CBM Package Liquor v. City of Maryville ( 2004 )


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  •                   IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF TENNESSEE
    AT KNOXVILLE
    Assigned on Briefs, February 26, 2004
    CBM PACKAGE LIQUOR, INC., ET AL., v. THE CITY OF MARYVILLE,
    ET AL.
    Appeal from the Chancery Court for Blount County
    No. 01-236   Telford E. Forgety, Jr., Chancellor
    No. E2003-01220-COA-R3-CV - FILED JUNE 29, 2004
    In this case it is argued that the Trial Court erred in approving the decision of the Appellees, the City
    of Maryville and the City Council for the City of Maryville, to issue certificates of compliance to
    three applicants as a precondition to each such applicant securing a license to operate a retail liquor
    store from the Tennessee Alcoholic Beverage Commission. We affirm the judgment of the Trial
    Court and remand
    Tenn. R. App. P. 3; Judgment of the Chancery Court Affirmed; Cause Remanded
    HERSCHEL PICKENS FRANKS, P.J., delivered the opinion of the court, in which CHARLES D. SUSANO ,
    JR. and D. MICHAEL SWINEY , JJ., joined.
    A. Thomas Monceret, Knoxville, Tennessee, for the Appellants, CBM Package Liquor, Inc. and
    Celeste B. Meunier.
    John C. Duffy, Knoxville, Tennessee, for the Appellees, the City of Maryville and the ity council for
    the City of Maryville.
    OPINION
    In August of 2001, the City of Maryville adopted Ordinance 2001-28 (hereinafter “the
    Ordinance”) which regulates the control of retail liquor sales within the City, and limited the number
    of liquor stores to three. Tenn. Code Ann. § 57-3-208(a) provides that as a condition precedent to
    the issuance of a State license for the retail sale of alcoholic beverages the applicant for a license
    under that section must submit a certificate “from the mayor or a majority of the commission, city
    council, or legislative body” of the local municipality. The Ordinance addresses the issuance of the
    certificate of compliance required under Tenn. Code Ann. § 57-3-208(a).
    By Form A-1 dated August 2001, the City issued instructions to those wishing to
    apply for the certificate of compliance. These instructions required that completed applications for
    the certificate be returned to the City Recorder’s Office by twelve noon on October 1, 2001. The
    Appellant, CBM Package Liquor, Inc. (hereinafter “CBM”), was one of nine applicants submitting
    applications by the deadline of October 1, 2001. However, when the City Council met on October
    18, 2001, to review the nine applications, CBM was not one of the three applicants chosen by the
    Council to receive a certificate.
    On December 13, 2001, CBM and its owner and president, Celeste B. Meunier, filed
    a petition for writ of certiorari in the Blount County Chancery Court suing the City and City Council
    for having denied CBM a certificate of compliance. The petition cites section 15 of Alcoholic
    Beverage Commission Rule No. 0100-3-.09 (hereinafter “the ABC Rule”) which states as follows:
    (15) The Commission shall require each applicant for a new retail liquor license,
    pursuant to Chapter 3 of Title 57 of the Tennessee Code Annotated, to place a notice
    in a newspaper of general circulation in the area proposed to be served concerning
    the applicant’s intent to seek a license from the Commission. The notice shall
    contain such information as is prescribed in Section (16) below and shall appear for
    at least three (3) consecutive issues immediately preceding the date that the applicant
    applies to the city or county for a certificate of compliance. The application shall be
    accompanied by a copy of the public notice and the sworn statement of the applicant
    that the notice was published in accordance with this section and the rules of the
    Commission.
    Section (16) of the Rule further provides:
    (16) Anyone applying for a Tennessee retail liquor license shall place the following
    notice in a newspaper of general circulation:
    RETAIL LIQUOR LICENSE NOTICE
    Take notice that
    (Name an[d] address of applicant)
    has applied to
    (City or County)
    for a certificate of compliance and has or will apply to the Tennessee Alcoholic
    Beverage Commission at Nashville for a retail liquor license for a store to be named
    and to be located at
    and owned by
    -2-
    (Name and address. List whether individual, partnership, or corporation. List
    individual owners except if corporation, list officers and manager.)
    All persons wishing to be heard on the certificate of compliance may personally or
    through counsel appear or submit their views in writing at
    (Name of City or Government to issue certificate and address)
    on       at              .
    (Date)      (Time)
    The Tennessee Alcoholic Beverage Commission will consider the application at a
    later date to be set by the Tennessee Alcoholic Beverage Commission in Nashville,
    Tennessee. Interested persons may personally or through counsel submit their views
    in writing by the hearing date to be scheduled by the TABC.
    Anyone with questions concerning this application or the laws relating to it may call
    or write the Alcoholic Beverage Commission at
    (Address)                             (Phone)
    The title of the notice shall be all capital letters and at least 10 point size. The text
    of the notice shall be at least eight point type size and the size of the entire notice
    shall be not less than two columns by two inches of newspaper space.
    CBM’s petition asserts that, although its application was the only one which included
    the referenced public notice and sworn statement of publication by the deadline of October 1, 2001,
    all of the other eight applications were accepted by the City as proper. The petition further asserts
    that, in accepting and considering applications which failed to meet the ABC Rule’s requirement
    regarding documentation of publication, the City and City Council acted arbitrarily, capriciously and
    illegally and in excess of jurisdiction. The petition requests “[t]hat the Court rule that the Plaintiff
    has complied with the law that this Plaintiff was a successful applicant, and entitled to Certificate
    of Compliance and be issued a liquor license.” In the alternative CBM requests that the City be
    ordered to issue a fourth certificate of compliance to CBM.
    CBM’s petition was heard on February 6, 2003, and the Court found that CBM’s
    petition should be dismissed and entered its final judgment to that effect on May 6, 2003. Thereafter,
    CBM and Ms. Meunier filed this appeal.
    This is a non-jury case and, therefore, our review is de novo upon the record of the
    Trial Court. Findings of fact by a trial court are entitled to a presumption of correctness and, unless
    there is evidence preponderating to the contrary, we must affirm such findings pursuant to Tenn. R.
    App. P. 13(d). Kincaid v. Kincaid, 
    912 S.W.2d 140
     (Tenn. Ct. App. 1995). A trial court’s
    conclusions of law are not entitled to a presumption of correctness. Campbell v. Florida Steel Corp.,
    
