PAC Club of Western PA v. PLCB ( 2018 )


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  •               IN THE COMMONWEALTH COURT OF PENNSYLVANIA
    PAC Club of Western PA                           :
    :
    v.                        :   No. 255 C.D. 2017
    :   Argued: November 13, 2017
    Pennsylvania Liquor Control Board,               :
    Appellant                 :
    BEFORE:        HONORABLE RENÉE COHN JUBELIRER, Judge
    HONORABLE PATRICIA A. McCULLOUGH, Judge
    HONORABLE BONNIE BRIGANCE LEADBETTER, Senior Judge
    OPINION NOT REPORTED
    MEMORANDUM OPINION BY
    JUDGE COHN JUBELIRER                                 FILED: January 3, 2018
    The Pennsylvania Liquor Control Board (Board) appeals from the Order of
    the Court of Common Pleas of Allegheny County (common pleas), which overturned
    the Board’s denial of the double transfer application (Application) of PAC Club of
    Western PA (Club) for Catering Club License CC-2293 (License) and directed that
    the Application be approved. On appeal, the Board argues that common pleas erred
    because, inter alia, the transfer would violate Section 404(a) of the Liquor Code1 by
    giving Mr. Sparrow an unlawful pecuniary interest in the License. Because Club
    bore the burden of proving that it satisfied the requirements of the Liquor Code for
    a double transfer, and it did not establish that Mr. Sparrow would not have an
    unlawful pecuniary interest, we reverse.
    1
    Act of April 12, 1951, P.L. 90, as amended, 47 P.S. § 4-404(a).
    Founded in 1998, Club exists “[t]o engage in social activities for the purpose
    of promoting community goals and good fellowship among the members and in
    accordance therewith to acquire a clubhouse with the future goal of acquiring a club
    liquor license.” (Reproduced Record (R.R.) at 13a.) In the past, Club has made
    multiple attempts to acquire a liquor license. Finally, in 2010, the Board approved
    Club for a club liquor license for a location in the Southside area of the City of
    Pittsburgh (City) for a term of December 8, 2010, through April 1, 2014. However,
    Club never opened at that location because it could not obtain an occupancy permit
    and the license expired due to non-activity. On August 30, 2014, Club entered into
    a purchase and escrow agreement with the Southside Caravan Club (SCC) to
    purchase the License at issue here. The License would be transferred from SCC’s
    location at 1113-15 East Carson Street, Pittsburgh, to Club’s location at 522
    Rosedale Street, Pittsburgh (Premises).
    Club filed its Application with the Board on November 18, 2014. The Bureau
    of Licensing (Licensing) notified Club that a hearing would be held to take testimony
    and evidence regarding 12 objections to the Application.2 (R.R. at 269a-71a.)
    Numerous residents from within 500 feet of Club’s Premises filed protests to the
    Application. The following evidence was adduced at the hearing.
    2
    The objections were: whether Club met the definition of “club” under the Liquor Code
    (Objection 1); whether Club had a primary interest or activity to which the sale of liquor and malt
    beverages would be secondary (Objection 2); whether the operation of Club’s business would inure
    to the benefits of the entire membership, rather than to benefit individual members or officers
    (Objection 3); whether Mr. Sparrow would have an unlawful pecuniary interest in the License
    (Objection 4); Club’s failure to submit certain required documents and information with the
    Application (Objections 5-9); whether certain entities and individuals would be directly aggrieved
    such that they could intervene on the Application (Objection 10); whether certain individuals
    reside within 500 feet of the proposed premises such that they would be valid protestants to the
    Application or would be directly aggrieved such that they could be intervenors (Objection 11); and
    whether the approval of the License would affect the health, welfare, peace and morals of the
    inhabitants of the neighborhood within 500 feet of the proposed licensed premises (Objection 12).
