Verano Alabama, LLC v. Alabama Medical Cannabis Commission (Appeal from Montgomery Circuit Court: CV-23-901165). ( 2024 )


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  • Rel:   April 19, 2024
    Notice: This opinion is subject to formal revision before publication in the advance sheets of Southern Reporter.
    Readers are requested to notify the Reporter of Decisions, Alabama Appellate Courts, 300 Dexter Avenue,
    Montgomery, Alabama 36104-3741 ((334) 229-0650), of any typographical or other errors, in order that corrections
    may be made before the opinion is published in Southern Reporter.
    ALABAMA COURT OF CIVIL APPEALS
    OCTOBER TERM, 2023-2024
    ________________________
    CL-2023-0831
    ________________________
    Verano Alabama, LLC
    v.
    Alabama Medical Cannabis Commission
    Appeal from Montgomery Circuit Court
    (CV-23-901165)
    PER CURIAM.
    On June 12, 2023, the Alabama Medical Cannabis Commission
    ("the AMCC") awarded Verano Alabama, LLC ("Verano"), an integrated-
    facility license, pursuant to the Darren Wesley "Ato" Hall Compassion
    Act ("the Act"), Ala. Code 1975, § 20-2A-1 et seq., which governs the
    CL-2023-0831
    Alabama medical-cannabis industry. On August 10, 2023, the AMCC
    rescinded the award. Verano appealed to the Montgomery Circuit Court
    ("the circuit court"), which upheld the AMCC's decision to rescind
    Verano's award. Verano now appeals the circuit court's judgment to this
    court. We construe the circuit court's judgment as being a judgment on
    the pleadings, and we affirm the judgment.
    Background 1
    The Act vests the AMCC with the authority to issue no more than
    five integrated-facility licenses. See Ala. Code 1975, §§ 20-2A-50 & 20-
    2A-67(b).   An integrated-facility license authorizes the licensee to
    cultivate cannabis, to process cannabis into medical cannabis, to dispense
    and sell medical cannabis to registered qualified patients or registered
    caregivers, to transport cannabis or medical cannabis between its
    facilities, and to sell or transfer medical cannabis to a dispensary. See §
    20-2A-67(b). To obtain an integrated-facility license, a business like
    Verano must apply to the AMCC. See Ala. Code 1975, § 20-2A-55(a). The
    1Based on the procedural posture of the case, the following factual
    information is derived primarily from the petition for judicial review filed
    by Verano.
    2
    CL-2023-0831
    AMCC then reviews the application to decide whether it should be
    granted or denied. See Ala. Code 1975, § 20-2A-56(d).
    If the AMCC decides to grant the application, the AMCC "awards"
    an integrated-facility license to the applicant. 2 The applicant must then
    pay an annual license fee. See § 20-2A-56(f). "Unless the [AMCC] or [a]
    court of competent jurisdiction enters a stay against the issuance of some
    or all licenses," the AMCC shall issue the integrated-facility license
    within 14 days of the payment of the annual license fee. Ala. Admin.
    Code (AMCC), r. 538-X-3-.17. An integrated-facility license is considered
    "issued" when the annual license fee has been paid, "all obstacles to the
    [a]pplicant's assuming the role of a [l]icensee have been removed," and
    the AMCC has delivered the license to the applicant. Ala. Admin. Code
    (AMCC), r. 538-X-3-.02(12). Upon receipt of the license, the applicant
    becomes a licensee. Id.
    On June 12, 2023, after completing its review of 38 applications for
    an integrated-facility license, the AMCC awarded 1 of the 5 available
    2A  "license awarded" refers to the AMCC's "decision to grant a
    license to a particular [a]pplicant, after which the [a]pplicant has the
    obligation to pay the license fee." Ala. Admin. Code (AMCC), r. 538-X-3-
    .02(11).
    3
    CL-2023-0831
    integrated-facility licenses to Verano, who had submitted the highest-
    ranked application based on the scoring system used by the AMCC
    during the review process. The AMCC also delivered an invoice for the
    annual license fee to Verano, who promptly paid the fee.3 However, the
    AMCC did not issue Verano the integrated-facility license it had been
    awarded. On June 16, 2023, following a virtual hearing, the AMCC
    stayed the issuance of the licenses it had awarded, citing concerns over
    the accuracy of the scoring of the applications.
