Club 530, Inc. v. PLCB ( 2017 )


Menu:
  •           IN THE COMMONWEALTH COURT OF PENNSYLVANIA
    Club 530, Inc.                     :
    :
    v.                     : No. 855 C.D. 2016
    : Argued: March 6, 2017
    Pennsylvania Liquor Control Board, :
    Appellant         :
    BEFORE:     HONORABLE RENÉE COHN JUBELIRER, Judge
    HONORABLE JULIA K. HEARTHWAY, Judge
    HONORABLE DAN PELLEGRINI, Senior Judge
    OPINION NOT REPORTED
    MEMORANDUM OPINION BY
    SENIOR JUDGE PELLEGRINI                              FILED: March 29, 2017
    The Pennsylvania Liquor Control Board (PLCB) appeals from an
    order of the Court of Common Pleas of Lackawanna County (trial court) granting
    reinstatement of Club 530, Inc.’s (Licensee) Restaurant Liquor License R-13112
    (License) upon payment of all applicable license fees that would have been
    payable on an annual basis since the date of revocation.
    I.
    When Licensee acquired the License for the premises located at 526
    Lackawanna Avenue, Scranton, Pennsylvania (premises) in 2007, Licensee
    requested that it be placed in safekeeping pursuant to Section 474.1 of the Liquor
    Code.1 When the License was placed in safekeeping, PLCB’s Bureau of Licensing
    (Bureau) advised Licensee that the safekeeping period would expire on November
    9, 2010. See Section 474.1(b) of the Liquor Code, 47 P.S. § 4–474.1(b).
    1
    Act of April 12, 1951, P.L. 90, as amended, added by Section 21 of the Act of
    December 9, 2002, P.L. 1653, 47 P.S. § 4–474.1. While Act 39 of June 8, 2016, P.L. 273,
    changed some of the relevant language of Section 474.1 of the Liquor Code, all of the underlying
    facts in this matter occurred prior to Act 39’s effective date, August 8, 2016. At all relevant
    times, Section 474.1 of the Liquor Code provided, in pertinent part:
    (a) A restaurant, eating place retail dispenser, hotel, importing
    distributor and distributor licensee whose licensed establishment is
    not in operation for fifteen consecutive days shall return its license
    for safekeeping with the board no later than at the expiration of the
    fifteen-day period. The license may only be reissued from
    safekeeping in the manner set forth by the board through
    regulation.
    (b) The board may hold the license in safekeeping for a period not
    to exceed three consecutive years. Any license remaining in
    safekeeping for more than three consecutive years shall be
    immediately revoked by the Bureau of Licensing unless a transfer
    application or request for reissue from safekeeping has been filed
    prior to the expiration of the three-year period or unless the board
    has approved a request to extend the safekeeping for an additional
    year as set forth in subsection (g). . . .
    (c) In the event a transfer application filed prior to the expiration of
    the three-year period is disapproved by the board, then the license
    may remain in safekeeping so long as the licensee has submitted
    and the board has approved a request to extend the safekeeping for
    an additional year as set forth in subsection (g). Such request must
    be submitted within thirty days of the board’s decision
    notwithstanding any appeal filed in the matter; however, the fee set
    forth in subsection (g) shall be refunded if the board’s decision is
    overturned.
    (d) Any period of time in which the licensee allows the license to
    lapse by not filing a timely license renewal or license validation
    (Footnote continued on next page…)
    2
    In the following years, Licensee submitted renewal applications for its
    License, which were approved by the Bureau. Desiring to take the License out of
    safekeeping to operate a restaurant at the licensed premises, on October 27, 2010,
    Licensee submitted an Application for Return of License from Safekeeping
    (Return Application).2         (Reproduced Record (R.R.) at 65a.)              In response, the
    Bureau sent a letter acknowledging Licensee’s timely Application and advising
    that it would request an investigation for the premises. The letter stated, “[s]hould
    the report of investigation disclose that the premises meet all Board requirements
    and is not ready to be open and operating as a bone fide restaurant, then an
    application for extension of safekeeping period . . . and a fee of $5000.00 will be
    (continued…)
    shall be considered time in which the license was held in
    safekeeping for purposes of this section.