    2
    A Board Licensing Analyst (Analyst) testified regarding the results of the
    investigation on the Application. (R.R. at 6a-57a.) The area surrounding the
    Premises is 90% residential and 10% commercial. There is no off-street parking, so
    Club would have to rely on on-street parking. Club would be open from 4:00 p.m.
    to 3:00 a.m., seven days a week, and would provide DJ entertainment on the
    weekends. Club submitted its bylaws, articles of incorporation, meeting minutes for
    between October 2013 and January 2015, a roster of its membership, a real estate
    sales agreement, a lease, and a purchase agreement for a prior license (Prior Purchase
    Agreement).3 Club has a board of directors and a membership of 33, and annually
    charges dues of $25 and $50, respectively, for its active members (voting) and social
    members (non-voting). The Prior Purchase Agreement between Club and Mr.
    Sparrow related to one of Club’s prior attempts to acquire a different liquor license.
    According to the terms, Club would sell its charter and liquor license to Mr. Sparrow
    for $35,000, $17,500 at the signing of the agreement and $17,500 in monthly
    installments of $1,000 beginning 30 days after final approval of the transfer of the
    license to Club. (Id. at 284a.) To purchase this License, Club is borrowing $18,000
    from Mr. Sparrow. Mr. Sparrow, who owns the Premises and is Club’s landlord,
    was not a Club member at the beginning of the application process, but became a
    member in October 2014 and Club’s President in January 2015. As of January 2015,
    Club’s officers were: Mr. Sparrow, President; Karen Sparrow, Secretary; Charles
    Sparrow, Treasurer; Andrew Lamboley, Executive Director; and Thomas Barnes,
    Manager Steward. (R.R. at 38a.)
    Club’s Manager Steward, Mr. Barnes, testified on Club’s behalf. (Id. at 227a-
    60a.) Club hoped to get a couple of hundred members once it opens, but anticipated
    3
    Club objected to the admission of the Prior Purchase Agreement on relevance grounds,
    but the objection was overruled.
    3
    having an occupancy permit for 50 or 60 persons. The DJ would play on Friday and
    Saturday nights from 8:00 p.m. to 1:30 a.m. Mr. Barnes, who has worked in licensed
    establishments for 40 years, has been involved in Club’s prior 3 or 4 attempts to
    obtain a license since 2009. He has never been involved in an establishment that
    had drug activity problems and would take steps to avoid, as much as possible,
    additional noise and litter. Mr. Barnes drafted the Prior Purchase Agreement
    between Club and Mr. Sparrow, which never went into effect because no license was
    granted. No similar agreement has been made for the purchase of this License.
    Because Club was unable to obtain funding from a bank, Mr. Sparrow was loaning
    Club $18,000 to acquire the License. Club will pay Mr. Sparrow back, but the terms
    of repayment would not be agreed upon unless the License was approved. (Id. at
    231a-33a.) Club will provide Mr. Sparrow a security interest in the License in
    exchange for the loan. Club has a lease with Mr. Sparrow for $500 to $750 a month,
    but Mr. Barnes was unsure of the exact amount of rent or the length of the lease. Mr.
    Barnes stated that no individuals will profit from Club’s business. (Id. at 237a-38a.)
    The City’s Police Department (Bureau of Police) sought to intervene.4
    Detective Brian Radocaj, the coordinator of the Nuisance Bar Taskforce, testified
    about the impact liquor licensed establishments bring to a neighborhood and that
    adding a licensed entity that provides live entertainment on the weekends would
    strain police resources. (Id. at 93a-99a.) Detective Radocaj acknowledged that his
    testimony “would assume that there were issues with the operator.” (Id. at 98a.)
    Rosedale Block Cluster, Inc. (Rosedale), a community organization that owns
    4
    A representative of the area’s City Councilman, who sought to intervene, testified on the
    Councilman’s behalf, describing, in relevant part, the efforts made and money spent by the City to
    redevelop the area. (R.R. at 67a-90a.) Similarly, a representative for the area’s state representative
    stated that the representative supported the opposition to Club’s Application. (Id. at 221a-22a.)
    Neither were granted intervenor status.
    4
    multiple parcels and operates a community center in the area, sought to intervene,
    and its executive director, Dianne Swan (also a resident), testified on its behalf. She
    described the efforts made by the community in the past 20 years to improve the
    neighborhood, the non-profit entities that have been enticed to the redeveloped
    community, a potential increase in existing problems with prostitution and parking,
    and the risk that the positive changes to the community would be disrupted by the
    proposed licensed premises. (Id. at 99a-130a.)
