Summary
In Gettman v. Bd. of Comm'rs, 122 Colo. 185, 221 P.2d 363 (1950), the court addressed a situation similar to that in this case.
Summary of this case from Berger v. City of BoulderOpinion
No. 16,238.
Decided July 17, 1950.
An action involving the validity of a resolution of a board of county commissioners prohibiting the sale of alcoholic liquors between the hours of twelve o'clock midnight on Saturday and eight o'clock A.M. on Monday. The resolution was adjudged by the trial court to be valid.
Judgment Affirmed in Part, and Reversed in Part.
1. WORDS AND PHRASES — Fermented Malt Beverages. "Under our [Colorado] statutes the term 'fermented malt beverages' means any such beverages containing not more than 3.2 per cent of alcohol by weight."
2. INTOXICATING LIQUORS — Licenses. "The power to grant licenses and to suspend and revoke them for violation of statutes, rules or regulations does not by necessary inference include the authority to make such rules and regulations."
3. Regulation of Sale — County Commissioners. A board of county commissioners "has no authority to regulate the sale of malt and vinous liquors, other than 3.2 per cent beer, but only to grant, suspend or revoke licenses as provided by statute."
4. Intoxicating and Nonintoxicating Beverages. It is patent that the legislature, by enacting certain laws, intended to establish that 3.2 per cent of alcohol by weight as the measure of alcoholic content beyond which beverages are intoxicating and below which they are nonintoxicating and to treat fermented malt beverages containing not more than 3.2 per cent of alcohol by weight as nonintoxicating.
5. Nonintoxicants — Legislative Power — County Commissioners. In an action involving the issuance of a license to sell alcoholic liquors, it is held, "that our [Colorado] legislature could properly declare that beer containing not more than 3.2 per cent of alcohol by weight legally was not intoxicating; * * * that the legislature had power to delegate to county commissioners the regulation of the sale of such fermented malt beverages. * * * it could also, within limits, change that standard * * * or it could repeal its enactment and abolish the legislative standard altogether."
6. Intoxicants — Fact Issues. Where there is no legislative standard by which to test whether 3.2 per cent beer is legally intoxicating, the question becomes one of fact which must be determined by the trier of facts from the evidence.
7. STATUTES — Validity — Burden of Proof — Alcoholic Liquors. "A statute is presumed to be valid in all its provisions. The burden of proof is upon him who attacks its validity." In the instant case it is held, "that plaintiffs have failed to establish the invalidity of the statute delegating the right of regulation of the sale of such 'fermented malt beverages' to county commissioners."
8. ALCOHOLIC LIQUORS — Licenses — County Commissioners. In an action involving the validity of a resolution of a board of county commissioners prohibiting the sale of alcoholic liquors between the hours of twelve o'clock midnight on Saturday and eight o'clock A.M. on Monday, it is held: "All presumptions favor the validity of the resolution and, in the absence of indication of legislative intent, and in view of the lack of harmony in precedents from other jurisdictions, we feel constrained to uphold its validity as not in violation of the statute."
Error to the District Court of Morgan County, Hon. George C. Twombly, Judge.
Mr. MAX D. MELVILLE, Mr. WALTER F. SCHERER, Mr. EDWARD E. PRINGLE, for plaintiffs in error.
Mr. GEORGE A. EPPERSON, for defendant in error.
PLAINTIFFS, alleging that they were engaged in the dispensing of fermented malt beverages and malt and vinous liquors in the county of Morgan, brought this action in behalf of themselves and other persons so engaged, asking declaratory judgment as to the validity of a resolution adopted by the board of county commissioners prohibiting the sale of malt or vinous liquors and fermented malt beverages between the hours of 12:00 midnight on Saturday and 8:00 A. M. on Monday. Defendant admitted the essential allegations and both plaintiffs and defendant moved for summary judgment. Defendant's motion was granted and the resolution adjudged valid.
Plaintiffs here challenge the power of the board of county commissioners: I. To prohibit the sale of malt or vinous liquors during hours when not prohibited by statute, as attempted by its resolution; and, II. To prohibit the sale of "fermented malt beverages" as so attempted. Under our statutes the term "fermented malt beverages" means any such beverages containing not more than 3.2 per cent of alcohol by weight, and their manufacture and sale are regulated by separate laws from those regulating the manufacture and sale of other alcoholic liquors which are classified as malt, vinous and spirituous liquors. No challenge is interposed as to the nature or appropriateness of the proceeding. The controversy is bona fide; the facts are not in dispute; the validity of the resolution of the board of county commissioners here involved is dependent on the construction of statutes; its prompt determination is a matter of public importance and the parties here contesting have a real and adverse interest therein.