    Subsequently, the AMCC scheduled a meeting for August 10, 2023.
    Shortly before the meeting, the AMCC revised its agenda to state its
    intent to decide whether to lift the stay of the licensing process and to
    "void" the June 12, 2023, license awards.          At the August 10, 2023,
    meeting, the AMCC commissioners voted to lift the stay. Immediately
    after the vote to lift the stay, the chairman of the AMCC raised the next
    item for discussion -- "to void the license awards from our June 12 [AMCC
    meeting]." The chairman continued:
    3Verano paid the $50,000 license fee on June 12, 2023.   The AMCC
    twice attempted to refund the license fee paid by Verano after its August
    10, 2023, meeting, see discussion, infra, but Verano did not respond to
    those attempts.
    4
    CL-2023-0831
    "As you are aware, ... following the June 12th meeting, the
    inconsistencies that were found in the tabulation and
    calculation of scores caused us to put a stay on our processes.
    We now have received corrected and verified calculations. And
    in an effort to be certain that the voting on licenses is
    supported by accurate data, we need to void the previous
    licenses awarded and consider that information in re-
    awarding new licenses."
    An AMCC commissioner then moved to void the June 12, 2023, license
    awards; that motion was seconded and approved unanimously.              The
    AMCC then recessed the public hearing for the commissioners to meet in
    an executive session.       During the executive session, the AMCC
    commissioners received and reviewed a report containing the updated
    scoring information, which revealed that Verano's score had increased
    and that it remained the highest-ranked applicant for an integrated-
    facility license. The AMCC reconvened the public hearing and voted to
    "re-award" the integrated-facility licenses; however, the AMCC did not
    award Verano an integrated-facility license.
    On August 21, 2023, pursuant to Ala. Code 1975, § 41-22-20, a part
    of the Alabama Administrative Procedure Act ("the AAPA"), Ala. Code
    1975, § 41-22-1 et seq.,4 Verano filed a "complaint and petition for judicial
    4Before filing the complaint, Verano filed a notice of appeal and cost
    bond with the AMCC. The notice of appeal complied with both Ala. Code
    5
    CL-2023-0831
    review" seeking judicial review of "[the AMCC]'s August 10, 2023[,]
    improper 'voiding' of the licenses it previously awarded on June 12,
    2023." 5 In its petition for judicial review, Verano alleged that the Act and
    the regulations promulgated by the AMCC did not expressly grant the
    AMCC the authority to "void" a license award and that the AMCC had
    not cited any legal authority when it voted to rescind the license awards.6
    In paragraph 22 of the petition for judicial review, Verano accused the
    AMCC of using the
    " 'scoring inconsistencies in the tabulation of score data' as a
    Trojan Horse to improperly throw out the scoring altogether,
    unilaterally void a valid license that was awarded to the
    1975, § 20-2A-57(f) (providing a specific right of appeal from an adverse
    licensing decision of the AMCC), and § 41-22-20 (providing a general
    right to judicial review of decisions of an administrative agency).
    Because there is no conflict between the two statutes for the purposes of
    this appeal, we elect to treat the complaint as a petition for judicial
    review under the AAPA.
    5Section    41-22-20(a) allows judicial review of "[a] preliminary,
    procedural, or intermediate agency action or ruling ... if review of the
    final agency decision would not provide an adequate remedy." The
    AMCC did not argue that review of the final agency decision would
    provide an adequate remedy, so we conclude that the circuit court had
    jurisdiction to review the rescission order, which was not a final decision
    of the AMCC.
    6In parliamentary law, the term "rescind" means "[t]o void, repeal,
    or nullify a main motion adopted earlier." Black's Law Dictionary 1562
    (11th ed. 2019) (emphasis added). Thus, we use the term "rescind" in
    that sense in this opinion.
    6
    CL-2023-0831
    highest-scoring applicant after final agency vote on June 12,
    2023, and re-award the license to another company without
    legal justification."
