Ulmer v. Alaska Restaurant & Beverage Ass'n

33 P.3d 773, 2001 Alas. LEXIS 153, 2001 WL 1392771
CourtAlaska Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 9, 2001
DocketS-9676
StatusPublished
Cited by50 cases

This text of 33 P.3d 773 (Ulmer v. Alaska Restaurant & Beverage Ass'n) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Alaska Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ulmer v. Alaska Restaurant & Beverage Ass'n, 33 P.3d 773, 2001 Alas. LEXIS 153, 2001 WL 1392771 (Ala. 2001).

Opinion

OPINION

CARPENETI, Justice.

I, INTRODUCTION

In 1999 Lieutenant Governor Fran Ulmer certified and prepared an initiative petition to increase the statutory excise tax on alcoholic beverages. Shortly thereafter, the Alaska Restaurant and Beverage Association, the Alaska Cabaret, Hotel, Restaurant and Retailers Association, and the Alaska Wine and Spirit Wholesalers Association (collectively "ARBA") 1 challenged the petition, claiming it was unconstitutional and that the petition summary was legally defective because it did not include the amount of the tax increase and it implied that the tax increase covered a group not included in the statute or in the initiative. Upon cross-motions for summary judgment, the superior court concluded the petition was constitutional but that the petition summary was legally defective. The initiative sponsors, who are not party to these proceedings, then abandoned the initiative by failing to timely file the petition with the lieutenant governor. The state now appeals the conclusion that its petition summary was defective.

Because the initiative sponsors are not party to these proceedings, because the initiative petition is dead, and because there is no current controversy as to whom the excise tax applies, we conclude that this case is moot. As no exception to the mootness doe-trine applies in this case, we dismiss this appeal. *

*775 II. FACTS AND PROCEEDINGS

Alaska Statute 48.60.010 imposes an excise tax on alcoholic beverages. 2 In early summer of 1999, an application for an initiative petition to substantially increase that tax was submitted to Lieutenant Governor Fran Ul-mer. The initiative petition tracks the statutory language, except for the tax amounts. The initiative proposed changing the tax on malt beverages from $0.35 to $8.02 a gallon, the tax on wine or other beverages with up to twenty-one percent alcohol from $0.85 to $7.25 a gallon, and the tax on beverages with more than twenty-one percent alcohol from $5.60 a gallon to $37.60. The lieutenant governor certified the application in July 1999 and prepared the initiative petitions. Pursuant to AS 15.45.090 the initiative petition included a summary of the subject matter of the bill 3 as well as the complete text of the bill. 4 The summary of the petition reads as follows:

Tax Increase on Alcoholic Beverages

Imposes a tax increase on persons who make or sell in the state malt alcoholic beverages, wine and hard or distilled alcoholic beverages, or consigns shipments of these beverages into the state. Should this initiative become law?

In August 1999 ARBA filed a timely complaint 5 for declaratory and injunctive relief against the lieutenant governor, arguing that the initiative petition was unconstitutional and that the lieutenant governor's petition summary was defective. In November ARBA filed a motion for summary judgment. The state opposed, 6 asking the superior court to grant summary judgment in its favor.

The superior court granted partial summary judgment in favor of the state, concluding that the initiative was constitutional. The court also granted partial summary judgment in favor of ARBA on the question of the validity of the petition summary, concluding that the petition summary was deficient as a matter of law, because it was both inaccurate (because it said the tax was to be imposed on out-of-state sales of alcoholic bey-erages produced in-state, contrary to the language of the initiative), and misleading (because it did not specify the amount of the tax increase). The final judgment enjoined the state from counting the signatures on those petitions bearing the defective summary. °

ARBA filed a motion for attorney's fees. The state opposed ARBA's motion but did not file its own motion for attorney's fees. The superior court concluded that both parties had prevailed and that each was thus to bear its own costs and fees. It therefore did not award costs or fees to either side.

The initiative petition was not filed within the one-year period provided for in AS 15.45.140 and thus has no force or effect. 7 It consequently was not included on any ballot.

*776 The state appeals the grant of summary judgment in favor of ARBA on the validity of the petition summary.

III. STANDARD OF REVIEW

We resolve issues of standing and mootness using our independent judgment because, as matters of judicial policy, these are questions of law. 8

IV. DISCUSSION

The initiative sponsors failed to file the petition with the lieutenant governor as required by AS 15.45.140, and they are not parties to this appeal. While the state points out that the failure to file could render this appeal moot, it urges us to reach the merits on three bases.

First, the state argues that this matter is not moot because the "sponsors ceased their signature-gathering efforts" within the one-year submission period and, if this court reverses, the sponsors could then file a motion to have the one-year filing period tolled because of the superior court's erroneous ruling. The state next argues that if the case is moot, we should reach the merits of the case in order to determine the prevailing party for purposes of attorney's fees. Third, the state contends that this case falls within the public interest exception to the mootness doctrine. For the reasons explained below, we reject each argument.

A. This Case Is Moot.

"[We) refrain from deciding questions where the facts have rendered the legal issues moot." 9 "A claim will be deemed moot if it has lost its character as a present, live controversy. We have further held that [a] case is moot if the party bringing the action would not be entitled to any relief even if" it prevails. 10 Mootness can also occur when "a party no longer has a personal stake in the controversy and has, in essence, been divested of standing." 11 "The basic requirement for standing in Alaska is adversity." 12 Without adversity a case may be rendered moot. 13 Even in a declaratory judgment case such as this, where the rights or obligations of parties are delineated by the court, courts should avoid "becoming involved in premature adjudication of disputes that are uncertain to occur." 14

The state itself characterizes its request for relief as providing guidance for the drafting of future petition summaries. This characterization necessarily admits that the present controversy is moot.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
33 P.3d 773, 2001 Alas. LEXIS 153, 2001 WL 1392771, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ulmer-v-alaska-restaurant-beverage-assn-alaska-2001.