Rollins v. State, Dept. of Public Safety, Alcoholic Beverage Control Board ( 2013 )


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  •       Notice: This opinion is subject to correction before publication in the P ACIFIC R EPORTER .
    Readers are requested to bring errors to the attention of the Clerk of the Appellate Courts,
    303 K Street, Anchorage, Alaska 99501, phone (907) 264-0608, fax (907) 264-0878, email
    corrections@appellate.courts.state.ak.us.
    THE SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF ALASKA
    ELIZABETH H. ROLLINS,      )
    )                            Supreme Court No. S-14760
    Appellant,   )
    )                            Superior Court No. 4FA-11-01678 CI
    v.                     )
    )                            OPINION
    STATE OF ALASKA,           )
    DEPARTMENT OF PUBLIC       )                            No. 6842 - November 22, 2013
    SAFETY, ALCOHOLIC BEVERAGE )
    CONTROL BOARD,             )
    )
    Appellee.    )
    )
    Appeal from the Superior Court of the State of Alaska,
    Fourth Judicial District, F airbanks, Michael P. McConahy,
    Judge.
    Appearances: Elizabeth H. Rollins, pro se, North Pole,
    Appellant. Harriet Dinegar Milks, Assistant Attorney
    General, and Michael C. Geraghty, Attorney General, Juneau,
    for Appellee.
    Before: Fabe, Chief Justice, Winfree, Stowers, Maassen, and
    Bolger, Justices.
    BOLGER, Justice.
    I.    INTRODUCTION
    Elizabeth Rollins appeals the superior court’s decision upholding the
    Alcoholic Beverage Control Board’s determination to deny her application for a waiver
    of the annual operating requirement for her liquor license. Rollins argues that: (1) the
    Board’s decision was not supported by the evidence; (2) she was improperly assigned
    the burden of proof; (3) the hearing before the administrative law judge violated her right
    to due process; and (4) the Board’s selective enforcement of its statutes violated her right
    to equal protection. We conclude that Rollins properly bore the burden of proof on the
    issue of whether she was entitled to a waiver, that the record supports the Board’s
    decision, and that the Board proceedings did not violate her constitutional rights. We
    therefore affirm the superior court’s decision to uphold the Board’s action.
    II.    FACTS AND PROCEEDINGS
    Elizabeth Rollins purchased a beverage dispensary license (liquor license)
    in late 1990.1 Rollins attempted to open a bar on a property she owned on Old
    Richardson Highway, but was, for several years, unsuccessful.2             Alaska Statute
    04.11.330(a)(3) contains a requirement that an applicant for renewal of a liquor license
    must operate the licensed premises “for at least 30 eight-hour days during each of the two
    preceding calendar years . . . .” Each year from 1991 through 1994, Rollins applied for
    a waiver of the 30-day annual operating requirement for varying reasons.3 Each year the
    Board granted Rollins a waiver.4
    In December 1995, Rollins applied for her fifth waiver of the annual
    operating requirement. In her application Rollins explained that she attempted to open
    1
    Rollins v. State, Dep’t of Revenue, Alcoholic Beverage Control Bd., 
    991 P.2d 202
    , 205 (Alaska 1999).
    2
    
    Id. 3 Id.
    at 205-06 (detailing Rollins’s struggles to complete the renovations
    required to obtain the permits necessary to open the bar and her attempts to sell the
    property and open the bar at another location).
    4
    
    Id. at 205.
    -2-                                       6842
    the bar, but needed extensive renovations in order to receive a health permit, and she
    could not complete those renovations by December 1, 1995. The Board denied her
    request for a waiver under the regulation governing a third or subsequent consecutive
    application for a waiver.5 Because a waiver was required to renew her license, the Board
    also denied the renewal of her liquor license. Rollins appealed.
    In Rollins v. State, Department of Revenue, Alcoholic Beverage Control
    Board, we upheld the superior court’s decision upholding the Board’s determination that
    the Board had the authority to enact the regulation governing consecutive applications
    for waiver and held that the Board’s decision was supported by substantial evidence.6
    However, we granted Rollins leave to file an Alaska Civil Rule 60(b)(3) motion for relief
    from judgment based on a misrepresentation the Board had made in the superior court.7
    On remand, the superior court granted Rollins relief from its earlier judgment and
    reversed the Board’s denial of the waiver application. In 2003, the Board sent Rollins
    a letter proposing terms for a settlement (the 2003 settlement). Rollins agreed to the
    terms outlined in the letter. According to the terms, the Board would grant her a fifth
    consecutive waiver “with the express warning that it is a final waiver of the operating
    requirement and no future waivers will be granted for this license.” The letter also
    5
    Former 15 Alaska Administrative Code (AAC) 104.170(e) (1996) (now
    numbered 3 AAC 304.170(e)) provided, in relevant part, that the Board “will, in its
    discretion, deny a third or subsequent consecutive application for waiver unless the
    licensee clearly shows that the licensed premises were not operated because the premises
    were condemned or substantially destroyed by any cause.”
    6
    