I. As to the power of the county commissioners to prohibit the sale of malt or vinous liquors, it is insisted by defendant in error that this issue is not raised here, nor was it determined by the trial court, inasmuch as defendant in its answer, while admitting that some of the individual plaintiffs were engaged in dispensing fermented malt beverages, denied that all of said individuals were so engaged. However, there is no denial of the allegation that plaintiffs are engaged in the dispensing of malt and vinous liquors, and even if there were denial, when defendant filed its motion for a summary judgment upon the ground "that the sole question involved is the legality of the resolution passed by the defendant," and such motion was sustained, any other issue was waived. As to the sale of liquors other than 3.2 per cent beer, plaintiffs in error urge: (1) That the legislature may not delegate to county commissioners power to regulate such sales; (2) that the legislature has in no way attempted so to delegate that power; and (3) that the regulation here involved is in conflict with the statutory provisions for hours of sale and must yield to them.
By virtue of Article XXII of our Colorado Constitution, the manufacture, sale and distribution of all intoxicating liquors shall "be performed exclusively by or through such agencies and under such regulations as may hereafter be provided by statutory laws of the State of Colorado." Under authority of that amendment, the legislature enacted the Liquor Code of 1935, being sections 15 to 47, chapter 89, '35 C.S.A., wherein, by paragraph 5 thereof, being section 19, chapter 89, '35 C.S.A., it is provided that, "For the purpose of regulation and controlling the licensing of the manufacture and sale of malt, vinous, and spirituous liquors, as provided by this article, there is hereby created the state licensing authority. The said state licensing authority shall consist of the secretary of state." Among the duties of the state licensing authority, as provided by amended section 20 of said chapter 89 (chapter 159, S.L. '41), are the following: (b) To make such general rules and regulations and such special rulings and findings as he may deem necessary for the proper regulation and control of the manufacture, sale and distribution of malt, vinous or spirituous liquors and the enforcement of this Article, in addition thereto, and not inconsistent therewith, and may alter, amend, repeal and publish the same from time to time."
We find in the statute no attempt to delegate to the board of county commissioners any authority of regulation. Authority is there given to the board to issue licenses in situations as here involved, upon presentation of a state license and payment of fee. Authority also is given to refuse to issue any license for good cause. Section 23 of the statute provides that, "Before granting any license" the board "shall consider the reasonable requirements of the neighborhood, the desires of the inhabitants, * * * and all other reasonable restrictions which are or may be placed upon the new district or districts * * * by the board of county commissioners." However, the "reasonable restrictions" contemplated are those which have been placed upon districts (such as zoning restrictions), and are to be considered "before granting any license," rather than restrictions upon sales, as to hours or otherwise, which have to do with the operation of the business after a license has been granted, as contended by defendant in error. The power to grant licenses and to suspend and revoke them for violation of statutes, rules or regulations does not by necessary inference include the authority to make such rules and regulations, especially where, as here, a separate state licensing authority is established with power to make rules and regulations.
It would appear from the provisions of Article XXII of our Constitution, hereinbefore quoted, that the power of regulation of the sale of intoxicating liquors was exclusively in the legislature, to be declared only by "statutory laws." If, under such constitutional provision, the legislature has any power of delegation of its authority to regulate, such power has clearly been delegated to the secretary of state as state licensing authority, who by statute has been given the duties and authority, who by statute has been given the duties and authority "to make such general rules and regulations and such special rulings and findings as he may deem necessary for the proper regulation and control" of the sale of such liquors. Accordingly, we must conclude that the board of county commissioners has no authority to regulate the sale of malt and vinous liquors, other than 3.2 per cent beer, but only to grant, suspend or revoke licenses as provided by statute. Whether the attempted regulation was in conflict with the statutory provision as to hours of closing need not be determined.
II. As to the authority of the county commissioners to restrict the sale of "fermented malt beverages," (3.2% beer), as here attempted, our statute, Article 1, chapter 89, '35 C.S.A., provides that the licenses required in counties for sale of "fermented malt beverages" shall be issued by the board of county commissioners of the county. It further provides that the authorities having the power to issue licenses "shall likewise have the power to make such reasonable rules and regulations with respect to the sale of fermented malt beverages as they may deem proper, not inconsistent with the provisions of this article." There is no contention made that the regulation with which we are here concerned is unreasonable, and the attempted delegation of authority to the county commissioners in the premises is plain. Therefore, the regulation was valid if the legislature could delegate authority to the board of commissioners. However, plaintiffs in error urge, first, that the legislature has no power so to delegate right of regulation and, second, that if such power exists, the regulation here involved is in conflict with the statutory provisions and must yield to them.