    Numerous residents who live within 500 feet of the Premises testified in
    opposition, citing concerns about: adding potential violence and crime to the
    community where they have worked hard to reduce violence and crime by 95%;
    hindering the redevelopment of the area; people leaving late at night; loud music and
    noise; loitering; Club being open until 3:00 a.m.; Club disturbing one of the quieter
    streets in the area; reducing the property values of the area, which includes newer
    homes than other parts of the area; and the impact on the children, including children
    with disabilities, who reside in the area and play at the nearby playground. (Id. at
    131a-39a, 161a-209a.) One resident testified in favor of the Application. (Id. at
    210a-11a.)
    After reviewing the record, the Board granted intervenor status to the Bureau
    of Police and Rosedale, and protestant status to those who resided within 500 feet
    from the proposed licensed premises and testified at the hearing.
    The Board denied the Application for the following reasons. Club is not a
    “club” as defined by Section 102 of the Liquor Code,5 47 P.S. § 1-102, because Club
    5
    A “club” is
    any reputable group of individuals associated together not for profit for legitimate
    purposes of mutual benefit, entertainment, fellowship or lawful convenience,
    5
    provided no evidence regarding what types of activities, goals, or community
    fellowship in which it engages. Rather, the evidence showed only Club’s attempts
    to obtain a liquor license to generate money to pay for its operations, which
    demonstrated that the sale of alcohol is not secondary, but primary, to Club. (Bd.
    Op. at 27.) Moreover, the double transfer of the License would violate Sections
    403(f) and 404(a) of the Liquor Code,6 47 P.S. §§ 4-403(f), 4-404(a). Although Mr.
    having some primary interest and activity to which the sale of liquor or malt
    and brewed beverages shall be only secondary, which, if incorporated, has been
    in continuous existence and operation for at least one year, and if first licensed after
    June sixteenth, one thousand nine hundred thirty-seven, shall have been
    incorporated in this Commonwealth, and, if unincorporated, for at least ten years,
    immediately preceding the date of its application for a license under this act, and
    which regularly occupies, as owner or lessee, a clubhouse or quarters for the use of
    its members. Continuous existence must be proven by satisfactory evidence. The
    board shall refuse to issue a license if it appears that the charter is not in possession
    of the original incorporators or their direct or legitimate successors. The club shall
    hold regular meetings, conduct its business through officers regularly elected, admit
    members by written application, investigation and ballot, and charge and collect
    dues from elected members, and maintain such records as the board shall from time
    to time prescribe, but any such club may waive or reduce in amount, or pay from
    its club funds, the dues of any person who was a member at the time he was inducted
    into the military service of the United States or was enrolled in the armed forces of
    the United States pursuant to any selective service act during the time of the
    member’s actual service or enrollment. The term includes a privately-owned
    private golf course.
    47 P.S. § 1-102 (emphasis added).
    6
    Section 403(f) of the Liquor Code provides “[t]he board shall refuse to issue licenses to
    clubs when it appears that the operation of the licensed business would inure to the benefit of
    individual members, officers, agents or employes of the club, rather than to the benefit of the entire
    membership of the club.” 47 P.S. § 4-403(f). Section 404(a) of the Liquor Code provides, in
    relevant part:
    (a) Upon receipt of the application and the proper fees, and upon being satisfied
    of the truth of the statements in the application that the applicant and
    management company or companies, if any, are the only persons in any manner
    pecuniarily interested in the business so asked to be licensed and that no other
    6
    Barnes testified that no individual will profit from Club’s operation, the facts that
    Mr. Sparrow is Club’s President, Club’s landlord (receiving rent money), Club’s
    secured creditor, and the terms of repayment on the loan had not yet been negotiated,
    gave “the Board pause as to whether the proposed transfer is more to Mr. Sparrow’s
    personal benefit than the club’s as a whole” in violation of Section 403(f). (Bd. Op.
    at 28-29.) Furthermore, while the Board could not definitively find “that Mr.