    Verano asserted that the AMCC did not have unfettered discretion to
    reconsider its earlier licensing decision and to "re-award" the integrated-
    facility licenses.   Verano requested that the circuit court reverse the
    AMCC's decision to rescind the June 12, 2023, license award and to order
    the AMCC to issue Verano an integrated-facility license, subject to the
    terms in the AMCC's regulations.
    On September 25, 2023, the AMCC moved to dismiss Verano's
    petition for judicial review because, it asserted, the petition failed to state
    a claim upon which relief could be granted under Rule 12(b)(6), Ala. R.
    Civ. P.7 However, in substance, the motion sought a judgment on the
    7A petition for judicial review filed pursuant to the AAPA does not
    violate Art. I, § 14, of the Alabama Constitution of 2022, which provides:
    "That the State of Alabama shall never be made a defendant in any court
    of law or equity." Section 14 makes a state agency absolutely immune
    from civil liability. See Ex parte Limestone Cnty. Bd. of Educ., 
    265 So. 3d 276
    , 281 (Ala. Civ. App. 2018). Section 14 does not preclude actions
    in which the state is not a defendant, no state money or property is at
    stake, and the action seeks judicial examination of the actions of a state
    agency. See State v. Bibby, 
    47 Ala. App. 240
    , 243, 
    252 So. 2d 662
    , 664
    (Crim. 1971). Section 41-22-20(h), Ala. Code 1975, provides that, in an
    action for judicial review, the state agency shall be named as a
    "respondent," not a defendant. In this context, a "respondent" is "[t]he
    party against whom an appeal is taken" and not "the defendant in an
    7
    CL-2023-0831
    pleadings under Rule 12(c), Ala. R. Civ. P. In the motion, the AMCC cited
    or quoted the petition for judicial review filed by Verano and, accepting
    the allegations in the petition as true, argued that it was entitled to a
    judgment as a matter of law. B.K.W. Enters., Inc. v. Tractor & Equip.
    Co., 
    603 So. 2d 989
    , 991 (Ala. 1992) ("Rule 12(c)[, Ala. R. Civ. P.,] allows
    a party to move for a judgment on the pleadings. When such a motion is
    made, the trial court reviews the pleadings filed in the case and, if the
    pleadings show that no genuine issue of material fact is presented, the
    equity proceeding." Black's Law Dictionary 1569 (11th ed. 2019). As the
    respondent, the state agency is responsible for transmitting the
    administrative record to be reviewed. See Ala. Code 1975, § 41-22-20(g).
    The action does not seek to impose civil liability upon the state. The
    action seeks only judicial review of the record transmitted by the
    respondent agency to determine whether the agency action was validly
    rendered and whether it should be affirmed, modified, or reversed, any
    equitable and legal relief being only incidental to the determination of
    the review. See Ala. Code 1975, § 41-22-20(k). Thus, unlike the situation
    in Redbud Remedies, LLC v. Alabama Medical Cannabis Commission,
    [Ms. CL-2023-0352, Mar. 29, 2024] ___ So. 3d ___ (Ala. Civ. App. 2024),
    in which a potential medical-cannabis-license applicant named the
    AMCC as the sole defendant in a suit for equitable relief under Ala. Code
    1975, § 41-22-10, Verano stated a valid claim for judicial review under §
    41-22-20 that was not barred by sovereign immunity. See Alabama Dep't
    of Pub. Safety v. Alston, 
    39 So. 3d 1176
    , 1178 (Ala. Civ. App. 2009) ("In
    the present case, Alston's appeal is not a lawsuit but, rather, is an
    administrative appeal. Therefore, the trial court had jurisdiction
    pursuant to § 32-5A-195(q)[, Ala. Code 1975,] to review the Department's
    administrative ruling, and the doctrine of sovereign immunity does not
    bar Alston's appeal.").
    8
    CL-2023-0831
    trial court will enter a judgment for the party entitled to a judgment
    according to the law.").