    ***
    (g)(1) A licensee whose license is subject to this section may, upon
    written request, apply to the board to allow the license to remain in
    safekeeping for an additional one year. The written request must
    be accompanied by a five thousand dollar ($5,000) fee for licenses
    placed in safekeeping from counties of the first class, second class,
    second class A, third class and fourth class and a fee of two
    thousand five hundred dollars ($2,500) for licenses placed in
    safekeeping from counties of the fifth through eighth classes. The
    board shall approve the request unless the license or licensee no
    longer meets the requirements of this act or the board’s
    regulations. . . .
    47 P.S. § 4-474.1.
    2
    A Certificate of Occupancy was issued for the premises on the same day.
    3
    required and you will receive a letter advising you of such.” (R.R. at 56a.) The
    letter also advised that Licensee’s Return Application “will be held in abeyance”
    due to a conflict of interest issue in violation of Section 411(e) of the Liquor Code,
    47 P.S. § 4-411(e), resulting from Licensee’s sole owner, Anthony J. Rinaldi, Sr.
    also being the “President and CEO of Scranton Life Realty Co. which leases space
    to Importer License No. I-683 . . . issued to Northern Wine & Spirits, Inc.
    [(Northern Wine)] at 538 Spruce [Street], Suite #502, Scranton.” (R.R. at 56a-
    57a.) Soon thereafter, Licensee notified the Bureau that the conflict had been
    resolved.3
    By letter dated December 22, 2010, the Bureau notified Licensee that
    at that time it could not approve removing the License from safekeeping because
    the Bureau investigator’s report stated that the conflict issue still existed and a
    current valid health license was not posted on the premises.4 The Bureau also
    notified Licensee that “If an application for extension of safekeeping period is not
    received within twenty (20) days of the date of this letter, the [L]icense will be
    revoked by operation of law.” (R.R. at 59a.) This letter did not mention that
    Licensee had a right to appeal. Licensee did not respond to this letter or take any
    actions to extend safekeeping purportedly because Licensee did not receive it.
    3
    Licensee notified the Bureau that it resolved the conflict issue by letter dated December
    7, 2010. However, because Licensee discovered that the letter was never actually received by
    the Bureau, Licensee then faxed a copy of the letter on January 10, 2011.
    4
    Regarding the conflict issue, the Bureau “noted[ that] an application for correction to
    license has been received for [Northern Wine’s] Importer License. . . . However, a transfer
    application packet and required fee must be submitted as this is a place to place transfer.” (R.R.
    at 58a.)
    4
    By letter dated January 25, 2011, later amended,5 the Bureau informed
    Licensee that its License was revoked because “the premises was not issued a
    health license at the time of investigation.” (R.R. at 40a.) It did not state as a
    reason that the License was being revoked because of the conflict issue. The
    Bureau then stated that Licensee “has the right to request a hearing on this matter,
    provided the request is submitted in writing and is received within twenty (20)
    days of the date of this letter.” (R.R. at 40a.) Licensee timely appealed.
    II.
    Before a hearing examiner, Gary Grochowski (Grochowski), a PLCB
    licensing investigator, testified that he was assigned to investigate Licensee’s
    Return Application and “upon investigation, the premises met all Board
    requirements with the exception of having a valid health permit at the time. And
    that was the last investigation that was done at the premises by myself.” (R.R. at
    12a.)
    William Rinaldi, Licensee’s attorney,6 testified that he did not receive
    the Bureau’s December 22, 2010 letter advising the reasons that the License was
    not being returned from safekeeping. He stated that the premises had a valid health
    license in March 2010, but the City of Scranton revoked the health license prior to
    the Bureau’s inspection because the premises needed a certificate of occupancy.
    5
    The January 25, 2011 letter incorrectly provided that the License expired on November
    9, 2011. On March 1, 2011, the Bureau sent an amended letter that corrected the expiration date
    to November 9, 2010.
    6
    In October 2015, William Rinaldi withdrew his appearance on behalf of Licensee as a
    result of objections by the PLCB.
    5
    After renovations were completed and a certificate of occupancy was issued for the
    premises on October 26, 2010, Licensee submitted its application to take the
    License out of safekeeping the next day. William Rinaldi also notified the Bureau
    that the conflict issue was resolved by letter dated December 7, 2010, and he
    would contact the Bureau every few weeks to see if the conflict issue was resolved.
