US Market 109 v. Oregon Liquor Control Commission

279 P.3d 833, 250 Or. App. 335, 2012 WL 2021896, 2012 Ore. App. LEXIS 722
CourtCourt of Appeals of Oregon
DecidedJune 6, 2012
DocketOLCC08V112; A144388
StatusPublished

This text of 279 P.3d 833 (US Market 109 v. Oregon Liquor Control Commission) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Oregon primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
US Market 109 v. Oregon Liquor Control Commission, 279 P.3d 833, 250 Or. App. 335, 2012 WL 2021896, 2012 Ore. App. LEXIS 722 (Or. Ct. App. 2012).

Opinion

ARMSTRONG, P. J.

In this companion case to US Market #180, LLC v. OLCC, 249 Or App 666, 278 P3d 116 (2012), licensee seeks review of a final order of the Oregon Liquor Control Commission (OLCC) that cancelled its license to sell alcoholic beverages at US Market #109.1 Licensee contends in its sole assignment of error that the OLCC erred in concluding that licensee failed to comply with a restriction on its license, and thereby violated OAR 845-005-0355(5), when one of licensee’s employees sold beer to an underage patron without using age-verification equipment.2 Although we conclude that the OLCC did not err in determining that licensee had violated OAR 845-005-0355(5), we nonetheless reverse and remand the final order for reconsideration of the sanctions imposed on licensee in light of our decision in US Market #180.

We take the pertinent facts, which are undisputed, from the OLCC’s final order and the record supporting the order. Licensee owns a number of small stores in addition to US Market #109, a convenience store in Woodburn, that are licensed to sell alcoholic beverages. As a result of violations of [337]*337OLCC rules at some of those other stores, the OLCC imposed several restrictions on the license for US Market #109. The pertinent restriction in this case provides:

“Licensee has Age Verification Equipment, as defined in OAR 845-009-0140(l)(b)[,] installed at all of its locations and will install Age Verification Equipment at any new locations at the time of licensure. Licensee will require that all individual employees or licensees use Age Verification Equipment to verify the age of any patron who reasonably appears under the age of 26 who attempts to purchase alcoholic beverages.”

(Emphasis added.) Roughly six months after the license restriction went into effect, the OLCC, the Marion County Sherriffs Office, and the Woodburn Police Department conducted a minor decoy operation to determine if Zarate — a clerk working at US Market #109 — would sell alcohol to Nolte, who was 20 years old.

To that end, Nolte entered US Market #109, grabbed a 24-ounce can of beer from a cooler, brought it to the counter to purchase it, and gave Zarate his driver’s license, which indicated that he was 20 years old and, hence, too young to lawfully purchase alcoholic beverages in Oregon. Zarate looked at Nolte’s driver’s license and, without using the age-verification machine installed at the store, sold the beer to Nolte. Shortly after the sale, an OLCC investigator issued a citation to Zarate for selling alcohol to a person who was less than 21 years old.3

In the course of issuing the citation, the investigator asked Zarate why he had failed to use the age-verification machine to verify Nolte’s age before making the sale. Zarate responded that the machine was not working, and, at the investigator’s insistence, Zarate scanned the investigator’s driver’s license, which produced a result on the machine’s screen of “No applications.” That result led the investigator to conclude that the machine was broken, but, despite Zarate’s and the investigator’s belief about the machine’s condition, the machine was not completely inoperable; rather, only the [338]*338automatic license-scanning feature was malfunctioning. Licensee had known about the malfunctioning scanner for roughly a month before the incident, and it also knew that the machine could be used to verify a patron’s age— notwithstanding the malfunction — by using the machine’s keypad to manually enter the necessary information from a driver’s license.

As a result of the sale, the OLCC charged licensee with two violations of agency rules and sought to cancel its license for US Market #109. The agency contended that licensee had violated OAR 845-006-0335(1) because Zarate had failed to verify Nolte’s age before selling beer to him and had also violated OAR 845-005-0355(5) because licensee had failed to comply with the license restriction when Zarate did not use the age-verification machine to verify Nolte’s age.4 The critical inquiry throughout the ensuing contested case proceeding and on judicial review is twofold: (1) whether licensee’s construction of the license restriction — viz., that the language of the restriction merely imposed an obligation on licensee to require its employees to use age-verification equipment during appropriate alcohol sales — is the correct understanding of the restriction and (2) if licensee’s construction is correct, whether, notwithstanding the fact that Zarate failed to use the age-verification machine before selling alcohol to Nolte, the OLCC met its burden of proving that [339]*339licensee had violated the restriction by failing to require Zarate to use the machine.5

We begin with the predicate legal issue: the proper construction of the license restriction. After a contested case hearing, an administrative law judge (ALJ) issued a proposed order in which he agreed with licensee’s construction of the license restriction. However, the OLCC took a different tack in its final order. Contrary to the ALJ, the OLCC agreed with the construction of the restriction championed by the agency, the same construction on which the OLCC had relied in its final order in US Market #180 — viz., that to comply with the restriction, licensee’s employees had to use age-verification equipment before making certain alcohol sales and, in doing so, had to verify that the patron was more than 21 years old. However, in our recent decision in US Market #180, we rejected the construction of the restriction on which the OLCC relies in this case.

The managing member of US Market #109 owns both US Market #109 and US Market #180, and the OLCC imposed the same license restriction on the licenses to sell alcohol at both stores. See US Market #180, 249 Or App at 667 (setting out license restriction). Similarly to this case, in US Market #180, the OLCC had sought to cancel the store’s license based, in part, on a violation of OAR 845-005-0355(5) resulting, according to the OLCC, from the licensee’s failure to comply with the license restriction when one of the licensee’s employees sold beer to an underage patron after scanning the patron’s driver’s license with an age-verification machine, which indicated both that the sale was “approved” and that the patron was only 19 years old. 249 Or App at 668.

On judicial review of the OLCC’s final order in that case, we concluded that the OLCC had misconstrued the restriction, and we reversed and remanded the final order so that the OLCC could apply the proper construction of it — viz., the “restriction, by its terms, imposes an obligation on [the] [340]*340licensee only to require that [the] licensee’s employees use age-verification equipment when the employee, during a sale of alcoholic beverages, is fulfilling his or her freestanding age-verification obligation under OAR 845-006-0335(l)(a).” 249 Or App at 673 (emphasis in original). Importantly, implicit in that construction of the restriction is the premise that the OLCC should assess, among other things, whether the licensee had adequately trained its employee in the use of the age-verification machine.

Here, the OLCC initially evaluated the evidence under the same misunderstanding of the license restriction that it had applied in US Market #180,

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Related

US Market 180, LLC v. Oregon Liquor Control Commission
278 P.3d 116 (Court of Appeals of Oregon, 2012)
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Beall Transport Equipment Co. v. Southern Pacific Transportation
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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
279 P.3d 833, 250 Or. App. 335, 2012 WL 2021896, 2012 Ore. App. LEXIS 722, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/us-market-109-v-oregon-liquor-control-commission-orctapp-2012.