    919 S.W.2d 26
     (Tenn. 1996).
    -3-
    Under writ of certiorari review of a city’s administrative action such action may be
    reversed or modified only upon a determination that the action was: 1) in violation of constitutional
    and statutory provisions; 2) in excess of statutory authority; 3) taken upon unlawful procedure; 4)
    arbitrary or capricious; or 5) unsupported by material evidence. Massey v. Shelby County Retirement
    Board, 
    813 S.W.2d 462
    , 464 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1991). Further, as the Tennessee Supreme Court stated
    in McCallen v. City of Memphis, 
    786 S.W.2d 633
    , 641 (Tenn. 1990) “[b]oth legislative and
    administrative decisions [of a local government body] are presumed to be valid and a heavy burden
    of proof rests upon the shoulders of the party who challenges the action.”
    CBM argues that the ABC Rule applies to proceedings conducted by the City related
    to the issuance of the certificate of compliance required under Tenn. Code Ann. §57-3-208(a). CBM
    further contends that the documentation of notices of publication required by the ABC Rule must
    be submitted by the deadline for submission of the application for the certificate of compliance,
    which in this case was October 1, 2001. Both CBM and the City stipulate that all three applicants
    that were issued certificates of compliance by the City submitted the documentation of the notices
    of publication by the date of the City Council meeting to review applications on October 18, 2001.
    The parties also stipulate that CBM was the only applicant to submit this documentation before the
    application deadline of October 1, 2001, and it is contended by CBM that, in view of this fact, only
    its own application should have been considered for issuance of a certificate. CBM argues that the
    other applications should have been disregarded because deficient under the ABC Rule and that,
    after the deadline of October 1, supplementation of the applications with documentation required
    under the ABC Rule should not have been allowed.
    The Trial Court found, and the record confirms, that the instructions provided by the
    City to applicants for the certificate of compliance do not specifically state that documentation of
    publication, as required by the ABC Rule, must accompany the application for a certificate of
    compliance. In its memorandum opinion the Trial Court noted the “two tiered procedure” involved
    in obtaining a liquor license:
    You have a procedure whereby an applicant first must apply to the city here - - it is
    a city here - - must apply to the city first for a, quote, certificate of compliance, that
    certificate referred to in 57-3-208, must get that certificate of compliance as a
    condition precedent to that applicant, then getting a license actually to sell the liquor
    from the State Alcoholic Beverage Commission.
    The Trial Court further noted:
    [The ABC] rule, by its own terms in subparagraph 15, states that the commission
    shall require such each applicants to submit the things that it shall require, the sworn
    statement and the proofs of publication.
    The Alcoholic Beverage Commission shall require those things. The court must
    include that if the Alcoholic Beverage Commission considered that the procedure
    -4-
    employed here before the City of Maryville was - - did not comply with its own
    rules and regulations, that it would have then ruled that those applicants to it, the
    Alcoholic Beverage Commission, who were successful in getting certificates of
    compliance from the City of Maryville, the Alcoholic Beverage Commission would
    simply have held that your application to us, the Alcoholic Beverage Commission,
    is not sufficient and is therefore denied, because the rule itself says that it is the
    commission that shall require these things.
    The record confirms the above findings of the Trial Court and we agree with the
    Court’s construction of the ABC rule. By its own terms the Rule clearly makes the Commission
    responsible for seeing that the requirements set forth in the Rule are met.
    CBM directs our attention to use of the word “shall” in the ABC Rule and specifically
    cites that portion of the Rule which states that “[t]he application shall be accompanied by a copy of
    the public notice and the sworn statement of the applicant that the notice was published in
    accordance with this section and the rules of the Commission.” CBM argues that “[t]he plain
    language of the ABC regulation controlling the application process requires that the applications be
    submitted to the city ‘accompanied by a copy of the public notice.’” We construe the Rule to be
    nothing more than a statement of those conditions which must be met to the satisfaction of the
    Commission before the Commission will issue a new retail liquor license. In support of this
    construction of the rule we note that previously cited section (16) which sets forth the form for the
    public notice which is called for under section (15) provides that “anyone applying for a Tennessee