    After discovering that the letter was never actually received by the Bureau, he
    faxed the letter to the Bureau on January 10, 2011.
    The hearing examiner filed an opinion recommending the License
    should not be revoked pursuant to Section 474.1(b) of the Liquor Code because
    “Licensee properly requested . . . that the [L]icense be reissued out of safekeeping .
    . . [and] this lack of a valid [health] permit was not the fault of the Licensee. Also,
    other various miscommunications led to Licensee’s unpreparedness.” (R.R. at
    113a-114a.)
    The PLCB, however, rejected this recommendation and issued an
    order revoking the License because Licensee had adequate notice of what would
    happen if it did not promptly extend the safekeeping period. Licensee appealed to
    the trial court, and a de novo hearing was held.
    III.
    Before the trial court, Mark Seitzinger (Seitzinger), former Director of
    the Department of Licensing, Inspections and Permits for the City of Scranton,
    testified that although he was scheduled to perform a health inspection for
    Licensee’s premises on December 3, 2010, he never actually made this
    6
    appointment because he had a conflicting doctor’s appointment on the same day.
    Seitzinger explained that it was his responsibility to conduct the health inspection
    for the premises on that day because “we were kind of left without a health
    inspector, per se. But as the director of the department, it kind of fell onto me to
    handle the day-to-day duties of the department.” (R.R. at 174a.) Seitzinger then
    acknowledged that Licensee’s premises had a prior health license, and indicated he
    was not aware of any change that would have affected the issuance of a health
    license for the premises.
    Anthony J. Rinaldi, Sr. testified that in addition to being the sole
    owner of Licensee, he is also the owner of the Scranton Life Realty Company
    (Scranton Life), which owns the building where Northern Wine was located, and
    500 Lackawanna Development Company (Lackawanna Development), which
    owns the building where Licensee’s premises are located. He testified that after
    his attorney, William Rinaldi, notified him about the conflict, Northern Wine
    moved within a month.
    Elmo Rinaldi, owner of Northern Wine, testified that his company
    was located in the Scranton Life Building since 1997, but after being advised of the
    conflict, he physically moved out of the building by December 7, 2010. However,
    due to certain complications and conflicting advice that he received from the
    Bureau, this conflict issue was not resolved until August 2011, when the location
    of Northern Wine was officially deemed transferred.
    7
    William Rinaldi testified that the first time he learned of the conflict
    with Northern Wine was in late November 2010 during a different PLCB
    inspection for a different liquor license and property that already had a valid health
    license. Two weeks later, he met Grochowski to conduct an inspection of the
    premises. He also scheduled for Seitzinger to conduct a health license inspection
    on the same day, explaining that “[w]e had done a few [of these arrangements] in
    the last three years prior to this.” (R.R. at 263a.) However, when Seitzinger failed
    to keep the appointment, Grochowski advised William Rinaldi that “he won’t be
    back until [PLCB] tells him the conflict is resolved.” (R.R. at 384a.) Four days
    later, William Rinaldi sent a letter to the PLCB notifying it that the conflict no
    longer existed because Northern Wine moved its office. Because a response was
    never provided by the PLCB, he later faxed the same letter to the PLCB as well.
    William Rinaldi denied ever receiving the December 22, 2010 Determination
    Letter.
    Concluding that it had discretionary authority to account for a
    licensee’s curative efforts when renewing a liquor license, the trial court reversed
    the PLCB’s order refusing reinstatement of the License because:
    [Licensee] made every good faith effort to
    successfully reinstate its license. It expended time,
    energy, and financial resources to address the problems
    that led to the underlying reasons to deny reinstatement.
    As for the “conflict” caused by [Northern Wine], the
    record reflects that immediate action was taken to move
    its office to a different building. With respect to the lack
    of a health inspection, we find that [Licensee] took every
    step possible to renew the health certificate. The failure
    to do so was simply outside its control. Finally, we find
    Attorney [William] Rinaldi’s testimony that he did not
    8
    receive PLCB’s correspondence directing payment for
    safekeeping to be both credible and compelling. . . . It is
    clear that PLCB was giving [Licensee] and the other
    Rinaldi Licensees conflicting and confusing directives.