    Rollins, 991 P.2d at 206-11
    .
    7
    Before the superior court, the Board represented that other licensees had
    been treated equally to Rollins. But the Board acknowledged to a third party that it had
    become stricter in enforcement, and Rollins was the first person to be affected by this
    stricter enforcement. 
    Id. at 212-13.
    -3-                                    6842
    specified that the license may only be transferred to another licensee with an express
    warning that “[t]he Board currently reviews waiver histories by license” and “[t]he
    requirement that the license be operated for 30 consecutive days in the calendar year
    2004 will transfer to the new licensee.”
    After the 2003 settlement, Rollins applied to transfer her license to a new
    location on Old Airport Way. Rollins operated at the Old Airport Way location
    beginning in August 2004. In May 2005, Rollins sold the license to Tracy Hester.
    Under the agreement, Rollins retained a security interest in the license. Hester operated
    the license until mid-2006 when she disappeared and became delinquent in her payments
    to Rollins. Although Hester had disappeared, Rollins claims the building owner at Old
    Airport Way continued to operate the license.
    Rollins commenced foreclosure proceedings on the license in October
    2006. She also renewed the license. At some point in mid-2007, Rollins began
    operating the license again.
    Rollins operated the license at the Old Airport Way location until May or
    June 2008. After she repeatedly noticed her alcohol was missing and received reports
    that the building owner had been opening the bar after hours, Rollins shut down
    operations and vacated the property. However, the license remained registered to the
    Old Airport Way location.
    In June 2009, Rollins saw an advertisement indicating that another bar was
    moving to the Old Airport Way location. She filed an application to transfer her license
    from the Old Airport Way location to “No Premises.” Around the same time, the Board
    became aware that Rollins had lost the lease on the Old Airport Way location and had
    not operated her license since May 2008. In a letter to Rollins sent in August 2009, the
    Board informed Rollins that she “must find a suitable location and file a transfer
    application, and be able to operate the license for at least 30 eight-hour days in 2009.”
    -4-                                     6842
    The letter reminded Rollins that under the terms of the 2003 settlement letter, no future
    waivers would be granted for the license.
    In an attempt to operate her license, Rollins prepared a business plan and
    tried to obtain a bank loan. But the bank declined to make a loan. Rollins inquired about
    leasing the premises formerly occupied by the bar that had moved to the premises she
    had vacated, but she did not want to share the space with a restaurant that had already
    leased part of the property. Rollins also spoke with a real estate agent about other
    possible locations and placed an ad in the newspaper offering the license for sale.
    On October 21, 2009, Rollins filed an application for waiver, marking her
    application as the “first waiver request.” In her application, Rollins indicated that she
    planned to operate the license at the Old Richardson Highway location (the same location
    that was the subject of the 1992-95 waivers), but noted that she would need to complete
    renovations to convert the space into a bar and obtain the necessary permits. After the
    Board voted to deny Rollins’s waiver application at a meeting in May 2010, Rollins
    invoked her right to a formal hearing.
    An administrative hearing was held on November 10, 2010 in front of an
    Administrative Law Judge (ALJ). Rollins represented herself at the hearing. The ALJ
    issued a proposed decision affirming the Board’s denial, and the Board adopted the
    decision on March 24, 2011. Rollins filed a request for reconsideration, which the Board
    denied. Because Rollins’s application for waiver was denied, her application for license
    renewal was also denied.8
    Rollins appealed to the superior court. The superior court upheld the
    Board’s decision and rejected Rollins’s due process and selective enforcement claims.
    Rollins now appeals to this court.
    8
    See AS 04.11.330(a)(3); 3 AAC 304.170(g).
    -5-                                    6842
    III.	   STANDARD OF REVIEW
    Where the superior court acts as an intermediate appellate court, we
    “independently review the merits of the underlying administrative decision.”9 The
    “substantial evidence” standard applies to questions of fact, and the “reasonable basis”
    test applies to questions of law involving agency expertise.10 “We apply our independent
    judgment to questions of law that do not involve agency expertise, including
    constitutional questions.”11
    IV.	    DISCUSSION
    Alaska Statute 04.11.330(a)(3) provides that
    an application for renewal shall be denied if . . . the applicant
    has not operated the licensed premises for at least 30
    eight-hour days during each of the two preceding calendar
    years, unless the board determines that the licensed premises
    are under construction or cannot be operated through no fault
    of the applicant.
    The implementing regulation, 3 AAC 304.170(b), provides that a licensee may apply to
    the board for a waiver of the operating requirement in AS 04.11.330(a)(3) and “the board
    will determine whether, through no fault of the licensee or because the premises are
    under construction, the licensed premises could not be operated for the required time[.]”
    A.	   The Board Did Not Err When It Assigned The Burden Of Proof To
    Rollins.
    9
    Stevens v. State of Alaska, Alcoholic Beverage Control Bd., 
    257 P.3d 1154
    ,
    1156 (Alaska 2011).
    10
    