    Sparrow would have an unlawful pecuniary interest in the [L]icense . . . there is
    person will be in any manner pecuniarily interested therein during the
    continuance of the license, except as hereinafter permitted, and that the applicant
    is a person of good repute, that the premises applied for meet all the
    requirements of this act and the regulations of the board, that the applicant
    seeks a license for a . . . club, as defined in this act, and that the issuance of such
    license is not prohibited by any of the provisions of this act, the board . . . in the
    case of a club may, in its discretion, issue or refuse a license: . . . And provided
    further, That the board shall refuse . . . the transfer of any license to a new
    location . . . if, in the board’s opinion, such new license, transfer or extension
    would be detrimental to the welfare, health, peace and morals of the
    inhabitants of the neighborhood within a radius of five hundred feet of the
    place proposed to be licensed . . . .
    47 P.S. § 4-404(a) (emphasis added). The Board’s regulations define “pecuniary interest” as
    An interest that sounds in the attributes of proprietorship. There is a rebuttable
    presumption of a pecuniary interest when a person receives 10% or more of the
    proceeds of the licensed business or when control is exercised by one or more of
    the following:
    (i)     Employing a majority of the employees of the licensee.
    (ii)    Independently making day-to-day decisions about the operation of the
    business.
    (iii)   Having final authority to decide how the licensed business is conducted.
    40 Pa. Code § 1.1.
    7
    enough evidence to provide cause for concern” based on Mr. Sparrow’s various roles
    in Club and the lack of known repayment terms. (Id. at 29-30.) Additionally, Club
    had not submitted all of the necessary documents and information required in a
    transfer application as required by Section 403 of the Liquor Code, 47 P.S. § 4-403.7
    Finally, there was sufficient evidence that the transfer would adversely affect the
    health, welfare, peace, and morals of the neighborhood within a radius of 500 feet
    of the proposed licensed premises. Club’s stated goal is to increase its membership
    from 33 to a couple of hundred, who would use on-street parking, and have a DJ on
    the weekends, which would strain the Bureau of Police’s resources. The area is 90%
    residential, and the testimony described the efforts made to improve the quality of
    7
    Section 403(a) and (e) of the Liquor Code require that:
    (a) Every applicant for a . . . club liquor license or for the transfer of an existing
    license to another premises not then licensed . . . shall file a written application with
    the board in such form and containing such information as the board shall from
    time to time prescribe, which shall be accompanied by a filing fee and an annual
    license fee . . . .
    ***
    (e) . . . . Every club applicant shall file with and as a part of its application a list of
    the names and addresses of its members, directors, officers, agents and employes,
    together with the dates of their admission, election or employment, and such other
    information with respect to its affairs as the board shall require.
    47 P.S. § 4-403(a), (e). The regulations require that photographs “shall be furnished to the Board’s
    representative by the following: Individuals; members of partnerships; and principal officers of a
    corporation applying for Retail Liquor Licenses, Retail Dispenser Malt Beverage Licenses,
    Distributor Licenses and Importing Distributor Licenses, except Public Service and Club
    Licenses” and “Current managers/stewards and proposed managers/stewards.” 40 Pa. Code
    § 3.31(a). The regulation also states that a liquor license will not be transferred unless, inter alia,
    the application avers that the proper municipal authorities have found that the proposed licensed
    premises “meet all the sanitary requirements for a public eating place in the municipality . . . as
    provided by statute, ordinance or regulation and that documentary evidence thereof is, and shall at
    all times be, displayed on the licensed premises. 40 Pa. Code § 5.41(a).
    8
    life in that neighborhood, which would be negatively impacted in various ways by
    granting the Application.
    Club appealed and, following its de novo review,8 common pleas overturned
    the denial and directed that the Application be approved. Common pleas concluded
    that: the Board could not assert that Club was not a “club” because it previously had
    approved a club catering license for Club in 2010; the record showed that Mr.
    Sparrow would not have an unlawful pecuniary interest in the License; and there
    was no evidence that showed a direct or immediate harm to the area within 500 feet
    of the proposed premises that would result from the transfer. Common pleas did not
    directly address whether the transfer of the License would inure to the benefit of Mr.