    Accordingly, we give consideration to the pattern of
    perplexing and complicated instructions provided by
    PLCB in determining that [Licensee’s] failures were not
    indicative of abuse of its licensing privilege.
    (Trial Court Opinion at 11-12.) Based on those findings, the trial court held that
    revocation was not warranted and Licensee was entitled to reinstatement of its
    License upon payment of all applicable license fees that would have been payable
    on an annual basis since the date of revocation. The trial court also refused to
    impose annual safekeeping fees for the years following Licensee’s appeal from the
    Adjudication Letter because the License was not actually in “safekeeping” but in
    jeopardy. This appeal by PLCB followed.7
    IV.
    A.
    On appeal, the PLCB contends that pursuant to Section 474.1 of the
    Liquor Code, 47 P.S. § 4–474.1, the trial court lacked discretionary authority to
    reinstate the License because it was in safekeeping for more than three years
    without extension, and Licensee failed to obtain a valid health license and resolve
    the conflict issue prior to the Bureau’s investigation of the premises.
    7
    Our scope of review in a liquor license renewal case is limited to a determination of
    whether the trial court’s findings of fact are supported by substantial evidence and whether the
    trial court committed an error of law or abused its discretion. Pennsylvania Liquor Control
    Board v. Bartosh, 
    730 A.2d 1029
    (Pa. Cmwlth. 1999).
    9
    In appeals arising under Section 464 of the Liquor Code,8 the trial
    court may make its own findings and reach its own conclusions based upon those
    findings even when the evidence it hears is substantially the same as the evidence
    presented to the PLCB. Two Sophia’s, Inc. v. Pennsylvania Liquor Control Board,
    
    799 A.2d 917
    (Pa. Cmwlth. 2002). While the trial court may modify, sustain or
    reverse a PLCB decision to deny the license renewal even if there is substantial
    evidence to support the PLCB’s findings, the trial court may do so only where its
    findings are supported by substantial evidence in the record as a whole. 
    Id. at 922
    n.5. If the PLCB has discretion to take an action, the trial court can exercise the
    same discretion under Section 464 of the Code. U.S.A. Deli, Inc. v. Pennsylvania
    Liquor Control Board, 
    909 A.2d 24
    (Pa. Cmwlth. 2006).
    Section 474.1(b) of the Liquor Code provides, in pertinent part:
    (b) The board may hold the license in safekeeping for a
    period not to exceed three consecutive years. Any
    license remaining in safekeeping for more than three
    consecutive years shall be immediately revoked by the
    Bureau of Licensing unless a transfer application or
    8
    47 P.S. § 4–464 provides, in part:
    The said appeal shall act as a supersedeas unless upon sufficient
    cause shown the court shall determine otherwise. The court shall
    hear the application de novo on questions of fact, administrative
    discretion and such other matters as are involved, at such time as it
    shall fix, of which notice shall be given to the board. The court
    shall either sustain or over-rule the action of the board and either
    order or deny the issuance of a new license or the renewal or
    transfer of the license or the renewal of an amusement permit to
    the applicant.
    10
    request for reissue from safekeeping has been filed
    prior to the expiration of the three-year period or
    unless the board has approved a request to extend the
    safekeeping for an additional year as set forth in
    subsection (g). . . .
    47 P.S. § 4–474.1(b) (emphasis added).
    Section 474.1(b) requires the automatic and mandatory revocation of a
    liquor license that is held in safekeeping for more than three years “unless a . . .
    request for reissue from safekeeping has been filed prior to the expiration of the
    three-year period. . . .” 47 P.S. § 4–474.1(b). When such a request has been made,
    revocation of the license is no longer automatic. The PLCB recognized as much
    when it placed the License in “abeyance” for several months while determining
    whether to return the License from safekeeping.
    What was before the trial court was not whether there was an
    automatic revocation but whether the License should be revoked because Licensee
    did not successfully complete all the requirements to have the License reissued.
    Because the trial court determined that Licensee made every good faith effort to
    successfully reinstate its License but failed to do so for reasons beyond its control,
    the trial court acted within its discretion not to revoke the License.
    B.