    In its motion, the AMCC argued that the Act and the regulations
    adopted pursuant to the Act gave the AMCC the inherent and implied
    authority to rescind its decision to award Verano a license before the
    license was issued. The AMCC also argued that, in accordance with
    Robert's Rules of Order, which it asserted it had adopted to control its
    procedures, it could properly reconsider and rescind the award to Verano
    of an integrated-facility license. On October 3, 2023, Verano filed a
    written response to the AMCC's motion. On October 10, 2023, the circuit
    court conducted a hearing on the motion, at which it received oral
    arguments from counsel for the parties.
    On October 11, 2023, the circuit court entered a final judgment in
    favor of the AMCC. The judgment provides, in pertinent part:
    "In sum, Verano's [c]omplaint alleges that the [AMCC]
    exceeded its authority as a state agency and violated the
    [AAPA] when, on August 10, 2023, the [AMCC] voted to void
    or rescind the medical cannabis licenses it had awarded on
    June 12, 2023.... [T]he [AMCC] contends that (1) its licensing
    authority inherently includes the power to void and correct
    license awards for which it did not have complete or correct
    information, due to erroneous tabulations; (2) the [AMCC]'s
    express authority to stay the licensing process impliedly
    authorizes the [AMCC] to void license awards as necessary to
    9
    CL-2023-0831
    accomplish the purposes for which stays were permitted; and
    (3) following Robert's Rules of Order impliedly authorizes the
    [AMCC] to rescind its June 12 awards.
    "Having considered the parties' filings, submissions and
    oral arguments, the [c]ourt concludes as follows:
    "Verano's [c]omplaint presents a question of pure law,
    one properly suited to resolution on a motion to dismiss: Does
    the [AMCC] have the power to rescind or void its award of
    licenses prior to issuance? The [c]ourt concludes that the
    [AMCC] does have such power.
    "The [AMCC]'s authority to award licenses inherently
    includes the power to void and correct those awards. Inherent
    authority, by its very nature, is authority vested in a
    governmental body that is outside the express authorization
    of the body's enabling act or rules and regulations. Pursuant
    to the [AMCC]'s Rule 538-X-3-.11, 'the primary consideration
    of the [AMCC] in awarding any license shall be the merits of
    the application submitted.' The [c]ourt finds compelling the
    authorities cited by the [AMCC] that it has such power where,
    as here, the goal of the conduct at issue is in furtherance of its
    legislatively mandated purpose. When the [AMCC] saw that
    its primary consideration may have been compromised by
    inaccurate information related to the applications, it took
    reasonable steps to correct its course. It cannot have been the
    [l]egislature's intention to bind the [AMCC] to a decision that
    subjected it to inevitable challenges in lengthy and resource-
    draining litigation.
    "The [c]ourt rejects Verano's assertion that the
    [AMCC]'s conduct in rescinding or voiding the license
    awarded [to Verano] in the vote taken at the [AMCC]'s
    June12[, 2023,] meeting amounted to a 'revocation' from
    which it has the right to an appeal to this [c]ourt. The
    [AMCC]'s regulations distinguish a 'license awarded' from a
    'license issued,' specifying that '[a]n [a]pplicant becomes a
    10
    CL-2023-0831
    [l]icensee upon receipt of the [AMCC]'s issuance of the
    license.' [Rule] 538-X-3-.2(11) and -.2(12). The [AMCC]'s Rule
    538-X-4-.22(7) demonstrates that 'revocation' cannot be
    visited upon a mere applicant: 'Revocation should not be
    imposed arbitrarily or capriciously, but only for grave
    misconduct by the licensee.' (Emphasis added.) Moreover, the
    [l]egislature expressly provided in the [AMCC]'s enabling
    [a]ct that a 'license issued' is 'a revocable privilege granted by
    this state and is not a property right.' Ala. Code [1975,] § 20-
    2A-68 (emphasis added). If a 'license issued' is not a property
    right, then its precursor, a 'license awarded,' surely cannot be
    a property right, and the [AMCC] was within its inherent
    power to rescind or void that award without the
    circumstances or obligations accompanying a 'revocation.' If
    the [AMCC]'s ultimate award of licenses for integrated
    facilities includes denying Verano a license, Verano may
    appeal that decision by means of an investigative hearing, the
    [l]egislature's prescribed administrative remedy for
    applicants when a license is denied.
