2011
Docket2010-516
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 32 A.3d 548 (State v. NORTH OF THE BORDER TOBACCO, LLC) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of New Hampshire primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. NORTH OF THE BORDER TOBACCO, LLC, 32 A.3d 548, 162 N.H. 206 (N.H. 2011).

Opinion

Lynn, J.

The respondents, North of the Border Tobacco, LLC d/b/a Tobacco Haven (Tobacco Haven) and Roll Your Own, LLC (RYO), appeal decisions of the Superior Court (Smukler, J.) that enjoined them from allowing customers to use on-site cigarette-making machines 1 to make rolled cigarettes with loose tobacco unless they make the required escrow payments under RSA chapter 541-C (2007). We affirm in part, vacate in part, and remand.

I

By way of background, in 1998 forty-six states, including New Hampshire, and other United States territories (settling states) entered into a Master Settlement Agreement (MSA) with leading United States tobacco product manufacturers to resolve litigation brought by the settling states over public health costs associated with smoking. See generally State v. Philip Morris USA, 155 N.H. 598, 600 (2007) (reciting general factual background). Under the MSA, the settling states agreed to dismiss their lawsuits and to release certain past and future claims against the settling manufacturers in exchange for annual payments by the settling manufacturers, as well as several other concessions, including marketing and advertising restrictions. These annual, nationwide payments are placed into an escrow account, are partly based on relative market share, and are intended to help the settling states “achieve significant funding for the advancement of public health” and “the implementation of important tobacco-related public health measures.” Id. (quotations omitted). The funds are subsequently allocated among the settling states according to a formula set forth in the MSA.

The drafters of the MSA acknowledged that the marketing restrictions and payment obligations could put the settling manufacturers at a competitive disadvantage relative to tobacco manufacturers who have not joined the MSA (non-participating manufacturers or NPMs) and potentially cause them to lose market share to the NPMs. Thus, the MSA provides for an NPM adjustment, which attempts to level the marketplace *209 by reducing the annual payment obligations of the settling manufacturers if it is proven that they collectively lost market share to the NPMs; this adjustment requires consideration of several factors set forth under the MSA. Nevertheless, a settling state’s allocated payment is not subject to the NPM adjustment if it enacts and enforces legislation, known as a Qualifying Statute under the MSA, requiring NPMs to make annual deposits into an escrow fund to cover public health costs related to smoking. NPMs’ escrow payments are based on market share.

In 1999, the legislature enacted a Qualifying Statute, see RSA chapter 541-C (NPM Act). Under the NPM Act, a tobacco product manufacturer selling cigarettes to consumers within the state has two choices; it can •

(a) Become a participating manufacturer (as that term is defined in subsection II(jj) of the [MSA]) and generally perform its financial obligations under the [MSA]; or
(b) Place into a qualified escrow fund by April 15 of the year following the year in question [certain prescribed amounts based on units sold] (as such amounts are adjusted for inflation).

RSA 541-C :3, I. The escrow fund is aimed at ensuring that the State will have an eventual source of recovery from an NPM should the entity be judgment-proof at the time it may be proven liable for damages for smoking-related health care costs. See RSA 541-C:1, VI. If no such liability is imposed, an entity’s escrow funds, with interest, are to be returned to it after twenty-five years. See RSA 541-C:3, 11(c). In 2003, the legislature enacted complementary legislation to fortify the enforcement of the NPM Act. RSA chapter 541-D (2007) requires NPMs who sell cigarettes in New Hampshire to annually certify to the attorney general that they are in compliance with RSA chapter 541-C, and to provide a list of all cigarette brand families sold. RSA 541-D :3. The attorney general maintains a state directory of entities which are in compliance, RSA 541-D:3, II, and no entity may sell, offer or possess for sale cigarettes of a brand family not listed in the state directory, RSA 541-D :3, III.

II

Respondent Tobacco Haven owns a tobacco shop in Brookline that sells a variety of tobacco products, including loose tobacco and certain cigarette-making machines for home use. At some point, it purchased and installed two cigarette-making machines for on-site consumer use, for a rental fee, in conjunction with loose tobacco and cigarette tubes purchased at the store. The machines can inject 200 tubes with tobacco in approximately ten minutes. It is undisputed that the loose tobacco used in conjunction with the *210 machines was labeled by the supplier as “pipe tobacco,” and that Tobacco Haven identified such tobacco as “pipe tobacco” to its customers who used the machines. In August 2009, the State filed a petition for declaratory judgment and preliminary and permanent injunction against Tobacco Haven, requesting the trial court to: (1) declare that Tobacco Haven is a manufacturer of tobacco products pursuant to RSA chapters 541-C and 541-D; (2) issue a temporary injunction “halting the sale of cigarettes made using [Tobacco Haven’s] cigarette-making machines”; and (3) enter a permanent injunction “banning the sale of cigarettes made through [Tobacco Haven’s] manufacturing process unless and until [it] is in compliance with RSA 541-C and RSA 541-D.”

In its answer, Tobacco Haven denied that it was a tobacco product manufacturer under the NPM Act, and subsequently moved to dismiss the petition for failure to state a claim upon which relief can be granted. It also filed an objection to the State’s petition for preliminary injunction. According to Tobacco Haven, the loose tobacco itself constituted manufactured cigarettes as defined in RSA 541-C:2, IV, and, thus, the entity that “manufactured” that tobacco (Tobacco Haven’s supplier) was responsible for making escrow payments. It also argued in its pleadings that to the extent use of the machines constituted manufacturing cigarettes, the customers who purchased the loose tobacco and cigarette tubes, and then rented and operated the machines, were the only parties who directly produced cigarettes. The State objected to Tobacco Haven’s motions, maintaining its position that Tobacco Haven was manufacturing cigarettes on its premises through the sale of loose tobacco, labeled by the supplier as pipe tobacco, in conjunction with the use of the on-site cigarette-making machines. The trial court denied Tobacco Haven’s motion to dismiss and granted the State’s request for a preliminary injunction “to the extent it is directed at the loose tobacco used in conjunction with the respondent’s rolling machinefs], which bears the ‘pipe tobacco’ label.” Tobacco Haven unsuccessfully moved for reconsideration or for interlocutory review by this court. See SUP. Ct. R. 8.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
32 A.3d 548, 162 N.H. 206, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-north-of-the-border-tobacco-llc-nh-2011.