    Sparrow rather than Club’s general members or that Club had not filed all of the
    required information and documents in Club’s Application. The Board now appeals
    to this Court.9
    Before this Court, the Board challenges common pleas’ decision on multiple
    bases. Among those is its argument that common pleas erred in overturning its
    denial and directing that the Application be approved because Section 404(a) of the
    Liquor Code allows only the licensee and its management company (if it has one) to
    8
    Under common pleas’ de novo standard of review pursuant to Section 464 of the Liquor
    Code, 47 P.S. § 4-464, common pleas, based on the de novo record, “may sustain, alter, modify or
    amend the Board’s action even if it does not find materially different facts.” U.S.A. Deli, Inc. v.
    Pa. Liquor Control Bd., 
    909 A.2d 24
    , 27 (Pa. Cmwlth. 2006). Applying this broader standard, we
    have held that if the Board has discretion to take an action, common pleas can exercise the same
    discretion under Section 464 of the Code. 
    Id. at 28.
            9
    Our review in liquor license cases “is limited to determining whether [common pleas’]
    findings of fact are supported by substantial evidence and whether [common pleas] committed an
    error of law or an abuse of its discretion.” In re Application for Liquor License of Thomas, 
    829 A.2d 410
    , 413 n.3 (Pa. Cmwlth. 2003).
    9
    have a pecuniary interest in a license.10 47 P.S. § 4-404(a). The Board points out
    that the record here shows that Mr. Sparrow is Club’s creditor and landlord, and that
    the terms of the repayment of the $18,000 Mr. Sparrow is loaning to Club have not
    been finalized and will not be until the transfer is approved. The Board contends
    that, without knowing the terms of repayment or Club’s lease, as well as Mr.
    Sparrow’s day-to-day input in Club’s operations, it was impossible to determine
    whether Mr. Sparrow will have an unlawful pecuniary interest in Club’s operations.
    Thus, it properly denied the Application and common pleas erred in reversing that
    denial and directing the approval of the Application.
    Club responds that Mr. Sparrow will not have an unlawful pecuniary interest
    and there is no evidence that he will receive any percentage of the proceeds of Club’s
    business, let alone the 10% set forth in 40 Pa. Code § 1.1, or that he will have the
    final decision-making authority for Club’s operations. According to Club, none of
    Mr. Sparrow’s titles (president, landlord, secured creditor) equate to an unlawful
    pecuniary interest or proprietorship interest in the License, Mr. Barnes testified that
    no individual will profit from Club’s business, and, if the Board had concerns
    regarding Mr. Sparrow’s involvement, it could have subpoenaed him to answer
    questions about that involvement. Club argues that this situation is analogous to
    Parks v. Liquor Control Board, 
    403 A.2d 628
    , 630 (Pa. Cmwlth. 1979), where the
    only evidence in the record showed that the applicant would be the sole owner and
    yet the Board denied the license on the basis that another person would have an
    unlawful pecuniary interest. Club contends that, similar to Parks, there is no direct
    10
    The Board also argues that common pleas erred because Club is not a “club” under the
    Liquor Code, the License will inure to the benefit of Mr. Sparrow rather than to Club’s general
    Members, Club did not submit all of the forms and information required, and granting the
    Application would adversely affect the health, welfare, peace, and morals of the neighborhood
    within a radius of 500 feet of the proposed licensed premises.
    10
    evidence establishing that Mr. Sparrow will have an unlawful pecuniary interest, and
    the Board could not deny the Application on that basis.
    Relevant to this issue, Section 404(a) of the Code provides, in relevant part:
    (a) Upon receipt of the application and the proper fees, and upon
    being satisfied of the truth of the statements in the application
    that the applicant and management company or companies, if any,
    are the only persons in any manner pecuniarily interested in the
    business so asked to be licensed and that no other person will be
    in any manner pecuniarily interested therein during the
    continuance of the license, except as hereinafter permitted, . . . the
    board . . . in the case of a club may, in its discretion, issue or
    refuse a license: . . . .