    "The [c]ourt also concludes that the [AMCC]'s express
    authority to stay the licensing process ... impliedly include[s]
    the power to rescind or void its June 12 license awards. If the
    [AMCC] has no power to rescind awarded licenses, then there
    could be no legitimate reason for the [AMCC] to stay licenses
    in the first place. Furthermore, Robert's Rules of Order
    specifically contemplates the right of an assembly to vote to
    rescind a previously adopted motion, thereby nullifying what
    had been done."
    On November 21, 2023, Verano filed a timely notice of appeal to this
    court.
    11
    CL-2023-0831
    Mootness
    On October 26, 2023, before Verano filed its notice of appeal to this
    court, the AMCC rescinded the licensing decisions it had made on August
    10, 2023, but it did not rescind its decision to "void" the June 12, 2023,
    license awards and did not reinstate its original decision to award Verano
    an integrated-facility license. Based on the AMCC's October 26, 2023,
    actions, Verano remained eligible for an integrated-facility license;
    however, on December 12, 2023, the AMCC made its final decision
    regarding the integrated-facility licenses.    The AMCC did not grant
    Verano one of the five available licenses, effectively denying Verano's
    application. Pursuant to Ala. Code 1975, § 20-2A-56(e), 8 Verano has filed
    a request for a "public investigative hearing" to challenge the denial of
    its integrated-facility-license application.
    This court determines that the subsequent actions by the AMCC
    have not mooted the controversy between the parties. In this appeal,
    Verano seeks reversal of the judgment entered by the circuit court
    8Section 20-2A-56(e) provides, in pertinent part: "After denial of a
    license, the [AMCC], upon request, shall provide a public investigative
    hearing at which the applicant is given the opportunity to present
    testimony and evidence to establish its suitability for a license."
    12
    CL-2023-0831
    approving the AMCC's August 10, 2023, decision to rescind the June 12,
    2023, license award to Verano. Verano argues that the circuit court erred
    because, it says, the AMCC had no authority to rescind the June 12, 2023,
    license award. If Verano prevails, the AMCC's decision to rescind the
    June 12, 2023, license award would be reversed and the award of the
    integrated-facility license to Verano would be reinstated. Because a
    favorable decision on the merits of this appeal would affect Verano's right
    to an integrated-facility license, the appeal is not moot. See generally
    Chapman v. Gooden, 
    974 So. 2d 972
    , 983 (Ala. 2007) (quoting Crawford
    v. State, 
    153 S.W.3d 497
    , 501 (Tex. App. 2004)) (determining that " '[t]he
    test for mootness is commonly stated as whether the court's action on the
    merits would affect the rights of the parties' "). The appeal involves an
    extant justiciable controversy between the parties concerning the
    authority to rescind an award of an integrated-facility license.
    Analysis
    In paragraph 25 of its petition for judicial review, Verano submitted
    to the circuit court the question "whether the [AMCC]'s vote to
    unilaterally 'void' the previously awarded licenses exceeded the [AMCC]'s
    statutory authority, violated the [AMCC]'s rule" and "was based upon an
    13
    CL-2023-0831
    unlawful procedure and/or was arbitrary or capricious."         In its final
    judgment, the circuit court responded to the issue as framed by Verano
    by concluding that the AMCC had acted within its authority in
    unilaterally rescinding the June 12, 2023, license award. The circuit
    court determined that the AMCC's authority to rescind its original
    decision to award Verano an integrated-facility license emanated from
    three independent sources: (1) the AMCC's inherent authority to
    reconsider and to correct errors in its licensing decisions; (2) the AMCC's
    implied authority to void license awards based on its express authority
    to stay those awards found in its rules, see Ala. Admin. Code (AMCC), rr.
    538-X-3-.17 and 538-X-3-.18;9 and (3) the AMCC's procedural right to
    annul a vote on the motion to award a license and to reconsider the
    motion, as set forth in Robert's Rules of Order.