As to the first contention, we are confronted with the question, unfortunately not discussed in the briefs, whether or not such fermented malt beverages are within the contemplation of Article XXII of our Constitution, which concerns "all intoxicating liquors." If such liquors are embraced within its control, then their sale must be performed exclusively "under such regulations as may hereafter be provided by statutory laws of the State of Colorado." If such liquors are not within its control, then their sale is not so restricted. The Constitution contains no definition of "intoxicating liquors." After the adoption of Article XXII of the Constitution and before its effective date, our legislature at the same special session enacted separate statutes, one "An act regulating the sale and manufacture of beer and wine containing not more than 3.2% of alcohol by weight," and the other, "An act regulating the manufacture and sale of alcoholic liquor containing more than 3.2% of alcohol by weight," etc., and thereafter at the regular 1935 session the former act was amended substantially to its present form and made to concern only "fermented malt beverages," which are specifically declared to mean such beverages containing not more than 3.2 per cent alcohol by weight. At the time of its amendment in 1935 and prior to its amendment in 1945, the statute contained the specific declaration that "such fermented malt beverage is hereby declared to be non-intoxicating." While both these statutes were included in the 1935 compilation of our statutes in chapter 89, entitled "Intoxicating Liquors," it is patent that the legislature intended to implement the new constitutional amendment by establishing 3.2 per cent of alcohol by weight as the measure of alcoholic content beyond which beverages were intoxicating and below which they were nonintoxicating and to treat fermented malt beverages containing not more than 3.2 per cent of alcohol by weight as nonintoxicating. In such circumstances, was the state legislature competent to declare 3.2 per cent beer nonintoxicating and eliminate it from the control of the constitutional provision?
[5-7] A similar situation existed within the federal jurisdiction. The National Prohibition Amendment barred intoxicating liquor. Under the National Prohibition, or Volstead, Act, intoxicating liquor was defined as that containing one-half of one per cent or more of alcohol by volume. By act of March 22, 1933, the Congress attempted to exempt from its operation beer and certain other beverages containing not more than 3.2 per cent of alcohol by weight. Many state legislatures attempted definitions of what constituted intoxicating liquor. A list of the states and of such attempts may be found in Ruppert v. Caffey, 251 U.S. 264, 40 Sup. Ct. 141, 64 L. Ed. 260. It seems to have been the consensus of opinion that a rigid classification of beverages as to alcoholic content in determining whether or not they were intoxicating was essential to effective regulation or effective prohibition of the sale of intoxicating liquors, and that it was within legislative competence, within reasonable limits, to declare below what percentage of alcoholic content beverages should be deemed nonintoxicating. As said in the opinion in National Prohibition Cases, 253 U.S. 350, 40 Sup. Ct. 486, 64 L. Ed. 946: "While recognizing that there are limits beyond which Congress cannot go in treating beverages as within its power of enforcement, we think those limits are not transcended by the provision of the Volstead Act (Title II, § 1), wherein liquors containing as much as one-half of one per cent of alcohol by volume and fit for use for beverage purposes are treated within that power," and, while it was held that the definition of intoxicating liquor as changed by the Congress form a liquid containing one-half of one per cent of alcohol by volume to one containing 3.2 per cent by weight was not binding upon the states, it was held a proper and reasonable exercise of legislative authority in implementing the National Prohibition Amendment and providing for its effective enforcement. The question is discussed at length in Louisville N.R. Co. v. Falls City Ice Beverage Company, Inc., 249 Ky. 807, 61 S.W.2d 639, and more briefly in Ryman v. Legg, Sheriff, 179 Ga. 534, 176 S.E. 403. Taking judicial notice of the apparently uniform decisions of state and federal courts, and having no evidence before us to the contrary, we conclude that our legislature could properly declare that beer containing not more than 3.2 per cent of alcohol by weight legally was not intoxicating; that under such declaration the regulation of the manufacture and sale of fermented malt beverages as defined by the act was not restricted by the provisions of Article XXII of the Constitution, and that the legislature had power to delegate to county commissioners the regulation of the sale of such fermented malt beverages. Johnson v. Board of County Com'rs, 147 Kan. 211, 75 P.2d 849. However, while the legislature could properly declare that 3.2 per cent beer was not legally intoxicating, it could also, within limits, change that standard, as was done by the Congress in amending the Volstead Act, or it could repeal its enactment and abolish the legislative standard altogether, and this the Colorado legislature did. Having, in 1935, set up by independent statute an entirely separate scheme for regulating the manufacture and sale of 3.2 per cent beer, tied to the declaration that such beer was not intoxicating and therefore not within the restrictions of Article XXII of our Constitution, the legislature, in 1945, repealed its declaration that such beer was not intoxicating and left the scheme for its regulation adrift without an anchor. Since that repeal there remains no legislative standard by which to test whether such beverage is legally intoxicating, and the question becomes one of fact which must be determined by the trier of facts from the evidence. In the case before us no finding was made by the court below, and no evidence was submitted to the court from which it could determine whether or not 3.2 per cent beer is in fact intoxicating and whether or not its manufacture and sale are within the restrictions of Article XXII of our Constitution. A statute is presumed to be valid in all its provisions. The burden of proof is upon him who attacks its validity and in the absence of proof we must hold that plaintiffs have failed to establish the invalidity of the statute delegating the right of regulation of the sale of such "fermented malt beverages" to county commissioners.