    Rollins, 991 P.2d at 206
    (quoting Handley v. State, Dep’t of Revenue, 
    838 P.2d 1231
    , 1233 (Alaska 1992).
    11
    
    Stevens, 257 P.3d at 1156
    (quoting Squires v. Alaska Bd. of Architects,
    Eng’rs, & Land Surveyors, 
    205 P.3d 326
    , 332 (Alaska 2009)) (internal quotation marks
    omitted).
    -6-	                                   6842
    The ALJ concluded that Rollins bore the burden of proof because she
    sought to change the status quo by requesting a waiver from the operating requirement.
    Rollins argues that the Board should bear the burden of proof. Rollins relies on Alaska
    Alcohol Control Board v. Malcolm, Inc., where this court held that in denying a renewal
    of a license, the Board bears the burden of proof.12 In reaching that conclusion, this court
    relied on the fact that a person who seeks renewal of a liquor license is designated as the
    respondent.13 In State, Alcoholic Beverage Control Board v. Decker, however, this court
    placed the burden of proof on a liquor license applicant, stating that “[o]rdinarily the
    party seeking a change in the status quo has the burden of proof.”14
    After Malcolm and Decker, the Administrative Procedure Act (APA) was
    amended to place the burden of proof on the respondent in certain circumstances.15
    Alaska Statute 44.62.460(e) now provides:
    Unless a different standard of proof is stated in applicable
    law, the
    (1) petitioner has the burden of proof by a preponderance of
    the evidence if an accusation has been filed under
    AS 44.62.360 or if the renewal of a right, authority, license,
    or privilege has been denied;
    (2) respondent has the burden of proof by a preponderance of
    the evidence if a right, authority, license, or privilege has
    been initially denied or not issued.
    12
    