    retail liquor license shall place the [designated] notice in a newspaper of general circulation.”
    (Emphasis added.) This language confirms that the Rule pertains to the pre-requisites for issuance
    of a license for a retail liquor license.
    We further note Tenn. Code Ann. § 57-3-208 which governs the certificate of
    compliance to be issued by a municipality precedent to issuance of a retail liquor license by the State
    states in pertinent part as follows:
    (a) As a condition precedent to the issuance of a license under § 57-3-204, every
    applicant for a license under that section shall submit with the application to the
    commission a certificate signed by the county executive or chair of the county
    commission in which the licensed premises are to be located if outside the corporate
    limits of a municipality or, if within a municipality, from the mayor or a majority of
    the commission, city council, or legislative body of the municipality, by whatsoever
    name designated, or if the municipality has no mayor, from the highest executive of
    the municipality.
    b) The certificate must state:
    (1) That the applicant or applicants who are to be in actual charge of the business
    have not been convicted of a felony within a ten-year period immediately preceding
    -5-
    the date of application and, if a corporation, that the executive officers or those in
    control have not been convicted of a felony within a ten-year period immediately
    preceding the date of the application; and further, that in the official’s opinion the
    applicant will not violate any of the provisions of this chapter;
    (2) That the applicant or applicants have secured a location for the business which
    complies with all restrictions of any local law, ordinance, or resolution, duly adopted
    by the local jurisdiction, as to the location of the business;
    (3) That the applicant or applicants have complied with any local law, ordinance or
    resolution duly adopted by the local authorities regulating the number of retail
    licenses to be issued within the jurisdiction.
    We find nothing in this statute which compels the conclusion that a municipality may only issue a
    certificate of compliance to those applicants who have timely submitted the documentation of
    publication required under the ABC Rule.
    CBM also cites Bernard v. Sharp, 
    481 S.W.2d 782
     (Tenn. Ct. App. 1972) in support
    of its argument that the ABC rule should govern the City’s procedure with regard to the issuance of
    certificates of compliance. In Bernard we addressed the issue of whether the plaintiff real estate
    agent was required to comply with a Jellico city ordinance which demanded that the agent pay a
    privilege tax before he could conduct business in Jellico, whereas Tenn. Code Ann. § 67-5116
    provided that whenever a real estate agent had paid the tax in the county of his principal place of
    business, as had the plaintiff, he was not liable for the tax in any other county. We found that the
    city could not, by its ordinance, “supersede or make an enactment contrary to a general act of the
    legislature.” We disagree that our holding in Bernard is relevant under the circumstances in the
    case now before us. We find no conflict between the ABC Rule and the City’s procedure such as
    was present in Bernard between the city ordinance and the State statute. Under our construction,
    the ABC rule dictates that the Alcoholic Beverage Commission require that certain conditions be met
    before an applicant will be issued a retail liquor license. The City’s procedure for issuance of a
    certificate of compliance was in substantial compliance with the ABC Rule which the Commission
    obviously determined by issuing licenses based on the Certificates of Compliance.
    CBM’s argument that the City should have dismissed the other eight applications for
    certificate of compliance because they failed to timely file the publication documentation required
    by the ABC Rule is without merit.
    In its brief, CBM also contends that the applications of the other eight applicants for
    a certificate of compliance should have been disregarded by the City because such applications did
    not contain certain maps which CBM asserts that the Ordinance required. We find no evidence in
    the record showing that CBM raised this issue at trial and it is therefore, deemed waived. Issues may
    not be raised for the first time on appeal. Lee v. Lee, 
    66 S.W.3d 837
     (Tenn. Ct. App. 2001).
    -6-
    All other issues raised in this appeal are pretermitted by our decision herein.
    For the foregoing reasons the judgment of the Trial Court is affirmed and the cause
    is remanded for such further proceedings as may be necessary, and for collection of costs below
    which are, as are costs of appeal, adjudged against CBM Package Liquor, Inc. and Celeste B.
    Meunier and their surety.
    _________________________________
    HERSCHEL PICKENS FRANKS, P.J.
    -7-
    

Document Info

Docket Number: E2003-01220-COA-R3-CV

Judges: Presiding Judge Herschel P. Franks

Filed Date: 6/29/2004

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 10/30/2014