The one further challenge is that the attempted regulation prohibiting sale on Sundays is inconsistent with the provision contained in the 1945 amendment to the statute, which reads: "Provided, however, that such beverages shall not be sold to any person under the age of eighteen years and shall not be sold to any person between the hours of 12:00 o'clock midnight and 5:00 o'clock A.M." The argument is that where a statute contains a limitation, an ordinance containing a further limitation is invalid as in conflict with the statute. In support of that contention are cited Noey v. City of Saginaw, 271 Mich. 595, 261 N.W. 88, and Neil House Hotel Co. v. City of Columbus, 144 Ohio St. 248, 58 N.E.2d 665, wherein the court said:
"When the statutes and a valid regulation of the Board of Liquor Control say that the sale of intoxicants may not be made after a designated hour, it is equivalent to saying that sales up to that time are lawful, and an ordinance which attempts to restrict sales beyond an earlier hour is in conflict therewith and must yield. Schneiderman, an Infant, v. Sesanstein, 121 Ohio St. 80, 86, 167 N.E. 158, 160, 64 A.L.R. 981.
"In principle at least this case is controlled by the decision in City of Akron v. Scalera, 135 Ohio St. 65, 19 N.E.2d 279 the implications of which are that if a municipal ordinance of the type here involved is in collision with a general law upon the same subject, the ordinance is ineffective."
In answer to that contention defendant in error cites States ex rel. v. Gregory, 191 Wash. 70, 70 P.2d 788. There might well be cited also, Ham v. Los Angeles County, 46 Cal. App. 148, 189 Pac. 462, where the court quoted with approval from Mann v. Scott, 180 Cal. 550, 182 Pac. 281: "Where the legislature has assumed to regulate a given course of conduct by prohibitory enactments, a municipality with subordinate power to act in the matter may make such new and additional regulations in aid and furtherance of the purpose of the general law as may seem fit and appropriate to the necessities of the particular locality, and which are not in themselves unreasonable." There it was held (contrary to the rule in Ohio) that a restriction of the speed of vehicles by statute does not prevent further restriction of speed by local ordinance; also might be cited Ex parte Hoffman, 155 Cal. 114, 99 Pac. 517, where it is held that a statute declaring that it shall be unlawful to sell milk containing less than a specified percentum of solids does not make invalid a city ordinance which requires a larger percentage than that required by statute; and City of Bellingham v. Cissna, 44 Wash. 397, 87 Pac. 481, where it is held competent for city authorities to prescribe a rate of speed less than that which the state law permitted, and the court said, "If it had been the intention of the legislature to provide that no municipal ordinance regulating speed of automobiles should be permitted, it could have so stated." Had our legislature desired to assume exclusive control of the hours of closing of establishments dispensing alcoholic beverages, it would have been easy so to declare. All presumptions favor the validity of the resolution and, in the absence of indication of legislative intent, and in the view of the lack of harmony in precedents from other jurisdictions, we feel constrained to uphold its validity as not in violation of the statute.
Accordingly, the judgment of the trial court is affirmed insofar as it relates to places of business for the dispensing of fermented malt beverages as defined by the statute; it is reversed as to those dispensing malt and vinous liquors, and the case is remanded for entry of judgment accordingly.
MR. CHIEF JUSTICE HILLIARD and MR. JUSTICE ALTER dissent.
MR. JUSTICE HOLLAND does not participate.