    9Rule 538-X-3-.18 provides, in pertinent part:
    "Despite the [AMCC]'s announcement of the award of
    licenses, due to the pendency of hearings or appeals on some
    or all licenses in a particular offering, some or all licenses may
    not issue, in the discretion of the [AMCC], but may be stayed
    until the time for appeal has lapsed or all appeals from the
    [AMCC]'s decision have resolved, whichever is later."
    14
    CL-2023-0831
    The judgment tracks the position of the AMCC in its motion for a
    judgment on the pleadings, in which it asserted that it could rescind the
    June 12, 2023, license award on all three alternative grounds: its
    inherent authority, its implied authority, and its procedural authority.
    Regarding the last source of authority, the AMCC asserted that it had
    adopted   "Robert's   Rules    of   Order   (Revised)"   during   its   first
    organizational meeting on August 12, 2021. The AMCC noted that,
    under those parliamentary rules, a deliberative body may, by a motion
    approved by a majority vote, rescind its decision on an earlier motion
    adopted at some previous time. The AMCC argued: "When [the AMCC]
    rescinds a motion, the motion allows [the AMCC] to nullify or void the
    prior action." The AMCC pointed out exceptions to the authority of a
    committee to rescind a previous decision, most specifically the exception
    prohibiting a rescission motion " '[w]hen something has been done, as a
    result of the vote on the main motion, that it is impossible to undo,' " see
    Op. Atty. Gen. No. 83-471 (Sept. 9, 1983) (quoting § 34(8)(b) of Robert's
    Rules of Order), but the AMCC explained why that exception did not
    apply. In its response to the motion for a judgment on the pleadings filed
    in the circuit court, Verano argued that the AMCC had not validly
    15
    CL-2023-0831
    adopted any version of Robert's Rules of Order. In its final judgment, the
    circuit court impliedly found that the AMCC had validly adopted an
    edition of Robert's Rules of Order that provided the AMCC with sufficient
    procedural authority to rescind its June 12, 2023, decision to award
    Verano an integrated-facility license.
    In its principal brief on appeal, Verano argues at length that the
    AMCC does not have express statutory authority, inherent authority, or
    implied authority to reconsider and void its licensing decisions;10
    however, Verano does not challenge the third alternative ground for the
    circuit court's judgment -- that Robert's Rules of Order supplied the
    AMCC with sufficient procedural authority to rescind the decision
    awarding Verano an integrated-facility license. On pages 23 through 25
    of its principal brief, Verano generally argues that the AMCC's "rules" do
    not contain a provision allowing the AMCC to rescind a previous license
    award, apparently referring to the AMCC regulations contained in the
    10In addition to arguing that the AMCC did not have the implied
    authority to rescind the June 12, 2023, license award, Verano also argues
    that the AMCC did not have the express authority to stay the issuance of
    the integrated-facility license after it had been awarded to Verano and
    Verano had paid the license fee; however, based on our disposition of the
    legal-authority issue, we find no need to address this point.
    16
    CL-2023-0831
    Alabama Administrative Code, see Ala. Admin. Code (AMCC), r. 538-X-
    1-.01 et seq., but Verano does not mention Robert's Rules of Order at all
    or attempt to explain why those rules do not support the AMCC's legal
    authority to rescind the June 12, 2023, license award. Verano attacks
    that basis for the circuit court's judgment only in its reply brief by
    contending that the AMCC did not properly adopt Robert's Rules of Order
    and that whatever edition of Robert's Rules of Order the AMCC had
    allegedly adopted did not supersede the procedural rules that the AMCC
    was obligated to follow under the AAPA.
    "When a trial court enters conclusions of law stating
    alternative legal grounds for its judgment, the failure of an
    appellant to show error as to each ground in his or her opening
    brief constitutes a waiver of any argument as to the omitted
    ground and results in an automatic affirmance of the
    judgment."
    Austin v. Providence Hosp., 
    155 So. 3d 1028
    , 1031 (Ala. Civ. App. 2014).