    391 P.2d 441
    , 444 (Alaska 1964).
    13
    
    Id. at 444.
           14
    
    700 P.2d 483
    , 485 (Alaska 1985).
    15
    Ch. 63, § 8, SLA 1995.
    -7-                                       6842
    In this case, Rollins initiated the administrative proceeding by filing a
    waiver of operation application under AS 04.11.330(a)(3). This statute provides that an
    application for renewal must be denied if “the applicant has not operated the licensed
    premises for at least 30 eight-hour days during each of the two preceding calendar years,
    unless the board determines that the licensed premises are under construction or cannot
    be operated through no fault of the applicant[.]”16 In addition, the implementing
    regulation clearly requires a licensee to make a special application for this waiver and
    clearly requires the Board to make the same determination.17 Because the licensee must
    apply for a waiver, and because the Board must make an affirmative no-fault
    determination, it is clear that a waiver of operation is a privilege, and that the applicant
    must affirmatively prove the lack of fault. Thus, the Board properly assigned the burden
    of proof to the respondent in her application for a waiver.
    The ALJ also relied on a regulation associated with the APA, which
    provides that “[u]nless otherwise provided by applicable statute or regulation, the burden
    of proof and of going forward with evidence is on the party who requested the
    hearing. . . .”18 Here it is Rollins who exercised her right to a hearing after the Board
    initially denied her application for waiver. Therefore, this regulation also supports the
    ALJ’s recommendation on the burden of proof. We conclude that the Board correctly
    required Rollins to bear this burden.
    B.     The Board’s Decision Was Supported By Substantial Evidence.
    Under AS 04.11.330(a)(3), the Board was required to deny Rollins’s
    application unless it determined that her failure to operate under the license was not her
    16
    AS 04.11.330(a)(3) (emphasis added).
    17
    3 AAC 304.170(b).
    18
    2 AAC 64.290(e).
    -8­                                       6842
    fault. Rollins argues that the ALJ erred when he ruled against her on this issue.
    At the hearing, Rollins presented little evidence regarding her efforts to
    operate her license after she vacated the Old Airport Way location. Rollins testified that
    between May 2008 and May 2009, she had approximately six conversations with a
    potential buyer. In August 2009, she investigated the possibility of moving to another
    location. Although it appears the location was equipped to operate a bar, Rollins did not
    want to share the location with a restaurant that was already operating there. In October
    2009, Rollins prepared a business plan and spoke with a bank about obtaining a loan, but
    she did not receive the loan. Rollins also spoke with a real estate agent about other
    possible locations, and she placed an ad in the newspaper offering the license for sale.
    The ALJ found that Rollins did not establish the requisite absence of fault.
    First, the ALJ explained that the problems at the Old Airport Way location were within
    Rollins’s control, and she did not take reasonable steps to eliminate them before she
    voluntarily left in May 2008. Second, the ALJ found that Rollins did not take reasonable
    steps to operate the license again in 2009. Third, the ALJ commented that Rollins failed
    to show her plan to operate the license at the Old Richardson Highway location (where
    she previously failed to operate the license) was feasible or that it could be accomplished
    in a reasonable time. The ALJ relied on this court’s holding that the purpose of the
    operating requirement was to “prevent a licensee from holding onto one of a limited
    number of licenses without operating it . . . beyond a reasonable time necessary to
    construct or otherwise establish premises. . . .”19 The ALJ ultimately concluded that
    Rollins was not entitled to a waiver because she did not take reasonable steps to operate
    the license and instead chose not to operate the license for business reasons.
    19
    
    Rollins, 991 P.2d at 209
    .
    -9-                                      6842
    Rollins challenges several of the ALJ’s factual findings. She argues that
    the ALJ improperly speculated about measures Rollins could have taken to resolve issues
    at the Old Airport Way location when he found that her actions were not reasonable.
    Rollins also asserts that there were legitimate reasons to reject the alternative location
    and clarifies that her advertisement for sale of the license ran in the newspaper for six
    weeks.
    We note that the Board was required to deny Rollins’s application for a
    waiver unless it found that the licensed premises could not be operated and that Rollins
    was not at fault for this condition.20 In this appeal, we decide only whether the ALJ’s
    conclusion on this issue is supported by substantial evidence.21 In deciding whether the
    license was not operated through no fault of the applicant for waiver, it was appropriate
    for the ALJ to consider the options available to the applicant.
    The evidence Rollins presented at the hearing showed that she did not take
    reasonable steps to operate her license. Rollins admitted she voluntarily left the Old
    Airport Way location in May 2008 and that her lease was still valid. She was concerned
    that the building manager was operating her license after hours, but she presented no
    evidence of steps she took to prevent this after-hours operation. Rollins presented no
    evidence that she attempted to operate her license from May 2008 to May 2009. Rollins
    did investigate other options to operate or sell the license, but ultimately rejected them.
    She considered but rejected an opportunity to lease another location. Rollins tried to
    obtain a loan to buy property but the bank refused.
    20
    See AS 04.11.330(a)(3).
    21
    