    47 P.S. § 4-404(a) (emphasis added). The Board’s regulations define “pecuniary
    interest” as
    An interest that sounds in the attributes of proprietorship. There is
    a rebuttable presumption of a pecuniary interest when a person
    receives 10% or more of the proceeds of the licensed business or
    when control is exercised by one or more of the following:
    (i) Employing a majority of the employees of the licensee.
    (ii) Independently making day-to-day decisions about the operation
    of the business.
    (iii) Having final authority to decide how the licensed business is
    conducted.
    40 Pa. Code § 1.1. Pursuant to these provisions, the Liquor Code prohibits anyone
    other than the licensee or its management company from having a pecuniary interest
    in the license, which is defined as having the “attributes of proprietorship.” 47 P.S.
    § 4-404(a); 40 Pa. Code § 1.1. A rebuttable presumption of pecuniary interest arises
    if the person receives 10% or more of the proceeds of the licensed business or
    exercises a particular level of control over the licensed business. 40 Pa. Code § 1.1.
    11
    Liquor license applicants bear the burden of proving, to the Board’s satisfaction,
    that they meet the requirements necessary to obtain a liquor license under Section
    404(a) of the Liquor Code. St. Rd. Bar & Grille, Inc. v. Pa. Liquor Control Bd., 
    876 A.2d 346
    , 353-54 (Pa. 2005). Thus, Club had the burden of proving that it is “the
    only person[] in any manner pecuniarily interested in the business so asked to be
    licensed and that no other person will be in any manner pecuniarily interested
    therein during the continuance of the license except as hereinafter permitted.” 47
    P.S. § 4-404(a) (emphasis added).
    Here, the only direct evidence of the financial relationship between Mr.
    Sparrow and Club is Mr. Barnes’ testimony that no individual would profit from
    Club’s business, Club would be paying Mr. Sparrow between $500 and $750 in rent,
    and Club would be repaying the loan but the terms of repayment were not yet set.
    (R.R. at 232a, 237a-38a, 258a.) While common pleas relied upon Mr. Barnes’
    testimony and the absence of direct evidence of an unlawful pecuniary interest, we
    disagree that this testimony and a lack of evidence satisfies Club’s burden of proof.
    There is no question that Mr. Sparrow will have some pecuniary interest in
    Club’s ongoing business, which is based on its acquiring the License, as he is Club’s
    landlord and its creditor. It is the level of that interest that is in question. Because
    the terms of repayment of the loan had not been negotiated, those terms could not
    have been considered by the Board, or by common pleas, to determine if Mr.
    Sparrow would have an unlawful pecuniary interest. In deliberately delaying the
    negotiation of these terms until after a decision on the Application was made, Club
    presented an incomplete picture regarding its financial relationship with Mr.
    Sparrow. Given the incomplete picture created by Club and the evidence that Mr.
    Sparrow would have some pecuniary interest in Club’s business, Mr. Barnes’
    12
    testimony that no individual would profit from Club’s business is not substantial
    evidence, that is, “evidence that a reasonable mind might accept as sufficient to
    support [the] conclusion,” Spencer v. City of Reading Charter Board, 
    97 A.3d 834
    ,
    842 (Pa. Cmwlth. 2014), that Mr. Sparrow “will [not] be in any manner pecuniarily
    interested [in Club’s business] during the continuance of the [L]icense,” 47 P.S. § 4-
    404(a) (emphasis added). Club appears to fault the Board for not subpoenaing Mr.
    Sparrow to ask questions regarding any pecuniary interest he may have; however, it
    is Club that bore the burden of proving that he would not have an unlawful pecuniary
    interest. Based on this record, we conclude that Club has not done so, and, therefore,
    common pleas erred in overturning the Board’s denial and directing that the
    Application be approved.11
    Parks does not require a different result. In that case, the only evidence
    regarding the ownership of the business indicated that the applicant would be the
    sole owner, but the Board found that her husband, “who [wa]s not a responsible
    person of good reputation,” would also have a pecuniary interest and denied the
    application on that, as well as another, basis. 