    That rule of automatic affirmance applies in appeals from a judgment of
    a circuit court adjudicating a petition for judicial review pursuant to § 41-
    22-20, even though the appellate court's standard of review is de novo in
    such cases. See Alabama Dep't of Mental Health v. Nobles Grp. Homes,
    Inc., 
    343 So. 3d 1140
    , 1146 (Ala. Civ. App. 2021).
    17
    CL-2023-0831
    In this case, the circuit court entered specific conclusions of law
    stating three alternative bases for its judgment. Verano did not assert
    any error as to the third basis for the judgment in its principal brief on
    appeal.   Therefore, Verano waived any argument as to that omitted
    ground despite making the argument later in its reply brief.          See
    Alabama Dep't of Mental Health, supra; see also Meigs v. Estate of
    Mobley, 
    134 So. 3d 878
    , 889 n.6 (Ala. Civ. App. 2013) ("Arguments not
    raised in the appellant's initial brief are deemed waived; arguments
    made for the first time in the reply brief are not addressed by the
    appellate courts."). Consequently, the judgment must be automatically
    affirmed insofar as it concludes that the AMCC had the legal authority
    to rescind the June 12, 2023, license award to Verano.
    Recognizing that the circuit court might determine that the AMCC
    had the requisite authority for its August 10, 2023, decision, Verano
    alternatively pleaded that the AMCC could not exercise that authority to
    arbitrarily and capriciously "throw out" the original license award. In
    American Trucking Associations v. Frisco Transportation Co., 
    358 U.S. 133
    , 146 (1958), in discussing the authority of the Interstate Commerce
    Commission ("the ICC") to modify certificates of public convenience and
    18
    CL-2023-0831
    necessity containing inadvertent errors, the United States Supreme
    Court explained that "the power to correct inadvertent ministerial errors
    may not be used as a guise for changing previous decisions because the
    wisdom of those decisions appears doubtful in the light of changing
    policies." Verano, relying on that passage, argues that the AMCC could
    correct only ministerial errors in the June 12, 2023, licensing decision
    and that it could not change that decision for other reasons, which Verano
    alleges the AMCC did when it refused to "re-award" Verano an
    integrated-facility license.
    In Frisco, the Supreme Court held that the ICC's authority to
    modify a certificate of public convenience and necessity derived from §
    17(3) of the act creating the ICC, which provided: " 'The [ICC] shall
    conduct its proceedings under any provision of law in such manner as will
    best conduce to the proper dispatch of business and to the ends of
    justice.' "   
    358 U.S. at 145
    .   The Supreme Court stated: "This broad
    enabling statute, in our opinion, authorizes the correction of inadvertent
    ministerial errors." 
    Id.
     The Supreme Court further analogized the ICC's
    authority to that of a federal court under Rule 60(a), Fed. R. Civ. P., to
    correct clerical mistakes in a judgment.      
    Id.
       The Supreme Court
    19
    CL-2023-0831
    essentially determined in Frisco that the ICC had the inherent or implied
    authority to rescind and replace a certificate of public convenience and
    necessity to correct an inadvertent ministerial error, but, as explained in
    the passage upon which Verano relies, that inherent or implied authority
    did not allow the ICC to reconsider its original decision and modify the
    certificate based on a substantive redetermination of the merits.
    Assuming Alabama law adheres to the principles espoused in
    Frisco, which we do not decide, but see Ellard v. State, 
    474 So. 2d 743
    ,
    751-52 (Ala. Crim. App. 1984), aff'd Ex parte Ellard, 
    474 So. 2d 758
     (Ala.
    1985) (finding inherent authority of parole board to reconsider and
    modify parole determination based on absence of complete investigative
    file as required by law), we still cannot reverse the judgment on the basis
    that the AMCC exceeded its inherent or implied authority to correct
    clerical or ministerial errors. In its final judgment, after discussing the
    inherent and implied authority of the AMCC to reconsider its licensing
    decisions based on corrected scoring data, the circuit court further
    determined that "Robert's Rules of Order specifically contemplates the
    right of an assembly to vote to rescind a previously adopted motion,
    thereby nullifying what had been done."        The circuit court plainly
    20
    CL-2023-0831
    concluded that the AMCC could rely on its procedural authority,
    independent of its other legal authority, to completely nullify the June
    12, 2023, decision to award Verano an integrated-facility license. Verano
    has not presented any legal argument challenging that conclusion. See
    Rule 28(a)(10), Ala. R. App. P. Thus, Verano has waived that argument.