    Even if the trial court properly exercised its discretion in not revoking
    the License, the PLCB contends that the trial court erred when it reinstated the
    11
    License rather than returning it to safekeeping and requiring payment of all the
    attendant fees since 2010 – approximately $35,000.00.
    Notwithstanding the trial court’s discretionary authority, Section
    474.1(a) of the Liquor Code provides:
    (a) A restaurant, eating place retail dispenser, hotel,
    importing distributor and distributor licensee whose
    licensed establishment is not in operation for fifteen
    consecutive days shall return its license for safekeeping
    with the board no later than at the expiration of the
    fifteen-day period. The license may only be reissued
    from safekeeping in the manner set forth by the board
    through regulation.
    47 P.S. § 4–474.1(a) (emphasis added.) The PLCB’s regulations provide:
    (a) A restaurant, hotel or club catering liquor license or
    retail dispenser eating place or hotel malt beverage
    license authorized under the Liquor Code will not be
    issued, renewed or transferred by the Liquor Control
    Board for any premises unless the application for the
    license, renewal or transfer avers that the proper
    municipal or State authorities have found that the
    premises to be licensed, or for which an application is
    filed for a new license or the renewal or transfer of a
    license, meet all the sanitary requirements for a public
    eating place in the municipality where the place to be
    licensed is operated, 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) (emphasis added.)
    12
    Here, the trial court was bound by the PLCB’s regulation prohibiting
    reissuance of a restaurant liquor license given that the premises still, to this day,
    fail to meet all sanitary requirements for a public eating place in the municipality –
    i.e., a valid health license. Until that occurs, the License cannot be taken out of
    safekeeping and the trial court cannot reinstate the License. That does not mean,
    however, that the appropriate remedy is to place the License back into safekeeping
    and to impose annual safekeeping fees for each year the License has been revoked.
    A liquor license is either:      in safekeeping, which requires annual
    safekeeping fees; active, which requires renewal and validation fees; or revoked,
    which obviously has no fee. Prior to revocation, the License was in safekeeping;
    but when the PLCB revoked the License, it was no longer in safekeeping and
    Licensee could not request it be taken out of safekeeping to make it active. Just as
    in Ball Park’s Main Course, Inc. v. Pennsylvania Liquor Control Board, 
    641 A.2d 713
    (Pa. Cmwlth. 1994) (en banc), overruled in part by Two 
    Sophia’s, 799 A.2d at 919
    n.3, where we held that a licensee did not continually have to file renewal
    applications when an appeal was taken from a PLCB decision denying renewal
    because there is nothing to renew, there is no requirement here that Licensee pay
    fees for a license that did not exist. See also Section 464 of the Liquor Code, 47
    P.S. § 4-464 (“The said appeal shall act as a supersedeas unless upon sufficient
    cause shown the court shall determine otherwise.”).
    Given all of the above, we vacate that portion of the trial court’s order
    reinstating the License because Licensee has not shown it has met the requirements
    to have the License reissued. Accordingly, we remand to the trial court for further
    13
    remand to the PLCB for Licensee, within 60 days of the date of this decision, to
    either submit an application for extension of safekeeping period along with the
    appropriate safekeeping fee, as recently amended,9 or apply for reissuance and then
    timely demonstrate that the Licensee’s premises is fully in compliance with the
    PLCB regulations and the Liquor Code with no past fees being due.
    _________________________________
    DAN PELLEGRINI, Senior Judge
    Judge Cosgrove did not participate in the decision in this case.
    9
    Effective August 8, 2016, annual safekeeping fees for Lackawanna County are
    $10,000.00 and validation and renewal application fees are $700.00.
    14
    IN THE COMMONWEALTH COURT OF PENNSYLVANIA
    Club 530, Inc.                     :
    :
    v.                     : No. 855 C.D. 2016
    :
    Pennsylvania Liquor Control Board, :
    Appellant         :
    ORDER
    AND NOW, this 29th day of March, 2017, it is hereby ordered that the
    Court of Common Pleas of Lackawanna County’s (trial court) order dated April
    26, 2016, is affirmed in part and vacated in part, and this matter is remanded to the
    trial court for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
    Jurisdiction relinquished.
    _________________________________
    DAN PELLEGRINI, Senior Judge