    Parks, 403 A.2d at 630
    . On appeal,
    the court of common pleas reversed the denial based on the unlawful pecuniary
    interest, and this Court agreed. We held that “[t]here was absolutely no evidence
    in the record to substantiate the Board’s finding that applicant’s husband would
    also have a pecuniary interest in the business.” 
    Id. (emphasis added).12
    In contrast
    to Parks, there is evidence that Mr. Sparrow would have some pecuniary interest in
    11
    Moreover, given that Club’s Board consists of multiple members of the Sparrow family,
    sitting as President, Secretary, and Treasurer, there is a question regarding the level of control Mr.
    Sparrow could exercise over Club’s day-to-day operations or if he would have final authority over
    how Club’s business would operate. See 40 Pa. Code § 1.1(ii), (iii).
    12
    This Court, in Parks, ultimately reversed the denial of the license in its entirety, holding
    that the court of common pleas had erred in affirming the Board’s secondary basis for denying the
    
    license. 403 A.2d at 630-31
    .
    13
    Club’s ongoing business, which is based on Club acquiring the License, as its
    landlord and its creditor. Moreover, the record contains evidence, the Prior Purchase
    Agreement, reflecting that Club, albeit before it had obtained counsel, was willing
    to sell to Mr. Sparrow its charter and the liquor license it was seeking to purchase in
    exchange for a loan to acquire that license.         (R.R. at 284a.)     Under these
    circumstances, Club’s reliance on Parks is misplaced.
    Because we conclude that common pleas erred on this basis, we will not
    address the Board’s remaining allegations of error, save one. The Board argues that
    common pleas erred because Club does not qualify as a “club” as defined by Section
    102 of the Code, 47 P.S. § 1-102. Common pleas held that the Board was precluded
    from finding that Club was not a “club” for the purposes of this License because it
    granted Club a club liquor license in 2010. While we will not address the merits of
    the Board’s arguments on this issue, it is important to clarify that each application
    for a liquor license is subject to the limitations prescribed in the Liquor Code,
    and a Board’s decision on one application does not necessarily preclude a different
    decision on a subsequent application. See W. Reading Tavern, Inc. v. Pa. Liquor
    Control Bd., 
    710 A.2d 648
    , 651 (Pa. Cmwlth. 1998) (holding that an applicant whose
    prior application has been denied may file a new application for the Board’s
    consideration); see also AWT Beaver Independ. Deli, Inc. v. Commonwealth, 
    876 A.2d 500
    , 503 (Pa. Cmwlth. 2005) (citing West Reading Tavern, Inc. and holding
    that a prior determination that a proposed transfer of a liquor license would adversely
    impact the welfare, health, peace, and morals of the community did not bar
    relitigation of that issue on a second application). While “the Board’s reversal of its
    earlier conclusions on the identical issues and facts in a subsequent decision may
    amount to an abuse of discretion, if the Board fails to state any valid reason for its
    14
    action,” where the Board’s actions on a subsequent application differ from the first,
    but are “based on new findings of fact and conclusions of law after considering all
    the evidence presented at the second hearing, the Board [does] not abuse its
    discretion.” W. Reading Tavern, 
    Inc., 710 A.2d at 651-52
    . Although these cases
    involved the denial of an initial application and grant of a subsequent application
    following a new hearing, the principles are the same, and the Board’s authority to
    act differently on a second application based on new evidence also applies here.
    Thus, the fact that the Board approved Club’s application in 2010 did not preclude
    it from revisiting whether Club still qualified as a “club” under the Liquor Code in
    considering Club’s second application based on the evidence presented at the second
    hearing.
    Accordingly, we reverse common pleas’ Order.
    _____________________________________
    RENÉE COHN JUBELIRER, Judge
    Judge McCullough dissents.
    15
    IN THE COMMONWEALTH COURT OF PENNSYLVANIA
    PAC Club of Western PA                 :
    :
    v.                   :   No. 255 C.D. 2017
    :
    Pennsylvania Liquor Control Board,     :
    Appellant       :
    ORDER
    NOW, January 3, 2018, the Order of the Court of Common Pleas of Allegheny
    County, entered in the above-captioned matter, is REVERSED.
    _____________________________________
    RENÉE COHN JUBELIRER, Judge