    See State Dep't of Transp. v. Reid, 
    74 So. 3d 465
    , 469 (Ala. Civ. App. 2011)
    ("Because [the Alabama Department of Transportation] has not provided
    any argument challenging the third basis for the trial court's judgment,
    it has waived any argument on appeal as to the correctness of that basis
    for the judgment of the trial court.").     An unchallenged ruling in a
    judgment, whether right or wrong, is the law of the case and requires
    affirmance. First Union Nat'l Bank of South Carolina v. Soden, 
    333 S.C. 554
    , 566, 
    511 S.E.2d 372
    , 378 (Ct. App. 1998). Accordingly, we must
    affirm that aspect of the final judgment as well.
    Verano also complains that the AMCC did not follow the procedure
    for revoking a license in its August 10, 2023, meeting. Section 20-2A-
    57(c), Ala. Code 1975, which is a part of the Act, provides, in pertinent
    part: "The [AMCC] shall comply with the hearing procedures of the
    [AAPA] when denying, revoking, suspending, or restricting a license or
    21
    CL-2023-0831
    imposing a fine." Section 41-22-19(a), Ala. Code 1975, which is a part of
    the AAPA, provides: "The provisions of [the AAPA] concerning contested
    cases shall apply to the ... revocation ... of a license." Section 41-22-19(c)
    provides:
    "No revocation ... of any license is lawful unless, prior to the
    institution of agency proceedings, the agency gave notice by
    certified mail to the licensee of facts or conduct which warrant
    the intended action, and the licensee was given an
    opportunity to show compliance with all lawful requirements
    for the retention of the license."
    Again, however, we cannot consider this argument. In its final judgment,
    the circuit court determined that the AMCC had validly rescinded the
    decision to award Verano an integrated-facility license through Robert's
    Rules of Order, which, as the AMCC showed in its motion for a judgment
    on the pleadings, could be accomplished by a simple majority vote of the
    AMCC's commissioners. Verano challenged that procedure in its reply
    brief, but not in its principal brief, thereby waiving the argument. See
    Meigs, 
    supra.
     Hence, we do not address whether the revocation rules in
    the AAPA apply and supersede Robert's Rules of Order when the AMCC
    rescinds a previous licensing decision.
    Finally, Verano contends that the AMCC acted arbitrarily and
    capriciously when it "re-awarded" the integrated-facility license to
    22
    CL-2023-0831
    another, lower-scoring applicant, effectively denying Verano an
    integrated-facility license; however, that issue is not properly before this
    court. In its petition for judicial review, Verano submitted to the circuit
    court the question whether the AMCC had acted arbitrarily and
    capriciously in voting to rescind the June 12, 2023, license awards.
    Verano did not submit for review the separate question whether the
    decision to award one of the five available integrated-facility licenses to
    an allegedly less-qualified applicant than Verano was arbitrary and
    capricious. As the circuit court concluded, that issue may be considered
    only upon a review of the final decision of the AMCC to deny Verano an
    integrated-facility license and only after exhaustion of Verano's
    administrative remedies. See note 8, supra, and accompanying text; see
    also § 41-22-20(a) (allowing judicial review of a final decision only after
    the exhaustion of administrative remedies). Thus, we express no opinion
    on this point.
    Conclusion
    In conclusion, we hold that Verano has waived any argument that
    the AMCC could not lawfully rescind the June 12, 2023, award of an
    integrated-facility license to Verano pursuant to Robert's Rules of Order.
    23
    CL-2023-0831
    We further hold that that waiver requires automatic affirmance of the
    circuit court's judgment. This opinion should not be construed more
    broadly than these limited holdings so as to prejudice the rights of either
    party in future proceedings.
    AFFIRMED.
    All the judges concur.
    24
    

Document Info

Docket Number: CL-2023-0831

Judges: Per Curiam

Filed Date: 4/19/2024

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 4/19/2024