    Rollins, 991 P.2d at 206
    (the “substantial evidence” test applies to questions
    of fact).
    -10-                                       6842
    At the hearing, Rollins was asked if it was correct that she “could have
    operated [the license], but . . . chose not to do that because . . . it [wasn’t] profitable
    enough.” She responded, “That’s exactly right. I could not afford to do that. . . . I don’t
    feel like throwing all my retirement monies away.” She explained that she couldn’t sell
    the license because she wanted cash, and she couldn’t find a buyer. Based on this
    evidence, the ALJ reasonably concluded that Rollins’s failure to operate the license was
    the result of business decisions.
    Although in her application Rollins stated that she planned to operate the
    license at the Old Richardson Highway location, she presented no evidence of actions
    she had taken which would make it possible to operate a bar there. And, if her previous
    attempts to operate at that location were any indication, the premises likely needed
    significant renovations. We conclude that the Board’s ultimate finding — that Rollins
    failed to establish that she was without fault in failing to operate her license — is
    supported by substantial evidence in the record.22
    C.     Rollins Was Not Denied Due Process.
    Rollins argues that she was denied due process at the hearing. She argues
    that she understood that the hearing would address the effect of the settlement letter and
    whether this was her first application for waiver. Rollins also asserts that the hearing was
    generally unfair and that she was “denied the right to interject and present her findings
    in her own word and manner.”
    22
    Because the ALJ treated her application as a first application for a waiver
    and because the ALJ did not rely on the 2003 settlement, we do not need to address
    Rollins’s arguments that her application should be treated as a first application or that the
    Board cannot place “a lifetime waiver restriction on a license.”
    -11-                                       6842
    Rollins correctly notes that a litigant has a due process right to fair notice
    of the issue to be litigated.23 But the record does not support Rollins’s argument that she
    was misled about the issue to be addressed. After Rollins exercised her right to a formal
    hearing, the Board filed and served a statement which framed the issue as follows:
    “Should the Alcoholic Beverage Control Board grant [Rollins’s] request, dated October
    21, 2009, for waiver of the AS 04.11.330 requirement to operate its alcoholic beverage
    dispensary license — whether the requested waiver be viewed as a first or a sixth
    waiver . . . ?”
    At a pre-hearing conference, the ALJ clarified the issue by explaining to
    Rollins that the effect of the settlement letter and whether this application was the sixth
    application for a waiver were topics that could be addressed. But the ALJ reiterated that
    the ultimate question was “whether a waiver should be granted under the circumstances
    in 2009” and explained that Rollins would need to present evidence about the
    circumstances in 2009 that supported a waiver. When Rollins indicated that she did not
    understand, the ALJ repeated that the Board would have to make a decision about
    whether to grant a waiver “regardless of what happened in 2003 and the settlement
    agreement.”
    We have explained that “due process requires that a license holder be
    provided with notice and an opportunity to be heard in a meaningful, impartial
    hearing.”24 Here, Rollins does not allege that there were any procedural defects in her
    23
    See Cushing v. Painter, 
    666 P.2d 1044
    , 1046 (Alaska 1983) (reversing a
    final child custody decision made after a hearing scheduled to determine interim
    custody).
    24
    Stevens v. State of Alaska, Alcoholic Beverage Control Bd., 
    257 P.3d 1154
    ,
    1160 (Alaska 2011) (quoting 
    Rollins, 991 P.2d at 211
    ) (internal quotation marks
    (continued...)
    -12-                                       6842
    hearing or that it did not comply with the APA. She was given an opportunity to speak
    and to present and cross-examine witnesses. When she testified, the ALJ asked questions
    regarding her actions over the period from 2008 to 2009. During the questioning,
    Rollins spoke freely. And at the end of his questions, the ALJ asked if there was
    anything Rollins wanted to add. She replied, “Nope that’s it.”
    Rollins’s arguments that she was denied fair notice and a fair hearing are
    not supported by the record. We therefore conclude that Rollins was not denied due
    process.
    D.	    The Board Did Not Violate Rollins’s Right To Equal Protection By
    Engaging In Selective Prosecution.
    Rollins argues that the Board’s decision amounts to selective prosecution
    because the Board has previously granted multiple waivers to other license holders. In
    our previous decision in this case, we explained that “[i]n order to make a prima facie
    case that the Board selectively enforced the annual operating requirement . . . Rollins
    would have to show that the Board intended to discriminate against her based on an
    arbitrary or unjustifiable classification.”25 As in the previous case, Rollins has failed to
    offer any evidence of discriminatory intent.26
    Both the current executive director and the former executive director of the
    Board testified that Rollins’s case is unique. The former attorney for the Board agreed.
    Although the current executive director could not remember if the Board had ever denied
    a first application for waiver, she also testified that there are situations when a first
    24
    (...continued)
    omitted).
    25
    
    Rollins, 991 P.2d at 210
    .
    26
    See 
    id. -13- 6842
    waiver might be rejected. Rather, the Board inquires as to the reasons for the application
    in order to make the required determination under AS 04.11.330(a)(3). The Board also
    considers the history of a license in evaluating whether the licensee is entitled to a
    waiver. The former attorney for the Board testified that in determining whether to grant
    a waiver, the Board considers whether a waiver is in the public interest.
    This testimony suggests that the Board does not automatically grant first
    and second applications for waiver, and that the Board generally considers the licensee’s
    history when deciding whether to grant a waiver. We conclude that Rollins has failed
    to show that the Board’s decision in this case involved any arbitrary or unjust
    classification that would violate her right to equal protection.
    V.    CONCLUSION
    We AFFIRM the superior court’s decision to uphold the Board’s decision
    denying Rollins’s application for a waiver of the annual operating requirement.
    -14-                                     6842