Willmont Liquors, Inc. v. Rohan

2 Misc. 2d 768
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedMay 14, 1956
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 2 Misc. 2d 768 (Willmont Liquors, Inc. v. Rohan) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Willmont Liquors, Inc. v. Rohan, 2 Misc. 2d 768 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1956).

Opinion

Matthew M. Levy, J.

Petitioner is a corporation organized and authorized to do business in New York State. It has been licensed, since August 11, 1954, to sell alcoholic beverages at retail for consumption off the premises at 566 Pennsylvania Avenue, Brooklyn, New York. Pursuant to article 78 of the Civil Practice Act and subdivision 6 of section 121 of the Alcoholic Beverage Control Law, the petitioner has brought two proceedings to have the determinations of the respondents (individual members of the State Liquor Authority and the State Liquor Authority itself) reviewed judicially so as to have the court annul the respondents’ refusal to approve the petitioner’s application to transfer its license from the Brooklyn address to 300 [770]*770West 153rd Street, Manhattan, or in the alternative to 104 West 113th Street, Manhattan, or in the further alternative to 270 West 153rd Street, Manhattan, and to have the court order the respondents to approve at least one of the applications for transfer.

The facts appear to be somewhat involved, and I shall endeavor to narrate them simply. But even before the factual background of the present two proceedings is revealed, it is necessary to take note of an intermediate order, dated October 5,1955, which granted the respondents’ motion to strike certain portions of the original petition. That petition sought to treat in one proceeding all of the petitioner’s requests, to change location. The result of this order was to require the-petitioner to serve an amended petition, omitting any reference to the 113th Street application and confining its scope to the 153rd Street applications. Accordingly, a separate proceeding was instituted to review the respondents’ actions relating to the 113th Street application. However, the two motions to overcome the respondents’ refusals to permit the petitioner to move its license to various locations in Manhattan were presented to me at the same time, and will here be disposed of together.

On April 1, 1955, the petitioner filed an application with the New York City Alcoholic Beverage Control Board to transfer its license to 300 West 153rd Street near Eighth Avenue in the borough of Manhattan. The petitioner states that, on the same day that it filed this application, a sign was placed on the fence surrounding an empty lot located, within 200 feet of 300 West 153rd Street, announcing that the Bethany Baptist Church intended to erect a structure upon the lot, to be completed in September of 1955. On April 27, 1955, the city board disapproved the application. On April 29, 1955, an alternative application was filed by the petitioner with the city board for permission to transfer its license to the premises of 104 West 113th Street, near the intersection of Lenox Avenue in the borough of Manhattan. Subsequently, on May 18, 1955, this application, too, was forwarded by the city board to the respondents, with a recommendation that it be denied.

On June 8, 1955, the State Liquor Authority, at a regular meeting, considered the petitioner’s applications, the papers annexed to them, the recommendations of the city board, the report of the respondents’ investigator and all other relevant papers; and, after such consideration, the Authority determined that the applications should be disapproved. Under date of June 9, 1955, the respondents informed the petitioner that both of its applications had been disapproved. In each instance the [771]*771respondents assigned two reasons for their action, the first reason being the same in each case, as follows: “ 1. The Authority finds that the licensees, as recent purchasers, have not been operating the licensed premises for a sufficient period of time to enable them to show a bona fide effort to serve public convenience and advantage in their present location and, accordingly, they have failed to establish to the satisfaction of the Authority that public convenience and advantage at their present location would be served by granting this application to remove from the present premises. ”

The second reason' assigned by the respondents for the refusal with respect to the 153rd Street application reads as follows: 2. The applicants have failed to establish that public convenience will be served by permitting the removal of its present store to the proposed location since the applied for premises is on the same side

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Bluebook (online)
2 Misc. 2d 768, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/willmont-liquors-inc-v-rohan-nysupct-1956.